THE BLOG'S THREE MAIN OBJECTIVES:
QUICK LINKS FOR PASSIVE INCOME CREATION:

Sunday, 28 September 2008

Looking Past the Crisis

ByDavid Sterman, Interim Portfolio Manager

If you take a quick snapshot of key economic indicators, you'll see that there is obviously plenty of reason for concern. But a more liquid banking system, falling energy prices and the sheer resilience of the U.S. consumer could set the stage for the next upturn to begin in 2009.

It's an old investing axiom that the market looks six to nine months ahead, so the timing of an economic bottom and eventual turnaround is likely to dominate market discussions in coming weeks and months. Let's take a closer look at the current headwinds and possible eventual tailwinds.

* Technology/semiconductors: Book-to-bill for semiconductors fell to just 0.83 in August 2008, down 37% from August 2007. Flat-panel TVs, GPS devices and iPods were key demand drivers for tech and chips in recent weeks. Those segments have matured, and it's hard to spot the next hot trend. Consumer PC technology is no longer making radical leaps, and consumers are upgrading only when their current systems wear out.

Silver lining: The weak book-to-bill figure could set the stage for lower inventories and firmer prices. And the weak demand environment is fueling rising losses for the smaller niche players; that should finally lead to industry consolidation and also keep the door closed to new tech IPOs.

That creates a little running room for the larger, better-capitalized tech names. Still-strong balance sheets will likely lead to more share buybacks. Valuations are also firmly in check: Tech bellwether Intel trades just above its five-year low.

* Small and medium-sized businesses are having an increasingly hard time securing loans while banks are stressed. These firms are typically the backbone of new job creation, and their cautious stance is likely to keep their employees (who are also consumers) fearful and tight-fisted as well.

Moreover, any small and medium-sized firms that saw a boost in exports due to the plunging dollar could see reduced foreign demand now that the dollar is strengthening. That could explain why capacity utilization figures appear to be softening.

Silver lining: These companies have stayed lean, with a tight lid on head count and inventories, so massive further retrenchment is unlikely, and signs of an upturn could fuel an inventory rebuild in 2009.

* Retail:The upcoming holiday season is likely to be disappointing. Trouble is, many retailers make almost all of their profits in the fourth quarter, so full-year losses appear likely for a growing number of players. Analysts have yet to write off the fourth quarter, and downward estimate revisions appear increasingly likely. Retailer distress could have an ancillary negative impact on mall-based REITs.

Silver lining: The Darwinian nature of retail can provide a solid boost for the survivors. For example, Pier One is poised to eventually boost sales now that Bombay, a key rival, is out of business. In a similar vein, Bed Bath & Beyond is not heartbroken over the implosion of Linens 'n Things.

* Airlines and autos: Weakening business and consumer confidence implies continued sales weakness in the near term for these two industries. Airlines are entering into the seasonally weakest point of the year, so the demand trends are likely to remain uninspiring for the rest of the year, at least.

The domestic auto makers are scrambling to keep up with Toyota and Honda in terms of fuel efficiency. Whether GM and Ford Motor can turn a profit on smaller, fuel-efficient vehicles is also a challenge, especially in the context of high prices for raw materials such as steel.

Silver lining: Both industries have taken a huge amount of costs out of their operations and can now turn a profit at far lower levels of demand -- when that demand re-materializes. Also, $100 oil is a lot less painful than $140 oil, and the moribund global economy implies that we are unlikely to see another demand-driven spike any time soon.

As I've noted in the past, small-cap stocks are often the best way to play a resurgent economy. That may explain why the Russell 2000 has held its own in the recent turmoil.

Is it time to assume that the economy will be on the mend in 2009? No one can answer that. Serious hurdles remain. Interest rates are my biggest concern. Although inflation appears to now be in check, the rising budget deficits and persistently high trade deficits may make it hard to keep a lid on interest rates.

However, if interest rates stay at low current levels, then you should look past the near-term headwinds, as I suggested recently.

Friday, 26 September 2008

When's the Right Time to Invest?

It's not surprising that first-time investors often worry about the timing of their initial stock purchases. Getting started at the wrong point in the market's ups and downs can leave you staring at big losses right off the bat.

But take heart, Fools: Whenever you first invest, time is on your side. Over the long haul, the compounding returns of a well-chosen investment will add up nicely, whatever the market happens to be doing when you buy your first shares.

Don't Waste Time

Rather than fretting about when you should make that first stock purchase, think instead about how long you're planning to keep money in the market. Different investments offer varying degrees of risk and return, and each is best suited for a different investing time frame.

In general, bonds offer smaller, more dependable returns for investors with shorter time frames. According to Ibbotson, short-term U.S. Treasury bills yielded roughly 3.7% per year from 1926 to 2003. (We picked 2003 as an endpoint because it was right after the end of a bear market.) While this seems relatively meager, remember that inflation was nonexistent for most of this period, making a 3.7% average annual return fairly attractive until the 1960s.

Longer-term government bonds have provided slightly higher returns: an average of 5.4% annually from 1926 to 2003. Surprisingly, their gains have been relatively volatile. In the 1980s, for instance, they returned nearly 14% annually, but in the 1950s, bonds lost an average of nearly 4% per year.

Stocks have also been very good to investors. Overall, large-cap stocks have returned an average of 10.4% per year from 1926 to 2003 -- quite a bit higher than bonds. Surprisingly, the range of the returns for stocks is not that much larger than the range for bonds over the same period. Stocks suffered a slight decline in the 1930s, but enjoyed several particularly strong decades as well, including the 1950s (18% average annual return), the 1980s (16.6%), and the 1990s (17.3%).

When Will You Need the Money?

The longer you have to amass your cash, the greater risk you can accept, since you'll have more time to wait out periods of bad returns.

If you need the money within the next five years, you'll want to avoid individual stocks and stock-centric mutual funds. If you need the money within the next three years, you should also avoid bond mutual funds and real estate investment trusts (REITs), which can drop if interest rates increase.

With those options eliminated, you have a few choices left: buying individual bonds or certificates of deposit (CDs) with durations of less than three years, putting your money in a money market fund, or using a savings account. Each vehicle generates income while guaranteeing the return of your principal. The sooner you need the money, the less you can afford to lose, right?

On the other hand, stocks are a very attractive option for long-term goals like retirement. The higher returns are simply too good to pass up.

When to Sell

Once you've decided what to buy, and when to buy it, you'll next need to decide when to cash out. Since bonds essentially sell themselves when they mature, this question primarily applies to stocks or stock mutual funds.

Some investors believe they can "time" the market, accurately predicting when it will rise and fall. As a result, they counsel selling all your stocks when the market is about to fall, and buying them all back when the market prepares to rise. Unfortunately, if investing were that easy, these same folks would be sunning themselves on beaches in Acapulco, rather than trying to sell their timing methods to other investors.

Granted, when overall economic woes begin to hurt corporate earnings growth, and companies start to flounder, you might consider selling some of your overvalued, lower-quality companies. But beyond that very general scenario, an accurate system for timing the market remains an investor's pipe dream.

Many mutual fund investors are quick to withdraw their cash when returns turn sour. But several academic studies have proven that investors who jump from one fund to the next, chasing performance, tend to do vastly worse than those who stay put. Be prepared to stick with a fund through good times and bad -- with one exception.

In an actively managed fund, you've entrusted your cash to a professional money manager. If that manager abandons your fund to manage another, his or her replacement may not manage your money with equal skill, and you may want to consider selling. Otherwise, a few months of poor fund performance are no reason to jump ship.

Selling stocks can present a more complex set of questions. Two major warning signs may suggest that it's a good time to sell:

• The business's fundamentals change. Is a new competitor rendering its basic products obsolete? Is the company branching out into areas wildly unrelated to its core competencies, leaving you no longer able to understand the business?

• The stock becomes overvalued. Has the market bid the company's shares up to unsupportable heights? Is the stock likely to crash on the slightest bad news? Does the risk of such a tumble outweigh any tax hit you'd take by selling now?

While both those red flags can provide excellent reasons to sell, many of the other screaming sirens surrounding the market can be safely ignored.

Don't Listen to the Noise

The media pays meticulous attention to Wall Street -- but it tends to focus entirely on one particular index, assuming that it reflects the entire market. Index goes up? The market is bullish! Index goes down? Here comes the bear market! Index yo-yos back and forth? Now the market is "volatile!"

Some investors, particularly those keen on technical analysis, study the ups and downs of market graphs to gauge whether investors will take the market higher. For Foolish investors, this is an exercise in futility. Successful investing relies not on monitoring the market as a whole, but on analyzing the strengths and weaknesses of individual companies. Whatever the market's doing at the moment, a buy-and-hold approach to investing is the best way to earn reliable long-term returns.

Review, Review, Review

Of course, you can't just load your portfolio with a few stocks -- however well-chosen -- and forget all about them. Like houseplants, investments need regular care and attention to flourish. Unless you've parked your money in government bonds, with their guaranteed rates of return, you need to check on your investments regularly to make sure they're beating the market -- and doing so more substantially and less expensively than other, similar options.

Reviewing your investments, particularly when you may have made mistakes, also offers a crucial opportunity to learn from your mistakes. Everyone makes errors now and then, but most successful investors avoid making the same goofs twice. Set aside time to review your portfolio at least once every three months, if not every week. While you shouldn't be glued to the computer screen, tracking your investments minute-by-minute, don't forget them entirely, either.

Wednesday, 24 September 2008

Buy, Sell, or Stay Put? Advice from the Pros

By Amy Feldman

If you're feeling pummeled by market mayhem, you're not alone. With Lehman Brothers (leh.) filing for bankruptcy, Merrill Lynch (NYSE:MER - News) selling out, and AIG getting a government bailout, investors have been knocked for a loop. Financial advisers have been fielding phone calls from panicked clients, but the smarter ones called their clients first to put things in perspective. "My issue with my clients is: Are they getting to a place where they cannot sleep?" says David Diesslin, a financial planner in Fort Worth. BusinessWeek spoke with more than 15 of the country's top financial advisers to find out what's keeping their clients awake at night. Here's what they're telling them to do about it.

Should I pull my money out of the market?

In short, no. With the Dow Jones industrial average down 4.4% on Sept. 15, and off 22.9% from its peak last October, investors are undoubtedly watching portfolios shrink. Right now, it's hard to see beyond the bad news. But the market has survived major upheavals in the past -- the savings and loan crisis, for example.

In fact, a number of advisers see a positive sign in the government's decision to allow Lehman to fail. "In the short term, there will be volatility and uncertainty, but the world didn't come to an end," says Coral Gables (Fla.) financial planner Harold Evensky, who was rebalancing clients' portfolios to make sure equities kept their weighting after the sell-off. "Investors who are properly invested own little pieces of companies around the world, and, for the most part, those companies are still fine and making money."

The smart strategy remains the tried-and-true one: Set your asset allocation and stick with it. Panic selling is more likely to harm your portfolio than doing nothing. "Selling at the bottom is not a good strategy, but I'm not a soothsayer," says Laurence Kotlikoff, an economics professor at Boston University and president of ESPLanner. "All I can say is, I'm staying in the market. The U.S. economy can get along quite nicely with fewer Wall Street investment companies, none of which seems able or willing to tell shareholders precisely what they are holding."

I have a life insurance policy or annuity with AIG. What will the Federal Reserve bailout mean for me?

It means you can take a deep breath. Even when there was a risk of bankruptcy, American International Group's insurance subsidiaries appeared healthy and policyholders weren't really at risk. There are numerous safeguards in place for policyholders. Now, with the government injecting $85 billion into the parent and the risk of bankruptcy gone, policyholders should be able to stop worrying.

What about my money market fund? Could it be affected by the market turmoil?

Sadly, yes. On Sept. 16, The Reserve Fund announced that hundreds of millions of dollars of debt securities issued by Lehman (leh.) and owned by its Primary Fund were worthless. That means The Primary Fund "broke the buck" -- net asset value fell from $1.00 per share to $0.97. At Evergreen Investments (AMEX:ERC - News), however, parent Wachovia (NYSE:WB - News) announced it would support the value of three money funds so they would not reflect the decline in value of Lehman debt. Several other money funds have followed suit.

What if I now realize my investment strategy is way off? Should I move my money?

If you were 100% in equities or overweight in your own company's stock, it's good to get out of denial about the risks. "This is a wake-up call for a lot of people," says Christine Fahlund, a financial adviser at T. Rowe Price Group (NasdaqGS:TROW - News). "People are finding out that their risk tolerance isn't what they thought it was or that they're not superstars when it comes to investing."

The big question is how quickly to act. "It's not a good time to sell anything, so it depends how bad it really is," says George Feiger, chief executive of Contango Capital Advisors in Berkeley, Calif. Investors not yet approaching retirement may be able to move portfolios toward a desired asset allocation slowly and wait for the market to settle down.

Will I still be able to retire?

The real reason to worry isn't market movements, no matter how nerve-wracking; it's whether you're saving enough. If you're in your 20s, 30s, or 40s, you've got lots of time on your side. "With a longer time horizon, say 10 to 20 years, even the crash of 1987 looks like a blip," says Michael Mauboussin, Legg Mason's (NYSE:LM - News) chief investment strategist.

For some people on the verge of retirement, there's a tougher reality that may mean working longer. Psychologically, being able to blame the market turmoil is helping investors cut through their denial about how long they're going to need to work to have a comfortable retirement. "It's the first time that people are saying publicly, 'In this market, I am not ready to retire,' " Fahlund says. "The reason is probably more than just their investments, but finally they can share these emotions with people and feel like they are in this together."

What if I'm already retired?

The big problem is the cash squeeze that can come from the double whammy of lower asset values and interest rates. With your portfolio throwing off less cash, you may be tempted to reach for yield. Or you may consider selling assets -- at what are now low valuations. Do either, and you could face trouble in the long term. "It's easy to tell a guy who's 35 and panicking that this is the wrong time to sell. But the consequences are worse if you're older, and it's harder to overcome the emotion and fear," Feiger says. Be sure to run the numbers, and don't assume you'll be short because of the plunge on Sept. 15.

Is this a buying opportunity?

That depends on your risk tolerance. "We may not have final markdowns yet, but if you have the stomach, some investments are looking cheaper," Diesslin says. Even so, he'd steer clear of financials.

Stephen Wetzel, a financial planner and adjunct professor of financial planning at New York University, is far less circumspect. "I'm buying like a crazy man: value stocks, financial services, value funds, muni bonds, some international small cap. You don't get opportunities like this very often."

Bondsellers may get lawsuits

HONG KONG - HONG Kong investors who bought complex financial products backed by collapsed US investment bank Lehman Brothers were considering suing the institutions who sold them, a lawmaker said on Tuesday.

Investors argued that the banks who sold the instruments guaranteed by the failed Wall Street titan did not fully explain the high risks associated with the products.

'The investors are considering mounting legal action against the banks for misrepresentation,' Albert Ho, chairman of the Democratic Party and a lawyer, told AFP.

Many of the investors, who paid a total of 12.7 billion HK dollars (S$2.30 billion US), had been sold mini-bonds which are based on derivatives linked to major firms' stocks but are worthless if the guarantor goes bankrupt.

'These products used to be sold by only investment banks to clients who had at least 1 million US dollars,' said Mr Ho.

'But a few years ago, commercial banks wanted to snatch a piece of the pie and started to convince their elderly customers to buy the mini-bonds without explaining to them the risks involved,' he said.

Mr Ho said investors will meet the city's Consumer Council on Thursday to see if they can get legal and financial assistance to try and recoup their losses.

Mr Ho said many of the bond holders were retired and had put all their savings into the investment because they trusted their banks.

A meeting held on Monday night with investors was attended by 800 people, Mr Ho said. Some of them held a protest on Sunday to urge the government to provide assistance.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority said it would investigate if 21 sellers of the mini-bonds had mis-sold them, according to a report in the South China Morning Post.

The Consumer Council said it had received a handful of enquiries from the investors and would consider their application for its legal assistance fund if it thinks they have a case, a spokeswoman for the council said.

Lehman Brothers collapsed last week under the strain of the US subprime, or high-risk, mortgage crisis, sparking turmoil on financial markets across the world. -- AFP

US risks a recession

WASHINGTON - FEDERAL Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke bluntly warned Congress on Tuesday the United States risks a recession, with higher unemployment and increased home foreclosures, if lawmakers fail to act on the Bush administration's plan to bail out the financial industry.

Mr Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee that failure to act could leave ordinary businesses unable to borrow the money they need to expand and hire additional employees, while consumers could find themselves unable to finance big-ticket purchases such as cars and homes.

Mr Bernanke's remarks came in response to a question from Senator Chris Dodd, a Democrat and the committee's chairman, who seemed eager to hear a strong rationate for lawmakers to act swiftly on the administration's unprecedented request.

'The financial markets are in quite fragile condition and I think absent a plan they will get worse,' Bernanke said.

Ominously, he added, 'I believe if the credit markets are not functioning, that jobs will be lost, that our credit rate will rise, more houses will be foreclosed upon, GDP will contract, that the economy will just not be able to recover in a normal, healthy way.'

Gross domestic product is a measure of growth, and a decline correlates with a recession. Mr Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson urged Congress earlier on Tuesday to swiftly pass a US$700-billion (S$989 billion) Wall Street bailout, warning the entire US economy was at risk.

The warnings came as President George W. Bush vowed before world leaders at the United Nations that US lawmakers would approve the country's largest financial bailout since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Mr Bernanke told lawmakers that despite the unprecedented steps already taken by the Republican administration to confront the crisis, global financial markets 'remain under extraordinary stress'.

Action was 'urgently required to stabilise the situation and avert what otherwise could be very serious consequences for our financial markets and for our economy,' he said in remarks prepared for delivery.

But the proposal to give the Treasury unprecedented authority to borrow US$700 billion to buy toxic mortgage-related assets from struggling financial institutions has met with stiff opposition from some lawmakers.

They have signaled they will not be hurried into approving such a massive US government financial intervention, and have called for proper oversight measures to be put in place to prevent future problems.

Nervous global markets were on Tuesday focused on the grilling that Mr Bernanke and Mr Paulson faced from the Senate Banking Committee, as the two men urged lawmakers to quickly approve the plan unveiled only days ago.

Democratic congressional leaders and some Republican colleagues have insisted the bailout include sweeping safeguards and oversight to protect American taxpayers.

Global equities markets sank amid growing doubts about the prospects for the US bailout's swift passage. US shares had plunged Monday but were trading modestly higher Tuesday morning as investors watched the skirmish in Congress.

Mr Bush assured worried world leaders that his administration was working to avert a financial meltdown.

'I can assure you that my administration and our Congress are working together,' he said in his farewell address to the UN General Assembly. 'I'm confident we will act in the urgent timeframe required.'

But lawmakers remain cautious.

'I'm prepared to act quickly but I'm not going to act irresponsibly. If it takes longer, so be it,' said Senator Chris Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

Mr Dodd said he was 'angry' about being faced with a crisis that was 'a preventable, avoidable situation' created by a political climate he described as 'basically an eight-year coffee break'.

'You had regulators sitting back as loans were being made with no documentation ... predatory lenders taking advantage of the situation - that's how this all unfolded. It's not a mystery,' Mr Dodd said.

Mr Dodd has proposed a number of amendments to the package, including a provision to allow the government to take a stake in the companies it bails out, limits on compensation for company bosses and severance packages of the rescued firms and additional help for American homeowners facing foreclosures.

Democratic Senator Hillary Clinton said she agreed with those ideas and was putting forth proposals of her own.

'I would like to make sure we have oversight and accountability in this immediate package,' she said in a separate CNN interview.

Mr Bernanke underscored the urgency of the swiftly escalating global credit squeeze.

'At this juncture, in light of the fast-moving developments in financial markets, it is essential to deal with the crisis at hand,' Mr Bernanke pleaded.

Mr Paulson echoed the central bank chief's comments, warning that if Congress did not act quickly, a credit crisis could threaten 'all parts of our economy'.

Mr Paulson warned against losing the 'bipartisan consensus' on the urgency of the bailout with attempts to lard the bill with add-ons.

'We need to build upon this spirit to enact this bill quickly and cleanly, and avoid slowing it down with other provisions that are unrelated or don't have broad support,' he said.

Mr Bernanke said the plan to buy up illiquid assets would create liquidity in the market and reduce uncertainty.

And he added it would also 'help to restore confidence in our financial markets and enable banks and other institutions to raise capital and to expand credit to support economic growth'. -- AFP, AP

Tuesday, 23 September 2008

Short-selling ban stuns hedge funds

Many lose a fortune and could fold up in the coming months

Published September 22, 2008
By NEIL BEHRMANN
IN LONDON

HEDGE fund short sellers, caught in Friday's bear squeeze, are believed to have lost fortunes. Many of them are expected to close down in coming months, analysts say.

Although a minority of hedge funds and traders made fortunes when Wall Street, London and other global markets soared, bears were caught unawares by the dual action of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the UK's Financial Services Authority (FSA). Both regulators, followed by Ireland and other European countries, clamped down on short selling.

Hedge funds, investment proprietary traders and other speculators had borrowed shares and sold them, aiming to profit from further price declines. Futures, options and other derivatives were also used to profit from a further market slide.

Instead, the short-selling ban caused an acute bear squeeze, forcing hedge funds and other bears to buy back shares.

Prices opened sharply higher as selling dried up and the bears scrambled to cover their short positions. Banks, insurance companies and other financial shares rose between 30 per cent and 60 per cent at one point, before falling back when the market began to settle down.

The bear squeeze and exceedingly volatile markets in recent weeks have now placed a question mark on the viability of some hedge fund businesses.

George Ball, chairman of Sanders Morris Harris Group, a large American asset manager, is predicting that 1,000 hedge funds will fail in the coming 12 months. This follows 350 failures in the first half of the year. The regulatory restrictions will crimp the flexibility of hedge fund managers, he says.

Hedge funds are likely to be under severe pressure for several reasons:

First, performance has been poor. In the year to Sept 18, before the huge rally on Friday, Hedge Fund Research's HFRX daily global hedge fund index was already down 9.7 per cent.

Relative value hedge fund strategies had fallen by 17 per cent while the HFRX long short hedge funds had declined by 11.6 per cent. Macro hedge funds, that trade all the markets, were still up by 4.6 per cent because of a good first half.

Second, withdrawals are accelerating and risk-averse investors have reportedly given hedge funds notice that they intend redeeming their investments by the end of the year.

Third, short-selling restrictions, tighter regulation and deleveraging are limiting hedge fund manager flexibility and trading.

Fourth, banks and prime brokers are expected to reduce loans to hedge funds. The borrowing and consequent leverage helped them profit in dull markets.

The regulatory moves to curb short selling received praise from companies and the expected criticism from AIMA, the hedge fund industry body. The regulators were accused of creating false markets in banking shares, but they countered that in the current crisis something had to be done to underpin faltering banks.

'The Commission is committed to using every weapon in its arsenal to combat market manipulation that threatens investors and capital markets,' said SEC chairman Christopher Cox.

The SEC said it had banned short selling in 799 financial companies until Oct 2, while Britain's FSA has placed 33 companies on its banned list.

Ireland also outlawed short selling of its biggest banks but said the ban would be kept under 'continuous review'.

The Committee of European Securities Regulators warned further short-selling restrictions could be imposed across its 27 member states.

Recession may hit S'pore

SINGAPORE may slide into a recession as slowing global economic growth undermines demand for the city-state's exports, the finance minister said.

A recession - typically two consecutive quarters of economic contraction - 'cannot be ruled out,' Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said through a spokesman in an emailed response to an Associated Press inquiry.

'We had to expect slower growth than previously expected, given the downward adjustments in the US, Europe and even parts of Asia compared to expectations just 3 months ago,' Mr Shanmugaratnam said.

Singapore's economy grew 2.1 per cent in the second quarter compared to the same quarter a year earlier, down from 6.9 percent growth in the first quarter.

Last month it lowered its growth forecast for this year to between 4 per cent and 5 per cent.

Mr Shanmugaratnam said it was too early to revise the forecast again 'given the extreme fluidity of developments in the US currently.'

Earlier on Monday, Singapore's trade minister Lim Hng Kiang also painted a gloomy picture on Singapore's economiy, saying that economic growth may dip below 4 per cent this year, even as global financial markets try to turn the corner.

'The financial difficulties in the US has led to de-leveraging and credit contractions, therefore slowing global growth,' said the Minister, who was speaking to the media on the sidelines of the Latin Asia Business Forum 2008.

'That means more difficult export markets for Singapore companies and for our economy...later this year and going into next year.'

Mr Lim added that he expects economic growth to be 'closer to 4 per cent, maybe even a bit below 4 per cent, depending on how the financial crisis pans out over the next few weeks and months'.

Singapore's non-oil exports, which account for about 70 per cent of gross domestic product, have been hit hard by the recent economic slowdown in developed countries. Non-oil exports, led by electronic goods and pharmaceuticals, tumbled 14 per cent in August from the same month a year earlier and 5.8 per cent in July. -- AP

5 Lessons for the Next Financial Mania

By Rick Newman

Why do we keep relearning the simplest rules in the world?

Buyer beware. Cut your losses. What goes up must come down. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. No matter how complex the market meltdown of 2008 might seem, all of these simple aphorisms--clichés, really--directly apply.

Of course, in every financial free-for-all--whether it's the S&L crisis, the dot-com bust, the Enron fraud, or today's housing-related meltdown--the chicanery takes a different form. On Wall Street, they call that "innovation." But right now, innovations like credit-default swaps and mortgage-backed securities look more like old-fashioned pyramid schemes: I'll take your money, you take somebody else's, and eventually some guy neither of us knows (or the government) will get stuck holding the bag.

Here's a guarantee: Wall Street will "innovate" again. A lot of guys in expensive suits will make a lot of money for a while. You'll want in, even if you don't completely understand what's going on. The suckers will be the ones who forget what happened in 2008. Smart investors will remember the following lessons:

The fine print matters. One of the most startling developments of the whole debacle has been the vulnerability of money market funds, which most investors consider virtually as safe as a government-insured savings account. Turns out they're not. When a couple of institutional money market funds "broke the buck" and essentially fell below the value of the principal invested in them, the government rushed to set up an insurance fund to back such funds. That's because confidence in the market is rooted in the safety of such basic accounts, where many investors park cash they might need over the short term--assuming the principal is safe.

But money-market accounts generally aren't insured by anybody, as the fine print in the prospectus no doubt points out. That illustrates a problem repeated over and over in the current crisis: A failure to understand the risks of an investment. During the housing boom, everybody focused on how much money they might make--and precious few focused on what could go wrong. Wall Street investors underestimated how risky mortgage-backed securities would be if housing prices fell. A lot of home buyers failed to do the math on their interest-rate resets, assuming it would all work out. Yeah, it's tedious to scour the fine print in such an overlawyered society. But if you don't even know what the worst-case scenario is, you'll be paralyzed if it actually happens.

Don't trust CEOs. Not because they're all liars, necessarily. But because they get paid, among other things, to be energetic cheerleaders no matter how bad their team is losing. The CEOs of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and Merrill Lynch all assured investors and the public that things were getting better for their firms, when the exact opposite was happening. Shareholders who believed them, and held on to their shares, lost a lot of money as bad investments and losses piled up. Skeptics who doubted the CEOs, and sold, cut their losses--or even made money, if they shorted the stock while the companies were on the way down.

Lehman CEO Richard Fuld wasn't just deceiving shareholders; he may even have been deceiving himself: In retrospect, it appears that Fuld had an unrealistic view of his firm's value, turning down buyout offers he deemed too low while waiting for a better offer--or government bailout--that never materialized. CEOs have an obligation to shareholders, but in reality that's second to their own self-interest--or self-delusion.

Don't trust geniuses. Wall Street is home to some of the brightest minds in the world, math and computer and finance geniuses with advanced degrees from all the best universities. If only they worked for you and me.

What they really do is find ways to make money for themselves and their firms. What they don't do is make sure their schemes serve the public interest. So a new kind of double-secret derivative might look really smart when it taps a new way to boost returns for the Bank of Brilliant People. If it works, everybody else will copy it, perhaps adding their own twists. But odds are, nobody in the system has bothered to run computer models showing what will happen if everybody starts issuing double-secret derivatives--and something goes wrong.

Theoretically, that's what government regulators are supposed to do. But the government is usually way behind the fast-thinking, overconfident gamblers on Wall Street. New regulations will attempt to change that. But the geniuses always find ways to outsmart the government and its flat-footed beat cops.

Don't trust yourself. It might have seemed like a great time to buy a house early in 2006. Interest rates were low and home values had been skyrocketing. Friends and neighbors seemed to be getting rich on real-estate deals and financing Lexuses and swimming pools with home equity. There was no reason to think the party would stop anytime soon.

But if you made your move then, you bought at the peak of the market, and chances are your big investment has lost 10 or maybe 20 percent of its value in less than three years. Yet lots of people who considered their money to be smart bought homes at precisely the wrong time. Now, the soaring foreclosure rate on many of those homes is one of the biggest underlying causes of the entire financial crisis.

People who bought at the peak of the market are generally OK if they bought a house because they needed a place to live--and plan to stay there. But millions who bought to join the craze, make easy money, or live like royalty--natural human impulses--now live in a nightmare, not a dream. And there's no government regulation that will curb greedy me-tooism.

Don't count on a bailout. It might seem like the government's writing a check to everybody with an overdue bill or two. There's federal relief for people behind on their mortgages. New insurance for investment accounts. And, of course, billion-dollar loans for troubled conglomerates.

But there's heavy political pressure to make sure taxpayers get something back, and besides, anybody who qualifies for a government bailout is already in a lot of pain. Mortgage relief, for example, goes only to homeowners who are in such dire shape that a regular bank won't help them out--and you might have to give the feds some of the cash if you sell your home for a profit. The federal loan to AIG is at such a high interest rate that the company's shareholders want to pay off the debt as early as possible. And the government could always say no, just like it did to Lehman Brothers. Whatever you consider the worst-case scenario can always get just a bit worse.

Banks gave poor advice

ASIAN retail investors who bought structured products linked to the collapsed USinvestment bank Lehman Brothers are complaining about poor advice from banks and have urged authorities to save them from losses.

Investors in Hong Kong, Singapore and Indonesia have over the past week been outraged that the bond-like products they purchased were actually complex derivatives and they stood to lose most or all of what they had invested.

The products include Lehman-linked minibonds sold in Hong Kong and Singapore, many of which offered modest returns of between 4 and 6 per cent, and DBS Group's High Notes 5 series, which offered around 5 per cent and were linked to eight securities including Lehman bonds.

After staging a protest on Sunday, dozens of aggrieved retail investors turned up at the headquarters of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority on Monday morning to seek help from authorities, complaining that banks and financial advisers did not do enough to warn them of the risks.

Mr Tan Kin Lian, the retired chief executive of Singapore insurance firm NTUC Income, who advises investors through his blog, said many investors bought such products believing these instruments were relatively safe.

'People who would not take the risk of buying shares have been asked to buy these structured products,' he said.

He also said authorities should examine the design of such products, which were often 'grossly unfair' to investors in terms the risks and rewards.

'The odds are not balanced. You have a chance of losing $1 million, but you won't win $1 million. The structure would take away most of the profits and give you very little,' said Mr Tan.

COMPENSATION

Singapore investor Archie Ong, who stands to lose the bulk of his investment in DBS' High Notes, hopes authorities would force banks to compensate investors who thought they had bought low-risk products that paid steady dividends.

'They had been marketed as a low-risk alternative to equities which are much higher risk,' he said.

A Singapore blogger, who called himself Falcon, said 'why would one take such a high risk for the potential of earning 5 per cent? Such high risks of losing everything should give a potential return of more than 100 per cent.'

DBS spokeswoman Karen Ngui said, however, that investors in its structured notes had been adequately advised of the risks. 'It's stated clearly in the prospectus and application forms and the pricing statement as well.'

DBS needed about 30 days to unwind its structured notes before it could determine the actual losses suffered by investors, she added.

Lehman declined to comment.

The failed investments in structured products linked to Lehman has also affected investors in Indonesia who had bought such instruments from Citigroup, according to a report in the Jakarta Post on Monday.

Citigroup did not respond when asked to comment on the report.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore did not immediately respond to queries from Reuters, while Hong Kong officials met with angry investors but did not pledge specific action.

'We hope that through such talks we can better understand the situation and try to find a resolution,' Financial Secretary John Tsang told reporters. -- REUTERS

Turmoil to worsen: Wen

BEIJING - CHINESE Premier Wen Jiabao has warned the global economic slowdown and financial turmoil may get worse, pledging more flexible policies to maintain the country's growth, state media said on Monday.

'The international financial turmoil and the slowdown in the world's economy could worsen, and we cannot underestimate the impact of these changes on the national economy,' Mr Wen said, according to the Shanghai Securities News.

'We should improve the effectiveness, focus and flexibility of macro-control measures... to maintain the stability of the economy, the financial market and the securities market.'

It is particularly important to 'find the balance between maintaining steady and fast economic growth and curbing inflation", he told a meeting on Saturday with provincial and ministerial leaders.

China's economy expanded by 11.9 per cent last year, and cooling efforts have already seen growth slow to 10.1 per cent in the second quarter of this year.

The consumer price index dropped to 4.9 per cent in August, the fourth consecutive month of slowing inflation and well below the peak of 8.7 per cent in February, giving policy makers more room to focus on growth creating.

Both the central bank and the banking regulator issued statements earlier this month calling for more loans to boost the national economy, after Beijing in August raised this year's quota of new local-currency loans by five percent.

The finance ministry also unveiled 10 days ago a package of subsidies worth 3.51 billion yuan (S$730 million) to help small and medium-sized firms. -- AFP

The end of an era

NEW YORK - GOLDMAN Sachs and Morgan Stanley brought down the curtain on a Wall Street era on Sunday, agreeing to a radical revamp that completes the biggest overhaul in high finance since the Great Depression.

The last two major independent investment banks in the United States will become holding companies, a rescue move which accepts the kind of government regulation that Wall Street's top high-rollers long fought bitterly against.

Even as the United States announced a US$700 billion (S$999 billion) bailout to save financial institutions, the firms themselves asked for the change as one after the other of their rivals were swallowed up in the global financial crisis.

The move submits both firms to significantly more regulation and will limit the massive profits that spawned a culture of high-risk finance and made them, along with other investment banks, the envy of Wall Street.

As holding companies, both firms will have easier access to credit to survive the current crisis - unlike former rivals Lehman Brothers, which collapsed, and Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch, which were taken over.

But it will also halt much of the massive risk-taking, often funded with huge debt, that created the swaggering investment-banking culture of Wall Street legend - a winner-take-all mentality often caricatured as naked greed.

Both firms will have to radically cut back the amount of money they borrow relative to the capital they have, a restriction that will curb profits dramatically.

'We believe that Goldman Sachs, under Federal Reserve supervision, will be regarded as an even more secure institution with an exceptionally clean balance sheet,' said Goldman chairman Lloyd Blankfein.

He said the decision had been 'accelerated by market sentiment' - an acknowledgement of the global financial turmoil that has transformed the face of Wall Street virtually overnight.

As the world financial crisis deepened last week, the US government took over troubled insurer AIG, Lehman Brothers collapsed and Merrill Lynch was bought out. Morgan Stanley was already in talks on a possible merger.

'This new bank holding structure will ensure that Morgan Stanley is in the strongest possible position,' chairman John Mack said.

Looking to shore up confidence and draw a line under the crisis, the US government put together a US$700 billion dollar bailout proposal.

The plan, now urgently awaiting approval by US lawmakers, would give the US Treasury almost free rein to buy up bad mortgage-related debts which sparked the current crisis.

US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said at the weekend that the US Congress now needed to take action fast.

'We need this to be clean and quick and we need to get it in place,' he said.

The US bailout plan brought cheer to markets. Asian bourses were largely up on Monday, and the Dow Jones surged 3.3 per cent on Friday.

But Europe's main markets dipped in early trade on Monday amid real uncertainty about the massive plan, the biggest bank rescue ever.

US financial authorities have meanwhile been working with their counterparts in Europe and Asia over the past fortnight to prevent a collapse of the global financial system.

Australia and Taiwan became the latest markets to announce restrictions on short-selling - a stock bet that share prices will go down, and which often helps them do so. -- AFP

Sunday, 21 September 2008

Why Wall Street Hates Gold and Silver??

(Excerpted from Chapter 12 of How to Prosper During the Coming Bad Years in the 21st Century.)

Wall Street ignored gold and silver during most of the 1970’s hyper-profitable bull market. They were either outright hostile, or acted as though the metals didn’t even exist. I got no respect, even though the first edition of my book sold 2.6-million copies and was near or at the top of The New York Times best-seller list in both hard and soft cover for two years, and I was all over the media; Wall street Week, Oprah twice, Regis and Kathy Lee three times, etc, etc. They were usually hostile also. Wall Street paid little attention to gold until it reached about $650, far too late for them to have much of a chance for their clients to make money.

Why the hostility? Partly because they believed their own rhetoric! Historically, because rising gold always means falling stocks or a troubled world, and they made most of their commissions in the stock market, they had to remain bullish on stocks, and bearish on gold. Their bullish stock-market recommendation was necessary because investors wouldn’t buy stocks if their advisors were dubious about the market’s future. They sneered at the inflation fears of us gold and silver fans, and derisively called gold investors “gold bugs.” Most of the young whippersnappers who now control Wall Street were in diapers 25 to 30 years ago during the last gold bull market so they haven’t experienced rising gold and inflation. Consequently, another gold bull market is inconceivable to them.

Studying Psycho-ceramics

One of the funniest things that ever happened to me illustrates the skepticism of mainstream media types regarding gold and silver. In 1978 I was on a national promotion tour for the first edition of my book when I found myself in Detroit, rushing to a TV station for a scheduled interview on a big morning show. I barely got there in time when the host turned to the camera and said, “Today we’re going to study psycho-ceramics, and with us today is a crackpot from California.” And the interview went downhill from there; with his biggest argument being that silver was an impractical investment for most people, unless you were very rich.

One year later I found myself in the same studio, same host, promoting the mass paperback of my book. But this time, when the light went on, he said, “Today we have with us one of America’s most brilliant financial advisors,” and the interview was terrific from then.

After the show, I reminded him of what he had said before, and asked him what had changed his mind. He very sheepishly said, “I read your book and bought silver from a local coin dealer, and tripled my money since you were here last.” So the media is not always infallible, even though they are usually wrong.

Inside Wall Street

Wall Street is a culture, as well as a financial institution.

Most of the young brokers who are the big producers on Wall Street are human beings, subject to all the errors of habit and behavior and peer pressure that plague all of us. They are surrounded by “group-think.” They make tons of money on the status quo. I have visited firms on Wall Street with big trading rooms full of twenty-something men and women whose annual income is measured in the millions – all on commissions on stock sales.

Few big Wall Street firms sell bullion (right off hand I can’t think of any) so it is only money out of their pockets if hot-shot brokers tell their clients to sell some stock and put the money into bullion or coins. Maturity and client concern are scarce commodities on Wall Street.

They are congenitally bullish on stocks, because that’s where their bread is buttered.

Financial Shows

Many of you listen to or watch financial shows, populated with people who are typical examples of main-stream Wall Street financial thinking.

If your broker’s opinion is important to you, you may be uncomfortable here. If you aren’t a maverick, you had better become one, and be quiet about it. You will have to leave the herd, and for a while, Merrill Lynch’s herd is all on Wall Street.

Terrorism and Other Things

Let’s consider just a few possible scenarios.

Panama and the Dollar

When we negotiated away the Panama Canal to Torrijos, the Panamanian Dictator, our chief negotiator was Sol Linowitz, a member of the board of Chemical Bank in New York. He was appointed for one day less than six months, so his appointment would not be subject to Congressional approval, and sure enough, the giveaway deal was signed one day before Linowitz’s term was up.

One key part of Linowitz’s banker-inspired mission was that the Canal Zone would be a “Free-banking Zone,” not subject to regulations or oversight. Even before the deal was signed, bank buildings were going up all over the Zone. Every multi-national bank was there, and it appears that they moved many of their international money systems there, with no oversight or regulation. Who determines their safety or vulnerability? No one!

If terrorist hackers were to hack into those computers and infect them with a destructive virus, the entire dollar-based monetary system would disappear in a nanosecond. In that case, for all practical purposes, the only spendable money left would be gold or silver coins or barter.

And what if they were able to sneak a nuke onto a ship and detonate it in the canal? It’s already bad enough that the Chinese are in control of the ports on both ends of the canal. Imagine the chaos with the banks obliterated and commerce fatally crippled.

These and innumerable other scenarios may seem beyond the edges of credibility, but I dare you to say they are not possible.

This is not a forecast, only a speculation about a possible worst-case, we-hope-not scenario.

The Hyperinflation Scenario

What if monetary inflation rose as a result of soaring demands on government with the soaring deficits, and the subsequent inevitable consumer inflation broke out into a real hyperinflation, with the modern money machine running night and day, like Germany during the 1920s. This would make money increasingly worthless and the precious metals increasingly precious. History tells us that this has happened over and over again, and we are repeating most of the same deadly mistakes.

Let’s pretend we are transported into a future where America is devastated by hyperinflation, and see what it looks like

The world will be in terrible trouble, and the prosperity and comfort that now surround you will be in tatters. You will be surrounded by people struggling to survive, let alone to prosper, as in the 1930s. That’s what happened in Germany after the hyperinflation of the deutschmark, and the general suffering was the fertile ground which gave birth to Adolph Hitler, dictator. If you have prospered by holding gold and silver, you can buy a lot of safety and security.

These are only a few of the possibilities.

The Best Case

Even if we wipe out or neutralize al Qaeda and the currency system hangs together, monetary inflation has already been cooked into the economic cake by the Federal Reserve and industry, and so is the silver supply/demand situation. Even in this “best-case” situation, you will make a bundle on this monetary-inflation-sensitive investment, even in a still-orderly world.

If all else fails, you still can count on Social Security, Medicare and the prescription-drug program to trigger a flood of trillions of dollars of “money printing” and the subsequent monetary inflation, followed as night follows day with soaring price inflation. As it becomes obvious to the public that these programs are plummeting into insolvency, the consumer inflation rate and gold and silver will soar.

When the dire facts become obvious, Congress will start desperately searching for solutions, but which ones?

Will they raise taxes and watch FICA soar and taxpayers revolt? Very little, if any! Will they cut benefits or raise the Social Security retirement age? Maybe a little bit, but not much. Will they dig in their heels and memorialize the current dysfunctional system by simply printing money? You bet! This will lay the groundwork for more ruinous inflation, and soaring gold and silver.

In this best case (the most likely – I think, I hope?), we will at least see rising inflation and an inflationary recession (which is already written in cement), and gold and silver and the metals and their mining stocks will go up – perhaps five to ten times, perhaps a lot more.

There is no best-case – or worst-case – scenario in which I can conceive of gold and silver being losers. You can mortgage the kids and bet the farm!

By Howard Ruff
The Ruff Times

10 things you should know

Couldn't keep up with the twists and turns that took place in the financial world last week? Here's a primer
By Ann Williams

1 THE FALL OF LEHMAN BROTHERS

The week that broke Wall Street began with Lehman Brothers. On Sept12, news broke that the fourth- largest investment bank in the United States was on the brink of collapsing due to bad mortgage assets. Lehman was scrambling for a buyer as customers and trading partners fled.

No deal, however, was reached during that desperate weekend. Lehman's chief executive had waited too long to sell the firm, and everyone was now afraid to buy.

The US government, its last hope, kept to its word and refused to bail Lehman out.

Just after midnight last Sunday in New York, Lehman announced it would file for bankruptcy, the biggest in history.

It was around midday last Monday in Asia, and immediately the carnage on stock markets began as investors dumped bank shares.

Lehman's fall showed that the US government would not automatically prevent big banks from failing. It also showed how much worse the financial crisis had become even after the government had rescued mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earlier this month and investment bank Bear Stearns six months ago.

2 SAVE AIG, SAVE THE WORLD... NOT

Two days after allowing Lehman to fail came bigger news that the US government would bail out American International Group (AIG), one of the world's biggest insurers. It would give the company an US$85 billion (S$122 billion) loan for an 80 per cent stake.

AIG was hit by a big shortage of cash triggered by US$18 billion of losses over three quarters, a sinking stock price and cuts in its credit ratings.

The insurer, with US$1.1 trillion of assets, however, was deemed too big to fail. The US government said unlike with Lehman, it had to rescue AIG because of the insurer's extensive ties to businesses and ordinary people throughout the world through a host of insurance products.

The bailout, though, failed to calm the markets. Instead, it led investors to wonder what other companies might suddenly plunge towards insolvency.

3 CRISIS HITS HOME

For ordinary people around the world, the credit crisis, which has been playing out for the last 15 months, may have really hit home only with the fall of AIG.

Newspapers in Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan splashed pictures and carried stories of hundreds of worried people queuing up to cash out on their insurance policies held with AIA, a unit of AIG.

For many ordinary investors in Asia, it was the first time their faith in American assets and the financial system was well and truly shaken.

Even after the US government stepped in to take over AIG and AIA put advertisements assuring policyholders that it could meet all claims, the queues continued.

4 THE BANK SALE WORTH WAITING FOR

Banks, meanwhile, were spooked by what was happening to Lehman. Merrill Lynch, the biggest brokerage in the US, wasted no time in finding a buyer.

It announced last Monday in New York that Bank of America would take it over for US$50 billion in a deal stitched together in just 48 hours.

And by last Wednesday, Britain's Barclays Bank, which had walked away earlier from buying up Lehman for the price its chief executive wanted, ended up with Lehman's core investment banking operations for just US$250 million.

With their shares plunging by the minute, other banks hung out 'For Sale' signs.

Lloyds of Britain rescued the country's biggest mortgage lender, HBOS, last Thursday in a US$22 billion takeover. At least five companies, including HSBC and Citigroup, were said to be looking at buying Washington Mutual.

Morgan Stanley bought time by exploring a possible merger with a smaller American bank, Wachovia, and more investment from a Chinese state-owned investment group.

With share prices bouncing back last Friday, banks like Morgan Stanley may no longer need a buyout or merger, so the Great Bank Sale may be over - for now.

5 CREDIT SQUEEZE TURNS INTO FREEZE

For 15 months, banks and other companies have suffered from a credit crunch as lending slowed. In the last week, however, as Lehman, then AIG and then Merrill went down, investors lost all confidence in the financial system.

The result was that all sorts of lending or credit froze, as the costs of short-term borrowing soared by as much as 30 per cent, hurting banks and other companies.

No corporate bonds were sold in the US in the last week - the first time that has happened since at least 1999 - while sales in Europe dropped 98 per cent.

Things reached crisis proportions when banks and investment firms simply stopped making loans to each other, as they hoarded cash to protect against any sudden need for it themselves.

6 CENTRAL BANKS RACE TO CALM THE STORM

With a global crisis on their hands, the top central banks from the US, Europe, Japan, Britain and Canada moved together last Thursday to pump an extra US$180 billion into money markets to keep credit flowing and interest rates down.

Many more billions were spent individually during the week.

The US Treasury also used US$50 billion to support money-market mutual funds and even lent more money directly to banks and other financial institutions, so they could buy certain assets from money-market funds.

With US$3.3 trillion in assets, money- market funds in the US are key in providing loans to companies so they can buy supplies and pay their employees.

With fund managers rushing to the safety of US Treasury bonds, corporations could not find buyers for their short-term loans. Making things worse, ordinary people who invest in these funds started pulling money out after one fund turned out to be not as super-safe as thought.

7 STOP THE LOOTING

They have been compared to looters after a hurricane, who are out to plunder. Short-sellers borrow stock to sell, then buy it back when the price drops, making a gain on the price difference.

Short-sellers, many of them huge hedge funds, have sought to profit from the financial crisis by betting against bank shares. In normal times, short-sellers add volume to share trading and help stocks find their true worth. When there is a crisis, on the other hand, unrestrained short-selling can make shares plunge even faster.

In response, the US and Britain slapped a temporary ban on the short-selling of financial stocks last Friday. Russia, whose stock markets plunged by more than 20 per cent last week, banned the shorting of all shares.

The ban on short-selling caused bank shares around the world, which had suffered big falls earlier in the week, to jump as much as 40 per cent last Friday.

8 THE MOTHER OF ALL BAILOUTS

After months of fighting each new emergency as it flared up, the US government announced last Friday a plan to once and for all deal with the bad mortgages and mortgage-linked assets at the root of the credit crisis by buying them all up from US banks.

The hope is that by helping banks get rid of bad mortgage debt, the government can avert a total meltdown of stock and credit markets around the world and free banks to make new loans to keep US businesses running and workers employed.

By taking on the actual mortgages and changing their terms, the government can also make it easier for home owners to pay back their home loans, thus helping the housing market to recover.

The cost: No official word has been given but estimates put it at US$500 billion to US$1 trillion.

There are no details yet on how the plan will work but the US government will likely buy the assets at a big discount and hold on to them until the US housing market recovers. Ideally, these loans could then be sold at a profit so US taxpayers, who are ultimately paying for the bailout, will get some money back.

The US Congress, which has to pass laws for the plan to be implemented, is looking at it now and will hold hearings this week. A deal must be hammered by the end of this week, when Congress adjourns because of the US presidential elections.

9 FLIGHT TO SAFETY AND BACK

Until last Thursday, panicked investors rushed to dump any asset seen as risky, especially stocks, as they piled into gold or US government bonds, seen as safe bets. Some just wanted plain cash.

But then the flight to safety reversed itself last Friday with news of the US government's sweeping plan to stem the crisis.

As investors poured their money back into stocks and investment funds, the price of gold fell by US$32 last Friday after soaring by US$116 in the previous two days.

The price of US Treasury bonds also tumbled. As a measure of how bad the fear was earlier in the week, investors piled into these bonds even though they were offering practically nothing in interest income.

Oil prices shot up by more than US$6 to over US$106 a barrel last Friday on hopes that the plan to resolve the bank crisis will spur economic growth, which is good for oil demand.

10 WHAT A RIDE

And so, investors all over the world went on the wildest ride of their lives last week.

To illustrate how volatile global markets had been, Russia suspended all stock market trading when shares plunged by 20 per cent to 25 per cent last Wednesday - and did so again when they rocketed up by 30 per cent last Friday.

The Irish stock exchange, with its biggest burst in history, jumped more than 25 per cent in the first hour of trading last Friday on news of the giant bailout.

Likewise in Asia and Europe, stock markets swung wildly up last Friday after plunging to dramatic lows earlier in the week.

In the US, the heart of the crisis, big plans to purge banks of bad assets and curb short-selling sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average, a key market index, soaring by 780 points in two days.

Because the Dow had plunged by about the same amount earlier in the week, however, the index actually ended the week where it started - pretty much like a real roller coaster.

Good comment by CNA forumer: Sessam

The worse may not be over because the details and reactions of global markets to the latest Paulson initiative are still so uncertain. What the Americans hope is that taking a more definite stand on a "final solution" and the restriction on short sales for a time will confer some stability on world markets. Their first objective is to prevent further deterioration of assets held by their financial institutions so that they can restructure themselves by selling of assets at reasonable prices to recapitalisation or by M&As.

We really don't know for sure what will be ahead, and one hope that the rises in world markets these 2 days after the announcement of the Paulson plan are returning confidence in the American ability to see through the crisis. But expect a lot of volatilities still...for it is still early days.

Costly intervention could narrow government's economic options later.

By Mark Landler

THE NEW YORK TIMES

Saturday, September 20, 2008

WASHINGTON — The rescue plan being created by the Bush administration is much like the financial crisis it is meant to end — complex, far-reaching and potentially rife with unpredictable consequences.

Among the dangers cited by economists Friday, as word of the plan began circulating, were an explosion in federal debt, higher financing costs, an escalating reliance on foreign capital, higher inflation and a further erosion of American economic sovereignty.

All of these dangers, these experts say, are hypothetical — except for the cost, which by some estimates could eventually exceed $1 trillion. Taking on that much additional debt could narrow the economic options available to the next presidential administration.

"The implications are that, at some point, you're going to have to see higher taxes, lower expenditures or a combination of both," said Carmen Reinhart, a University of Maryland economist.

Not all of the potential consequences of the plan are negative. Economist Nouriel Roubini, said the rescue, if properly executed, could lift the economy by reducing the burden on households, particularly those afflicted by troubled mortgages.

"If you reduce their debt payments, they will start spending again," said Roubini, a professor at New York University. "It's not going to help us avoid a recession, but it could make it shorter."

To finance the rescue effort, the United States will have to borrow even more from foreign investors. That hasn't been a problem in recent days, given the intense demand for Treasury bills, which are perceived as a safe haven by investors around the world.

But if the bailout doesn't quickly restore confidence in the U.S. financial system, foreign investment could slow, which would drive up the cost of financing that debt, said Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard economics professor.

So far, the dollar has shown remarkable resilience in foreign markets, suggesting, he said, that foreigners still have faith in America's ability to get out of this crisis.

The concerns of foreign central banks over the fate of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac played a role in the Treasury's rescue of the mortgage finance giants. That influence is likely to grow, along with the debt they hold.

"The people with leverage are the Japanese, the Chinese and the oil-producing countries, who will want assurances that the debt they hold is worth something," said Eugene Steuerle, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute who worked in the Treasury Department during the Reagan administration.

Steuerle said he hoped that the additional burden would force policymakers to confront the country's long-term budget imbalances.

The last time this happened, he said, was in the early 1990s, after a much more modest government rescue effort in the aftermath of the 1987 market crash.

But first the Treasury and the Federal Reserve must successfully carry out this plan. And the sheer scale and complexity of it left economists and other experts slack-jawed.

"It's like doing a quintuple jump in figure skating," said Edwin Truman, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a Treasury official in the Clinton administration. "It's impressive if they can do it. It's impressive even to try."

Among the potential sources of tension is the Treasury's ultimate decision on whether it will buy troubled mortgage-backed securities held by non-American banks. European banks, such as UBS, invested heavily in such securities.

"If (European bank) Paribas has bought a mortgage-backed security, why can't they present it to Treasury?" Truman said. "If the government is going to do it for the American banks, they should do it for everyone."

But that could provoke a strongly negative reaction from lawmakers, who already protested that other countries should chip in for the $85 billion rescue of the insurance giant American International Group, because it has operations in those countries or has insured their banks.

"Are the taxpayers in the United States going to bail out all the banks in the world?" said Allan Meltzer, a historian of the Federal Reserve. "I just don't know how this works out."

Meltzer said he thought the plan would be politically viable only if participation was voluntary and if the banks that received government aid were required to pay it back later. "We're protecting private industry, not the public interest," Meltzer said.

Perhaps the plan's longest-term consequence is a wholesale reordering of the financial landscape. Economists said the government will almost certainly impose a raft of new regulations on banks.

"It's hyperbole to say we're abandoning the free-market system," Rogoff said. "But we certainly seem to be entering a new uncharted territory of regulation."

Ban on Short-Selling Will Hurt Rather Than Help Brokerage

Courtesy of CNA forummer: Johnlaw

New measures to shore up the markets are coming so fast and furious that it is becoming hard to keep track of them. What most people do not realize is that they produced some not-very-pretty unintended consequences. As we discussed (courtesy reader Lune) at the time:

1) Congress raises conforming limits on Fannie/Freddie to help unfreeze the mortgage market. Result: agency spreads skyrocket, bringing down Bear and a host of hedge funds. Mortgage markets still remain frozen.

2) Fed opens TSLF to unfreeze mortgage market. Result: Carlyle goes bankrupt as people rapidly arbitrage the difference between holding MBS in firms that can and can't access the new credit facility. Mortgage markets remain frozen.


Note the spike in agency spreads and bankruptcy of Carlyle helped precipitate the run on Bear.

In fact, as Richard Bookstaber discussed at length in his book, Demon of Our Own Design, this sort of unintended consequence is precisely what you'd expect to see in a tightly coupled system, such are our financial system. Tight coupling occurs when processes move from step to step so rapidly that intervention is well-nigh impossible. Bear Stearns and Lehman are classic examples. A downgrade of their debt beyond a certain level meant that their counterparties could no longer trade with them, because that exposure would get them downgraded too. Thus a move (or threatened move) beyond a trigger point kicked off a sequence of unstoppable events.

One possible consequence is that hedge funds forced to exit positions by the SEC ban on short-selling might take losses big enough to lead to a run of the fund, forcing liquidation of positions. That rapid selling could produce distressed prices, and in a worst-case scenario, brokers could take losses if collateralized positions fell in value and hedge funds were unable to meet margin calls.

Note Morgan Stanley and Goldman are far and away the biggest prime brokers.

John Hempton sets forth another unintended consequence which is more certain to happen and broader in its impact and puts none to fine a point on it in his post title, "SEC Tries to Bankrupt Wall Street":

Last I looked when I was short a stock the broker borrowed the stock (yes, Virgina you do get a borrow) and sold it. They then had cash.

That cash was not available to me - it was pledged to whoever provided the stock to remove or reduce the risk that the stock won't be returned.

That means it is generally available to the broker (who will generally lend me the stock from their inventory or margin or prime broker clients).

Now there are a few hundred billion of short-sales out there. Probably more than normal - but a lot in almost all markets.

And those short sales produce cash balances of a few hundred billion, most of which are available to Wall Street brokers.

If you ban short-selling those balances will taken away from Wall Street brokers.

That would be rather unpleasant. Last I looked the debt market was skittish and was hardly going to replace that money.

So I conclude that the SEC in their "infinite wisdom" are going to stick the knife into Wall Street and bankrupt the lot of them. For political optics. So they can be seen to be doing something about short-selling.

The only reason the damage might not be as broad-scale as Hempton fears is that the "temporary" ban is on shorting financial stock. Oh wait, financial represented (until they started hitting the rocks) 40% of S&P earnings.

And there is something far simpler that the SEC could do. Just re-implement the uptick rule (it means you can short only when the last sale price was above the immediately prior sale). That rule comported itself well for over 50 years but for some unfathomable reason (no doubt at the behest of Wall Street) was eliminated b the SEC.

Reasons why the bailout might not work

Courtesy of CNA forummer: Johnlaw

The aim is two-fold. The government hopes that by buying these mortgages, enough debt will be removed from the balance sheets of banks to enable them to recapitalise and resume lending, something they have all but ceased doing since the subprime housing market collapsed. This, hopefully, will stem the precipitous drop in property prices, which has resulted in more and more homeowners defaulting on their mortgages. Secondly, the government hopes to sell these mortgages once the market recovers. If housing prices do cease falling and people resume buying homes, then the US stands to make a substantial profit from the mortgages it now holds.

But the US economy’s woes are not limited to merely falling home prices caused by a stagnant lending market. Nor will the removal of these bad debts guarantee that banks will become profitable again. Unless banks are able to return to their core business and resume lending, they will continue to fail, this bailout will be unsuccessful, and investors will resume their flight. Were that to happen the US economy will decline at an even swifter rate than we witnessed over the past week.

Asia casts nervous eye on US financial turmoil

By KELLY OLSEN,AP Business Writer

SEOUL, South Korea - Han Seung-woo is casting a wary eye on the financial crisis erupting halfway around the world on Wall Street.

From garment makers in southern China to real estate agents in India, businesses across Asia are worried that the turmoil will filter through to them.

"I'm watching nervously," said Han, the president of Sam-A Techno Solution, a technology services company in Seoul with 10 employees and annual sales of 3 billion won (US$2.7 million).

Even before the past week's dramatic events, the economic slowdowns in the U.S. and Europe were dragging on Asia's biggest economies in Japan, China and South Korea. Now, the worry is it could get worse.

The fears highlight the growing realization that Asian economies have not "decoupled" as much from their longtime dependence on the U.S. market as some had previously thought or hoped.

"Right now people somehow conclude that decoupling is a myth," said Citibank Korea economist Oh Suk-tae.

Lending has tightened around the world as Western banks stagger under the weight of billions of dollars in bad loans and mortgages that have accumulated from the wave of U.S. home foreclosures.

Those woes led to one of the most unforgettable weeks in financial history: major U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy, Bank of America bought Merrill Lynch & Co. and the Federal Reserve bailed out troubled insurer American International Group Inc. _ sending shock waves through global markets and fanning fears of a worldwide financial meltdown.

World markets rallied Friday on news of a U.S. government plan to rescue banks from billions of dollars in bad debt.

Han, the South Korean businessman, said if the bailout plan stabilizes the U.S. economy and exchange rates, that would obviously be positive.

But whether the worst is over remains to be seen, and the economic outlook is still plenty murky for businesses across Asia, especially smaller ones that lack the financial resources of larger corporations.

"We're OK until the end of the year, but I have no idea what 2009 will look like," said Christopher Fussner, president of Singapore-based electronic equipment distributor TransTechnology, which has 165 employees in nine Asian countries. "My clients are trying to digest what's going on."

Volatile markets also could undermine consumption and investment in Asia. Already, corporate borrowing costs are rising as investors demand a greater premium on corporate bonds, creating a drag on investment in the region.

"We have a perfect storm in the making," said Ifzal Ali, chief economist at the Asian Development Bank in Manila.

He predicts the Wall Street meltdown means U.S. economic weakness will last longer than thought, at least through 2009, seriously hurting exports from Asia, particularly China.

Shrinking demand for India's information technology companies and the withdrawal of global financial services companies from India will weaken property values and hit the outsourcing industry hard, predicts Anuj Puri, India country head of Jones Lang Lasalle, a real estate company.

"The IT sector is going to take a beating," he said, adding that he is going to shift his strategy to focusing more on domestic clients instead of foreign ones.

The pandemonium on Wall Street has added to anxiety for Chinese exporters that already have seen demand in key American markets decline.

"When we first heard the news, we were like, 'Oh, my! Why is the economy doing this again?' You know everyone is waiting for an opportunity to breathe, to recover," said Lu Lingru, trade manager for Tianji Leisure Products Ltd.

The 110-employee company in Zhejiang province in China's southeastern export belt sells gazebos, garden umbrellas and outdoor furniture and depends on the United States for all its sales.

"Certainly, this is going to affect our business," Lu said.

The company will be fortunate to equal last year's sales of 150 million yuan (US$22 million), Lu said, and is trying to persuade customers not to demand price cuts.

Likewise, in southern China's Guangdong province, garment exporter Zhongshan Maochang Garment Co. has already been under pressure from higher labor and material costs.

"Now, it's not easy to get orders from other countries because of the worldwide economic crisis," said Duan Zhihui, foreign trade sales manager. "On the other hand, when you do have orders, profits are shrinking," she said.

Not all think the situation for Asia is dire.

Subir Gokarn, chief economist for Standard & Poor's in New Delhi, says the region might not have decoupled but trends in recent years have insulated it from shocks in the U.S. economy.

"There will be an impact but there are forces within the region _ domestic demand in India and China and the ability of other countries to tap into that growth _ that will partially offset global developments," he said.

Exactly how Asia will ride out the current economic threat remains unclear, but some are bracing for a tough go.

"You have to stay flexible," said Kenneth Yu of Hong Kong. The 55-year-old businessman matches foreign investors with mainland companies looking for funding, an endeavor he says has become harder since the credit crunch began last year.

"I have to respond to different problems and crises ... otherwise you cannot survive," said Yu, who has engaged in various businesses in China. "But surviving is becoming more and more difficult than before."

__

Associated Press writers Jae-hyun Jeong in Seoul, Elaine Kurtenbach in Shanghai, Joe McDonald in Beijing, Alex Kennedy in Singapore, Erika Kinetz in Mumbai and Jeremiah Marquez in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

Credit Default Swaps: The Next Crisis?

As Bear Stearns careened toward its eventual fire sale to JPMorgan Chase last weekend, the cost of protecting its debt, through an instrument called a credit default swap, began to rise rapidly as investors feared that Bear would not be good for the money it promised on its bonds. Not familiar with credit default swaps? Well, we didn't know much about collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) either — until they began to undermine the economy. Credit default swaps, once an obscure financial instrument for banks and bondholders, could soon become the eye of the credit hurricane. Fun, huh?

The CDS market exploded over the past decade to more than $45 trillion in mid-2007, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association. This is roughly twice the size of the U.S. stock market (which is valued at about $22 trillion and falling) and far exceeds the $7.1 trillion mortgage market and $4.4 trillion U.S. treasuries market, notes Harvey Miller, senior partner at Weil, Gotshal & Manges. "It could be another — I hate to use the expression — nail in the coffin," said Miller, when referring to how this troubled CDS market could impact the country's credit crisis.

Credit default swaps are insurance-like contracts that promise to cover losses on certain securities in the event of a default. They typically apply to municipal bonds, corporate debt and mortgage securities and are sold by banks, hedge funds and others. The buyer of the credit default insurance pays premiums over a period of time in return for peace of mind, knowing that losses will be covered if a default happens. It's supposed to work similarly to someone taking out home insurance to protect against losses from fire and theft.

Except that it doesn't. Banks and insurance companies are regulated; the credit swaps market is not. As a result, contracts can be traded — or swapped — from investor to investor without anyone overseeing the trades to ensure the buyer has the resources to cover the losses if the security defaults. The instruments can be bought and sold from both ends — the insured and the insurer.

All of this makes it tough for banks to value the insurance contracts and the securities on their books. And it comes at a time when banks are already reeling from write-downs on mortgage-related securities. "These are the same institutions that themselves have either directly or through subsidiaries invested in the subprime market," said Andrea Pincus, partner at Reed Smith LLP. "They're suffering losses all over the place," and now they face potentially more losses from the CDS market.

Indeed, commercial banks are among the most active in this market, with the top 25 banks holding more than $13 trillion in credit default swaps — where they acted as either the insured or insurer — at the end of the third quarter of 2007, according to the Comptroller of the Currency, a federal banking regulator. JP Morgan Chase, Citibank, Bank of America and Wachovia were ranked among the top four most active, it said.

Credit default swaps were seen as easy money for banks when they were first launched more than a decade ago. Reason? The economy was booming and corporate defaults were few back then, making the swaps a low-risk way to collect premiums and earn extra cash. The swaps focused primarily on municipal bonds and corporate debt in the 1990s, not on structured finance securities. Investors flocked to the swaps in the belief that big corporations would seldom go bust in such flourishing economic times.

The CDS market then expanded into structured finance, such as CDOs, that contained pools of mortgages. It also exploded into the secondary market, where speculative investors, hedge funds and others would buy and sell CDS instruments from the sidelines without having any direct relationship with the underlying investment. "They're betting on whether the investments will succeed or fail," said Pincus. "It's like betting on a sports event. The game is being played and you're not playing in the game, but people all over the country are betting on the outcome."

But as the economy soured and the subprime credit crunch began expanding into other credit areas over the past year, CDS investors became jittery. They wondered if the parties holding the CDS insurance after multiple trades would have the financial wherewithal to pay up in the event of mass defaults. "In the past six to eight months, there's been a deterioration in market liquidity and the ability to get willing buyers for structured finance securities," causing the values of the securities to fall, said Glenn Arden, a partner at Jones Day who heads up the firm's worldwide securitization practice and New York derivative.

The situation is already taking a toll on insurers, who have been forced to write down the value of their CDS portfolios. American International Group, the world's largest insurer, recently reported the biggest loss in the company's history largely due to an $11 billion writedown on its CDS holdings. Even Swiss Reinsurance Co., the industry's largest reinsurer, took CDS writedowns in the fourth quarter and warned of more to come in the first quarter of 2008.

Monoline bond insurance companies, such as MBIA and Ambac Financial Group Inc., have been hit the hardest as they scramble to raise capital to cover possible defaults and to stave off a downgrade from the ratings agencies. It was this group's foray out of its traditional municipal bonds and into mortgage-backed securities that caused the turmoil. A rating downgrade of the monoline companies could be devastating for banks and others who bought insurance protection from them to cover their corporate bond exposure.

The situation is exacerbated by the heavy trading volume of the instruments, the secrecy surrounding the trades, and — most importantly — the lack of regulation in this insurance contract business. "An original CDS can go through 15 or 20 trades," said Miller. "So when a default occurs, the so-called insured party or hedged party doesn't know who's responsible for making up the default and if that end player has the resources to cure the default."

Prakash Shimpi, managing principal at Towers Perrin, downplays this risk, noting that contractual law requires both parties to inform and get approval from the other before selling the CDS policy to someone else. "These transactions don't take place on a handshake," he said. Still, being unregulated, there is no standard contract, no standard capital requirements, and no standard way of valuating securities in these transactions. As a result, Pincus said she wouldn't be surprised to see a surge in litigation as defaults start happening. "There's a lot of outcry right now for more regulation and more transparency," said Pincus.

A meltdown in the CDS market has potentially even wider ramifications nationwide than the subprime crisis. If bond insurance disappears or becomes too costly, lenders will become even more cautious about making loans, and this could impact everyone from mortgage-seekers to municipalities that need money to fix roads and build schools. "We're seeing players in all of those spaces being more circumspect about whose credit they're going to guarantee and what exactly the credit obligation is," said Ellen Marshall, partner at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP.

Shimpi admits a meltdown or even a slowdown in the CDS market would affect the amount and cost of liquidity in the market. However, he dismisses concerns that municipalities and others seeking capital could be left in the dust. "Even if the U.S. takes a hit, there are other markets in the world that have different dynamics, and capital flows are international," he said.

Still, most agree the potential repercussions are far-reaching. "It's the ripple effects, the domino effects" that are worrisome, said Pincus. "I think it's [going to be] one of the next shoes to fall" in the credit crisis. Miller said the subprime debacle, rising unemployment, record-high oil prices, and now CDS market troubles "have all the makings of the perfect storm.... There are some economists who say this could be another 1929 — but I don't believe it," he said. "We have a lot of safeguards built into the system that did not exist in 1929 and 1930." None of them, though, are directly targeted at CDS. On Wall Street, innovators are always ahead of regulators. And that can sometimes have a very steep price.

Structured Products

"If you don't understand it, then don't buy it"

-- Investing legend, Warren Buffett


A BRIEF HISTORY



Structured products include structured investments, structured deposits, capital guaranteed funds and capital protected funds. The word "structured" is rarely used in the marketing and they are usually sold as unit trusts or ILPs (investment-linked products). Most are distributed mostly by banks although insurance companies have recently entered the picture.



In the 1990’s, they were a way for rich individuals and institutions to structure investments to get their preferred mix of risk, return, liquidity, income and capital gain. This was useful.



As issuers got good at structuring, they expanded to the mass market. But how to make a customised product for each and every small investor? It seemed impossible.



It didn’t take long to find a way to “customise for the masses”. The newly developed structured products appealed to the masses and had similarities to gambling. It works like this: A structured product might take 20 well-known stocks, for example, and let people place bets on which three would appreciate the most over 5 years.



The world’s best stock pickers and sports handicappers would be hard-pressed to guess the outcome. In addition, every structured product has an expiry date. These two features make it similar to a wager.



But like all games of chance it is exciting to try one’s luck. Plus it looks like the odds are structured in such a way to give you a big payout if you win.



Add to this a minimum return that is often “guaranteed” (as long as you fulfill other conditions like no early redemption). It appears to be an investment with no risks and good upside potential. Not surprisingly, it has sold very well.



ONE-TIME CHARGES



If you buy a structured product, it will almost certainly be from a bank who are the “distributors”. Their standard fee is 3 per cent of the amount invested. For example, a two-month marketing campaign that raises $100 million would produce $3 million in revenues for the bank.



This 3 per cent distribution charge is deducted from the net asset value (NAV) of the investment. It means if sold immediately after purchase, the investor would receive back 97 per cent of the investment.



The distribution cost does not seem to be excessive and is revealed in the fund’s prospectus (but not the brochures or advertisements). It is in line with initial sales commissions of unit trusts and ILPs (investment-linked products) which charge 2 to 5 per cent.



Distribution costs are one-time costs. If one holds the structured product for a number of years, the average annual distribution costs will be less than yearly fees.



The issuer will also include a charge in the price of the structured product. It is typically embedded in the instantaneous variance component.



ANNUAL CHARGES



Issuers charge annual management fees. They also charge performance fees which can be very high as I will explain.



Issuers are the architects who design the structured product. They also invest the money which the distributor (bank) collects and remits to them. Issuers are also called guarantors and underwriters.



Structured products usually sells in units and are classified as unit trusts. In this case, the must disclose the management fees.



When not sold in units, the issuer will subtract its fees directly from the fund's yield. In that case, there is no way to determine the cost the issuer charges.



The management fee may be higher than it appears, especially for guaranteed funds which invest about 90 per cent of the fund into bonds.



In these cases, the management fee may take a substantial portion from an already low return.



The issuer might take a fixed 1 per cent per year when total returns are between 1 and 5 per cent. It leaves only 0 to 4 per cent for the retail investor.



An example: When a guaranteed fund's return is 3 per cent, an issuer that takes a 1 per cent management fee is taking 1/3 = 33 per cent of the total return.



EARNINGS CAP



Let’s say the structured product is linked to stock returns and these perform well. Then the structured product will also do well. Returns could be quite high.



The high returns do not go to investors because returns are typically capped. It means they cannot go above a certain level.



An earnings cap is typically marketed as a benefit to investors and is called an “early buyout”. This is not correct. It is a drawback. The investor would have made more money if there were no earnings cap.



Usually, it is phrased something like this: “Should your investment do well, then at the end of year 2 you will receive an early buyout with a 5 per cent bonus.”



Scenario 1: Suppose the structured product does well enough to pay its promised maximum returns of 3 per cent in year one and 3 per cent in year two. At the end of year two, it pays the 5 per cent bonus. It means that over 2 years, you will have earned 11 per cent (3+3+5).



Scenario 2: Take a case where the product earns 8 per cent in both years 1 and 2. The total is 16 per cent. You will still receive the pre-determined 11 per cent and no more. The excess profits of 5 per cent (16 – 11) go to the issuer. It is not shared with investors.



Scenario 3: Suppose it was a great year and stocks shot up 26 per cent. The cap is the same and the issuer needs to pay investors only 11 per cent. In this case, the excess returns are even more. They are 26 – 11 = 15 per cent. As before, none of the excess returns go to investors. The entire 15 per cent goes to the issuer.



Nearly all structured products contain caps. It is an upper limit to returns. It guarantees that investors will not participate in high returns when markets are strong. Instead investors will receive a modest bonus in the form of a buyout. (Usually, it is 5 per cent.)



In a strong market, who gets the returns in excess of the cap? For some structured products, it may go to the issuer. For others, it may go to a counterparty to a hedge contract.



Regardless, the derivative portion of the structured product is a fair bet prior to charges. If one party wins, the other loses.



As second level of analysis, one must understand that it becomes a negative-sum investment. This happens when one considers fees of the issuer and distributor.



Those fees are found in (i) the issuing charge that is either (a) charged as a management fee or (b) embedded in the product itself, (ii) the issuer's profits from market-making, (iii) the front-end load charged by the distributor and various hidden fees deducted directly from the yield of the structured product -- such as foreign exchange conversion costs, gains or losses from foreign currency fluctuations, taxes deducted at source and brokerage commissions.



5 PROBLEMS OF STRUCTURED PRODUCTS



The first problem is that many structured products are not traded as unit trusts and do not show the management fee. Instead, issuers will embed their charges in the price of the product itself. As such, it is not possible to know how much you pay for it.



A second problem is the return caps. These limit returns when the product does well, such as in bull markets. It limits the profit potential. It may be fair if the cap is part of the structuring. One could think of it as the price one pays for benefits of the structured product. Typically, however, those benefits are emphasised while the return caps are downplayed.



A third problem is illiquidity. If the investor sells prior to the maturity date, usually 5 years, he must pay a penalty. This can result in getting back less than the initial investment, a loss. Even when the product is actively traded, the issuer will typically act as the market-maker. It is another source of profit for the distributor and another cost for the investor.



A fourth problem is the marketing. It is less than straight-forward and often suggests a higher payout than investors actually receive. For example, it may be promoted as giving a payout 5.5 per cent after 6 months. This works out to 11 per cent per year. That is good. (In fact, it is too good to be true.)



The prospectus always contains an admission (sometimes in hard-to-understand language) that such a high return requires a payout from capital. It means the payout is not a return on investment at all. The bank has simply given back a part of the investor’s own money and called it a “payout”.



Sometimes banks even send a letter congratulating you on receiving a high payout. The tactic seems to be effective and has spread. It has also been used to promote bank deposits and endowment insurance policies.



A fifth problem is the bank's marketing strategy. It advertises a range of returns. Bank staff then suggest to customers that the upper end of that range is likely.



In fact, there is no way to know since structured product returns are based on baskets of shares, bonds, stock indices or currencies. Forecasting the return to each component of the basket over a 5-year period is extremely difficult.



HOW TO RECOGNISE A STRUCTURED PRODUCT



Very often, structured products are marketed as familiar and safe investments: Either a unit trust or an investment-linked product (ILP). Typically, the word "structured" is never used. How to know if you are buying an ordinary unit trust or ILP -- or a structured product?



Usually, the only way to tell is if the return is linked to some other event -- like "no more than 3 stocks in a basket of 20 declining in price each year". Most structured products will also have a buy-out provision. It allows the fund to buy you out if it is moving in the right direction.



Most structured products also advertise high yields. But a part of the yield is often a return of your own investment.



Can structured products be sold under the CPF investment scheme (CPFIS), which permits you to use your CPF money to buy an investment?



The answer is "yes". If the product is sold as a unit trust or ILP, then it is possible that it could be sold under CPFIS. Keep in mind, therefore, that just because a fund is CPF-approved, doesn't mean it is not a structured product.

Should Minibond Series 3 have taken the retail route?

IF YOU want a front-row lesson in first-class financial obfuscation for structured products, then look no further than the way the recently collapsed Minibond Series 3 notes was packaged and marketed.

Lehman structured a synthetic derivative product to hedge its exposure to various instruments and linked it to the default likelihood of six major banks.

Up to $200 million of these notes were sold to a gullible retail public who probably thought they were buying a five-year bond issued by six leading banks that paid a 5 per cent coupon per year but were in reality, not only exposed to the US housing market but also to a complex credit default swap arrangement whose substantive party was the now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers.

The cover of the Pricing Document prominently stated that the issue was credit-linked to six financial institutions, namely Barclays Bank, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, UBS and UOB - these banks being defined as Reference Entities or REs.

Much was made of the fact that the viability of the notes depended on whether these six banks or REs would go bankrupt and there are repeated warnings to this effect throughout the document. Investors were given plenty of information on the credit ratings of these six REs and links to their websites while Lehman is listed only as the Arranger in small print.

The fine print at the bottom of the cover, however, states that Lehman is also Swap Counterparty, besides being the arranger. Not many retail investors would have seen this, and if they had, few would probably have understood the importance of this information. More on this later.

Investors, however, were urged to read the Base Prospectus in conjunction with the Pricing Statement. In the former's page 24, it is stated that 'the Notes are intended to provide investors with a coupon for assuming exposure to the credit risks of companies or of sovereign states, that is, the Reference Entities'.

'By acquiring the Notes, investors can gain exposure to the credit risks of the REs without directly holding debt obligations of the REs, for example, bonds issued by the REs.'

Note that the language used creates the impression that gaining exposure to the credit risks of the six REs is something desirable - and, by extension, this suggests that the notes are good investments - when in reality, the key to the whole issue is in the words 'without directly holding debt obligations' of the REs.

In other words, the six REs are not participants in the notes, receive no money from the issue and are not issuers of the notes. Instead, the next sentence reveals all: 'This (exposure) is achieved by linking payment of the principal and/or interest on the Notes to an RE's default.'

Who provides this link? In all the documents, this is given as Minibond Ltd but this is a special purpose vehicle with only US$1,000 in capital. The substantive party behind Minibond Ltd is most likely Lehman Brothers. Here's how it works.

Lehman most probably owned securities in the six REs. In order to hedge itself against default by any of these REs, it set up Minibond to offer notes to the public. Minibond offered these notes with attractive terms and because of clever marketing and pricing collects a certain amount of cash from retail investors.

This money is then used to buy securities - in the case of Series 3, it was collateralised debt obligations (CDOs), most probably on US mortgage instruments. Minibond then collects the cash flows from these CDOs. In order to pay investors the quarterly coupon and to ensure no problems with currency/interest rate fluctuations, it swaps these cash flows with counterparts, which is Lehman. It is stated elsewhere that if the swap deals fail in addition to a RE default, the whole issue will be terminated. Thus, since Lehman has failed, so has the issue.

The crux of the entire deal appears on page 17 under Credit Default Swap where it is stated that Minibond has an agreement with Lehman in which Lehman pays Minibond a premium for insuring Lehman against credit losses on the REs.

In effect, the money that Singapore retail investors exchanged for the notes were not for any bonds issued by the six names that appeared on the cover of the prospectus but instead, went towards insuring Lehman against losses in its portfolio.

The quarterly coupon investor received was not interest from the six REs but instead, Lehman paying an insurance premium, partly financed by cash obtained from CDOs.

In short, Lehman structured a synthetic derivative product to hedge its own exposure to various instruments and linked it to the default likelihood of six major banks.

Should the true nature of the instrument have been disclosed upfront? Yes, especially since it was marketed to retail investors - though it has to be said that many other notes and products have been sold in a similar manner and the only reason that the poor disclosure of this particular series of notes surfaced is that Lehman went bust. Had it not, or had it been rescued, the coupon payments would have continued as per normal and no one would have been the wiser.

Moreover, while it is possible to piece together the actual substance of these notes from the documents available, it is a tedious process and arguably not within the ability of the average retail investor.

There are many issues also unresolved - for one thing, how many other similar products are out there? How could the authorities allow the conflicts of interest inherent in one party from being the arranger, issuer and swap counterparty?

How is it that, if Lehman alone performed all these functions, there was virtually no disclosure of Lehman's financial position or credit rating? Instead, investors' attention was focused on the six REs - wrongly, as it turned out.

Finally, if disclosure was weak, then so was knowledge among distributors. Some brokers did not understand the true nature of the instrument and sold it as a bond. Maybe the name had something to do with it, though as investors have now found out painfully, what they had bought was not a bond but a convoluted swap-based instrument.

Thus, should such products be allowed to continue to come into the retail market?

Global financial crisis: 'Keep a significant portion of your portfolio in cash'

I AM A financial advisor and money manager, and many of my clients have asked me about the stability of banks in general and some of them have joked about keeping cold, hard cash under their beds.

While I want Singaporeans to be fully aware of the current circumstances and take precautions if necessary, I do not want to instil fear in their hearts.

Is there a chance of a global financial meltdown?

First, we need to define systemic risk.

Systemic risk is the risk which is common to an entire market and not to any individual entity or component thereof. It can be defined as 'financial system instability, potentially catastrophic, caused or exacerbated by idiosyncratic events or conditions in financial intermediaries'. It refers to the movements of the whole economy and has wide-ranging effects.

Next, we need to understand the credit derivatives market. The credit derivatives market is a US$63 trillion (S$90 trillion) market. To put that into perspective, this market is about 50 times the size of the subprime market. The subprime market has wreaked havoc in the financial markets, imagine what will happen if the credit derivatives market turns sour.

A credit default swap is a credit derivative that transfers an investor's risk to someone else in exchange for a fee.

For example, if you are a bank and you have granted a loan to Company ABC for 10 per cent per annum for five years, you may pass on part of this risk to another party by going into a credit default swap. The bank pays the counterparty five per cent per annum on the amount and, in return, the counterparty takes on part of the default risk of Company ABC. This all looks very good on the surface.

1. Company ABC gets its loan.

2. The bank earns an X per cent on the loan after deducting the cost of funds and paying the counterparty.

3. The counterparty earns five per cent in fees and takes on the risk of company ABC which it thinks has a low chance of default. On the financial books, the profits of the counterparty will be the fees they earn minus the provision for the credit default. This provision works out on the chance that company ABC will default multiplied by the nominal amount of the credit default swap.

It will not take a genius to tell you that it will be in the interest of the counterparty to put the risk of default lower as this will result in higher profits for the company and thus higher bonuses for everyone.

This system may not take systemic risk fully into account. When there is a global recession and more companies go belly-up, the writer of the credit default swaps may not have enough resources to provide for these defaults. If they collapse, the banks are in trouble as well. They may have thought that they have hedged their exposure to these loans, but their hedge is useless now and they must bear the losses as they are not able to claim on the writer of the credit default swap, leading to a domino and snowball effect.

What does this mean to the man on the street?

Banks will start scrutinising their risk exposure.

1. Small banks that are in trouble will not be rescued as they will not contribute so much to the snowball. The big banks will be either bought over or will merge to form a stronger bank. If they are really in trouble, the authorities will have to step in to bail them out. Once again, in choosing a bank to bank with, every bank is subjected to some form of risk. Some banks are more exposed to this risk than others. Because of the strict capital requirements of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), I think that the risk of a bank failure in Singapore is low.

2. However, the general public needs to realise that the real risk is for the borrowers. Strange idea? Let me explain. If you are borrowing from a bank, I believe the bank will be cutting liquidity and be very selective in its loans. I would not rule out banks increasing their collateral requirements. In the last few years, many Singaporeans were exposed to the property market and property loans. It is unlikely that the banks will decrease the collateral value of your property in terms of percentage. If you had borrowed an amount to the tune of 80 per cent of the value of your property, the bank is unlikely to tell you suddenly that you can borrow only 60 per cent next year. That will be unfair.

However, one thing the bank can and will control will be to follow up religiously on the re-valuation of your property. This is especially so when property prices are coming down.

If the prices of the property market continue to fall, property investors who are highly geared may be faced with a situation whereby the collateral value of their property after re-valuation is lower than the loan amount. In such situations, the investors will have to reduce their loan amount by coming up with cash.

If the borrower cannot come up with the cash, it will be a case of foreclosure. As such, I would urge investors to have enough liquidity to cater for such situations.

So what does a borrower need to do?

Firstly, re-evaluate your loans and property. If the price of your property drops by 30 per cent, how does that affect your standing with the bank? Do you have enough liquid assets to cover yourself?

To sum it all up, keep a significant portion of your portfolio in cash just in case you need it in situations like these.

Risk management is not rocket science and neither is it only for financial institutions. I hope I have highlighted the risk that Singaporeans are exposed to in their personal finances and take necessary precautions if needed.

Patrick Chan

Saturday, 20 September 2008

What Billionaires Say About the Wall Street Crisis

by Andrew Farrell

How will John Catsimatidis--supermarket billionaire, New York mayoral hopeful and the 215th wealthiest person in America--know when the crisis on Wall Street is over?

"The situation is going to get better when you feel good about buying Citigroup stock," he says. "Right now, nobody feels good about buying it."

With all the turmoil on Wall Street these days, it's easy to get spooked. Miles of newsprint, endless talking heads, pandering candidates and economists quoted up the wazoo--all with opinions, most of them differing.

One group you haven't heard a lot from, though, are America's richest people--some of the savviest entrepreneurs and financiers on the planet. To get some insight into one of the most unpredictable periods in the history of Wall Street, we asked a handful of these billionaires to tell us about the economic indicators they're watching and what they think will happen next.

Don Marron, former chief executive of PaineWebber and founder of investment firm Lightyear Capital, has his eye on asset sales from troubled banks. In the coming months, Marron, a billionaire who is not on The Forbes 400 list, says they'll be an important gauge of how the economy is faring and how Wall Street is recovering.

"You have a number of situations here, notably one company in bankruptcy, where a certain set of assets have to be liquidated, and the market hasn't been tested on these," says Marron. "As a potential buyer, I would want to wait until we see these sales actually take place, and I think others would too."

Will investment banks ever post those eye-popping profits again? "I think it will be a long time getting back there," says Sam Wyly, who knows something about finance from his hedge fund Maverick Capital.

"One thing that I noticed about two years ago was that financial sector of the American economy had grown to percentages that were greatly disproportionate to history," he said. "The financing part of the economy grew much more than the part that was making and selling something. It will be shrinking at least for a while."

Stabilizing home prices will be a crucial part of the healing process since it will bolster the value of troubled mortgage securities. When does the housing market bottom? Catsimatidis, who has extensive real estate holdings in the New York area, says, "Home prices stabilize when they equal the cost of actually building of home plus the cost of the land plus a premium for location."

Billionaire entrepreneur George Lindemann, the 262nd wealthiest person in America with a fortune of $1.8 billion, says we'll see values stabilize much more quickly in some areas than others. "I think that's a regional issue and not a national issue. Houston, for instance, is strong as hell. No vacant jobs, prices are going up and building is continuing."

A year ago, Lehman Brothers shares traded for over $60 each. Now they're virtually worthless. Do the problems that totaled the once-mighty Lehman spread to other companies and industries?

"Any company that is built around the need to add debt is in trouble," says Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks and founder of HDNet. He ranks 161st on The Forbes 400 this year with a net worth of $2.6 billion. "The process of deleveraging is industry agnostic. If I had the time, I would be researching every company that needs renewable and expandable debt to survive and would short the sh*t out of it."

One thing that's clear is that despite the turmoil of the times, successful businesspeople have no shortage of ideas where to invest. On Monday, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that one of Warren Buffett's subsidiary companies bought a corporate furnishings division from Aaron Rents.

Wyly, a billionaire who is not on The Forbes 400, advises to invest in areas you know are "rock solid." The author of 1,000 Dollars and An Idea likes companies like energy giant BP. He points to its investments in renewable energy, low price-earning multiple and management team.

As they say, buy when there's blood on the streets. But that raises another question: Who's to blame for the recent torrent?

Mike Bloomberg casts a wide net. The mayor of New York, former Wall Streeter, and founder of financial services company Bloomberg (which made him the 8th richest person in America with a net worth of $20 billion) told reporters Tuesday that, "You can’t just blame the banks, you also can blame the people that took out mortgages ... We were brought up that you first had to put some savings together and then enjoy. But this whole society has gotten to the fact that we’re a ‘now, give it to me today’ kind of society. I think regulation has not been adequate.

"There’s no one person to blame other than all of us," he added.

Investors pulling out of US

HONG KONG: Asia's savings have bankrolled American spending for decades to the tune of trillions of dollars.

Now, tremors from Wall Street are rattling Asian investors - from central banks to industrial corporations to hedge funds to individuals queueing up to withdraw their money from American International Group (AIG) - and making them question the very wisdom of being invested in the United States.

Asia's loss of confidence in American financial institutions and assets could have dire consequences for both the US government and American taxpayers.

Asian investors were starting to show hesitation even before the financial earthquake of the last week. Now, a wariness towards the US is setting in that is unprecedented in recent memory.

The non-stop deluge of bad publicity for American investments seems to be stoking panic among some of the rich and middle-class across Asia who are rushing to bring their money home.

'I do not believe in US financial institutions anymore; I don't think any US bank is safe anymore,' said Hong Kong homemaker Wang Xiaoning. Even after the Federal Reserve had taken control of AIG, she waited in line with dozens of other anxious policyholders for the chance to close her investment account.

The asset management operations of American banks have steered many Asian investors into American securities for years.

But Mr Thomas Lam, senior treasury economist at United Overseas Bank in Singapore, said many of these investors had not fully understood what they were buying. They became more curious and more concerned when, for example, mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were placed in conservatorship.

'All these top executives, Indonesians and others started asking, 'What do they really do?'' Mr Lam said. 'They bought because the next company did.'

Some experts say that with Asia's phenomenal economic growth, savings are piling up so quickly that those funds will inevitably start flowing again to the US at a fast clip once the present crisis is over.

'The interest for the moment is depressed, but the trend is, we have a lot of savings in Asia and this is a bargain time' for assets in the US, said Mr Paul Tang, chief economist at the Bank of East Asia in Hong Kong.

Meanwhile, Asian investment in the US has been faltering.

Data released by the Treasury Department on Tuesday showed that the sharp change in international capital movements began in July. Private investors pulled a net US$92.9 billion (S$133.4 billion) out of the US, after putting US$46.8 billion into American securities in June.

Central banks, mainly Asian, did continue buying American securities in July. But they did so at a slower pace than usual. They made net purchases of US$18.2billion, compared with an average monthly purchase of US$22.3 billion in the first half of this year.

The central banks also changed the allocation of their purchases.

They bought short-term Treasury bills while slowing their purchases of longer- term Treasury bonds and American corporate bonds.

Foreign cash coming into the US to buy American assets helps the country hold down interest rates by making plenty of money available for the federal government to borrow to cover its budget deficit. It also provides cash for consumers to borrow so that they can afford imported cars, DVD players and other goods.

The US has relied heavily on this money to fund its spending. US Commerce Department data released on Wednesday showed that the nation's current-account deficit, the broadest measure of trade in goods and services, had a deficit of US$183.1 billion in the second quarter.

Also worrying is how much all of Washington's measures to prevent a financial meltdown could cost the nation in the long run.

Said Mr David Walker, former US comptroller general: 'The real question is, Will Washington wake up and realise that the federal government's finances are not in good shape and that we need to start getting our nation's fiscal house in order? If not, some may start asking, 'Who will bail out America?''

NEW YORK TIMES, WASHINGTON POST

Thursday, 18 September 2008

Flight to safehavens

NEW YORK - The panic in world stock and credit markets has triggered a flight to safety of the kind not seen since the second world war.

As barometers of financial stress hit record peaks across the world, frenzied investors around the world frantically moved their money into the safest investments, like Treasury bills.

Worried investors were are snapping up three-month Treasury bills with virtually no yield and they pushed gold to its biggest one-day gain in nearly 10 years on Wednesday. The precious metal rallied some US$90 an ounce as volatility on the equity markets and fears over the outlook for the financial sector sparked a flight to safety.

'This is stunning, and testimony to these historic times,' said Mr Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist with RBS

Greenwich Capital, in a note. 'It is clear that fear and a desperate search for a hedge against risk has trumped all.'

Analysts said this flight to safety, away from other kinds of debt as well as stocks, could cause serious damage to an already weakened economy by making it more expensive for businesses to finance their day-to-day operations.

Some economists worry that a psychology of fear has gripped investors, not only in the United States but also in Europe and Asia, said The New York Times.

While investors' decision to protect themselves may be perfectly rational, the crowd behaviour could cause a downward spiral that has broader ramifications.

'It's like having a fire in a cinema,' said Mr Hyun Song Shin, an economics professor at Princeton. 'Everybody is rushing to the door. You are rushing to the door because everyone is rushing to the door. Clearly, as a collective action, it is a disaster.'

Faltering confidence could have an infectious effect in Asia, whose savings have essentially bankrolled America for decades.

'Asia, perhaps more than other markets, is a bit more volatile, a bit more based on sentiment,' said Mr Dan Parr, the head of Asia-Pacific for brandRapport, a marketing consulting agency with an office in Hong Kong.

'It doesn't take much for the man on the street to become very, very concerned.'

In early Japan trading, the major stock index fell 3 per cent.

Asian stocks fell, with shares outside Japan down 4 per cent on Thursday, as emergency actions by central banks and governments around the world failed to ease a crisis that has investors fleeing to government bonds or sticking with plain cash.

European stock market futures were down slightly, pointing to at least a temporary staunching of three days of heavy selling.

But the seismic shift on Wall Street this week continued to create a sense of global panic, with frenetic consolidation in the financial sector in the world's largest economy, sending the MSCI all-country world stocks index to its lowest since November 2005.

Investors have piled into short-term US Treasuries and bailed from money market funds, pushing yields down close to zero. The cost of insurance against default or restructuring in the credit default swap market soared to record levels in Asia, reflecting deep-seated unease.

In the past 24 hours, No. 2 US investment bank Morgan Stanley and top US savings and loan Washington Mutual were reportedly up for sale, and Britain's Lloyds TSB agreed to buy rival HBOS, reflecting the unstable landscape that has contributed to gold's 18 per cent surge in the last week.

'Credit fears have now reached a climax. It's presumptuous to assume it would end in one day,' said Mr Harushige Kobayashi, head of research department at broker Securities Japan.

'The market ignores fundamentals and is now 95 per cent driven by psychological factors.'

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index or VIX, Wall Street's main barometer of investor fear, had its highest close in almost six years on Wednesday.

Another measure of investor distaste for risk, the TED spread of 3-month interbank lending rates over 3-month US Treasury bill yields blew out to more than 300 basis points, far exceeding levels reached during the US savings and loan crisis of the 1980s.

Fear of the unknown has also pushed investors to government bonds, chasing safety above all else, even yield. US Treasury bill yields inched toward zero.

One-month Treasury yields dipped to 0.010 per cent, from 0.040 per cent late in New York on Wednesday, when it may have actually traded at negative levels, dealers said. Yields from 1-month to 6-months were less than 1 per cent.

'This corner of the cash market is significant because its a rich, deep pool of liquidity that is tapped by insurance funds, banks and brokers. Stress here signals another impediment to vital liquidity,' said Mr Brett Williams, credit analyst with BNP Paribas in Hong Kong.

Investors are quickly learning that in the current crisis almost nothing is safe, even US money market funds.

Late on Wednesday, Moody's Investors Service sharply downgraded the Reserve Primary Fund after it fell below $1 a share in net asset value due to losses on debt issued by Lehman Brothers, which has filed for bankruptcy protection.

Crude oil has not been immune to the large-scale liquidation in markets to feed the need for cash. The October future slipped $1 to $96.13 a barrel after jumping $6 on Wednesday. -- REUTERS.

Asia at risk from US fallout

MANILA - THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) warned on Thursday that Asia's financial institutions remain at risk from US financial turmoil even if the region's losses from the sub-prime crisis have been lower than elsewhere.

Asia appear to be cushioned against immediate effects of the turmoil with its growing domestic demand, rising foreign currency reserves and healthy current accounts, but vulnerabilities remain, ADB President Haruhiko Kuroda told a Manila regional forum on the US sub-prime mortgage crisis.

'Even if subprime-related losses have to date been lower than elsewhere, there is no guarantee recent events will not affect major Asian financial institutions,' Mr Kuroda said.

He called for the establishment of an 'Asian Financial Stability Dialogue' among finance ministers, central banks and financial regulators in the region to coordinate regulatory development and improve surveillance of the region's financial markets.

'This week's turbulence only underlines the urgent need for central banks and regulators to assess the underlying problems and build a cogent and proactive plan of action to better preserve regional financial stability,' Mr Kuroda said.

Mr Keith Lui, executive director for market supervision of Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission, said the crisis will have minimal impact in Asia given the region's limited exposure to sub-prime credit products.

The region has also been strengthened by post-1997 Asian financial crisis reforms, including a more robust regulatory and infrastructure framework and enhanced governance, he added.

But Mr David Fernandez, head of JP Morgan's Emerging Asia Research, said pain from the US financial crisis is being felt most acutely in Asia, where stock markets are now among worst performing among emerging economies.

Asian stocks tumbled on Thursday as investors feared more financial institutions could succumb to the global financial crisis after the collapse of Lehman Brothers and government bailout of American International Group. -- AP

Worst Crisis Since '30s, With No End Yet in Sight

The financial crisis that began 13 months ago has entered a new, far more serious phase.

Lingering hopes that the damage could be contained to a handful of financial institutions that made bad bets on mortgages have evaporated. New fault lines are emerging beyond the original problem -- troubled subprime mortgages -- in areas like credit-default swaps, the credit insurance contracts sold by American International Group Inc. and others firms. There's also a growing sense of wariness about the health of trading partners.

The consequences for companies and chief executives who tarry -- hoping for better times in which to raise capital, sell assets or acknowledge losses -- are now clear and brutal, as falling share prices and fearful lenders send troubled companies into ever-deeper holes. This weekend, such a realization led John Thain to sell the century-old Merrill Lynch & Co. to Bank of America Corp. Each episode seems to bring intervention by the government that is more extensive and expensive than the previous one, and carries greater risk of unintended consequences.

Expectations for a quick end to the crisis are fading fast. "I think it's going to last a lot longer than perhaps we would have anticipated," Anne Mulcahy, chief executive of Xerox Corp., said Wednesday.

"This has been the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. There is no question about it," said Mark Gertler, a New York University economist who worked with fellow academic Ben Bernanke, now the Federal Reserve chairman, to explain how financial turmoil can infect the overall economy. "But at the same time we have the policy mechanisms in place fighting it, which is something we didn't have during the Great Depression."

Spreading Disease

The U.S. financial system resembles a patient in intensive care. The body is trying to fight off a disease that is spreading, and as it does so, the body convulses, settles for a time and then convulses again. The illness seems to be overwhelming the self-healing tendencies of markets. The doctors in charge are resorting to ever-more invasive treatment, and are now experimenting with remedies that have never before been applied. Fed Chairman Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, walking into a hastily arranged meeting with congressional leaders Tuesday night to brief them on the government's unprecedented rescue of AIG, looked like exhausted surgeons delivering grim news to the family.

Fed and Treasury officials have identified the disease. It's called deleveraging, or the unwinding of debt. During the credit boom, financial institutions and American households took on too much debt. Between 2002 and 2006, household borrowing grew at an average annual rate of 11%, far outpacing overall economic growth. Borrowing by financial institutions grew by a 10% annualized rate. Now many of those borrowers can't pay back the loans, a problem that is exacerbated by the collapse in housing prices. They need to reduce their dependence on borrowed money, a painful and drawn-out process that can choke off credit and economic growth.

At least three things need to happen to bring the deleveraging process to an end, and they're hard to do at once. Financial institutions and others need to fess up to their mistakes by selling or writing down the value of distressed assets they bought with borrowed money. They need to pay off debt. Finally, they need to rebuild their capital cushions, which have been eroded by losses on those distressed assets.

But many of the distressed assets are hard to value and there are few if any buyers. Deleveraging also feeds on itself in a way that can create a downward spiral: Trying to sell assets pushes down the assets' prices, which makes them harder to sell and leads firms to try to sell more assets. That, in turn, suppresses these firms' share prices and makes it harder for them to sell new shares to raise capital. Mr. Bernanke, as an academic, dubbed this self-feeding loop a "financial accelerator."

"Many of the CEO types weren't willing...to take these losses, and say, 'I accept the fact that I'm selling these way below fundamental value,'" says Anil Kashyap, a University of Chicago Business School economics professor. "The ones that had the biggest exposure, they've all died."

Borrowing Slowdown

Deleveraging started with securities tied to subprime mortgages, where defaults started rising rapidly in 2006. But the deleveraging process has now spread well beyond, to commercial real estate and auto loans to the short-term commitments on which investment banks rely to fund themselves. In the first quarter, financial-sector borrowing slowed to a 5.1% growth rate, about half of the average from 2002 to 2007. Household borrowing has slowed even more, to a 3.5% pace.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economist Jan Hatzius estimates that in the past year, financial institutions around the world have already written down $408 billion worth of assets and raised $367 billion worth of capital.

But that doesn't appear to be enough. Every time financial firms and investors suggest that they've written assets down enough and raised enough new capital, a new wave of selling triggers a reevaluation, propelling the crisis into new territory. Residential mortgage losses alone could hit $636 billion by 2012, Goldman estimates, triggering widespread retrenchment in bank lending. That could shave 1.8 percentage points a year off economic growth in 2008 and 2009 -- the equivalent of $250 billion in lost goods and services each year.

"This is a deleveraging like nothing we've ever seen before," said Robert Glauber, now a professor of Harvard's government and law schools who came to the Washington in 1989 to help organize the savings and loan cleanup of the early 1990s. "The S&L losses to the government were small compared to this."

Hedge funds could be among the next problem areas. Many rely on borrowed money to amplify their returns. With banks under pressure, many hedge funds are less able to borrow this money now, pressuring returns. Meanwhile, there are growing indications that fewer investors are shifting into hedge funds while others are pulling out. Fund investors are dealing with their own problems: Many have taken out loans to make their investments and are finding it more difficult now to borrow.

That all makes it likely that more hedge funds will shutter in the months ahead, forcing them to sell their investments, further weighing on the market.

History of Trauma

Debt-driven financial traumas have a long history, from the Great Depression to the S&L crisis to the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s. Neither economists nor policymakers has easy solutions. Cutting interest rates and writing stimulus checks to families can help -- and may have prevented or delayed a deep recession. But, at least in this instance, they don't suffice.

In such circumstances, governments almost invariably experiment with solutions with varying degrees of success. Franklin Delano Roosevelt unleashed an alphabet soup of new agencies and a host of new regulations in the aftermath of the market crash of 1929. In the 1990s, Japan embarked on a decade of often-wasteful government spending to counter the aftereffects of a bursting bubble. President George H.W. Bush and Congress created the Resolution Trust Corp. to take and sell the assets of failed thrifts. Hong Kong's free-market government went on a massive stock-buying spree in 1998, buying up shares of every company listed in the benchmark Hang Seng index. It ended up packaging them into an exchange-traded fund and making money.

Today, Mr. Bernanke is taking out his playbook, said NYU economist Mr. Gertler, "and rewriting it as we go."

Merrill Lynch & Co.'s emergency sale to Bank of America Corp. last weekend was an example of the perniciousness and unpredictability of deleveraging. In the past year, Merrill has hired a new chief executive, written off $41.4 billion in assets and raised $21 billion in equity capital.

But Merrill couldn't keep up. The more it raised, the more it was forced to write off. When Merrill CEO John Thain attended a meeting with the New York Fed and other Wall Street executives last week, he saw that Merrill was the next most vulnerable brokerage firm. "We watched Bear and Lehman. We knew we could be next," said one Merrill executive. Fearful that its lenders would shut the firm off, he sold to Bank of America.

This crisis is complicated by innovative financial instruments that Wall Street created and distributed. They're making it harder for officials and Wall Street executives to know where the next set of risks is hiding and also contributing to the crisis's spreading impact.

Swaps Game

The latest trouble spot is an area called credit-default swaps, which are private contracts that let firms trade bets on whether a borrower is going to default. When a default occurs, one party pays off the other. The value of the swaps rise and fall as market reassesses the risk that a company won't be able to honor its obligations. Firms use these instruments both as insurance -- to hedge their exposures to risk -- and to wager on the health of other companies. There are now credit-default swaps on more than $62 trillion in debt, up from about $144 billion a decade ago.

One of the big new players in the swaps game was AIG, the world's largest insurer and a major seller of credit-default swaps to financial institutions and companies. When the credit markets were booming, many firms bought these instruments from AIG, believing the insurance giant's strong credit ratings and large balance sheet could provide a shield against bond and loan defaults. AIG believed the risk of default was low on many securities it insured.

As of June 30, an AIG unit had written credit-default swaps on more than $446 billion in credit assets, including mortgage securities, corporate loans and complex structured products. Last year, when rising subprime-mortgage delinquencies damaged the value of many securities AIG had insured, the firm was forced to book large write-downs on its derivative positions. That spooked investors, who reacted by dumping its shares, making it harder for AIG to raise the capital it increasingly needed.

Credit default swaps "didn't cause the problem, but they certainly exacerbated the financial crisis," says Leslie Rahl, president of Capital Market Risk Advisors, a consulting firm in New York. The sheer volumes of outstanding CDS contracts -- and the fact that they trade directly between institutions, without centralized clearing -- intertwined the fates of many large banks and brokerages.

Few financial crises have been sorted out in modern times without massive government intervention. Increasingly, officials are coming to the conclusion that even more might be needed. A big problem: The Fed can and has provided short-term money to sound, but struggling, institutions that are out of favor. It can, and has, reduced the interest rates it influences to attempt to reduce borrowing costs through the economy and encourage investment and spending.

But it is ill-equipped to provide the capital that financial institutions now desperately need to shore up their finances and expand lending.

Resolution Trust Scenario

In normal times, capital-starved companies usually can raise money on their own. In the current crisis, a number of big Wall Street firms, including Citigroup, have turned to sovereign wealth funds, the government-controlled pools of money.

But both on Wall Street and in Washington, there is increasing expectation that U.S. taxpayers will either take the bad assets off the hands of financial institutions so they can raise capital, or put taxpayer capital into the companies, as the Treasury has agreed to do with mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

One proposal was raised by Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the House Financial Services Committee. Rep. Frank is looking at whether to create an analog to the Resolution Trust Corp., which took assets from failed banks and thrifts and found buyers over several years.

"When you have a big loss in the marketplace, there are only three people that can take the loss -- the bondholders, the shareholders and the government," said William Seidman, who led the RTC from 1989 to 1991. "That's the dance we're seeing right now. Are we going to shove this loss into the hands of the taxpayers?"

The RTC seemed controversial and ambitious at the time. Any analog today would be even more complex. The RTC dispensed mostly of commercial real estate. Today's troubled assets are complex debt securities -- many of which include pieces of other instruments, which in turn include pieces of others, many steps removed from the actual mortgages or consumer loans on which they are based. Unraveling these strands will be tedious and getting at the underlying collateral, difficult.

In the early stages of this crisis, regulators saw that their rules didn't fit the rapidly changing financial system they were asked to oversee. Investment banks, at the core of the crisis, weren't as closely monitored by the Securities and Exchange Commission as commercial banks were by their regulators.

The government has a system to close failed banks, created after the Great Depression in part to avoid sudden runs by depositors. Now, runs happen in spheres regulators may not fully understand, such as the repurchase agreement, or repo, market, in which investment banks fund their day-to-day operations. And regulators have no process for handling the failure of an investment bank like Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Insurers like AIG aren't even federally regulated.

Regulators have all but promised that more banks will fail in the coming months. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is drawing up a plan to raise the premiums it charges banks so that it can rebuild the fund it uses to back deposits. Examiners are tightening their leash on banks across the country.

Pleasant Mystery

One pleasant mystery is why the crisis hasn't hit the economy harder -- at least so far. "This financial crisis hasn't yet translated into fewer...companies starting up, less research and development, less marketing," Ivan Seidenberg, chief executive of Verizon Communications, said Wednesday. "We haven't seen that yet. I'm sure every company is keeping their eyes on it."

At 6.1%, the unemployment rate remains well below the peak of 7.8% in 1992, amid the S&L crisis.

In part, that's because government has reacted aggressively. The Fed's classic mistake that led to the Great Depression was that it tightened monetary policy when it should have eased. Mr. Bernanke didn't repeat that error. And Congress moved more swiftly to approve fiscal stimulus than most Washington veterans thought possible.

In part, the broader economy has held mostly steady because exports have been so strong at just the right moment, a reminder of the global economy's importance to the U.S. And in part, it's because the U.S. economy is demonstrating impressive resilience, as information technology allows executives to react more quickly to emerging problems and -- to the discomfort of workers -- companies are quicker to adjust wages, hiring and work hours when the economy softens.

But the risk remains that Wall Street's woes will spread to Main Street, as credit tightens for consumers and business. Already, U.S. auto makers have been forced to tighten the terms on their leasing programs, or abandon writing leases themselves altogether, because of problems in their finance units. Goldman Sachs economists' optimistic scenario is a couple years of mild recession or painfully slow economy growth.

Aaron Lucchetti, Mark Whitehouse, Gregory Zuckerman and Sudeep Reddy contributed to this article.

Money-market fund dips below safety benchmark

By Mark Jewell
Fund 'breaks the buck,' only second time in history of money-market funds

BOSTON (AP) -- The assets of a money-market fund that held $62 billion three months ago have fallen below a safety benchmark intended to ensure investors who put money in can get it all back -- just the second unsettling instance in which a fund has exposed investors to potential losses in the nearly four-decade history of money-market funds.

Reserve Management Co.'s announcement that its Reserve Primary Fund had "broken the buck" after its assets fell sharply because of soured investments in Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. marked the first such investor exposure to money-market losses since 1994.

New York-based Reserve said the value of $785 million in debt securities issued by Lehman and held by the Primary Fund were written down to zero as of Tuesday afternoon -- a consequence of Lehman's collapse and bankruptcy after the federal government failed to bail out the investment bank over the weekend.

Money-market funds normally maintain assets of at least $1 for every dollar invested in funds, and are supposed to return interest to investors in the form of dividends.

Money funds are normally seen as among the safest investments after cash and bank deposits because they're required under federal regulations to invest only in low-risk securities. However, they lack the federal deposit insurance that other safe investments such as bank accounts offer. Consequently, money funds typically offer smaller returns than investments such as stocks, though they have become increasingly popular amid recent market turmoil, and enable investors to easily put money in and take it out when needed.

Reserve said Tuesday night that "unprecedented market events of the past several days" had reduced the value of the fund's holdings to 97 cents for each $1 put in by investors -- an event known as "breaking the buck."

Investors who put in orders to remove money from the fund before Tuesday afternoon will get their money back at $1.00 a share. As for redemption orders that came in after 3 p.m. EDT on Tuesday, the amount they get back depends on the fund's daily share price calculated at 5 p.m. -- a price that could vary depending on the performance of the fund's investments, and ability to raise capital to bring the asset level back up.

Reserve said Tuesday night that effective immediately, investors redeeming cash from the fund will not receive their money until as long as seven days later -- the maximum allowed by law.

Calls to Reserve for further comment rang busy on Wednesday morning.

According to the company's Web site, the Primary fund held $62 billion as of June 30 -- an amount that is likely smaller after Lehman's collapse. The Primary fund was the very first money-market fund when introduced in 1970.

Overall, Reserve oversees more than $124 billion in products including mutual funds, bank products and government-insured deposit accounts, serving millions of accounts, according to its Web site.

In the case in 1994, investors in the Community Bankers Mutual Fund ultimately lost about 4 cents on the dollar. And the fund was for a group of bankers, not retail investors.

In most instance in which a fund is in danger of breaking the buck, the fund's parent firm supplies cash from its own holdings or finds money elsewhere on the open market to maintain an adequate fund balance, said Peter Crane, president of Westborough, Mass.-based Crane Data, publisher of the money-market fund newsletter, Money Fund Intelligence.

"Most funds would take action long before the $1 net asset value was jeopardized," Crane said.

But Reserve "is really an anomaly, because they are one of the few advisers that is privately held, and doesn't have a large financial institution as a parent," Crane said.

Crane said in the past 14 months, the managers of 21 money funds have stepped in to supply additional cash to avoid breaking the buck. Crane said he was aware of three such "support events" this week alone, involving the money-market funds of Wachovia Corp.'s Evergreen Investments unit; Ameriprise Financial Services Inc.'s RiverSource Funds; and the money fund of Northwestern Mutual's Russell Investments.

In cases in which money funds aren't able to fully repay investors, Crane said, "The loss is typically so small that investors should keep the interest income in perspective. You are talking about a loss that is small than the likely interest income they earned."

The Investment Company Institute, an industry organization, issued a statement calling the Reserve case "extremely rare," and said the "fundamental structure of money market funds remains sound."

The ICI said it is "working closely with its members and regulators ... to maintain open communications about market conditions and their impact on funds."

Money funds hold $3.5 trillion in assets for a wide range of individual and institutional investors.

AP Business Writer Tim Paradis contributed to this report from New York.

Will my money be safe?

By Gabriel Chen

AMID all the mayhem on Wall Street, many ordinary bank customers here are wondering: How does all this affect me?

Should I be worried if I have bank deposits, structured products investments, or unit trusts linked in any way to embattled American financial institutions?

We talk to financial experts to find out exactly what the risks are.

Q: If I have deposits with a bank here, will my money be safe?

Mr Leong Sze Hian, president of the Society of Financial Service Professionals, said: 'In the worst-case scenario, even if the bank is liquidated, you're protected up to $20,000 under the deposit insurance scheme for banks in Singapore.'

It is very unlikely for banks here to fail as they are subject to tight regulations, and are required to keep a big sum in capital as buffer against its loans.

For example, Citi is incorporated in Singapore, which means that the bank has to put up capital that is ring-fenced from its parent's.

In other words, the US bank is seen as a separate entity here. This means that if the parent firm goes belly up, that should not affect deposits here, said Mr Joseph Chong, chief executive of financial advisory firm New Independent.

Q: If I have bought a structured product - a complex investment product - such as Lehman Brothers' Minibond series, how will I be affected?

Minibond was a product offering 4.8 per cent in regular payments and attracted a lot of retail interest when it was launched due to its high payout.

It was also risky.

Experts estimate that investors will get about 30 cents on the dollar if they were to redeem their investment.

'It will be difficult to get a market price for the Minibond series because the markets for some of the underlying credits have frozen as a result of the credit crisis,' said Mr Nicholas Tan, head of group wealth management at OCBC Bank.

'Holders of these instruments will have to wait and see what the liquidation price for these assets will be.'

'It's a confidence issue. If you bought anything that is structured by Lehman, you'll be finished,' Mr Leong said.

The value of such products - typically based on derivatives, such as a single security, basket of securities, options, indices, commodities, debt issuances, and to a lesser extent, swaps - has fallen so much that there is hardly any interest in them, he said.

Q: Along the same lines, what about investment products with some Lehman exposure such as DBS High Notes 2 and High Notes 5?

The value of DBS High Notes 5, for example, is partly determined by a basket of eight reference entities, including US investment banks Merrill Lynch, Lehman and Morgan Stanley.

It is also structured on a first-to-default basis, which means that if any of the eight reference entities goes bankrupt, then it will trigger what is known as a credit event.

Once triggered, the customer could lose his investment, said Mr Rajan Raju, head of DBS' consumer banking group.

Q: I have funds managed by the asset management units of banks facing problems in the financial crisis. If banks go belly up, are my funds in trouble?

It depends on what you mean by trouble. Your assets may fall in value, but they don't just disappear overnight.

This is because the unit trust assets are held by custodians such as BNY Mellon Asset Servicing on behalf of their unitholders, so the assets in those unit trusts really belong to unitholders.

'The fund managers don't own the assets, but they just manage them for investors. Even if the custodian banks go bust, the assets still belong to unitholders,' said APS Asset Management chief investment officer Wong Kok Hoi.

Q: Given the crisis, will the value of my unit trusts fall?

Yes. Fund managers point out that any fixed income fund that is global or US-focused are likely to be holding debts belonging to troubled Wall Street firms such as Lehman and Washington Mutual.

So it really is a question of how much exposure as a whole these funds have to that particular financial firm.

If the exposure is huge, then yes, there will be a negative impact.

In Singapore, for instance, Schroder ISF US Large Cap, an equities fund, has exposure to cash-starved insurer AIG, though this is less than 1 per cent.

Of course, if a fund is heavily exposed to Lehman stock, the value of the fund is likely to have tumbled badly by now.

Q: Should I leap into the plummeting market to grab a cheaper blue chip stock or two?

It depends on who you ask. For instance, if you're a trader, you could buy at these levels and sell them at 10 per cent higher.

Dr Marc Faber, who told investors to bail out of US stocks before the 1987 so- called Black Monday crash, said that if investors are holding 100 per cent in cash, then they should be putting 10 per cent of that cash in equities now.

'But if someone's fully invested in equities, I would tell him to sell on the rally because he's overly exposed and the economic downturn could be worse than expected,' he said.

Crisis will worsen: Soros

LONDON - US FINANCIER George Soros warned in a television interview Tuesday that the turmoil in the financial markets was far from over, with Britain likely to be the economy most badly hit by the crisis.

As Wall Street braced for the potential collapse of insurance giant AIG, the hedge fund pioneer told the BBC that the wisdom of letting Lehman Brothers go to the wall at the weekend would only be revealed with hindsight.

'I'm afraid we are not through it at all - in some ways we are still heading into the storm rather than heading out of it,' he said.

Asked whether the US government should have rescued Lehman investment bank, he said: 'If the financial system survives then it was the right thing to do to let them go bust. If there is a meltdown then obviously it wasn't.'

'Saving the system trumps moral hazard. In the end you do whatever it takes to save the system,' he added.

However, he said the way US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson was handling the situation was 'very reminiscent of the way the central bankers talked in the 1930s', the time of the Great Depression.

Mr Soros said Britain's reliance on the financial industry make it especially vulnerable.

'The financial industry is a major segment of the British economy and that's why I think Britain is more heavily hit by this financial crisis than most other economies,' he said.

More generally, he warned finance had 'grown too big, it has taken up too big a share of the world's resources. Now it is shaking and I think when it becomes once again regulated it will be less profitable'. -- AFP

US economy's fundamentals OK?

WASHINGTON - US UNEMPLOYMENT is at a five-year high.

Financial firms that withstood the Great Depression are failing. Congress and the outgoing president are gridlocked.

So when Republican presidential candidate John McCain declared that 'the fundamentals of our economy are strong,' it drew ridicule from his Democratic rival Barack Obama.

Mr McCain later toned down his remarks, but his observation reflected a debate among analysts and policymakers about the economy's underlying health.

Polls show a majority of voters put the economy as their No. 1 concern with seven weeks to go until the presidential election.

Many economists believe the US is now in a recession. Signs of economic distress are everywhere as housing prices continue to fall and the nation's financial system is pounded by a series of shocks, including a 504-point drop in the Dow Jones industrials on Monday.

'Strains in financial markets have increased significantly and labour markets have weakened further,' the Federal Reserve said in a sober assessment on Tuesday.

But in deciding against lowering interest rates, the central bank signalled that it didn't see the economy's present situation as dire.

'When you have jobs being lost, industrial production down, personal incomes down and so forth, the economy's not in good shape,' said Mr Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at Global Insight, a Lexington, Massachusetts, forecasting firm.

Still, he added, 'If the issue is whether the US had a dynamic, resilient economy, and that the long-term trends are positive, I completely agree.'

'It's important not to get carried away with gloom and doom.'

And Mr David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor's, said that while there is a serious financial sector problem, 'the fundamental economy actually isn't in that bad a shape.'

But, Mr Wyss added, 'I still think we're in a recession.'

That dichotomy is at the heart of the dispute over Mr McCain's remarks. Mr McCain declared on Monday that 'the fundamentals of our economy are strong,' a phrase he has used before.

After Democrats pounced, he backtracked and declared the economy to be in a crisis and said 'fundamentals are threatened.'

Democrats kept up their assault. 'How can John McCain fix our economy if he doesn't understand it's broken?' asked an Obama TV ad.

While the housing and financial sectors are in near meltdown, the larger economy is plodding along, the numbers suggest.

After turning negative in the final three months of 2007 and growing at an anaemic 0.9 per cent in the first three months of 2008, the nation's gross domestic product - helped by government stimulus checks - grew at 3.3 per cent in the April-June quarter.

A relatively weak dollar has helped US exports. High prices for food and other commodities have helped agriculture and the energy and mining industries.

A survey of CEOs by accounting firm PriceWaterHouseCoopers found that while the unemployment rate jumped to 6.1 per cent in August, a majority of the top corporate leaders surveyed said they are not planning significant cutbacks of people, products or services.

Instead, the CEOs are focusing on opportunities to improve efficiency and ways to emerge from the slowdown in a better position to compete.

That doesn't mean all is rosy.

'If all of this should lead to a tightening of credit, which it very well might, that would be a serious concern to manufacturers,' said Mr Hank Cox, a spokesman for the National Association of Manufacturers.

Lack experience
With the economy now at centre stage, both Mr McCain and Mr Obama must try to overcome the fact that neither has much experience with markets or finance, nor do their running mates.

Mr McCain may be at a bigger disadvantage because his party has controlled the White House for eight years - and voters often blame the party in power for hard times.

Still, new polling suggests the Wall Street tumult is helping Mr McCain, at least for now. He and Mr Obama now are trusted equally on the economy, with 34 per cent of voters naming each as the candidate who would do a better job, according to a wires pollconducted last week.

Previously, Mr Obama had held a solid advantage on the issue. Democrats have also been seeking to link Mr McCain with unpopular Bush economic policies ? something Mr McCain has been pushing back against.

In a recent McCain television ad, an announcer asserts, 'We're worse off than we were four years ago.'

That not only takes a dig at President Bush, but also evokes the memory of Mr Ronald Reagan, the Republican who famously asked voters in 1980 if they were better off than four years earlier.

Mr Reagan also had a ready definition of economic downturns.

'A recession was when your neighbour lost his job, and a depression was when you lost yours.'

'Recovery would come when then President Jimmy Carter, the Democrat he beat in the election, lost his,' he liked to add. -- AP

Fallout in Singapore

SINGAPORE and the region will not escape the financial tsunami sweeping through Wall Street, according to local economists.

They told The Straits Times yesterday that the man on the street will feel the fallout from the credit crisis in the form of a tighter jobs market, sinking asset prices and shrinking corporate bottom lines.

Singapore's growth will probably also be affected. Exports are likely to take a further hit and the domestic economy will experience a slowdown.

However, the economists added that the situation unfolding now is not as severe as during the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s.

Citigroup's Kit Wei Zheng said the storm in the US will 'increase the risk on the export front', leading to 'a broadening of the slowdown into the domestic economy'.

'First to be hit will be the export-oriented sectors such as manufacturing, and the externally-oriented sectors, like tourism. The slowdown will also filter through to affect domestic demand.'

OCBC Bank economist Selena Ling said: 'It's a confidence crisis more than anything else. The biggest question now is, who's next in line?'

The economists pointed to the way this week's dramatic events could reach down to affect the man on the street.

Consumers are likely to tighten their belts and cut spending and investment in light of plunging equity markets.

That will mean corporate bottom lines will be dampened, and firms will in turn be more cautious about expansion, resulting in fewer jobs created.

These are likely to be accompanied by falling property prices, leaner bonuses and smaller salary increases.

Banks will also turn more defensive, limiting loans for cars, homes or business expansion.

The economists noted that the impact of a giant insurer such as AIG going under would be greater than that of an investment bank like Lehman Brothers.

Ms Ling said: 'That's because insurance cuts across both companies and consumers. If an insurer goes under, consumers will be affected via auto, personal policies. It'll have a greater economic impact.'

Nanyang Technological University economist Choy Keen Meng said the maelstrom will result in fewer jobs for the financial sector.

But he added: 'I don't think the deterioration will be substantial...I don't think we're anywhere close to the 2001 recession scenario...unless the whole world goes into a recession.'

Other economists also aired the view that the crisis is nowhere near as bad as during the Asian financial meltdown.

Mr Kit said: 'Asia's not at the epicentre of this crisis, so I don't think it'll be that severe. The region has restructured and is more resilient. We're not looking at a meltdown.

'But what it'll mean is that the slowdown in Singapore will be a lot more painful than what people were expecting at the start of the year.'

Ms Ling added: 'Asia's still growing now - that's the key distinction as compared to the previous period. The crisis is more concentrated in the US, and is spreading to Europe and Japan.'

And economists are not all scampering to trim their 2008 growth forecasts in the wake of Wall Street's mayhem.

Standard Chartered Bank's Alvin Liew said: 'We are still fairly comfortable with keeping our full-year 3.5 per cent forecast unless the third-quarter prelim GDP growth turns out much worse than the 0.4 per cent year-on-year projection we made.'

But not everyone is as optimistic.

Mr Kit said: 'The current situation reaffirms our bearish view over the next 12-18 months. The 4-5 per cent Government growth forecast range may not be realistic any more, and growth could fall under 3 per cent this year and the next.'

10 Ways to Protect Your Finances From the Crisis

by Brett Arends

Here are ten things that this financial panic means for you.

1. Check that your bank accounts are federally insured. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) guarantees deposits up to $100,000 per person. If you have to hold more than that, spread it across multiple banks. As a taxpayer you are paying for this insurance. Use it.

2. Make sure your brokerage accounts are federally insured, too. The Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) guarantees you at places like Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, E-Trade and the like up to $500,000, including $100,000 worth of cash. The same rules apply: If you have more to invest, spread it across multiple firms. Note: The SIPC is only there to make sure you get your shares and bonds back if a brokerage fails. It does not, obviously, guarantee those investments' value.

3. Put money in thy purse. If this market and this economy get any tougher, cash isn't just going to be king any more. It's going to be king, queen, emperor, lord high chamberlain, and the whole court – including the royal cat and crazy prince Ruprecht locked in the attic. The easiest way to make or find a buck is to save it. So take an axe to those family budgets. The restaurant meals. The Super Duper Everything Cable package. The rip-off checking account with the high fees and low interest. It's all costing you.

4. Set up a home equity line of credit while you still can. I usually don't like advising people to take on more debt, but if access to ready cash might be a life saver it's best to line it up. That's especially true if you are worried about your job. Credit is already tight, and it may get a lot tighter still.

5. Refinance your mortgage. The panic on Wall Street just caused a collapse in the interest rate on long-term US Treasury bonds, as lots of investors rushed there for safety. And that usually leads to a fall in long-term mortgage rates.

6. Stop pulling a Monty Python when it comes to your worst investments. If you ever saw John Cleese and Michael Palin perform their famous skit about the dead parrot, you know exactly what I mean. No, your Fannie Mae shares aren't "resting." They're lying at the bottom of the cage with their feet in the air. What more do you need to know? So stop waiting for them to "recover" before sorting out your portfolio.

7. Don't panic. Journalists, like markets, tend to move in herds. And by the nature of their jobs they write about the plane that crashes instead of the thousands that land safely. Remember, too, that pundits want to seem really wise by putting on serious expressions and saying things like "we don't know how this thing is going to play out," and "the situation could get a lot worse". Bah. Guess what? We never know how things are going to play out. And the situation could get a lot better too. That's the future for you.

8. When it comes to your short-term money needs, nothing has changed. Any money you might need within the next year or two should be held in cash or equivalents. That was true two years ago and it is true now. The stock market is no home for money you may need urgently. It could fall 30% or jump 30%. Nobody knows. You can get a one year CD paying 5% right now, and it's federally guaranteed.

9. If you are investing for five years or more, buy some stock. The investment outlook is much, much better today than it has been for several years, because shares are much cheaper. World markets overall have fallen 27% from last year's peak. They're not a steal at current levels but they are not particularly expensive either. Invest globally. Vanguard Total World Stock gives you the whole world and low fees. If you are looking for a value focus, Morningstar analyst Bridget Hughes likes Oakmark Global. Another good one is Tweedy, Browne's new Worldwide High Dividend Yield Value. The list is not comprehensive. Remember: I am not trying to call the bottom of the market. Things could fall quite a bit further ahead. No one knows. So only invest little, often, and broadly.

10. If you want to worry about anything, worry about your taxes. The worse this crisis gets, the more they will end up putting the taxpayer on the hook to prevent a meltdown. Taxes are going up sooner or later anyway, no matter who wins the election, because of our gigantic federal deficits. (If you think Lehman Brothers was bad, you should look at Uncle Sam). And you can forget about any talk of tax breaks. Oh, and if you want a break from worrying about taxes, worry about Treasury bonds. Deficits won't do anything good for them.

Weathering Wall Street's Storm

by Eleanor Laise and Shefali Anand

Clients of Merrill, Lehman Should Be Largely Secure, But Brokers May Jump Ship

No one could blame clients of Merrill Lynch & Co. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. for feeling like they've been sandbagged. Now the question many are asking: How safe are their accounts and investments?

For brokerage clients of these firms, account assets should be largely secure, industry experts say. There are strict rules, for example, that protect customer assets in the event a firm goes bust. Workers whose 401(k) retirement-savings plans are administered by Merrill can also feel secure. But Lehman clients holding certain sophisticated investments, such as certain derivatives, may have trouble exiting their positions quickly.

Both Merrill and Lehman clients will likely face some tough decisions ahead. One issue: Many brokers are likely to leave these firms and either strike out on their own or join another firm, industry experts say, and their clients must weigh the pros and cons of following along, staying behind or moving their assets to an entirely new firm.

Amid the upheaval, brokerage customers should be aware of the rules that protect their accounts in times of crisis. Brokerage firms are required to keep clients' cash and securities separate from their own accounts and keep certain levels of liquid assets on hand. The industry-funded Securities Investor Protection Corp., or SIPC, helps protect investors when a brokerage firm fails. In such an event, customers receive all their assets back from the firm, and if any assets are missing, a reserve fund maintained by SIPC satisfies each customer's remaining claims up to $500,000.

Since SIPC was founded in 1970, there have been only 349 people who weren't made completely whole, said Steve Harbeck, president and CEO of SIPC. But SIPC doesn't cover ordinary market losses, and some holdings, such as currencies, hedge funds and limited partnerships not registered with the SEC, aren't covered by SIPC.

Though the moves at Lehman and Merrill come amid a tumultuous year in the markets, clients had little advance warning. The situation at the Wall Street giants deteriorated quickly over the weekend as Lehman failed to find a buyer and the government declined to step in and bail out the firm. But investors got a picture of how quickly a Wall Street titan can crumble earlier this year when Bear Stearns Cos. narrowly avoided a bankruptcy filing by agreeing to sell itself to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

Here's what the latest Wall Street turmoil means for small investors and account holders:

Merrill account holders. Merrill Lynch account holders are on their way to becoming part of a brokerage behemoth. A combined Bank of America and Merrill brokerage would have more than 20,000 financial advisers and $2.5 trillion in client assets.

But the deal with Bank of America may prompt many Merrill brokers to jump ship, industry experts say. The more conservative culture at Bank of America may not mesh well with the more aggressive, risk-oriented atmosphere at Merrill. That means many Merrill brokers are likely to ask clients to move with them to a new firm, and that could cause some headaches for investors.

Clients switching to a new firm may need to sign new account and margin agreements, locate paperwork for any trusts, and get new checks or check cards on their brokerage accounts, said Matt Bienfang, senior research director at financial services research and advisory firm TowerGroup. On top of that, of course, customers will have to consider the products offered and fees charged by the new firm.

Merrill is also a major administrator of 401(k) retirement savings plans. But 401(k) assets are held in trusts, and "it's all separate from all the activities of plan sponsors and providers," said David Wray, president of the Profit Sharing/401k Council of America -- so the Bank of America deal should have little impact on participants in these plans.

Lehman account holders. Lehman Brothers said on Monday that its investment-management unit, which includes its investment services for high-net-worth individuals, is not part of the bankruptcy filing and will continue to operate.

"We assure you that as our clients your assets remain safe," wrote Jack Petersen, Lehman's global head of private investment management business, in a letter sent to clients early Monday. "We continue to operate business as usual, and are fully staffed and ready to handle your immediate needs, including the facilitation of proper execution and the orderly transfer of assets as needed."

SIPC's Mr. Harbeck said that "to the best of our knowledge ... there are no missing customer assets," and Lehman clients still have normal access to their accounts. Should SIPC discover otherwise, "we're obviously ready to take action," he said. In addition to SIPC, Lehman clients are covered by the Customer Asset Protection Co., an insurance company that offers coverage beyond SIPC's limits.

It's quite likely that Lehman's high-net-worth business could be acquired, said Lauren Smith, brokerage analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. In any case, many Lehman clients will wind up simply following their financial adviser to a new firm.

Lehman's broker-dealer, Lehman Brothers Inc., "is expected to close only after the orderly transfer of customer accounts" to another firm, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a Wall Street self-regulatory group, said Monday.

Yet Lehman clients who hold complex investments with the firm may face greater complications. "The more complicated the security, the more difficult it's going to be to liquidate those securities or have those positions transferred out to another brokerage firm," said Steven Caruso, partner at New York law firm Maddox Hargett & Caruso.

Clients with holdings such as derivatives in which Lehman has the other end of the trade, or limited-partnership investments offered by Lehman, are likely to face such issues, industry observers say. It's very difficult to say how much these investors will recover, said Ms. Smith, and it could take weeks or months to get answers.

Another issue: Clients with margin loans may be forced to quickly inject more money into their accounts if they hold hard-to-value assets with the firm, as the valuations of those holdings could decline substantially, Mr. Caruso said.

One especially vulnerable set of investors are those who bought billions of dollars of auction-rate securities from Lehman. Other large investment banks have recently announced plans to buy back such securities issued by them, but Lehman hadn't done so, leaving a question mark as to whether investors will get their money back. Auction-rate securities were marketed as cash-like investments, but when the market froze earlier this year, many investors found that they were unable to sell their holdings.

Investors also hold about $900 million in auction-rate securities issued as closed-end fund preferred shares by Neuberger Berman, Lehman's mutual-fund unit, according to research firm Thomas J. Herzfeld Advisors.

"I'm very worried this morning," said Ed Dowling, 53, of Huntington Station, N.Y., who owns $300,000 in such preferred closed-end shares issued by Neuberger and is concerned that whoever buys the Neuberger unit may find a loophole that will keep them from honoring the funds' debt obligations. Legally, closed-end funds aren't obliged to redeem preferred shareholders, though many, including Neuberger, have announced plans to do so in recent months to preserve their reputations.

In all, Mr. Dowling, who owns a manufacturing business, has about $2 million in preferreds from five different closed-end fund companies, which he said he will need by the end of this year to build a house.

Investors in Lehman's exchange-traded notes, a type of debt instrument that trades like a stock, are also facing an unsure fate. Lehman has three ETNs with around $13 million in assets, and since these are unsecured debt instruments, owners will have to stand in line like other creditors. "They're looking at [getting] pennies on the dollar," said Matt Hougan, editor of IndexUniverse.com, a Web site that tracks index-based investments.

For Lehman clients, "the safest course is to get all the assets away from the firm so they're not subjected to uncertainties as things develop," Mr. Caruso said.

Money-management clients. Lehman's bankruptcy filing doesn't directly affect shareholders of its Neuberger Berman mutual funds, and investors can continue to trade in and out of these funds easily. "As a fund investor, you have the luxury of sitting back and see how these things play out," said Don Phillips, managing director of investment-research firm Morningstar Inc.

Anne Jackson, 34, an associate at architecture firm Perkins+Will in Charlotte, N.C., directs 15% of her 401(k) retirement savings to the Neuberger Berman Socially Responsive fund. "I haven't been paying attention" to recent developments, she said.

That may well be fine for now. But over the next few weeks and months, fund shareholders should watch out for one key factor -- will their fund managers stay at the funds or defect?

The answer will largely depend on who ends up buying the Neuberger unit, which manages 26 mutual funds and six closed-end funds with nearly $25 billion in assets, according to Morningstar. In recent weeks, some private-equity firms have shown interest in buying the unit. If that happens, analysts expect that the firm would leave the fund managers alone to do business as usual, increasing the chances that they will stick around. However, if the buyer is another fund company, it might attempt to merge Neuberger funds with its own and prompt managers to bolt.

Blue chips: Fundamentals will help them bounce back

By Pat Dorsey, Money Magazine contributing writer

For many years, investors took it on faith that a portfolio of big blue-chip stocks - chockfull of familiar names like General Electric and Coca-Cola - was the surest path to investing success.

Why get cute with complicated stuff like foreign equities or small-cap shares when you could invest in well-known, industry-leading companies, sleep well at night and watch your portfolio steadily grow?

Obviously, that faith has been shaken recently because blue-chip shares just haven't appreciated. Over the past decade, Standard & Poor's 500 index has returned a mere 3.7% a year. You'd have to go back to the end of the 1970s bear market - or to the late 30s, as the Great Depression was winding down - to find a worse 10-year stretch for blue-chip stocks.

Is it time to throw in the towel on these once heralded shares? I don't think so because the reason they're struggling has nothing to do with declining American competitiveness or the dawn of the "Asian century," to name a couple of theories. It has to do with a short-term change in investors' mood, which won't last forever.

I think of investing in simple terms. When companies do well, so should their shares - eventually. And when businesses suffer, the stocks will too. Eventually.

What moves stock prices

In my view, there are really only three drivers of equity market returns:

You can make money based on a company's growing earnings, which will ultimately be reflected in its share price. You can make money if the company pays out a portion of its profits directly to you in the form of cash dividends. And you can make money if the market decides, for whatever reason, that it is willing to pay more for those earnings than in the past.

Of course, this also means you could lose money if investors don't want to pay that much for profits anymore. This last variable, called valuations, is the x factor at work here.

In the long run, it is a company's profit growth and dividends - which Vanguard founder John Bogle describes as your investment returns - that matter most. In fact, Bogle analyzed stocks in the 20th century and found that 9.8 percentage points of their 10.4% annual returns were because of earnings and dividends.

But while investment returns are key over time, a drop in valuations can significantly cut into your gains in the short term, as you've no doubt discovered.

Over the past decade, for example, the S&P's annual investment returns were a respectable 6.8%. But the market's price/earnings ratio, a key measure of valuations, fell from a frothy 29 to 21.

This change - which Bogle refers to as speculative returns - effectively reduced blue-hip stock performance by 3.1 percentage points a year. By contrast, in the prior 10 years, P/Es shot up from 12 to 29, adding to your investment gains.

The mood of the market

Why do P/E ratios change so much? Interest rates certainly play a part, but the big reason is that there are simply times when people get more or less excited about owning a particular group of stocks.

Can I predict with certainty when this momentum will change? No. But history tells us that at some point enthusiasm becomes euphoria, or negativity becomes depression - and the cycle reverses.

In the meantime, think of it this way: You're taking far less risk buying blue chips at 21 times earnings - or lower - than you were at 29 times earnings in 1998. The fact is, there is a lot of value among U.S. large-caps right now, which you won't see by looking solely at stock charts.

Take General Electric, arguably the bluest of blue chips. Over more than a decade, GE has increased earnings per share 10.4% annually, with an average dividend yield of about 2.2%. But the stock has returned only about 2.5% annually as its P/E plunged from a lofty 36 in 1998 to 13.

There's a vocal contingent on Wall Street that assumes if the stock hasn't done well, there must be something wrong with GE. The reality is, GE's shares have stunk because they were just so expensive in 1998.

In contrast to the stock, GE the company has been performing rather well. Earnings have increased at a nice clip over the past decade, and profit margins are substantially higher. Add in a healthy 4% yield and the shares look quite attractive.

Ultimately, that's what makes a stock appealing - profits and dividends, not the mere fact that a stock's price happens to be rising at the moment. Have you recently been hit up by a family member for a loan? Money wants to hear about it. Email us at makeover@moneymail.com, including who the person was, how much they needed, what they needed it for, and how you handled it. Please send along a recent photo, as well as your location and income.

Wednesday, 17 September 2008

HP to cut 24,600 jobs

SAN FRANCISCO - US TECHNOLOGY giant Hewlett-Packard (HP) said on Monday it would cut 24,600 jobs worldwide over the next three years as part of its integration with computer services firm Electronic Data Systems.

The job cuts would allow HP 'to restructure the EDS business group to streamline costs, invest in growth and drive shareholder value,' HP said in a statement.

About 7.5 per cent of the combined workforce would be affected, with about half of the cuts taking place in the United States, HP said.

The workforce reduction aims to 'streamline the combined company's services businesses,' and once complete was expected to 'result in annual cost savings of approximately US$1.8 billion (S$2.57 billion).'

In May, HP inked a deal to buy the Texas-based technology company for US$25 per share. After approval by shareholders as well as US and foreign regulators, the acquisition was finalised in August.

The new HP services includes annual revenues of more than US$38 billion and 210,000 employees, operating in more than 80 countries.

The deal was expected to create a global powerhouse in computer services to compete against IBM.

Northern California-based HP is among the world's largest IT companies, with revenue totaling US$110.4 billion for the four fiscal quarters ended April 30, 2008. -- AFP

ADB cuts Asia growth forecast

MANILA - ASIAN growth will slow further this year and next as the turbulence on global markets fans inflation, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) warned on Tuesday.

Governments in the region will need to address inflation even if it means slower economic growth, the Manila-based lender said in an update to its 2008 Development Outlook report.

The report was written before a weekend of financial market turmoil in the United States that has already had global repercussions, after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch was only saved with a takeover by Bank of America.

In its report the ADB said the past eight months of turmoil in the markets had 'exploded the myth of uncoupling' and showed economies in Asia were still heavily reliant on industrial countries, notably the US, for their exports.

Around 85 per cent of footware imported by the US and a third of its clothing comes from developing Asia, the bank said.

The ADB sharply increased its inflation forecast for Asia for 2008 from the 5.1 per cent predicted in April to 7.8 per cent, and to 6.0 per cent in 2009.

Economic growth in 2008 is expected to drop from the 7.6 per cent that was forecast in April to 7.5 per cent, and slow further to 7.2 per cent next year.

The ADB said it expected food prices would remain high, and that oil would remain 'well above' US$100 (S$143) a barrel.

China's economic growth will remain unchanged at 10 per cent this year, the ADB forecast, but it revised down slightly its 2009 forecast to 9.5 per cent on the expectation of a reduced trade surplus and slower investment growth.

The ADB said that while some central banks had started to tighten monetary policy, 'some may have let the inflation genie out of the bottle by doing too little, too late, since interest rates in most countries are still lower than inflation.'

'Containing inflation will take time as monetary policy works with a lag,' the bank said.

The ADB projected double-digit inflation this year for Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Philippines, and Vietnam.

'Curbing inflation is the crucial macroeconomic challenge facing most Southeast Asian countries,' the bank said. -- AFP

Food prices likely to remain high

MANILA - THE high prices of food worldwide are not likely to fall any time soon, and there are no quick solutions to the problem, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) warned on Tuesday.

'Scarcity is back, hunger is growing, and rapid economic growth is threatened. These are difficult times,' the Manila-based lender said in the update of its annual Asian Development Outlook.

'In view of these difficulties, it seems unlikely that basic food prices will return to their real long-run downward trend.'

The regional lender did note that food prices were 'substantially below the peaks of the previous world food crisis in 1973-74.' But it said this time, price increases had been 'sharp and disruptive,' affecting the poorest people and food-importing countries the most, increasing inflationary pressure and threatening economic growth.

Studies blamed the high prices on various causes including population growth, a slowdown in agricultural production, the depreciation of the US dollar, high oil prices and the increased demand for biofuels, the ADB said.

Short-term speculation had also fed the price increases, it said.

The bank also said higher prices for some crops had led countries like India, Thailand and Vietnam to impose export controls while importing countries like the Philippines scrambled to find new stocks, further fuelling the crisis.

In the past, food price crunches were solved by boosting output, but there is now less high-quality farmland available, and agricultural yields have not increased for 'decades' due to lack of investment in research, it said.

To make matters worse, the cost of inputs like fuel and fertilizer are now higher and rising rapidly, the ADB said.

The bank said even when the panic and speculation subsides, the new 'equilibrium price' for rice is likely to be 50-60 per cent higher than it was in 2007.

'Other basic food commodities are likely to exhibit similar patterns,' the ADB added.

'Domestic policies will trump international cooperation whenever politicians see a short-run advantage in closing borders or subsidising trade,' the ADB said.

While it called for increased food aid to affected populations and the setting up of safety nets for the poor, 'the only sustainable solution for these households is inclusive, or pro-poor, economic growth that provides reliable real incomes and stable access to food,' the ADB said.

It called for more investments in agriculture especially in basic food crops to spur growth, noting that such an effort should have been made decades ago. -- AFP

Deeper recession threats?

WASHINGTON - THE fall of Lehman Brothers raises the risk of a deeper US recession that engulfs a broader swath of the global economy as skittish banks around the world lock their vaults.

Countries that had so far escaped the yearlong credit crisis largely unscathed scrambled on Monday to quantify the potential losses after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc filed for bankruptcy.

Banks' borrowing costs soared because of the uncertainty over how far and wide the Lehman impact might extend. If that translates into a crackdown on lending terms for companies and consumers, the economic fallout will be severe.

US growth prospects already looked gloomy even before this weekend's drama, which also included Merrill Lynch agreeing to be bought by Bank of America and insurer AIG looking for financial help.

'At this point, the US will be lucky to escape with a mild recession,' said Prof Ken Rogoff, a Harvard University professor and former International Monetary Fund chief economist.

The pain quickly spread to Asia and Europe. In Taiwan, which had reported little in the way of losses from the subprime mortgage mess, the top financial regulator said Lehman-related exposure for its companies and retail investors totalled US$2.5 billion. Two Japanese banks appeared on the list of major Lehman creditors.

In Europe, Germany's Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said the initial impact on Germany was limited, but Economy Minister Michael Glos said Lehman's collapse could seriously harm Europe's biggest economy.

'We hope that we don't see a crisis which pushes the global economy to the brink of ruin,' Mr Glos said.

Across Europe, banks' funding demands far outstripped the supply offered by central banks, indicating that firms were keeping a tight grip on cash as they assessed the damage.

US interbank interest rates spiked to three times the Federal Reserve's target of 2 per cent, and calls grew for additional interest rate cuts.

'This weekend's events raise the probability of one or several major central banks cutting interest rates, possibly as early as this week, and perhaps in a concerted action,' Morgan Stanley economist Mr Joachim Fels wrote in a note to clients.

The US central bank's interest rate-setting committee meets on Tuesday, and trading in rate futures markets showed that investors think another reduction is possible then.

Dust settles

Although the financial pain was acute on Monday, Harvard's Prof Rogoff said the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department were right to deny taxpayer money to salvage Lehman Brothers.

'The government's actions may lead to a deeper recession but much shorter because they're letting the private sector work this out,' Prof Rogoff said. 'It takes a lot of guts a few months before an election to let this happen, but it is absolutely the right thing to do.'

The depth of the downturn depends largely on how banks behave in the coming weeks. Mr Douglas Elmendorf, an economist with the Brookings Institution, said it will be several days before markets settle down enough to give a clear signal on the status of lending conditions.

If banks manage to unwind their transactions with Lehman this week, the effect on corporate and consumer lending may be manageable. If they cannot, and losses mount, that will clearly restrict lending and lead to higher borrowing costs.

'If you could stop the world for a week and let everybody figure out exactly what their exposures are and try to find other counterparties, that would help,' he said.

Because of that uncertainty, Mr Elmendorf said he expected the Federal Reserve to hold off on lowering interest rates at its Tuesday meeting but make it clear that it stood ready to act swiftly should credit conditions remain tight.

'Recession wolves'

Mr Brian Bethune, chief US financial economist with Global Insight, said the Fed did not have the luxury of waiting to see if credit markets worsen and called for an emergency rate cut now to cope with the fallout.

'We should not delude ourselves into thinking that without a significant move from the Fed there will not be further tightening of credit conditions as a result of the events over the weekend,' he said. 'That will threaten the economy and the financial system even further.'

He pointed out that even before this weekend's drama, data showed that lending conditions tightened over the summer and the pace of credit growth was at recessionary levels. Consumer spending has already weakened, and unemployment is rising.

'The economy is very weak, the recession wolves are pounding down the door and the financial system faces new deflationary threats from the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers.

This is an emergency situation, and an aggressive response from the Fed is needed,' he said. -- REUTERS

Lehman staff pack up bags

TOKYO - AS LEHMAN Brothers workers packed their bags across Asia, an employee of the once venerable Wall Street firm in Tokyo said he felt like he had been handed the death penalty.

There was a sombre mood at Lehman's Japanese unit, housed in a 54-storey skyscraper in Tokyo's glitzy Roppongi Hills complex where the bird's-eye view of the capital was once a metaphor for the bank's financial pride.

Employees of the 158-year-old bank, which crumpled under mortgage-related losses, were already trying to get on with their lives even though Lehman has made no official announcement on lay-offs.

'Now I know what it feels like to be handed down the death sentence,' said one American employee in his 20s.

He said he had been closely following developments in the past weeks in the news media, receiving no information from his superiors.

While he was considering enrolling in a US business school next year, 'it looks like I could be leaving (Japan) like, next week', said the employee, who did not want his name used out of concern for his professional future.

A trickle of casually dressed workers braved flashing cameras and drizzling rain to enter the building but it seemed many others stayed away - possibly brushing up their resumes.

Another young Lehman employee decided to take the day off, going for a bike ride to shop and meet friends who worked for teetering Merrill Lynch and the now defunct Bear Stearns.

Smiling with them in a photo entitled 'One crazy day' that she uploaded on her website, she added a hint of sarcasm with the caption: 'reps from former banks'.

Lehman filed for bankruptcy and court protection from its creditors on Monday after potential buyers, including Bank of America and Britain's Barclays PLC, walked away from a deal and the US government refused to intervene.

Currently the bank is in talks with Barclays which is considering acquiring certain of its assets, including its key investment management unit.

Employees were not the only shell-shocked victims - thousands of investors and ordinary shareholders are seeing their holdings blow up, as Lehman shares have plunged 94 per cent to 21 cents.

'I keep getting calls from angry customers yelling at me because they lost all their money. The market is fluctuating so much,' said Mr Tse Yu Tui, a dealer at Prudential Brokerage in Hong Kong.

'I have told them not to buy any more, but they did not listen to me, and then what can I do?' he asked.

Camera crews waited all day in a shopping mall outside of Lehman Brothers' Hong Kong office, which occupies four floors in the city's tallest building.

Local broadcaster Cable News quoted sources as saying that Lehman had told staff in Hong Kong to work half-day shifts from now on until managers figured out a proper arrangement.

Employees at Merrill Lynch were also biting their nails, left guessing over their professional fates after its rescue buyout by Bank of America.

Managers are 'trying to put a positive spin on the whole thing, saying that there will not be much overlap in their business and our business', a Merrill Lynch employee said in Hong Kong.

'The impression is that even if there are going to be any lay-offs, it is going to be much less serious than the situation in the US. Right now even top management have no idea what will happen to them,' she said. -- AFP

More banks may close: IMF

CAIRO - THE global financial crisis is not over and more banks could close, possibly leading to the disappearance of the independent investment houses, IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said.

'The fact that a certain number of banks in the United States are restructuring shouldn't lead to panic,' he said in an interview in the wake of Monday's collapse of major US investment bank Lehman Brothers.

'But these events add to the uncertainty, and financial tensions cannot be excluded in the short term,' with banks other than Lehman Brothers also in a bad position, he said.

Predicting 'a narrower global financial sector', the International Monetary Fund managing director said certain 'players will disappear', particularly in the United States, with the possible gradual disappearance of independent investment banks like Lehman or Merrill Lynch.

Lehman Brothers was seen in financial markets as one of the big four United States investment banks, along with Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch, which announced on Monday it is to be taken over by Bank of America in a 44 billion dollar deal.

'We are facing an unprecedented financial crisis,' Mr Strauss-Kahn said, because it stems from 'the heart of the system', the United States, and not from its 'periphery' and has affected the whole world simultaneously.

'Some parts of the world are more or less affected, but the slowdown is general,' he said, adding: 'The entire global economy will slow down by between a half and two per cent', including in China and Europe.

'Something new is more dangerous than something that happens repeatedly, but a difference with (the stock market crash of) 1929 is that we have instruments which don't allow us to avoid the crisis but to soften the consequences and correct their effects', in particular the IMF, he said.

The IMF boss said European banks, which combine several different functions, were less likely to be affected and did not risk 'being brought to the ground' like their American counterparts.

Global equities tumbled for a second day running on Tuesday as anxious investors waited to see if US insurance giant AIG would suffer the same fate as Lehman.

The IMF chief praised the European Central Bank for taking strict measures.

'Honestly, the ECB has done its work, by avoiding inflationary tensions.'

He said that faced with rising prices, 'it is normal that it undertakes a strict policy'.

Mr Strauss-Khan pointed to some positive developments, including the oil price which has dropped below 100 dollars a barrel and said the IMF would predict an economic upturn in 2009 in its next forecast in October.

'The current turbulence adds to the uncertainty but we still predict an upturn in 2009,' he said, adding that 'the economy is much more resilient than we had anticipated.'

Created in 1944 to organise a global financial system, the Washington-based body today also offers financial and technical assistance to its member states.

Mr Strauss-Kahn was in Egypt for talks with officials, including President Hosni Mubarak, on the country's economic reform programme.

Investment banks specialise in organising finance for businesses rather than providing services to the general public. Some have become enormous corporations amid the rapid worldwide economic growth in recent years. -- AFP

US financial system 'sound'

WASHINGTON - TREASURY Secretary Henry Paulson said on Monday the American people can remain confident in the 'soundness and resilience in the American financial system.'

Briefing reporters at the White House, Mr Paulson said he 'never once' considered it would be appropriate to put taxpayer money at risk to resolve the problems at Lehman Brothers.

The fourth largest US investment bank filed for bankruptcy protection earlier on Monday.

Starting Friday, Mr Paulson participated in three tense days of negotiations at the New York Federal eserve Bank in which he held firm to the position that the federal government would not step in and supply any money to resolve the crisis at Lehman.

Faced with the prospect of no government help in dealing with Lehman's huge losses on its mortgage holdings, other financial firms lost interest in trying to buy the venerable firm.

That forced New York-based Lehman to file for bankruptcy protection, making it the largest bankruptcy in history in terms of assets, surpassing the failures at Worldcom and Enron earlier in the decade.

Mr Paulson explained his decision by telling White House reporters that any decision to put taxpayer money at risk to prop up a private company must be undertaken only after considering all alternatives.

'Moral hazard is something I don?t take lightly,' Mr Paulson said, referring to the belief that when the government steps in to rescue a private financial firm it encourages other firms to engage in risky behaviour.

'I never once considered that it was appropriate to put taxpayer money on the line in resolving Lehman Brothers,' Mr Paulson said.

The current credit crisis will not be resolved until the prolonged slump in housing comes to an end, he said.

'Until we stem the housing correction, until the biggest part of that is behind us and we have more stability in housing prices, we're going to continue to have turmoil in financial markets,' Mr Paulson said.

Mr Paulson, who was heavily involved in the decision last week for the government to take control of mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, said if that action works as expected in helping to stabilise the mortgage markets, then housing should start to rebound.

'I'm not saying two or three months, but in months as opposed to ... years,' he said. -- AP

Sunday, 14 September 2008

In Tough Times, Even the Billionaires Worry

by Christine Haughney

Do you have millions of dollars in the bank and still worry about filling up your gas tank? Do you fear that the housing slowdown may mean your sprawling beachfront property will face the auction block?

As the economy has soured, Lee Hausner, a psychologist at IFF Advisors Inc., in Irvine, Calif., who works primarily with wealthy families, has noticed rising anxieties about spending.

She has a test for such clients: she asks them to calculate their monthly expenses — from Botox shots to country club fees — and their monthly income from work and investments. Then she has them cut 10 or 20 percent off the income figure. If they can still afford their lifestyle, she tells them that they have enough of a cushion to protect them from a troubled economy. In most cases, she finds that her clients are fine.

"You control the wealth," she said. "The wealth does not control you."

But the combination of depressed financial investments and declining real estate values is a formidable burden, even for those who have accumulated the most. "Almost everybody is worrying, including people who are billionaires," said Dennis Pearne, a psychologist in Framingham, Mass., who works with wealthy patients. He says lately he has noticed that "the worry increases with the size of the holdings."

The bigger the amount, the more patients have to worry about losing, and these losses prey on their deepest fears about money, Dr. Pearne said. Either they feel that they did not deserve the money in the first place, or they feel entitled to their wealth and are angry when it is gone, he said. Dr. Pearne advises such patients not to make major decisions about their investments until they have a team of trustworthy financial advisers to guide them. Then he counsels them on their specific issues.

"To the extent that they have shame, then the shame multiplies with the size of the fortune," he said. "The more they have, the more they're afraid they're going to act out with it." This could include taking their children out of private school or selling homes at losses.

Kenneth Mueller, a Manhattan psychotherapist who counsels many wealthy people, agreed that patients can become overwhelmed by the magnitude of the numbers. For example, he said, their income may have shrunk to $2 million in 2008 from $20 million in 2007, or their $10 million in stocks may have lost 10 percent of its value. These declines can stir up insecurities, he said. "They remember any form of deprivation, physical or emotional." He counsels that these are "old worries" to be worked through, not present realities.

In fairness, worrying about money is natural. It stems from the primal need to have enough food to survive through winter, says Robert A. Kenny, associate director of the Center on Wealth and Philanthropy at Boston College. "We have been worrying about having enough for thousands of years," he said. Mr. Kenny is working on a survey of people with an average net worth of $50 million, and he said that about half of them think they have "enough" money.

Some worriers are learning a valuable lesson. Advisers like Anthony J. Guinta, the client service director at the wealth management firm Homrich & Berg in Atlanta, said he had clients who assumed that their stocks would appreciate endlessly. After warning them for years about spending, he is now watching them cut back on luxuries. "Even though we told them they should rein in their spending a little bit, their portfolio was covering that overage," he said.

Psychologists and wealth advisers say that most wealthy worriers haven't cut back on charitable giving. Dr. Hausner said that her clients see donating as part of their identities. "They've kind of gotten hooked on it," she said of the satisfaction they derive.

Therapists are also reminding their clients that, like life itself, building wealth does not take a linear path. Elyse Goldstein, a psychologist on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, said that this was important for clients in their 20s and 30s — who have never worked through a major downturn — to hear. She tells them that life has a "certain ambiguity," which makes it interesting.

She says that male clients are struggling with worries more than female clients. "Women are pretty used to fighting their way up the corporate ladder and almost expect adversity," she said.

Advisers also remind worriers that, in many cases, they have benefited from the economic upheaval. Mr. Guinta points out to clients complaining about gasoline prices that their investments in energy companies and commodities have soared. When they complain about how expensive their trips to Europe have become, he shows them how much they have profited from the performance of their international stocks.

For moments of panic, there are mantras. Dr. Goldstein tells her clients — especially those working on Wall Street — to tell themselves, "I'll deal."

After all, she says, "When somebody has confidence that they can live on less, then it gives them a greater sense of power and comfort."

S'pore corporate results are the next casualties

SINGAPORE: Corporate earnings may be the next casualty of the current global economic turmoil, says Swiss economist Marc Faber. Colossal busts in most asset types have been occurring over the past year, but he believes this is only the beginning.

Faber, who is also known as Dr Doom after he accurately predicted earlier stock market crashes, said this at OCBC's Global Treasury Regional Economic and Business Forum on Friday.

With dark clouds gathering over the global economy, Faber said the real storm is still to come. He expects the situation to get increasingly volatile as tensions between the private sector and governments grow.

Faber, economist, Marc Faber Limited, said: "We're in a situation where the private sector is tightening lending now, more cautious and reducing lending growth as a result of credit growth.

"At the same time, you have central banks throwing money at the system, cutting interest rates dramatically and manipulating markets by taking over private companies."

He said the overall environment is not favourable for most investors, especially as the global turmoil filters into corporate earnings over the next few years. But a safe haven or two may exist.

He noted that even in a slump, some sectors and regions will still expand. While China and India will not see demand for commodities totally vanish, some slowdown in growth can be expected.

He also likes real estate in rich emerging countries and healthcare among others. Faber added that Asian stocks are starting to look reasonably priced.

He said: "In Singapore, you have many companies with dividend yields in excess of money market yields. At least, you get paid for your patience to be in shares."

Geographically, he likes emerging markets like Cambodia and Mongolia. Singapore also makes the cut.

But Mr Faber does not rule out property prices sliding 20 per cent or more, and further falls in the stock market. But as far as alternatives go, it is as good as it gets.

He said: "I don't see any catalyst that will propel, in the near future, markets substantially higher in a sustained bull market. I don't think the Singapore stock market will make a new high anytime soon." - CNA

Sunday, 7 September 2008

So, what's with the Real Estate markets now?

Courtesy of Valerie Wu

So, what’s with the Real Estate markets now?

I was speaking with a friend of mine last night about the Real Estate market. Is it really a good time to buy US properties? Well, we both agree that it’s not a good time to jump into it yet even though property prices have come down significantly, it appears that there is room for prices to fall further.

How ‘bout Asia then? Let’s just say that you’ve to take a long term view if you really have to get a place. Definitely not for the faint-hearted.

And in Singapore? Prices have slipped a little, for buyers planning to get a property, Based on our conversation, it might be better to look at it in late 2009 to 2010 when the deferred payment scheme forces the speculators to pay up.

I would love to hear your opinions on this.

Global Equities - Feeling the Currents

Courtesy of Valerie Wu

Stock markets are moving downwards to a point that we do not know where the floor is anymore!

How are the funds performing these days?

Private Equity – Still holding out strong
CTA/Managed Futures – Made money first half of 2008, we began to see losses in the second half of 2008 when commodity prices slipped
Hedge Funds – Some were trashed, but many have gotten used to the volatility (reluctantly), several have shorted the market in the recent months, so we don’t see them making as much losses as compared to July/August and first quarter of 2008.
Mutual Funds – May God bless them in markets like this

What are investors doing then?

Most of them who have redeemed have already done so either last year or first quarter of 2008, either to hold cash or remodel their portfolio. We see the institutional ones remodeling their portfolios more often than what they have done in the last 2 good years; and the retail clients, the more emotional lot, have either cashed out at the same time or still burning them by speculating or averaging out their portfolios. More are turning to private equity investments and definitely more cautious with their money.

Which sectors to look at in 2009?

Resources and infrastructure were the themes in 2008, but with the recent dip in commodity prices, I personally feel that resources is not going to be very popular; rather, consumer and infrastructure benefitting from the slip in commodity prices. Then again, it depends on what kind of consumer products and infrastructure companies we are looking at, so one note of warning: Please trade with caution.

Would you agree with me?

Economic squeeze hit 'rock bottom'

ROME - THE president of the European Central Bank (ECB) said on Saturday that the economic squeeze has 'hit rock bottom', telling Italian television that he expects a 'gradual revival' over the course of 2009.

'Going by our calculations, just published, during the second and third quarters of this year, we hit rock bottom,' Mr Jean-Claude Trichet told RAI 1 on the sidelines of an economic forum attended by political leaders at Lake Como, Italy.

The eurozone economy contracted 0.2 per cent in the second quarter of 2008, and finance ministers from France and Belgium called again this week for the ECB to consider measures that would boost economic activity when it determines the level of interest rates for the 15-nation zone.

The ECB left its main lending rate unchanged at 4.25 per cent on Thursday and Mr Trichet's comments at a subsequent press conference implied it would remain steady for some time.

He underscored the need to prevent a second round of inflationary pressures that might be created by strong wage demands and said that the current inflation rate of 3.8 per cent was cause for concern.

Many analysts nonetheless forecast an easing of ECB monetary policy in the first half of next year as the central bank is forced to respond to slowing growth. -- AFP

Saturday, 6 September 2008

Luck or Skill?

The lead from the Guardian was relatively nonchalant. In a very matter-of-fact way it noted that "Hedge fund manager Ospraie Management LLC will close its flagship fund after it plunged 27 percent in August on losses in energy, mining and natural resources equity holdings, in one of the biggest ever closures of a commodities-focused hedge fund."

Staring at that sentence on the screen , however I was stunned. Ospraie wasn't just some wanna be player in the hedge fund world. It was the creme de la creme of commodity money managers. Featured in the House of Money - a seminal book on the stars of the hedge fund world - it enjoyed a golden reputation as a savvy trader of hard assets.

And yet these guys blew 27% in just one month. The reasons for their demise do not matter. Clearly they simply did not manage their risk. In fact they confirmed my suspicion that the money management strategy of most hedge funds is to double down when they are wrong and hope that they have enough capital to weather the storm. Sleek skyscraper offices, richly textured brochures, soothing talk about Phd driven risk control models are all nonsense. Most hedge funds are horrible traders. In fact if all hedge funds had to reveal their trading positions in real time like we do at BKT 99% of them would probably be out business.

Hedge funds hide behind the mystique of competence but the longer I am on Wall Street, the more I am convinced that Nassim Taleb is right - most successful people in finance are simply lucky and are only one bad trade from blowing up your money. There are only two traders that I know of who are truly great - Paul Tudor Jones and Steve Cohen. Both are traders frist and foremost. Both will always take a stop when they are wrong. Both have had more than 200 months of positive returns with only one or two months of negative performance of no more than -1.5%. In fact, if there is a single question that I would ask a hedge fund, would be this - What was you worst monthly performance? If they say 10% or more - run from their office and don't even bother listening to rationalizations.

The Osprie saga only serves to remind us just how difficult this business can be. But it is also a testament to the BS that permeates Wall Street. Making money consistently is not easy and most managers are simply lucky rather good.

US jobless rate jumps to 6.1%

WASHINGTON - THE US unemployment rate jumped to a five-year high of 6.1 per cent as 84,000 jobs were slashed, according to a government report on Friday suggesting fragile economic conditions.

The Labour Department report - considered one of the best indicators of economic momentum - marked the eighth consecutive month of shrinking non-farm payrolls, and was worse than expected by private economists.

Wall Street analysts had expected a loss of 75,000 jobs and a steady unemployment rate of 5.7 per cent.

The agency also revised its figures from the prior two months to show a loss of 60,000 positions in July and 100,000 in June, up from earlier estimates of a drop of 51,000 in each of the two months.

The latest figures show a cumulative loss of 605,000 US jobs since the start of 2008, highlighting the woes of the world's largest economy from a horrific housing slump and credit squeeze.

The report suggests a struggling economy in which employers are cutting more jobs and reluctant to hire because of weak consumer and business confidence.

Although official data showed the US economy grew at a robust 3.3 per cent in the second quarter, many analysts say that figure was skewed by a surge in exports and helped by spending from a massive tax rebate programme.

Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC World Markets, said the payrolls figure indicates a weak economy teetering close to recession.

'We are looking for the turn in economic conditions and the second quarter GDP report gave a false signal that the turn had occurred,' Shenfeld said.

'Taking the revisions into account and including the big rise in the jobless rate, this (payrolls data) is clearly weaker than the markets anticipated. We haven't had a recession in GDP growth but the rise in unemployment is looking as bad as it gets in a recession.'

Mr Ian Shepherdson, chief US economist at High Frequency Economics, called the report 'grim', adding that 'the big shock is the 6.1 per cent unemployment rate', which suggests further weakness ahead.

'Our forecast of a 7.0 per cent peak headline (jobless) rate might now be too low,' he added.

The report comes less than two weeks ahead of a meeting of Federal Reserve policymakers on interest rates.

The current base rate of 2.0 per cent is considered stimulative but officials say troubles in the banking sector make credit difficult.

Some Fed officials have said the next move is likely a rate hike in view of inflation pressures but analysts say the central bank is unlikely to move to choke off economic activity.

Among various sectors, manufacturing shed 61,000 jobs and construction employment dropped by 8,000. The service sector lost 27,000 jobs.

Among the sectors gaining jobs were education (55,000) and government (17,000).

Average hourly wages rose 0.4 per cent to 18.14 dollars, slightly above expectations of a 0.3 per cent increase. -- AFP

Fear grips markets

FEAR, confusion and a touch of panic gripped investors yesterday to send already shaky Asian stock markets crashing for the third straight day.

What spooked market sentiment this time was a rise in American jobless claims, which heightened worries over economic growth in Asia's most important export market.

Those concerns fed into the already bubbling witch's brew of commodity price falls, volatile currency markets and fears of more financial market chaos. Even falling oil prices are adding to the sense of dread.

'It is an ugly bear market where few strategies are working. When oil was rising, it was bad for Asian markets. Now oil is falling, apparently that is a bad thing too for Asian markets,' said Merrill Lynch strategist Mark Matthews.

The horror week has been particularly painful here, with the Straits Times Index losing 184.73 points in the past three days.

Friday's plunge of 51.84 points, or 1.97 per cent, was driven by big falls in property and banks and left the market at 2,574.21. That means investors are back to where they were in October 2006.

China was the worst hit with the Shanghai Composite Index diving 3.29 per cent, with oil giants like PetroChina and Bank of China leading the losers.

Thursday, 4 September 2008

S'pore growth outlook cut

THE Monetary Authority of Singapore said on Wednesday a survey showed economists expected the city-state to grow 4.2 per cent in 2008, down from the 5.5 per cent predicted in an earlier poll.

The lower growth prediction comes amid signs of an economic slowdown after a tumble in key exports over the last few months, particularly to US and other industrialised economies.

Economists had trimmed the growth outlook to 5.5 per cent from 5.6 per cent in the previous survey released in June.

The poll showed that economists expected the manufacturing sector, a key pillar of the economy, to grow a mere 1.0 per cent this year compared with the previous forecast of 5.5 per cent.

The government in August lowered its 2008 growth targets to 4.0-5.0 per cent from 4.0-6.0 per cent, citing weakness in the global economy as the main reason behind the downgrade.

The central bank sent out the survey to 24 economists in the private sector in August and 20 responded. -- AFP

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

What to Do When Layoffs Loom

By Elizabeth Brokamp

If you get laid off, you can only hope you saw the writing on the wall long before your company announced its cuts. You can only hope you leave with an impressive work history, great recommendations, and updated skills. You can only hope.

Unfortunately, not everyone is so prepared when the boss delivers a pink slip.

Here are some things you can do starting today -- whether you think you face a layoff or not -- to keep yourself relevant on the job:

Act as if your job is always on the line, even if you're still on the company payroll. Strive to make yourself more valuable -- not just to your current employer, but also to any potential employers you'll need to win over in the future.

Imagine yourself interviewing for a new position. Can you point to specific ways in which you've improved your skills and grown on the job? If so, keep up the good work.

Document your accomplishments. Update your resume regularly to reflect your ever-increasing skills on the job. You can use this information during your performance review and salary negotiations or, should the worst happen, for finding other employment quickly.

If, however, you've been coasting in your current position, it's time to take some initiative. Try these surefire ways to increase your value as an employee:

Work while you're at work. According to a Gallup poll, most of us spend an average of 75 minutes a day using our office computers for activities other than work. Online shopping, online gaming, and personal email are just a few of the ways we waste our employer's time, to the tune of a more than $6,000 loss in productivity per employee per year. Do yourself (and your boss) a favor and keep the other activities to a minimum.

Hit the books. Take continuing-education credits at your local community college, enhance your computer skills with an advanced course relevant to your work, or look for weekend workshops that target a developing skill related to your job. Your employer may even have a program to help defray the costs. Take advantage of these paid continuing-education opportunities. It might be your old employer who writes your ticket to a fabulous new job, once you've updated and expanded your job skills.Â

Be visible. Perception can be everything. You can be a productive, highly skilled employee, but if you continually skip company-wide events or staff meetings, others may perceive you as a slacking off. Make sure you attend functions where your presence will indicate commitment, arrive at meetings on time, and volunteer for tasks that will raise your profile in the larger organization.Â

Look like you care. "Dress for success" means different things across different work cultures, of course, but there are always limits. Even if your work doesn't require that you wear a suit every day, make an effort to look well-groomed, up-to-date, and ready to assume your supervisor's job.

Communicate your ambition. Ask your supervisor what you need to do to progress in the company. Overtly expressing your ambition is the first step in setting high expectations; be ready to spring into action after that. Your supervisor may hand you extra challenges and responsibilities; these are your opportunities to differentiate yourself from the pack.

Even if you are never faced with a layoff, acting as if one will happen can enhance your value as an employee. Who knows? It might even win you a promotion.

Monday, 1 September 2008

Bush points to signs that economy is on upswing

In Labor Day weekend message, Bush says recent signs should give Americans hope on economy

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush said Saturday that Americans may have cause this Labor Day weekend to start worrying less about the nation's -- and their families' -- economic health.

"There have been some recent signs that our economy is beginning to improve," Bush said in his weekly radio address.

Among the positive signs that Bush referenced was a report Thursday that the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, rose by 3.3 percent in the April-June quarter. This surprised analysts and was a significant rebound from growth of just 0.9 percent in the first quarter of the year. Most credit was given to the $93 billion in economic stimulus payments the federal government has sent to households since May.

However, other economic news this week showed that right after that second quarter, in July, consumer spending slowed to a crawl and personal incomes plunged.

With few stimulus payments still to go out, some economists worry consumer spending will continue to falter. Since it accounts for two-thirds of economic activity, that could send economic growth tumbling again in the second half of the year, particularly given rising unemployment, a continuing credit crisis and the deepest housing slump in decades.

Democrats, including presidential nominee Barack Obama, are calling for the government to pass a second stimulus package to guard against that.

But Bush has resisted, expressing concern about the impact on the budget deficit and insisting the rebate payments will continue to support the economy in coming months.

He praised the impact of the current stimulus package in language that suggested he remains opposed to another.

"The economic stimulus package that I signed earlier this year is having its intended effect," the president said. "Many Americans who received tax rebates are spending them. Businesses are taking advantage of tax incentives to purchase new equipment this year. And there are signs that the stimulus package will continue to have a beneficial impact on the economy in the second half of the year."

Still, despite his optimistic outlook, Bush took care to express sympathy with those grappling daily with pocketbook worries.

"There are families across our country struggling to make ends meet," he said. "There is an understandable concern about the high price of gas and food. And many Americans are worried about the health of our housing and job markets. I share these concerns about our economy."

Goldman Sachs Information, Comments, Opinions and Facts