High-flying domestic equities are giving US investors sticker shock after an eight-year bull market and upward run following the US presidential election last year. "Part of it is the US is expensive, but there are genuinely good opportunities which are presenting themselves elsewhere," said Atul Lele, chief investment officer of Deltec International Group, citing Japan's equity markets as one of the best opportunities he sees in the world. He said economic momentum in the United States is slowing, while global data improves. "The US expansion we saw from a few years ago is starting to expand out to the rest of the world," Lele said. The money came into foreign funds during the seven days ended May 3, as anxious markets awaited a presidential runoff in France on Sunday that pitted centrist Emmanuel Macron's business-friendly vision of European integration against euroskeptic Marine Le Pen. Macron won.
Copyright Reuters, 2017