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Eye on the Market | August 4, 2011 J.P Morgan
Today
This is a little unorthodox, but here is the text of an internal note that I just sent to our integrated Private Bank client coverage
teams a few moments ago. Mary thought it would be a good idea to share this with our clients given the events of the day.
“Here is what I plan to say at our Aspen Insights conference tomorrow about today’s events. The last two weeks have been a
severe setback for financial markets and the global recovery.
1.
Today, Italian equity markets sold off sharply and were eventually shut down after the ECB (for now) rejected being
the buyer of last resort for Italian government bonds, as the markets were hoping. The Bundesbank apparently has
objections to the idea. This is a problem: Italy has issued around as much public debt as Germany, but is a considerably
smaller country with almost twice the debt load as a percentage of its GDP. Absent a decision by Germany to move to
Federalism or a lot more debt monetization by the ECB, the European Monetary Union (as it is currently configured) could
be facing its final stretch. Today’s reported move by Italian regulators to seize documents at Moody’s regarding declines in
Italian bank stocks is an indication of the pressure the system is under, and the possible search for scapegoats. I don’t think
you will find a firm that has written more often and more direly about the structural inconsistencies of the EMU than we
have (I have a 2-year bibliography of what we said and when, if anyone wants it). The “Sick Men of Europe” paper from
February 2010 and “Don Quixote Thanksgiving” from November 2010 go into the greatest detail on why. Our concerns
sky-rocketed upon Greece’s financial disclosures in November 2009, after which we took portfolio decisions to back that
up, purging exposures to the GIPSI countries from our credit, government bond and equity portfolios. Since early 2010, our
underweight positions in Europe represent the largest regional underweights we have ever held.
Will there be another recession in the US? Our friend Marty Feldstein at Harvard puts the odds at 50-50. Sell side
and buy side economists missed last month’s US economic rollover by a country mile, so I am not sure how much weight to
put in their current forecasts. Most summarily dismissed our concerns that the recovery earlier this year had elements of a
stimulus-driven mirage. Bridgewater Associates was the only firm we spoke to that consistently highlighted the broader
process of household deleveraging; and cautioned that when stimulus faded, so would the US economy, given the weakness
in household income. Their insights have been invaluable to us in terms of not stepping into this and taking too much risk
prematurely during the three market swoons this year. Our central scenario for the US in 2012 is not another recession, but
low growth in the 2.0% range, which is enough of a problem given the low job creation that entails. Note that the CBO
assumes growth rates of 3.0% to 3.6% over the next few years in their analyses of future US federal debt levels.
Do not blame today’s events on the debt ceiling debate, US politicians or European regulators. If we get to the point
where economic and profit fundamentals in a given market or region are not sustainable on their own, then we
should be underweight that region (as in Europe). Owning an asset class under the assumption that there will always be
a “Lord of the Flies” type rescue from Central Banks and Treasuries is very risky, and historically, fraught with failure. I
remember similar logic in the summer of 1998, when the accepted mantra was that the US would bail out Russia and Boris
Yeltsin, since President Clinton would not want to see a nuclear power like Russia slide back into Soviet rule, or anarchy
(that view turned out to be wrong). Anyone market-weight European risk out of the expectation that “Trichet and Merkel
will fix surely it” is taking a binary risk that impossible to handicap. Similarly, we should not start buying anything just
because we think Qe3 is coming in the US (in the form of securities purchases, a permanently controlled long bond, etc).
When we began this year, I made the following decision: we would risk underperforming if there was a strong equity
rally, out of concerns about the macroeconomic landscape (weakness in the West, inflation in the East). As a result,
we have held less equity exposure than usual for a period of high margins, low P/E multiples and strong earnings. Instead,
we’ve held larger exposures to investment grade and high yield credit, and hedge funds. Over the last couple of years, our
hedge funds (long-short funds with low net positions, macro hedge funds, distressed credit) have helped cushion portfolio
returns when markets declined. We won’t know until the data comes in, but we expect the same to happen this time.
The “Eye on the Market” has endlessly chronicled this year the fissures which are now affecting financial markets:
European sovereign risk and inadequate bank capitalization; weak labor compensation as an Achilles heel of the US profits
recovery, given its negative impact on spending; the political divide in Congress over how to deal with falling government
revenue and rising entitlement spending; inflation risks in Asia and Latin America and the resulting need for more policy
tightening; and the mixed track record of low interest rates to sustainability solve structural problems. The cover of the
2011 Outlook (a printing press, out of control) expressed our concern regarding a recovery built upon a stimulus machine.
I would contrast this with the cover of a competitor’s 2011 publication, which had a picture of George Washington crossing
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