Analyse fra Bank of America:
BofA’s comment appears superfluous: “We believe a peaceful Greek outcome is a necessary condition for a rally.”
But while the optimistic bias is shifting, if slowly, one place where the “fund managers” are at least admitting that things are changing for the worse in Europe is their latest, June, estimation of the biggest tail risks. Here, while “geopolitical crisis” and a behind-the-curve Fed still remain in the top two “tail risks”, at 21% and 20% respectively, just as they were last month, what is concerning is the third most prevalent fear which, at 18%, is a Eurozone breakup.
It is notable that one month ago this fear did not even register, suggesting just how fragile the Eurozone was and still remains, and that despite the constant central bank tinkering to infuse endless amounts of “political capital”, said capital may just not be enough when the Lehman moments finally arrives.
Perhaps it is due to this jump in Eurozone concerns that BofA’s properietary “cash indicator” level is now at 4.9% or the highest it has been in all of 2015. This is how BofA explains it: “As a reminder, the FMS Cash Rule works as follows: when average cash balance rises above 4.5% a contrarian buy signal is generated for equities. When the cash balance falls below 3.5% a contrarian sell signal is generated.”