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Strategies & Market Trends : The Thread Formerly Known as No Rest For The Wicked

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To: Tim Luke who wrote (129)11/14/1998 9:37:00 PM
From: EyeDrMike  Read Replies (1) of 90042
 
IMO, if he does cut, it only means that another LTCM is waiting in the wings, and he's cutting in advance of the bad news, rather then appearing weak, and reacting afterwards.

2 newsworthy items:

1.)

More than 700 Russian banks
set to collapse: analysts

LL but Russia's strongest banks are set to collapse as the
government's three-month moratorium on private foreign
debt payments expires this weekend, analysts and officials
said.

More than 700 banks -- or about half of all Russian banks -- are
about to fail because of the rouble's 60 per cent plunge since
mid-August and the government's default on its rouble debt, of
which domestic banks were the biggest holders, said Andrei
Kozlov, first deputy chairman of the central bank.

Banks had a temporary respite from foreign debt payments through
a government order that they should not make payments on US$12
billion (S$19.8 billion) in foreign debt. By not extending that order
and pledging to help only banks it considers strategic, the
government, itself unable to pay its debts, is setting the stage for
collapse.

"We'll end up with a handful of Russian banks," said David Riley,
director of sovereign ratings at Fitch IBCA in London. "It's clear
that a number of major banks, including some of the Moscow-based
ones, without government support are not viable."

Already, at least four Russian banks have had accounts in foreign
banks blocked by courts in London and Paris because of
non-payments. More foreign creditors probably will try to seize
Russian assets abroad, analysts said.

The situation grew more complicated after the government last week
separated banks' private obligations from talks with holders of
Russia's defaulted rouble debt. -- Bloomberg
business-times.asia1.com.sg

2.)
Dr Doom is back. Gloomier than ever. Dr Al Wojnilower, the analyst who forecast the Wall Street crash in 1987, is making the same forecast now - except this time, he expects Wall Street to take the world economy down with it.

In Australia to address CS First Boston's annual economics conference yesterday, Dr Wojnilower said the Wall Street boom of the '90s had been a financial bubble. We were now past the crest of it, he warned, and the impact of the slide ahead would put the brakes on US and world growth for the next two years.

''Every period of prolonged easy money produces financial bubbles such as the present one,'' Dr Wojnilower said. ''They always last longer than you think is possible, but the end is not so much fun.''

Corporate profits in the US had peaked in the third quarter of 1997, he said, and had been falling since, despite growth of 3.5per cent.

''If growth falls to more like 1.5per cent, which I think it will - although the risk is on the down side rather than up - profits will fall more than that,'' he said. ''We have empty buildings in Bangkok and idle factories in Korea. We have both in Japan. We are starting to have empty factories in the US. US personal savings were negative in September. Five years ago, it was 5.5 per cent, but the deficit of the Government has been transferred to the household sector.''

The US merchandise trade deficit was now running at $A35 billion a month, he said. ''It will have an effect on the profitability of US companies. It will have a damaging effect on the rest of the world.''

The worst of the crisis would probably be felt in 2000, but the best hope was that Wall Street might hold out until Japan and Asia had begun to recover.

Dr Wojnilower, senior economic adviser to the private investment firm Monitor-Clipper Partners and vice-chairman of Craig Drill Capital, is used to being a lone voice.

''I have solid credentials as an alarmist on these matters,'' he said. ''I think all human beings have a narcotic attraction to gambling, and those who have that attraction and want to be reasonably respectable do it on financial markets.

''I may sound facetious, but I don't think you can understand financial markets unless you understand that that is their structure. They are casinos.''

Dr Wojnilower blamed the chairman of the Federal Reserve, Dr Alan Greenspan, for not bursting the bubble by raising rates in 1996 and 1997, before it was too late. He said the Fed had been sidetracked by a single-minded focus on inflation in the real economy, failing to recognise the dangers of asset price inflation. Even now, he said, ''US monetary policy is trying to perpetuate the bubble''.

By contrast, he praised Australia's performance in the crisis. ''Through a combination of luck and good management, you really have dealt with it exceptionally well. You have a Reserve Bank management, which is second to none in the world, in my opinion.''

But Dr Doom, as Wall Street christened him for his gloomy predictions, said Japanese monetary policy had contributed to the problem by cutting rates as low as 0.5per cent, which then allowed the hedge funds and mainstream financial institutions to snap up cheap money to invest in the US.

theage.com.au
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