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每日机构分析:11月11日
Xin Hua Cai Jing·2025-11-11 08:44

Group 1 - Deutsche Bank's Chief Investment Officer for emerging markets indicates that the dollar remains attractive for arbitrage due to the Federal Reserve's cautious approach to interest rate cuts, but there is uncertainty regarding the policy path next year, especially if the new Fed chair adjusts the rate cut pace [2] - Goldman Sachs warns that the onset of a Fed rate cut cycle may fuel asset bubbles, with credit spreads recently widening from 2.76% to 3.15%, reflecting a decrease in risk appetite. Tech investment spending is nearing its peak, with the five major tech companies expected to spend $349 billion in capital expenditures by 2025 [2] - The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) cautions that President Trump's proposed "tariff dividend" of at least $2,000 per person will significantly increase the deficit, potentially adding $6 trillion over ten years, which is double the expected tariff revenue during the same period [2] Group 2 - Morgan Stanley notes that the end of quantitative tightening (QT) by the Fed does not equate to a restart of quantitative easing (QE), as it involves optimizing asset structure without expanding the balance sheet. The key factor affecting market duration and liquidity is the U.S. Treasury's debt issuance strategy, not the Fed's bond-buying actions [1] - Bank of America highlights that the surge in AI capital expenditures and off-balance-sheet financing is masking future profit pressures, with the actual lifespan of AI hardware being only 3-5 years, posing a depreciation risk that may impact financial reports post-2026 [1] - JPMorgan warns that global investment in AI data centers will require at least $5 trillion over the next five years, far exceeding the capacity of any single financing channel. The investment-grade bond market can provide $1.5 trillion, while there remains a $1.4 trillion gap that will need to be filled by private credit and government funding [1]