J.P. Morgan Asset Management covers topics related to investing, retirement, markets, economy, and financial strategy, as evidenced by video titles about market rotations, private credit, alternatives, long-term capital market assumptions, and retirement planning. The content appears to be a mix of educational deep-dives and strategic analysis, with a data-driven, global-perspective focus typical of asset management firms, and it posts tutorials and insights that address investors and financial advisors. Uploads are ongoing since 2010, with an average of about 2K views per video across 251 published pieces.
Similar Channels
We found 45 YouTube channels similar to J.P. Morgan Asset Management
Highly similar audience and focus on markets and investments (search overlap 100% with equities, private credit, alternatives; content similarity 77%), indicating overlap in topics and viewers though CNBC’s style is more news-driven than J.P. Morgan Asset Management's advisory depth.
Shares emphasis on private credit, private equity, and strategy development (queries aligned; 80% match in both search and content), but Felix focuses more on evidence-based personal finance rather than institutional asset management.
Targets similar institutional and market topics including private credit and capital market assumptions (search 88%, content 66%), reflecting overlapping audience with slightly different reporting depth and format.
Covers equity market rotation and institutional strategies (search 60%, content 79%), indicating audience interest in market cycles similar to J.P. Morgan, though IBD leans more toward individual investor guidance.
retirement portfolio strategiesinvestment governance best practicespension fund portfolio design
Discusses retirement portfolio strategies and governance which align with asset-management concerns (search 59%, content 79%), sharing a focus on portfolio design but targeting retirement planning rather than institutional asset mandates.
retirement plan alternativesretirement portfolio strategiespension fund portfolio design
Relates to retirement plan alternatives and pension strategies (search 65%, content 74%), mirroring J.P. Morgan's pension and retirement considerations though presented through the creator's personal-finance lens.
Content Landscape
Top competitors include CNBC Television (86% match) and Bloomberg Television (75% match) with large subscriber bases (3.3M and 3.1M respectively) and overlapping queries around equity market rotation, private credit risks, and alternative investments. Ben Felix (80% match) also aligns on topics like private credit risks and private credit strategy, with 526K subscribers. All three share queries related to private credit and capital markets, indicating a competitive space for sophisticated investment content. J.P. Morgan Asset Management has 21.9K subscribers, which is substantially smaller than these competitors, highlighting a gap in audience size despite similar subject matter.
Which YouTube channels are most similar to J.P. Morgan Asset Management?
CNBC Television — 86% match, 3.3M subscribers; Bloomberg Television — 75% match, 3.1M subscribers; Ben Felix — 80% match, 526K subscribers. All are finance-focused channels with emphasis on markets, investing, and economic analysis, sharing content that targets investors and financial professionals.
What type of content does J.P. Morgan Asset Management make?
The channel creates financial and investment-related content based on video titles such as market rotation, implications of a new Fed chair, private credit risks, trends in alternatives for 2026, and long-term capital market assumptions. Upload frequency is implied by the range of recent videos, with an average around 2K views per video.
How do we determine which channels are similar to J.P. Morgan Asset Management?
We analyze J.P. Morgan Asset Management's recent videos, generate topic-relevant search queries, check YouTube search results, and compare the meaning of each channel's content to measure similarity. The result is a ranked list sorted by SERP overlap, semantic similarity, and search appearances.