Remy joined Milford in 2022 as a Credit Analyst within the Fixed Income Team. Her primary role is to research investment opportunities within local and international corporate bond markets.
Prior to joining Milford, Remy worked in banking with experience across commercial, corporate, and institutional banking at BNZ, as well as DBS Bank in London. Remy holds a Bachelor of Business Studies from Massey University, majoring in Finance and Accounting.
In this week’s Monday Market Highlights, Credit Analyst Remy Morgan looks at the Fed, the US jobs data and big tech earnings, with the market ending the week down on concerns about the weakness of the US economy and the drag of big AI spend. Remy also discuss other key economic data across the week […]
In this week’s Monday Market Highlights, Credit Analyst Remy Morgan looks into US data releases which came in softer than expected, including retail sales for May, initial jobless claims, and housing starts and building permits. She also discusses UK May CPI data and Bank of England policy rates, and Chinese data which showed slower industrial […]
In this week’s Monday Market Highlights, Credit Analyst Remy Morgan discusses the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index which showed consumer sentiment declined in early May to a 6-month low. She also covers the Bank of England’s policy rate, and the RBA which held its cash rate at 4.35%. In equity news, Remy looks into […]
In this week’s Monday Market Highlights, Credit Analyst Remy Morgan discusses month and quarter-end, with US stock markets finishing strong. Federal Reserve Governor Waller spoke to the risk of moving rates lower too soon, citing healthy economic output data and consumer spending. Remy also looks into the PCE data release, Australian February consumer price index […]
Why corporate bonds are looking more attractive relative to equities
Throughout the pandemic and up until 2022, the relatively low interest rate environment has made it tough for corporate bond yields to compete with the earnings or dividend yields generated by equity investments.
However, rising global interest rates have changed this dynamic, and bond yields are now […]
It is a well-known fact that the population is ageing in developed markets. Not only are people living longer, but fertility rates are falling, and this sees the number of retirees growing faster than the number of younger people, creating a phenomenon known as the demographic reversal.
Without a change to current policy, developed markets are […]
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