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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: djane who wrote (7563)9/5/1998 2:37:00 PM
From: chirodoc  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 22640
 
September 5, 1998

Analysts Warn of Dangers to Brazil's Economy
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO

IO DE JANEIRO, Brazil -- With Brazil's stock market in a nose dive and the central bank spending $1 billion a day to defend the currency, economists warned that despite the strengths of Brazil's economy, investor panic could plunge the region into decline.

Brazil's market fell by 5.8 percent Friday, following a decline of 8.61 percent on Thursday, its second-worst in history, triggered, in part, by a downgrading of Brazilian bonds and notes by Moody's Investor service. The markets were not soothed by a televised appeal by President Fernando Henrique Cardoso on Thursday night for a "national pact for fiscal adjustment" or by criticism of the Moody's assessment by Brazilian officials.

To the contrary, stocks plunged further Friday as a low-ranking U.S. Treasury official called the Brazilian currency "unarguably overvalued." The Treasury later disavowed the comments as a personal opinion not reflecting the department's policy.

Investors worldwide have been fleeing emerging markets, and Brazil has been caught in the crosscurrents. In the month of August alone, Brazilian equities fell 40 percent, with similar losses in stock exchanges around the continent.

Brazil's current account deficit hovers at nearly 4 percent of gross domestic product. The country's failure to cut government operating expenses, particularly civil service costs, has put the country in a difficult position as credit tightens for emerging markets around the globe.

Citing these structural weaknesses, Moody's downgraded its rating of Brazilian bonds and notes to B2 from B1 and the ceiling for foreign currency bank deposits to Caa1. It also downgraded three Brazilian banks to C from C plus.

The Brazilian finance minister, Pedro Malan, in Washington for a meeting of Latin finance ministers with the International Monetary Fund that ended Friday, lashed out at Moody's analysts, saying they were compensating for earlier optimistic ratings in Asia by turning more cautious toward Latin America.

Michel Camdessus, managing director of the fund, said that many of the problems faced by Brazil and Latin countries derived from panic elsewhere in the world rather than lack of will to take tough economic measures.

But with markets throughout the region plummeting, Camdessus acknowledged that the situation for Latin America was "dangerous." He said that "a degree of panic" among investors had led to "an excessive and unfortunate pressure" on many countries in Latin America. "It's true that if this persists a number of countries will have to tighten their policies," Camdessus said.

In his speech Thursday night, Cardoso, who is favored to win re-election Oct. 4, did not announce any new initiatives. His talk restated his government's commitment to Civil Service, social security and tax reforms that stalled during his first term. "We have to continue a program of fiscal adjustment," he said.

With roughly $58 billion reported in foreign reserves, Brazil has substantial resources to stabilize its currency. Under Cardoso, the country has made headway toward market-oriented reforms, privatizing state industries and slaying chronic hyperinflation.

Analysts say the central bank has been spending an average of $1.3 billion a day since Sept. 1 to protect the Brazilian currency, the real, while Friday's O Globo newspaper reported international reserves had fallen $15.8 billion since August 1. A spokesman for the central bank, usually forthcoming with information, would not confirm the figures or provide others.

Malan has ruled out a devaluation, but Brazilians are buying dollars to cover themselves. The difference between the official and informal rates of exchange has been widening, with exchange houses offering 1.27 reais against the dollar, compared with an official rate of 1.17 reais. Traditionally, the difference has run about two or three cents.

Under Mercosur, the customs union joining Brazil with Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, Argentina's exports to Brazil quadrupled, and now represent more than 25 percent of its export business. With Argentina's peso pegged to dollar reserves, a devaluation in Brazil would send instant tremors through Buenos Aires. "Safely and securely, they would be in a deep crisis," said Alexandre Barros, a Brasilia-based political consultant .

Paulo Leme, economic research director of emerging markets at Goldman, Sachs, argues that industrial nations must come up with solutions, like a lowering of U.S. interest rates, replenishing the International Monetary Fund's bailout capacity and restoring stability to Japan, to help emerging markets. "These are not isolated viral cases, but an epidemic," he said.

Brazilian firms are carrying a foreign debt of $108.5 billion, up from $37.3 billion three years ago. Some $11 billion will come due before next July, and if international lenders decline to renew the loans, the companies will turn to the central bank.

One emerging-markets specialist, who requested anonymity, said that while investment analysts pick over the differences between developing markets, investors these days act on the similarities. Underpinning the rage for emerging markets were assumptions -- that currencies do not devalue, that countries do not default -- that have been shattered with Russia's collapse.

"The real contagion is not something I'm worried about, it's the financial contagion," the analyst said. "Everybody agrees that if the Hong Kong peg were to go, the attack on Brazil would be relentless, until there were no international reserves left."

"It's not because there's a real connection between the economies," he added. "It has everything to do with perceptions, and the psychosis of the market."

Perhaps for that reason, a letter to the editor of The Wall Street Journal from the lower-level Treasury Department official was quickly disavowed. The official, Britta Hillstrom, wrote that while "Brazil's real is unarguably overvalued, a destructive devaluation is not the only solution," and said the country could move the exchange rate band. A spokeswoman for the Treasury Department said those "were absolutely not the views of the Treasury Department."



To: djane who wrote (7563)9/5/1998 6:54:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 22640
 
A Bleak Week for Dow, a Dark Day for Brazil

latimes.com

Saturday, September 5, 1998

Latin America: Stocks plunge on rumors of interest rate hikes and possible
devaluation by Cardoso government. In Mexico, banks suspend loans as
interest rates near 40%.
By CHRIS KRAUL, Times Staff Writer



he economic clouds over Latin America darkened further Friday
amid a headlong flight of foreign capital from Brazil and
reports--strenuously denied by the government--of imminent interest rate
hikes and budget cuts.
Reports of such steps, which would further dampen the region's biggest
economy and reelection prospects of free-market President Fernando
Henrique Cardoso, sent Brazilian stocks plunging.
Higher interest also sent chills through Mexico, where several banks said
they were suspending all new consumer and mortgage loans until financial
markets settle down.
Mexico's peso hit another all-time low, 10.23 against the dollar, and
stocks fell 1.84%. Colombia's main stock index fell 4.5%, and Argentina's
was down 3.4%.
Brazil's main stock index recovered partially from a 13.9% nose dive in a
bout of panic selling one hour before close. It closed off 6.1%. Some
market analysts said the federally owned National Development Bank
helped the market recover by buying shares at the end of the trading session.

The mini-crash came amid increasing pessimism about Brazil's economic
outlook a day after Moody's Investor Service lowered its rating of Brazilian
sovereign debt. The country is groaning under an increasing debt load
exacerbated by budget and trade deficits. The downgrade significantly
boosts the cost of servicing that debt.
Speculation continued to swirl that Brazil might have to devalue its
currency, a notion that was vigorously denied by Finance Minister Pedro
Malan, who was attending a summit meeting of Latin American finance
officials convened by the International Monetary Fund in Washington.
"Let me use this opportunity once again to say what we've been saying
for years: There will be no change in exchange policy," Malan said.
IMF Managing Director Michel Camdessus said Latin America was "on
the right track" toward weathering the global turmoil.
But a consensus is developing that Brazil must at least raise interest rates
and cut its budget if it is to restore confidence. As things stand now, Brazil is
sinking deeper in an "immense emerging-markets crisis" from which there is
no near-term escape, said economist Luis Fernando Lopes of Banco
Patrimonio in Sao Paulo.
President Cardoso is believed to want to delay any such action until after
the Oct. 4 presidential election. But analysts do not think the country can
wait that long.
Since July 31, Brazil has spent $16 billion in foreign reserves--now
hemorrhaging at the rate of $1.5 billion a day--to bolster its currency, the
real, said Marcelo Audi, Brazilian equity strategist at Merrill Lynch in Sao
Paulo.
"A hike in interest rates is needed, and there is increasing expectations of
this. And it will have to come with fiscal measures to be credible," Audi said.

* * *
Brazil's stocks were whipsawed by rumors that the Cardoso Cabinet
would meet this weekend to boost interest rates and cut the budget. But
Finance Ministry officials on Friday categorically denied there was any such
meeting or package planned.
Citing mounting short-term debt and the likelihood of an interest rate
hike, J.P. Morgan said last week that Brazil's economy would contract 2%
in 1998. Merrill Lynch's Audi said the economy would grow slightly at 0.4%
off of projected 1.2% growth this year.
"The problem in the stock market today is that investors are anticipating
an emergency landing, so to speak," Banco Patrimonio's Lopes said. "We
are not expecting this crisis to diminish in the near future."
In Mexico, interest rates that hovered around 20% for most of the year
have shot up close to 40% in recent days as the Central Bank squeezed
monetary policy to fight inflation fears sparked by the peso's fall.
Bankers noted that few customers are willing to take out new loans with
interest charges so high. The head of the nation's banking association, Carlos
Gomez y Gomez, last week cautioned consumers not to take on new debt at
rates that they might not be able to repay.
Such bad loans were one of the main causes of the country's mid-1990s
banking crisis, which required a $56-billion bailout.
* * *
Staff writer James F. Smith in Mexico City and researcher Paula Gobbi
in Rio de Janeiro contributed to this report.
* * *
Action and Reaction
* Alan Greenspan says Fed is prepared to cut interest rates if necessary.
A1
* Russia's Viktor Chernomyrdin offers bold plan to pay overdue wages.
A1
* A top U.S. fund manager has been among hardest hit in market plunge.
D3

Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved




To: djane who wrote (7563)9/5/1998 6:56:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 22640
 
LatAm Forum Focuses on Market Slide

September 5, 1998

Filed at 3:33 p.m. EDT

By The Associated Press

PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) -- Falling currencies and stock selloffs
dominated talks Saturday at a summit of Latin American leaders, whose
region has been battered by fallout from the Asian and Russian financial
crises.

Economic worries suddenly became the top priority at the annual
one-day gathering of the 14-member Rio Group after Latin America's
largest market, the Sao Paulo Stock Exchange, suffered a 13.9 percent
midday slide Friday and other Latin markets reported declines.

''The impact of the last two days on Latin America was something that
we probably hadn't expected so soon,'' Mexican Foreign Secretary
Rosario Green said.

President Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico -- where the market also fell Friday
and the peso hit a new low -- spoke with summit host Ernesto Perez
Balladares of Panama and other leaders before the summit's start to
suggest they make the global financial crisis the main focus, Green said.

''They are worried because it's a crisis that greatly affects ... commerce,
investment and public spending,'' Green said.

The 10 Latin American presidents attending the summit along with four
top officials from other countries will sign a declaration Saturday
expressing support for open markets and concern at the financial
instability sparked by the Asian and Russian crises.

Zedillo, Colombian President Andres Pastrana and Venezuelan
President Rafael Caldera met privately before the larger meeting,
agreeing that their region should be able to withstand the troubles
because their economic structures are distinct from those of Asia and
Russia.

Green said the Rio Group would discuss what steps each nation must
take to keep the region's economies healthy.

The economy ''is extraordinarily globalized and interconnected,'' said
Green. ''In this sense, the consideration must be collective.''

The declaration addresses regional unity, development, the need to
protect democracy and human rights, poverty, drug trafficking and
terrorism.

And it criticizes the U.S. Helms-Burton law, which punishes businesses
that trade with Cuba, as harmful to international commerce and as an
example of a nation wrongly attempting to impose its laws outside of its
territory.

Eight nations -- Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Venezuela, Argentina,
Brazil, Peru and Uruguay -- founded the group in Rio de Janeiro in
1986. Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, and Paraguay joined later.

Two countries are the temporary representatives for their regions: El
Salvador for Central America and Guyana for the Caribbean.



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To: djane who wrote (7563)9/5/1998 6:58:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
NY Times. Analysts Warn of Dangers to Brazil's Economy

nytimes.com

September 5, 1998

By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO

IO DE JANEIRO, Brazil -- With Brazil's stock market in a nose
dive and the central bank spending $1 billion a day to defend the
currency, economists warned that despite the strengths of Brazil's
economy, investor panic could plunge the region into decline.

Brazil's market fell by 5.8 percent Friday, following a decline of 8.61
percent on Thursday, its second-worst in history, triggered, in part, by a
downgrading of Brazilian bonds and notes by Moody's Investor service.
The markets were not soothed by a televised appeal by President
Fernando Henrique Cardoso on Thursday night for a "national pact for
fiscal adjustment" or by criticism of the Moody's assessment by Brazilian
officials.

To the contrary, stocks plunged further Friday as a low-ranking U.S.
Treasury official called the Brazilian currency "unarguably overvalued."
The Treasury later disavowed the comments as a personal opinion not
reflecting the department's policy.

Investors worldwide have been fleeing emerging markets, and Brazil has
been caught in the crosscurrents. In the month of August alone, Brazilian
equities fell 40 percent, with similar losses in stock exchanges around the
continent.

Brazil's current account deficit hovers at nearly 4 percent of gross
domestic product. The country's failure to cut government operating
expenses, particularly civil service costs, has put the country in a difficult
position as credit tightens for emerging markets around the globe.

Citing these structural weaknesses, Moody's downgraded its rating of
Brazilian bonds and notes to B2 from B1 and the ceiling for foreign
currency bank deposits to Caa1. It also downgraded three Brazilian
banks to C from C plus.

The Brazilian finance minister, Pedro Malan, in Washington for a
meeting of Latin finance ministers with the International Monetary Fund
that ended Friday, lashed out at Moody's analysts, saying they were
compensating for earlier optimistic ratings in Asia by turning more
cautious toward Latin America.

Michel Camdessus, managing director of the fund, said that many of the
problems faced by Brazil and Latin countries derived from panic
elsewhere in the world rather than lack of will to take tough economic
measures.

But with markets throughout the region plummeting, Camdessus
acknowledged that the situation for Latin America was "dangerous." He
said that "a degree of panic" among investors had led to "an excessive
and unfortunate pressure" on many countries in Latin America. "It's true
that if this persists a number of countries will have to tighten their
policies," Camdessus said.

In his speech Thursday night, Cardoso, who is favored to win
re-election Oct. 4, did not announce any new initiatives. His talk
restated his government's commitment to Civil Service, social security
and tax reforms that stalled during his first term. "We have to continue a
program of fiscal adjustment," he said.

With roughly $58 billion reported in foreign reserves, Brazil has
substantial resources to stabilize its currency. Under Cardoso, the
country has made headway toward market-oriented reforms, privatizing
state industries and slaying chronic hyperinflation.

Analysts say the central bank has been spending an average of $1.3
billion a day since Sept. 1 to protect the Brazilian currency, the real,
while Friday's O Globo newspaper reported international reserves had
fallen $15.8 billion since August 1. A spokesman for the central bank,
usually forthcoming with information, would not confirm the figures or
provide others.

Malan has ruled out a devaluation, but Brazilians are buying dollars to
cover themselves. The difference between the official and informal rates
of exchange has been widening, with exchange houses offering 1.27
reais against the dollar, compared with an official rate of 1.17 reais.
Traditionally, the difference has run about two or three cents.

Under Mercosur, the customs union joining Brazil with Argentina,
Uruguay and Paraguay, Argentina's exports to Brazil quadrupled, and
now represent more than 25 percent of its export business. With
Argentina's peso pegged to dollar reserves, a devaluation in Brazil
would send instant tremors through Buenos Aires. "Safely and securely,
they would be in a deep crisis," said Alexandre Barros, a Brasilia-based
political consultant .

Paulo Leme, economic research director of emerging markets at
Goldman, Sachs, argues that industrial nations must come up with
solutions, like a lowering of U.S. interest rates, replenishing the
International Monetary Fund's bailout capacity and restoring stability to
Japan, to help emerging markets. "These are not isolated viral cases, but
an epidemic," he said.

Brazilian firms are carrying a foreign debt of $108.5 billion, up from
$37.3 billion three years ago. Some $11 billion will come due before
next July, and if international lenders decline to renew the loans, the
companies will turn to the central bank.

One emerging-markets specialist, who requested anonymity, said that
while investment analysts pick over the differences between developing
markets, investors these days act on the similarities. Underpinning the
rage for emerging markets were assumptions -- that currencies do not
devalue, that countries do not default -- that have been shattered with
Russia's collapse.

"The real contagion is not something I'm worried about, it's the financial
contagion," the analyst said. "Everybody agrees that if the Hong Kong
peg were to go, the attack on Brazil would be relentless, until there were
no international reserves left."

"It's not because there's a real connection between the economies," he
added. "It has everything to do with perceptions, and the psychosis of
the market."

Perhaps for that reason, a letter to the editor of The Wall Street Journal
from the lower-level Treasury Department official was quickly
disavowed. The official, Britta Hillstrom, wrote that while "Brazil's real is
unarguably overvalued, a destructive devaluation is not the only
solution," and said the country could move the exchange rate band. A
spokeswoman for the Treasury Department said those "were absolutely
not the views of the Treasury Department."

Home | Site Index | Site Search | Forums | Archives | Marketplace

Quick News | Page One Plus | International | National/N.Y. | Business | Technology |
Science | Sports | Weather | Editorial | Op-Ed | Arts | Automobiles | Books | Diversions |
Job Market | Real Estate | Travel

Help/Feedback | Classifieds | Services | New York Today

Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company




To: djane who wrote (7563)9/5/1998 7:04:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Must-read. Barron's. As the Developing World Burns, the Fed Refuses to Fiddle With Rates
[Note: This probably changed based on Greenspan's speech in Berkeley on Friday night.]

interactive.wsj.com

September 7, 1998



By Robert J. Barbera

Pity Alan Greenspan. Just one year ago, he adorned the cover of
BusinessWeek, anointed as the premier architect and champion of a brave
new world vision. Savvy corporate managers, exploiting new information
technologies and untapped emerging economies were set to deliver an
inflation-free, earnings-rich supercycle of economic boom. Today, the tragic
irony is that Greenspan has had to stand idly by as much of the developing
world crumbles. The Fed chairman controls the printing press that delivers
U.S. dollars to the world. His charge as head of the Fed, however, ties his
decisions to the American economy. Emerging nations, caught in a downward
spiral and saddled with dollar-denominated debt, confront a parochial, and
therefore unyielding, Fed. Malaysia's move to impose capital controls stands
as evidence that the developing world is ready to quit the game. Quite
straightforwardly, Greenspan's brave new framework is coming apart because
the world lacks a global lender of last resort.

"We have the right stuff -- the technology, the money and the business
knowhow -- for creating wealth and lifting living standards in your country.
Welcome us in, play by our rules, and you'll profit with us." This, in effect, was
the offer the U.S., Europe and Japan made to the emerging world, on the
heels of communism's collapse. In Asia and Latin America and among former
communist-bloc nations, the offer was resoundingly accepted.

Emerging-economy stock markets have led
commodities up and down.

In the developed world, communism's collapse led to the firing of country-risk
analysts. Investments in the developing world were judged on their
micro-merits. When you eliminate worries about government stability and
focus on $10-a-month labor, almost every project is approved. Enthusiastic
borrowers and lenders generated an enormous north/south flow over the first
half of the 1990s.

Institute for International Finance reports show net inflows from developed to
developing economies growing at unprecedented rates. The $300 billion
inflow in 1996 was 15 times the size of the previous cycle's peak, reached in
1989. The boom in finance for emerging nations engendered a real economic
boom for them as well.

Eighteen months ago, it was reasonable to label entrepreneurial capitalists as
agents of change for the better in the developing world. Success, however, led
to excess. Crony capitalism, empty office buildings, golf courses a thousand
miles from nowhere. Late-in-the-game projects were being approved that
benefited a handful of individuals and had little economic justification. When
the excesses began to appear, investors started backing out. As
disappointments multiplied, they sold indiscriminately. In the past six months,
in fact, capital flight from emerging nations has produced a self-fulfilling
prophecy, as the resultant surge in interest rates in developing nations all but
dooms them to sharp deterioration in their economic fundamentals.


Remember the junk-bond collapse in 1990? It began when a substantial
number of leveraged-buyout credits collapsed under the weight of
deteriorating fundamentals and extreme interest burdens. As the selling
momentum built, however, all junk credits came under pressure. Panic selling
drove borrowing costs for all high-yield credits to pernicious levels. In the
end, selling on the speculation that all junk credits would disappoint became a
self- fulfilling prediction. Unbearable interest rates led to changes for the
worse in the fundamentals of all junk credits.

In the U.S., in late 1990, as the debacle was in full force, most every junk
credit was labeled hopeless; Citibank was trading at $10 a share. But the
American economy didn't collapse; the federal funds rate did. An engineered
decline of this risk-free rate, to 3% from 8%, prevented a debt-deflation
depression. By collapsing the risk-free rate, the Fed forced money back out
along the risk curve. Excessive junk investments failed. Many S&Ls were
closed. But the majority of high-yield investments avoided bankruptcy, the
financial system endured and recession, not debt-deflation depression, was
the price paid in the real economy.

Today, in the developing world, the same sort of brutal cleansing of excesses
is going on. As an unavoidable byproduct of entrepreneurial capitalism, this is
to the good. But the violent loss of appetite for risk among
developed-economy investors in the developing world has created a
downward spiral for these economies that only a radical reduction in the
risk-free borrowing rate can change.

And since these developing economies have dollar-denominated debt
burdens, they need the risk-free rate on dollar assets-the fed funds rate-to
collapse.
Again, however, Fed decisions pivot on domestic considerations.
And in the U.S., despite the free fall in the developing world, creeping wage
pressures, a supertight labor market and, through midyear, an irrepressible
stock market, have conspired to keep the Fed on hold.

Quite perversely, panic in the developing world during the first half of 1998
energized much of America's economy and helped to catapult the U.S. stock
market to breathtaking heights. Fed policy kept short rates high, but violent
capital inflows pushed down long rates dramatically
, engendering a boom for
housing not seen since the early 'Eighties. Laid alongside hourly earnings gains
of 4%, the collapse of gasoline prices and the sharp fall in the cost of goods
made in Asia translated to a whopping 3% gain for real wages in the first
half-the biggest jump seen since the mid-1960s. Safe-haven buying also
contributed to the Dow's big runup.

With housing booming, real wages soaring and Wall Street setting records,
small wonder that real consumer spending in the U.S. grew faster in the first
half than it had at any other time in the 1990s expansion.

For the Fed, all this had, until last week, conspired to squelch any talk of
ease. The August employment report tells a real-economy story of more of
the same. U.S. financial markets, however, now are loudly telling a different
story. The spectacular inversion of the yield curve, the skyrocketing widening
of government/corporate bond spreads, and, of course, the break in the U.S.
equity market all strongly suggest a turn for the worse in the American
economy.

Nonetheless, historically, financial-market signals of impending changes in the
real economic fundamentals haven't triggered policy changes at the Fed. Only
when the data break does the Fed reverse course. Thus, U.S. economists,
tied to data flow, protest the notion of any imminent easing by the Fed.

Where does that leave the developing world? One step from quitting the
game. Celebrated economist Paul Krugman broke ranks with most of his
profession a few weeks ago by putting his imprimatur on capital controls. And
last week, Malaysia put them into place. Capital controls, quite
straightforwardly, allow an emerging nation to engineer its own interest-rate
relief, without suffering from capital flight. How? By refusing to let foreign
investors take their money out. One can argue, on moral grounds, that capital
controls are the developing world's way of saying, "Hey, we're in this
together!"
[Fascinating]

What about the downside of freezing flows? As Krugman wryly noted in his
defense of this strategy: "After Mexico imposed exchange controls during the
1982 debt crisis, it went through five years of stagnation -- a dismal result, but
when your GDP has contracted by 5%, 10% or 20%, stagnation looks like a
big improvement."

But the downside to capital controls goes much deeper. Entrepreneurial
capitalism did, until some 18 months ago, deliver on its promise of rapid
economic growth in the developing world.
Moreover, it was the instrument
that exported American values around the world.

However, investors from America and other developed countries are unlikely
to return to emerging economies for a long time if governments freeze their
funds over the next several quarters. In the intermediate term, much-reduced
access to financing from the developed world radically reduces the developing
world's upside. Put simply, a world stripped of globe-hopping entrepreneurs
reverts to one in which official capital flows bear the burden of reducing
north/south, rich/poor disparities. And that would be a pity. A central banker
with a global vision simply wouldn't stand for it.

ROBERT J. BARBERA is chief economist of Hoenig & Co., a brokerage
firm based in Rye Brook, New York.

Return to top of page | Format for printing
Copyright c 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.




To: djane who wrote (7563)9/5/1998 7:07:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Barron's. Markets Buckle Worldwide, and Malaysia Bows Out; Have You Heard Talk of a Global Recession?

September 7, 1998



By Peter C. Du Bois

Exit Malaysia, stage left, condemned by foreigners for abandoning
free-market precepts but beloved by local stock market traders. All of which
proves, for starters, that a strong-willed xenophobe can rig a bourse as well
as any other manipulator.

The latest chapter in this saga began last Tuesday, when Malaysian Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamed imposed draconian currency controls that
prohibit trading his nation's currency, the ringgit, abroad. Any ringgit held
overseas must be repatriated by September 30 or become worthless. At the
same time, foreigners who own Malaysian stocks face harsh restrictions on
taking the proceeds of rupiah sales out of Malaysia.

Dow Jones Global Indexes | Emerging Markets | Global Stock Markets

Wednesday, Mahathir fired Anwar Ibrahim, his deputy PM and internationally
respected finance minister. Thursday, having inoculated Malaysia against
foreign financial interference, he cut domestic interest rates and began to
reflate his economy in splendid isolation.

Booted From EAFE Index

Initial foreign retaliation came Friday. Morgan Stanley Capital International
deleted Malaysia from its benchmark EAFE index of developed stock
markets, effective September 30. MSCI reckons that $150 billion of global
pension-fund money is indexed to EAFE, with $600 million allocated to
Malaysia (which carries a 0.4% weight). Presumably, these Malaysian stocks
soon will be sold, but it's unclear where, to whom or at what price. MSCI
kept Malaysia for now in its Emerging Markets index, where it boasts a 4.4%
weighting.
[Money will be reallocated to countries like Brazil.]

Not surprisingly, Malaysian shares, as measured by the dollar-based Dow
Jones Global Index, endured a wild ride last week. The indicator fell 3.38%
Monday, another 13.27% Tuesday. It then turned around and rallied 12.14%
Wednesday, 6.27% Thursday and an amazing 16.09% Friday. At week's
end, the index still was down 38.86% year-to-date.

Friday's spurt was fueled by the initial repatriation of ringgit held in Singapore.

Once upon a time, before emerging stock markets became venues in which
to speculate, and before derivative instruments were invented and became
weapons of portfolio destruction, the dog days of August were a quiet time
for money managers. Your pooch slept in the shade while you read a good
book on the porch.

Jump to August 1998. Global bourses sank, and your pet canine turned into a
rabid Rottweiler. How many markets did he infect? Of 50 (27 emerging, 23
developed) tracked by Morgan Stanley Capital International's proprietary
indexes, only two posted gains in dollars last month. Morocco rose 7.1%,
Pakistan 4.9%.

Of the 25 other emerging markets, 23 suffered double-digit declines. Russia,
off 59.2%, and Venezuela, off 43.4%, fared the worst. Eight bourses fell by
between 39.2% and 30.8%; another nine dropped by between 29.1% and
22.6%. Four more fell between 17% and 11.5% of their value erased.
Relatively unscathed were Jordan, down 0.5%, and India, down 8.5%.

All 23 developed markets fell, 20 by double-digit sums. Not suprisingly,
Malaysia, off 28%, took the booby prize. On a relative performance basis
nine bourses (Hong Kong, Belgium, U.K., Denmark, France, Japan,
Netherlands, Australia and Portugal) beat the U.S. (off 14%) in August.

Global marts fell again last week, with Brazil especially weak (see nearby
table). Among the reasons: Moody's downgraded the country's credit rating.
Telecom giant Telebras, which carries the biggest weight in the Bovespa index
(about 45%) was heavily sold. Telebras, which was split into 12 separate
units in a recent privatization, soon will disappear as a single entity.

What next? James Montier, a London-based global strategist at BT Alex.
Brown, believes there's a 50% chance of a global recession within 18 months.
[Greenspan better get busy...]

He notes that until recently, Europe had been the powerhouse of the global
economy. However, "economic recovery in Germany now appears to be
stalling out. Industrial production grew at just 1.6% year-over-year in June,
new order growth continues to decelerate, and the [German] consumer looks
to be retreating, with retail sales volume falling no less than 2.7% year-on-year
in June."

To Montier, this raises questions about the ability of German banks to avoid a
credit crunch. In his view, "They look to have made similar errors to U.K. and
U.S. banks during the 1980s debt crisis, and are exceptionally vulnerable to
default from Eastern Europe."

One upshot: "If German growth continues to fade at such an alarming pace,
the rest of Europe will likely find it hard to keep its head above a recessionary
quagmire."

At the same time, U.S. consumers could buy less stuff in the wake of ongoing
stock market declines. Not good news.

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