Recently, institutional investors' risk appetite has reached its highest level since 2017-2018, even hotter than at the end of 2024. According to various survey data, the proportion of net bullishness has long hit the limit, and the US stock sentiment indicator has even surged to an extreme number like 9.3.
The story behind this is quite clear: nearly 60% of institutions expect a soft landing for the economy, with only 3% still worried about a hard landing. More tellingly, institutional cash reserves have fallen to a historic low of 3.3%—which means a large amount of funds are fully allocated into stocks and high-yield bonds, these risk assets.
But there is a hidden risk here. Historical experience repeatedly shows that when everyone is on the same boat and cash is almost zero, the market is very prone to a "crowded long" situation. Once earnings fall short of expectations or policy surprises occur, there are no new buyers to absorb the sell-off, and the selling pressure will be immediately amplified. The chain reaction could be even more intense than expected.
Looking ahead, the expected return of the global stock market in 2026 is around 11%, but this growth rate will be significantly lower than in 2025. Meanwhile, US stock valuations are already at a mid-to-high historical level, indicating that the room for further rise is not that large.
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AirdropSkeptic
· 15h ago
Cash reserves are only 3.3%? Isn't that just all-in style? It feels a bit risky.
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SerRugResistant
· 15h ago
All in on the entire position now, this time it's really all in... 3.3% cash, feels like I'm teetering on the edge of the gambling table
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SilentAlpha
· 15h ago
Cash is only 3.3%, isn't this the rhythm of all in... History always teaches us this way.
Everyone is optimistic, but that's actually the most dangerous time. If no one is willing to take the other side, it's game over.
Market sentiment on 9.3 is a bit outrageous, feels like we're just one black swan away.
2026 return rate of 11%? Sounds pretty good... Wait, that's lower than 2025.
The bullish crowd is really stretched thin; a shakeout is inevitable sooner or later.
Institutional cash reserves are at a historic low, a sign of greed reaching its peak.
Fully deploying risk assets, this time the gamble is quite aggressive.
The soft landing expectation is too optimistic; the 3% pessimists are actually the smart ones.
Valuations are already above average; there's not much room for growth.
Once earnings fall short of expectations, the sell-off will be very violent...
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MultiSigFailMaster
· 15h ago
All the cash has been invested, if this wave hits a snag... Oh my, I need to run.
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StableNomad
· 15h ago
ngl this 3.3% cash reserve situation literally screams luna/ust vibes... everyone all-in, no dry powder, what could go wrong right?
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failed_dev_successful_ape
· 15h ago
This time, it's really all-in. Cash is only 3.3%, with no buffer at all.
Recently, institutional investors' risk appetite has reached its highest level since 2017-2018, even hotter than at the end of 2024. According to various survey data, the proportion of net bullishness has long hit the limit, and the US stock sentiment indicator has even surged to an extreme number like 9.3.
The story behind this is quite clear: nearly 60% of institutions expect a soft landing for the economy, with only 3% still worried about a hard landing. More tellingly, institutional cash reserves have fallen to a historic low of 3.3%—which means a large amount of funds are fully allocated into stocks and high-yield bonds, these risk assets.
But there is a hidden risk here. Historical experience repeatedly shows that when everyone is on the same boat and cash is almost zero, the market is very prone to a "crowded long" situation. Once earnings fall short of expectations or policy surprises occur, there are no new buyers to absorb the sell-off, and the selling pressure will be immediately amplified. The chain reaction could be even more intense than expected.
Looking ahead, the expected return of the global stock market in 2026 is around 11%, but this growth rate will be significantly lower than in 2025. Meanwhile, US stock valuations are already at a mid-to-high historical level, indicating that the room for further rise is not that large.