Monday, September 26, 2011

AsianBondsOnline Newsletter (26 September 2011)

To read the full report, data and graphs go to http://www.asianbondsonline.adb.org/newsletters/abowdh20110926.pdf?src=wdh&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

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News Highlights - Week of 19 - 23 September 2011

Consumer price inflation in Hong Kong, China slowed to 5.7% year-on-year (y-o-y) in August, compared with 7.9% in July, due to a timing difference in the government's payment of public housing rentals in July. Netting out this effect, consumer price inflation in August rose to 6.3% y-o-y from 5.8% in July on account of higher private housing rental and food prices. Malaysia's consumer price inflation eased slightly to 3.3% y-o-y in August from 3.4% in July. The index for food and non-alcoholic beverages increased 4.6% y-o-y in August, slightly lower than the 4.9% increase posted in July. In Singapore, consumer price inflation accelerated to 5.7% y-o-y in August from 5.4% in July due to higher costs for transportation, housing, and food.

*The People's Republic of China's (PRC) outstanding foreign debt climbed to USD642.5 billion as of end-June from USD586.0 billion at end-March.

*The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in Hong Kong, China eased to 3.2% in June-August compared with 3.4% in May-July. The unemployment rate in the Republic of Korea fell to 3.0% in August from 3.3% in July amid strong export growth and a modest increase in domestic demand. Malaysia's unemployment rate fell to 3.0% in July from 3.2% in June.

*Japan reported a trade deficit of JPY775.3 billion in August-the highest recorded deficit since 1979-resulting from the fuel imports of utility firms to meet electricity demand as many nuclear reactors remain offline. The Philippines' balance of payments (BOP) surplus soared 166.0% y-o-y to USD9.0 billion in the first 8 months of the year, exceeding the revised full-year target of USD6.7 billion

*The Philippines posted a budget surplus of PHP9.2 billion in August due to higher revenue collections and constrained government spending. The Bureau of the Treasury plans to issue retail treasury bonds in 4Q11.

*Last week in Hong Kong, China, US-based Yum! Brands priced a CNH350 million 3-year bond at 2.375%. In the Republic of Korea, Honam Petrochemical Corporation priced a KRW500 billion 3-year bond at a coupon rate of 3.93%, while Dongkuk Steel priced a KRW250 billion 3-year bond and a KRW70 billion 5-year bond at coupon rates of 4.35% and 4.53%, respectively. In Malaysia, shipping company MISC sold two tranches of Islamic medium-term notes totaling MYR800 million: (i) a MYR500 million 3-year tranche, which pays an annual return of 3.51%; and (ii) a MYR300 million 5-year tranche, which pays an annual return of 3.71%. In Singapore, Overseas Union Enterprise Ltd. (OUE) issued SGD200 million worth of 4-year medium-term notes at 3.95% last week. Thailand's mobile phone operator True Move also completed its tender offer to buy back two USD-denominated bonds totaling USD690 million. In Viet Nam, Song Da Urban & Industrial Investment and Development Joint Stock Company issued VND700 billion 3-year corporate bonds with coupon rate to be adjusted every six months.

*Government bond yields fell last week for most tenors in Singapore, while yields rose for all tenors in Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, and the Philippines, and for most tenors in Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. Yield movements were mixed in the PRC and Hong Kong, China: falling in the shorter end of the curve in the PRC, but in the longer end of the curve in Hong Kong, China. Yield spreads between 2- and 10- year maturities widened in the PRC, the Republic of Korea, the Philippines and Thailand, while spreads narrowed in most other emerging East Asian markets.

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Monday, September 19, 2011

AsianBondsOnline Newsletter (19 September 2011)

Weekly Debt Highlights

To read the full report, data and graphs go to http://www.asianbondsonline.adb.org/newsletters/abowdh20110919.pdf?src=wdh&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

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News Highlights - Week of 12 - 16 September 2011

Hong Kong, China's industrial production growth rate fell to 2.0% year-on-year (y-o-y) in 2Q11 from 3.5% in 1Q11, due mainly to a decline in the output of textiles and apparels. Textile production fell 13.5% y-o-y while apparel fell 9.6%. In Japan, the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry revised its July production index downward to -3.0% y-o-y from a preliminary figure of -2.8%.

*In the Philippines, merchandise exports shrank for a third consecutive month in July- by 1.7% y-o-y to USD4.4 billion-as the global slowdown curbed demand for electronic products. Meanwhile on a month-on-month basis, exports grew 7.3%. Singapore's non-oil domestic exports grew 5.1% y-o-y in August after posting a 2.8% decline in July.

*In the Republic of Korea, the combined net income of 62 securities companies jumped 74.7% y-o-y to KRW793.2 billion in the first quarter of fiscal year 2011 (April-June). Their return on equity for the quarter increased to 2.1% from 1.3% in the same period last year. According to the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), the increase was brought about by a 12.4% y-o-y increase in commissions revenue, which reached KRW2.2 trillion for the quarter, as well as a 58.3% y-o-y rise in the income from proprietary trading, which amounted to KRW1.1 trillion.

*Growth in overseas foreign worker remittances to the Philippines eased to 6.1% y-o-y in July-for a total of USD1.7 billion for the month-from 7.0% growth in June. Meanwhile, in the first 7 months of the year remittances rose 6.3% y-o-y for a total of USD11.4 billion. Remittances from land-based and sea-based workers grew 4.3% and 14.1% y-o-y, respectively.

*Powerlong Real Estate, a Chinese real estate company based in Hong Kong, China, issued HKD1.0 billion worth of senior notes to China Life Trustee Limited. The notes mature in 3 years and carry a coupon of 13.8%. In the Republic of Korea last week, Korea Eximbank sold a KRW150 billion 1-year zero coupon bond and a KRW50 billion 6-month zero coupon bond. Korea Development Bank issued a 3-year bond worth KRW150 billion at a coupon rate of 3.76%. Also, Korea Finance Corporation priced samurai bonds totalling JPY30 billion including a JPY15.5 billion 2-year bond, a JPY7.5 billion 3-year bond, and a JPY7.0 billion 5-year bond.

*In Malaysia, property developer Perdana Parkcity issued MYR400 million worth of medium term notes (MTN), while Telkom Malaysia sold MYR300 million worth of 10-year Islamic MTN. Singapore's Housing and Development Board issued last week SGD625 million worth of 5-year bonds and SGD650 million 10-year bonds Meanwhile, Thailand auctioned a 50-year THB5.0 billion bond with a 4.85% coupon.

*China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC) and China Railway 16th Bureau Group announced that they plan to issue commercial paper with a maturity of 1-year on the interbank market. China National Petroleum Corp. will issue CNY15.0 billion and China Railway 16th Bureau Group will issue CNY560 million.

*Government bond yields rose for all tenors in Indonesia and Malaysia and rose for most tenors for Korea; Philippines; Singapore and Thailand as risk aversion rises over concerns that Greece may default. Yields fell for most tenors in the PRC; Hong Kong, China and Vietnam. Yields changes were mostly mixed for Japan. Yield spreads between 2- and 10-year tenors narrowed for the PRC and Hong Kong, China but widened for the rest of the Emerging East Asian markets.

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Monday, September 12, 2011

AsianBondsOnline Newsletter (12 September 2011)

To read the full report, data and graphs go to http://www.asianbondsonline.adb.org/newsletters/abowdh20110912.pdf?src=wdh&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

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News Highlights - Week of 5 - 9 September 2011

Consumer price inflation in the People's Republic of China (PRC) stood at 6.2% year-on-year (y-o-y) in August, compared with 6.5% in July, as the increase in food prices slowed. In Indonesia, consumer price inflation rose to 4.8% y-o-y in August from 4.6% in July as food prices climbed at a faster annual pace amid the Idul Fitri celebration. In the Philippines, the 2006-based consumer price index rose 4.7% y-o-y in August, compared with 5.1% in July, mainly due to an easing in food price inflation. Meanwhile, producer prices in the Republic of Korea rose 6.6% y-o-y in August, the highest annual increase in 4 months.

*Policy interest rates were held steady last week in Indonesia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, and the Philippines.

*The PRC's trade surplus dropped to USD17.8 billion in August from USD31.5 billion in July, as imports surged 30.2% y-o-y, while Indonesia's trade surplus fell to USD1.4 billion in July from USD3.3 billion in the previous month. In contrast, Malaysia's trade surplus widened to MYR9.5 billion in July from MYR7.9 billion in June.

*The Republic of Korea revised its quarterly real gross domestic product (GDP) growth for 2Q11 to 0.9% quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q). Malaysia's industrial production index declined 0.6% y-o-y in July. The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for Hong Kong, China fell to 47.8 in August from 51.4 in July, while it rose slightly in Singapore to 49.4 in August from 49.3 in the previous month.

*Net foreign investment into the Republic of Korea's LCY bond market fell to KRW134 billion in August from KRW2.9 trillion in July. Meanwhile, Thailand launched its initial offering of 3-year retail government bonds totaling THB50 billion on 12 September and intends to raise THB540 billion from planned bond sales in the next fiscal year, beginning in October.

*Last week, Korea Eximbank announced a USD1 billion 10-year global bond sale; Energy firm BP priced a CNH700 million 3-year bond and French gas producer Air Liquide priced a CNH1.75 billion 5-year bond in Hong Kong, China; and Henderson Land priced a SGD200 million 7-year note with a 4.0% coupon.

*In the PRC, China Datang Corporation Renewable Power Company plans to issue CNY2 billion worth of 1-year commercial paper, while Guangdong Development Bank aims to sell CNY2 billion of 10-year subordinated debt. In Hong Kong, China, BSH Bosch Und Siemens Hausgauraete plans to issue CNH-denominated bonds.

*Foreign reserves in Hong Kong, China rose 0.2% month-on-month (m-o-m) to USD279.4 billion in August. Accumulated foreign reserves also increased in August in Japan and the Philippines to USD1.2 trillion and USD75.6 billion, respectively.

*Several commercial banks in Viet Nam began lowering their lending rates last week to between 17% and 19%. The State Bank of Viet Nam released a circular last week presenting the conditions for credit institutions and foreign bank branches to purchase corporate bonds.

*Government bond yields fell for all tenors in Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, and the Philippines, and for most tenors in the PRC; Hong Kong, China; Malaysia; Singapore; and Viet Nam. Yields rose for most tenors in Thailand. Yield spreads between 2- and 10-year tenors widened in Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, while spreads narrowed in most other emerging East Asian markets.

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Wednesday, September 7, 2011

IMF Agrees To Shove Head Deep In Sand, Will Lower Eurobank Capital Needs : Zero hedge

IMF Agrees To Shove Head Deep In Sand, Will Lower Eurobank Capital Needs
via
(title unknown) by Tyler Durden on 9/6/11
When all else fails, change the rules, and shove your head even deeper in the sand:

• IMF has agreed to substantially lower initially estimate for European bank sector capital needs according to Eurozone sources• Private sector expected to meet bank recapitalisation needs, according to Eurozone sources• Eurozone has no plans for public support for banks over and above money in bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal according to Eurozone sources• "We have discussed this with the IMF in detail and the IMF has agreed that this initial figure will be revised downwards and the revision will be quite substantial," a euro zone official participating in the talks said.
Of course, this won't change anything about the fact that Eurobanks are insolvent, that the ECB is undercapitalized, that the Greek bailout is falling apart. But what matters is that the IMF, or the world's former bailout, and now completely irrelevant, organization courtesy of China, will allow banks to proceed far further undercapitalized than prudent, until it has to bail out not one, but all, and at the same time. As a reminder, the IMF expected a need of $200 billion, which the eurocrats say is goign to be far lower... Even as Goldman's report, first released on Zero Hedge, said that the full amount will be 5 times bigger,

or $1 trillion. As much as Goldman is blasted left and right, they at least know how to use that HP12C. Which is far more than we can say about the idiots from Luxembourg.

More from Reuters:

Euro zone governments have no plans to inject any further capital into banks over and above the money earmarked for the financial sector in the emergency loan programmes to Greece, Ireland and Portugal, sources said.

 

Euro zone officials discussed the issue of banking sector recapitalisation on Monday and Tuesday as part of the preparations for the informal meeting of European Union finance ministers in Poland on Sept. 16.

 

The issue has returned to the table after the IMF called for additional capital to boost the European banking sector, estimating the extra need at 200 billion euros in a draft version of an unpublished report leaked to the press.

 

"

We have discussed this with the IMF in detail and the IMF has agreed that this initial figure will be revised downwards and the revision will be quite substantial," a euro zone official participating in the talks said.

 

"

There is a need for additional capital in the European banking system but the magnitude of the required recapitalisation is nowhere near the initial number of the IMF," the official said.

 

Euro zone officials estimate banks have in total already raised some 50 billion euros in additional capital in the run up to the European bank stress tests in July and now had between six and nine months to further increase it where necessary.

 

"

In all likelihood it will be private capital that will be raised. For public money, we have no plans of a large scale or any banking recapitalisation programme over and above the contingency reserve for the financial sector in the three programmes that we are currently running," the official said.

 

The capital needs could also be solved through mergers and acquisitions. Only at the end of the six to nine months, if the identified banks will have failed to have sufficient capital, would governments step in with public money, a second euro zone official said.

 

The euro zone has earmarked 10 billion euros to help banks in Greece, 35 billion for Ireland and 12 billion for Portugal under the euro zone bailout programmes

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Wikileaks Discloses The Reason(s) Behind China's Shadow Gold Buying Spree

Wikileaks Discloses The Reason(s) Behind China's Shadow Gold Buying Spree
via
(title unknown) by Tyler Durden on 9/3/11
Wondering why gold at $1850 is cheap, or why gold at double that price will also be cheap, or frankly at any price? Because, as the following leaked cable explains, gold is, to China at least, nothing but the opportunity cost of destroying the dollar's reserve status. Putting that into dollar terms is, therefore, impractical at best, and illogical at worst. We have a suspicion that the following cable from the US embassy in China is about to go not viral but very much global, and prompt all those mutual fund managers who are on the golden sidelines to dip a toe in the 24 karat pool. The only thing that matters from China's perspective is that "suppressing the price of gold is very beneficial for the U.S. in maintaining the U.S. dollar's role as the international reserve currency.

China's increased gold reserves will thus act as a model and lead other countries towards reserving more gold. Large gold reserves are also beneficial in promoting the internationalization of the RMB." Now, what would happen if mutual and pension funds

finally comprehend they are massively underinvested in the one asset which China is without a trace of doubt massively accumulating behind the scenes is nothing short of a worldwide scramble, not so much for paper, but every last ounce of physical gold...

From

Wikileaks:

3. CHINA'S GOLD RESERVES 

 

"China increases its gold reserves in order to kill two birds with one stone"

 

"The China Radio International sponsored newspaper World News Journal (Shijie Xinwenbao)(04/28): "According to China's National Foreign Exchanges Administration China 's gold reserves have recently increased. Currently, the majority of its gold reserves have been located in the U.S. and European countries.

The U.S. and Europe have always suppressed the rising price of gold. They intend to weaken gold's function as an international reserve currency. They don't want to see other countries turning to gold reserves instead of the U.S. dollar or Euro. Therefore, suppressing the price of gold is very beneficial for the U.S. in maintaining the U.S. dollar's role as the international reserve currency.

China's increased gold reserves will thus act as a model and lead other countries towards reserving more gold. Large gold reserves are also beneficial in promoting the internationalization of the RMB."


Perhaps now is a good time to remind readers what will happen if and when America's always behind the curve mutual and pension fund managers finally comprehend that they are massively underinvested in the one best performing asset class.

From

The Driver for Gold You're Not Watching (via

Casey Research)

You already know the basic reasons for owning gold – currency protection, inflation hedge, store of value, calamity insurance – many of which are becoming clichés even in mainstream articles. Throw in the supply and demand imbalance, and you've got the basic arguments for why one should hold gold for the foreseeable future.

All of these factors remain very bullish, in spite of gold's 450% rise over the past 10 years. No, it's not too late to buy, especially if you don't own a meaningful amount; and yes, I'm convinced the price is headed much higher, regardless of the corrections we'll inevitably see. Each of the aforementioned catalysts will force gold's price higher and higher in the years ahead, especially the currency issues.

But there's another driver of the price that escapes many gold watchers and certainly the mainstream media. And I'm convinced that once this sleeping giant wakes, it could ignite the gold market like nothing we've ever seen.

The fund management industry handles the bulk of the world's wealth. These institutions include insurance companies, hedge funds, mutual funds, sovereign wealth funds, etc. But the elephant in the room is pension funds. These are institutions that provide retirement income, both public and private.

Global pension assets are estimated to be – drum roll, please –

$31.1 trillion. No, that is not a misprint. It is more than twice the size of last year's GDP in the U.S. ($14.7 trillion).

We know a few hedge fund managers have invested in gold, like John Paulson, David Einhorn, Jean-Marie Eveillard. There are close to twenty mutual funds devoted to gold and precious metals. Lots of gold and silver bugs have been buying.

So, what about pension funds?

  According to estimates by Shayne McGuire in his new book,

Hard Money; Taking Gold to a Higher Investment Level, the typical pension fund holds about 0.15% of its assets in gold. He estimates another 0.15% is devoted to gold mining stocks, giving us a total of 0.30% – that is, less than one third of one percent of assets committed to the gold sector.

Shayne is head of global research at the Teacher Retirement System of Texas. He bases his estimate on the fact that commodities represent about 3% of the total assets in the average pension fund. And of that 3%, about 5% is devoted to gold. It is, by any account, a negligible portion of a fund's asset allocation.

Now here's the fun part. Let's say fund managers as a group realize that bonds, equities, and real estate have become poor or risky investments and so decide to increase their allocation to the gold market. If they doubled their exposure to gold and gold stocks – which would still represent only 0.6% of their total assets – it would amount to $93.3 billion in new purchases.

How much is that? The assets of GLD total $55.2 billion, so this amount of money is 1.7 times bigger than the largest gold ETF. SLV, the largest silver ETF, has net assets of $9.3 billion, a mere one-tenth of that extra allocation.

The market cap of the entire sector of gold stocks (producers only) is

about $234 billion

. The gold industry would see a 40% increase in new money to the sector. Its market cap would double if pension institutions allocated just 1.2% of their assets to it.

But what if currency issues spiral out of control? What if bonds wither and die? What if real estate takes ten years to recover? What if inflation becomes a rabid dog like it has every other time in history when governments have diluted their currency to this degree? If these funds allocate just 5% of their assets to gold – which would amount to $1.5

trillion – it would overwhelm the system and rocket prices skyward. 

And let's not forget that this is only one class of institution. Insurance companies have about $18.7 trillion in assets. Hedge funds manage approximately $1.7 trillion. Sovereign wealth funds control $3.8 trillion. Then there are mutual funds, ETFs, private equity funds, and private wealth funds. Throw in millions of retail investors like you and me and Joe Sixpack and Jiao Sixpack, and we're looking in the rear view mirror at $100 trillion.

I don't know if pension funds will devote that much money to this sector or not. What I do know is that sovereign debt risks are far from over, the U.S. dollar and other currencies will lose considerably more value against gold, interest rates will most certainly rise in the years ahead, and inflation is just getting started. These forces are in place and building, and if there's a paradigm shift in how these managers view gold, look out!

I thought of titling this piece, "Why $5,000 Gold May Be Too Low." Because once fund managers enter the gold market in mass, this tiny sector will light on fire with blazing speed. 

My advice is to not just hope you can jump in once these drivers hit the gas, but to claim your seat during the relative calm of this month's level prices

Read full article at
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/wikileaks-discloses-reasons-behind-chinas-shadow-gold-buying-spree

Psychology, Neurology... How Your Biology Impacts Your Investment Decisions

Michael S. Falk, CFA, discusses the intellectual and emotional
struggles inherent in investing and how the brain processes external
information that impacts decision making.

Free webcast at
http://www.cfawebcasts.org/modules/catalog/CourseDetails.aspx?ProductGroupID=9602

Monday, September 5, 2011

AsianBondsOnline Newsletter (5 September 2011)

To read the full report, data and graphs go to http://www.asianbondsonline.adb.org/newsletters/abowdh20110905.pdf?src=wdh&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

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News Highlights - Week of 26 August - 2 September 2011

Gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the Philippines fell to 3.4% year-on-year (y-o-y) in 2Q11-the fourth straight quarter of slowing growth. The 2Q11 data brought the country's GDP growth in 1H11 to 4.0% y-o-y following 4.6% growth in 1Q11. The slowdown in GDP growth was due to faltering global demand that curbed exports and investments. Despite the global slowdown, the Philippine economy benefited from a robust rebound in the agriculture sector; the sustained, albeit slowing, performance of the manufacturing sector; and balanced growth in the services sector. On the demand side, consumer spending also boosted GDP with growth of 5.4% y-o-y in 2Q11.

*Japan's industrial production rose 0.6% in July from the previous month, the slowest monthly growth rate since March. In the Republic of Korea, industrial output in July grew at the slowest pace in 10 months, 3.8% y-o-y, as annual growth rates in manufacturing and producers' shipments fell. In Viet Nam, industrial production surged 5.8% y-o-y and 4.3% month-on-month (m-o-m).

*Retail sales in Hong Kong, China grew 29.1% y-o-y to HKD35.2 billion in July on account of robust local consumption and tourist spending. In Viet Nam, the total value of retail sales of goods and services increased 22.2% to VND1,224 trillion (USD59.7 billion) in the first 8 months of the year.

*Consumer price inflation for the Republic of Korea accelerated to 5.3% y-o-y in August, the highest level in 3 years, mainly triggered by a sharp increase in food prices. In Thailand, consumer price inflation in August rose to 4.3% y-o-y, the highest level since September 2008, spurred by escalating food costs.

*The Republic of Korea's trade surplus plunged to USD821 million in August from USD6.3 billion in the previous month, amid strong import growth and only modest export growth. In Thailand, the current account surplus widened to USD3.6 billion in July from USD2.5 billion in June, as the trade surplus for the month increased to USD2.7 billion from USD1.9 billion in the previous month.

*The People's Bank of China (PBOC) announced its plan to include the margin deposits of commercial banks-the deposit paid by clients to secure the issuance of banker's acceptance and letters of credit-as part of the reserve requirement in order to mop up excessive liquidity. Meanwhile, the State Bank of Viet Nam issued its decision, effective 1 September, to increase foreign currency reserve requirement ratios for demand deposits and time deposits.

*Last week, notable bond issuances from the People's Republic of China included commerical paper from Sinohydro Group (CNY1 billion), Shaanxi Regional Electric Power (CNY1 billion), and Metallurgical Corporation of China (CNY3 billion). In the Republic of Korea, steel producer Posco priced a KRW500 billion 5-year bond at a coupon rate of 3.99%. In Thailand, Glow Energy Public Company Ltd. issued a 10-year bond worth THB5.6 billion with a 5.0% coupon.

*Government bond yields fell last week for all tenors in Viet Nam and for most tenors in the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore. Yields rose for all tenors in the PRC and for most tenors in Thailand. Yield movements were mixed in Hong Kong, China; and were mostly unchanged in Indonesia. Yield spreads between 2- and 10- year maturities widened in the Philippines and Thailand, while spreads narrowed in most other emerging East Asian markets.

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Saturday, September 3, 2011

Fw: Absolute Return Letter September and Global corporate ratingactivity-First Half 2011



From: MANOJ JETHVA <manoj.jethva@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 3 Sep 2011 09:27:27 +0530
To: manoj.jethva<manoj.jethva@gmail.com>
Subject: Absolute Return Letter September and Global corporate rating activity-First Half 2011


With Regards
Manoj Jethva
+91-9224668855
 
 

Friday, September 2, 2011

Michael Lewis Gets Taken Off The Pedestal

via Capital Mind by Deepak Shenoy on 8/30/11
Michael Lewis gets skewered on his Vanity Fair piece on Germany, by Scott Locklin:

Michael Lewis is the preeminent financial journalist of our age. In many ways, Michael Lewis is the

only financial journalist of our age. No other author on finance is so widely read. His articles are widely taken as something like the conventional wisdom. This is a great tragedy, as, despite the fact that Michael Lewis is unarguably a great writer, he's a terrible journalist. Reading a Michael Lewis article on finance is much like watching the evening news. It gives you the impression that you're well informed, but in reality, you've been deceived by noise.


The entire piece is a good read, and reveals that:

• Germany didn't have a financial crisis,• Lewis is overboard on the turd thing. Without revealing the source, the funniest comment I heard was that his kid is getting potty trained, which makes him overexposed to poop. I don't find that hard to believe :)• Lewis didn't talk about how Germany managed to not get wet when it was raining all over the world. Yeah, that's true. For the stories don't tell you enough.• Lewis' Iceland piece left out the villains. (Read)• There is a toilet museum in Delhi!​◦ He wrote, in 2007, about how the "growing derivatives markets" brought stability to the economic system​The Sarbanes-Oxley Act sticks a wrench in the American market for initial public offerings, and the capital-raising business simply removes itself to London and Hong Kong. Thailand installs capital controls and the markets force it to reverse its policy, virtually overnight -- again with nary a ripple. The Brazilian real is now less volatile than the Swiss franc; Botswana's debt is now more highly rated than Italy's. Oil prices double, the U.S. housing market tanks -- no matter what happens, financial markets adjust quickly and without hysteria. …

There are obviously a few things to worry about just now in the world, but the inability of traders to find a sensible price for the spread between European junk and European Treasuries isn't one of them.

◦ Uh oh.◦ Janet Tavakoli totally kills him for that, saying he mangled facts in his eagerness to create a story. Janet was one of those that predicted the crisis and maintains, with strong evidence, that wall street banks behaved recklessly, and knowingly frauded customers.
I've felt for a while since that Vanity Fair article that Lewis held something back. There were obviously enough juicy tidbits to work with – with Deutsche Bank being one of the major players in the worldwide crisis, with German banks levered

more than 50 to 1 (which implies that a 2% drop in asset values will wipe them out) and consequently, with their banking system allowing them to lie and borrow against collateral that, in other less blind countries, would classify as toilet paper. No, they have indeed not had a financial crisis, but they are like a pig that keeps getting fatter and looks healthier until…that day.

The drama of Europe will have to be written. I will look forward to books by Roger Lowenstein, Niall Ferguson, Frank Partnoy and yes, even Michael Lewis. Because to piece the story together, you have to read more than one book, and read more than one web site. Of the lot, I would (now) give Lewis the least importance. He is entertaining, but indeed has dropped in my mind after the above articles. I'll read his books, but won't expect to get the full story.

(Note: I have recommended his book "

Panic"  on the right sidebar of this blog. It consists of writing from a number of authors, not just Lewis. I still think his other books are good reads.)

Read the full article at

http://capitalmind.in/2011/08/michael-lewis-gets-taken-off-the-pedestal/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CapitalMind+%28Capital+Mind%29

Roubini Sees 60% Chance of A Double Dip in 2012

via Value Investing News by jacobwolinsky on 9/1/11

By EconMatters

Party heardy NYU economist Nouriel Roubini went on Bloomberg TV on Aug. 31 to give his latest prediction of the global economy: "We've reached a stall speed in the economy, not...

Read article at

http://www.valuewalk.com/financial-crisis/roubini-sees-60-chance-double-dip-2012-china-brazil-risk/

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Asia Bond Monitor September 2011

"The size of local currency bond markets in emerging East Asia continued to expand in the first half of this year, rising to USD5.5 trillion at the end of June, 2.4% higher in local currency terms than at the end of March, and 7.7% more than at the end of June 2010. The overall emerging East Asian market's growth was driven by corporate bonds, which grew by 4.4% quarter-on-quarter. The PRC's corporate bond market grew at a more rapid pace of 6.3% in the same period and is now the region's largest corporate bond market."

Read the full report - http://asianbondsonline.adb.org/documents/abm_sep_2011.pdf?src=newsletter&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

Read the news release - http://asianbondsonline.adb.org/documents/abm_news_release_sep_2011.pdf?src=newsletter&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

Read past issues - http://asianbondsonline.adb.org/regional/abm.php?src=newsletter&id=Vd7k9wdkOhnXujvrtQLVzHQl3Ygf9j

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Tell Us What You Think

For comments and suggestions on our website, please contact us at asianbonds_feedback@adb.org

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AsianBondsOnline is an ASEAN+3 initiative, supported by the Asian Development Bank and funded by the Government of Japan. It offers easy, centralized access to information about the region's rapidly developing bond markets. The website contains essential data on current market activities, the legal and regulatory framework of each market, and monitors government policies and initiatives affecting the industry.

It covers the 13 markets listed above and the Asian regional market. The Office of Regional Economic Integration of the Asian Development Bank developed and maintains AsianBondsOnline.