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Confidence in equity investments has dramatically revived
in the past three months with 79% of IFAs advising clients
to invest in UK shares over the next three months, compared
with just 57% in February when the FTSE-100 was heading
down.
However it is not just UK shares that have benefited, according
to results from the Virgin Money Investor Intentions Index,
advisers are now more likely to recommend equities across
the board with increased confidence in European Shares,
Emerging Markets and Far East Shares.
Confidence in investing in Commodity Funds, Gold and Property
Funds has also increased dramatically in the past three
months.
The renewed appetite for risk is reflected in a drop in
intentions to invest in cash and bonds – 59% of IFAs
will advise investors to put money into cash over the next
three months compared with 67% in February with 79% advising
Bond funds compared with 83% in February, the index shows.
Far East Shares recorded one of the biggest increases to
68% intending to advise clients to invest over the next
three months compared with just 46% in February with Emerging
Markets seeing a surge from 46% to 75% in the quarter.
And in Virgin Money’s Investor Intentions Optimism
League UK shares are now at the top with Emerging Markets
and Bonds in second and third place.
The company’s authoritative Investor Intentions Index
tracks the confidence of independent financial advisers
across the country in 10 different investment sectors as
well as where they advised their clients to invest their
money over the preceding quarter.
Compared to this time last year, when investors saw cash
investments as the only way to safeguard capital while stock
market volatility was so high, confidence in cash has fallen
heavily.
In the first quarter of 2008, 86 per cent of IFAs were
advising clients to put their money in cash, while just
59 per cent will do so now.
Virgin Money believes the sea change is due to the prospect
of green shoots in other markets compounded by the poor
rate of return on cash while interest rates remain low.
The Bank of England reduced the base rate of interest to
a historic low of 0.5 per cent in March 2009 and has yet
to change this position.
Virgin Money spokesman Grant Bather said: “Better
returns now outweigh the relative security of cash investments.
IFAs quite rightly sought the safety of cash and bonds when
banks were desperate to improve liquidity and equities were
so unpredictable.
“But in the past three months confidence is starting
to return and while there’s a long way to go these
are promising signs.”
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