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Strategies & Market Trends : Asia Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jyoti sharma who wrote (1200)1/19/1998 9:05:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Respond to of 9980
 
Jyoti, thanks for that input, but i don't know whether dabbling in derivatives is a panacea or prescription for disaster. I will go read the article,perphaps i get a better insight into Miller's ideas.



To: Jyoti sharma who wrote (1200)1/20/1998 12:59:00 AM
From: Frodo Baxter  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
>the Government selling currency options

Sounds like a great idea to me. If the peg holds, they make money. And since they control their own destiny...

By the way, Intel sells puts on its stock all the time. If the stock rises, they get the premium. If the stock falls, they buy back stock that they were going to buy back anyway.



To: Jyoti sharma who wrote (1200)1/20/1998 9:21:00 AM
From: Worswick  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
Jyoti in response to your post of the SCMP and the Miller seminar Jess Beltz, a professor of economics in Hong Kong was at the meeting and what the SCMP omits is significant. It is, in my opinion, an example of how the "major media" is "managing" the news of the crisis in Asia. On this thread we are getting the news out, unhappily that can not be said for the press.

"Subject: Semi-Equips - Buy when BLOOD is running in the streets!
To: +Mason Barge (4492 )
From: +Jess Beltz Monday, Jan 19 1998 3:06AM EST
Reply # of 4525

Mason, I would bet on more havoc coming from Asia in the next two quarters. Understand that I say this as all the Asian Markets are currentlly putting on stunning rallies. The reasons are (1) Japan and (2) China.

Let me deal with China first. They have said that they will not devalue the Yuan. I think their hand will be forced, particularly if they stay on track to dismantle their inefficient, money-losing state run enterprises. There is a black market in Yuan and it is already losing value there. The result of not devaluing will be increased unemployment as their export industries suffer by no longer being price competitive against neighboring countries that have seen substantial devaluation of their own currencies. Look for the Yuan to sink in value at an accelerating rate as China makes the same mistake as Thailand, trying to support the price level of the Yuan by buying its own currency by exhausting its foreign reserves. Far worse however is what's going on in Japan.

The Japanese Banking Sector is like a leg that is gangrenous from the ankle to the hip. What the Japanese have done is sprayed some Bactene on it and put a band-aid on it. Hashimoto and the LDP have no will to force the banks to write off the bad loans and clean up the sector. What they do is cut one deal after another with the banks to keep them limping along, rather than deal with the problem. I listened to a seminar by Merton Miller today, who traced about all of the woes in the entire region to the Japanese banking sector. One thing he pointed out was the conscious effort by the Japanese Central Bank to allow the Yen to lose value against the dollar by lowering interest rates so that it would (1) lower the Japanese banks' cost of funds, with the hope that (2) the simultaneous stimulation of the Japanese economy would allow the banks to make profitable new loans, and the sector could work its way out of its problems. What it ultimately did was make the Dollar very strong against all currencies in the region, hastening the collapse of the regional currencies. I asked him if, in an era of recession in Japan with declining GDP and a declining stock market, if the slide in the value of the Yen could be stopped. He didn't think so. Until the Japanese show the resolve to face the problem and write off the bad loans, and implement changes forcing transparency and the efficient allocation of capital, there will be a steady worsening of the situation in Japan.

You can see a couple of my recent notes on the Cymer thread for some other observations on the situation in Asia (ie Indonesia, S. Korea and Thailand.) See also the latest Barrons Roundtable for an intereting discussion with a complete spectrum of competing views. One thing that nobody has really talked about so far is the possibility that there is a lot of exposure to the Asia Crisis on the part of European Banks that may not yet have reported the damage to their balance sheets, but which may be revealed in the next quarter or two, perhaps with disasterous effects on the upcoming economic union.




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