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Richard Madigan, Chief Investment Officer, J.P. Morgan Private Bank November 2012 A brief introduction (and a promise) For those of you who don’t know me from my former position as Chief Investment Officer of the Global Access Portfolios, where I oversaw $16 billion in private and institutional client assets, I want to briefly introduce myself in my new role as Chief Investment Officer of the J.P. Morgan Private Bank. I’ve been part of the investment and strategy team at the Private Bank since 2004, when I returned to the firm to work with Michael Cembalest as he assembled a global strategy team to work on behalf of private clients. I was responsible for global multi-asset investment strategy and asset allocation for our international clients before taking on the role as CIO for Global Access. During my time with Global Access, I wrote a regular investment strategy note, Market Thoughts, which we sent to clients globally. In my new role, I want to re-establish the discipline of putting pen to paper around our market views: what we are thinking, what we are seeing as core investment themes, and how we are investing across global markets. There is nothing more humbling than writing down and clearly explaining what you think, and why, about the world and markets. I have a well-established practice with our family physician: I promise not to confuse him with investment nonsense if he promises not to do the same with medical gibberish. I promise the same clarity with this note. Same as it ever was “Once in a Lifetime” is a song by the band Talking Heads. It has come to mind repeatedly as I‘ve listened to the media talk about the recent U.S. elections. There is a line in the song that keeps repeating the phrase “same as it ever was,” which seems to be, post-election, where we’ve landed. The United States just ran a national election where an estimated $6 billion was spent campaigning. The result across Congress, state governorships and the presidential popular vote was effectively a 50/50 split. Ironically, an election this important is supposed to help bring direction and clarity, and instead we have continued short-term uncertainty. We believe that will translate into a market that trends higher over the next 12 months, but with air pockets. Right now, the most important policy debate and air pocket is around the fiscal cliff. The good and bad news is we have to see movement in the next few months. There isn’t a choice. The one thing that did ring clearly from the U.S. election is the degree of frustration around partisan bickering and policy inaction. This was Obama’s last campaign, so he is playing for posterity. Congress recognizes it is already playing to mid-term elections in 2014, and while I never count on pragmatism from politicians, it’s actually in everyone’s interest for the first time in three years to work together. Everyone wins, and if not, has the other side to blame come 2014. Looking ahead From a macro perspective, we believe the global economy is bottoming, though we are likely to sit along the bottom of a U-shaped recovery into early next year: growing, but not yet inspiring. The immediate effects on growth from Hurricane Sandy are going to need to be better understood, along with how protracted a recession Europe is facing. Markets reflect expectations, and already, data that is less bad shows improved leading indicators, consumer confidence and surprise indices. So less bad will eventually be good; we simply need to see a trough in activity to lessen market uncertainty. Economic data has been surprising to the upside Economic surprises; Index level 100 50 0 -50 Developed Markets -100 Emerging -150 Markets 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: Citigroup, Bloomberg. Data as of November 2012. Global manufacturing and services survey J.P. Morgan Global Composite PMI 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Bloomberg. Data as of October 2012. 1 market thoughts Our core macro view remains that the global economy continues to muddle through. We see U.S. growth between +1.5% and 2.0%, Europe continuing to work its way out of recession, and emerging economies growing +4%–5%, led by China as growth moves to a more sustainable trend-like +7%–8%. Global growth next year should be somewhere between +2.5% and 3%. China has just gone through a major political transition. We expect the new Government to focus on reform initiatives and inward investment. As my team in Hong Kong continues to remind me, 7% growth feels pretty good. There simply isn’t the sense of concern or urgency in China as there has been outside the country around a Chinese hard landing. It’s a domestic economy that is maturing, which is exactly what we expect to see ahead. With the U.S. election behind us, we believe there should be little doubt across markets that until inflation becomes a meaningful concern, central banks will continue to make holding cash and core bonds frustrating for investors—slowly pushing investors to take on incremental risk across markets. But like deleveraging, increased risk taking needs to be a process, not an event. Fundamentals matter I’m a pragmatist in life and as an investor, especially when measuring and trying to understand risk. My team is very much macro driven, and I believe in fundamentals (as a parent, I have to). I like to have a view on both the upside and downside of an investment. My favorite investment ratio is 2:1, when thinking about the potential upsiderelative-to-downside, and those investments are hard to find. Credit has been one of them. I recently challenged our quantitative research and analytics team to help me think about the benefits and the risk in portfolio diversification. We continue to have significant investment tilts across our portfolios, and I wanted to make sure we weren’t taking on additional risk because of a lack of diversification. My intuition is that there is far less benefit today than there has been traditionally in a set-it and forget-it approach to asset allocation (something we don’t practice). Let me also add that there is a tremendous difference between an investor who is less diversified and one who is out of the market, which continues to be painful for many investors still on the sidelines. The team looked back to 1991 at the correlation between assets across world equity, bond, commodity and foreign exchange markets. What we found is that correlation across risk assets has been particularly high since the 2008 financial crisis. You get less benefit owning a little bit of everything and a great deal more reward for being disciplined and investing only where you see the most value. What was even more interesting is that while some of this is obviously cyclical, there appears to be a structural pattern here as well. Correlation across risk assets has risen 0.80 0.70 0.60 0.50 0.40 0.30 0.20 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 Source: J.P. Morgan Private Bank, Bloomberg. Data as of November 2012. Why is this relevant? Because it helps explain why we’ve been comfortable barbelling the risk we’ve taken across portfolios this year with a significant overweight to credit markets; it’s allowed us to own less equities for similar returns. Effectively, we’ve been able to take normal levels of risk in portfolios but focus on the higher certainty of those returns coming from yield rather than more volatile equity price appreciation. We still see fundamental value in our credit allocations, but the return ahead is going to be driven by yield or the coupon, not by bond price appreciation. I’m going to argue that it places us right where we should be in the deleveraging and global recovery cycle. It’s time to revisit the balance of how we are taking risk in portfolios. If we want to achieve similar portfolio returns next year, we’ll need to take more directional risk where we see value across global markets. The end of “easy money” Index 2012 YTD Return Annualized Return Realized Volatility* Global Equities (MSCI World) 8.6% 10.8% 19.1% J.P. Morgan Developed High Yield Bonds 12.7% 22.4% 9.4% Investment Grade (JULIexEM) 9.9% 11.9% 4.9% Emerging Market Debt (J.P. Morgan EMBI) 16.1% 16.5% 6.9% Source: Bloomberg. Data from January 2009 through November 14, 2012. * Data from January 2009 through October 2012. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. 2 market thoughts The great rotation There is an awful lot being written about the next bursting bubble, which, according to pundits, is fixed income. The fear is either that inflation very quickly begins to reaccelerate because of monetary policy and central banks will need to aggressively slam on the policy brakes, or that investors are going to begin a Great Rotation out of fixed income. The Great Rotation scare being talked about argues that individual investors will apparently all wake up one day and collectively sell their bonds to buy stocks. For individual investors, it’s very unlikely that we will see selling of core bonds until investors actually lose money—and we don’t expect that to happen soon. In our portfolios next year, we envision owning more world equity markets, and owning less cash and short-duration fixed income. So I agree with the risk rotation, but a mad dash by individual investors out of fixed income seems unnecessary and unlikely. The balancing act for central banks is to try to stimulate growth without provoking inflation. There is enough excess capacity in labor markets that the greater policy concern remains disinflationary pressure. While we are keeping a close eye on inflation expectations, which have been rising, our economics team continues to believe inflation comes after growth and therefore isn’t a threat to this cycle of easy monetary policy. We expect the Fed, European Central Bank and Bank of Japan will continue to promote “easy money.” There is going to be an inflation shock that will come with accelerating growth—we just don’t see it next year. But in preparation for that scenario, our team has already begun to do work on the theme of inflation protection. Inflation expectations remain stable 5Y5Y forward breakeven inflation 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% -1% -2% -3% 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: Bloomberg. Data as of November 2012. U.S. inflation is not yet troubling U.S. CPI YoY NSA 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% -1% -2% -3% 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: Bloomberg, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Data as of November 2012. Now what? We invest with a 12-month outlook, but also take advantage of short-term trading opportunities. But to borrow a phrase from my daughter, patience is the key to joy. Into year-end, markets face higher uncertainty and weaker activity. We are going to see more headlines, unfortunately with less real news. In the short term, both issues will extract a higher risk premia from risk assets, which should create some interesting opportunities. For where we believe the macro cycle is right now, we want to be increasing our allocation to equities as we look into 2013. We continue to barbell those equity allocations between the United States, which continues to lead the global recovery, and emerging markets, where we see significant growth potential. While we have added to our exposure in Europe and continue to see scope for investment opportunity ahead, we don’t feel it’s a market that is gapping away from us. We are also doing tactical work in our hedge fund allocations. We are looking to be more directional in our risk taking next year, particularly looking at long/short and eventdriven strategies. In fixed income, we continue to like credit, but need to be more selective. We are looking at total and absolute return fixed income strategies that can be more nimble in how they invest duration. We expect to hold less short-duration and cash next year across portfolios. As a last mention, for anyone looking for a timely read, I just finished William Silber’s book about Paul Volcker. It is great context for how we got to where we are today and a reminder that while the past doesn’t ever exactly repeat itself, it does rhyme. It’s also a subtle reminder of why strong leadership and bipartisan counsel are essential for effectively navigating the road ahead. I very much look forward to our ongoing investment dialogue with you. Richard Madigan November 2012 3 Richard Madigan is Chief Investment Officer and Head of Investment Strategy for J.P. Morgan Private Bank. In his role, he is responsible for the development of investment strategy, tactical and strategic asset allocation for over $800 billion in high-net-worth and institutional client assets. Richard is Chair of the Private Bank’s Global Investment Committee. The Private Bank CIO Team is composed of market strategy, portfolio construction and a dedicated quantitative research and analytics team that also oversees investment risk. The team is global, with senior CIO Team members based in New York, London, Geneva, Hong Kong and Singapore. Strategy and Portfolio Construction for Latin America are based in New York. Previously, Richard held the title of Chief Investment Officer for the Global Access Portfolios, where he and his team managed in excess of $16 billion in client assets across 35 countries. Richard brings over 20 years of experience in portfolio management and international capital markets to the firm. Prior to his current role at J.P. Morgan, he held the title of Managing Director, Head of Emerging Markets Investments and Senior Portfolio Manager at Offitbank, a New York–based wealth management boutique, where he managed peak assets in excess of $1 billion in both domestic and offshore portfolios, including the firm’s flagship emerging markets mutual fund. He was also a senior member of the firm’s investment committee. Before joining Offitbank, Richard worked for J.P. Morgan’s Investment Banking division in New York in the emerging markets securities business. He previously spent six years with Citicorp, first as a banker in Mexico and then in the firm’s international corporate finance division in New York. Richard's commentaries have appeared in the Financial Times, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and Reuters. He is a frequent guest speaker on CNBC, and has also appeared on CNN and Bloomberg News, as well as various industry conferences. Richard holds a master’s degree from New York University, where he majored in Finance and International Business. He has lived both in Europe and Latin America, and currently resides with his wife and children in New York City. The material contained herein is intended as a general market commentary. Opinions expressed herein are those of Richard Madigan and may differ from those of other J.P. Morgan employees and affiliates. This information in no way constitutes J.P. Morgan research and should not be treated as such. Further, the views expressed herein may differ from that contained in J.P. Morgan research reports. The above summary/prices/quotes/statistics have been obtained from sources deemed to be reliable, but we do not guarantee their accuracy or completeness, any yield referenced is indicative and subject to change. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. References to the performance or character of our portfolios generally refer to our Balanced Model Portfolios constructed by J.P. Morgan. It is a proxy for client performance and may not represent actual transactions or investments in client accounts. The model portfolio can be implemented across brokerage or managed accounts depending on the unique objectives of each client and is serviced through distinct legal entities licensed for specific activities. Bank, trust and investment management services are provided by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A, and its affiliates. Securities are offered through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC (JPMS), member NYSE, FINRA and SIPC. Securities products purchased or sold through JPMS are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); are not deposits or other obligations of its bank or thrift affiliates and are not guaranteed by its bank or thrift affiliates; and are subject to investment risks, including possible loss of the principal invested. Not all investment ideas referenced are suitable for all investors. Speak with your J.P. Morgan representative concerning your personal situation. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any financial instrument. Private investments may engage in leveraging and other speculative practices that may increase the risk of investment loss, can be highly illiquid, are not required to provide periodic pricing or valuations to investors and may involve complex tax structures and delays in distributing important tax information. Typically, such investment ideas can only be offered to suitable investors through a confidential offering memorandum, which fully describes all terms, conditions and risks. MSCI World Index—The MSCI World Index is a capitalization weighted index that monitors the performance of stocks from around the world J.P. Morgan Developed Market High Yield Index (JPM Global High Yield)—An index of developed market high yield bonds J.P. Morgan Investment Grade Index (ex Emerging Markets)—An index of investment grade corporate bonds, excluding emerging markets J.P. Morgan Emerging Markets Bond Index—An index of emerging market bonds 1012-0637-01 4
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Market Thoughts_Nov 2012.pdf - Epstein Files Document HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030840

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