Oversight Explorer Logo

House Oversight Document Explorer

Search and explore committee documents

Documents tagged "Fixed"

Found 8 documents with this tag

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031121.txt

The J.P. Morgan View report from January 11, 2013 discusses asset allocation trends and economic forecasts for various regions, including East Asia and the US/Europe. The report advises investors to focus on East Asian equities, particularly Japan and EM Asia, due to signs of an economic rebound in the region. They also recommend going long duration in US fixed income markets and staying short JPY among other currency recommendations.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031114.txt

This document from JPMorgan discusses global asset allocation, with a focus on local risks and opportunities dominating investment strategies. The document mentions that US activity data is better than hoped, but consumer response to higher taxes is uncertain. It also highlights the search for carry in fixed income markets and Japan as a main country overweight in equities. Additionally, it notes that credit remains the troubled asset class with spreads wider in most markets, especially in emerging market external debt. The overall investment theme for this year appears to be a number of unrelated local forces with largely local impact, rather than a general global investment theme.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030848.txt

In summary, the J.P. Morgan View in March 2013 focuses on local risks and opportunities trumping global forces in driving investment opportunities. The report discusses various topics such as economics, fixed income, equities, credit, currencies, commodities, US stocks, bonds, and asset classes. It emphasizes that there is no overarching global investment theme this year and instead highlights unrelated local forces with largely local impact. Additionally, the report suggests that there is no momentum in global growth, price or earnings expectations that could lead to a bullish or bearish growth story.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030844.txt

The J.P. Morgan View document discusses the current state of global asset allocation and identifies local forces as more dominant than global ones in driving investment opportunities. The focus is on economics, fixed income, equities, credit, currencies, commodities, US stocks, and bond markets. It highlights that there is no overarching global investment theme this year and instead emphasizes the importance of local factors.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026635.txt

In the document, a man named Richard Kahn is concerned about the potential impact of Donald Trump's tax plan on his itemized deductions. He has seen success in contributing appreciated stock to gratitude or enhanced foundations. He shares some calculations and thoughts on how long these foundations can continue making annual contributions. However, he mentions that there are very few details available about the likelihood of Trump's plan passing.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026572.txt

The J.P. Morgan View discusses how US elections have affected asset allocation, economic outlooks, and market risks. They believe that the equity market has priced out a Romney win scenario and that medium-term equities and credit are still overweight despite volatility caused by the fiscal cliff negotiations. The focus is on EM Asia, Cyclical stocks, and US Home builders for overweights in equities. Fixed income should see yields head higher with an emphasis on spread compression trades. They recommend being long the dollar during fiscal cliff negotiations and remaining medium-term overweight both credit and equities against cash, government debt, and commodities, as they do not think an Obama victory changes economic outlooks or risks significantly.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025247.txt

This document is a monthly report on global investment markets from UBS AG's Global Investment Office. It focuses on key areas such as the global economy, equities, fixed income, and foreign exchange markets, with specific sections dedicated to each asset class. The report highlights that global growth is showing signs of improvement, supported by decisive monetary policy from major central banks. In terms of equity markets, the report recommends preferring US and Emerging Markets (EM), while Canada and Australia are less favored due to falling earnings. The report also discusses fixed income markets, highlighting that US high yield bonds remain supported by strong fundamentals and technicals.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024135.txt

The UBS CIO Monthly Extended from July 2012 discusses the global economy and investment preferences with a focus on risk return and the Euro debt crisis. The document presents asset class views for equities, fixed income, foreign exchange, commodities, listed real estate, hedge funds, and private equity. It also highlights the need for further reform and consolidation efforts in Spain and Italy. In terms of US corporate bonds, it is believed that they offer the best risk return. The UBS Wealth Management & Swiss Bank's Chief Investment Office provides this analysis, but investments may be subject to jurisdictional and regulatory restrictions.