A stunning, otherworldly photograph is leaving people across the internet in awe. Called “The Fall of Icarus,” the viral image captures a skydiver seemingly plunging across the Sun’s blazing surface. The shot was taken by US-based…
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UBS Reaffirms Buy Rating on JPMorgan (JPM) as AI Drives Revenue Growth and Innovation
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) ranks among the best financial stocks to buy according to billionaire Ken Fisher. Following an investor meeting with the bank’s Chief Data & Analytics Officer, UBS reaffirmed its Buy rating and $357 price target for JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) on November 12. The firm emphasized JPMorgan’s long-term lead in the practical use of AI, pointing out that the bank recently switched to generative AI for new applications.
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According to the meeting, JPMorgan’s use of AI is boosting revenue rather than saving costs. Speaking on its conviction regarding artificial intelligence, JPMorgan management stated that AI capabilities will someday become “table stakes” for financial organizations, similar to basic technology requirements like personal computers or internet access.
The LLM Suite, a proprietary platform driven by top third-party large language models (LLMs), is at the center of the bank’s AI revolution. The platform has automated several procedures and provided employees direct access to AI tools.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) is a multinational financial services company that offers investment banking in addition to consumer and small business financial services. It also offers commercial banking, asset management, and financial transaction processing.
While we acknowledge the potential of JPM as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you’re looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.
READ NEXT: 10 Best Magic Formula Stocks for 2025 and 10 Best Retirement Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds.
Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.
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From post-partum depression to relationship woes: Importance of mental health after giving birth
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From post-partum depression to relationship woes: Importance of mental health after giving birth Montreal, “Post-partum depression” has been discussed as an identifiable, measurable, treatable disorder for 50 years now….
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Mexico: Thousands march against crime and corruption in Generation Z protests, with 100 police injured | World News
Thousands have taken to the streets of Mexico City to protest against crime and corruption – with 120 people left injured, according to authorities.
Pablo Vazquez, security secretary for Mexico’s capital, said that of those injured,…
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The Leonid meteor shower 2025 peaks soon. Here’s what to know.
If you missed the peaks for the Northern and Southern Taurid meteor showers, you may soon get another chance with the Leonid meteor shower.
The Leonid meteor shower, which is active from Nov. 6 to Nov. 30, will peak from the night of Nov. 16 to…
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Siakam Steady Despite Pacers' Early Struggles – NBA
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Black Betty — how a prison chant became a heavy rock anthem
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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
The evolution of “Black Betty” from prison chant to a quasi-heavy metal standard perhaps reflects its roots among…
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Foreign investors return to China’s stock market
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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Foreign purchases of Chinese equities have hit their highest level in four years, in a sign global investors are reassessing a market that until recently was considered “uninvestable”.
Offshore inflows into China stocks from January to October this year totalled $50.6bn, up from $11.4bn in 2024, according to data from the Institute of International Finance, a trade body for the global banking industry.
Chinese stocks listed on the mainland and in Hong Kong have risen strongly this year, driven by enthusiasm for artificial intelligence following the release of DeepSeek’s groundbreaking model and a strong run of listings in Asia’s financial hub.
The gains follow years of dismal returns, as foreigners sold down their positions in response to mounting concerns over slowing economic growth and rising tensions between Washington and Beijing.
“China still trades at a record discount to the rest of the world and yet they have some of the best companies in the tech space,” Jonathan Pines, head of Asia ex-Japan equity at Federated Hermes. “They’re the only realistic competitor to the US in some spaces.”
This year’s foreign buying remains below the record full-year figure of $73.6bn reached in 2021, when China’s CSI 300 rebounded strongly from the initial shock of the coronavirus pandemic to hit an all-time high. However, it still marks a reversal after several years of falling investment from foreigners.
“Two years ago China was uninvestable for a lot of people,” said Yan Wang, chief emerging markets and China strategist at Alpine Macro.
Beijing stopped releasing daily data tracking investment in equities in mainland China via Hong Kong last year, making it harder to gauge levels of foreign flows. The IIF tracks changes in external portfolio liabilities and excludes Chinese companies listed in the US.
There has been more buying of Chinese equities since the US unleashed its “liberation day” tariffs in April, according to Citi, with roughly 55 per cent buying versus 45 per cent selling across different client types.
This year, foreign active managers have been net sellers of Chinese equities but that has been more than offset by inflows into passive funds, according to EPFR Global data tracking flows into exchange traded funds and mutual funds.

The strong performance of Chinese stocks this year has primarily been driven by a rush of domestic money from retail investors, said Stuart Rumble, head of investment directing for the Asia Pacific at Fidelity International.
Mainland China investors have poured HK$1.3tn (US$168.7bn) into Hong Kong’s stock market this year, a record high, and now account for about 20 per cent of turnover on the exchange.
Foreigners’ caution on Chinese equities followed a property downturn, a crackdown on private business and an escalating US-China trade war, which together helped push the stock market down by nearly a half from its peak.
“There was a point where people just didn’t want to talk about [China],” said Daniel Morris, chief market strategist at BNP Paribas Asset Management. “Now we do talk quite a bit.”
Beijing’s crackdown on private business, exemplified by Alibaba founder Jack Ma’s fall from grace, is widely seen to have damaged confidence in the country. Regulators have since pushed a string of reforms designed to revive markets.
“It was clear they wanted their capital markets to go up,” said Pines.
This year’s uptick in equity inflows from foreign investors comes as many state pension funds in the US such as Texas and Indiana have divested from Chinese companies as a result of volatile US-China relations.
Some investors are keen to gain exposure to innovative Chinese technology companies, in part as a way to diversify out of US markets trading near record highs. Stocks such as Alibaba remain off their peak valuations and trade at discounts to US counterparts.
“You don’t want to put 100 per cent of your portfolio in Nasdaq,” said Morris.
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