My answer is “Yes.”
If we look back into the last century (when I started managing equity portfolios), the world equity markets experienced a number of seismic changes that tilted the balance in favor of foreign stock markets over the US for decades. They were:
–the world forced Japan to revalue its currency in the early 1980s, sparking the years-long flowering of the domestic Japanese economy, at the expense of export-oriented manufacturing. This is the reverse of the change it appears to me that the Trump administration is trying to accomplish in the US (a second key difference being Washington’s violent ICE campaign of terror, which, from an economic point of view, will likely negate some/all of the benefits of dollar devaluation
–faced with the wreckage of the Chinese economy under Mao, his 1978 successor, Deng, replaced central economic planning with “socialism with Chinese characteristics,” meaning capitalism, which resulted in an explosion of economic growth for decades there
–European countries formed the European Union in 1993, triggering a surge of economic growth there as countries and industries expanded to serve the much-enlarged common market.
This situation changed very dramatically as the new century dawned:
–there was an explosion of economic growth through internet-related companies, mostly based in the US, that began right around the turn of the century
–Deng died in 1997 and was ultimately succeeded by Xi, who, fearing the demise of the Chinese Communist Party, reinstituted (economic growth-inhibiting) central planning control from Beijing.
–the Japanese working population peaked in 1993, but the country declined to tap the brain power of women workers and continued to oppose immigration. The country has been pretty much a spent force since
–EU members began to chafe as individual country authority was supplanted by Brussels, with the result that the UK, arguably the union’s most important member, voted to secede from the union in 2016.
The result of all this was that world portfolio investment shifted dramatically away from areas now perceived as weak to the new source of strong economic growth, the US.
Today:
–Xi has been forced, kicking and screaming, to reembrace Deng initiatives to avoid the collapse of the Chinese economy that his Maoist policies was leading to
–the UK is (hard to believe, but the case) starting to realize what a horrible mistake Brexit was. So maybe Europe has bottomed
–US voters, on the other hand, have put in power an administration that appears to have two economic goals: to shrink the domestic workforce, using terror as a key tactic; and to lower interest rates (whether the economy needs this or not, I think). ICE and tariffs are the two main tools. As I see it, tariffs differ from income taxes in two ways: they obscure the fact of taxation; and, because they’re a tax on consumption, they’re paid disproportionately by the less wealthy.
Foreign holders of US Treasuries seem to believe that the result, if not the purpose, of lowering interest rates will be to create inflation that will reduce Treasuries’ real value. If press reports are correct, foreign central banks have so far moved to protect themselves from this move by hedging their dollar currency exposure, generating the sharp decline in the US currency we’ve experienced since the inauguration.
The result, I think, is that global investors, still with massive weightings in US securities, are trying to do two things: reduce their overall exposure to the US, and shift their US equity orientation toward the well-understood emerging markets model. My impression, which really is only a guess, is that US-based investors are farther long in this process than the rest of the world.