JP Morgan Asset Management

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Soft Patch not a Perfect Storm World Market Outlook August 2011

FOR PROFESSIONAL INVESTORS ONLY. NOT FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION

Contents



Portfolio process



Key portfolio themes



Main macro themes



Conclusions

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Summary of process

Asset Allocation Research

Setting of Risk and Return Objectives Investment Constraints

Strategic Intermediate Cycle neutral, Secular, structural trends

Cyclical factors

Tactical Momentum, technical, event driven factors

Portfolio Construction and Risk Analysis and Monitoring

Portfolio Investment Solution

Manager Research

… delivers attractive risk adjusted returns through the active management of asset allocations FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY

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Investment Regime Map Asset class performance (high to low) by stage of the economic cycle Inflationary

Growth Falls

Latest

Stagflationary



Real Assets



Real Assets



Credit



Credit



Equity



Fixed Income



Fixed Income



Equity

Inflation Rises

Inflationary Growth Inflation

Stagflationary Growth Inflation

Reflationary Growth Inflation

Deflationary Growth Inflation

Reflationary

Inflation Falls Deflationary



Equity



Equity



Credit



Credit / Fixed Income



Real Assets



Real Assets



Fixed Income Growth Rises

Source: J. P. Morgan Asset Management Global Multi-Asset Group The above information is provided for illustrative purposes only and should not be relied upon as advice or interpreted as a recommendation. They are based on current market conditions that constitute our judgment and are subject to change. Results shown are not meant to be representative of actual investment results. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of the likely future performance of an investment. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT A GUIDE TO THE FUTURE

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Tactical allocation : Liquid relative value positions (3-6mths horizon)

Key Investment Decisions

Major Stock / Stock Peripheral Stock / Stock Style

Process Components

Quantitative models  Market inefficiencies in global macro

markets

Asset Allocations

Relative value stock decisions amongst 12 countries and regions Australia/HK, Canada/U.S., EME/Developed Large/Small, Growth/Value

 Relative value and market directional

strategies Major Bond / Bond Bond Sector

Qualitative insights  Systematic and irregular market

U.S., Europe, U.K., Japan, Australia, Canada EMD/U.S. Bond and HY/Investment

opportunities  Insights from economists and the

Stock / Bond Duration

investor network

FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY

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US, Europe, UK, Japan, Canada, Australia US, Europe, UK and Japan

Key portfolio decisions

LEVEL 1 – DIRECTIONAL DECISIONS 

Overweight equities vs. bonds and cash



Neutral duration

LEVEL 2 – REGIONAL DECISIONS 

Overweight North America vs. UK and Australian equities



Overweight UK vs. European and Japanese bonds

LEVEL 3 – INTRA-REGIONAL DECISIONS 

Overweight core Europe equities vs. Periphery



Continue to avoid peripheral European bonds

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Key macro themes



Structural headwinds vs cyclical tailwinds



Mid-cycle slowdown not a double dip



Policy stimulus to underwrite the cycle



Duration – a portfolio construction issue



Equities are attractively valued

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Evidence supporting the alternative (negative) view Some market forecasters are warning of a “perfect storm” in the world economy, with a concerted downturn in place by 2013 US house prices, % y/y

Eurozone 10-year bond spreads (vs Bunds), bps

20%

1600

10%

1200

0%

800

-10%

400

Spain

-20% 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

0 2008

Portugal

2009

Ireland

2010

Greece

2011

Japan manufacturing production index

China real credit growth, % y/y

130

35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

120 110 100 90 80 70 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Sources: Thomson Datastream, MacData, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Data up to July/August 2011.

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Debt resolution – The different outcomes*

Scenario

Govt bonds

Equities

Real assets

(1) Grow it away – growth strategy



++

+

(2) Pay it off – fiscal retrenchment

++



––

(3) Inflation tax – monetisation

––

N

++

+/–

+

+

+/––

––

++

(4) Default-lite – debt restructuring (5) Default-heavy – full-scale repudiation

Source: J.P. Morgan Asset Management Global Multi Asset Group. Assessments as at 12 August 2011. * Note: Table shows judgements made regarding the probable relative performance of the main asset classes for different potential outcomes over the next 5-10 years. Key: “+” = Outperformance, “—” = Underperformance, “N” = Neutral performance. Expected performance ranges from “++” to “– – ”

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The required fiscal adjustment – an IMF simulation Stabilising debt ratios by 2030 requires a hefty fiscal tightening over a long period, averaging 8% of GDP in the advanced economies. Note this adjustment is even greater if age related spending is taken into account Required fiscal adjustment between 2010 and 2020 to achieve debt target * % of GDP 18 15

SW: Sweden Additional adjustment required for age-related spending, 2010/30

GE:

Germany

Required fiscal adjustment between 2010 and 2030

EM:

Emerging G20**

IT:

Italy

AU:

Australia

CA:

Canada

FR:

France

BE:

Belgium

12 9 6 3 0 SW

GE

EM

IT

AU

CA

FR

BE

SP

PO

UK

GR

JP

IR

US

SP:

Spain

PO:

Portugal

UK:

United Kingdom

GR:

Greece

JP:

Japan

IR:

Ireland

US:

United States

Source: IMF, Fiscal Monitor, April 2011 * Notes: The primary budget balance is the overall budget balance minus interest revenue plus interest expenditure. The cyclically-adjusted primary balance (CAPB) is the primary balance adjusted for the effects of the economic cycle, usually expressed as a per cent of potential GDP. The CAPB is assumed under these simulations to improve gradually from 2010 to 2020, thereafter it stays constant until 2030, which is seen as sufficient in most cases to bring a stable/falling debt path. The post-adjustment CAPB shows the CAPB needed to stabilise debt at the end-2012 level by 2030 (if debt/GDP is under 60%) or to bring the ratio to 60% by 2030. ** Emerging G20 countries comprise: Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Turkey

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The global savings glut – the barrier to successful rebalancing Fiscal austerity in the OECD requires offsetting growth elsewhere (OECD corporate capex / Asian consumption) to avoid a deflationary slump. This is not happening yet The so-called Eurasian savings surplus*

Consumption share of GDP, %

USD bn 4000

75%

60%

OECD private-sector balance** Germany

Japan

US

China (RHS)

North East Asian current account*** 70%

55%

2000

65%

50%

1000

60%

45%

0

55%

40%

3000

50%

-1000

35% 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08 10

95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 Sources: MacData, Lombard Street Research. Notes: * Based on an approach adopted by Charles Dumas, “Globalisation Fractures, How major nations’ interests are now in conflict (2010); ** Household and business sectors; ***Comprising China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

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Source: MacData, data up to 2010 except for China which is estimated to 2009. RHS: Right hand scale

Real trade-weighted dollar The dollar is undervalued and close to its Bretton Woods lows. But it is not unprecedentedly cheap. Real trade-weighted U.S. dollar index, 2000=100 120

110

100

90

80

70 70

72

74

76

78

80

82

84

86

88

90

Sources: J.P. Morgan, Thomson DataStream. Data up to July 2011

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92

94

96

98

00

02

04

06

08

10

Global growth indicator – consistent with a mid-cycle slowdown Our proprietary growth indicator has stabilised after being affected by the supply disruptions from Japan’s earthquake. Global earnings estimates are now catching up Percentile

Ratio of upgrades / downgrades

100%

2.0

80%

1.6

60%

1.2

40%

0.8

20%

0.4

0%

Global growth indicator (LHS)* Global earnings momentum (RHS)*

0.0 92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

Sources: Thomson Datastream, J.P. Morgan Asset Management Global Multi-Asset Group. Data up to July 2011. *Notes: (1) The global growth indicator is a composite measure of 10 forward indicators. (2) Earnings momentum is defined as the ratio of analyst upgrades to downgrades over three months.

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US economy – reaching stall speed? Some analysts argue that the US economy will stall and head back into recession when growth falls below 2%. We are there, but recession is not our central case view Year-on-year change in real GDP, % 10% 8% US Recession periods as defined by the NBER*

6% 4% 2%

Real GDP growth, %y/y

0% -2% -4% -6% 1967

1972

1977

1982

1987

1992

1997

Sources: BEA, MacData, J.P..Morgan Asset Management. Data up to Q2 2011 Notes: * US recession periods as defined by the National Bureau of Economic Research.,

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2002

2007

Monetary conditions – mainly stimulative Monetary conditions remain stimulative in the US and eurozone, while Japan has shifted back to neutral. The exception is China where policy has been tight but may be reversing US

Eurozone

100

100

Easy

80

80

60

60

40

40

Easy

20

20 Tight

99

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

Tight

0

0

99

11

Japan

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

China 100

100 Easy

80

Easy

80

60

60

40

40

20

20

Tight

0 99

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

Tight

0

11

99

Sources: Thomson Datastream, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Data up to June or July 2011

14

00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

Deflation alert indicator – signalling the need for QE3? Our forward-looking inflation indicator has heading back into deflation territory and any further deterioration could force the Fed’s hand Standard deviations

3

INFLATION CONCERN 2

1

0

-1

-2

DEFLATION CONCERN -3 1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

Sources: Thomson Datastream, MacData, J.P. Morgan Asset Management Global Multi Asset Group. Data up to 12 August 2011 * Note: The Deflation Alert Measure comprises three variables: inflation expectations implied by US five year / five year forward break-even rates; the correlation of global stock / bond returns; and a breadth measure of commodity prices

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Investor risk appetite – the most extreme risk aversion Risk appetite has evaporated, with the Credit Suisse* measure at its most risk averse – ever. This could be a contrarian signal to stick with risk assets Investment risk appetite indicator* 10 8 EUPHORIA

6 4 2 0 -2 -4 PANIC

-6 -8 81

83

85

87

89

91

93

95

97

99

01

03

05

07

09

11

Sources: Credit Suisse. Data up to 11 August 2011 * Note: The Credit Suisse risk appetite indicator compares risk-adjusted returns across 64 equity and fixed income markets. The index aggregates six-month excess returns over cash compared with 12-month volatility

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Correlations of stock/bond returns – the case for duration Correlations of equity and bond returns have been negative since the crisis began Correlation of US equity and bond returns, rolling 25-weeks 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1.0 1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

Sources: Thomson Datastream, J.P.Morgan Asset Management. Data up to 12 August 2011

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2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

Margins – may prove more resilient than expected Consensus thinking believes that margins will compress back towards their long-term mean. This process may take longer in the current cycle due to the high levels of spare capacity and labour’s limited pricing power Per cent of total capacity, %

% year on year 8%

Per cent of labour force, %*

90

2

85

4

80

6

75

8

4%

0%

-4% 70 Change in GDP deflator less change in unit labour costs

Capacity utilisation (LHS) Unemployment rate (RHS)*

65

-8%

12 67 70 73 76 79 82 85 88 91 94 97 00 03 06 09

55 58 61 64 67 70 73 76 79 82 85 88 91 94 97 00 03 06 09 Sources : MacData, J.P.Morgan Asset Management. Data up to Q2 2011

Sources: MacData, J.P.Morgan Asset Management. Data up to July 2011. *Note: scale inverted

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10

Global bond / equity valuation – downside protection Earnings-bond yield gap analysis suggests that equities are attractive vs. bonds and reached extremes in early August. Equity Yield - Bond Yield Gap*, Standard Deviations 3

Equity/bond yield gap sensitivity table

Index 1800

Combinations of bond yields and potential index changes (where 2.73% was the bond yield as at end-July 2011 and the EY/BY reading was -0.69 SDs)

Equities Overvalued 2

1600

1

1400

0

1200

-1

1000

-2

800

-3

Equities Undervalued

Latest estimate

-4

Equity Market Moves

Global Bond Yield

600 400

94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 EY/BY Gap *, Standardised (LHS)

2.00%

2.50%

2.73%

3.00%

3.50%

+20%

0.04

0.56

0.80

1.08

1.60

+10%

-0.64

-0.12

0.12

0.40

0.92

0%

-1.45

-0.93

-0.69

-0.41

0.11

-10%

-2.44

-1.92

-1.68

-1.40

-0.88

-20%

-3.68

-3.16

-2.92

-2.64

-2.12

MSCI World (RHS)

Sources: Thomson Datastream, J.P. Morgan Asset Management Global Multi-Asset Group. Monthly data up to end July 2011, with estimate for 11 August *Note: The global earnings-bond yield gap measures the difference between the earnings yield and the nominal bond yield. The series has been standardised over three years. Data up to July 2011. This information reflects JPMAM’s opinion and is subject to change. LHS: left hand scale

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Stock / bond – The portfolio construction case Recent trend declines in volatility and normalising correlations of stock and bond returns made it easier to take asset-class rather than relative-value positions. This has partially reversed with the recent market turbulence Rolling 6-month daily TE (annualised) of a 1% Stock/Bond Bet 0.7% Rolling S/B risk

Long-term average

0.6% 0.5% 0.4% 0.3% 0.2% 0.1% 0.0% 1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

Sources: Bloomberg, J.P. Morgan Asset Management Global Multi Asset Group. Data up to 12 August 2011

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2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

Cyclically-adjusted valuations – moderate value support US cyclically-adjusted equity valuations are in line with their 10-year average, but are significantly above their long-term average of 16x. Other markets look comfortable on this basis with Europe and Japan the most attractive US Shiller PE ratio (based on 10 years trailing real earnings) and 10 year moving average 50 US Shiller PER

10 Year Average

Cyclically-adjusted PE ratios * (based on 10 years trailing earnings) US

24.0

Emg.Mkts

26.9

Japan

38.7

HK

19.4

40

30

20

UK

18.2

10

20.2

Europe 0 Jan-1881

Jan-01

Jan-21

Jan-41

Jan-61

Jan-81

Jan-01

10

15

20

25

Sources: Prof Robert Shiller, Datastream, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Data up to July 2011 * Note: 10-year averages listed alongside

Source: Prof Robert Shiller. Data up to July 2011

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Asset allocation – Overweight stocks vs. bonds

MACRO THEMES

INVESTMENT DECISIONS



Structural headwinds vs cyclical tailwinds



Overweight equities vs. bonds and cash



Mid-cycle slowdown not a double dip



Neutral duration



Policy stimulus to underwrite the cycle



Overweight North America vs. UK and Australian equities



Duration – a portfolio construction issue 

Overweight UK vs. European bonds



Overweight core Europe equities vs. Periphery



Continue to avoid peripheral European bonds



Equities are attractively valued

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J.P. Morgan Asset Management Contact: David Shairp, Managing Director – Global Multi-Asset Group

 

+44 20 7742 5709 [email protected]

About GMAG: The Global Multi-Asset Group is a 54-strong team of portfolio managers, analysts and strategists based mainly in London and New York, which is dedicated to developing and managing multi-asset and multi-country strategies, using J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s global expertise across core and alternative asset classes. GMAG is responsible for managing assets totalling over US$41bn, including traditional balanced portfolios, funds of funds, convertible bonds and total return funds and specialised TAA mandates. Responsibility for overall asset allocation lies with the Global Strategy Team, a group of senior investors with an average investment experience of 24 years. Neill Nuttall is Chief Investment Officer of the Global Multi Asset Group. Any forecasts, figures, opinions or investment techniques and strategies set out, unless otherwise stated, are J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s own at the date of this document. They are considered to be accurate at the time of writing, but no warranty of accuracy is given and no liability in respect of any error or omission is accepted. They may be subject to change without reference or notification to you. The views contained herein are not to be taken as an advice or recommendation to buy or sell any investment and the material should not be relied upon as containing sufficient information to support an investment decision. It should be noted that the value of investments and the income from them may fluctuate and investors may not get back the full amount invested. Both past performance and yield are not necessarily a guide to future performance. Exchange rate variations may cause the value of investments to increase or decrease. Investments in smaller companies may involve a higher degree of risk as they are usually more sensitive to market movements. Investments in emerging markets may be more volatile and therefore the risk to your capital could be greater. Further, the economic and political situations in emerging markets may be more volatile than in established economies and these may adversely influence the value of investments made. You should also note that if you contact J.P. Morgan Asset Management by telephone those lines could be recorded and may be monitored for security and training purposes. J.P. Morgan Asset Management is the brand name for the asset management business of JPMorgan Chase & Co and its affiliates worldwide. The Fund may not be authorised or its offering may be restricted in your jurisdiction. Prior to any application investors should inform themselves as to the requirements within their own country for transactions in the Fund, any applicable exchange control regulation and the tax consequences of any transaction in the Fund. Shares may not be offered to or purchased directly or indirectly by US persons. All transactions should be based on the latest available simplified and full prospectuses and any local offering document. These documents together with the annual report, semi-annual report and the articles of incorporation for the Luxembourg domiciled Funds range are available free of charge upon request from JPMorgan Asset Management (Europe) S.à.r.l., European Bank & Business Centre, 6 route de Trèves, L-2633 Senningerberg, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, your financial adviser or your J.P. Morgan Asset Management regional contact. Issued by JPMorgan Asset Management (Europe) Société à responsabilité limitée, European Bank & Business Centre, 6 route de Trèves, L-2633 Senningerberg, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, R.C.S. Luxembourg B27900, corporate capital EUR 10.000.000. Material issued in the United Kingdom are approved for use by JPMorgan Asset Management (UK) Limited, 125 London Wall, London EC2Y 5AJ, England. JPMorgan Asset Management (UK) Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. Registered in England No. 01161446. Registered address: 125 London Wall, London EC2Y 5AJ. © 2011 JPMorgan Asset Management.

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