SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Condor who wrote (40373)9/25/2008 10:49:44 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 218070
 
Ireland 1st Euro Nation to Enter Recession. Italy looks to be the next candidate. Germany is also emerging as a major candidate.

(Ireland Becomes First Euro Nation to Enter Recession
Update1)

By Fergal O'Brien

Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Ireland became the first euro area economy to slide into a recession, as homebuilding and consumer spending slumped and the global financial crisis intensified.

Gross domestic product contracted 0.5 percent in the three months through June from the previous quarter, when it shrank 0.3 percent, the Central Statistics Office said today in Dublin. From a year earlier, the economy lost 0.8 percent.

The housing collapse, coupled with the global credit crisis, forced the Irish government to slash spending to keep its deficit in check and pushed the benchmark stock index to fall more than any other in western Europe this year. Ireland's slump may be followed by recessions across Europe, according to the European Commission, which has cut its forecasts for growth across the euro area.

``Italy looks to be the next candidate'' to enter recession, Julian Callow, an economist at Barclays Capital, said in a note. ``Germany is also emerging as a major candidate.''

Ireland's contraction follows a decade-long boom, sparked by exports in the mid-1990s and then extended by record homebuilding. The economy has expanded around 7 percent a year for a last decade, three times the euro-area average. Ireland hasn't had a full-year economic contraction since 1983.

Now, home building is plunging as house prices drop. Bank of Ireland Plc, the country's second-biggest bank, said on Sept. 17 it will slash its dividend by 50 percent and post a drop in first-half profit as loan losses mount. House prices fell 9.4 percent in July from a year earlier.

`Torpedoing the Economy'

``The housing market is torpedoing the economy,'' Pat McArdle, chief economist with Ulster Bank Ltd. in Dublin, said in a phone interview. ``The third quarter will definitely be worse.''

From a year earlier, consumer spending fell 1.4 percent in the second quarter, the first year-on-year decline in at least 11 years, according to the statistics office. Exports rose 2.4 percent and imports fell 1.1 percent.

``It is clear that the domestic economy has already entered recession, as evidenced by the fall in consumer and investment spending,'' Dermot O'Leary, chief economist at Goodbody Stockbrokers in Dublin, said before today's report. ``Judging by the state of our main trading partners, it may be too big of an ask for them to take up the slack.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Fergal O'Brien in Dublin at fobrien@bloomberg.net.



To: Condor who wrote (40373)9/25/2008 11:08:51 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 218070
 
Stopping a Financial Crisis, the Swedish Way
By CARTER DOUGHERTY
Published: September 22, 2008
A banking system in crisis after the collapse of a housing bubble. An economy hemorrhaging jobs. A market-oriented government struggling to stem the panic. Sound familiar?

It does to Sweden. The country was so far in the hole in 1992 — after years of imprudent regulation, short-sighted economic policy and the end of its property boom — that its banking system was, for all practical purposes, insolvent.

But Sweden took a different course than the one now being proposed by the United States Treasury. And Swedish officials say there are lessons from their own nightmare that Washington may be missing.

Sweden did not just bail out its financial institutions by having the government take over the bad debts. It extracted pounds of flesh from bank shareholders before writing checks. Banks had to write down losses and issue warrants to the government.

That strategy held banks responsible and turned the government into an owner. When distressed assets were sold, the profits flowed to taxpayers, and the government was able to recoup more money later by selling its shares in the companies as well.

“If I go into a bank,” said Bo Lundgren, who was Sweden’s finance minister at the time, “I’d rather get equity so that there is some upside for the taxpayer.”

Sweden spent 4 percent of its gross domestic product, or 65 billion kronor, the equivalent of $11.7 billion at the time, or $18.3 billion in today’s dollars, to rescue ailing banks. That is slightly less, proportionate to the national economy, than the $700 billion, or roughly 5 percent of gross domestic product, that the Bush administration estimates its own move will cost in the United States.

But the final cost to Sweden ended up being less than 2 percent of its G.D.P. Some officials say they believe it was closer to zero, depending on how certain rates of return are calculated.

The tumultuous events of the last few weeks have produced a lot of tight-lipped nods in Stockholm. Mr. Lundgren even made the rounds in New York in early September, explaining what the country did in the early 1990s.

A few American commentators have proposed that the United States government extract equity from banks as a price for their rescue. But it does not seem to be under serious consideration yet in the Bush administration or Congress.

The reason is not quite clear. The government has already swapped its sovereign guarantee for equity in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage finance institutions, and the American International Group, the global insurance giant.

Putting taxpayers on the hook without anything in return could be a mistake, said Urban Backstrom, a senior Swedish finance ministry official at the time. “The public will not support a plan if you leave the former shareholders with anything,” he said.

The Swedish crisis had strikingly similar origins to the American one, and its neighbors, Norway and Finland, were hobbled to the point of needing a government bailout to escape the morass as well.

Financial deregulation in the 1980s fed a frenzy of real estate lending by Sweden’s banks, which did not worry enough about whether the value of their collateral might evaporate in tougher times.

Property prices imploded. The bubble deflated fast in 1991 and 1992. A vain effort to defend Sweden’s currency, the krona, caused overnight interest rates to spike at one point to 500 percent. The Swedish economy contracted for two consecutive years after a long expansion, and unemployment, at 3 percent in 1990, quadrupled in three years.

After a series of bank failures and ad hoc solutions, the moment of truth arrived in September 1992, when the government of Prime Minister Carl Bildt decided it was time to clear the decks.

Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the opposition center-left, Mr. Bildt’s conservative government announced that the Swedish state would guarantee all bank deposits and creditors of the nation’s 114 banks. Sweden formed a new agency to supervise institutions that needed recapitalization, and another that sold off the assets, mainly real estate, that the banks held as collateral.

Sweden told its banks to write down their losses promptly before coming to the state for recapitalization. Facing its own problem later in the decade, Japan made the mistake of dragging this process out, delaying a solution for years.

Then came the imperative to bleed shareholders first. Mr. Lundgren recalls a conversation with Peter Wallenberg, at the time chairman of SEB, Sweden’s largest bank. Mr. Wallenberg, the scion of the country’s most famous family and steward of large chunks of its economy, heard that there would be no sacred cows.

The Wallenbergs turned around and arranged a recapitalization on their own, obviating the need for a bailout. SEB turned a profit the following year, 1993.

“For every krona we put into the bank, we wanted the same influence,” Mr. Lundgren said. “That ensured that we did not have to go into certain banks at all.”

By the end of the crisis, the Swedish government had seized a vast portion of the banking sector, and the agency had mostly fulfilled its hard-nosed mandate to drain share capital before injecting cash. When markets stabilized, the Swedish state then reaped the benefits by taking the banks public again.

More money may yet come into official coffers. The government still owns 19.9 percent of Nordea, a Stockholm bank that was fully nationalized and is now a highly regarded giant in Scandinavia and the Baltic Sea region.

The politics of Sweden’s crisis management were similarly tough-minded, though much quieter.

Soon after the plan was announced, the Swedish government found that international confidence returned more quickly than expected, easing pressure on its currency and bringing money back into the country. The center-left opposition, while wary that the government might yet let the banks off the hook, made its points about penalizing shareholders privately.

“The only thing that held back an avalanche was the hope that the system was holding,” said Leif Pagrotzky, a senior member of the opposition at the time. “In public we stuck together 100 percent, but we fought behind the scenes.”



To: Condor who wrote (40373)9/25/2008 3:43:44 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218070
 
just in in-tray

· One of the key issues concerning the Treasury's debt purchase plan remains whether the proposed entity turns into a genuine RTC or a warehousing AMC exercise. If the plan is to adopt a reverse auction where sellers of toxic debt compete on price to sell it at the lowest possible offer, then this would at least point to a healthier market clearing solution if one that is less immediately short term bullish for equities.

· If full scale monetisation of the structured debt problem is avoided for now, that should point to a renewed US dollar countertrend rally and renewed declines in the oil-led commodity complex. One reason for GREED & fear's expectation for a further counter trend rally in the US dollar is the likelihood of a dramatic reduction in America's current account deficit.

· The sharper the decline in the US current account deficit, the less America needs the world's savings to fund itself. This is why GREED & fear still does not think that US 10-year Treasury bond yields have seen their low in this cycle. The other reason is the sheer scale of the deleveraging implied by the recent monumental debt excesses.

· GREED & fear expects that a confirmation of a national decline in house prices in China over the next few months, plus the growing likelihood of some prominent developers going bust, is likely to lead to an explicit relaxation of official policy towards residential property before the end of the year. The expectation is that this will be enough to turn popular sentiment towards property.

· Policy easing in China, or at least the end of specific tightening, is the best potential positive catalyst investors in Asia can look forward to which is not US centric. The PBOC should be expected to become ever more relaxed as the threat of "overheating" continues to recede.

· China has been in the midst of what the leadership hoped would be a gradual transition from an export-led economy to a consumption driven economy. The message of the markets is that this adjustment role will now have to be accelerated and that China can no longer rely on US consumers.

· The impact of the credit crunch on the real economy, in terms of commercial banks' growing reluctance to make new loans and growing preference for government bonds, will lead to a sharp rise in nonperforming loans in overleveraged consumer driven economies, be it America, Britain or Australia. This is in turn going to lead to massive taxpayer financed recapitalisations of deposit insurance funds or their nearest equivalents.

· GREED & fear continues to believe that the ultimate end game will be a law redrafting some modern version of the Glass-Steagall Act where investment banking and commercial banking are formally separated - and where those engaged in investment banking return to the traditional agency and advisory model from which CLSA has never diverged.

· The action by the authorities to ban short selling of financial stocks has certainly further undermined the credibility of the regulators. Indeed it would be better if Western regulators closed their markets altogether rather than resort to such arbitrary actions, most particularly if the closure was used as an opportunity to come up with some clear policy initiatives.

· The investments in Asahi Glass and Kuraray in the Japanese portfolio will be replaced by gas suppliers Osaka Gas and Tokyo Gas. And the investment in Fanuc will replaced by an investment in JR Central. In the Asia ex-Japan thematic portfolio, the investment in ICBC will be removed and replaced by Bangkok Bank and Advanced Info Service. The investment in First Financial and HDFC Bank will also be replaced by China Resources Power and Housing Development Finance with an extra 2ppts added to the investment in China Life.

· A further one percentage point will be added to China and Thailand in the relative-return portfolio with the money removed from Taiwan.