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Economy & Markets

Arrested Development

Arrested Development: the tightest labor markets in decades are pressuring the Fed; can “second chance” policies for those with criminal histories expand the labor force?  Also: the Citrix canary and a COVID update

As I wrote in our Labor Day piece, we expected the S&P 500 to re-test June lows and now we’re there.  Equity markets have been slow to digest the path of future policy rates shown in the first chart below.  Additional headwinds come from Europe’s energy mess, and from China’s real estate collapse (bad debt ratio of 30% and rising) and its zero COVID tolerance policy.  More broadly, as shown in the second chart, we’re emerging from a decade of abnormal pricing for risky assets relative to cash, which argues for lower valuations on just about everything as the gap closes and normalizes.  As we wrote on Labor Day and earlier in the year, we do not envision a deep US recession based on the strength of consumer balance sheets, but we think better entry points on equities still lay ahead.

Consider the Citrix deal whose senior notes priced at 10% vs initial underwriting levels of 6.5%; underwriters still reportedly hold the all of the second lien Citrix notes which would require much larger discounts to place with investors.  Pending large buyout financing deals include Twitter, Nielsen, Tegna and Tenneco, all of which are lower rated by Moody’s than Citrix.  Citrix may be a canary in the coal mine given the limited selloff so far in high yield spreads and leveraged loan prices, which at 6% and $93 are still below recessionary levels.

Line chart shows market expectations of the Fed funds target rate over projected future timeframes ranging from August 2022 through December 2024. The line chart compares these current expectations vs prior market expectations on August 15, 2022, May 2, 2022, and September 7, 2021.
Line chart shows developed world asset yields vs developed world short interest rates which were very similar from 1960 to 2009. Since 2009, short rates have been below asset yields, but that gap is closing.
Line chart plots the S&P 500 leveraged loan price index (since 1997) and US high yield credit spreads (since 1988). Line chart shows the index has fallen, while spreads have widened since late 2021. However, both have not reached levels seen in previous recessions (i.e., 2020, 2008, etc.)

Early warning signs on earnings appear below. Consider US consumer staples: while Q2 revenues rose, all of the increase resulted from price hikes while unit volumes were down. As the economy weakens with rising Fed Funds rates, it will become harder to pass through rising costs. Other early warning signs on earnings include leading indicators with which they’re correlated (see chart below), and that’s before taking into account a projected ~2% EPS decline from the new 15% minimum book tax mostly affecting tech and healthcare companies, and the 1% buyback tax. Last point: as Gavekal Research highlighted in a recent note, the ratio of S&P to NIPA (economy-wide) profits has risen to 1.2x again, a level which historically has been a reliable indicator of pending profits recession.

To be clear, institutional positioning and individual investor sentiment are quite bearish and some valuations already price in bad news: China banks at less than 0.5x book value, Europe 10.7x forward P/E converging on 2012 debt crisis lows and Metaverse-Fintech-Hydrogen-SPAC stocks down 50%-80% from their peaks. But all eyes are on the Fed and its vanishing hopes of a soft landing, which we discuss next (after a brief COVID update).

Line chart compares changes in price to unit volume sales year-over-year from 2016 to Q2 2022 for a basket of 16 consumer staples companies: CAG, CHD, CL, CLX, CPB, GIS, HSY, K, KHC, KMB, KO, MDLZ, NESN, PEP, PG, and UL. The chart shows prices have grown 9.2% y/y while unit volume sales have declined 0.8% y/y, suggesting Q2 sector revenues are increasing as a result of price hikes.
Line chart compares actual trailing earnings growth year-over-year to two earnings leading indicator models from 2001 to now. The models closely follow actual trailing earnings growth and point to more earnings declines ahead.

A brief COVID update: bivalent vaccines, inhalable vaccines and preventable deaths

  • While vaccine protection against infection and transmission have dropped sharply with efficacy below 50%, studies focused on people aged 60+ still show large declines in mortality and hospitalization risk from a 4th shot compared to two or three shots
  • Unvaccinated people (most of whom have already been infected) have 14x the risk of dying than vaccinated people, suggesting that infection-induced immunity is much weaker than immunity from vaccines
  • New bivalent mRNA vaccines are now available and have been engineered to work against the original strain and against Omicron BA4/5.  There is not a lot of efficacy data yet; the decision to move forward was based on the results of a BA1 vaccine, a Beta variant vaccine and lab data from mice
  • A new report from the NEJM indicates that mucosal (nasal) antibodies are what may be needed to more effectively block infection and transmission, since that is where airborne pathogens are first introduced into the body
  • China approved its first inhalable COVID vaccine manufactured by CanSino, which uses the same adenovirus vector approach that it uses in its injectable vaccine.  Early trials showed better immune responses than a regimen of three shots, and CanSino claims that its inhalable vaccine also needs much less viral material to be effective.  India’s Bharat Biotech has also approved its own inhalable adenovirus vaccine which it developed in conjunction with researchers at the Washington University (St Louis) School of Medicine
  • Inhaled vaccines are best used in tandem within injected vaccines rather than replacing them, since injected vaccines produce antibodies in the bloodstream and internal organs which are needed if nasal defenses fail
  • As per Brown’s School of Public Health and Microsoft AI: from January 2021 to April 2022, the US experienced 320,000 deaths that could have been prevented if such individuals had been vaccinated.  Excess death rates are still 10% above expected levels, and in 2021, the US experienced the largest decline in life expectancy in 100 years

Why would the Fed tighten into a weakening global economy? The risk of wage-price spirals apparently worries them even more. Can the US labor supply increase without a deep recession?

The Fed is under the gun: the monthly job fill rate as a % of openings has collapsed, and the ratio of employment plus job openings to the size of the labor force is close to its highest level on record. Other similar indicators:

  • People switching jobs are earning a very high premium relative to those who stay put
  • A Brookings paper cites labor market tightness as being responsible for 80% of the increase in consumer price inflation since 20201 [note: in our view, explosive monetary and fiscal stimulus, supply chain delays due to COVID and energy policy were the primary drivers of the initial rise in inflation]
  • A new NBER paper estimates NAIRU (the non-inflationary rate of unemployment) at 6%, one of the highest rates since the 1980’s2
  • 2.5% of the US workforce is estimated to have been lost to excess retirement during COVID, a variety of other COVID related issues (long COVID, terminations, child care shortages) and the decline in immigration3

It’s hard to increase the labor supply. Birth rates are stagnant, immigration is just beginning to pick up (see Appendix) and it’s difficult to lure retired people back into the workforce. Unless the labor supply increases, wage-price spirals could become more commonplace; this is a risk that the Fed is clearly focused on. As we discussed last time, labor force participation is already back to normal for 25-54 year olds; it remains depressed for those over 54. One potential pool of underutilized labor: the population of people with a criminal arrest record, many of whom were never convicted for serious crimes and/or incarcerated. Let’s take a closer look.

Line chart plots jobs filaled as a percent of outstanding job openings from 2001 to July 2022. The chart shows job fill rates have hovered around 60% in 2022, the lowest they’ve been since the year 2000.
Line chart compares year-over-year wage percent changes in wages for job switchers versus job stayers as a 3 month rolling average from 1998 to now. The comparison shows that job switchers are earning a high premium relative to job stayers today.
Line chart plots job openings plus employment as a percent of labor force from 1951 to July 2022, with any point above 0% signaling more jobs than workers. The chart shows that the US is experiencing the largest worker shortage in the post war era.
Line chart shows the year-over-year percent change for several key measures of consumer price inflation. On a year-over-year basis, each measure is at its highest level since 1985, with the Cleveland Fed trimmed mean CPI leading at 7.2%.

Could “Second Chance” legislation help reduce the US labor supply shortage? It’s worth a closer look

Second chance legislation refers to policies designed to ease the path to employment for people with a criminal record, some of whom have been incarcerated although many people with an arrest or conviction record haven’t been.  Given the recent increase in violent crime rates, it might seem like an odd time for this; but if such policies can reduce recidivism, a wide range of social, economic and workforce issues could improve.

Main components of second chance legislation:

  • “Clean Slate” procedures under which criminal records are automatically expunged if individuals remain arrest-free for a specified period. Eight states have passed such legislation: PA, UT, MI, CT, DE, OK, CO, VA
  • “Ban the Box” legislation which would require most private employers to postpone asking about an applicant’s criminal record until after the applicant has had an opportunity to interview, or until after a conditional offer of employment has been made. More than 100 cities/counties and 19 states have already enacted ban the box policies, as has the Federal government4
  • The FDIC has recently narrowed the circumstances under which written consent is required in order for a bank to hire individuals with minor criminal offenses, but more can be done by Congress
  • Prevent unpaid court debts (fines, fees, costs and restitution) from being a barrier to record clearing. In almost every jurisdiction, outstanding court debt is a barrier to record clearing, either rendering a person ineligible for record relief or making it difficult for them to qualify for it5
  • Standardize record clearing timetables across states. These timetables refer to the time during which individuals must be crime-free in order to qualify for record clearing. Dispersion across states is very wide; for example, some states allow clearing of felony convictions after 1-3 years, others after 5, 7 or 10 years, and 16 states do not allow felony record clearing at all6

To understand why this legislation is worth thinking about, consider the following:

  • One third of the adult working age population has a “criminal record” that can impair their ability to get a job, even though most have not committed a “serious crime”, and even after the rest fulfill their justice system obligations.  Criminal records are retained by the Department of Justice in its Interstate Identification Index even though many people who get arrested are never charged or convicted7. Around one third of employers consider an arrest without conviction as "somewhat influential” in their hiring decisions
  • In another study, 64% of all unemployed males between the ages of 30 and 38 had been arrested at least once, with negative implications for marriage, education, net worth, employment and earnings8
  • With respect to drug arrests, 70%-80% have been for possession rather than manufacture (see Appendix)
  • The current system of having records expunged is costly, complex and very time-consuming; as a result, few people pursue it even though having an arrest record reduces the chances of being contacted by an employer by 50%-65%9. Example: among those eligible for expungement in Michigan, just 6.5% obtain it within five years of eligibility due to a limited understanding of expungement laws and procedures, application fees and possible loss of wages for time taken off work10
  • The US has the highest rate of incarceration in the world, just above Rwanda, Turkmenistan and El Salvador. Formerly incarcerated people are routinely and systematically shut out of the work force
  • In one study11, 33% of parolees found no employment over four years post-release, and at any given time no more than 40% was employed (i.e., a roughly 60% consistent unemployment rate). Those who were employed had an average of 3.4 jobs throughout the four-year study and earned 50%-80% of median wages, suggesting they were landing jobs that didn’t offer security or mobility
  • Someone imprisoned as a young adult suffers a lifetime earnings loss of $480k, regardless of the offense12
  • All of the above contribute to the US having one of the lowest male labor force participation rates in the OECD (see Appendix)

Will such second chance programs “work”? In other words, when Ban the Box and record clearing legislation exists, do such policies sustainably increase the work force? They just might. Studies differ, of course; here are some noteworthy analyses.

  • Employment has been estimated to be the most significant factor in decreasing recidivism13
    • In Chicago, formerly incarcerated people who had found employment for one year had a recidivism rate of only 16% over three years compared to a 52% for all other releases14
    • However, it appears that “any job of any kind” doesn’t help as much. In several studies, recidivism rates only declined when parolees got higher paying jobs leading to sustainable career pathways15, such as construction and manufacturing jobs rather than retail or food service jobs16
  • Reducing employer liability could increase hiring rates of people with criminal records. According to the Society of Human Resource Management, 52% of employers said their primary reason for checking candidate backgrounds was to reduce legal liability rather than to ensure a safe work environment (49%) or assess trustworthiness (17%)17
    • In a criminal background check, how far back should employers look? In other words, how long does it take for someone who has been convicted or arrested to demonstrate that it won’t happen again? By shrinking the time horizon of background checks, pathways to employment increase
    • One answer comes from a 2009 paper which looked at 88,000 first-time arrestees in New York and followed them for the next 25 years to see whether if they committed other crimes. After a sufficient amount of time following a prior offense passes without new charges, ex-offenders are no more likely to be arrested than the average citizen. For those who commit their first crime at a young age or whose first crime is a serious offense, it takes about eight years without another offense. For others, such as those who commit non-serious crimes, it can take as little as three years18

Policy experts in this field believe that viable employees are being passed over unnecessarily.  Emerging research suggests that some combination of age, number of prior convictions and time since last conviction (and not the nature of the crime itself) are the best indicators of future criminal activity risk.  In other words, the older someone is and the more time that elapsed since the crime occurred, the lower the risk to the employer of recurrence.  Algorithms have their problems and biases, but policies driven by empirical data are probably better than the ad-hoc and zero-risk tolerance approaches used today by many hiring managers.

Employers are increasingly turning to second chance hiring

  • The Second Chance Business Coalition, co-chaired by JPMorgan Chase, represents more than 40 large companies across industries that are committed to developing best practices and tools for employers to deploy second hiring and advancement strategies at companies like Accenture, CVS, Eaton, General Motors, McDonald’s, Microsoft, Verizon and Walmart 
  • Last year, JPMorgan Chase hired more than 4,300 people with criminal backgrounds (~10% of new hires in the US) whose history fit within industry regulatory guidelines and had no bearing on the requirements of the job they were seeking
  • Many were involved in low-level crimes such as disorderly conduct, personal drug possession and DUI (driving under the influence), and are employed in jobs such as transaction processing, and lending and account servicing
  • The firm “banned the box” that asked about a candidate’s criminal or arrest records on initial job applications, and established a community hiring strategy that provides legal services, job search support and mentorship in collaboration with local nonprofit organizations
  • In addition to our own hiring practices, the firm is supporting Second Chance legislation at the state and Federal levels through the JP Morgan Chase Policy Center

Second Chance Bills in front of Congress

Fair Hiring in Banking Act, H.R. 5911, would expand employment opportunities for those with a previous minor criminal offense without posing safety and soundness risks to the financial system. This measure passed the U.S. House of Representatives in May with significant bipartisan support and is expected to be introduced in the U.S. Senate this month.

Clean Slate Act, H.R. 2864, would create a process for clearing low-level nonviolent federal records and streamlining the process through automation.

Fresh Start Act, H.R. 5651, would allow states that have expungement or sealing laws in place to apply for a Federal grant to help automate the process.

Appendix charts

The indexed line chart shows monthly issuance of immigration visas in the United States from 2000 to now. The chart illustrates the recent rise in issuance, however, the amount is still below levels seen prior to the pandemic.
Line chart shows the share of drug offense arrests between possession and manufacture from 1994 to 2016. With respect to drug arrests, 70%-80% have been for possession rather than manufacture.
Table shows US arrests by type and share of total arrests from 2014 to 2016.
Line chart shows male labor force participation rates (ages 25 to 54) amongst various countries from 1970 to now. The line chart illustrates that the United States not only had one of the largest declines amongst the group, but is currently at one of the lowest levels.
Bar chart shows the male labor force participation rate (ages 15 to 64) for OECD countries and the United States in 2021. The bar chart conveys that the United States is below the OECD average.

1“Understanding US Inflation During the COVID Era”, Ball and Mishra, Brookings, September 7, 2022

2“Estimating Natural Rates of Unemployment”, Bok and Petrosky-Nadeau (FRBSF), May 31, 2022

3“The Big Stuff: Earnings, Inflation and the Labor Market”, Empirical Research, September 14, 2022

4As per the Federal Fair Chance Act of 2019, the Federal government and its paid contractors may not require that job applicants disclose criminal history information prior to extending a conditional offer of employment

5The high cost of a fresh start”, National Consumer Law Center, February 2022

6Waiting for relief: a national survey of waiting periods for record clearing”, CCRC, February 2022

7Brennan Center for Justice, Matthew Friedman, November 2015

8Barred from employment: More than half of unemployed men in their 30s had a criminal history of arrest”, Bushway et al, Science Advances, 2022

9Colorado Law & Policy Center, “Ban the box legislation boosts employment and reduces recidivism”, Nov 2015

10Expungement of Criminal Convictions: An Empirical Study”, Prescott and Starr, Univ. of Michigan, 2020

11New data on formerly incarcerated people’s employment reveal labor market injustices”, Wang and Bertram, Prison Policy Initiative, February 2022

12Conviction, Imprisonment, and Lost Earnings: How Involvement with the Criminal Justice System Deepens Inequality”, Brennan Center, September 2020

13Reentry and the Ties that Bind: An Examination of Social Ties, Employment, and Recidivism”, Justice Quarterly, 2011

14“Safer Foundation Three-Year Recidivism Study”, Georgia Justice Project, 2008

15“Local labor markets and criminal recidivism”, Yang (Harvard Law), 2017; “The Impact of Post-release employment on Recidivism in North Carolina”, Berger-Cross (NC LEAD), 2022; and “Not Just Any Job Will Do”, Ramakers et al. (IJOTCC), 2017

16“Good Jobs and Recidivism”, Schnepel (Univ. of Sydney), 2016

17Society of Human Resources Management survey, SHRM Research Institute

18“Redemption in an Era of Widespread Criminal Background Checks”, Blumstein & Nakamura (NIJ), 2009

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FEMALE VOICE:  This podcast has been prepared exclusively for institutional, wholesale professional clients and qualified investors, only as defined by local laws and regulations.  Please read other important information, which can be found on the link at the end of the podcast episode.

MR. MICHAEL CEMBALEST:  Good morning, this is late September Eye on the Market.  This one’s called Arrested Development for reasons we will discuss.  There are three topics I want to go through this time.  One is on markets and the Citrix canary.  The second topic is labor markets, the Fed, and if second chance policies for those people with criminal histories can expand the labor force.  And then lastly, a brief COVID update.

So, on markets and Citrix and high yield and everything, I wrote in our Labor Day piece that we had expected the S&P to retest the June lows; now we’re there.  Equity markets have been very slow to digest the path of policy rates, which continue to rise.  It’s almost like people didn’t take Powell at his word, and Powell was extremely slow to recognize what was unfolding in front of him.  Amazing that the Fed barely had forecast any rate increases a year ago, even though we had very tight labor markets and commodity prices were skyrocketing.

So you have the additional headwinds from Europe’s energy mess, China’s real estate collapse, its zero-COVID policy, et cetera.  So more broadly, as we show in here, we’re emerging from this weird decade where the pricing on risky assets was very high relative to the pricing of cash and cash equivalents.  And now that that gap is closing and renormalizing, that argues for lower valuations on a lot of different things.  So we don’t think there’s a deep US recession coming, particularly given the strength of consumer balance sheets.  But we think that better entry points on equities probably still lay head sometime between now and next spring, when the fund rate peaks.

Now on the Citrix deal, which a lot of you probably read about, the senior notes were originally underwritten a few months ago at 6.5.  They got placed at 10, and the underwriters still reportedly held all of the second-lien Citrix notes, which had initial underwriting levels of 8.5, and nobody really knows where those would’ve been placed because they weren’t placed.  And Citrix was reportedly one of the better deals in the pipeline.  What comes next is Twitter and Nielsen, Tegna, Tenneco, all of which are lower rated and/or more cyclical than Citrix.  So given while there’s been a lot of repricing in the equity market so far, the selloff in high yield and leveraged loan has been pretty modest.  And Citrix, this Citrix deal and the next couple may be telling us something more about how much assets will reprice here.

We’ve got some charts in here on leading indicators for earnings, which are falling.  They’re not dropping off a cliff, but obviously they’re declining as the economy gets weaker.  And there is some evidence that positioning and sentiment are very bearish, and some valuations already price in a lot of bad news.  And China banks are trading at less than half of book value.  The P/E ratio on European equities is getting pretty close to the 2012 debt crisis lows and then all that kind of Metaverse, Fintech, hydrogen, SPAC nonsense stuff is down 50 to 80% from its peak.  But right now, all eyes are on the Fed and a rapidly vanishing window for a soft landing.  And that’s what we’re going to discuss next, as it relates to the Fed and the labor markets.

So a lot of clients are asking why in the world, with the Fed tightened into a weakening global economy.  That’s a good question.  But the risk of wage price spirals apparently worries them even more.  The Fed’s under the gun here.  The monthly job-fill rate has collapsed, right.  That’s the percentage of open jobs that get filled each month.  There’s a measure you can look at that looks at the ratio of employment plus job openings to the size of the labor force.  So there’s a lot more jobs than there are workers right now.  And that that number is close to the highest level we’ve seen in decades.  People that switch jobs are earning a big premium relative to those who stay put.  And then there’s a whole bunch of academic research coming out, citing labor markets as being responsible for the bulk of the increase in CPI.  The latest NARO [phonetic] estimate from one of the other papers is 6%, which is one of the highest estimates we’ve seen in a long time.

And so it’s hard to increase the labor supply.  Birth rates are stagnant, immigration is just beginning to pick up, and it’s difficult to lower all those retired people back into the workforce.  I think two-and-a-half times the number of people retired over the last couple of years compared to prior pre-COVID trends.  And so unless the labor supply picks up, the wage price spirals could become a risk for the Fed.  And that’s why they may see themselves as being forced to crush the economy to get that labor supply number and labor inflation back to normal.  And as we discussed last time, the labor force participation rate is already back to normal for 25 to 54-year-olds.  It’s very depressed for those over 54.

So there’s a section in this piece, and I’m not going to go into too much detail ‘cause you kind of have to read it to see what we’re getting at, but there is a potential pool of underutilized labor in the form of people with criminal arrest records, a lot of whom are never convicted for serious crimes or incarcerated.  And this is something that J.P. Morgan has done a lot of work on as a firm and with other members of the Business Coalition. 

And in general, clean slate procedures refer to things that ease the paths to employment.  It can be things like having your arrest records automatically expunged if you remain arrest-free for a certain period, something called ban the box approaches, which would require private employers to not ask about criminal records until after they’ve had the chance to interview or after they’ve been made a conditional offer of employment.  The FDIC can do more to allow our banks to hire individuals with minor criminal offenses until recently that required written waivers.  

I think more can be done in terms of preventing unpaid court debts from being able to clear your arrest record.  In almost every jurisdiction, any outstanding fines and fees and things like that can be a barrier to having your record clear.  And then in some states, they don’t allow for clearing of felony convictions at all, despite the number of years that you might be crime-free.

And to think about why this is important, and when I started looking at this, I didn’t think this was going to be this important and I found these numbers kind of shocking, one-third of all working-age adults in the US have a criminal record, which is again kind of shocking to me.  And obviously that’s going to impair their ability to get a job, even though most of these people have not committed what you and I would consider to be a serious crime, and even after the rest of them who did commit serious crimes fulfill their justice system obligations.

And another study, and I spoke to someone from the Rand Institute who worked on this, almost two-thirds of all unemployed males who are currently unemployed today between the ages of 30 and 38 had been arrested at least once.  And so again, it points to the fact that there could be, amongst this population of people that had been arrested, barriers to employment that are worth thinking about.  And with respect to drug arrests, 70 to 80% of them historically have been for possession rather than manufacturing.

And then as you all probably know, the US has a higher, the highest rate of incarceration in the world, above places like Rwanda and Turkmenistan.  So there’s a large pool of people here who could potentially benefit.  And the US also has one of the lowest male labor force participation rates in the entire OECD.  And again, that’s another sign that we’ve got people missing from the workforce, and some of these second chance policies have the potential to really help on this front.

The last topic for this week’s piece is a brief COVID update.  I haven’t talked to you or written to you about COVID in a little while, and I wanted to just give an update on the bivalent vaccines, the inhalable vaccines, and preventable deaths. So as we all know, based on how transmissible omicron is, the vaccines are no longer very effective in terms of preventing infection and transmission.  Those efficacy rates have dropped below 50%, and that’s in particular, after four to six months.  

However, studies focused on people aged 50 and 60 and above, a cohort that I care a lot about, still show very large declines in mortality and hospitalization risk from a fourth shot compared to either two or three shots.  So there’s a lot of research here showing the benefits in terms of mortality and hospitalization risk, even if it’s hard to prevent infection transmission.  

The other thing that’s interesting is that a lot of the studies showing the risk of unvaccinated people versus vaccinated people ending up in the hospital or dying, is that a lot of the unvaccinated people have already been infected.  So to the extent that those rates for unvaccinated people look bad, it now tells us that infection-induced immunity is not nearly as strong as immunity that’s acquired from vaccines.

So there are these new bivalent mRNA vaccines available.  Bivalent simply means they’ve been engineered to work against two different strains, the original strain and omicron BA 4 and 5.  There’s not a lot of hard data on efficacy yet for these new vaccines.  The decision to move forward with them was based on the results of some prior vaccines and some lab data on this new vaccine from mice.  So efficacy data should be rolling out in the weeks ahead. 

But looking forward, what the world really needs, and we’ve all obviously been reading about this a lot, is something that does a better job on infection and transmission.  And there is a new report from the New England Journal of Medicine indicating that that nasal mucosal antibodies are what may be needed to really block infection and transmission, ‘cause that’s where pathogens, airborne pathogens, are first introduced into the body.

A bunch of companies are working on this.  Take for what it’s worth, China improved its first inhalable COVID vaccine, and I can understand why people would have concerns about the data there.  But according to what they’ve reported, their trial show a better immune response from two injectable vaccines plus an inhalable booster, than from a regimen of three shots.  They also claim the inhalable vaccine needs a lot less viral material to be affected.

And what I think is interesting and important is that India’s biotech approved its own inhalable vaccine, which it developed in very close conjunction with researchers at the Washington University of St Louis.  So that has an imprimatur that I feel much better about.  And I think in the future, the inhaled vaccines are going to be used in tandem with the injected ones.  You still need the injected vaccines to produce antibodies in your bloodstream and internal organs in case the nasal vaccine defenses fail.

So that’s a brief COVID update.  Thank you very much for listening.  I’m very proud of Jamie’s testimony last week, particularly as it relates to energy topics.  And for those of you that read the Eye on the Market annual energy paper, you will understand why.  Thank you for listening, and I’ll talk to you next time, bye.

FEMALE VOICE:  Michael Cembalest’s Eye on the Market offers a unique perspective on the economy, current events, markets and investment portfolios, and is a production of J.P. Morgan Asset and Wealth Management.  Michael Cembalest is the Chairman of Market and Investment Strategy for J.P. Morgan Asset Management and is one of our most renowned and provocative speakers.  For more information, please subscribe to the Eye on the Market by contacting your J.P. Morgan representative.  If you’d like to hear more, please explore episodes on iTunes or on our website.

This podcast is intended for informational purposes only and is a communication on behalf of J.P. Morgan Institutional Investments Incorporated.  Views may not be suitable for all investors and are not intended as personal investment advice or a solicitation or recommendation.  Outlooks and past performance are never guarantees of future results.  This is not investment research.  Please read other important information, which can be found at www.JPMorgan.com/disclaimer-EOTM.

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JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. and its affiliates (collectively "JPMCB") offer investment products, which may include bank-managed accounts and custody, as part of its trust and fiduciary services. Other investment products and services, such as brokerage and advisory accounts, are offered through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC ("JPMS"), a member of FINRA and SIPC. Insurance products are made available through Chase Insurance Agency, Inc. (CIA), a licensed insurance agency, doing business as Chase Insurance Agency Services, Inc. in Florida. JPMCB, JPMS and CIA are affiliated companies under the common control of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Products not available in all states. Please read the Legal Disclaimer in conjunction with these pages.

 

INVESTMENT AND INSURANCE PRODUCTS ARE: • NOT FDIC INSURED • NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY • NOT A DEPOSIT OR OTHER OBLIGATION OF, OR GUARANTEED BY, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A. OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES • SUBJECT TO INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED

Bank deposit products, such as checking, savings and bank lending and related services are offered by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. Member FDIC. Not a commitment to lend. All extensions of credit are subject to credit approval.

LEARN MORE About Our Firm and Investment Professionals Through FINRA Brokercheck

 

To learn more about J.P. Morgan’s investment business, including our accounts, products and services, as well as our relationship with you, please review our J.P. Morgan Securities LLC Form CRS and Guide to Investment Services and Brokerage Products. 

 

 

 

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. and its affiliates (collectively "JPMCB") offer investment products, which may include bank-managed accounts and custody, as part of its trust and fiduciary services. Other investment products and services, such as brokerage and advisory accounts, are offered through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC ("JPMS"), a member of FINRA and SIPC. Insurance products are made available through Chase Insurance Agency, Inc. (CIA), a licensed insurance agency, doing business as Chase Insurance Agency Services, Inc. in Florida. JPMCB, JPMS and CIA are affiliated companies under the common control of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Products not available in all states. Please read the Legal Disclaimer in conjunction with these pages.

Deposit Protection Scheme
INVESTMENT AND INSURANCE PRODUCTS ARE: • NOT FDIC INSURED • NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY • NOT A DEPOSIT OR OTHER OBLIGATION OF, OR GUARANTEED BY, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A. OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES • SUBJECT TO INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED

Bank deposit products, such as checking, savings and bank lending and related services are offered by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. Member FDIC.

Not a commitment to lend. All extensions of credit are subject to credit approval.

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