Here's a question worth pondering: What happens when everyone's all-in on stocks, cash is at a two-year low, and the Federal Reserve decides maybe it doesn't need to cut rates after all?
We might be about to find out. Global fund managers are now holding just 3.7% in cash—the lowest level since early 2022—while crowding into equities and commodities at levels that make Bank of America nervous. Really nervous.
And that nervousness is suddenly looking more justified. A string of hawkish comments from Fed officials has shifted market expectations dramatically. According to the CME FedWatch tool, traders now see a 51% probability the Fed holds rates steady at 3.75%-4.00% on December 10. Last week, those same traders were pricing in a 66% chance of a 25-basis-point cut.
When Everyone's Bullish, Start Worrying
The November Bank of America Global Fund Manager Survey paints a picture of markets that are heavily positioned for more good news. Average cash levels dropped to 3.7% from 3.8%—not a huge move on its face, but significant because it crosses below the 4% threshold that historically signals trouble ahead.
How reliable is this signal? Pretty reliable, actually. Bank of America points out that cash levels at 3.7% or lower have occurred 20 times since 2002. On every single occasion, stocks fell and Treasuries outperformed over the following one to three months.
The firm's broader sentiment indicator jumped to 6.4 from 5.7, reaching the highest reading since February. Translation: positioning has shifted from being a tailwind for risk assets to being a potential headwind.
Now, it's not quite euphoria territory yet. Net 34% of respondents remain overweight equities, which is bullish but well below the 60% range typically seen at major market tops. So we're in that awkward zone where everyone's leaning one direction but not completely tipping over.
Soft Landing Dreams Meet AI Bubble Fears
The base case among fund managers remains optimistic. A solid 53% expect lower inflation and stronger growth over the next year. Only 6% are bracing for a hard landing.
But here's where it gets interesting. When asked about the biggest tail risk, 45% of respondents pointed to an AI equity bubble. More than half say artificial intelligence stocks are already in bubble territory right now.
The contradiction is fascinating. At the same time these managers are calling AI a bubble, 53% believe AI is already boosting productivity—the highest share in three months. They think it's both real and overvalued, which is probably the most honest assessment you can make about transformative technology.
And for the first time in 20 years, a net 20% of managers say companies are "overinvesting," driven largely by the massive capital expenditure happening in hyperscale AI infrastructure.
The Most Crowded Trade? Take a Wild Guess
Surprise: it's the Magnificent 7 again. The trade built around megacap tech stocks—NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA), Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Apple Inc. (AAPL), Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (GOOGL), Amazon Inc. (AMZN), Meta Platforms Inc. (META), and Tesla, Inc. (TSLA)—is once again the market's most crowded bet, cited by 54% of managers.
Second place goes to "long gold" at 28%, which makes sense given the geopolitical uncertainty and inflation concerns still floating around.
Meanwhile, private credit has emerged as the top candidate for a future credit event, with 59% of managers flagging it as a concern—the highest conviction since Bank of America started asking the question in 2022.
Where the Money's Going (and Where It Isn't)
Fund managers have turned most overweight on healthcare, emerging markets, and banks. Banks in particular are seeing heavy positioning, with a 36% overweight allocation—the highest since December 2024.
Commodities are also back in fashion. A net 17% overweight represents the highest allocation since September 2022.
On the flip side, UK equities just got hammered. Allocations dropped by 27 percentage points over three months, the biggest decline since October 2022. Consumer discretionary saw the steepest monthly cut on record, down 16 percentage points.
Overall, managers are 29% underweight UK stocks and 28% underweight energy.
Crystal Ball Time: What Managers Expect for 2026
Here's where things get really interesting. When asked about the best-performing asset class for 2026, 42% said international equities. Only 22% picked U.S. stocks.
Best performing index? 37% say MSCI Emerging Markets will lead. A mere 6% expect the S&P 500 to be the winner.
On currencies, 30% are betting on the Japanese yen. Only 3% picked the British pound.
For gold, 34% expect prices between $4,000 and $4,500 per ounce by year-end 2026.
For equities, 43% see the S&P 500 ending 2026 between 7,000 and 7,500. Only 1% see it above 8,500.
And for ten-year yields, 45% expect 4%-4.5% at year-end 2026.
What Could Wreck the Party?
The most bearish scenario for 2026, according to 45% of respondents, is renewed inflation and Fed rate hikes. AI capital spending hitting a wall ranks second at 26%.
Interestingly, 62% still describe the next 12 months as "stagflation"—meaning below-trend growth combined with above-trend inflation. Not exactly the soft landing narrative, but here we are.
So here's the setup: cash is at a two-year low, everyone's counting on a soft landing and Fed rate cuts, and positioning is tilted heavily toward risk assets. The question isn't complicated—it's just uncomfortable. What happens if the Fed doesn't cut?
Bank of America's chief investment strategist Michael Hartnett summed it up nicely, describing the current investor crowd as "capex rich, cash poor, and rate-cut needy." Historically, that's been a mix that precedes painful reversals.
Markets have gotten used to the Fed riding to the rescue. If December brings a pause instead of a cut, we'll find out pretty quickly how much of this rally was built on that assumption.