The Dow just closed out the best January in 15 years, but the latest investor confidence survey may foreshadow a different sort of February and full 2012. State Street’s Investor Confidence Index declined, driven by European risk reduction, but U.S. investors are the most cautious of all these days. That stands in perfect contradiction to January’s performance.
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Asian investors are apparently feeling a bit better about stocks, with that segment measure up 3.3 points to 96.9 in January’s survey. Still, while the index is sitting below 100, it means even Asian investors are cutting back on risky assets. What troubles me most is what I see developing for U.S. stocks. The Investor Confidence’s North American component index showed the most risk aversion, with a measure of 89.8, down 0.1 from December. The way economic data has been unfolding of late, investor confidence should wane further alongside consumer confidence, which was reported lower Tuesday. In my view, deteriorating data should also turn the tide on the market rally that started in early October 2011. Tuesday’s performance by asset managers seems to agree, with the shares of T. Rowe Price (Nasdaq: TROW), Legg Mason (NYSE: LM), Janus Capital (NYSE: JNS) and Calamos Asset Management (Nasdaq: CLMS) each in the red Tuesday.
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