This collaboration between NZSA and University of Canterbury (UC) Business School is part of our mission to promote a thriving market and to be the voice of investors. A sentiment index will contribute to the understanding of investor behaviour and the overall market and allow you to get first access to the data and make better-informed investment decisions.
Have your say!
Each week, a random selection of NZSA members are sent an email to complete the survey. If you wish to participate in the NZ Investor Sentiment Index Survey anyway, you can click on this link anytime – also contained in each Briefing newsletter. The sentiment survey is conducted weekly from Thursday 12:01am to Wednesday 11:45pm.
This Week’s Results:
The “amber” section of these dials show the middle quartiles (ie, 25th – 75th percentile) since the NZSA / UC Retail Investor Sentiment survey began in 2020.
This week’s commentary – November 20th, 2024
- Bullish sentiment, expectations that stock prices will rise over the next six months, decreased by 19.2 percentage points to 50.0%.
- Neutral sentiment, expectations that stock prices will essentially stay unchanged over the next six months, increased by 23.6 percentage points to 42.9%.
- Bearish sentiment, expectations that stock prices will fall over the next six months, decreased by 4.4 percentage points to 7.1%.
- The level of optimism among individual investors is highest for IT (61.5%), followed by financials and primary sector (both at 46.2%). The level of optimism is lowest for consumer discretionary (19.2%), followed by industrials (25.0%) and real estate (30.8%).
- The level of neutral sentiment is highest for real estate (61.5%), followed by industrial (58.3%) and energy (50.0%). Neutral sentiment is lowest for IT (34.6%), followed by consumer discretionary (42.3%) and health care (44.0%).
- The level of pessimism is highest for industrials (20.0%), followed by consumer discretionary (16.7%) and health care (12.0%). Pessimism is lowest for IT (4.0%), followed by IT and energy (both at 8.0%).
- Bullish sentiment, expectations that stock prices will rise over the next six months, decreased by 15.4 percentage points to 65.4% for Australian stocks and increased 11.5 percentage points to 88.5% for U.S. stocks.
- Neutral sentiment, expectations that stock prices will stay flat over the next six months, unchanged at 19.2% for Australian stocks and decreased by 15.4 percentage points to 7.7% for U.S. stocks.
- Bearish sentiment, expectations that stock prices will fall over the next six months, increased by 15.4 percentage points to 15.4% for Australian stocks and by 3.9 percentage points to 3.9% for U.S. stocks.
- The proportion of investors anticipating an increase in their small cap shares increased by 5.6 percentage points to 29.6% this week if they were to purchase equity.
- The proportion of investors anticipating an increase in their large cap shares decreased by 3.0 percentage points to 37.0% this week if they were to purchase equity.
- The proportion of investors anticipating an increase in their funds decreased by 1.5 percentage points to 18.5% this week if they were to purchase equity.
- The proportion of investors anticipating no change in their equity allocation increased by 6.8 percentage points to 14.8% this week.
- The proportion of investors who express uncertainty about their equity allocation decreased by 8.0 percentage points to 0.0% this week.
Six-week Retail Investor Sentiment – NZ50 Index
Historic Data
There have been wide variations since the survey began (January 2020) in Investor Sentiment. The following chart shows:
- the lowest recorded response for each type of sentiment (the lower ‘whisker’)
- the recorded responses between 25th – 75th percentile (the ‘box’)
- the median response score – ie, exactly 50% of scores are above and below this number
- the maximum response
- Interestingly, NZ Investors have displayed a greater tendency towards expressing “negative” (bearish) sentiment since the survey’s inception.