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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe Fed doesn't need to be in a rush to cut rates, JPMorgan Asset Management saysJonathan Liang, Asia ex-Japan head of fixed income investment specialists at JPMorgan Asset Management, says that's "because the economy is so robust. Why risk … causing inflation to reaccelerate?"
Persons: Jonathan Liang Organizations: JPMorgan Asset Management, Asset Management Locations: Asia, Japan
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe U.S. is likely headed for a recession in end-2023 or early 2024, JPMorgan saysJonathan Liang of JPMorgan Asset Management says tightening credit conditions will probably be the "primary driving force."
Persons: Jonathan Liang Organizations: JPMorgan, JPMorgan Asset Management
JPMorgan Asset Management's Jonathan Liang said Wednesday on Bloomberg that smaller banks now face an increased risk of credit losses because of their heightened exposure to the commercial real estate debt. And Goldman Sachs' global head of real estate client solutions, Jeffery Fine, recently said the commercial real estate market is in the middle of a "perfect storm" of higher rates, tight credit, and fast-maturing debt. The Goldman strategist said securing commercial real estate loans now is "almost impossible" since financing has just about shut down. What's your outlook for the commercial real estate sector in the next 6 months? This real estate investor commands a 311-unit portfolio.
Regional banks' troubles aren't over and remain "an area of concern", JPMorgan Asset Management's Jonathan Liang said. They are facing increased risks of credit losses in the commercial-property sector, which may come under stress, he said. And so we think that in the coming year or two, there's going to be growing distress in this space, and that will also potentially amount to credit losses for those US regional banks," he added. Many experts have warned the US commercial real-estate sector could face problems as high borrowing costs and tighter credit conditions following the recent banking turmoil complicate matters for big property owners as they seek to refinance loans. Nearly $450 billion in commercial real-estate debt is due to mature in 2023 - meaning a final payment on those loans are due, per data cited from Trepp by JPMorgan.
SINGAPORE, Jan 20 (Reuters) - Japan's central bank appears to have scored an interim win in its long-drawn battle with bond bears. The Bank of Japan's (BOJ) policy meeting this week was, at first glance, a damp squib for excited markets. It maintained its cap on 10-year yields, defying market expectations for change, and modified a funds-supply operation such that it offers more money for longer tenors to banks. After Wednesday's decision to retain ultra-low rates, 10-year bond yields, which had been testing the BOJ's 0.5% cap for a week, settled below 0.4%, suggesting many speculators were closing positions. "Most people are concerned about market liquidity in the bond market," a senior trader at a global bank in Asia told Reuters.
U.S. consumer spending has remained strong, rising more than expected in September, despite underlying inflation pressures continuing to bubble. "If you look at stocks and asset prices, you would probably expect the Fed to be already easing by now," Gurevich said. read moreHowever, Anita Gupta, head of equity strategy at Emirates NBD, told the forum it was "too early" to draw conclusions for other central banks from this move. "If you're going downhill and pushing your foot on the accelerator, it's going to be very hard to break," Gurevich said. "I feel it's already too late for them to stop deflation and a recessionary cycle."
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