WORTH READING :
The most scathing report describing in exquisite detail the coming financial apocalypse in Europe comes not from some fringe blogger or soundbite striving politician, but from perpetual bulge bracket wannabe, Jefferies and specifically its chief market strategist David Zervos. "The bottom line is that it looks like a Lehman like event is about to be unleashed on Europe WITHOUT an effective TARP like structure fully in place. Now maybe, just maybe, they can do what the US did and build one on the fly – wiping out a few institutions and then using an expanded EFSF/Eurobond structure to prevent systemic collapse. But politically that is increasingly feeling like a long shot. Rather it looks like we will get 17 TARPs – one for each country. That is going to require a US style socialization of each banking system – with many WAMUs, Wachovias, AIGs and IndyMacs along the way. The road map for Europe is still 2008 in the US, with the end game a country by country socialization of their commercial banks. The fact is that the Germans are NOT going to pay for pan European structure to recap French and Italian banks – even though it is probably a more cost effective solution for both the German banks and taxpayers….Expect a massive policy response in Europe and a move towards financial market nationlaization that will make the US experience look like a walk in the park. " Must read for anyone who wants a glimpse of the endgame. Oh, good luck China. You'll need it.
Full Report:
In most ways the excess borrowing by, and lending to, European sovereign nations was no different than it was to US sub prime households. In both cases loans were made to folks that never had the means to pay them back. And these loans were made in the first place because regulatory arbitrage allowed stealth leverage of the lending on the balance sheets of financial institutions for many years. This levered lending generated short term spikes in both bank profits and most importantly executive compensation – however, the days of excess spread collection and big commercial bank bonuses are now long gone. We are only left with the long term social costs associated with this malevolent behavior. While there are obvious similarities in the two debtors, there is one VERY important difference – that is concentration. What do I mean by that? Well specifically, there are only a handful of insolvent sovereign European borrowers, while there are millions of bankrupt subprime households. This has been THE key factor in understanding how the differing policy responses to the two debt crisis have evolved.
In the case of US mortgage borrowers, there was no easy way to construct a government bailout for millions of individual households – there was too much dispersion and heterogeneity. Instead the defaults ran quickly through the system in 2008 – forcing insolvency, deleveraging and eventually a systemic shutdown of the financial system. As the regulators FINALLY woke up to the gravity of the situation in October, they reacted with a wholesale socialization of the commercial banking system – TLGP wrapped bank debt and TARP injected equity capital. From then on it has been a long hard road to recovery, and the scars from this excessive lending are still firmly entrenched in both household and banking sector balance sheets. Even three years later, we are trying to construct some form of household debt service burden relief (ie refi.gov) in order to find a way to put the economy on a sustainable track to recovery. And of course Dodd-Frank and the FHFA are trying to make sure the money center commercial banks both pay for their past sins and are never allowed to sin this way again! More on that below, but first let's contrast this with the European debt crisis evolution.
In Europe, the subprime borrowers were sovereign nations. As the markets came to grips with this reality, countries were continuously shut out from the private sector capital markets. The regulators and politicians of course never fully understood the gravity of the situation and continuously fought market repricing through liquidity adds and then piecemeal bailouts. In many ways the US regulators dragged their feet as well, but they were forced into "getting it" when the uncontrolled default ripped the banks apart. Thus far the Europeans have been able to stave off default because there were only 3 borrowers to prop up – Portugal, Ireland and Greece. The Europeans were able to do something the Americans were not – that is "buy time" for their banking system. And why could they do this – because of the concentrated nature of the lending. In Europe, there were only 3 large subprime borrowers (at least so far), so it was easy to front them their unsustainable payments – for a while. But time is running out. Of couse, the lenders (ie the banks) have always been dead men walking!
At the moment, the European policy makers – after much market prodding – have finally come to grips with the gravity of their situation. And having seen the US bailout movie, they know all too well what happens when a default of this caliber rips through the financial system. The reason the EFSF was created in the first place was so that there could be some form of a European TARP when the piper finally had to be paid and the defaults were let loose. Certainly many had hoped the EFSF could be set up as a US style TARPing mechanism (like our friend Chrissy Lagarde suggests). The problem of course is that there are 17 Nancy Pelosis and 17 Hank Paulsons in the negotiation process. And while the Germans are likely to approve an expanded TARP like structure on 29-Sep, it increasingly looks like it may be too little too late. The departure of Stark, the German court ruling on future bailouts/Eurobonds, the statements by the German economy minister and the latest German political polls all suggest that Germany is NOT interested a full scale TARPing and TLPGing process across Europe. They somehow think they will be better off with each country going at it alone.
The bottom line is that it looks like a Lehman like event is about to be unleashed on Europe WITHOUT an effective TARP like structure fully in place. Now maybe, just maybe, they can do what the US did and build one on the fly – wiping out a few institutions and then using an expanded EFSF/Eurobond structure to prevent systemic collapse. But politically that is increasingly feeling like a long shot. Rather it looks like we will get 17 TARPs – one for each country. That is going to require a US style socialization of each banking system – with many WAMUs, Wachovias, AIGs and IndyMacs along the way. The road map for Europe is still 2008 in the US, with the end game a country by country socialization of their commercial banks. The fact is that the Germans are NOT going to pay for pan European structure to recap French and Italian banks - even though it is probably a more cost effective solution for both the German banks and taxpayers.
Where the losses WILL occur is at the ECB, where the Germans are on the hook for the largest percentage of the damage. And these will not just be SMP losses and portfolio losses. It will also be repo losses associated with failed NON-GERMAN banks. Of course in the PIG nations, the ability to create a TARP is a non-starter – they cannot raise any euro funding. The most likely scenario for these countries is full bank nationalization followed by exit and currency reintroduction. Bring on the Drachma TARP!! The losses to the remaining union members from repo and sovereign debt write downs at the ECB will be massive (this is likely the primary reason why Stark left). It will require significant increases in public sector debt and tax collection for remaining members. And for the Germans this will probably be a more costly path. Nonetheless, politics are the driver not economics. There is a reason why German CDS is 90bps and USA CDS is 50bps – Bunds are not a safe haven in this world – and there is no place in Europe that will be immune from this dislocation. Expect a massive policy response in Europe and a move towards financial market nationlaization that will make the US experience look like a walk in the park. Picking winners and losers will be VERY HARD but let's look at a few weak spots –SocGen 12b in market cap (-70% this year) with assets of 1.13 trillion BNP 31b in market cap (-55% this year) with assets of 2 trillion Unicredito 13b in market cap (-70% this year) with assets of 1 trillion Intesa 14b in market cap (-70% this year) with assets of 700b Compare this with the USA where we have – JPM 125b in market cap with assets of 2.1 trillion BAC 70b in market cap with assets of 2.2 trillion
Importantly, France GDP is only 2 trillion and in bank balance sheets are some 400% of that number. The banks are dead men walking with massive leverage to both home country income as well as assets. The governments are about to take charge and Europe as a whole is about to embark on a sloppy financial market socialization process that has been held back for nearly 2 years by 3 bailouts. The weak links will not be able to raise enough Euros/wipe out enough private sector equity to get this done, so there will be EMU members that need to exit and use a reintroduced currency for this process. We put a Greek drachma on the front cover of our Global Fixed Income Monthly 20 months ago for a reason.
Ex-company secy levels charges against Kanorias.
Viom Networks, a venture between Tata Teleservices and Srei Group enterprise Quippo, has run into a cloud of controversy over charges of financial irregularities.
The company has appointed KPMG to assess the extent of the graft, if any, after a former company secretary alleged that the Kanorias of the Srei Group diverted funds to the tune of Rs 300 crore to some private institutions.
In 2009, the tower businesses of Tata Teleservices and Quippo were merged to form Tata Quippo, which was subsequently named Viom Networks. Initially, Tata had 51 per cent stake and Srei the balance. The stake of Srei has subsequently come down to about 18 per cent, but they still have management control over the company.
According to a contract between the two partners, the Srei Group will continue to have management rights till it has 12 per cent stake in the venture.
When contacted, Hemant Kanoria, chairman and managing director of Srei Infrastructure, said the company secretary was fired on
July 25, following which he made certain allegations. "Since the company has a whistle-blower policy and shareholders maintain higher standards of corporate governance, it was decided to appoint an independent auditor for a probe."
According to people close to the development, KPMG has already started looking into the issue.
In a late evening statement, Viom said the shareholders, board and management of Viom Networks were committed to the highest standards of corporate governance and the action reflected that philosophy.
Viom has more than 38,500 towers and around 95,000 tenancies. The company plans to roll out nearly 20,000-25,000 additional towers in the next two years. According to the company's website, Viom is the strongest player in neutral host shared in-building communication solutions, with installations already completed at most of the major airports.
Options traders are making the most bearish bets in a year against India, Asia's worst-performing stock market, before the central bank meets to consider extending a record series of interest-rate increases.
Prices for three-month puts to sell the S&P CNX Nifty Index have climbed 62 percent higher than calls to buy, and they reached 66 percent on Aug. 22, the highest since September 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Open interest for September 4,500 puts has jumped by 24,547 in the past week to 111,264 for the largest increase among all contracts on the benchmark index, which has slid 19 percent this year to 4,940.95, the data show.
Investor confidence is waning on concern that the Reserve Bank of India's five rate increases this year may compound the effects of a global economic slowdown on corporate profits. The highest inflation among major Asian economies may force the central bank to raise borrowing costs on Sept. 16, two days after the government releases data that may show inflation rose.
"Investors are buying puts as rising rates will continue to slow production," Arun Khurana, a Mumbai-based fund manager at UTI Asset Management Co., said in a telephone interview on Sept. 12. The mutual fund company is the nation's fourth largest, with $15 billion in assets. "Consumption isn't slowing and that is pushing inflation higher. The situation is moving out of the Reserve Bank of India's control."
Growth Slows
The central bank will lift the benchmark repurchase rate by a quarter point, according to all 11 economists in a Bloomberg survey, in an attempt to curb wholesale-price inflation that stayed above 9 percent for an eighth straight month in July. The rate has risen 1.75 percentage points this year to 8 percent. Factory production in July grew at the slowest pace in almost two years as consumer demand moderated after the rate increases, government data showed Sept. 12.
The India VIX rose 0.1 percent to 32.77 yesterday, near the two-year high of 34.88 reached on Aug. 9. The gauge of prices for Nifty options and expected share-price swings has averaged 30.75 in its almost four-year history. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index fell 4.4 percent to 36.91 yesterday, while Europe's VStoxx volatility gauge lost 8.3 percent to 49.12.
Morgan Stanley cut its year-end estimate for the BSE India Sensitive Index, another benchmark gauge of the nation's equities, on Aug. 18 by 15 percent to 18,850. CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets lowered its forecast to 18,200 from 19,500 on Aug. 24.
'Constrained'
"It would be negative in the near term if they decide to increase rates," Seth Freeman, chief executive officer at EM Capital Management LLC in San Francisco, said about India yesterday in a phone interview. "Revenues are likely to go down because customers are constrained from higher borrowing costs."
Falling commodity prices and the worldwide economic slowdown may ease inflation pressures in developing nations including India, according to Geoffrey Dennis, global emerging- market strategist at Citigroup Inc. in New York.
The S&P GSCI Spot Index of raw materials has declined 13 percent from this year's high on April 8. Brazil's central bank unexpectedly cut interest rates on Aug. 31, while Turkish policy makers reduced borrowing costs to a record low after an unscheduled meeting on Aug. 4.
"The short-term inflation problem, which has been quite tough for emerging markets for the last 12 months, will ease," Dennis said during a Sept. 12 Bloomberg Radio interview. "That's going to help because it means less in the way of interest rate hikes than we thought would be the case a couple of months ago."
Implied Volatility
Nifty put options 10 percent below the index level have an implied volatility of 33.30, compared with 24.10 for calls priced 10 percent above, JPMorgan data show. Implied volatility is the key gauge of prices for options, which become more valuable as swings in the underlying stock or index increase.
September 4,700 puts have the largest open interest of all contracts on the index, with 167,619, followed by 142,526 outstanding September 4,800 contracts. The Nifty hasn't closed below 4,700 since November 2009. There are 1.76 million total puts on the index versus 1.29 million calls.
India's Nifty dropped for a third day yesterday, losing 0.1 percent to 4,940.95. Overseas investors withdrew a net $2.4 billion from Indian equities last month, the most since October 2008, data from the Securities and Exchange Board of India show. That helped send the Nifty down 8.8 percent, the biggest August drop since 1997.
Companies in the Nifty trade at 14.2 times reported profits, compared with a price-earnings ratio of 10.1 for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.
'Not Justified'
"India's valuation premium over emerging markets is not justified with high inflation and slow growth," Saurabh Mukherjea, the Mumbai-based director of institutional equities at Ambit Capital Pvt, said in a Sept. 9 telephone interview. "Markets will continue to grind lower as the premium should narrow in line with long-term averages." The Reserve Bank may raise rates by another 50 basis points, he said.
Indian stocks are "somewhat overpriced," according to Mark Mobius, who oversees about $50 billion as executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management's emerging markets group. "Inflation at this stage is beginning to moderate but the concern going forward will be growth," he said in a Sept. 7 interview broadcast in India on Bloomberg UTV.
India's economy grew 7.7 percent in the June quarter, beating the 7.6 percent median of 26 estimates in a Bloomberg survey. Its growth was 7.8 percent in the previous three months, the second-fastest rate among the four-nation group including Brazil, Russia and China known as the BRICs.
'Stubborn'
The Reserve Bank of India said on Aug. 25 that price gains may remain "stubborn," which could limit the ability to hold or lower interest-rate levels. India's benchmark wholesale-price inflation was 9.22 percent in July, remaining at more than 9 percent for an eighth straight month. Consumer prices rose 6.5 percent or less in China, Indonesia, South Korea and Thailand for the same period.
This NEWS in FINANCIAL TIMES created last hour Buying in US Market and this is the reason ….ASIAN Markets are UP
Italy's centre-right government is turning to cash-rich China in the hope that Beijing will help rescue it from financial crisis by making "significant" purchases of Italian bonds and investments in strategic companies.
According to Italian officials, Lou Jiwei, chairman of China Investment Corp, one of the world's largest sovereign wealth funds, led a delegation to Rome last week for talks with Giulio Tremonti, finance minister, and Italy's Cassa Depositi e Prestiti, a state-controlled entity that has established an Italian Strategic Fund open to foreign investors.
Italian officials were in Beijing two weeks ago to meet CIC and China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange (Safe), which manages the bulk of China's $3,200bn foreign exchange reserves. Vittorio Grilli, head of treasury, met Chinese investors in Beijing in August. Italian officials said further negotiations were expected to take place soon.
The possibility of Chinese investment comes at a critical moment for Italy, as markets demand increasingly high yields to buy Italian public sector debt, projected to reach 120 per cent of GDP this year, a ratio second only to Greece in the eurozone.
Mr Tremonti has written extensively in the past about his fears of China's "reverse colonisation" of Europe. But he has been driven to seek new alternatives as Europe prevaricates over strengthening its bail-out fund and the European Central Bank warns that its month-old bond-buying programme cannot go on indefinitely. In a reflection of Italy's refinancing problems, the treasury on Monday sold €11.5bn of short-term notes at higher yields.
European analysts were cautious over the outcome of talks. Despite Beijing's numerous expressions of confidence in the creditworthiness of countries such as Greece and Portugal analysts say Chinese purchases of peripheral European debt have been relatively small.
How much of Italy's €1,900bn of debt is already held by China is unclear, though one Italian official told the FT that Beijing held about 4 per cent.
Italy's debt crisis has forced the government to consider possible sales of strategic stakes in companies such as Enel, the Italian power utility, and Eni, the oil and gas multinational.
Cassa Depositi e Prestiti is a founding member of the informal "long-term investors club" along with similar institutions in France and Germany. In July it launched its Italian strategic fund with an investment of €4bn that it plans to expand to €7bn with participation from other sources, including foreign institutional investors.
CIC was set up in 2007 with capital of $200bn and its assets under management now total about $410bn. It says it "maintains a strict commercial orientation and is driven by purely economic and financial interests" and that it is committed to "high professional and ethical standards in corporate governance, transparency and accountability". China's embassy in Rome had no immediate comment.
Three years after launching the Nano as “the world’s cheapest car”, Ratan Tata, chairman of India’s second largest industrial group, presented what may be the world’s most-expensive automobile: the jewel encrusted GoldPlus Nano.
Covered in 80kg of 22 carat gold and 15kg of silver, and inlaid with 10,000 semi-precious stones and gems, the ‘bling’ version of the Nano is a one-off showpiece that will tour Tata-owned jewelry stores across the country.
What was originally marketed as the People’s Car, selling for about $2,500, has been transformed into a golden chariot, with an estimated value some $4.68 million higher, based on the current price of bullion.
The makeover highlights the paradoxes of one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, where billionaires live side-by-side with the severely impoverished.
The original Nano, which launched with a 100,000-customer waiting list in 2008 and was aimed at an emerging middle class, has seen sales plummet. In August the Mumbai-based group shipped just 1,202 units, down 88 percent from April’s 10,012 units.
Analysts blame the fall on safety issues, poor marketing and a misunderstanding of the Indian consumer.
“Really for the Nano project to make any sense, you need to sell between 15,000 to 20,000 cars every month … [for] a couple of years,” said Deepesh Rathore, managing director for India at IHS Automotive.
Tata made clear the new car was simply a promotion for its GoldPlus stores, but analysts said that could confuse consumers and failed to address the broader problems the People’s Car has had since its launch.
“They are not getting their brand and marketing strategy right and it’s confusing the buyers,” said Surjit Arora, auto analyst at Prabhudas Lilladher. “They need to have a better and more aggressive marketing [strategy].
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Analysts also blame the Nano’s poor safety record. Several incidents of the cars spontaneously erupting into flames were widely reported, pushing Tata to offer its existing 70,000 Nano customers a safety upgrade to its electrical system and exhaust.
However, a more fundamental issue, according to Mr Rathore is that the car has been marketed in the wrong way from the beginning. Indians, he said, generally do not want to be known as buyers of the world’s cheapest car.
The showcasing of the car comes as Tata Motors announced a new Jaguar Land Rover engine plant in the U.K. on Monday and only 11 days after Carl-Peter Forster, the chief executive of the group, stepped down for personal reasons.
After reporting deep losses during the financial crisis, JLR is now solidly profitable and the main driver of Tata’s growth. The U.K. unit reported net profit of £1.04 billion for the 2010-11 financial year.
Tata’s lower-end brands have been suffering a broader drop in sales in the small passenger vehicles segment, which has also affected its domestic competitors. India’s auto sales fell in July for the first time in nearly three years.
The Mumbai-based group has plans to combat low sales by opening exclusive Nano-only dealerships throughout rural India, the market for which the small car was originally intended. The move has worked with the more utilitarian Tata Ace mini-truck, but an analyst said operating and start-up costs would prevent many entrepreneurs from starting the dealerships.
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.