Surveys
Largest Investor Risks In 2025: Trade Wars, Inflation, Equity Concentration – Survey
Asset Risk Consultants has just released its global sentiment survey of 98 wealth management chief investment officers on investor risks for 2025.   Â
The latest wealth manager sentiment survey of CIOs from Asset Risk Consultants (ARC), an organization tracking private client portfolio performance, shows that while positive sentiment towards equities has increased with a new year on the horizon, investors still have key risks to watch out for in 2025.
The ARC Market Sentiment Survey, a quarterly poll examining the 12-month outlook for the major asset classes and sectors, shows that the net sentiment toward equities has increased to 56 per cent from 21 per cent over the past 12 months.
ARC asked 98 CIOs to name the greatest risks facing investors in 2025. Trade wars emerge as the single largest concern (23.8 per cent), reflecting fears of escalating protectionism and its impact on global supply chains. Rising inflation (20.7 per cent) also remains at the forefront of managers' minds, underscoring lingering unease about persistent price pressures and monetary policy responses.
Meanwhile, sovereign debt levels (15 per cent) reflect concerns about mounting fiscal imbalances, particularly as governments grapple with post-pandemic borrowing, the survey shows. While equity sector concentration (14.3 per cent) points to unease over valuations and the dominance of a few sectors or companies, creating potential systemic risks, respondents favor financials, closely followed by healthcare and IT.
US equities stay popular
Sentiment toward US equities is the most favorable, out of
all the regions. Investment positioning changed as a result of
the US presidential elections, with 34 per cent of respondents
increasing their overall US exposure. The ARC survey also
showed that the sentiment toward UK, Japanese, emerging
market and European equities has fallen, with net sentiment
toward the latter now in negative territory.
Bonds have fallen out of favor, with net sentiment of +5 down from +43 last quarter but sentiment toward small caps and private equity has increased, the survey reveals.
“The reality is that many of the risks are interlinked. Trade wars combined with a China slowdown could lead to heightened Taiwan tensions which would lead to fears over advanced node semiconductor manufacturing, which in turn would impact many of the Magnificent Seven [Apple, Microsoft, Google parent Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta Platforms and Tesla],” Dr James Cooke, deputy CIO at investment consultancy ARC, said. “Inflation rising too much could force central banks to tighten monetary policy more aggressively and the money supply is a significant detriment to the return on risk assets.”
“On the brighter side, there continues to be rather a lot of cash in money market funds or "dry powder." We would not be too surprised to find 2025 is a year of heightened "animal spirits" and increased M&A activity which tends to be good overall for equity prices, particularly of slightly smaller companies,” he added. “Perhaps this means we will actually see the broadening out of equity markets that many managers talked about around this time last year.”
The ARC Indices collect the actual performance of over 350,000 investment portfolios, net of fees, supplied by over 140 investment managers to establish the actual returns being seen by real clients. The research gives ARC an understanding of the drivers of investment performance. Managers include Barclays Wealth, Brewin Dolphin, Investec, Rathbones and UBS.
Asset Risk Consultants is an international investment consultancy with offices in the UK and the Channel Islands. ARC advises on over $22 billion of assets invested across more than 200 banks and investment firms for clients from over 20 jurisdictions around the world.