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To: TobagoJack who wrote (47193)3/10/2004 4:19:51 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 74559
 
Derivatives losses fuel doubts over Fannie Mae
By Stephen Schurr in New York
Published: March 9 2004 19:31 | Last Updated: March 10 2004 1:54


Fannie Mae paid a net $25.1bn on derivatives transactions in under four years - nearly all of which may represent losses that cannot be recouped, in turn depressing future earnings.


The potential scale of the liabilities, which have yet to be recognised in the company's earnings or in the minimum capital adequacy required by its regulator, raise fresh doubts about the financial health of the mortgage finance giant.

Regulation of Fannie Mae and its sibling Freddie Mac is rapidly moving up the agenda in Washington, amid concerns that the two goverment-sponsored entities have grown so big that they pose a systemic risk to the US financial system. The two entities own or guarantee mortgages totalling $4,000bn.


Doubts over derivatives
Click here
How the $24bn losses estimate is reached
Click here

On Tuesday John Snow, US Treasury secretary, renewed the criticism, saying: "We don't believe in a too-big-to-fail doctrine, but the reality is that the market treats the paper as if the government is backing it."

His comments follow similar warnings from Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve, and Gregory Mankiw, chairman of George W. Bush's council of economic advisers.

Fannie Mae acknowledges it has taken losses in its derivatives trading that have not yet been recognised it its earnings, but declines to disclose the amount. The reason, said Jonathan Boyles, vice-president of financial standards and taxes at Fannie Mae, is that "we don't believe it's all that meaningful".

A Fannie Mae spokeswoman added that the company typically held its positions to maturity and as such it did not see the losses as material.

Next Monday Fannie Mae is due to release its annual "fair value disclosure" - a statement of the current market value of its derivatives positions. Observers will be watching to see if the gap between the company's regulatory capital and fair value has widened further than the $6bn shortfall of a year ago.

A Financial Times analysis of Fannie's accounts suggests it may have incurred losses on its derivatives trading of $24bn between 2000 and third-quarter 2003. That figure represents nearly all of the $25.1bn used to purchase or settle transactions in that period. Any net losses will eventually have to be recognised on Fannie Mae's balance sheet, depressing future profits.

Fannie Mae maintained that the losses from cashflow hedging will have no bearing on the capital adequacy required by its regulator.

However, critics increasingly question whether Fannie Mae's financial disclosure offers a complete picture of its fiscal health.

"They have used the derivative accounting rules for cash flow hedges to defer some losses that they have taken," said John Barnett, senior analyst at the Center for Financial Research & Analysis, an independent research firm. "They may not be as well-capitalised as they appear to be for regulatory purposes."



To: TobagoJack who wrote (47193)3/10/2004 3:52:49 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
US trade deficit reaches record levels? USD rallies!

The dollar rallied anew against European currencies on Wednesday despite the US trade deficit reaching record levels.

Dollar rallies anew despite widening deficit
by Steve Johnson in London
Published: March 10 2004 12:03 | Last Updated: March 10 2004 17:23


The dollar rallied anew against European currencies on Wednesday despite the US trade deficit reaching record levels. The deficit widened to $43.1bn in January, from an upwardly revised $42.7bn in December, confounding expectations for a modest decrease.


Yet the euro weakened against the greenback, slipping 2 cents to $1.2224. Sterling fell almost 4 cents to a seven-week low of $1.8013 against the dollar as it was pounded by the ramifications of the UK's own record trade deficit.

Daragh Maher at ING attributed the dollar's strength against European currencies to a significant narrowing of the US deficit against these nations. The US gap with the eurozone fell to $6.6bn, from $11.1bn in December, with the deficit against the UK down to $0.4bn from £1.1bn. The trade gap with Asian nations rose, however.

"This shows that the burden of adjustment is falling primarily on western European nations rather than those countries that have pegged their currency against the dollar," said Mr Maher. "This has negative implications for European growth."

Indeed sterling was weak against a basket of currencies, suffering a continued hangover from Tuesday's dire trade figures. The pound fell to a four-week low of £0.6789 against the euro, and a three-week low of Y199.59 against the yen, although Paul Robson, economist at Bank One, argued the slide was nothing more sinister than profit-taking after sterling's sharp rise since January. Speculators were also said to be liquidating long sterling and euro positions.

The Norwegian krone slid to a one-week low of NKr8.709 against the euro before steadying. The slide was triggered by Norwegian consumer price inflation turning negative, bolstering expectations that the Norwegian central bank will cut its key deposit rate by 25 basis points to 1.75 per cent today. Credit Agricole Indosuez even raised the prospect of a 50 basis point cut.

The Czech koruna fell to a one-month low against the euro of Kcs33.14 as the Czech National Bank revised down its estimates of foreign direct investment inflows for 2002 and 2003.

"The Czech Republic is no longer finding it easy to finance its large current account deficit [6.6 per cent of GDP] by privatising state assets," said Monica Fan, senior currency strategist at Royal Bank of Canada. "Not only is the government going to run out of state assets to sell, Czech investors are increasingly going to invest in eurozone equities."

The Hungarian forint rallied to Ft253.07 against the euro, a five-month high, after hitting lows of Ft270 in January. The latest move was precipitated by comments from Gyorgy Szapary, the vice-governor of the central bank, that rising inflation mitigated against rate cuts, reinforcing the forint's attraction for carry trades.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (47193)3/10/2004 4:51:49 PM
From: Condor  Respond to of 74559
 
China wheat.

Message 19901568

C



To: TobagoJack who wrote (47193)3/10/2004 10:09:32 PM
From: BubbaFred  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74559
 
Jay - Your thoughts on this global slowdown induced by China's planned GDP growth slowdown and re-prioritized spending away from infrastructure. However the need for job growth is also urgent. Growth has been too fast and a short rest is wise, to think and plan the best and most cost effective ways. Otherwise there would be too much excesses, too many mistakes (obvious and hidden), and too much waste creation. China still is comprised of humans too and susceptible to normal human frailties.

China will fix what's broke by spending more to improve quality of life.
Message 19901400

China may impose more curbs on bank lending
New reserve requirements expected to cut bank lending and cool overheating economy
Message 19901462

Mainland China jobless situation grim, minister says
Message 19901987

Asia Pacific: The Global Cycle Has Peaked
Andy Xie (Hong Kong)
Morgan Stanley
Mar 10, 2004

This cycle of the global economy peaked in the fourth quarter of 2003, in my view, although the market seems to believe that the momentum is still upward. A minority of investors believes in the slowdown scenario but expects slow deceleration. I believe that the slowdown in GDP growth in 2004 will range between 50% in China and 30% in most other economies relative to the growth rates in the last quarter. The main reasons are: (1) Weak income growth in the US cannot sustain its stimulus-induced consumption boom; (2) the gain in trade from the migration of the electronics industry to China has peaked; and (3) the authorities in many economies (e.g., Australia, China, and the UK) are tightening to rein in asset bubbles, which would decrease the multiplier from the low US policy rate on the global economy.

China Is Slowing

During the past six weeks, I traveled around the world to see investors. My messages were (1) that the global cycle peaked in 4Q03 and (2) that China has taken actions to slow its investment growth. My conclusion was that the beta party that began in early 2002 was ending; the key portfolio decision in 2004 is to decrease beta.

My messages did not go down well at all. There is almost uniform faith in continued growth momentum in the G-7 economies. The prevailing view is that the growth cycle in the global economy has just begun and has another two good years ahead.

The counterarguments against the case for China’s slowdown included the following: (1) China doesn’t really intend to slow investment because it has to create jobs; (2) China can’t slow because local governments act on their own; (3) capital inflows could replace bank lending, even if the government did manage to slow credit growth; and (4) China has raised its growth potential, i.e., the high growth rates in the past two years have represented secular rather than cyclical increases.

The above arguments are not supported by facts, in my view. First, China needs to create jobs, but stability is more important. If China creates jobs by accumulating inventory or creating excess capacity, it would only lead to job destruction later. Second, local governments in China do make most investment decisions, but they can only do so if funds are available. The central government has changed the rules in order to decrease both supply and demand for credit. Financial institutions’ (‘FI’) loans have decelerated by three percentage points in the past three months; their growth rate should decelerate to 12% by September 2004. Third, the change in capital inflows will be too small to replace bank credit. Last year, China’s FI loans increased by US$335 billion, while its gross foreign assets increased by US$73.6 billion. The rest of the US$162 billion increase in foreign exchange reserves last year came from Chinese banks’ converting their foreign assets into renminbi. With tighter rules on credit expansion, Chinese banks have no incentive to convert the remaining US$50 billion (or US$100 billion including the recapitalization funds from the central bank) into renminbi.

Since it bottomed in 1998, China’s economy has been accelerating for five years, first with infrastructure stimulus, second with FDI and exports, and lastly with a property boom. China peaked in the fourth quarter last year as its leadership took actions to rein in investment that would cause excess capacity and deflation. China’s growth potential remains at about 8%, in my view. The limits to China’s growth potential are not imposed by labor or capital but by the efficiency of its financial sector. Until China privatizes its financial system, as it has done with its real economy, I believe China’s growth potential will remain at the current level. The high growth that we have seen in the past two years just reflects the peaking of another investment cycle. Extrapolating the trend from the past two years would cost investors dearly, in my view.

US Stimulus and Outsourcing Have Caused the Upturn

I believe the current global cycle is based on (1) monetary and fiscal stimulus in the US and (2) gains in trade from the migration of electronics industry to China. After the Nasdaq crashed in 2000, the US Fed began an easing campaign to stimulate the US economy to offset the demand shortfall from the adjustment in the tech sector. The Fed’s interest rate cuts triggered a housing boom that offset the negative wealth effect from a deflating stock market. The Bush tax cuts offered purchasing power to American consumers during a period of low wage growth.

Weak tech demand caused prices for tech products to decline, forcing manufacturers to shift production to China. China’s exports of ‘high-tech’ products tripled between 2000 and 2003 and accounted for 40% of China’s total export growth. The relocation of the electronics industry to China is responsible for most of its above-trend export growth in this cycle.

China’s overall exports rose by US$189 billion (or 0.5% of global GDP) between 2000 and 2003. The efficiency gains for the global economy could be greater than that amount, as China can more than halve production costs for manufactured goods. China uses its export income to purchase equipment and raw materials, spreading the efficiency gain to economies that specialize in these products.

Between 2000 and 2003, US GDP rose by US$1,168 billion and China’s, by US$329 billion. The ratio between the two roughly indicates the relative importance for the global economy of monetary and fiscal stimulus in the US and the gain from China trade over that period.

The Cycle Peaked

In my view, the global economic cycle has peaked because (1) US income growth is not sufficient to replace the dissipating stimulus in the US economy; (2) outsourcing to China by the global electronics industry has peaked; and (3) policy-makers in several major economies are taking actions to cool bubbles, which would decrease the multiplier effect of low US interest rates on the global economy.

As I argue above, China’s economy has slowed as a result of credit tightening. This is likely to compress the multiplier effect from low US interest rates on other emerging economies that export raw materials to China. As China’s property sector decelerates, the demand for such raw materials should cool sharply, which would slow these economies. The growth acceleration in commodity-driven emerging economies over the past two years has much to do with China’s booming property market.

In addition, when China slows, the inflow of speculative capital is also likely to decline, and China will not have to invest as much money in US Treasuries. This is quite contrary to the view that the investment slowdown will mean more capital surplus. China’s capital surplus comes mostly from speculation, and when the economy slows, speculators tend to flee.

The central banks in Australia and the UK are indicating concern about the property bubbles in their economies. These bubbles, which boost consumption, reflect the ‘multiplier effect’ of low US interest rates in their economies. As these central banks tighten, their economies will likely slow because of declining property prices.

The gains from trade in the world economy peaked last year, in my view. We estimate about one-third of the global electronics industry moved to China in the past five years. While the migration continues, the higher base decreases the incremental impact; this is why China’s FDI has weakened. China’s contribution to the increase in global trade was double the trend rate in the past two years. Until another industry begins to move to China for export production (e.g., autos), the gain from Chinese trade will normalize to trend, in my view.

The US employment numbers have been quite weak. Even if they improve in the coming months, they are unlikely to be as strong as the historical pattern would suggest. This would imply that income growth will also be relatively weak. Thus, the post-stimulus US economy is likely to weaken.

China’s Slowdown Will Affect Other Asian Economies

China’s growth momentum is the key to the continued to bull case on Asia. Its market has accounted for all of the export increase for Japan, Korea, and Taiwan since 2000 compared with 25–30% in the 1990s. China’s imports are mostly funded by credit in one way or another. When China tightens credit, import demand will also be curtailed.

However, the impact is not as big as the numbers suggest. A considerable portion of China’s imports from Japan, Korea, and Taiwan is made up of components for exports. Taiwan’s exports to China, for example, are mostly electronics components for export production, and probably half of Japan’s exports to China fall into the same category. Korea’s exports to China, on the other hand, are mostly for China’s domestic consumption.

morganstanley.com.

Message 19899409