France reports lesser number of retail stock traders in 2022

A study conducted by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) showed that that the number of active retail investors in the stock market has declined by 5.5 percent in 2022 compared to a year earlier.

The ninth edition of the AMF’s Active Retail Investor Dashboard saw a lesser inflow of new private investors, taking the overall number of individuals with brokerage accounts to nearly 1.5 million. That compares to 1.6 million investors in 2021 when the pandemic spurred a flood of new retail investors into the stock market.

In the quarter just ended, 604,000 traders placed at least one order to buy or sell shares. The figure was in line with previous quarters, with the exception of the second quarter when volumes were boosted by IPOs, the AMF said.

In Q3, when the stock market was well on its way to its worst quarter since 2008, the figure was down by 35 percent from the previous quarter. Judging by the prior years’ metrics, the curiosity over stock prices has returned back to its pre-pandemic levels.

“The uncertainties weighing on the markets are reflected in the lower activity of individual investors. With the markets declining for the third consecutive quarter, retail investors appear to have taken a wait-and-see approach and held their positions,” the AMF said.

Retail trading volumes also more than doubled in the last two years compared to the turnover observed in 2018 and 2019. This came as market volatility and Covid lockdowns created a unique opportunity for regular investors to play the stock market’s unprecedented rally.

The flow of new investors remained steady but seems to have levelled off at around 50,000 per quarter, the AMF notes.

These annual volumes match those achieved in 2020 when many French turned to trading as the central banks slashed rates to record lows, making banks’ deposits less attractive.

A big part of this growth was driven by first-time investors. However, the AMF found that these new investors are not just young people, they are also those elder but discovering investing for the first time.

Retail investing had been on the rise even before the Covid-19 crisis hit the world. But the novel virus gave just the push required to send young investors to the financial markets.

Financefeeds.com