One in five retail investors sees recession as main investment risk, eToro survey shows
The prospect of a recession has jumped above inflation as the chief concern for retail investors around the world, according to data from the latest Retail Investor Beat (RIB) from trading and investment platform eToro.
In the study of 10,000 retail investors across 13 countries, more than a fifth (22%) said they regard the state of the economy and a potential recession as the biggest risk to their investments, whereas 13% see inflation as the top risk. This is a significant reversal from six months ago, when inflation was the number one worry (20%), with recession fears lower down the list (13%).
The RIB data also shows that, while a potential recession is now the biggest perceived threat to investment portfolios, it is not weighing down on investor sentiment in the way that out-of-control inflation did six months ago.
When retail investors were asked how confident they feel across different aspects of life during the last three months, every single confidence metric rose. Those confident about their investment portfolio jumped from 71% in June to 78% today, whilst those upbeat about income and living standards rose from 65% to 70% over the same period.
Whilst confidence in investments uniformly rose across every country, Dutch retail investors are the most optimistic (91%) whilst the Spanish score lowest on this metric (71%).
Commenting on the data, eToro Global Markets Strategist Ben Laidler, said:
“Retail investors are no longer laser-focused on inflation and are clearly feeling optimistic about central banks’ ability to tame price rises without many more interest rate hikes. Whilst concerns have now shifted towards the recession that these interest rate hikes might cause, this is not weighing down sentiment to the same degree that inflation was.
“In fact retail investors are feeling a lot rosier about their investments than they were three months ago, they are generally quite bullish about the remainder of 2023, and the consensus amongst this group is still for a sustained bull market in the first half of next year. This would extend the 23% global stocks rally we have already seen since the October 2022 low.”
The jump in confidence related to investments is resulting in a more bullish approach when it comes to the size of investment contributions. According to the data, a third (33%) plan to increase the size of their regular contributions in the next three months, with this group outnumbering those who plan to scale back investment contributions (7%) by more than four to one.
The industry most likely to benefit from this upturn in sentiment is technology, with investors more likely to up investment in this sector over any other sector during Q4. Financial services – an industry that historically performs well with high interest rates – was the second favourite amongst respondents for the remainder of 2023, followed by the real estate and energy sectors. The sectors least attractive to retail investors in Q4 are discretionary consumer goods and industrials.
Laidler adds:
“Tech has come back with a vengeance in 2023 and is once again in focus for retail investors as the strongest performing sector of the year, with AI stocks doing a lot of the heavy lifting. Unsurprisingly, given the recession risks, consumer discretionary goods come bottom of the list for investors at the moment. But they are not afraid of being contrarian, with a significant focus on real estate and utilities sectors, recent underperformers that would do well with any early cutting of interest rates.”