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d-18370House OversightFinancial Record

J.P. Morgan market commentary on US/Euro data and deficits (Mar 2012)

The passage is a routine economic analysis with generic references to data, deficits, and a brief mention of Dick Cheney. It lacks concrete leads, specific transactions, or new allegations involving p Discusses ECB's €650bn bank support and US consumer data. Notes US primary budget deficit and potential market impact. Mentions Fed stress‑test assumptions compared to Great Depression losses.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #024132
Pages
2
Persons
0
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No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a routine economic analysis with generic references to data, deficits, and a brief mention of Dick Cheney. It lacks concrete leads, specific transactions, or new allegations involving p Discusses ECB's €650bn bank support and US consumer data. Notes US primary budget deficit and potential market impact. Mentions Fed stress‑test assumptions compared to Great Depression losses.

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budget-deficitfederal-reservebankingecbhouse-oversighteconomics

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Eye on the Market | March 15, 2012 J.P Morgan Topics: Is US data as good as it looks? Is Chinese data as bad as it looks? Is European data as bizarre as it looks? What a diff’rence a day makes. Ever since the ECB gift- : wrapped 650 billion Euros for EU banks, the news has been The Importers of ie US Censunier pretty good, particularly inthe US. Most of the market’s _ @ scunon Investment aa ort focus is on the US consumer, for the simple reason that US THOT CHES. eee eee households are the largest single economic force in the world US 10,417 1,818 3,020 (500) (see table). Even after deconstructing the labor report for Asia 8,231 4,614 3,449 424 signs of false positives’, the message is clear: US job markets Asia ex. CNIJPN 2,761 597 1,482 134 are gradually geting better, ane ° is spencling. The capital Japan 3,501 1,185 1,175 58 position o anks is in good shape’, so we expect access China 4.969 2832 792 232 to credit to remain easy’. A US GDP growth rate of 2.25% is / : still below trend, but a long way from the unavoidable Europe S870 Ate abe 130 recession articulated by the ECRI last fall. I agree with those EMU 7,145 2,386 2,704 145 who think the US economy could not withstand a withdrawal Latin America 2,747 754 1,010 28 of stimulus right now, but I also do not see the Fed actively Source: Haver. Data as of Q4 2010. withdrawing it. Whatever rain dance the Fed is doing to keep inflation low, they better keep doing it. A chart I saw on the history of jobless claims (below, left) was meant to show how good things may get. In the prior 3 business cycles, when continuing claims fell through 2.2% of the labor force (1982, 1993, 2003), it was a great time to add risk in portfolios. Improving claims signaled that the business cycle was picking up enough steam to be self-sustaining, and last week, the US crossed through this barrier again. But as Big Bird used to say, one of these things is not like the other: the US primary budget deficit which supports this recovery is a bigger now. So, the US economy better improve markedly in order to pay the freight. When will this chart on the primary deficit (below, right) matter to financial markets? Only when it becomes a binding constraint, either due to a lack of demand to finance the deficit at current yields, or due to the economic cost of closing it. The timing is uncertain, given Central Bank purchases of Treasury bonds, and a Congress which may leave the problem for another day (or generation). I lose a lot of sleep over this, but I don’t know a lot of other people that do. As discussed last week, portfolio allocations given today’s private and public sector realities vary substantially across wealth management firms. Ours rely on hedge funds, credit and real estate as complements to public and private equity. In past cycles, claims were a great market signal Paging Dick Cheney: Do Deficits Matter? Continuing claims asa % of labor force Deficit ex-interest, percentof GDP, seasonally adjusted 5.0% 8 45% 6 4.0% i 3.5% 0 3.0% -2 25% “4 2.0% 6 < 0 -8 1.5% 10 1.0% -12 1967 1972 1977 1982 1987 1992 1997 2002 2007 2012 1954 1967 1981 1995 2008 Source: DepartmentofLabor, BLS, Empirical Research Partners. Source: CBO, BEA, OMB, J.P. Morgan Private Bank. ' Our chief economist Michael Vaknin has analyzed the various seasonal adjustments that the Bureau of Labor Statistics uses when it reports payrolls. After adjusting for better weather, the Lehman shock and other factors, payroll growth does not look quite as good as reported, but is still positive. The trend is supported by the latest Manpower surveys, Institute for Supply Management surveys, JOLTS surveys, etc, all of which show growing demand for labor. Even state and local government firmg has finally come to an end, which was a constant fixture of the last two years. So far, hourly earnings remain very weak, and typically do not grow until later in the cycle. ° The latest US bank stress tests were pretty stressful. Two-year loss assumptions applied by the Fed were higher than those experienced during 2008 and 2009, and comparable in almost every category to realized losses during the Great Depression. Almost every institution passed the test, and even the ones that didn’t are expected to reach required capital levels in short order. US banks have sharply reduced reliance on “hot money” (time deposits, commercial paper and repo), relying instead on core retail deposits to finance their balance sheets. Comparing the rigor of US and European bank stress tests is like comparing the rigors of actual football to Wii football. > So far, net household borrowing other than student loans is weak; loan growth is almost exclusively from companies rather than households. 1

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