Don-
An interesting article in the NY Post. Does this signal a bottom in the Japanese economy?
nypostonline.com JAPAN GETS READY, OUR TURN TO WORRY By JOHN DIZARD
THE biggest financial and economic news of the year so far came last Tuesday, hardly noticed by the media. On that day the Japanese bank regulatory authorities issued a set of tough, even brutal guidelines for the banks on the loan-loss reserves that have to be taken against bad loans. They came as a big shock to the Japanese banks. But investors seemed to like the news and bid up the Japanese bank stocks, which were the reason for the Nikkei's rally this week. Since the beginning of the Japanese depression, the banks have been able to keep their zombie assets on the books long after their real value has collapsed. Americans, both on Wall Street and in the government, have gotten their moralistic jollies lecturing the Japanese about how they have to face reality, come clean, take the hit, just like we did after our coke-and-debt fueled Decade of Greed. History tells us that the Japanese nation alternates between prolonged dithering and indecision and powerful, fully coordinated drives to well-defined goals. For the past several years, the Japanese have wandered aimlessly trying to agree on what to have for lunch. Now they seem to have decided that they're going to be General Grant's army on the way to Richmond. The interesting question for us, of course, is what is in this for us? Americans, I mean, and Wall Street people in particular? There will be a lot of assets priced to sell in Japan. So the value-investing community will at last have something to do there. And our financial markets will once again have the Japanese economy as a serious competitor for the world's spare cash. The losses the Japanese are going to take are rough. In the U.S., for example, a category-three defaulted loan requires the bank to set aside reserves equal to 50 percent of its value. From now on, in Japan the bank will have to set aside reserves equal to 70 percent of the face value for an equivalent asset. And it's not just a couple of overextended oil wildcatters and strip-mall developers we're talking about here. The official estimates for the Japanese bank's bad loans are around $600 billion for the top 17 banks and $800 billion for the banking system as whole. If the economy continues to sink for much longer, the estimates go up to $1 trillion. One trillion dollars. I seem to recall getting a letter from Publishers Clearing House saying I could already have won that much. To put it in some perspective, $1 trillion is the most commonly accepted number for how much more the Japanese have - net - lent or invested in the rest of the world. In other words, all those VCRs and Toyotas and Hello Kitty toys, all the empty office towers in Houston and Bangkok, assembly plants in Tennessee - they're all going to pay off the bad judgments of their financial managers. Most people don't like to admit to making mistakes like that. Not even universal geniuses such as we have in the U.S. Treasury's international staff who have been generously devoting their advice to the Japanese over the years. Let's give the Japanese, specifically the Bank of Japan, credit for picking up the shovels to clean out the stables. For the moment, though activity in the Japanese economy is still sinking fast. Housing starts are the worst since 1984, employment is still falling, retail sales look like a summer resort's in November and price deflation - crippling for borrowers - is threatening to continue. But the forces of darkness - represented by the sinister Ministry of Finance and the old postwar business establishment - are in retreat. It's hard to understand how important bank write-offs and loan-loss reserves are until you see the effect they can have on turning around a business. Back in 1990, I was in a small workout partnership that specialized in reorganizing private companies in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut. We were looking at taking over a 200-unit convenience-store-chain in Jersey that couldn't make the payments on its bank loan. We offered to put up some new equity, found a successful c-store-chain owner willing to be the operator and went to the bank that held the paper to get it to take the needed 40 percent haircut on the loan. The bank officer who'd made it stonewalled taking the loss. The reason, of course, was that the bank didn't have the capital to take a write-off, and it would mean his job. The result? We walked away, poorer for our time and the lawyer's fees. The bank was forcibly taken over, much to our delight, the stores folded, the loan was a write-off and, I hope, the loan officer became a store clerk himself. The point is, recognizing a loss makes it a lot easier to get restarted. Now the Japanese people - not just a few commentators - have recognized that. The Japanese government, or rather, its more progressive faction, is saying that it will chip in new bank capital - subsidized by the taxpayer, of course - to make sure the system stays in place after the write-offs are taken. It's too early to finish the process by the Japanese year-end in March, but the bank crisis should be over by, say, April of 2000. *Please send e-mail to dizard@nypost.com MORE BUSINESS NEWS Copyright (c) 1998, N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of the New York Post is prohibited |