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Eye on the Market I March 10.2011 J.P. M organ
Please join us next Tuesday, March 15, at 11:00 am ESTfor a conference call on the "Ides ofMarch" topics discussed last
week (see box). Vali Nasr, Professor ofInternational Politics at The Fletcher School ofLaw and Diplomacy, will join us. Mr.
Nasr, a specialist on political and social developments in the Muslim world, is a Senior Advisor to the U.S. State Department on
South Asia. You can get the dial-in informationfor the webcast front your coverage team.
As shown in the table below, as March began, the world was benefiting from a global recovery that was broadening and
deepening. This recovery has run headlong into a series of events that were both foreseen and unforeseen. The eruption of
political risk across the Arab world has been something of a surprise, although conditions leading to it were well understood for
years. As for problems in the European Monetary Union and the impact of tightening policy in Asia, they have been familiar
refrains around here for months, and were central to our 2011 Outlook. The whole point of the cover of the 2011 Eye on the
Market was that removal of the stimulus tsunami was never going to be that simple, that parts of the recovery were very
stimulus-dependent; and that the tsunami itself led to a variety of disruptions (e.g. rapidly rising commodity prices, particularly
in the wake of the Fed's August 2010 Jackson Hole speech) whose regressive consequences were troubling.
The Ides of March
Global Recovery in the Works March 3 Protests in Qatif. East Province of Saudi Arabia
°O of Countries Growing Faster than 3 Months Prior March 9 Irish Parliament recornenes with mandate to
revisit EU/IMF bailout
3-Mar-11 Nov-10 March 10 Moody's downgrades Spain to Aa2
March 11, 20 Days of Rage, Saudi Arabia
World 79% 38%
March 11 Eurozone summit (Heads of state)
Developed World 8,304, 70/0 March 14, 15 Eurogroup meeting (Ministers of Finance)
March 15 Federal Reserve Open Market Committee Meeting
Asia 88O/O 50% March 17 Bundestag vote on consultation requirement
Central & Eastern Europe 75% 25% March 24, 25 Main EU leaders meeting to finalize a deal
March 1 - 30 Central Bank meetings in Brazil, Mexico, Norway,
Latin America 60% 60% Indonesia, India, Taiwan, Korea, etc
Source: Bridgewater Associates Source:. Morgan Prrvate Bank
Instead of the traditional EoTM commentary, this
week I wanted to share some charts on oil, Europe,
equity markets and monetary policy that speak
mostly for themselves. They are part of our rationale
for holding less equity risk than what you might
normally associate with a period of elevated profit
margins, low P/E multiples in the developed world and
a global rebound in both manufacturing and services.
We continue to believe that certain styles of hedge
funds (e.g., macro, merger arbitrage, credit), diversified
commodity exposure and various forms of private
lending (e.g. purchases of distressed European bank
loans, well-collateralized loans to commercial property
borrowers) are important complements to equities for
the foreseeable future.
E Figure 1: Printing Press. The illustration
represents the money created by various central banks
since January 2008 to buy their own government
bonds, or government bonds of other countries to limit
exchange rate adjustments. Crates are labeled by
amount created, and expressed as a percentage of
GDP. (Cover of the 2011Eye on the Market)
EFTA00610624
Eye on the Market I March 10, 2011 J.P. Morgan
On oil, commercial inventories are at the high end of their historical ranges, and when adding in government Strategic Petroleum
Reserves, the buffer against a supply disruption is even higher. However. there is resistance to releasing the SPR, and US
commercial inventories tend to be concentrated in the Midwest. where they are not easily transportable to other areas to offset
rising prices. It's undeniably true that the oil intensity of growth has fallen since 1980. but we are getting closer to levels of gas
prices which have negatively impacted demand and consumption in prior cycles. As shown below. parts of Asia and Eastern
Europe are worst situated to absorb a sustained oil price increase. As discussed last week. Saudi capacity is being relied upon to
offset declines in Libyan production and potential declines in Algeria (although these have not happened to-date). We will focus
on Saudi Arabia on next week's call. Earlier today. Saudi police opened fire on protestors. according to news reports.
Commercial and government oil inventories Commercial oil inventories by region
Days of consumption Millions of barrels
100 200 Gulf Coast
i
1 1%, , United States with Strategic 1 %0% 180
90 ti %..
1 Petroleum Reserve id 160
%I% t • %it%
I I • A I V% i 140
80 ie..%
V%i"
sl 120
West Coast Midwest
70 100
80
60 OECD commercial
60
50 40
East Coast Rock Mountain
20
40 0
1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 1981 1984 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011
Source: BA. Morgan Asset Management. Source: Energy Information Administration.
Oil intensity declining worldwide US retail gas prices as a share of average hourly earnings
Billions of barrels/GDP Percent
3.6 25%
3.3 23%
3.0 21%
2.7 19%
2.4 17%
2.1 15%
1.8 13%
1.5
11%
1.2
9%
0.9
7%
0.6
50/
0.3
93 '94 95 '96 '97 '98 '99 90 '01 '02 93 '04 95 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10
1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010
Source. ISI Group.
Source: U.S. Departmentof En orgy. Bureau of labor Statistics.
Two views on the impact of an oil price shock Saud' Arabia spare capacity vs potential supply loss
%decline GDP Thousands barrels per day
0.0% 3.500
■ Canada
Australian • U.K Mexico 3.000
Euro land Japar• Brazil
• Poland Malaysia 2.500
Hungary • • U.S. • Argentina
ChinaU • Indonesia 2.000
IN Turkey
• Philippines 1.500
• Korea • India
MI S. Africa 1.000 Libya &
Taiwan
• Thailand 500
Algeria
exports
Ar.. Si
0
-1.0% -0.5% ISI 0.0% 0.5% 1999 2001 2002 2004 2005 2007 2008 2010
Source: Bridgewater Associates. ISI Group Source: Bloomberg.
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Eye on the Market I March 10.2011 J.P.Morgan
On Europe, solvency problems in Greece, Portugal and Ireland are increasingly being factored into both bond and
equity prices. This is a good thing, since it implies that some investors have already reconciled portfolios for potential debt
restructurings to come (question marks remain on European banks, whose trading books and investment portfolios may account
for sovereign bonds differently). On what to do next, both sides are pretty far apart and will have to compromise to avoid a very
negative market reaction to upcoming EU summits. Comments from outgoing Bundesbank President Axel Weber this week are
indicative of the challenges here: "Strong German import demand is insufficient to compensatefor the structural problems in the
countries concerned, where painful adjustment processes have to take place...I know that the necessary measures are painful
but they are also unavoidable".
Price for benchmark government bonds Heading into the March Summit meetings
Euros
Debtors want Creditors want
€100
• • Maturing extension on • Binding debt reduction
€95 EFSF and lower borrowing plans
€90 Portugal
• • EFSF purchases of • EU Commission
€85 government debt in monitoring of
€80 Ireland secondary markets competitiveness and
€75 productivity targets, with
Greece • fines for large imbalances
€70
• • Increase in EFSF • Constitutionally required
€65
capacity sovereign debt limits
€60
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 • Senior bank loan haircuts • Tax harmonization
Source: Bloomberg.
Europe cheap to US: price to earnings Europe cheap to US: price to book
Europe10-yr trailing PE divided by US 10-yr trailing PE Europe price to book divided by US price to book
1.25 095
1.15 090
1.05 0.85
0$5 0.80
0.85 0.75
am 0.70
ass 0.65
Jan-98 Jan-00 Jan-02 Jan-04 Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 Feb-04 Feb-06 Feb-08 Feb-10
Source: Factset. MSCI. Source: Factset, MSCI.
Ireland: The Road to Serfdom
Irishdebt/GNP, percent 4- This is an incredible chart. One can argue that Irish
160 government debt was understated in 2007, as GNP was
140 • artificially inflated by the housing boom. Nevertheless,
Ireland's decision to recapitalize banks to safeguard the
120 •
Cor.dtcr European banking system has turned out to be a painful
100 • Large fiscal stabize
deficits from high levet d one. The EU was very much a partner on this decision,
80 • entitlemeds. debt. but insisting on no losses for senior creditors of Irish banks.
More GNP additional woOdgran In GNP terms, Ireland is well on the road to serfdom.
60 • decline from recap of funkier
40 • Recession recession: Anglo Irish sutiect :c Perhaps global investors should not worry too much about
First reap d and
20 •
0 mir
2007
1
hits GNP:
Guaranteed
Bank Debt
2008
Anglo 'fish 8
Nationwide
2009
Nationwide
2010 2012
aeon
addtior8
bank reca::
Ireland. After all, in GDP analogy terms, Ireland is to
China as the Bahamas is to Ireland (in other words,
Ireland is pretty small). But as a symbol of the still
unresolved structural problems in the European Monetary
Source: Irish National Treasury Management Agency. IMF. Private Bank
Union, it looms large.
Past performance not indicative offuture results.
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Eye on the Market I March 10, 2011 J.P.Morgan
The exit from exceptionally easy monetary policy (not to mention fiscal policy) was always going to be complicated. In
China, we are finally starting to see the impact of higher bank reserve requirements, slower money supply growth and slower
fixed investment growth, as manufacturing surveys and imports have declined. Some of this is distorted by the Chinese New
Year. But modestly slower growth in China' is here to stay and will be felt by the rest of the world, which acclimated itself to
10%-11% average growth from 2006 to 2010. As a starting point on financial market impacts, we have been looking at prior
periods of monetary stimulus withdrawal in the US. As shown, returns were actually modestly positive during periods
when the Fed tightened. In addition, in each case there was a subsequent equity rally, once monetary uncertainty was
removed. However, they were generally not accompanied by substantial fiscal tightening as well, and in the case of 1984 and
2005, the period of low interest rates led to private sector imbalances which would come home to roost within a year or two. All
things considered, we are settling in for a period of single digit developed market equity returns for the next year or two.
Free money period gradually coming to an end Evidence of China's slow-down
Policy rates adjusted for inflation, percent Percent change - yoy
8%
32% Fixed asset investment
DM countries 27%
EM countries 17%
M2 money supply
-6% 12%
'00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 t8 '09 '10 'II 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Source:M. Morgan Securities LLC. Source:121300, China Economic Information Network
Fed tightening periods equity markets during Fed tightening periods
Fed Funds target rate, percent =500 Index, January. 100
12.0% 120
r r 1984
11.0%
10.0% 115 1988
9.0% 1988 110
8.0%
7.0% 105 2005
6.0% 1994
r— 1994 100
5.0%
40% t 2005
95
3.0%
2.0% 90
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Doc Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Source Bloomberg. Source: Bloomberg. Past performance not i ndicative of future results.
The largest oil disruption of the last 30 years was the Iranian revolution (5.5 mm bpd), followed by the Iran-Iraq war and
invasion of Kuwait (-4 mm bpd each). As we will review on the call, we do not believe a similar crisis is in store for Saudi
Arabia. But in my lifetime, I recall how quickly permanent fixtures of Enver Hoxha, Erich Honecker and Nicolae Ceauqescu
disappeared. One day, shale gas fed into natural gas-driven power plants will support electrification of cars, or perhaps fuel a
fleet of compressed natural gas vehicles. Until then, geopolitical oil risk will be part of the landscape. As investors, we have to
position accordingly. Regarding monetary policy, Central Bankers did the rational thing by trying to restart global demand, and
in many ways, it worked. But that doesn't mean the transition to a private sector-driven economy is going to be a smooth one.
The global private sector still inhabits a world more affected by government policy than any other in the last 300 years.
Michael Cembalest
Chief Investment Officer
I The new 5-year plan calls for a 7% growth target. Barry Eichengreen at Berkeley notes that the transition to slower growth in fast-growing
economies comes sooner with a high ratio of elderly to active labor-force participants, increasingly the case in China due to increased life
expectancy and its one-child policy. Slowdowns also tend to come earlier in economies with undervalued currencies, given the potential for
external shocks. On the labor force, JPMSI estimates that only 3% of China's rural labor force is still a source of potential migration
("China's Internal Contest for Labor: Winners and Losers", March 3, 2011), another sign of the end of a period of massive surplus labor.
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The material contained herein is intended as a generalmarket commentary. Opinions expressedherein are those ofMichael Cembalest and may differfrom those ofother..
Morgan employees and affiliates. This infomtarion in no way constitutes . Morgan research and shouldnot be treated as such. Further. the views expressed herein may
differfrom that containedin Morgan research reports. The above suntmary/prices/quotes/starisrics have been obtainedfrom sources deemed to be reliable. but we do not
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