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Hargreaves Lansdown reports Investor Confidence Index down 7% as Hamas attacked Israel

Hargreaves Lansdown reports Investor Confidence Index down 7% as Hamas attacked Israel

Wealth manager Hargreaves Lansdown reported that its in-house Investor Confidence Index has dropped 7% to 71. Responses to the latest index were gathered as Hamas attacked Israel.

Hargreaves Lansdown reported that confidence has risen in the Asia Pacific but fallen in Europe, Emerging Markets, Japan and North America. Investors continue to favour cash assets as markets are turbulent, the wealth manager said this week.

Of note was the fact that, while low, confidence in the UK was creeping up slowly.

The investor confidence index is compiled by surveying HL clients on a monthly basis. Each month the group sends the investors’ confidence survey to 6,000 random clients and there is a representative split of its clients by age. On average around 10% of clients respond.

Investor Confidence By Sector

Emma Wall, head of investment analysis and research, Hargreaves Lansdown commented further: “It is not surprising to see Investor Confidence has dropped following the devastating war in the Middle East. The conflict has impacted both oil and gold prices. But retail investors were already loading up on perceived lower-risk assets, thanks to market volatility, an uncertain global economic outlook, and compelling yields.”


Investors still favour big tech stocks

Trades on HL’s platform reveal investors have been choosing plenty of money market funds and ETFs, alongside NASDAQ and tech trackers and a few US equity and developed market options – also chock full of big tech.

Cash has an important part to play in financial resilience. Three months’ salary is the rough guide for your rainy-day fund, to ensure you can weather personal uncertainty. It can also be a great tactical play in a portfolio – in a rising rate environment, with market volatility you are rewarded for keeping your powder dry.

But it has limited long term strategic asset allocation benefits. Hargreaves Lansdown said investors should be looking longer term – “Markets will be choppy over the next six months, but rates have peaked so holding cash in your investment portfolio no longer pays,” Wall said.

Investors should therefore look to diversify. HL advised they should put cash to work with strategic bond managers which have the flexibility to take advantage of opportunities when the rate cycle starts to turn, and the news cycle causes pricing volatility.

“On a valuation basis, UK equities – with good dividend cover and the opportunity for income growth – and emerging markets look attractive,” said Emma Wall. “And if all of this is too time consuming or complicated, outsource to a multi-asset fund, preferably one with a track record of managing through a downturn.”

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