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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gottfried who wrote (14460)1/12/1998 1:24:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 70976
 
<More BearTalk>

The Janus effect, by A Abelson , Barrons 1/12/97

.........continued

Asia's woes may not be as bad as everyone thinks -- they may be worse.

That, at least, is the considered opinion of Ray Dalio. Ray, who runs
Bridgewater Associates, says flatly, "I believe there is not enough
money to mount a bailout, and the borrowers and lenders are too
dispersed to allow the management of this problem to proceed as well as
it did in the 1980s debt problem."

During that Latin American crisis, "a much more concentrated group of
lenders [commercial banks] lent the money to a much more concentrated
group of sovereign borrowers." The banks and the de facto bankrupts both
could be fitted comfortably in one decent-sized conference room. The IMF
was a presence but not an overwhelming one.

Debtors and creditors, as a result, were much better able to cut deals,
such as rolling over or restructuring debt. The bargaining was carried
out by a committee of banks (led by Citibank) on the one side and each
of the respective borrowers on the other.

This time around, by contrast, there's an enormous profusion and
confusion of debtors and creditors. The pulls and tugs of such a throng
make negotiating as easy as building the Tower of Babel.

In working up a makeshift Korean arrangement, Ray notes that the lenders
have agreed to roll over the loans for a very short stretch, and many of
them have perfectly good reasons why they can't be more generous
(they're not allowed to hold securities below investment grade, for one
thing). And they, by and large, also are eager for terms they probably
won't get.

As to the New Patron Saint of the World's Debtors -- the IMF -- Ray
contends that its "arsenal is much too small" to assure the debts being
rolled over or restructured effectively. And he opines that "it is
unlikely that the big contributors (particularly the U.S. and Germany)"
will raise the quotas even a little, let alone the amount required to
get the job done.

"I think," he sighs, "the ship is likely to sink."



To: Gottfried who wrote (14460)1/12/1998 1:30:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
GM,

USA Devoted their entire Monday Money column to the "dirty" side of Chipmaking.

usatoday.com

BK