Insights

Institutional Investor Indicators: August 2025

Institutional investors indicators august 2025

The State Street Risk Appetite Index remained positive in August, continuing a four-month run of upbeat sentiment as investors kept calm in a month of potentially significant headline risk.

September 2025

Our monthly video series offers an updated analysis of our institutional investor indicators.

  • Our Institutional Investor Holdings Indicator shows the aggregate holdings of institutional investors across three asset classes: stocks, bonds and cash. This simple information can tell us a lot about how investors view the economy and markets.
  • Our Institutional Investor Risk Appetite Indicator is based on flows — buying and selling activity — rather than portfolio positions. It reveals whether investors, in aggregate, are buying risk or selling it. While the Holdings Indicator tells us about the current location, the Risk Appetite Indicator tells us about the direction of travel.
Institutional investors indicators chart august 2025

The State Street Holdings indicators show that long-term investor allocations to equities continued to dip from the post-global financial crisis highs earlier in the year. However, during August, the balance of behavior was constructive and these small adjustments do not counter the broader shift in risk-taking in a meaningful way.

View August 2025 commentary by Timothy Graf, head of EMEA Macro Strategy for Markets.
 


Despite rising challenges to United States central bank independence and a renewed focus on sovereign fiscal policies, our broad measures of risk appetite continued to show resilience and positivity through August. Equity markets made new all-time highs just before month end and volatility measures continue to drift lower. Investors have a solid second-quarter earnings season, especially from the all-important tech sector and a modest, dovish pivot in Fed communications to thank for these positive catalysts.

Within the month, the weight to equities, the riskiest class of assets, did drop a touch in favor of cash and bonds. However, this shift is a modest adjustment to what is still a large overweight and not enough to derail the risk-seeking message across the broader suite of institutional flow indicators. Indeed, we have not seen a risk-averse tilt to investor behavior since May.

Digging deeper, US dollar (USD) selling remains a risk-positive mainstay of our flows, but USD holdings now show a pronounced underweight worth bearing in mind in the coming months. The message from currencies is not all risk-positive, as the buying of low yielding, funding currencies like the euro and Swiss franc remained robust. However, we also saw buying of riskier commodity currencies, such as the Canadian dollar, as a complement to the USD selling. In equity markets, the US remains the largest country-level overweight by some distance, but August saw a continued uptick in interest in riskier emerging market shares and a slight paring of the US overweight. Flows into Chinese equities were particularly strong and continue a pattern of greater interest in Asia this month, as well as in emerging markets versus developed market equities more broadly. Finally, demand for US Treasuries remains tepid, as does the overall appetite for duration.

Institutions also continue to unwind some of the inflows into European shares from earlier this year and positions in European equities are now back to underweight. This has not fed through into the euro, where demand remains strong, as it does for the majority of non-USD currencies. A weaker flow profile for European government bonds, presumably thanks to renewed headlines on government instability in core European markets, has also not fed through into the currency, but euro overweights are now quite extended and this consensus risk is worth future consideration.
 

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