To: jeevacationepgmail.com[jeevacation©gmail.corn]; Undisclosed recipients:[@)
From: US GIO
Sent Fri 10/19/2012 8:11:03 PM
Subject: JPM View 10.19.2012
JPM View 10.19.2012-pdf.zip
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J.P. Morgan Clot
19 Oi
The J.P. Morgan View
The mean and the mode
• Asset allocation — Our modal forecasts on the economy and earnings are still Glob
edging down but so are downside risks. such that the probability-weighted Jan I
means are instead rising. We stay long risk assets. and add longs in euro (1-21:
periphery bonds and shorts m overall bond duration. With event risks moving Jan Joe
from China and Europe to the US. we move underweight US equities and JPMcu
overweight USTs vs. Europe. while staving short the dollar.
Johr
(44-2C
• Economics — US 2013 growth is lowered by 0_2•. to 1.7% as we raise 2013
phn.n
fiscal drag to -2%.
J.P.
• Fixed Income — Look for the rally in Euro area peripherals to continue. Niko
(44.2(
• Equities — UW US equities within a global portfolio into 2013. ntkola
J.P. Itt
• Credit — We lower our YE US HG spread target to 135bp. down from 150bp.
Sear
• Currencies — A Romney win should be dollar bearish. as it boosts risk assets. (44-2(
seam
• Commodities — We stay long base metals. J.P. Re
Matti
• Risk markets continue to yo-yo, with this week being up. while last week
(44-2(
was down. Bond markets are minoring the move, in reverse. Most markets math.
remain within their 2-month range. but credit is outperforming with spreads
J P. 1$0
reaching new lows for the year.
Leo I
• We continue to see risk markets supported by a better mean, despite a poorer (44-2C
Mont
mode. That is statistics language for saying that our best-guess modal forecasts
for global economic growth and earnings next year are still edging gently down.
but the probability weighted mean of different outcomes for next year is. in YTD
contrast, still slowly improving. This is because we and the market are X, eq•
gradually seeing less downside risk emanating from China and Europe, even as
concerns are rising about the so-called US fiscal cliff.
• The economic data flow continues to show signs of a bottoming and a coming
rebound in growth. A few weeks ago, we got upward moves in PMIs. and
especially in orders relative to inventories. This week, we received strong
demand-side data on consumption for September in the US. UK and China.
Business capital spending remains weak, though. Watch out next week for US
durables and flash PMIs for further confirmation of the coining rebound. On the
policy side. our US economists reassessed the likely fiscal tightening next year
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