Friday 23 January 2009

What's really wrong with Sterling?



What's really wrong with Sterling?
The pound is suffering its worst ever fall in value. Why is it happening and what are the implications? Edmund Conway, Economics Editor, has the answers

Last Updated: 10:13PM GMT 22 Jan 2009

Taking a pounding: UK currency is in crisis
How bad is this fall in the pound? In a word: hideous.

Measured against a basket of other currencies – the best way in this globalised era to test a currency's strength – the pound has fallen in the past year by around a quarter.
This is more than any previous devaluation in the past century – greater even than in 1931, when, under Ramsay MacDonald, the UK was forced to abandon the gold standard and saw the pound plummet by more than 24 per cent against the dollar. Greater than after Black Wednesday and the abandonment of the Exchange Rate Mechanism; worse than in 1967, when Harold Wilson was forced to make an extraordinary televised statement to the nation claiming that the "pound in your pocket" would not be worth any less after his devaluation.
As anyone who has been overseas recently will know, it has fallen from over $2 against the dollar to under $1.40. This week it touched the lowest level since the Plaza Accord of 1985 – in which year the pound very nearly went to parity against the US currency. Against the euro, the pound has slid from €1.35 to just above €1 in the past year.
In practice this means that anyone travelling to the Continent will find it tough to get anything more than a euro for every pound they want exchanged, after the bureau de change has taken its cut and commission.
For Gordon Brown, who mocked the Conservatives in 1992, it is acutely embarrassing. Back then, he said: "A weak currency arises from a weak economy which in turn is the result of a weak Government." This time he is staying conspicuously quiet about the whole thing.

But why is sterling sliding?

In large part because it reflects Britain's economic prospects. The UK is facing a nasty recession – one that is likely to be as bad as any experienced by the Western world. House prices are falling at the fastest ratesince the 1930s, unemployment is on the rise and will soon climb beyond two million, consumer spending is sliding.
In such circumstances, investors are naturally likely to withdraw their money from the UK. On the one hand, they will sell sterling shares and investments since they are likely to fall in value as a result of the recession. On the other, those who invest their cash in the UK will pull it out of the country, since the Bank of England is cutting interest rates as a response to the slump. Any money in sterling in a UK bank account is earning very little interest, so overseas investors calculate they might as well take it elsewhere.

How worried ought we to be?

If the above was all that was happening, not unduly. In a world of floating exchange rates, the falling pound is not merely a symptom of the disease (the recession) but its cure. All else being equal, a weak pound should boost the exports of British companies, since it makes their products cheaper than those of their overseas rivals.
Machinery produced in the north of England is fast becoming cheaper than that produced in eastern Europe. And this goes not just for visible trade – actual physical goods – but for invisible trades such as legal or financial services.
So, although Britain's manufacturing sector has shrunk significantly since the 1980s and 1990s, the comparative value of UK products should nevertheless help boost the economy. The same goes for tourism, which has already picked up significantly as foreigners come to the UK to pick up bargains. London's days as Europe's most expensive city are well behind it.
The problem, however, is that all else is not equal at the moment: the appetite abroad for exports of any type has dried up in a way never before experienced. From Europe to the Americas to Asia, trade has almost entirely seized up as the recession has turned global. And let's not mention financial and legal services – the appetite for which has evaporated.
In the 1990s and the 2000s, successive governments decided to focus the UK's economy on financial services. A decision was taken to put almost all our economic eggs in one basket. Unfortunately, that basket has come crashing to the ground.

So is this now a full-blown sterling crisis?

Until recently, it wasn't a crisis. There are, broadly speaking, two types of devaluation – one benign, the other far less so. The good one is much as described above – a competitive devaluation in the pound which, over time, provides a cure. After the pound fell in 1992, it ushered in years of recovery and then prosperity for the economy.
The bad version is a full-scale crisis – a run on the pound. It is a vote of no-confidence in a country's economic policies, and occurs when investors start pulling their cash out of the UK not because of a temporary period of recession but because they are worried about the direction the economy is taking (over years and decades rather than months).
In the months up until this week it was possible to argue that this represented a competitive devaluation, and would be a boon for exporters. All of that changed on Monday. Following Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling's announcement of a second bail-out package for struggling banks, the pound suffered what can be described as a minor run. Investors took fright that the UK was drawing closer to insolvency, and as a response sold off their stocks of government debt.
It is difficult to overstate the significance of this. Britain's power and prosperity since the earliest days of the Union have been founded on its reputation for being a good risk.
Whereas other countries, such as Argentina and Russia, have occasionally defaulted on their debts, Britain's government has always been among the best borrowers in the world. For the first time in decades this is being questioned.
The rumour around the market this week was that Standard & Poor's, a ratings agency which tells traders what has and does not have the stamp of approval, was set to downgrade Britain's government sovereign debt. The agency has since denied this, but the UK fulfils many of the criteria for such a humiliating decision.

Does it really matter if Britain's creditworthiness comes under question?

Yes – immensely. Britain has a large current account deficit – of about £7.7 billion. This means we, as a nation, spend more money than we generate each year. This is no problem while we can borrow the difference, but that £7.7 billion chunk has to come from overseas investors. Should they stop lending to the UK, Britons would face a sudden, painful jolt and their living standards would fall even faster and more painfully than they are at the moment.
The Government would have to seek assistance from the International Monetary Fund which would, most likely, dole out a baleful dose of economic medicine – higher interest rates, lower government spending and immediate austerity.
Although, in the long run, Britain does need to borrow less and save more, such an adjustment should ideally take place over years, not weeks.

Isn't this all really the fault of the bankers as well as the Government?

Indeed it is. Now that the majority of the banking system is effectively nationalised (and the Government has promised to insure the nastiest debts of the remaining private banks) the taxpayer is effectively standing behind another massive liability. The banking system has about $4.4 trillion of foreign debts, and most analysts predict that around £200 billion of these could default.
What scared investors this week was the sudden realisation that the Government, rather than the banks, will have to pay the bill. The UK, unlike Iceland, does not have the luxury of being able to default on those foreign debts (remember the fracas when Britons faced losing their savings in Icelandic banks?)
Were the UK to do the same as Iceland, the size of Britain's liabilities are such that it would trigger an international panic and financial meltdown worse than when Lehman Brothers collapsed last year.

This all sounds unremittingly gloomy. Is there any solution?

Mainly to hope that the economic medicine served up by the Bank of England and its fellow central banks does the trick. As long as house prices are falling and unemployment is rising, the liabilities of the Government will swell and the pound will remain weak. But when, eventually, the economic backdrop improves, so should the financial outlook, and, eventually, the pound.
However, there is little hope of returning to the heady days of a near-80p euro and a $2 pound. The pound was significantly stronger than it ought to have been over the previous decade. It is probably undervalued now, and if all goes well it should bounce back in the coming years.
However, everything now depends on trust: that trust will return to the beleaguered financial system; that investors will start to trust the Government again and that Britons trust that there will be life after the recession.


World crisis deepens as downturn bites in Asia

World crisis deepens as downturn bites in Asia

Grim economic news from China and Japan showed the global crisis hitting ever harder Thursday, burning Asia's champion exporters while data from the United States signalled more pain to come.
China's powerhouse economy slowed dramatically at the end of 2008, dragging growth of the world's third-largest economy to a seven-year low, official data showed, in a striking sign of the current downturn's strength and reach.
Japan meanwhile warned it was facing a two-year recession and announced new measures to repair battered credit markets after announcing a 35-percent plunge in exports in December.
"Exports tumbled so much that you cannot believe your eyes," said Naoki Murakami, chief economist at Monex Securities in Japan.
After breathtaking economic growth in recent decades, China had been widely tipped to ride out the world economic storm that has driven the world's biggest economies into recession.
But with the Asian giant now gravely suffering too, reporting just 6.8 percent growth in the last quarter of 2008, signs emerged on Thursday of a knock-on effect, with Australia warning of the impact on its own prospects.
"The Chinese boom that supercharged Australia's economy over the past five to seven years is receding rapidly," Australia's Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner told reporters.
South Korea said its economy was in the worst shape since the East Asian financial crisis a decade ago while Singapore announced a 13-billion-dollar (10-billion-euro) stimulus package and said it would tap its vast financial reserves for the first time.
US data released Thursday showed unemployment claims hit a 26-year high and housing construction fell to half-century lows, highlighting the depths of the recession facing the new administration of Barack Obama.
"The underlying trend in (jobless) claims is still upwards and we have no hope that the peak is anywhere near," said Ian Shepherdson, chief US economist at High Frequency Economics.
"The corporate sector is rolling over and we probably have not yet seen many job losses stemming from the sudden collapse in international trade."
On the industrial front, US software giant Microsoft said on Thursday it was cutting up to 5,000 jobs over the next 18 months due to "the further deterioration of global economic conditions."
Italy's national auto champion, Fiat, slashed its 2009 forecasts due to slumping demand and said it would not pay shareholders a 2008 dividend.
And in Helsinki Nokia, the world's leading mobile phone maker, reported a near 70 percent drop in its fourth-quarter net profit.
In Europe, meanwhile there were fresh signs of upheaval in the financial sector, where shares in troubled banks faced more pressure.
Belgian authorities moved to bail out lender KBC, providing up to 3.5 billion euros, and Germany was working on a new rescue package for its banks as last year's 480-billion-euro effort failed to get them lending again.
The financial crisis showed it had further to run as Portugal on Wednesday followed Spain and Greece in having its sovereign debt downgraded by the ratings agency Standard and Poor's.
Some fear such downgrades could increase strains in the 16-nation eurozone where investors are discriminating between weaker and stronger debtors, with powerhouse Germany paying less interest on its bonds than the rest of Europe.
US stocks swung lower Thursday after the jobless and construction figures and amid persistent worries on company earnings. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2.20 percent in early trade.
In Europe, London's FTSE 100 index closed down 0.19 percent. Paris fell 1.24 percent, while Frankfurt lost 0.98 percent.
Asian stocks rose Thursday in a technical bounce despite the miserable economic data.

http://news.my.msn.com/topstories/article.aspx?cp-documentid=2210110

US: More Pain Ahead

APLayoffs spike, housing tumbles; outlook worsens

Thursday January 22, 4:42 pm ET
By Jeannine Aversa, AP Economics Writer

Worse-than-expected reports on jobless claims, housing further dim outlook, challenge Obama

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The number of newly laid-off Americans filing jobless claims and the pace of home construction both posted worse-than-expected results in government data released Thursday, lending urgency to the economic recovery plan President Barack Obama and Congress are scrambling to advance.
The latest batch of economic news cemented fears that the recession, already in its second year, will drag on through much of 2009.
The reports "paint a bleak economic landscape ahead," said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services Group.
And the furious pace of layoffs continued Thursday, with Microsoft Corp. saying it will slash up to 5,000 jobs over the next 18 months. Chemical maker Huntsman Corp. will ax 1,175 jobs this year and will get rid of an additional 490 contractors. Those -- as well as other employers -- have seen customer demand wane and are cutting costs to survive the fallout.
"The corporate sector is rolling over, and we probably have not yet seen many job losses stemming from the sudden collapse in international trade," warned Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. "The labor market remains a disaster area."
Wall Street ended a volatile trading day sharply lower following the worse-than-expected economic data, concerns about the nation's banks and disappointing results from Microsoft. The Dow Jones industrial average lost more than 105 points.
On Capitol Hill, House Democrats rolled up their sleeves to nail down pieces of Obama's $825 billion stimulus package -- a blend of tax cuts and increased government spending that includes boosting unemployment benefits-- with the goal of a floor vote next week.
And the Senate Finance Committee cleared Obama's nomination of Timothy Geithner to be Treasury secretary -- despite what the nominee called "careless" and "avoidable" tax mistakes. The full Senate still must clear Geithner, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, before he can take office.
Already Geithner is helping shape the Obama administration's new plan to bust through the debilitating credit and financial crises that are aggravating the recession. The package -- likely to be unveiled in a few weeks-- may include a program to mop up bad mortgages and other toxic assets so banks would be in a better position to lend money more freely.
On the layoffs front, first-time applications for unemployment benefits jumped last week by 62,000 to 589,000, the Labor Department reported. That was much more than the 540,000 tally economists expected. It left claims matching a 26-year high reached four weeks ago, although the work force has grown by about half since then.
Part of the rise was blamed on a backlog of claims that piled up in recent weeks as several states experienced computer crashes from a crush of filings, a government analyst said.
The number of unemployed people continuing to draw jobless benefits soared by 97,000 to 4.6 million. That figure, too, was above analysts' expectations, and was up considerably from a year ago, when 2.7 million people were receiving such aid. The pickup shows that those out of work are having trouble finding a new job.
Some economists believe the number of people continuing to draw unemployment benefits could rise to 5.5 million -- possibly more -- this year even if a new stimulus package is enacted.
On top of the 4.6 million covered by the regular unemployment insurance program, another 2 million Americans requested benefits under an emergency extension authorized by Congress last year. But the 2 million figure is not seasonally adjusted and is volatile.
Obama's stimulus package -- which is running into Republican resistance -- includes plans to extend and boost unemployment benefits, give states $87 billion to deal with Medicaid shortfalls and help unemployed people retain health care. Tax credits for workers, tax cuts for businesses and money for public works projects, such as road and bridge construction, also are being put forward.
Meanwhile, the miserable state of the U.S. housing market was in full view Thursday, and the outlook remains dim.
The Commerce Department reported that new-home construction plunged 15.5 percent in December to an annual rate of 550,000 units, an all-time low, capping the worst year for builders on records dating back to 1959. Last month's performance was weaker than economists expected, and shattered the previous record low set in November.
"The extent of the decline was breathtaking," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economics Advisors. "Home builders were simply sitting around watching the grass grow, and conditions are not likely to change soon."
For all of last year, the number of housing units that builders broke ground on totaled just over 904,000, also a record low. That marked a huge 33.3 percent drop from the 1.355 million housing units started in 2007. The previous low was set in 1991.
The report also showed that applications for building permits -- considered a reliable sign of future activity -- sank to a rate of 549,000 in December, a 10.7 percent drop from the previous month.
Rising defaults, tighter lending standards and fear about the housing market's future have sidelined buyers, an absence felt acutely by homebuilders such as D.R. Horton Inc., Pulte Homes Inc. and Centex Corp.
The collapse of the once high-flying housing market has been devastating to the United States' economic health.
Its spreading fallout has contributed to big pullbacks by consumers and businesses alike, plunging the economy into a painful recession now in its second year.
The Obama administration wants to ramp up efforts to stem skyrocketing home foreclosures, which have dumped even more properties on an already crippled market.
The Federal Reserve has taken a number of extraordinary steps with the hope of providing some relief. It is buying certain types of mortgage securities and has slashed a key interest rate to a record low of between zero and 0.25 percent. To help brace the economy, the Fed is expected to hold rates at that level at its meeting next week and probably for the rest of this year.
In other housing-related news, rates on 30-year mortgages climbed above 5 percent this week, ending a five-week streak at record low levels. Average rates on 30-year fixed mortgages rose to 5.12 percent this week, from 4.96 percent last week, which was the lowest since Freddie Mac started its survey in April 1971, the mortgage giant reported.
Builders and economists are skeptical about the prospects of a housing turnaround. Unemployment last month hit a 16-year high of 7.2 percent and is expected to march upward this year -- a situation that can put stresses on existing home owners and make it less likely new buyers will stream into the market.
Against this backdrop, Patrick Newport, economist at IHS Global Insight, summed up the outlook: "More pain ahead."

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/090122/economy.html

Firing John Thain Should Be Ken Lewis's Last Act At Bank Of America (BAC)

Firing John Thain Should Be Ken Lewis's Last Act At Bank Of America (BAC)

Posted Jan 22, 2009 02:07pm EST by Henry Blodget in Newsmakers, Banking
Related: BAC, MER, ^DJI

From Clusterstock, Jan. 22, 2009:

Ken Lewis has now successfully focused some of the outrage about the destruction of Bank of America (BAC) on John Thain.
Thain was the one responsible for that $15 billion loss. Thain was the one who approved $15 billion of bailout-funded bonuses. Thain was the one who spent $1.2 million decorating his office. And now, a month after the bonus and loss outrages, Ken Lewis has finally fired John Thain.
As he should have. Someone has to take direct responsibility for that loss, the taxpayer-funded bonuses, and the humiliation of Ken Lewis. And John Thain's that man.
But don't let this distract you from who is ultimately responsible.
No one forced Ken Lewis to buy Merrill Lynch--the decision that, more than any other, destroyed Bank of America shareholders. No one forced Bank of America to approve the $15 billion in bailout-funded bonuses Merrill just paid to its workforce.
John Thain isn't responsible for those decisions. Ken Lewis is. If Bank of America's board doesn't finally acknowledge this and throw him out, the board should be thrown out, too.
For more news, go to Clusterstock.

http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/162333/Firing-John-Thain-Should-Be-Ken-Lewis

Broken Financials: Are Bank Stocks Going to Zero?

Broken Financials: Are Bank Stocks Going to Zero?

Posted Jan 22, 2009 03:39pm EST by Aaron Task in Investing, Banking, Housing
Related: XLF, BAC, JPM, FITB, NTRS, C, ^DJI


After hitting a 14-year low Tuesday, the financial sector enjoyed a reprieve Wednesday on news of some big purchases by insiders, namely JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and Bank of America's Ken Lewis.
But the sector was back in the dregs Thursday on news of John Thain's ouster from Bank of America (and ridiculous spending spree), change at the very top of Citigroup and a big loss at Fifth Third Bancorp.
But with the financial sector now less than 10% of the S&P 500's market-cap (down from 22% at its peak) and so much bad news "priced in," there have to be bargains in the banks, right?
Wrong! says John Roque, technical analyst at Natixis Bleichroeder.
While he can find at least one bank stock worth investigating, Roque believes investors would be wise to avoid banks, homebuilders and other housing-related stocks for the foreseeable future.
"Those sectors have been broken and are not going to come back for a long time," he said, predicting it will be a very long time before these stocks return to their peaks, if ever.
Disclosure: Roque has no positions in any of the stocks mentioned in the accompanying video.



http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/162574/Broken-Financials-Are-Bank-Stocks-Going-to-Zero?tickers=XLF,BAC,JPM,FITB,NTRS,C,%5EDJI

Thursday 22 January 2009

Social risk

Social risk

Social risk is difficult to quantify. It reflects the potentially adverse impact changing public attitudes can have on a firm’s ability to sell its product.

It is really a form of business risk that impacts a specific firm or industry.
· No one likes ugly smoke-stacks, for instance. Local opposition to apparent pollution might lead to a boycott of company products.
· Past examples of social risk issues include nuclear power, the spotted owl, furs, cigarette advertisements, concern with cholesterol, and the gasoline consumption of SUVs.

According to the Social Investment Forum, there is more than $2 trillion invested in socially screened portfolios in the United States. This is a 47% increase since 1999.

While there are various social screening criteria, avoiding tobacco investments is the most common.

Other criteria appearing in more than half of the institutional screens are related to
· the environment,
· human rights,
· employment/equality,
· gambling,
· alcohol, and
· weapons.

Less common criteria involve
· labour relations,
· animal testing/rights,
· community investing,
· community relations,
· executive compensation,
· abortion/birth control, and
· international labour standards.

Social investing does not necessarily avoid things; sometimes it seeks things out, and not always with good outcomes.
· In 1990 the state of Connecticut Employee Pension Plan, under political pressure, invested $25 million in the stock of Colt Firearms in order to keep 925 local jobs from being lost. Colt filed for bankruptcy 2 years later. This government attempt to help one group of citizens wound up hurting another, as the entire investment was lost.


Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Political risk

Political risk

Political risk reflects the possibility that a foreign government will interfere with a firm’s preferred manner of conducting business.

The level of interference can be modest, such as requiring that a certain number of first-line supervisors be local nationals rather than “foreigners.”

More severe instances of political risk include:
· restrictions on the repatriation of dividends,
· mandatory local investments, or
· even the host-country government assuming control of the foreign firm through nationalization.

For multinational corporations, political risk is a fact of life. Firms learn to estimate the level of this risk in different parts of the world, as well as how to reduce its impact and to postpone or avoid its effects.


Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Foreign exchange risk

Foreign exchange risk

Foreign exchange risk reflects the possibility of loss due to adverse changes in the relative values of world currencies.

Suppose an investor buys securities in an Australian company for AUD25 at a time when the exchange rate is one Australian dollar per 75 cents U.S. One year later the share price is AUD30, and 70 cents will buy one Australian dollars.
· To an Australian, the shares appreciated by 20%, from AUD25 to AUD30.
· From the perspective of a U.S. investor, the adverse change in the exchange rate reduced the actual gain on the investment to 12%. The U.S. investor wants to begin and end with U.S. dollars.
· Foreign exchange risk reduced the true economic return from a U.S. investor’s perspective.


Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Interest rate risk

Interest rate risk

Interest rate risk is the chance of a loss in portfolio value due to an adverse change in interest rates.

When interest rates change, the value of a fixed income security also changes.

Rising interest rates depress bond prices, and vice versa.

Default risk: Default risk is the same as credit risk. It reflects the fact that a borrower might be unable or unwilling to honour the terms of an agreement to pay principal and interest on a loan.


Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Purchasing power risk

Purchasing power risk

Purchasing power risk reflects the possibility that the rate of return on an investment will be insufficient to offset the rise in the cost of living.

During the early 1980s, the prime interest rate rose to 23% and inflation hit double-digit rates. At the same time, passbook savings accounts yielded about 5%. In retrospect, bank depositors would have been better advised to purchase canned goods and stack them in the basement. The interest earned from the savings account would have been insufficient to match the increase in the cost of food.

The stock market is generally considered to be a hedge against inflation. (Some analysts disagree with this generalization. Over long periods it is true; over shorter periods in history, it has not always been true.)

A well-diversified stock portfolio has little purchasing power risk, while an investment in fixed rate securities has plenty of it.


Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Financial risk

Financial risk

Financial risk is associated with the bottom of the income statement; it deals with earnings and how business risk and the financial structure of the firm impact them.

This type of risk is related to the firm’s use of financial leverage (debt).

Interest payments are fixed costs the firm must pay to stay out of bankruptcy, regardless of the firm’s profitability.

Some people, in fact, will say that a firm with no debt has no financial risk.


Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Business risk

Business risk

Business risk is the variability in a firm’s sales or in its ability to sell its product.

It is associated with the top of the income statement.

Business risk surfaces for a number of reasons.

  1. For instance, consumer tastes may change.
  2. An automobile company might introduce a new compact car at a time when people are looking for larger luxury cars or minivans.
  3. A clothing manufacturer might be unable to react quickly to shifting fashion styles.
  4. Business risk also arises from macroeconomic changes, such as
  • a recession leading to reduced consumer spending, or
  • high interest rates making people reluctant to buy houses.

Also read: Understanding Risk
Partitioning Risk
Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Partitioning Risk

Partitioning Risk


Risk has many subsets.


Total risk is all-inclusive and refers to the overall variability of the returns of a financial asset.


The two components of total risk are
· Un-diversifiable risk (also called systematic risk or market risk) and
· diversifiable risk (also called unsystematic risk).


Undiversifiable risk is that which must be borne by virtue of being in the market. This risk arises from systematic factors that affect all securities. We quantify systematic risk by beta.

Subsets of Risks:

Business risk
Financial risk
Purchasing power risk
Interest rate risk
Foreign exchange risk
Political risk
Social risk

Risk and the Income Statement
Sales: Foreign exchange risk, Social risk, Business risk
Tax: Political risk
Dividends: Political risk
Contribution to Retained Earnings: Financial risk

Risk and the Balance Sheet
Total Assets
Financial assets: Interest rate risk, default risk, systematic and unsystematic risk, foreign exchange risk.
Real assets: Foreign exchange risk

Total Liabilities and Net Worth
Liabilities: Interest rate risk, foreign exchange risk
Net worth: Purchasing power risk

Asian economic woe grows as China slows and Japanese exports plunge

Asian economic woe grows as China slows and Japanese exports plunge

China's economy may have ground to a halt entirely between the third and fourth quarters of last year and Japanese exports plunged 35pc in December, underlining the scale of the slowdown in Asia.

By Malcolm Moore in Shanghai
Last Updated: 7:39AM GMT 22 Jan 2009

China's national statistics bureau said gross domestic product had grown at an annual rate of 6.8pc in the fourth quarter of 2008, compared to a gain of 9pc in the previous three months.
The annual rate of growth for the world's third-largest economy was the lowest since the second quarter of 1998. "The international financial crisis is deepening and spreading with a continuing negative impact on the domestic economy," said Ma Jiantang, head of the statistics bureau.
Although the annual rate of growth was 6.8pc, economists speculated that the actual growth between September and December last year could have been zero, or even negative.
"My rough assumption is that it was basically zero," said Stephen Green, an economist at Standard Chartered bank in Shanghai. However, he added, recent revisions to Chinese GDP figures made an accurate calculation impossible. Mr Green also predicted that GDP may not grow in the first quarter of this year, compared to the last quarter.
Japanese exporters endured a torrid December as demand for a range of goods fell sharply. Exports to the US fell 26pc, those to Europe dropped 41.8pc and those to China were down 35pc.
In China, much of the slowdown has been blamed on a lack of demand from the rest of the world for Chinese-made goods. Wen Jiabao, the prime minister, said earlier this week that the outlook for Chinese employment is "very grim" as factories shut down and foreign companies rein in their spending.
Mr Wen will visit the UK next week, and Gordon Brown has already called upon him to make sure that China plays its part in stabilising the global economy. "We need China to play a full role, in partnership with us, if we are to restore confidence, growth and jobs," said Mr Brown.
China, however, has insisted that it must get its own house in order first, and there are indications that the government has already instructed banks to unleash credit into the market. The value of loans issued in November and December soared by nearly 19pc.
"It is hard to overestimate the potential importance of this," said Mr Green. "Mature economies' banking systems are currently flooded with liquidity that is not being lent out. China's interbank market is similarly flooded, but the difference is that the banks are lending."
The banks are likely to be ordered to finance a large chunk of the Pounds400 billion fiscal stimulus package that the Chinese government announced in November. There is a further Pounds2 trillion of spending demands from local governments across China that they may also be called upon to help with, irrespective of the possibility of bad loans.
Other bright spots included a slight rebound in industrial production growth to 5.7pc in December from 5.2pc in November, and a strong set of retail sales figures, where growth was 19pc.
Goldman Sachs, which issued one of the most bearish predictions for Chinese economic growth in 2009, at 6pc, admitted that there are "rising upside risks" that they may be incorrect, given the money flooding into the market.
"Our checks with commercial banks suggest the value of loans extended in January is likely to be even larger than the amount in December," said Yu Song, an economist at Goldman, adding that falling inflation also raised the possibility of further interest rate cuts.
However, Goldman said that China could be hit by even weaker export demand and maintained its prediction for now. "It is way too early to even claim the worst is over," said Mr Green. "Exports and domestic consumption, as well as profit growth, are now slowing and they will continue to grind lower over the year. Property still looks fragile, as does private investor sentiment. Even if we reach 8pc growth for this year, it will not feel like it," he added.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/4312120/Asian-economic-woe-grows-as-China-slows-and-Japanese-exports-plunge.html

Wednesday 21 January 2009

Risk Aversion

Risk Aversion

One of the key concepts in finance is the fact that a safe dollar is worth more than a risky dollar.

This important principle compares one safe dollar with one risk dollar. Any one who invests in the stock market is exchanging bird –in-the-hand safe dollars for a chance at a greater number of future dollars.

It is wrong to say that a risk-averse person will not take a risk. We are all risk averse, yet we take risks all the time.

----

Risk Aversion and Rational People

Suppose a person is given a choice between the following two alternatives:

Alternative A $100 for certain
Alternative B 50% chance of $100, 50% chance of $0

No rational person would select B. Its average payoff is $50, only half what A offers with certainty.

Now consider another set of choices:

Alternative C $100 for certain
Alternative D 50% chance of $0, 50% chance of $200

D has an average payoff of $100, the same as C.
C, however, is safer than D.
People do not like a risk, and a rational person will choose the certain $100 over the risky $100.

Let’s now consider a more complicated example.

On a television game show, a contestant wins the right to spin a lottery wheel once. The wheel shows numbers 1 through 100, and a pinter selcts one number when the wheel stops. Which payoff schedule should the contestant choose from the four choices listed below.

Choice 1
Resulting Number….Payoff
1-50….$110
51-100….$90
Avg….$100
Choice 2
Resulting Number….Payoff
1-50….$200
51-100….$0
Avg….$100
Choice 3
Resulting Number….Payoff
1-90….$50
91-100….$550
Avg….$100
Choice 4
Resulting Number….Payoff
1-99….$1000
100….-$89,000
Avg….$100

Each of the choices has the same average payoff, but the consequences of the two possible outcomes with each choice vary widely.

Choice 1 is the safest alternative in the minds of many people.

Choice 2 offers a reasonable shot at $200. People who select this option reasons, “If my number doesn’t come up, at least I haven’t lost anything.” From an economic point of view, this logic is faulty. The person did lose something: the certain minimum payoff of $90 associated with Choice 1; this loss is an opportunity cost.
In other words, by choosing 1, a contestant will get at least $90. But the contestant gives up at least $90 in exchange for a try at a bigger return with the other choices.

Choice 3 offers a much higher possible return than 2 but ensures a payoff of at least $50. Some people select this option partly because of the entertainment value of the game.

What about Choice 4, with its high likelihood of a $1,000 payout? If the lottery wheel stops on the number 100, however, the contestant suffers a huge loss. Some people (and some investment portfolios) cannot tolerate any chance of such a loss and consequently could not seriously consider an option such as Choice 4.

Each of these alternatives has analogies in the investment world.

Choice 1 is much like buying shares of a conservative electric utility stock.

Choice 2 is akin to purchasing a stock option.

Choice 3 might be a convertible bond, with its assurance of steady interest income, and a chance for large gains if the underlying stock rises sharply.

Choice 4 is similar to a program of writing naked, out-of-the-money call options. With such a program the likelihood is high that the options will expire worthless (to the call writer’s benefit), but there is also a small chance that the options will become extremely valuable, in which case the call writer is in deep trouble.

----

Risk and Time

Peter L. Bernstein, founder of the Journal of Portfolio Management and well respected on Wall Street, said, “Risk and time are dancing partners in an eternal dance.” It is easy to overlook this important point. Probability theory deals with HOW MUCH and HOW LIKELY but says nothing about WHEN. The market crashed in 1929 and in 1987. It is likely to do so again.

Bernstein also said, “Risk and time are opposite sides of the same coin.” How likely is the market to crash tomorrow? A betting person (which investment analysts and advisors typically will not admit to being) is more likely to put money on NO CRASH tomorrow.

On the other hand, how likely is a market crash sometime in the next 50 years? This time frame puts a different light on the situation; most people certainly would agree that the probability of a crash anytime in the next 50 years is greater than the probability of a crash tomorrow.

In finance, we typically measure risk by the variance or standard deviation of returns. Daily returns are different from weekly, monthly, or annual returns. For returns to be comparable, we must measure them over consistent time intervals. The dispersion of a forecast (such as a future stock price) increases indefinitely as the length of the forecast (or holding period) approaches infinity. Logically speaking, the standard deviation of daily stock returns is smaller than the standard deviation of annual returns.

It is important to note that while the returns over a long horizon may be more uncertain, history suggests that over long periods of time there is also less likelihood that the investment will lose money.

Consider the information in Table below:
http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=pJV5vBExPQ_AehxWIo5vCRA&hl=en

These figures are the result of a 2,500 trial simulation of a $1,000 stock investment assuming an average annual return of 12%, but with a 20% annual standard deviation.

The longer the term of the investment, the greater is the mean return - but the greater the range between the minimum and maximum values.

Note also the longer the term of the investment, the less the likelihood of losing money and the greater the likelihood that the investment will at least keep up with an assumed average inflation rate of 3%.

----

Summary:

It is wrong to say that a risk averse person will not take a risk.

People have different degrees of risk aversion; some people are more willing to take a chance than are others.

An opportunity cost is what is given up in exchange for a chance at something better.

"Risk and time are dancing partners in an eternal dance." - Peter Bernstein

Forecast variance increases indefinitely as the length of the forecast period approaches infinity.

Safe and Risky Investments

Safe and Risky Investments

Joe Conservative hates risk and is terrified of the prospects of losing money. He is strictly a bank CD man, being highly suspicious of the stock market. His girlfriend, Rita Riskaverse, doesn’t like risk either, but she studied investments in college and knows something about the relationship between risk and return.

Joe and Rita eventually get married but decide it makes sense for them to handle their investments individually. Joe puts $100,000 in a bank certificate of deposit earning 6% annually, while Rita spreads her $100,000 equally across five stocks, putting $20,000 in each one.

Twenty years later the two lovebirds decide to do some joint financial planning, which requires them to disclose the performance of their personal investment accounts.

Rita does some calculations on the performance of her five stocks. She tells Joe “I had one stock go bankrupt, two that earned less than your 6% from the bank, one that earned 8%, and one that earned 12%.”

Joe responds, “I told you the stock market was too risky. You should have listened to me.”

Suppressing a smirk, Rita shows Joe the data below.

----
Joes’s Bank CD:
$100,000 x (1.06)^20 = $320,714

Rita’s Stocks:
Stock A: worthless $0
Stock B: $20,000 x (1.03)^20 = $36,122
Stock C: $20,000 x (1.05)^20 = $53,066
Stock D: $20,000 x (1.08)^20 = $93,219
Stock E: $20,000 x (1.12)^20 = $192,926
Total = $375,373
----

Joe can’t believe it. Rita had one stock go under, two that were below-average performers, and two that did okay but certainly didn’t set the world on fire. It seems like luck to him that her portfolio is worth more than his – although he can’t put his finger on what was lucky. It just doesn’t seem fair.

The Problem with Losses

The Problem with Losses

Big Losses

This investment has an expected return of 9.50%. Standard statistical thinking tells us if we invest in this stock and hold it, some years we will have high returns and some years low returns, but that, on average, the return will be 9.50%. This assumption is true, but it is also a potentially misleading result.

Suppose an investor buys this stock and holds it 10 years. In each of 9 of these years, the stock advances 20%; in the other year it falls 90%. The 10 year arithmetic average return is 9%
{=(9x20% - 90%)/10}, slightly below the return predicted by the distribution.

In reality, a $1000 investment, however, would be worth only $1,000(1.20^9)(0.10) = $516, less than the starting value! The compound annual rate of return is a negative 6.40%.

Learning points:
  1. A large one-period loss can overwhelm a series of gains.
  2. If an initial investment falls by 50%, for instance, it must gain 100% to return to its original value.
  3. Big losses complicate actual returns, and investors learn to avoid situations where they may lurk.

Small Losses

Over time, even small losses can be a problem if too many of them occur.

An example will show why. Suppose the proverbial statistical marble jar contains two colors of marbles: red and green. The red marbles symbolize a 10% gain in the stock market, while the green marbles symbolize a 10% loss. If, in simulating an investment and taking a number of marbles from the jar, we draw exactly the same number of red and green marbles, how did the investment fare?

The return is negative, but there is no way to tell how badly things turned out, because what matters is not the proportion of winners to losers, but the number of losers.

As the number of draw increases, the terminal value of the investment declines.

After about 1,000 draws from the jar, the investment is nearly worthless. #

# In the stock market, such an investment could not survive. No security should have an expected return of zero. No one would buy it. Consequently, its price would fall until it offered a return consistent with its risk.

Learnng point:

Over time, even small losses can be a problem if too many of them occur.


Risk and the Time Horizon

There is an important distinction between:
  • the probability of losing money and
  • the amount of money that you might lose.
Suppose you model a $100 investment by flipping coins. Heads means you win $1, and tails means you lose 50 cents. After one flip, there is a 50% chance of a loss. This declines to 25% after two flips and is down to 12.5% after three flips. After 10 flips, the probability of a loss is only 0.10%.

The maximum loss, however, increases with each succeeding toss of the coin. The maximum loss after one flip is $0.50, after two flips is $1.00 and after three is $1.50.

If you define risk as the probability of losing money, then risk decreases as the time horizon increases.

However, if you define risk as the amount of money you might lose, it increases as the time horizon lengthens.

Learning points:
  1. In general, the longer you hold a common stock investment, the lower the likelihood that you will lose money.
  2. On the other hand, the longer you hold the investment, the greater the amount you might lose.
  3. The extent of the risk depends on how you define it.

Advice for Uncertain Times

Ben Stein How Not to Ruin Your Life

Advice for Uncertain Times
by Ben Stein
Posted on Tuesday, January 20, 2009, 12:00AM

The night before Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated in Memphis, he gave a memorable, inspiring speech. At its end, he said, "I don't know what's going to happen with me now. We've got some difficult days ahead...."
Unfortunately, this is true now about the American (and global) economy. I wish I could say I knew what was going to happen in the future. I have learned that I do not. I was not given the gift or the burden of foresight. I thought that our government would not let the bottom fall out. I was wrong. I am sorry.
So given that I do not know the future, what can I tell you that will be useful? Actually, quite a bit.
Cash Really Is King
First, taking the advice of my dear pal Ray Lucia, rock and roll star and investment guru, I can tell you that, no matter what happens, it will be good to have a nice chunk of money in cash or near cash. Yes, I know we may soon have inflation. But if we do, the rates on money market funds will rise. Cash is just a lovely thing to have in almost situation. Cash or near cash offers a level of comfort that even a large portfolio of stocks does not offer.
Taking a cue from my dear pal Phil DeMuth of Conservative Wealth Management, I can tell you that, if you think we are definitely at a bottom, you might be fooled. While Phil's research tells us that we may be near a bottom by postwar metrics of price, price to earnings, and price to dividends, we may have ( as Phil puts it ) "jumped the tracks of history."
My own view is that we have been fooled so much in the past 15 months about what real earnings are, what real book value is, that we cannot trust the data given to us. Yes, by current price-earnings measures, stocks look fairly reasonable. But we don't really know what true earnings are. That is the vicious truth. So if we are in the quicksand of not being able to rely on the data our companies give out, then anything can happen. Yes, we may be at a bottom or near it. Or we may not be anywhere near a bottom.
Anything Can Happen
Just to illustrate, who would have dreamed a few weeks ago that Citi would be in the kind of trouble it is in, even after a $45 BILLION infusion from the federal government? Anything can happen in the treacherous world in which we find ourselves.
Third, taking counsel from my pal Barron Thomas, very possibly the best salesman on the planet, I will tell you a rule of indisputable value in this or any economic situation: WORK.
Barron is in the real estate and private plane businesses. These are both highly impacted by the economic slowdown. How does Barron deal with it? He gets up at 5 a.m. every day and works the phones from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., goes home, makes notes, and then sleeps well until he starts all over again. And he closes the deals. There are still plenty of people who will make the deal at the right price.
Keep on Working
Next, from yours truly: Work is deeply therapeutic. It makes us feel better. It gives us a much better attitude about ourselves. It makes us feel as if we are worth something. A middle class person who works has a far better self image than a rich person who does not work. Work is a gift, a sacrament, a true blessing. Plus, people who work are generally going to have higher incomes and higher standards of life than people who do not work.
If times are tough, work harder than ever. You will get through the rough patches and learn how strong you really are. Do not seek to avoid work -- embrace it.
Then, finally, I will tell you something I do when I feel buffeted by the markets. I dig into the 12-step program that has saved my life for the past 20 years. Using its precepts, I say to myself, "I am powerless over the stock market. It is all up to God. I do the very best I can, and after that, it's up to God."
Know What's Important
If you don't believe in God, then you can substitute "fate." Powerlessness is a huge source of power. Try it. You will like it.
"We shall overcome," we used to sing at civil rights demonstrations when we were getting tear gassed. "We are not afraid." Now I lie in bed at night and say to myself that if the men and women at military hospitals in this country and abroad can get through what they do, if their families can go through what they go through, then I can deal with market volatility -- trivial by comparison.
And so -- here it is. I do not know how it -- the stock market and economic turmoil -- will end, but to paraphrase The Bard, it will end, and that suffices.

http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/article/yourlife/135453

UK cannot take Iceland's soft option

UK cannot take Iceland's soft option
The British government faces an excruciating choice. It cannot let Royal Bank of Scotland and its fellow mega-banks go to the wall. Yet it risks being swamped by the massive foreign debts of these lenders if it takes on their dollar, euro and yen exposure by opting for full nationalisation.

By Ambrose Evans-PritchardLast Updated: 7:00PM GMT 20 Jan 2009
Comments 0 Comment on this article

Britain has foreign reserves of under $61bn dollars (£43.7bn), less than Malaysia or Thailand. The foreign liabilities of the UK banks are $4.4 trillion – or twice annual GDP – according to the Bank of England. The mismatch is perilous.
It is why sterling has crashed 10 cents from $1.49 to $1.39 against the dollar in two days. The markets have given their verdict on Gordon Brown's latest effort to "save the world".
Credit default swaps (CDS) measuring risk on British debt have reached an all-time high of 125, just below Portugal. The yield spread on 10-year Gilts over German Bunds has doubled to 53 since last week.
Standard & Poor's has quashed rumours that it will soon strip Britain of its AAA credit rating – an indignity averted even after the International Monetary Fund bail-out in 1976. But there was a sting yesterday as it responded to the Treasury plan for the banks. "Market confidence in the sector has eroded to such a degree that it is not clear whether these measures by themselves will bring about a material improvement," the IMF said. "As a result, full nationalisation of some banks remains a possibility in our view."
Spain was relegated from AAA to AA+ on Monday, and Spain's public debt is a much lower share of GDP.
"If Spain can get downgraded, then the risks for the UK are self-evident," said Graham Turner, of GFC Economics. "The increase in the UK gross public debt burden – 11.8 percentage points in just one year – is troubling. The market rightly fears the long-term fiscal costs of a collapsing banking system. Rising Gilt yields are the main impact of the botched move from the UK Treasury."
Mr Turner said the British Government had taken far too long to resort to quantitative easing – printing money – and had wasted months with fiscal frippery as debt deflation throttled the banks.
The parallels with Iceland are disturbing. The country was ruined by the antics of its three big banks. They built up foreign liabilities equal to 900pc of GDP. Operating as hedge funds, they borrowed in dollars, euros and pounds to speculate. However, the state lacked the foreign reserves to match this leverage.
But Iceland at least had the luxury of letting banks default – shifting losses on to the rest of the world. It refused to honour foreign debts.
"They drew a line," said Jerry Rawclifffe, who tracks Iceland for Fitch Ratings. "They created new banks, parking the old losses in resolution committees. It is not easy for other governments to walk away. They have a duty of care."
Indeed, if Britain walked away from UK banks' $4.4 trillion of foreign liabilities – worth eight times Lehman Brothers – it would destroy the credibility of the City and take the whole world into deeper depression.
"The UK cannot go down that route because it would set off an asset price death spiral," said Marc Ostwald, a bond expert at Monument Securities. "The Western banking system is already on life support. That would turn it off altogether."
So whatever the temptations, and whatever the feelings of righteousness over the follies of the RBS leadership in its debt-driven campaign of Napoleonic expansion, the Treasury is wedded to the banks and all their sins. Chancellor Alistair Darling cannot copy Iceland.
S&P's lead UK analyst, Trevor Cullinan, said the Government faces a "severe test" and will be judged by its actions, but he doubts whether matters will reach such a dangerous pass.
"The challenges to UK banks are significant amid a correction in property prices and a contraction of GDP. Nevertheless, the situation is very different from Iceland. The UK benefits from sterling, which is a major global funding currency. UK access to external funding is far more secure. In a worst-case scenario we estimate the cost of recapitalising the UK banking system to be in the region of £83bn (5.7pc of GDP)," he said.
The Government can take out derivatives contracts on currency markets to hedge the foreign debt risk. Perhaps it already has. The banks have $4.4 trillion foreign assets to offset their liabilities, of course. But what is their real value in this climate?
Britain is not alone in its current distress, although the fall in sterling speaks for itself. The sovereign debt of Russia, Ukraine, Greece, Italy, Belgium, Austria, The Netherlands, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand and Korea is all being tested by the markets. The core of countries deemed safe is shrinking by the day to a half dozen. Sadly, Britain is no longer one of them.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/4299883/UK-cannot-take-Icelands-soft-option.html

World economy 'close to the bottom' of liquidity cycle

World economy 'close to the bottom' of liquidity cycle
Morgan Stanley has begun to detect early signs that the global economy may be nearing the bottom of the cycle.

By Ambrose Evans-PritchardLast Updated: 9:27PM GMT 18 Jan 2009
It is advising clients to ignore the deep gloom in the markets and focus on deeper fundamental forces as a fresh phase of liquidity gathers strength. However, it is still too early to buy stocks.
"Excess liquidity has started to rise again in the G5 (US, Japan, Germany, Britain and France) for the first time inalmost three years," said Joachim Fels, the US bank's research chief.
"In our view, this marks the beginning of a new global liquidity cycle in 2009. It is driven by unprecedented easing of monetary policy as well as the gradual healing of impaired financial systems."
Dr Fels uses a complex recipe to measure the excess money sloshing through the world's financial system. This is how each long cycle of rising asset prices first builds a foundation.
"As in past episodes, excess liquidity will find its way into asset markets. To some extent, this has already started to happen, with government bond yields having been pushed to new lows, credit spreads coming in and equities having bounced off their lows from last Autumn."
The bank favours corporate credit at this stage rather than government bonds. It likes emerging markets such as the BRICS – Brazil, Russia, India and China – rather than equities in the old world.
Dr Fels says liquidity is the key driver of asset booms and busts. It drove the bond rally in the early 1990s and the dotcom bubble in the late-1990s.
Morgan Stanley said investors must monitor the entire global liquidity picture to understand what is going on in today's cross-border markets.
Teun Draaisma, the bank's European investment guru, said stocks tend to rally roughly six months before the US property market touches bottom in each cycle – although that is not what occurred in the relatively modest housing slide in the early-1930s.
By this measure, it is still too early to take the plunge in the stock markets. His team expects US house prices to keep falling until the middle of 2010, dropping a total of 46pc from peak to trough. They are down 24pc so far.
"Patience is the golden rule in bear markets, and the bigger the crisis, the more patience is required," he said.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/globalbusiness/4284602/World-economy-close-to-the-bottom-of-liquidity-cycle.html