EFTA02572697.pdf
dataset_11 pdf 820.4 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 6 pages
From: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 10, 2013 12:16 PM
To: Barrett, Paul S
Subject: Re: FW: The J.P. Morgan View : What countries to buy or sell
ok
On Sat, Aug 10, 2013 at 5:37 AM, Barrett, Paul S
> wrote:
Jeffrey
I think we should add another 2mm to that European equity basket. We went f=rther overweight Europe.
Paul Barrett I Managing Director I Global Investment Opportunities Group I =.P. Morgan Private Bank I
Original Message
From: Perlman, Daniel A
Sent: Friday, August 09, 2013 05:09 PM Eastern Standard Time
To:
Subject: The J.P. Morgan View : What countries to buy or sell
Global Asset Allocation
The J.P. Morgan View: What countries to buy =r sell
Click here for =he full Note and disclaimers.
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• Asset allocation ** An increasing part of our allocation exposure is now in country choi=es. We raise our
European overweight, and are considering at what point we=need to cut our EM underweight vs. Japan.
• Economics •• Data are tracking the expected rebound in Global GDP growth, with ba=anced risk. But we
are seeing increasing signs of a rebound in manufacturi=g. Europe Q2 is raised to 1%, but Russia and Mexican growth
forecasts for =013/14 are cut.
• Fixed Income" Bond duration should be traded on local conditions: short in US, Eur= area and EM; long
in Japan and Australia, neutral in the UK.
• Equities •• Open a Cyclical vs. Defensive sector overweight globally. Cut by hal= the overweight in Japan
vs. EM.
Credit • * OW financials vs. non financials and Europe vs. the US.
FX • • We resist the rise in GBP and EUR vs. USD and expect them to fall ba=k again within this year's
range.
Commodities ** Take profit on OW energy vs. base metals and open an outright long i= energy.
• Click her= for video. <http://emaillink.jpmorgan.com/t=AQ/AAMGjA/AAYLOg/O1FDJA/Ael/ABWW-
Q/AQ/VEul>
• Our top investment recommendation remains =o be aggressively overweight equities versus cash and
fixed income. But b=yond that, we have concentrated much of our tactical risk on country and r=gional allocations. How
do we allocate here? What is working, or not worki=g? And where are we considering change?
• Our top regional allocation has been to underweight EM against DM across asset classes. The rationale
has be=n predominantly fundamental in that we and the consensus have been forced =o steadily lower our growth
expectations in EM, outright and relative to D=. We do not yet have reason to change this assessment. The past few
weeks of lower EM PMIs and the weak t=acking of Q3 activity data versus forecasts leave us with further downside=risks
on EM growth projections.
• This week alone, we cut Mexico and Russia.=EM policy makers on average will likely not provide much
support, in some =ountries because inflation remains too high, and in others because capital=outflows have put
downside pressure on the currency that is preventing their central banks from easin= rates. In addition, as reviewed in
Job gains to lag global growth lift, Kasman et al., July 24, we see =ailing EM profit margins, in response to tight labor
markets and rising wa=e costs, also depressing EM growth.
• That said, we will not remain underweight =M forever, as relative value is getting re-established, many
active invest=rs are already UW, and at some point, the rebound in DM should pull EM out=of its funk. This week's data
dump from China is providing support for our projected rebound in gro=th from Hl*s 6.5% to 7.5% in H2. EM equities
are still underperforming t=is week, but at a slower pace now. EM is holding itself vs. DM in credit a=d FX over the past
month.
• We think it too early to move back to OW E= asset classes, given still downside risk on EM forecasts, and
are instead=trimming UWs selectively, especially in fixed income and FX.
• Our European overweight is working =icely and is getting good support from economic data. This week
alone prov=ded upside surprises on economic activity data, allowing us to raise Q2 to=1% in the Euro area. The
challenge we all face on Europe, after years of crisis and recession, =s whether the rebound is a *dead cat bounce*, born
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from a relief that =urope is at least not blowing up this year, or whether we can see Europe o=fering good value and
economic upside over the more medium term.
* We are somewhere in the middle here, seein= the rebound a reflection of more rational policy making
(more monetary po=icy support and a move from destructive austerity) and progress towards re=ucing EMU North
South imbalances. Wage cost gaps between the core and periphery are shrinking an= the periphery's current account
deficit has virtually disappeared. The =urrent quiet in euro financial markets, supported by the OMT and ESM, coul= thus
last for years. We note that this does not mean that Europe will become an economic locomotive, as supp=y-side
economics and macro stimulus are sorely missing. Overall, with a co=tinued absence of a funding crisis, relative value
and client flows will d=ive performance, in our view. We stay overweight European equities relative to EM, and credit
against the U=, as the great rotation has arrived in the US, but not in Europe.</=>
" We have been overweight Japanese eq=ities versus EM since Nov of last year, to position for Japanese
reflation= This has performed well, but has lost money over the past month, as econo=ic data have started to disappoint
against our quite bullish expectations. We cut 2013 Japan gr=wth from 2.2% to 2.0% today, and in GMOS this week took
half profit on our OW. This is largely position =anagement as we remain long-term bullish on Japanese reflation and
equitie=.
Fixed l=come
• Bond yields followed equity markets down t=is week. Globally, we retain a bearish bias on bonds, but do
not see this =s a structural short as the expected rise in yield is likely to remain une=en, and highly variable by country.
• In the US, we retain a bearish bias on mom=ntum, the start of tapering next month, and evidence of
investors switchin= broadly from fixed income to equities. We continue to execute this view b= selling the belly of the
curve 5s against l0s and 2s. In euros, we stay short 10-year Bunds on =teadily improving economic data. In sterling, the
move to rate guidance by=the BoE if anything increases uncertainty and we move from bullish to neut=al. And in Japan,
we remain positive duration. In Australia, we stay bullish as the RBA has further room to eas=. We stay bearish in local
EM bonds.
Equitie=
* The prospective rebound in global manuf=cturing is inducing us to open an overweight in Cyclical vs.
Defensive=equity sectors globally. Both our US and European equity strategists are c=rrently favoring Cyclical sectors.
• It is true that the global manufacturing P=I has not yet staged a convincing rebound. But our economists
are confiden= of a manufacturing rebound in the coming months, driven initially by DM e=onomies but also pulling EM
economies along on the way up. China's July activity indicators are a=ding conviction to this view.
• Is this is a reason to reverse our EM equi=y underweight? We do not think so. We think that a better trade
to position for a rebound in global manufac=uring is via a Cyclical vs. Defensive sector overweight rather than an EM =s.
DM equity overweight. This is because the driver of this manufactur=ng rebound emanates from within DM rather than
EM.
* Are depressed valuations a good reason =o buy EM equities? We do not think so, either. It is true that the
PE gap between=MSCI World and MSCI EM indices has been widening for two years now to well=above historical
averages, 3.8 pts currently vs. a historical average of 2=7. This 3.8pt gap is above average but not exceptionally high as
shown in the chart above. Gaps=of this magnitude could have been used as an argument to buy EM equities a= the
beginning of the year or in 1995/1996, but that would have proved a d=sastrous bet. In addition, the valuation gap
between EM and DM equities narrows if one adjusts for the hi=her weight of commodity sectors in EM which typically
trade at a lower mul=iple than other sectors.
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* This is not to say that value is not usefu=. We do believe that value combined with a positive fundamental
change pro=ides a good reason to overweight a region or sector. And this is why we in=tead overweight Europe in our
regional portfolio.
* Japanese equities have stopped outperfo=ming. We reduced our overweigh= in Japanese vs. EM equities
in our model portfolio in this week's GMOS. There is currently no policy impetus and the positive economic=news is
largely priced in. In addition, CFTC spec positions on Nikkei are =rifting lower, suggesting that overseas investors have
started taking prof=t on the Japanese equity trade.
Credit<=span>
* US Financials have outperformed Non=F inancials recently and are now only 1 lbp wider in spread, close to
the 8b= multi-year tight reached in May. We expect continued Financials outperfor=ance due to stronger fundamentals,
the recovery in Europe, and the deterioration of some non-Fi=ancial sectors driven by commodity trends, competitive
environment and sha=eholder friendly activity (CMOS, Eric Beinstein et al., Aug 9). We =re OW both US and European
financials in our GMOS portfolio.
• In Europe, the improved economic ou=look and continued strong demand for quality spread product are
strong pos=tives. At this point, we see more upside on our European growth forecasts =han in the US. In addition, as we
argued in last week's Flows & Liquidity, Who is driv=ng the great rotation?, Aug 2, US investors are moving from fixed
inco=e into equities but we are not seeing this rotation in Europe, giving supp=rt for euro spread product relative to the
US market. Euro spreads used to trade well below US spreads before the=great recession (see chart on the right) and
with some form of normality r=turning to the Euro area, we think there is reason to believe that euro sp=eads will again
trade well below US spreads.
Foreign=Exchange
* With US 10-yr yields side-winding around 2=6% for almost two months and FX volumes down to their
typical August lows,=the dollar index is freefalling. The trade-weighted currency (JPMQUSD) has=declined for four of the
past five weeks, and while moves have been inconsistent across pairs, =ome of this year's biggest losers (JPY, GBP, NZD,
NOK, ZAR) have becom= this month's biggest gainers. When the dollar was rallying in late spri=g it seemed
unreasonable to expect the move to be so broad and persistent throughout 2013, since that view assume= that only the
US economy would perk up in Q2/Q3. Instead, selective USD s=rength has been our message for months. Now that the
dollar is collapsing =n a number of crosses, it also seems hasty to extrapolate. The baseline view this fall for a higher US=
vs Asia and some commodity currencies (AUD, ZAR) is unchanged, even w=th better Chinese data. If China only manages
to stabilize but US rates he=d higher this fall, commodity FX like AUD will probably decline.
* The euro and sterling have bounced 3% over=the past month, moves which are middle-of-the-pack
globally but nonetheles= surprising given the forward guidance the ECB and BoE premiered or previe=ed on July 4. Since
these banks were unveiling guidance in the context of economies exiting recessio= (Euro area) or sub-trend growth (UK),
and since US rates seemed headed hi=her, our view then was that rate guidance would weaken EUR and GBP within
=heir ranges but strengthen some Central European currencies like PLN. What explains EUR and GBP's rise= Growth
surprises, mainly. More Euro area and UK releases than US ones h=ve been beating expectations since May, despite a
few high-profile beats i= the US like Q2 GDP and PMIs/ISMs. And since bond markets tend to move as much on data
momentum as they do on cen=ral bank policy, forward guidance may only be relevant once the consensus =evelops a
more realistic view on European/UK growth, or until US data exhi=it more consistency. Unless we have seriously
misjudged the likelihood of a US acceleration this fall as =iscal drag fades, or unless we have underestimated the ability
of Europe t= deliver above-trend growth for a few quarters, EUR/USD and GBP/USD should=revert lower by a few cents
but remain within this year's range.
Commodi=ies
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* We have been OW energy vs. base metals<=b> since early April on downside risk in China while we
expected more upsi=e in oil, given tighter supply conditions and Middle East risk. This week =as brought two significant
upside surprises in the Chinese economic data, trade and IP. Additionally,=our metals strategists expect an acceleration
in physical metal demand fro= here due to better Chinese end user demand (see Metals Monthly: China likely to lift
metals in 2H2013, Kaneva et al.= Jul 31). These two data points are not yet enough to create upside risk o= our Chinese
GDP growth forecast, but they do remove a lot of the downside=and given that metal prices are close to production
costs, we think risks are probably more balanced now. =ur position is up some 10% since inception and we now take
profit. We also close our UW in base metals in our GM=S long/only portfolio, leaving us OW energy vs. precious metals.
* We open an outright long in energy in our long/short portfolio as we still th=nk there is some upside risk
in oil from here given improving US and Europ=an demand coupled with significant supply uncertainty in the Middle East
(=ee Commodity Markets Outlook and Strategy, Colin Fenton, Aug 8). Additi=nally, tight supplies in energy have caused
spot prices to be persistently=higher than forwards, something we expect to continue. This backwardation =f the curve
(downward sloping) is currently pricing a more than 1% a month return from holding the front =ontract and rolling down
into the second each month. This equates to over =2% a year only in roll/slide.
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(1-212) 834-5874 <tel:%281-212%29%20834-58=4>
John Normand <http://=maillink.jpmorgan.com/t/AQ/AAMGjA/AAYLC/g/QIFDJA/Ael/A8QyhQ/AWGNvy>
(44-20) 7134-1816
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