U.S. Investor Optimism Ends 2016 at Nine-Year High

Lydia Saad

Wednesday, January 4th, 2017

After reaching a nine-year high in the third quarter, the Wells Fargo/Gallup Investor and Retirement Optimism Index rose further in the fourth quarter to its highest point since January 2007. The index now stands at +96, up from +79 last quarter and from +40 in the first quarter after stock market volatility rattled investor confidence.

The fourth-quarter reading is based on telephone interviews conducted Nov. 16-20 with a nationally representative sample of 1,012 U.S. investors who report having $10,000 or more in stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or a self-directed IRA or 401(k).

Reflecting the results of the 2016 presidential election, investor confidence zoomed 155 points in the post-election poll among investors who identify as Republican, from an index score of 0 in the third quarter to +155 in the fourth. Conversely, Democrats' confidence fell by nearly as much, from +174 to +25. At the same time, the index rose only slightly among those with $100,000 or more in investments, from +99 to +105, while it jumped from +55 to +87 among lower-asset investors.

The Wells Fargo/Gallup Investor and Retirement Optimism Index has been conducted quarterly since 2011. The Gallup Index of Investor Optimism, which provides the historical trend, was conducted monthly from October 1996 through October 2009. The index has a theoretical range of +400 to -400, but in practice has ranged from +178 at its highest point in January 2000 to -64 at its lowest in February 2009.

Investors More Confident About Personal Than Economic Factors

Of the seven elements that form the index, investors are the most confident this quarter about maintaining or increasing their income over the next 12 months -- 69% are optimistic about this while 15% are pessimistic, for a +54 net optimism score.

Investors are nearly as hopeful about reaching their five-year investment goals, with 68% optimistic. Slightly fewer are optimistic about achieving their 12-month investment targets (58%) and in their 12-month outlook for U.S. economic growth (57%) and stock market performance (54%).

Net optimism about the unemployment rate is just a notch below investors' outlook for the economy and stock market, while investors are split in their outlook for inflation.

Components of U.S. Investor Optimism -- Q4, 2016

Wells Fargo/Gallup Investor and Retirement Optimism Index

 

Optimistic

Pessimistic

Net optimism

 

%

%

(pct. pts.)

12-month income outlook

69

15

+54

Five-year investment goals

68

20

+48

12-month investment targets

58

21

+37

Economic growth

57

27

+30

Stock market performance

54

24

+30

Unemployment rate

52

27

+25

Inflation

37

36

+1

Optimistic = % Very/Somewhat optimistic; Pessimistic = % Very/Somewhat pessimistic; % Neither not shown

Wells Fargo/Gallup, Nov. 16-20, 2016

Optimism Typically Highest on Income, Five-Year Investing Outlook

The rank order of investors' confidence in the three personal financial components of the index has been fairly constant in recent years. Investors tend to be the most optimistic about the 12-month outlook for their income, as well as the outlook for reaching their five-year investment goals. They tend to be a bit less optimistic about achieving their 12-month investment targets. However, solid majorities are now optimistic on all three dimensions.

Investor optimism about the four economic factors included in the index have been more variable since 2011 but also stand at recent high points. This reflects a sharp increase in investor optimism about economic growth since last quarter -- from 45% to 57% -- as well as steady long-term gains in investor optimism about the U.S. unemployment rate.

Since early 2011, the percentage of investors expressing optimism about unemployment has risen 18 percentage points, compared with a 13-point increase in optimism about economic growth, a seven-point rise on inflation and a five-point rise on stock market performance.

Bottom Line

Investors' willingness to purchase equities in 2017, thus helping to maintain the bull market, will depend on many factors, not the least of which is their broad outlook on the investment climate as measured by the Wells Fargo/Gallup Investor and Retirement Optimism Index. The index presents a fairly positive picture at the close of 2016 and is considerably improved over a year ago after three consecutive quarters of gains. While Republican exuberance about Donald Trump's victory may explain some of this, the fourth-quarter jump only added to long-term gains in confidence -- particularly in optimism about unemployment -- that should provide a good foundation to build on in 2017.

From http://www.gallup.com/poll/200930/investor-optimism-ends-2016-nine-year-high.aspx?utm_source=alert&utm_medium=email&utm_content=morelink&utm_campaign=syndication