Investor optimism stayed at par in October, but investors were glum about their own portfolios.
Investor optimism stayed at par in October, but investors were glum about their own portfolios, according to the UBS/Gallup Index of Investor Optimism.
The Index of Investor Optimism rose two points from September to a reading of 70.
However, the Personal Dimension of the Index, which measures investors' optimism about their own investment portfolios, tumbled sharply by 8 points to 62 from 70 in September.
The Economic Dimension of the Index, which measures investors' feelings about the direction of the overall U.S. increased 10 points from a reading of -2 in September to 8 in October.
Pessimism regarding the declining dollar grew to 39% this month, compared to 30% of investors who felt the same way in September.
Despite the fact that oil prices recently passed the $80 per barrel mark, investor worries regarding higher energy prices fell five percentage points in October, as 60% of investors said that they believe energy prices are hurting the current investment climate "a lot."
The survey, which was taken between Oct. 1 and Oct. 14, sampled 804 investors with household with total savings and investments of $10,000 or more.
UBS AG is based in New York and the Galllup Organization is based in Washington.