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


To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:19:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Economists fear Mexico-type meltdown in Brazil

Reuters, Friday, September 11, 1998 at 18:18

By David Luhnow
MEXICO CITY Sept 11 (Reuters) - Some economists who
witnessed Mexico's peso crash in 1994 are experiencing an
uneasy sense of deja vu when it comes to Brazil this year.
Like Mexico back then, Brazil has an overvalued currency
used as an inflation anchor, large gaps in its accounts that
need financing in the face of capital flight and presidential
elections that make a managed devaluation a political no-no.
It also has Wall Street cheering from the sidelines, hoping
nothing happens to one of its star pupils.
"To me, everything is exactly the same. And it's just a
matter of time before the result is the same," said a Mexico
City-based economist at a large foreign investment bank.
"It sounds like Mexico to me," added an economist at a
large brokerage in New York, requesting anonymity.
Mexico steadfastly denied it would devalue its peso even
when it had only a few billion dollars in reserves left,
finally letting it go in late December and sparking the deepest
recession here in half a century.
Economists say there are important difference between both
cases: Brazil's deepening woes are largely due to financial
turmoil spreading from Asia and Russia, while Mexico's crisis
was almost entirely of its own making.
But while it may not be entirely Brazil's fault, any kind
of crisis there would be harder to overcome in an environment
where most of the globe in headed for recession and the IMF has
little money for a bailout.
Mexican officials privately say they are deeply worried
about Brazil and fear a crisis there would make Mexico's
"tequila" crisis look mild in comparison. A sell-off of
Brazilian stocks on Thursday sparked sharp market downturns
throughout the hemisphere.
In 1994, Mexico had a large trade and current account
deficits that it financed recklessly with short-term dollar
debt, while Brazil's problem lies more with a massive fiscal,
or internal, deficit that it covers in large part internally.
"I think the Brazilians are being more pragmatic than
Mexico was," Alfredo Thorne, chief economist for Mexico at J.P.
Morgan, told Reuters.
Mexican political conflict such as a guerrilla uprising and
political assassinations also spooked investors, while Brazil's
political landscape looks peaceful by comparison.
Brazil also has more than twice the reserves Mexico had to
defend against speculators, about $60 billion to $30 billion.
"So far, we think it's going to hold," said Fernando
Losada, senior Latin America economist at ING Barings in New
York.
But others give Brazil just slightly better than a 50-50
chance, saying the country only has a few weeks to convince
investors it is serious about solving structural problems like
the fiscal deficit and raising interest rates even further to
keep capital in the country.
As if to drive home the point, Brazil's stock market fell
nearly 16 percent on Thursday and stood at a third of its value
from earlier this year. Not even Mexico's bolsa fell that much
before the devaluation.
"A lot of reserves gives you some comfort, but ultimately
it's the fundamentals that matter. If you lose a billion a day,
it can't last long. Your large stock or reserves can become an
insufficient amount in a short period of time," said Denis
Parisien, head of Latin American equity strategy at Dresdner
Kleinwort Benson in New York.
Brazil used an interest rate spike successfully last year
to defend the real, something the Mexicans were not willing to
do before elections, said Lawrence Krohn, head of economic and
equity analysis for Latin America at Chase Manhattan.
Brazil may also resort to controls on domestic capital
flight to discourage Brazilians from taking their money out.
"The question is whether that will suffice or whether the
markets have become too cynical now and will continue to pound
Brazil," he said.
But, given continued capital flight, he added: "What was
once unthinkable is now thinkable."
mexicocity.newsroom@reuters.com))

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:27:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
ADR REPORT - Emerging market highlights - Sept. 11

Reuters, Friday, September 11, 1998 at 18:44

BRAZIL ADRS STRENGTHEN AFTER RATES ROCKET
NEW YORK, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Brazilian American Depositary
Receipts (ADRs) rose Friday in steady trade, boosted in part by
a sharp rise in Brazilian interest rates.
Dealers said sentiment about Brazil and other Latin
American ADRs continued to be very cautious because of fears
that Brazil could devalue its currency, the real.
"People are very negative," a trader said. "There are still
a lot of scared people out there."
Jason Myers, with Latin American sales at Paribas, said,
"For now, people seem to be willing to stick a toe in the
water."
However, he added that much of the buying was
short-covering by traders and hedge funds.
Brazil's Central Bank raised its basic lending rate late
Thursday to 49.75 percent from 29.75 percent a year to stem an
outpouring of foreign capital. The outflow was thought to have
topped $2 billion Thursday alone.
Sao Paulo's Bovespa stock index (INDEX:$BVSP.X) was up 8.64 percent
in late trade.
Traders said Brazilian shares also were underpinned by a
rumor that Brazil had gotten a $15 billion loan from the
International Monetaary Fund (IMF). The Finance Ministry denied
it had reached any kind of accord with the IMF.
The ING Barings Latin American index of leading regional
stocks <.LAT> was up 2.88 points, or 3.38 percent, to 88
points.
Here are some highlights among emerging market ADRs:
* * *
BRAZIL - Telephone issue Telebras SA (SAO:TELB4) (NYSE:TBR)
rose 1-9/16 to 53-3/8 and was the second most-active issue on
the New York Stock Exchange.
Pulp company Aracruz Celulose (SAO:ARC) (NYSE:ARA) rose 1-1/4,
or 22.22 percent, to 6-7/8 and Unibanco Group (SAO:UBB) (NYSE:UBB)
was up 1-1/16, or 14.66 percent, to 8-5/16.
* * *
MEXICO - Bottler Pepsi-Gemex (MEX:PGX) (NYSE:GEM) was up 15/16,
or 12.93 percent, to 8-3/16. Broadcaster Grupo Televisa
(MEX:TLV.L) (NYSE:TV) was up 1-13/16, or 12 percent, to 16-15/16.
Telefonos de Mexico (MEX:TMX.L) (NYSE:TMX) was up 1-1/4 to
34-3/4.
* * *
CHILE - Airline Lan Chile (NYSE:LFL) (SAN:LAN) was up 7/16, or
17.5 percent, to 2-15/16.
* * *
TAIWAN - Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd.
(TW:2330) (NYSE:TSM) was up one, or 9.3 percent, to 11-3/4.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:28:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Sighing, blase Brazilians buckle up for rocky ride

Reuters, Friday, September 11, 1998 at 19:13

By Tracey Ober
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Hardened by
years of economic instability, Brazilians braced themselves for
a rocky ride but did not panic Friday after the Central Bank
jacked up interest rates in an unfolding financial crisis.
While economists warned of looming recession and fleeing
foreign investors spoke of meltdown, the average Brazilian just
sighed with an attitude of "been there, done that" and put off
making that major appliance purchase.
"I'm going to think twice before buying something right
now. But I'm not worried. It's just never going to be as bad as
it was," Elizabeth Costa Reboucas, a clerk in a film processing
store in downtown Rio de Janeiro, told Reuters as a steady
stream of customers passed through.
Reboucas, who is in her 30s, remembers the era of
hyperinflation only five years ago when prices would shoot up
each month and it was a guessing game as to whether her salary
would stretch far enough to survive.
"You didn't want to spend anything then, and you couldn't
because you never knew if you would have money," she said.
The Bahia state native, who moved to escape the
poverty-stricken north, says she's better off now, despite the
crisis roiling the country's stocks and currency markets.
A poll published on Thursday showed almost half of
Brazilians were planning to re-elect President Fernando
Henrique Cardoso in October even as his emergency measures to
save the currency were putting a choke hold on the economy.
The cerebral Cardoso, often criticized for ivory-tower
aloofness, is nonetheless credited for putting money in the
pockets of average Brazilians with the inflation-fighting Real
Plan he introduced as finance minister.
He won the hearts of Brazilians when his free-market
reforms brought four years of economic stability and they are
now sticking to him like glue, despite rising unemployment,
public spending cuts and stagnant growth.
"The customers are starting to get edgy. They debate
'Should I get this, shouldn't I get this,'" said Antonio Reis,
manager of an Insinuante appliance retail outlet.
"But it's not like it was before the Real. It's a lot
easier to work with zero inflation all the time than with 30
percent inflation every month. Cardoso's staying."
Economists warned Friday that the Central Bank's decision
to raise interest rates to nearly 50 percent to staunch a
massive flight of dollars from the country could push Latin
America's biggest economy into recession, causing further
unemployment.
The credit squeeze comes on top of 4 million reais ($3.42
million) in emergency spending cuts and a host of other
measures designed to defend the local currency, the real, from
speculative attack.
There were fire and brimstone warnings by some economists
that businesses hampered by the credit crunch would start
laying off workers and defaulting on payments.
But there was a wait-and-see attitude in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil's second city, as shopkeepers held off changing credit
policies, certain that the economy was now fundamentally strong
enough to pull through what was just seen as one more blip.
"There is a certain amount of concern out there about
whether they will have a job tomorrow, or money," Reis said.
"We haven't changed our policies yet. There's no big panic.
That's a thing of the past."

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:30:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
FOCUS-Brazil rate hike offers only short-term relief

Reuters, Friday, September 11, 1998 at 20:00

By Joelle Diderich
BRASILIA, Brazil, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Brazil's stock market
rallied on Friday after the central bank raised interest rates
to defend the country's battered currency but analysts said
more tough steps were needed to get the economy in order.
The main Bovespa index jumped 638 to 5,398 after the
central bank late Thursday raised its basic lending rate to
49.75 percent from 29.75 percent in a bid to defend the
currency, the real, and stop the flow of funds out of the
country.
While an average $1.5 billion a day has flowed out of
Brazil so far this month, currency dealers said that slowed to
about $730 million by late afternoon on Friday.
The move boosted hopes Brasilia was working to avert a
devaluation of the real after a four-year drive to stabilize
the economy and end years of hyper-inflation.
"The government showed its determination to defend the real
and could lure investments to stay in Brazil for the better
returns," a fund manager at Lloyds Asset Management said.
Brazil's hard currency reserves have plummeted to $52
billion, a nine-month low, from around $70 billion at the
beginning of August as the economic crisis in Russia shattered
investor confidence in emerging markets around the world.
Foreign currency reserves are Brazil's main defense against
a speculative attack on the real, widely considered overvalued
by 10 percent or more.
Economists said Brazil was not out of the woods yet, adding
that an international rescue package, tougher fiscal measures
or a combination of both were needed to stave off the threat of
a collapse in Latin America's largest economy.
Markets speculated Friday that the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) was preparing to step in with a regional assistance
package for Latin America, but Brazil's Finance Ministry
dismissed rumors of an IMF deal as "pure speculation."
IMF First Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer said the
institution was prepared to assist Brazil but had not been
asked to help yet.
"If we got a package, we'd see a lot of bounce," ABN Amro
Latin American strategist John Mullin said. "However, it only
buys them some time. They have to address the fundamentals in a
very convincing way to really turn them around."
President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, stung by a lukewarm
reaction to budget cuts announced this week, was expected to
postpone any additional fiscal measures until after the Oct. 4
general elections, which he is widely expected to win.
Whether nervous investors can wait that long is uncertain,
analysts said.
"In terms of assuaging international investors, (fiscal
reform) really needs to happen now," said Joe Petry, chief
economist for Latin America at Citicorp Securities in New York.
"The international market has really grown impatient."
While soothing frayed investor nerves, the latest rate hike
-- coming after a more modest one last Friday -- has the
unwelcome side-effect of sending debt financing costs higher.
Analysts estimated interest payments on domestic debt would
rise by 3.75 billion reals ($3.18 billion) a month after the
latest rate hike, effectively erasing any benefit from budget
cuts announced this week.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:35:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Spain's Santander Won't Bid For Brazil's
Bemge Bank

Dow Jones Newswires

SAO PAULO -- Spain's Banco Santander SA (STD) said Friday it has
decided not to bid for Brazilian state bank Banco do Estado de Minas
Gerais SA (Bemge), to be sold in an auction on Monday.

A Santander spokeswoman said the bank made its decision Friday on
account of the "instability of the international situation."

She said the decision isn't related to worries about Brazil's economy.

Banco Santander has already bought controlling stakes in two
medium-sized Brazilian banks, Banco Geral do Comercio and Banco
Noroeste.

The state government of Minas Gerais will sell an 89% stake of Bemge at
a minimum price of 346.2 million reals (BRL) ($1=BRL1.17) in a
closed-envelope auction in the state capital of Belo Horizonte.

Of the six banks pre-registered to participate, only three remain in the
running - Banco Bradesco SA (E.BBR), Banco Itau SA (E.BIT) and
Banco Bozano Simonsen, all from Brazil. The Netherlands' ABN-Amro
NV (N.AMB) and Spain's Banco Bilbao Vizcaya SA (BBV) had already
announced their decisions to not bid for Bemge.

-By Mary Milliken; (55-11) 813-1988; mmilliken@ap.org



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:36:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Fed McDonough:Investors To Look At
Emerging Mkts Separately

Dow Jones Newswires

NEW YORK -- New York Federal Reserve Bank President William
McDonough said Friday that investors should look at each emerging
market separately and evaluate the country's credit risks and opportunities.

Without commenting on any individual countries, McDonough urged
investors not to treat every emerging market as if they were equal.

"Investors are looking at all emerging markets as if they were equal,"
McDonough said.

He added that it is "a not very rational conclusion" that investors who have
exposure in one emerging market that they are concerned about should
escape from all emerging market countries.

"To act if all emerging markets are equal is a very bad basis of judgment,"
he said.

McDonough refused to comment on whether the Fed and the U.S.
Treasury are considering a stabilization package for Brazil in light of the
country's effort to defend its currency, the real, and ward off additional
capital flight.

McDonough, who spoke to reporters at the Schomburg Center for
Research in Black Culture where he was attending a business excellence
award, said that the most important thing the Fed could do to help the
world economy is to continue a sound monetary policy for the U.S.

"The U.S. is the leading world economy, and a growing well-balanced
American economy is not only in the interest of the American people, but
in the interest of all countries and is the single greatest contribution the Fed
can make to markets being stable," McDonough said.

He added that the U.S. economy in the first half of the year was "quite
strong" and the Fed has "every reason to believe" that economic growth
will continue.

He said the U.S. economy has a balance between strong elements of
growth, such as consumer, investment, and construction spending, and a
drag from the net export sector.

"We have a very fine balance between a push toward strong economic
growth from domestic sources and a brake on economic growth coming
from the situation abroad through its effects on American exports," he said.

He said the Fed has to follow this balance very closely.



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:41:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
SMARTMONEY ONLINE: Market Digest

By KARYN MCCORMACK
Dow Jones Newswires

SmartMoney Interactive

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Don't be fooled by a one day rally.
Technology stocks bailed the market out Friday from two days of heavy
selling, but many market watchers say that the troubles overseas and
political uncertainty here will continue to drive the market lower. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average jumped as much as 201 points, ending the day
up 179.96 points, or 2.36%, at 7795.5. For the week, the Dow was up
155.25 points, kicked off by Tuesday's 380-point jump inspired by
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. Since its high on July 17, the
blue chip index has fallen 16.5%.

Positive earnings disclosures from many leading technology companies
sparked the Nasdaq index 56.32 points higher to 1641.65 for a 3.55%
gain. The index has declined 18.5% from its high in July.

"The news of an increase in PC demand is driving the market today," says
trader Art Hogan at Jefferies & Co. Hogan thinks the Nasdaq is
bottoming, given that Intel and Dell are reporting an increase in demand.
That has investors looking for bargains. "The buyers are ready to come
back in," says Hogan, noting that AMG Data Services" report Friday that
investors put $1.44 billion in new cash into equity mutual funds in the week
ending Wednesday, after paring back in the prior week.

Investors may also get more relief from Greenspan next week. The Fed
chairman and investor George Soros are scheduled to speak Tuesday to
the House Banking Committee in Washington about the global economic
turmoil. In addition, a few officials from the Federal Reserve have
scheduled speeches next week, which may give investors some more
insight on whether the Fed will lower rates at its next meeting.

In the meantime, investors will get a heavy flow of economic reports next
week. "Some of the data will show that the overseas turmoil has washed
closer to U.S. shores," says economist Harvinder Kalirai at I.D.E.A.

Here's a rundown on what to expect:

Tuesday, Sept. 15

Retail Sales. Kalirai expects sales (excluding autos) to fall 0.1%, indicating
that consumer spending continues to wane.

Import Prices. This report will probably be weak as well, given that prices
for commodities have fallen. He sees import prices down 0.4%.

Thursday, Sept. 17

Consumer Price Index. Economists are expecting a flat CPI for August,
given the soft producer price index report Friday, Kalirai says.

Trade Balance. Kalirai believes the trade balance report for July will show
a record trade deficit of $16 billion, as foreign countries cont inue to hold
off purchases of U.S. goods.

Philadelphia Fed Survey. This report is the first indication of how
manufacturing is faring in September. He sees the index falling to eight
from 13.3 in August.

Friday, September 18

Housing Starts. Kalirai forecasts a slight decline in the housing report from
1.72 million to 1.65 million, but says that the housing market still remains
robust.

Perhaps the most important indicator of all right now will be third-quarter
earnings. A few companies have a lready disclosed how the economic
slowdown is affecting earnings in the current quarter, and more warnings
are expected. "There's uncertainty surrounding Clinton and events
overseas are important, but it all boils down to corporate profits," says
Charles Carlson, who pens the Dow Theory Forecasts newsletter.

So what should you do? Be patient and don't chase short-lived rebounds,
advises Carlson, who turned bearish in early August. Instead, he
recommends investing a small amount of money regularly int o more
defensive stocks.

Carlson favors the shares of BellSouth (BLS), Merck (MRK), Abbott
Laboratories (ABT) and FDX (FDX).

Of course, investors probably won't be focusing on economic or earnings
minutiae this weekend. After all, given a choice between your mutual fund
statement and the summary of the Starr Report, which one would you
choose?

Tech Leaders

The stock market rallied this morning after yet another apology from
President Clinton. But tech companies were trading higher for le ss cosmic
re asons. In a speech early Friday, Dell Computer CEO Michael Dell said
that the company's third-quarter sales are strong, despite the economic
troubles overseas. "The third quarter is going great," Dell told reporters in
Dallas.

Analysts will continue to raise their estimates for Intel following the
chipmaker's upbeat sales forecast for the third quarter.

According to First Call, analysts currently expect Intel to earn 73 cents a
share in the current quarter, compared to 88 cents a shar e a year ago.
For the year, analysts see the company earning $3.03 a share, down from
$3.87 in 1997. On Friday, Gruntal & Co. raised its earnings per share
estimate on Intel to $3.09 from $3.03 for 1998. Warburg Dillon Read
upgraded the shares of the company to Buy from Hold.

Following Oracle's better-than-expected earnings report, Merrill Lynch
upgraded the shares to near-term Buy from Accumulate.

Prudential Securities also raised its rating on Oracle to Strong Buy from
Accumulate. It's not as thou gh Oracle's business is suddenly on fire,
however.

"Better-than-expected" in this case, and for many other tech companies
including Intel, means better than sharply reduced earnings expectations.

For many companies, earnings growth will slow this year.

Adobe Systems

Here's another case of diminished expectations. The maker of graphics
software reported earnings late Thursday that were two cents higher than
analysts were expecting. But analysts had lowered estimates after Adobe
warned on Aug. 11 that earnings would fall short of forecasts. Adobe said
that fiscal third quarter earnings fell 49% to 37 cents a share from a year
ago. Revenue fell 3% to $222.9 million from a year ago, which was in the
middle of the company's forecast.

The company blamed its sales decline on the problems in Japan.

But with the help of new products and cost controls, the company said
that it should be able to generate annual revenue growth of 15% and
operating margins of 25%.

In response, CIBC Oppenheim er raised its rating on Adobe shares to
Buy from Hold.

American Express

The shares of the financial services provider rebounded after the company
said that the problems in emerging markets will modestly hurt earnings. In
a press release, American Express said that it still expects earnings to
increase 12% to 15% a year and revenue to rise 8%. The company also
said it is targeting a return on equity of 18% to 20% over the next few
years. The company led the Dow Jones Industrial Average higher on
Friday.

General Electric

The largest company in the world tried to calm investors" worries about
the economic troubles overseas Friday by saying that third-quarter
earnings should come in on target with analysts" forecast of 69 cents a
share. GE, a conglomerate that makes appliances and owns the NBC
network, expects revenue for the quarter to increase 15% to 20% from a
year ago.

While GE said it is facing increased competition from Whirlpool (WHR)
and Maytag (MYG) in its appliance business, its jet engine, medical
scanner and GE Capital finance units are doing well.

Lehman Brothers

Shares of the brokerage company plunged early Friday amid rumors that
the company could file for bankruptcy protection because of huge
derivative losses in emerging markets. But Lehman Brothers denied the
rumor and the shares rebounded slightly.

Pier 1 Imports

The home furnishings retailer reported earnings that were on target with
analysts' expectations, but sales were disappointing. Pier 1 said that fiscal
second-quarter earnings fell 15% to 17 cents a share from a year ago.

Sales rose 9.1% to $281.5 million from the same quarter in 1997. In a
press release, the company said that it is on track to open 65 new stores
and remodel more than 100 stores by February 1999.

Adams Harkness lowered its rating on Pier 1 shares to Attractive from
Buy because sales were less than the company's forecast and could be
hurt in the third quarter by Pier 1's continuing re modeling plan. The firm
trimmed its earnings per share estimates to 71 cents from 76 cents in fiscal
year 1999 and to 88 cents from 90 cents in fiscal year 2000.

Suiza Foods

The dairy products maker said it will acquire Broughton Foods (MILK), a
milk products maker and distributor, for $123 million. The terms of the
deal involve Suiza Foods paying $19 a share for Broughton Food and
assuming $13 million in debt. Suiza Foods said that the acquisition will
strengthen its position in the Mid western and Southern regions of the U.S.
The deal is subject to the customary regulatory approvals.

Telebras

Shares of the Brazilian phone company rebounded in response to the rally
in the U.S. and Latin American markets. A Brazilian news agency
reported Friday that the 12 spinoffs of Telebras will trade in Brazilian
exchanges before they list on the New York Stock Exchange. The plan
originally called for the units to trade on both exchanges at the same time.

For a list of other SmartMoney stocks on the move in today's market, see
the SmartMoney Gainers & Losers page.

For more information and analysis of companies and mutual funds, visit
SmartMoney Interactive at smartmoney.com



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:46:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Lethal Stage

Here it comes, says David Hale

Review1 | Preview2

Follow-Up: Brave New World

Few economists grasped the implications of the economic bust in Asia as
quickly or surely as Zurich Insurance's David Hale. Last December, he was
right on the money when he stated in a Barron's interview that the collapse of
Asian currency and stock values would inevitably mutate into a full-bore
economic crisis in the region ("This Is Different3," Dec. 22, 1997). Nor was
Hale any more sanguine in an article in the July 27 issue of Barron's ("No
Relief4"). He saw the so-called Asian contagion as intensifying and spreading
over the globe.

We decided to put in a follow-up call to Hale late last week in light of the
recent intensification of global financial problems in the wake of the Russian
ruble devaluation and debt default. Hale, indeed, sees the latest mishap, which
has sent currency values and stock markets crashing as far away from Russia
as Brazil, as the latest and most lethal stage of an economic drama that began
innocently enough a year ago in July with the collapse of the Thai currency, the
baht. First, of course, the economic crisis in Asia led to reduced demand in
world commodities markets, which, in turn, has blighted the trade balances and
therefore the currencies of key commodity-producing nations like Australia,
Canada, New Zealand, Norway and, of course, Russia.

In Hale's view, last month's ruble
devaluation and concomitant debt
default were the most ominous
developments. For the moves
shattered several key illusions
held by international bankers and
investors about emerging
markets. For one thing, Russia
has called into question the very
credibility of the International
Monetary Fund and, by
implication, the U.S. in being able
to fashion effective bailout
programs. Clearly if the IMF and
U.S. Treasury failed to arrest the
downward spiral of financial
events in Russia -- the country
supposedly deemed too nuclear
to go bust -- what assurance could investors and lenders have of a modicum of
asset protection in other precincts of the emerging and developing world?

Likewise, says Hale, Russia shocked the international financial community by
its almost unprecedented willingness to default on its domestic debt. "Normally
countries, when they take the fateful step of debt default, only welsh on their
foreign currency debt," he averred. "That's because domestic debt can always
be paid back with a cheapened currency merely by running the printing
presses. But Russia instead resorted to de facto devaluation and, in the
process, destroyed their banking system along with their standing with the
international financial community. For while hedge funds and other international
investors own some $10 billion of the ruble debt, the Russian banks hold some
$22 billion of it. The move was totally mad."

He sees no early solution to the Russian crisis even with a weakened Yeltsin
finally succeeding in nominating a prime minister, Yevgeny Primakov, who's
acceptable to the Russian Duma after two false starts. The stabilization of the
ruble will depend on a concerted international effort, which isn't likely to come
for some months. Clinton, at the moment, is obviously preoccupied with
surviving the Lewinsky scandals. In the meantime, taxes will go uncollected and
the ruble will continue to fall and destroy domestic purchasing power.

According to Hale, the global ripple effect of the ruble crisis is even graver. By
casting doubt on the integrity of all emerging and developing debt, it has
triggered a global margin call and credit crunch. As a result, interest rates have
soared in places like Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela, raising the specter of
recession in 1999 in a continent which is a major trading partner of the U.S.
"Brazil alone has suffered a quintupling in their interest rates to nearly 50% as a
result of Russia, which has obviously hit the Brazilian economy like a tornado,"
Hale observed. "The currency and debt of any country with budget or current
account deficits is now vulnerable to attack by both hedge funds and worried
businessmen trying to convert funds into safer currencies. Likewise, a banking
crisis impends in much of the developed world because of the heavy exposure
of banks in Japan, Germany, the U.K. and France to emerging-market debt
with as much as 100% of their systemwide bank capital on the line."

Other signs of current international financial distress abound. Intelligence
sources tell Hale that Chinese authorities have already expended nearly half of
their $150 billion in foreign currency reserves to defend the Hong Kong dollar
peg against speculative attack. That's in addition to the estimated $15-$20
billion spent in recent interventions into the Hong Kong stock market in the
attempt to punish international short-sellers banking on the deleterious effect
that rising interest rates would continue to have on stock prices. To little avail,
however.

Nor are things going well in the rest of Asia, in Hale's opinion. The Obuchi
government in Japan is proving as feckless as most observers feared. Its key
bank-rescue bill remains bottled up in the upper house of the Japanese
parliament while the country's financial health deteriorates further. Fears are
beginning to surface over the very ability of major Japanese banks to roll over
their certificates of deposit in light of their exposure to deteriorating domestic
and foreign loan portfolios. Several recent bankruptcy filings by Japanese
corporations have only fanned these fears.

Hale also claims that the corporate restructuring of Korea is now foundering.
Indonesia remains mired in what he describes as a "terrible" recession, despite
a recent rally in the rupiah. No political solution to the country's economic
woes is likely until scheduled national elections next year. A new bankruptcy
law may ultimately help Thailand's recovery, but the process will take years.

Malaysia's recent decision to institute draconian capital or exchange controls
constitutes a huge risk in Hale's estimation. Effectively, foreign investors in
Malaysian stocks and enterprises will be unable to get their assets out of the
country for at least a year. Among other things, exchange controls typically
lead to a misallocation of capital and corruption. Some controls may make
sense, he concedes, to prevent banks' short-term dollar lending from
destabilizing developing economies by the institutions levering up borrowers
and then abandoning them at the first sign of trouble. But Hale feels equity
investors shouldn't be similarly hamstrung. Highly placed sources in Brazil tell
him that selective exchange controls may be imposed shortly.

As a result of all these developments, Hale is less than upbeat about the
prospects for the U.S. stock market. Yet he sees no impending crash. Lower
interest rates led by a drop in the U.S. long bond to 5% should prevent any
free fall in stocks. Moreover, he expects the Fed to "confirm" this drop in long
rates by lowering short-term rates in the not too distant future. Yet these
moves won't deter continued erosion in U.S. stock prices.

Jonathan R. Laing

Brave New World

A sea of troubles clobbers global satellite-phone stocks

Better put off your plans to take a cell phone on your next trip to the middle of
nowhere. The dream of being able to reach out and touch someone from
anyplace on the planet has launched a myriad of multi-billion-dollar satellite
projects ("Crowded Skies5," June 15). But recent events involving the two
leaders in the field, Globalstar and Iridium, illustrate the immense risks in
these massive projects.

Iridium, which is closer than any of its rivals to going live with global mobile
telephone, saw its stock price close at 35 3/8 Friday -- up 2 3/4 on the week
but still well below the $72 it fetched in May -- and its bonds go into free fall.
The company postponed until November 1 its planned September 23 startup
of its system. Standard & Poor's revised its outlook on Iridium debt to
"negative" from "stable," and said further delays could lead to ratings
downgrades. Although Iridium now has 79 satellites in the sky, seven of them
have failed and another is having problems. Its supplier Kyocera, which is
making handsets for the service, has been running behind schedule because of
delays in completing some key software. Iridium said it also needs extra time
for testing the system.

As for Globalstar, Iridium's top
rival, last week a Ukrainian
Zenit rocket launched from
Kazakhstan with the first 12 of
the network's planned 48
satellites failed a few minutes
after liftoff and had to be
destroyed, sprinkling Siberia
with pieces of rocket and
satellite debris. It was the
eighth time in 31 launches that
a Zenit has been blown to bits.
Globalstar shares last week
plunged by 6 7/16, to 10 1/4,
compared with about $37 in March. Stock in Loral, which built the satellites
and holds a 42% stake in Globalstar, fell by two points on the week, to 13
7/8; QualComm, which helped develop the project, rose by 2 15/16, to 45
1/2 .

In fact, the entire satellite industry has big headaches, technical and otherwise.
Multimillion-dollar satellites have been destroyed in several launch accidents,
and the industry has been hurt, too, by political problems. First, Loral was
accused of improperly providing sensitive information to China. Not long after,
the State Department suspended SeaLaunch, a Boeing-led joint venture to
launch rockets from floating platforms in the ocean, citing concerns about
information passed from Boeing to its Russian and Ukrainian partners.

Another company hurt by these problems is ICO Global Communications. The
third big player in the telephone space race, which came public last month at
$12, last week fell by 7/32, to 8 13/16. ICO, it seems, has been planning to
launch three of its planned 12 satellites from SeaLaunch platforms using Zenit
rockets.

Eric J. Savitz



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/12/1998 3:59:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Despite Greenspan's Hints and
Japan's Trim, a Global Round of
Coordinated Rate Cuts Is
Unlikely

By WILLIAM PESEK JR.

Who says central banking lacks intrigue? Conspiracy
theorists are working overtime, spinning tales of a global
plot of interest-rate cuts. A concerted monetary easing
by Group of Seven central banks, the theory goes, is on
tap to help restore calm to markets and economies from
Japan to Brazil.

It may not have the makings of an Oliver Stone film, but
the story line is preoccupying economists around the
world. The plot began with Alan Greenspan's hint that
the Federal Reserve would consider cutting rates if the
"oasis of prosperity" that the U.S. currently represents
becomes an island of sluggish growth. It thickened when
the Bank of Japan surprised the world with an
interest-rate cut.

Admittedly, things look a bit suspicious. Officials in
Tokyo acted just days after Greenspan opened the door
to U.S. rate cuts, comments delivered only minutes
before the Fed chairman was to join Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin and Japanese Finance Minister Kiichi
Miyazawa for dinner. Then, on the same day Japan
announced a 25-basis-point cut in its overnight call
money rate to 0.25%, some key European economies --
including France and Italy -- revised downward their
growth forecasts because of turmoil in Russia and Asia.
Next, the Bank of England resisted the urge to raise
rates. And finally, the head of the European Central
Bank said he "would be concerned" about further
declines in the dollar.

So with G-7
deputies meeting
in London on
Monday, there's
rampant
speculation that
the world's
richest nations are
on the verge of a
major
coordinated effort
to reverse Japan's
fortunes through
public
declarations on
the scale of the 1985 Plaza Accord. No matter how
things look, however, coordinated rate cuts may not be
on the near-term horizon.

It's impossible to rule out some kind of joint rate action
should the global financial system deteriorate further.
And the issue is likely to be raised at Monday's G-7
confab. But for now, U.S. monetary officials see Japan's
easing as a move to counter mounting deflationary
pressures in Japan, not the start of a global trend. It will
also help weaker banks fund themselves more easily at
the midpoint of their fiscal year on September 30.

There are a few reasons why coordinated rate cuts
aren't imminent, however. First, some G-7 countries
aren't in a position to cut rates. Canada has boosted
rates to resuscitate its moribund currency, while a
number of European countries -- including Germany and
France -- are grappling with efforts at economic
convergence ahead of next year's move to a single
currency; rate cuts may only destabilize things. And
continued growth in the U.K. makes a rate cut unlikely
there.

Second, considerable skepticism remains in Washington
and elsewhere about Japan's commitment to rapid and
strenuous reform. After all, wasn't the BOJ's rate cut a
clear admission of desperation? The message was that
fiscal and other measures to resolve Japan's financial
crisis are failing. And even though the central bank has
cut rates again, Tokyo remains in a liquidity trap; there
are still more sources of money than demand or uses for
it. "If Japan couldn't get borrowers to step up with its
overnight call rate at 0.50%, how much difference will
0.25% make?" asks John Queen of Hotchkis & Wiley.

And third, the
world has
changed since
policy makers
emerged from
New York's
Plaza Hotel 13
years ago with
plans to fix the
global economy.
Merely
jawboning the
financial markets
and following up
such declarations
with modest, gradualistic quarter-point rate cuts won't
do the trick. In today's rapid-fire markets, where
information and financial transactions flow from New
York to Hong Kong with the speed of light, only bold
and lasting policies will save the day, not stopgap
measures.

All eyes, of course, are on the Fed here. You can't have
coordinated rate cuts unless the world's most influential
central bank leads the campaign. And for now, the Fed
seems more willing to talk about rate cuts than to
actually pump new liquidity into the U.S. economy.
While inflation remains benign -- a point backed up by
the 0.4% drop in August producer prices -- the Fed
probably is on hold until consumer spending slows.

We'll know more Wednesday, when Greenspan appears
before the House Banking Committee to offer fresh
views on the global financial crisis and perhaps clarify
recent ones. From Greenspan's recent comments, we
know the Fed assumed a symmetrical stance on policy in
August. And barring additional financial meltdowns in the
U.S. or elsewhere, it's more likely the Federal Open
Market Committee would shift to an easing bias when
members meet September 29 rather than actually cutting
rates.

The bond market isn't wasting any time. It's pricing in a
series of rate cuts, with yields across the Treasury
maturity spectrum grinding to historical lows. The
two-year note yield ended last week at 4.669% after
hitting its lowest level in more than four years during the
week. The 10-year note ended the week at 4.820%, the
lowest level since the late 1960s. And the 30-year bond
yield is steadily ratcheting lower, finishing the week at
5.224%, down from 5.282% a week earlier.

Is the bond market getting ahead of itself in pricing in an
easing? Increasingly, many observers say no. "I don't
think central banks, the Fed included, appreciate just
how accommodative they're going to have to be," says
Bridgewater Associates' Ray Dalio. Economists in
Merrill Lynch's fixed-income research department agree.
While senior economist Mary Dennis and her colleagues
have long thought the Fed would tighten this year, Latin
America's troubles and the global chaos have changed
their minds.

To the comfort of
many,
Greenspan, in his
market-shaking
speech to
students at the
University of
California-Berkeley,
has stepped up
to fill the global
leadership
vacuum. And his
timing couldn't be
better. Latin
America's
sudden slide into financial chaos, coming while officials in
Ottawa try to pump life into the Canadian dollar, has
brought the global turmoil to the Americas more rapidly
than economists expected. Indeed, Lehman Brothers'
move to deny rumors the firm was insolvent due to its
emerging-markets exposure resonated on Wall Street.

The Sao Paulo Stock Exchange's Bovespa Index fell
15.8% and the country's foreign exchange markets
posted a net outflow of $1.8 billion in a single day last
week, prompting the Brazilian central bank to boost the
interest rate at which it lends to banks to 49.75% from
29.75%. The ferocity of Brazil's selloff underscored the
depth of the turmoil engulfing Latin America's largest
economy since the year-old Asian financial crisis turned
investors' attention to Brazil's expanding fiscal deficit and
worrisome current-account balance. Increasingly, it
seems a rapid response from the International Monetary
Fund and the U.S. is needed if Brazil's plunging real is to
stabilize. But given the IMF's finances and Washington's
focus on things Monica, action may not come soon
enough.

Things in the good old U.S. of A. are brighter, but not
much. President Clinton's Monica Lewinsky troubles
came to a head as Kenneth Starr's report was published
on the Internet. And even with U.S. bond yields falling,
the dollar -- partially in response to Clinton's problems
-- continues to take its lumps; it ended the week at
130.85 yen and 1.6890 marks, compared with 133.80
and 1.7305 a week earlier.

With a variety of crises spanning the globe, the U.S. is
no longer immune to their economic fallout. Consider
that the U.S. current-account trade deficit hit a record
$56.53 billion in the second quarter. Add in other
ingredients like capital fleeing the stock market, Clinton's
political troubles, and investors being faced with margin
calls, and you have a recipe for continued downward
pressure on the greenback. Some oasis of prosperity.



To: md1derful who wrote (7932)9/13/1998 1:22:00 AM
From: Bulls  Respond to of 22640
 
LOL