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


To: B Tate who wrote (2589)3/9/1998 1:36:00 AM
From: Stitch  Respond to of 9980
 
Bernie,

Do you know about our new Asian Forum-Investment ideas thread? Its a sister to this one. Check it out:

Subject 19606

Best,
Stitch



To: B Tate who wrote (2589)3/9/1998 11:45:00 AM
From: Worswick  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
Bernie & Stitch...do you know the great Broadfoot?

The only man to call the crisis.

Fantastic story that appeared today in Hong Kong

For Private Use Only

(C) SCMP

Monday March 9 1998

Risk analyser places faith in forecasts without frills
DAVID IBISON
The offices of the Political and Economic Risk Consultancy (PERC) are in almost as big a shambles as the economies of the countries it assesses. There is no lobby, as such, and entry is gained by rapping a knocker on the door which, when opened, reveals several workers battering away at typewriters surrounded by randomly located computers, desks and book shelves.

Bob Broadfoot, the man who founded the consultancy in 1975, sits in his modest office at the back, an office he shares with his golf clubs, crooked indeterminate prints on the wall, boxes of computer software, plants that look like they were last watered when Suharto came to power, an air-conditioning control with exposed wiring and a flickering neon ceiling light.

Out of these humble surroundings came a report in February last year that "warned a financial sector crisis was building in Asia and that the status quo as it prevailed at the time was not sustainable in the medium term".

It was just about the only report that spotted the Asian crisis that followed, identified the countries which would be hit and assessed the reasons behind the crisis accurately. It was almost universally ignored.

The World Bank was still hailing the region's successes and ratings agencies such as Moody's and Standard & Poor's were dolling out investment grade ratings as if there was no tomorrow.

"We were lucky on that one," says Mr Broadfoot. "What we didn't see was the intensity of the cross-border implications - that one we didn't catch."

Without denigrating Mr Broadfoot, lucky is the right word. He spotted the crisis by seeing a familiar face pictured on the front of the Bangkok Post.

"He was a guy who was involved in Hong Kong during the very early crash of the futures exchange in 1981. He was head trader for Worldcom. He didn't do anything fraudulent but he lost a lot of money and then disappeared. He was a typical Hong Kong wheeler-dealer, and really not a bad guy.

"But all of sudden I saw him on the front page of Bangkok Post captioned as a senior adviser to one of Thailand's better banks. So I said 'this is going to be fun to watch, we're going to have a scandal down here', and one month later the bank went bankrupt and he is now under extradition in Vancouver.

"He had the prime minister and the finance minister in his pocket. That was the sign."

Tall, intense and humorous, Mr Broadfoot played down his agency's prescience when it came to calling the crisis correctly.

He did not, however, spare any punches for those that missed it, saving his more strident comments for the financial industry rather than the IMF or the rating agencies.

Why weren't the signals as clear for them as they were for him?

"I don't think they wanted them to be clear. It displays an amazing lack of due diligence, an over-reliance on numbers and not nearly enough reliance on really getting to know the people behind it.

"Don't forget the brokers. If you are looking at where the real reports are coming out, it's the guys who are trying to sell funds.

"There was one case where we were hired by a fund manager to assess the political risk of four countries. We analysed Indonesia and said if you are going there, your problem is going to be avoiding doing business with the children. They may be an asset now but they could be a liability tomorrow.

"The client came to us and said 'you have to change that because we won't be able to sell the fund to our clients'. They chose not to portray it to the market.

"One of the problems with the analysis we see written by brokers and rating agencies is that they focus too much on strictly economic criteria without stepping back and looking at the non-economic influences.

"There is now no excuse for them to be so blinkered as they were before."

Mr Broadfoot's unblinkered eyes are presently swivelled in the direction of Indonesia, which holds elections in two days amidst its most severe political and economic crisis in 30 years.

It is fair to assume the eyes of President Clinton and pretty well every political leader in the world are also scrutinising Indonesia's volatile situation. How close is Indonesia to total social collapse?

"Close. I think we will have a breakdown.

"The question is really timing. That's always the hard part.

"The situation is so critical - sooner or later you will get a new government.

"If you keep the current government in power for five or 10 years, what it would take to restore business confidence is a radical restructuring of the family businesses. I don't think anything short of a complete liberalisation - dismantling the state-enterprise sector and awarding contracts on the basis of commercial merit - will work.

"If he [Suharto] does that he can stay in power and business is going to start coming back. But I don't think he's going to do that.

"If you assume he is not going to do that, the Chinese will be taking out their money, there will be more difficult times for people outside the urban areas, you are going to have mass immigration. This is already happening. If you keep going in this direction, sooner or later this government is going to change.

"The economic deterioration will be a glue that pulls the rioters together. The longer this goes on the higher the odds you are going to get a change of government from the outside. You get an Iranian-style situation or a Nicaragua-style situation.

"What is a more likely scenario is that the inside powers - military groups and certain families - will see that the longer this goes on the more their personal interests are going to be vulnerable and they will try and convince him to step aside or they'll boot him out."

It is this chaotic scenario that is attracting the attention of the United States.

Having already warned Mr Suharto of the dangers of economic contagion, President Clinton last week sent Walter Mondale to the country, and Mr Mondale's warning was of a more worrying nature.

For the first time, he passed on views that the contagion that had affected the region might not just be economic, it might be social as well.

Riots have already occurred in South Korea, Thailand, the Philippines and Malaysia. Having already lit one fire that has caused a haze over the region, could Indonesia be the spark that lights a political fire too?

"In certain ways yes, in certain ways no. I do not think you are going to have an Indonesia in the other countries. I think this crisis by and large will show how much Asia has matured in terms of social stability.

"In Korea you are not going to get student demonstrations as they are worried about having enough money to pay their tuition. They are not really eager to worsen their own lot - so what you are probably going to get is the majority of demonstrations by unemployed bankers, which doesn't really intimidate me.

"But if Indonesia disintegrates, the biggest creditor to Indonesia is Japan - as it is to Thailand and Korea. The Japanese banks are scared to death of a debt moratorium - and are also scared to death of any move to have the foreign creditors take a loss and be forced to write down their loans by knocking down the value of the assets.

"That's really damaging. At the moment they are barely at or below the BIS minimum reporting requirements. If you discover the loans on property in Indonesia are not worth what they are extended at - say 10 per cent of their value - that increases their loan exposure.

"That gives them less room to manoeuvre in Korea and Thailand - which could force them to play harder with Korea and Thailand, which could force more dislocations in Korea - so you would get anti-Japanese protests.

"Plus, think of the immigration flows - it's got to be destabilising for Australia and Malaysia."

It is, according to Mr Broadfoot's analysis, a finely balanced situation - a situation that requires leadership if it is to be dealt with successfully.

The region's natural leader - and the one originally favoured by the US - is Japan. Unfortunately, Japan cannot keep its own house in order, let alone anyone else's. There is a leadership gap in the region right now and according to Mr Broadfoot, it is only natural that the mainland should fill it.

"Japan's failure will enhance the Sino countries' role. It will pull Taiwan and mainland China together economically. China is going to more aggressively woo Taiwanese and Hong Kong capital as it is not going to get any money from Indonesia and Thailand.

"It will keep the Greater China countries together, set their political differences aside and the rest of Asia will have to view this emerging Greater China as a greater focus of their policy."

It would appear the elections in two days could be a turning point for the entire region, paving the way for Greater China - in the longer term - to assume a leading political and economic role in Asia by usurping Japan.

At least, that's what Mr Broadfoot believes. He is, however, cannily aware of the downside. Asked what he found most fascinating about his chosen career, he gave the following answer.

"I get it wrong so often."

Bob Broadfoot, head of the Political and Economic Risk Consultancy (PERC), was born and educated in the United States.

He graduated from university in Ohio to work initially for a Swiss consulting operation at the time of the Bretton Woods agreement.

He set up PERC in 1975 to provide analysis for companies seeking access to Asian markets.

His client base is primarily made up of Fortune 100 companies. PERC publishes a regular newsletter called Asian Intelligence.



To: B Tate who wrote (2589)3/9/1998 12:00:00 PM
From: Worswick  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 9980
 
More to Consider. Bank crisis will be at the heart of the problems in Asia. When liquidity dries up... listen, you can hear the sound of the bankers taking to drink. That is the sound of Scotch on the rocks Mohan.

For Private Use only
(c)SCMP

Banks brace for tough times as turmoil bites into bottom lines
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE in Singapore
Asian banks and financial institutions which have so far survived the regional turmoil are bracing themselves for worse to come as bad loans start ravaging balance sheets.

With Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea in recession, corporate borrowers collapsing, consumer confidence at rock bottom and the property market choked by a glut, banks are expecting more defaults, prompting exceptional provisions for bad loans which are eating into profit margins.

"You ain't seen nothing yet," said Song Seng Wun, regional economist with GK Goh securities in Singapore after the island's regionally-exposed banks reported sharp drops in profits, with one small bank suffering a rare loss.

"If you call this poor, you should call again in six months' time," he warned.

Global credit assessor Moody's Investors Service downgraded the outlook of Singapore's leading banks from "stable" to "negative" last week to reflect "the possible deterioration in regional conditions".

In Thailand four commercial banks have been taken over by the central bank since the beginning of the year after failing to find foreign partners to help them in a desperately-needed recapitalisation ordered by the authorities.

In December, 56 debt-ridden finance firms were closed down as part of efforts to overhaul a financial sector saddled with an estimated US$35 billion in bad debts run-up mainly in the property industry.

The authorities ran up $27 billion in failed rescue bids in the financial sector.

In Indonesia the government closed down 16 banks in November.

The central Bank Indonesia has been injecting money into Indonesian private banks to help them pay crippling foreign debt, foreign bankers said. More than 200 banks remain in operation, many ripe for mergers.

In Malaysia, no banks have collapsed or been shut down but the central bank announced that the sixth-largest bank, Sime Bank, suffered a first-half loss of US$436 million and required at least M$1.2 billion (about HK$2.3 billion) in fresh capital.

The central Bank Negara Malaysia also said Bank Bumiputra, the second-largest bank, needed about M$750 million in new capital while two finance companies required a combined M$33 million ringgit.

In South Korea, local banks were saddled with nearly US$15 billion in non-performing loans by the end of 1997 after a spate of corporate failures.

In February they signed loan restructuring agreements with major conglomerates.

Last month, the finance ministry suspended operations at two ailing merchant banks. It earlier shut down 10 merchant banks after the sector was blamed for a liquidity crunch which toppled many corporations in January.

Foreign banks are worried over the money they poured into Asian banks and corporate borrowers during the good times.

According to Moody's, Japan's banks face a larger risk than those of other major lending countries, with an exposure of $182 billion dollars to Asia, up to half of them given to Japanese businesses overseas.

European lenders are also facing major risks, led by German banks, which have an exposure of $62 billion dollars to Asia, while US lenders are relatively better protected by strong reserves, Moody's said.

... on our little creaking bicycle we move towards Korea. The land of the chaebol that employ 40% of everyone in Korea who works.

Rosy numbers mask Seoul's predicament

B.J. LEE

On the surface, South Korea is recovering from a foreign currency crisis that led the world's 11th largest economy to the brink of a national default. Its trade surplus hit a record high last month and foreign investors are bringing billions of dollars to buy Korean stocks and bonds. Foreign creditor banks are willingly converting Korean banks' short-term debts into long-term ones to ease their dollar shortages.

Yet the Korean financial markets are not showing signs of improvement.
The won suffered last week, losing more than 2 per cent against the US dollar on Thursday and Friday, while the stock market's composite index plunged 5.9 per cent for the week. Thursday saw the heaviest losses as massive sales by foreign investors wiped more than 6 per cent off the index.

What are the reasons behind the contradictory moves of the markets?

When it comes to Korea's foreign currency situation, the worst is not over yet, analysts believe. Korean firms still owe huge amounts of short-term debts and that makes them hoard dollars. In addition, because of a lack of confidence in the economy, foreigners are not adopting a serious investment approach.

"The fundamental dollar shortage problem has not disappeared yet," Lee Chang-soon, a senior researcher at LG Economic Research Institute, said. "The problem can haunt the Korean economy for months, or even years."

At least in the short run, Korean banks' foreign debt problems are easing. During the past week, they received favourable responses from foreign creditor banks on converting US$24 billion of short-term obligations to long-term debts.

.......please note here that there is no mention of the won which has gone to money heaven... $15-$25 billion worth of small naked won with little smiles on each one of them winking into eternity... at this point that's a lot of dumplings kids....

"In January, representatives of the foreign creditors agreed in principle to reschedule the debts but individual agreements have to be struck between individual Korean and foreign banks in the next few weeks. The Finance and Economy Ministry said at least $20 billion of short-term debts would be rescheduled.

But that is only a fraction of Korea's foreign debts, estimated at $180 billion. Korean corporations hold nearly 40 per cent of the debts and these cannot be rolled over or rescheduled that easily because their payments are not guaranteed by the Korean Government, unlike the debts held by the banks.

This leads to the hoarding of dollars to repay debts.

The Bank of Korea said foreign currency deposits rose 10 per cent during the past two months mainly because companies were keeping the proceeds from their exports in banks.

Exports have grown recently thanks to the weaker won that makes Korean products cheaper overseas. That is mainly responsible for a record $3 billion trade surplus last month and four consecutive months of current account surpluses.

However, the surpluses are also a result of poor import performances, which is a bad sign because large amounts of raw materials and machinery are needed to produce goods for export.

"Poor imports will soon lead to poor exports, given our economic structure," Han Sang-choon, a senior researcher at Daewoo Economic Research Institute, said. "Without enough exports, Korea will always have tough times repaying its foreign debts."

Foreign investors have already noticed the problem. So far this year, more than $3 billion of fresh money has been injected by foreign stock and bond buyers but the trend has suddenly reversed during the past few days as they questioned the probability of a quick recovery in the Korean economy.

"Without the backing of strong economic fundamentals, foreign investors will not keep their money in Korea for a long time," Mr Han said.