Showing posts with label market strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label market strategy. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 January 2010

What Could Endanger The Markets In 2010

What could cause problems in 2010, these are all IFs. Pays to keep track. If Bernanke gets itchy and push down 10-year US Treasury yields again, that could put more oomph to the already excessive liquidity in the system. Bernanke could be scared into doing so if jobless numbers do not show signs of improvement. The funds will try to play the liquidity game yet again, piling into crude oil, gold and this could really create a swift liquidity bubble again.

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Japan is the best bet for calamity in 2010. Things may suddenly turn focus on their huge fiscal measures and their imbalances with respect to their public debt. Already the public debt is at a staggering 225 per cent of GDP. What could start the cascade is a big dip in the value of the yen, which may require stabilisation by raising interest rates. Any kind of rates rise will push debt service costs up the roof. The country will flip from deflation to early bouts of hyperinflation. The yen may crash to 130 yen to the dollar ... which will wreck their bonds market but actually sustain interest in Japanese exporters.

China may find that it is the only engine for growth, and shouldering global demand alone may reach its peak. Wild credit growth can mask the weakness of its export model for a while but only at the price of an asset bubble. Beijing must hit the brakes this year or store up serious trouble. What will Beijing do? Prick the asset bubble, the shares will also tumble, and its effects will be felt all across emerging markets.

The EU could be placed under attack as some nations complain bitterly for having to shoulder the weak ones. The weak ones complain that they need to revive their country's employment and wants the Euro much weaker and rates a lot lower. When rich nations spending power is under threat, the union may start to wobble. Rallies and protests may rage across Europe.

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These are all IFs, but they could emerge as realities swiftly, hence its best to be on our toes.


p/s photos: Zhang Zhiyi

Friday, 27 November 2009

Important View On Dubai World Factor In Equity Strategy




Well, just as swiftly foreign money came into emerging markets, just as swiftly will they leave, and not even on something direct. An indirect scare out of Dubai seems to be enough reason to take the chips from the table. On Wednesday, Dubai World, the government investment company behind some of the emirate's most ambitious projects, said it was seeking to delay repayment on a tranche of its debt. The company has $60bn of liabilities from its various companies including Nakheel, the property firm behind the Palm Jumeirah, the world's biggest artificial island, and the Nakheel Tower, the world's tallest building at 1km high. It also owns DP World, the ports operator that bought P&O Ferries. Nakheel is due to make a $3.52bn Islamic bond repayment, plus charges, on December 14.

Traders feared that the request for a six-month standstill was a sign that the Dubai Government was struggling with its other debts – and that the full impact of the financial crisis globally may not yet be over. British bank stocks, that are among the most exposed in the world to the Middle East, were hard-hit. Royal Bank of Scotland slumped 7.75pc, Lloyds Banking Group lost 5.75pc and HSBC fell 4.4pc – all three are among nine banks who were book runners on an outstanding $5.5bn syndicated loan to Dubai World in June 2008. HSBC's interim accounts showed that the bank had a $15.9bn exposure to the whole of the United Arab Emirates.

The concerns for UK banks also hit sterling, which fell to its weakest point in a month against the euro and a basket of currencies, while gilt futures leapt to a six-week high, propelled by renewed fears about credit quality. Property shares fell sharply amid concerns of a fire sale of Dubai's UK assets, which include the Grand Buildings in London. Dubai has also been a major buyer of UK property.

The risk of corporate default in Dubai clearly shows that contagion risks have not disappeared and that perhaps the market has turned a little complacent about risk. Foreign money flew out of emerging markets yesterday and the cost of borrowing shot up as investors sweated over the prospect of a state-owned Dubai company defaulting and sending another round of shock waves through the global banking system.

Banks in Europe and North America are heavily exposed to the Middle East, and Dubai in particular, with its $80 billion of debt. The cost of borrowing money increased sharply with the increased risk in financial markets. Credit default swap rates (CDS) rising on debt issued out of the Middle East and emerging markets rose, and borrowing costs on Dubai's five-year loan jumped to 5.4 per cent, up 2.24 per cent in two days.

If you look at the emerging nations' stock market performances it gives you a feel of how quickly Western capital will flow out of these nations on default fears. That said, we have to acknowledge that this is largely not long term funds anyway. These funds will find some obscure reasons to get out, if it wasn't this Dubai World situation, it will be some other obscure factor. Thats part and parcel of the high risk of having carry trades into your system. You can complain when they exit, but somehow the same people never seem to complain when they arrive??!! (ala Mahathir).

If nothing is resolved for Dubai World in the next few days you could expect more of the same next week. Uncertainty will breed fear, in other words. However methinks the risk of contagion is relatively low this time around - plus it came at a time when most equity markets were quite robust, and were actually looking for a reason to correct. This would be a good reason to correct - but I would have to say that its a buy on weakness this time around, rather than a "go for a few months holiday" kind of correction. I think markets should have a few more days of weakness, and a good strategy would be to slowly build up positions.

One big thing which most of the Western media have neglected is the role of Abu Dhabi/UAE in this - many seemed to just gloss over this. Abu Dhabi won't allow Dubai's state-owned companies default on debt payments as the global banking crisis limits their access to funds. Dubai and Abu Dhabi are interdependent and one can't be isolated from the other. Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is the world's largest sovereign wealth fund with assets of between $250 billion and $850 billion, according to the International Monetary Fund. The emirate owns more than 90 percent of the U.A.E.'s oil reserves, nearly 8 percent of the world's proven total.

Take all that into account, the risk of contagion and another credit crunch was low. Because seriously, the Middle East is not the engine of growth or a crucial part of the recovery we are seeing in the global economy. The sums that the affected banks will have to bear are not overly large, they can be written down safely, yes these banks' share prices will take a hit, but its nowhere as bad as the subprime situation.


p/s photo: Haruna Yabuki