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Investment Strategist Ups Stock Allocation

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Bloomberg News

The biggest bear among Wall Street strategists is becoming more bullish.

CIBC World Markets Inc. chief U.S. investment strategist Subodh Kumar recommended Tuesday that investors increase to 75% the amount of their portfolios allocated to stocks, up from his previous recommendation of 55%. He said stocks will benefit from expectations that earnings growth would pick up in 2002.

Kumar recommended investors reduce the percentage of their portfolios dedicated to bonds to 20% from 35% and the amount they keep in cash to 2% from 5%. He said the remaining amount should be invested in real estate.

Kumar previously had the lowest recommended stock allocation on Wall Street, according to Bloomberg News data.

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“I’ve had a balanced portfolio for the past couple of years” because the risk of a decline in stocks outweighed the potential return, Kumar said in an interview. Now, “bond yields have bottomed out, cash returns are low and equities are already discounting a recession.”

He recommended investors allocate less of their portfolios to utilities and large-capitalization pharmaceutical stocks than their market capitalizations warrant.

Kumar also said investors should buy energy and financial stocks in proportion to their weights in benchmark indexes. Energy accounts for 7.1% of the S&P; 500, while financial stocks account for 17.3%.

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