X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Superannuation Guide
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the Super Review bulletin
  • News
    • All News
    • Technology
    • Financial Advice
    • Funds Management
    • Institutional Investment
    • SMSF
    • Insurance
    • Superannuation
    • Post Retirement
    • People & Products
    • Rollover
    • Women’s Wealth
  • Superannuation Guide
  • Features & Analysis
    • All Features & Analysis
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Features
    • Roundtables
    • Knowledge Centre
  • Events
    • Australian Wealth Management Awards
  • Investment Centre
  • Promoted Content
No Results
View All Results
  • News
    • All News
    • Technology
    • Financial Advice
    • Funds Management
    • Institutional Investment
    • SMSF
    • Insurance
    • Superannuation
    • Post Retirement
    • People & Products
    • Rollover
    • Women’s Wealth
  • Superannuation Guide
  • Features & Analysis
    • All Features & Analysis
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Features
    • Roundtables
    • Knowledge Centre
  • Events
    • Australian Wealth Management Awards
  • Investment Centre
  • Promoted Content
No Results
View All Results
No Results
View All Results
Home News Institutional Investment

Has the US exceptionalism conviction peaked?

New data indicates that investor conviction in US exceptionalism has peaked, according to Bank of America.

by Jessica Penny
February 24, 2025
in Institutional Investment, News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

New data indicates that investor conviction in US exceptionalism has peaked, according to Bank of America.

In its latest Fund Manager Survey (FMS), which included 205 participants managing US$482 billion in assets, “long Mag 7” was identified as the most crowded trade by 56 per cent of respondents, followed by a long US dollar by 17 per cent.

X

“The US ‘exceptionalism’ theme has been characterised by a combo of strong US dollar and an equity bull market led by the ‘Magnificent 7’ group of stocks,” the bank said.

Ultimately, a total of 73 per cent of FMA investors perceive “long US exceptionalism” – comprising both Mag 7 and US dollar – as the most crowded trade, down from the three-year high of 80 per cent reached in January.

Importantly, 89 per cent of FMS investors said the US stock market is overvalued, the highest number since the survey began in 2001.

“Note that decade-to-date, an average 81 per cent of FMS investors have consistently viewed US equities as overvalued,” it said.

At the same time, FMS investors now view global equities as the best-performing asset class, at 34 per cent versus 21 per cent a month prior, overtaking US equities.

In fact, US equities fell by two spots in just a month, with gold also having surpassed the asset class to become the preferred asset of 22 per cent of participants.

Turning to best-performing indexes, FMS investors now see Euro Stoxx (22 per cent) outperforming the Nasdaq (18 per cent).

“The Hang Seng Index (i.e. China equities) is seen as the best performing equity index according to 18 per cent of FMS investors (up from 10 per cent January),” it said.

Moreover, the bank’s broadest measure of FMS sentiment, based on cash levels, equity allocations, and global growth expectations, edged up from 6.1 to 6.4 in February, signalling rising investor optimism. However, it remains below the levels seen in December.

Turning to FMS asset allocations, investors were the most overweight in stocks, banks, healthcare, and US markets versus being the most underweight in UK markets, resources, and bonds.

Equity allocations were net 35 per cent overweight in February, but down 6 percentage points month on month. Meanwhile, bond allocations are net 11 per cent underweight from net 20 per cent underweight a month ago.

Similarly to bonds, cash allocations remained underweight at net 6 per cent, but improved from net 11 per cent underweight.

When asked on asset performance in the advent of a full-blown trade war, a large majority of FMS participants (58 per cent), according to Bank of America, said they view gold as the best-performing asset, followed by the US dollar (15 per cent) and the 30-year US Treasury (9 per cent).

Conversely, only 2 per cent said equities would perform best, trailing bitcoin (3 per cent) and cash (4 per cent).

Related Posts

NGS Super awards two mandates to Robeco

by Laura Dew
January 19, 2026

NGS Super has awarded two investment mandates to fund manager Robeco.  The $15 billion superannuation fund has appointed the Dutch asset...

ART appoints two to board

by Adrian Suljanovic
January 19, 2026

Australia’s second largest super fund has appointed two new directors to strengthen its governance.Australian Retirement Trust (ART) has appointed two...

Retirees defying digital myth with soaring online engagement: UniSuper

by Adrian Suljanovic
January 19, 2026

UniSuper has seen retirees lead digital adoption as personalisation, security and simplicity drive extraordinary online engagement across older members.Retirees are...

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIEW ALL
Promoted Content

Using data to achieve member experience success

A panel of superannuation commentators have shared how data and technology can be used to improve the member experience at...

by Staff Writer
December 4, 2025
Promoted Content

To the expert guiding the doers

Everyone has their own reason for wanting to stay healthier, for longer.

by Partner Article
October 7, 2025
Promoted Content

Developing Next-Generation Fintech Applications on High-Speed Blockchain Networks

The evolution of financial technology continues accelerating with the emergence of high-speed blockchain networks that enable unprecedented performance and cost...

by Partner Article
September 4, 2025
Promoted Content

Smart finance is the key to winning in the property investment surge

Australian property prices are rising again, presenting a compelling opportunity for investors. For the first time in four years, every Australian...

by Partner Article
August 13, 2025

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

Top Performing Funds

FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
Fund name
3 y p.a(%)
1
DomaCom DFS Mortgage
164.43
2
Loftus Peak Global Disruption Fund Hedged
118.46
3
Global X 21Shares Bitcoin ETF
73.80
4
BetaShares Crypto Innovators ETF
67.16
5
Smarter Money Long-Short Credit Investor USD
66.76
Super Review is Australia’s leading website servicing all segments of Australia’s superannuation and institutional investment industry. It prides itself on in-depth news coverage and analysis of important areas of this market, such as: Investment trends, Superannuation, Funds performance, Technology, Administration, and Custody

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Investment Centre
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • Superannuation
  • People And Products
  • Financial Advice
  • Funds Management
  • Institutional Investment
  • Insurance
  • Features And Analysis

© 2026 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
    • All News
    • Technology
    • Financial Advice
    • Funds Management
    • Institutional Investment
    • SMSF
    • Insurance
    • Superannuation
    • Post Retirement
    • People & Products
    • Rollover
    • Women’s Wealth
  • Superannuation Guide
  • Features & Analysis
    • All Features & Analysis
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Features
    • Roundtables
    • Knowledge Centre
  • Events
    • Australian Wealth Management Awards
  • Investment Centre
  • Promoted Content
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2026 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited