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Chuck Bao
1/15/2008, 03:47 PM
It seems like we get new and even scarier doom and gloom newspaper articles about the global financial system almost every damn day.

I’m going to be ahead of the curve, for once, and come up with my own scary thoughts.

• The Chinese government owns Citibank. Instead of laying off employees, the new management decides to send them all to re-education camps.

• With the loss of confidence in the Fed managing the US economy, Ben Benake finally officially announces that it’s substantive.

• Citibank announces that it is applying Feng Shui principles to all of its branches to bring the bank up to modern banking standards.

• Alan Greenspan becomes the financial advisor to the Chinese government. While some financial analysts say it’s unseemly, most agree that he has earned his right to go where the money actually is.

• US presidential candidates of both parties uniformly agree that the correct course of action would be large a new stimulus package to get the US consumer to spend again. Says one: “You can’t spell the American dream without the words ‘IOU’.”

• Citibank announces that US depositors will, in the future, get fortune cookies with their monthly bank statement. Citibank secretly hopes this may take some of the guess work out of mortgage defaults.

Okay, you guys can come up with better ones than that.

This is a real news article from the Asia Sentinel.

http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=985&Itemid=32


Asia Ponders Its Astounding Foreign Exchange Reserves
John Berthelsen
14 January 2008

The greatest shift of capital in world history, now washing across Asia, poses a dilemma for policymakers

What is Asia going to do with its money? Because of the astonishing profligacy of the western economies, primarily the United States, the region’s 11 biggest economies have amassed the biggest transfer of financial resources in the history of the world. Although most of the focus has been on China, with its US$1.5 trillion in reserves, the region as a whole holds more than double that amount, nearly US$3.9 trillion. And, by one estimate, the figure appears set to soar upward even further, to US$5.1 trillion by the end of 2009.

It is questionable how long this can go on at the present pace, however. Ultimately it would probably collapse the global monetary system. Debt of that magnitude is not repayable and thus the trust basis of the reserve system would simply collapse. Nonetheless, the way the region manages this massive amount of money can be expected to dominate global economics and financial markets for decades to come. But with few really sophisticated financial markets, and lots of barriers remaining to regional flows of capital, how will this be handled?

For perhaps the last two to three decades, the global trade system has functioned as a kind of perpetual motion machine in which the United States in particular exported a vast amount of its industrial plant to Asia in search of cheap labor. Asia’s mercantilist economies, primarily Japan and China, made cheap goods and sent them to the west, driving trade balances deep into negative territory. The profits from those goods were then recycled back into US stock markets, treasury and corporate bonds, money market funds and other financial instruments used to keep the west, particularly the US economy, going.

But perpetual motion machines work for only so long. Successive US governments, fearing rejection at the ballot box, did nothing to stimulate domestic savings to prompt domestic investment or to cut consumption. Even in areas where the US had a real advantage, including information technology, biotechnology and aerospace, the country began to lose its lead. Services, which it long dominated, also began to slip into the red. The US has thus become Asia’s biggest debtor by far, its international deficit in goods and services now having reached US$63.1 billion for the month of November alone, the biggest total in 14 months.

This wasn’t supposed to happen. The falling dollar and slowing US economy were supposed to begin to reverse that trade balance. But it doesn’t appear to be working yet. Asia’s central bankers and policymakers are beginning have major concerns about the capital inflows, especially to financial markets, pressuring currencies to rise and creating the conditions for inflation.

“The resulting huge accumulation of foreign exchange reserves leaves these economies far better able to deal with potential financial shocks than in 1997,” according to the Asian Development Bank in its July, 2007 Asian Economic Monitor. But, the ADB says, “Surging capital inflows… impose a significant challenge to the region, as inflationary pressures build and world interest rates continue to rise. Given that financial market stability is critical to macroeconomic management, capital flows have become a significant factor affecting policy decisions in these emerging East Asian economies. Policy options are limited because of the increasing conflicts between domestic and external objectives.”

Beyond China, India is perhaps the best example. Although not as big as those of China or Japan, India’s foreign exchange reserves soared from US$192 billion in 2006 to US$284 billion in 2007 – a 47.9 percent jump in a single year. But even tiny Brunei, with a population of about 380,000, holds between US$40 billion and US$60 billion (the exact amount is a state secret). Singapore, with only 4.5 million citizens, holds US$261 billion. Hong Kong, with 7.5 million, holds US$149 billion.

The holders of these reserves, denominated in US dollars, are obviously hostage to their debtors. China alone holds US$1.499 trillion in reserves. According to Qu Hongbin, HSBC’s chief economist for China, “China’s position is just too long in the dollar. If they are going to make any significant reallocation or shift, it would be almost suicidal. Once the market smells that China would sell down dollars, the dollar would go into free fall.”

Although the latest data indicate that China’s trade surplus growth may have peaked, with import growth exceeding export growth over the final three months of 2007, the country has vast resources that Beijing is delicately seeking to manage in a way that would preserve their dollar value. But, Qu says, “It’s just like a bank. If you lend too much money, the last thing you want to see is this guy go bankrupt. When poor Asia lends too much money to rich America, it becomes a hostage.”

In 2006, gross capital inflows into Asia reached a record US$269 billion, spurring the ADB’s concern. But in 2007, that amount soared to US$740 billion, increasing the pressure to drive up asset prices and putting pressure on exchange rates. It has driven the spectacular growth of sovereign wealth funds - funds controlled by governments - to buy and manage foreign assets. So far few sovereign funds have covered themselves with much glory. The US$200 billion China Investment Corporation bought US$3 billion worth of the investment company Blackstone only to see its shares collapse by US$600 million. A similar US$5 billion investment in the troubled investment bank Morgan Stanley came just as the extent of the subprime crisis was starting to hit financial markets.

Nonetheless, today, according to a study by Joshua Aizenman for the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, sovereign wealth funds hold assets ranging from US$1.5 to US$2.5 trillion, an amount that is expected go grow seven-fold over the next decade. This is “an amount larger than the current global stock of foreign reserves of about $5 trillion.” Sovereign wealth funds, Aizenman writes, “’have stirred debate about the extent to which their size may allow them to destabilize financial markets and their policies may be driven by political, rather than economic and financial, considerations.”

The two most visible -- and oldest -- sovereign wealth funds are in Singapore, the Government Investment Corporation and Temasek, which have combined assets of US$200 billion and have long faced questions over lackluster investments. The latest was Temasek’s US$6.2 billion purchase of 9.4 percent of the US investment bank Merrill Lynch on January 3, only to have Merrill announce on January 11 that it was taking a US$15 billion writedown because of the subprime crisis. Another is the Korea Investment Company, with US$20 billion in assets. The bulk of sovereign fund assets, however, are held in the petro-oligarchies of the Middle East, which have combined assets of more than US$1 trillion between them.

Where is this money going to be invested? Up to six months ago, western powers were humiliating Asia’s attempts to buy western assets – see China’s attempts to acquire Unocal and the white goods manufacturer Maytag. Even attempts by Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing, to take over the infrastructure of the Panama Canal were rebuffed on suspicion that he might be too close to the communists in Beijing.

But today, given the growing desperation of American investment banks in particular, the sovereign wealth funds’ money is considerably more appreciated – just ask Merrill and Morgan Stanley.

TheHumanAlphabet
1/15/2008, 04:04 PM
Hey Chuck!

2 things concern me (well actually more than two, but I'll sensor myself...)

1. The reluctance of the Fed or Bush admin to do something, anything about the low dollar value and propping up the value of the dollar. and

2. All the foreign ownership of major US institutions. I am a capitalists and generally don't have a problem with that, but when foreign gov'ts and foreign corps own major institutions and exchanges, I start to think conspiracies and really bad things...

royalfan5
1/15/2008, 04:11 PM
Hopefully people will start to figure out that we can't sustain a negative savings rate as long as we have and start putting some money in the damn bank. If not at least I am employed in a field that provides something that China needs.

crawfish
1/15/2008, 04:25 PM
I suppose this is why Citibank has been employing Shaolin monks in their debt collection department. :eek:

Chuck Bao
1/15/2008, 05:12 PM
There are soooo many more of these.

This one is from Bloomberg and they're calling it the "three bubbles":

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=aX7dPVoxMs5w&refer=columnist_pesek


China + Citigroup + Alwaleed = Brave New World: William Pesek

Commentary by William Pesek

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Leave it to Citigroup Inc. to settle the raging debate about the true might of China's economy.

The debate was prompted by a recent World Bank report claiming the world's No. 4 economy is far smaller than believed. The new calculation, based on purchasing-power parity, found that China produces 40 percent less output than previous estimates.

The largest U.S. bank is proving wealth speaks louder than statistics. Citigroup may be turning to the cash-rich Chinese government for a handout, joining other household names like Morgan Stanley.

It would be the latest sign China is, according to Joseph Quinlan, chief market strategist at Bank of America Capital Management, ``America's Financial Sugar Daddy.'' First came its $3 billion investment in Blackstone Group LP, one of the most capitalist of Wall Street vehicles. Now, ``communist'' China is routinely bailing out the masters of the financial universe.

China is hardly Wall Street's only savior. Singapore's state-run Temasek Holdings Pte tossed a $5 billion life preserver at Merrill Lynch & Co. And now, after a $7.5 billion investment from Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, Citigroup may be getting a cash infusion from China and Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal.

Three Bubbles

On the surface, all this back-scratching makes sense. Asian and Gulf governments, with their currency reserves and oil wealth, face a kind of embarrassment of riches and are open to buying into Wall Street at fire-sale prices. In the West, subprime mortgage losses have drained the capital Citigroup and others keep as a cushion against bad loans.

Yet such transactions of convenience are joining together three of the world's biggest bubbles: China's economy, oil prices and Wall Street's hubris.

The Chinese bubble that gets the most attention is stocks. The CSI 300 Index climbed 162 percent last year, even as officials took steps to calm the market. In 2007, the names of three Chinese banks and the word ``stocks'' beat ``sex'' to become four of the most Googled words in China.

Another bubble is a stockpile of currency reserves that is approaching the equivalent of Brazil's annual gross domestic product. Economists are wondering about bubble troubles elsewhere. Officials are so worried about inflation that they're freezing price increases of oil products, natural gas and electricity.

Oil Boom

Oil prices near $100 per barrel seem emblematic of the surge in commodities. Prices for everything from grain to gold to zinc are being driven higher by the rise of China, India and other developing powers and speculation in markets. While the commodities boom is crimping global growth, its proceeds are enriching resource-rich nations.

Saudi Prince Alwaleed's consumption patterns say it all. He's buying his own Airbus SAS A380 superjumbo jet for personal use. That $319 million purchase in being financed by a lack of energy conservation and efficiency around the globe. That's just fine by Gulf states rolling in petrodollars and using them to extend their global reach.

And then there's Wall Street's hubris bubble. While it's manifested itself in myriad ways over the decades, the most recent incarnation is among the most disturbing. Banks sold risky loans to Americans least equipped to understand or handle them. Then Wall Street systematically packaged that risk in ways that hid the dangers. Even as things unraveled, experts lined up to say the turmoil would be ``contained.'' As if.

New Risks

Whether serendipitous or by design, the connecting of these three bubbles raises the stakes for the global financial system. Here's but one example: If China overheats or its stocks plunge, Wall Street shares could take a hit as investors bet on an end to bailouts from China Inc. Or if Wall Street's hubris resulted in even more bad loans, China's stocks could take a hit as investors mull the fallout for Asia's No. 2 economy.

The intermingling of a Wall Street on the ropes, a China on the verge of overheating and obscene oil wealth is creating a brave new world of finance. Indeed, the thrust of Aldous Huxley's ``Brave New World'' dovetails nicely with what's unfolding in global markets at the moment.

Huxley wasn't thinking about Wall Street when he wrote his 1932 novel. Yet the motto of the utopian world Huxley created -- ``community, identity, stability'' -- isn't all that unlike what people from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to Citigroup Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit to Chinese President Hu Jintao is trying to achieve.

Brave New World

Bernanke and Pandit are interested is the stability of the global financial community. While Hu shares that goal, he's also interested in creating a more global identity. This is China's moment, not only to spread its ``soft power'' but also its influence over the global economy's biggest players. A bigger say in the International Monetary Fund is one thing; pieces of Citigroup and others are nice to have, too.

As the world's bubbles intersect, the challenges of the global system arguably become more complex. It will be interesting to watch them co-exist, feed off and perhaps even reinforce each other in the months ahead -- or frightening.

(William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this column: William Pesek in Tokyo at [email protected]

FirstandGoal
1/16/2008, 12:40 AM
Maybe if I am not so tired tomorrow I can try again to read this thread and understand anything in it.

SoonerKnight
1/16/2008, 03:35 AM
Maybe if I am not so tired tomorrow I can try again to read this thread and understand anything in it.

The Chinese along with the Saudi's are buying the United States....... There is a summary for ya. Be scared. Al least be worried!!! :eek:

royalfan5
1/16/2008, 10:33 AM
The Chinese along with the Saudi's are buying the United States....... There is a summary for ya. Be scared. Al least be worried!!! :eek:
Also the Singaporeans are acquiring stuff too.