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d-26000House OversightOther

J.P. Morgan market outlook memo (April 9, 2012) with generic economic commentary

The document is a routine internal market commentary containing no specific allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads linking powerful actors to misconduct. It merely discusses macroeconom Mentions potential €1.5 trillion borrowing need for Spain. Notes Fed's stance on monetary easing. Provides housing and builder demand statistics.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #025235
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The document is a routine internal market commentary containing no specific allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads linking powerful actors to misconduct. It merely discusses macroeconom Mentions potential €1.5 trillion borrowing need for Spain. Notes Fed's stance on monetary easing. Provides housing and builder demand statistics.

Tags

spain-debtfederal-reservejp-morganhousing-markethouse-oversighteconomics

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From: US GIO [[email protected]] Sent: 4/9/2012 2:11:03 PM To: Undisclosed recipients: Subject: J.P. Morgan Eye on the Market, April 9, 2012 Attachments: image013.png; image014.png; image015.png; image016.png; image017.png; image018.png; image020.png; image022.png; image024.png; image026.png; 04-09-2012 - EOTM - The Day of the Triffids.pdf Eye on the Market, April 9, 2012 (attached pdf is easier to read this week) Topics: Q&A on the USA, with a watchful eye on the risk of giant man-eating plants; Spain Our view for 2012 was that economic and equity market conditions in the US and Asia ex-Japan would be better than in Europe. So far, that view is on track. Spain in particular is in difficult shape (see page 5); its banks and government may have to borrow 1.5 trillion Euros over the next 12 months while in recession. Both the ECB and EU will need to keep the spigot open to prevent Spain from becoming a bigger problem. This week, some Q&A on the US recovery, flows into bonds and stocks, profits and P/E multiples, municipal bonds, and the long-term US fiscal situation. The Fed appears to be saying that no additional monetary easing is needed unless the economy worsens further. Are there any signs that the US recovery is becoming self-reinforcing? Durable goods consumption, equipment & software spending, vehicle sales, bank loans to companies, manufacturing payrolls (even after Friday’s disappointing report) and housing stats (building permits, multifamily housing starts) have improved over the last few months. While delinquency rates are in better shape (credit card delinquencies are back to 2007 levels), household credit growth is still weak. However, homebuilders are seeing stronger demand, and nationwide remodeling continues to rise. We see opportunities in retailing and building products companies that may benefit from a continuation in these trends. Publicly-held builders reporting stronger demand Residential remodeling index Percent change, YoY in latest fiscal quarter Number of homes, millions, 3-month moving average 40% 33 New Backlog 50% Ne of Orders 34 aR, 29 10% aT 15 o% 25 -10% 2001 2003 2005 2007 2000 2011 Lennar KBHome Toll Hovnanian OR Horton NVR Pultegroup Source: Corporate Reports. Empinaal Research Partners. Source: BuildFax, Empirical Research Partners Has the data really been that good? I heard better US economic data has a lot to do with the weather. Parts of the US experienced the warmest March in recorded history. Measured from December to February, the winter was the 4" warmest on record. I don’t think there are reliable models to estimate the impact of demand being pulled forward, so we will have to see how consumer spending, housing and payrolls behave in the months ahead. As our Chief Economist Michael Vaknin reminds me, other distortions come from the “catch-up” effect from Japan’s tsunami. As shown below, some strength in auto sales came from pent-up demand for Japanese cars, a process which now seems complete.

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