KEY POINTS
  • "The weaker Euro helps Eurozone, but the global investor flows are likely to stay on the sidelines as Italy will remain an issue in the background, with the new populist government being potentially quite confrontational," Europe-based global equity strategist Mislav Matejka and his team said in a Monday report.
  • They reduced their rating on euro zone stocks to neutral, from overweight, in a global regional portfolio, and moved the funds to the U.S., raising their allocation to overweight from neutral.
  • On Friday, Italy swore a populist coalition into power, bringing some closure to political turmoil that hit global markets last week.
Italy's Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte reviews the guard of honour at Chigi palace in Rome, Italy, June 1, 2018.

J.P. Morgan is selling European stocks and buying American ones in the wake of Italy's political crisis.

"The weaker Euro helps Eurozone, but the global investor flows are likely to stay on the sidelines as Italy will remain an issue in the background, with the new populist government being potentially quite confrontational," Europe-based global equity strategist Mislav Matejka and his team said in a Monday report.