Wednesday, December 15, 2004

Bloomberg: Foreigners Bought Net $48.1 Billion in U.S. Assets in October

Foreigners Bought Net $48.1 Billion in U.S. Assets in October

Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) -- International investors increased their holdings of U.S. assets in October by $48.1 billion, the smallest gain in a year, the Treasury Department said in Washington.

Combined purchases of Treasury notes, corporate bonds, stocks, and other financial assets had risen by $67.5 billion in September, more than previously reported. Higher demand in October for U.S. Treasuries, corporate bonds and stocks was offset by net sales of foreign assets held in the U.S.

The last time holdings grew less was in October 2003, when they rose by $27.5 billion. International investors and central banks complain that an unprecedented trade deficit, combined with a record budget shortfall, is making American assets less attractive and pushing the dollar to a succession of record lows against the euro. Japan's government and investors cut their holdings of U.S. Treasuries for a second consecutive month, and demand from China slowed to $300 million in net purchases.

``There is a worry that the pace of foreign inflows into the U.S. won't keep up with the swelling trade deficit,'' Ashraf Laidi, chief currency strategist at MG Financial Group in New York, said before the report. ``The trend is for diminishing demand.''

The overall net figure in today's report comprises Treasury notes and bonds, debt of so-called agencies such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, corporate bonds and stocks, and the stocks and bonds of foreign companies bought from U.S. investors.

Treasury Secretary John Snow said in an interview today he was ``not concerned'' that foreign demand for U.S. assets would fade and promised to halve the budget deficit within four years. ``We have the deepest, most liquid and best capital markets in the world and we're going to keep them like that.''

Details

Total purchases of domestic securities were $1.22 trillion in October, while total sales were $1.16 trillion.

Purchases of Treasury holdings rose by $18.3 billion. Demand for U.S. corporate bonds rose by $19.2 billion.

Foreigners also had net sales of $3.2 billion in foreign bonds traded in the U.S. and net sales of $12 billion in foreign stocks traded in the U.S. Demand for U.S. agency holdings rose by $22 billion.

Investors abroad held $1.9 trillion of the $3.8 trillion in marketable U.S. Treasury securities outstanding during that month, according to Treasury figures. Private investment of long-term domestic securities rose a net $49.1 billion in October. Central banks and other agencies accounted for the rest.

Concern Over Deficits

Concern is growing in financial markets that trade, current account and budget shortfalls mean the U.S. is living beyond its means and that international demand for dollar-denominated assets may soon sour, said C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based research group. On Dec. 7, the U.S. currency fell to a record $1.3470 per euro.

``This gradual and orderly decline in the dollar may accelerate, turning into a freefall, and create a hard landing,'' Bergsten said yesterday. He predicted the dollar needed to fall another 15 percent to halve the trade gap.

The U.S. current account hasn't been in balance or posted a surplus since the second quarter of 1991. The shortfall grew to a record $166.2 billion in the second quarter as higher oil prices contributed to a wider trade gap. A report tomorrow from the Commerce Department is likely to show a further widening, to $171 billion, in the third quarter, according to the median forecast in a survey of economists.

At an annual rate, the current account deficit was equivalent to 5.7 percent of the $11.6 trillion economy in the April-June period, up from 5.1 percent in the first quarter.

The deficit in goods and services trade grew to an all-time high of $55.9 billion in October, and the U.S. budget deficit reached an unprecedented $412.3 billion in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, reports this month showed.

Euro Holdings

The Zurich-based Bank for International Settlements, which provides banking services for 120 financial institutions and central banks, said Dec. 6 that Asian central banks and members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries may be increasing their holdings of euros and selling dollars. Should that trend continue, the U.S. will struggle to compensate for the trade shortfall, the bank said.

Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, told the European Banking Congress in Frankfurt on Nov. 19 that foreign investors may tire of funding the trade gap and channel money into other currencies. Central bankers in Indonesia and Russia have said they may do just that should the U.S currency extend its drop.

Japan, the largest foreign holder of government securities, sold a net $5.1 billion in October, the second straight decline. That follows a net sale of $1.9 billion in September, which was the first drop since October 2002. Japan accounts for $715.2 billion of Treasuries held by overseas investors, followed by China with $174.6 billion and the U.K. with $140.9 billion.

Until March, Japan bought Treasuries with proceeds from yen sales it undertook to hold down the value of its currency as a way of helping its exporters. Japan hasn't sold yen since exchanging $290 billion worth of its currency for dollars in the first three months of 2004.

China buys dollars to ensure its currency, the yuan, stays at about 8.3 to the dollar, where it has been fixed for nine years. The Chinese net purchases of $300 million were the smallest a decline in February. Net purchases in September were $2.1 billion. The U.S. is encouraging China to let its currency be set instead in free markets.

Caribbean holdings, which analysts link to hedge funds located in the region, fell by $3.2 billion. They have climbed to $85.2 billion in October from $55.2 billion in January.

The Caribbean is the fourth biggest buyer of U.S. Treasuries. Richard Waugh, a managing director at Principal Global Investors in Des Moines, Iowa, said hedge funds have fickle tastes and ``the risk is that if they suddenly decided to sell their Treasuries, we could be flooded with securities.''

The Treasury Department said it will release on Dec. 17 revisions to the benchmarks for the report. They were last revised in 2001.



Tuesday, December 14, 2004

New York Times: "Triggers: Chill! You'll Give Yourself a Stroke"

Triggers: Chill! You'll Give Yourself a Stroke
By JOHN O'NEIL

New York Times, December 14, 2004

Anger appears to have a bigger effect on the onset of strokes than positive emotions, according to a study released yesterday.

The study also found that other negative emotions, in addition to sudden movements, like responses to startling events, appeared to act as triggers.

The study's lead researcher, Dr. Silvia Koton of the Israel Center for Disease Control, said many patients reported that stroke symptoms began after episodes of "overwhelming emotion."

For the new study, which was published in the journal Neurology, 200 patients were interviewed within a few days of a stroke and asked to rate their moods and recall notable events hour by hour for the day leading up to the start of their symptoms. The events and emotions in the two hours immediately before the stroke were then compared with what had been reported for the corresponding two-hour period the day before.

The study found that 43 patients experienced significant anger or negative emotions during the two hours before the stroke, but that only six reported them from the day before. The same pattern held concerning a sudden posture change in response to something unexpected: such events occurred to 24 patients just before having a stroke, but to only 2 the day before.

The effect was most pronounced among patients younger than 69, the study said.

Dr. Koton said further research might be able to identify the people most vulnerable to strokes set off by particular occurrences. "Although people cannot be told not to get mad, stress- and anger-coping programs can be offered to high-risk groups," he said.

Saturday, December 11, 2004

Bloomberg: Dollar Posts Its Biggest Weekly Advance Against the Yen Since February

Dollar Posts Its Biggest Weekly Advance Against the Yen Since February

Dec. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar posted its biggest weekly gain since February against the yen on signs Japan's economy is stalling while economists raise estimates for U.S. growth. The dollar also rallied this week against the euro and 14 other major currencies.

The U.S. currency reached an almost five-year low against the yen on Dec. 2, sparking concern Japan's exports will slow. Japanese government data Dec. 8 showed weaker-than-expected economic growth last quarter, and the Bank of Japan's Tankan survey next week is forecast to show waning business confidence.

``There's no reason to suspect that Japan can now generate a domestic growth story,'' said Steve Pearson, head of currency strategy at HBOS Plc in London. ``Just when we thought there was no risk in being short dollars, the market reminds you it can go up and down.'' Short positions are bets on a decline in price.

The dollar surged 3.1 percent against the yen this week, to 105.22 yen at 5 p.m. in New York from 104.68 late yesterday, according to electronic currency-dealing system EBS. It climbed 1.7 percent this week to $1.3223 per euro, its largest increase in three months.

This week's gain against the yen is the biggest since Japan was selling a record amount of its currency in the first quarter to stem the yen's climb. Japan hasn't sold yen since March. The euro reached 139.85 yen today, the strongest since June 2003.

Hedge funds and other speculators reduced bets on further euro gains for the fourth straight week this week, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed today.

Higher Forecasts

Gains for the dollar this week accelerated after European and Japanese officials said its slide was unwelcome. Japan grew at a less-than-expected 0.2 percent annual clip last quarter, government data showed. French industrial output dropped for the third month in four in October, the government said today.

In the U.S., economists raised their growth forecast for this quarter, according to a monthly survey by Bloomberg News. A 3.8 percent annual rate of expansion is forecast for gross domestic product in October through December, up from the 3.5 percent projected last month.

``Money's going to go where it can get the highest growth and it's not Europe or Japan,'' said Joseph Portera, managing director overseeing $8 billion of global fixed income at Mackay- Shields Financial Corp. in New York. The stronger yen ``certainly hurts their competitiveness globally,'' just as the higher euro crimps European growth, he said.

The U.S. currency fell to a record $1.3470 per euro on Dec. 7. It dropped to 101.83 yen this month, the weakest since January 2000.

Fed Expectations

Expectations for higher U.S. interest rates may also help the dollar. The Federal Reserve may lift its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point on Dec. 14, for the fifth boost this year, to 2.25 percent, the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey shows. The European Central Bank's benchmark is now 2 percent.

The dollar had fallen the past 10 weeks against the yen and eight straight weeks against the euro.

``The market had moved a long way in a short period of time,'' said James McCormick, London-based head of foreign- exchange research at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. ``We really needed to see a pause.''

Lehman, the most accurate forecaster of exchange rates last quarter in a Bloomberg survey, predicted the dollar will resume its decline, reaching $1.40 per euro next year.

Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi yesterday in Tokyo said the yen's climb has been ``unwelcome.'' ECB policy makers, including Jose Manuel Gonzalez-Paramo and Nout Wellink, said the euro's gain to a record threatens the region's economy.

Officials' Comments

``Finance officials want to see the pace and the volatility of the dollar's move diminished,'' said Thomas O'Malley, head of global currency fund management in San Francisco at Barclays Global Investors, with more than $1 trillion of assets.

The dollar's decline has eroded the purchasing power of revenue earned by oil-exporting countries.

``We should consider the dollar depreciation in changing the price band floor'' set by OPEC for oil, Iranian oil minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said in an interview today before a meeting in Cairo of Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

A stronger currency euro damp European growth by making exports more expensive. Industrial production in France, the euro- region's second-largest economy, fell 0.7 percent in October. Exports account for a fifth of the 12-nation euro-region's economy.

The quarterly Tankan index of confidence among large manufacturers may fall to 23 in December from a 13-year high of 26 in September, according to the median of 20 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey. The report is scheduled for release Dec. 15.

Current-Account Deficit

The dollar's slide may resume on speculation U.S. officials favor a weaker currency to narrow the deficit in the current account, the widest measure of trade.

Because of the U.S. deficits, ``it's really hard to be long- term bullish on the dollar,'' Portera at Mackay-Shields said. He said he may buy euros if it goes below $1.30.

A government report will probably show on Dec. 16 that the U.S. current-account deficit reached a record $171 billion in the third quarter, according to the median forecast. A widening gap means an increasing amount of dollars need to be converted into other currencies to pay for imports.

U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow suggested in an interview on Dec. 3 he wouldn't attempt to counter the dollar's slide. ``Markets can overshoot and undershoot, and they often do, but the virtue of markets is they're self correcting,'' he said.

Japan's economy grew at a 0.2 percent annual pace in the third quarter, less than the median forecast of 1.1 percent, the government said Dec. 7.

Friday, December 10, 2004

New UAL Flights to Vietnam Are First Since 1975: Doron Levin Bloomberg Columnist

New UAL Flights to Vietnam Are First Since 1975: Doron Levin

Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- San Francisco was one of the main departure cities for U.S. military personnel going to Vietnam. These days, tourists and business people, not soldiers, are visiting the Asian country.

So this morning United Airlines will inaugurate passenger service from San Francisco to the Asian nation with the first U.S. commercial flight since the fall of Saigon in 1975.

The daily flight, which will operate with a 347-seat 747- 400, stopping in Hong Kong, will land at Ho Chi Minh City, formerly known as Saigon and from where Pan Am made the last U.S. commercial flight.

UAL Corp., the parent of United Airlines and currently operating under bankruptcy protection, said the number of air passengers between the two countries totaled 300,000 last year and has been growing at 10 percent to 12 percent annually since 1997.

Those numbers are quite small, at least in the environment that United is used to operating. In 2003, for example, the airline carried 1.6 million passengers between its Chicago and Denver hubs.

Mark Schwab, a United vice president, told Bloomberg News on Nov. 16 that ``we are going to see continued double-digit growth between the U.S. and Vietnam for several years to come,'' probably in the teens.

Vietnam Airlines

Under the five-year air service agreement between the two countries, state-owned Vietnam Airlines intends to begin flights to the U.S. at the end of 2005, most likely to San Francisco.

Vietnam Airlines said yesterday that it had signed a contract, estimated to be worth $720 million, to buy 10 Airbus 321 aircraft, to be delivered between 2006 and 2009. The carrier flies to about 25 overseas destinations and is talking with Boeing Co. about buying four next-generation 7E7 Dreamliners starting in 2008.

Vietnamese consular officials told the U.S. that more than 100,000 people traveled to Vietnam from the U.S. this year to celebrate Tet, the country's lunar New Year.

Until 1994 when the U.S. and Vietnam normalized relations, Vietnamese officials often were vocal in their resentment against the U.S. for the war. The passage of time, the need for economic development and a desire for tourist dollars have all played a role in changing that attitude, at least publicly.

Yet signs of the war remain visible throughout the country, with Vietnam proud to show tourists government-preserved tunnels once used by the Vietcong and North Vietnamese soldiers to hide from U.S. soldiers and a War Remnants Museum, with displays such as a burned-out U.S. tank.

Meanwhile, Vietnam is taking a page from the West's tourism playbook. The country had no golf courses, for example, a decade ago and now has 10, with nine under construction and another eight in the planning stage, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment.

United's Problems

Who would have dreamed in the early 1970s that the triumphant Communist government of North Vietnam would one day be building golf courses in an effort to turn Vietnam into a fast- growing tourist mecca? Or that mighty United Airlines one day would be fighting to stave off liquidation?

United announced last week it will lay off 575 bag handlers and customer service agents as it flies fewer planes to reduce costs. The airline, which employs 61,800, said it's trying to cut $2 billion of costs through pay cuts, termination of pension plans and operational changes.

A week earlier, the financially strapped airline won a temporary court order blocking a group of creditors from repossessing 14 of its Boeing 767 and 737 aircraft. The issue may be resolved in bankruptcy court.

Watching Costs

United faces a treacherous road to recovery, as low-cost airlines continuously erode the pricing of passenger tickets throughout the U.S., as well as eat away at the airline's customer base. One of the healthiest segments of United's business remains its overseas routes, which contend with competitors but haven't yet suffered substantial encroachment by low-cost carriers.

The most difficult aspect of recovery may be the one facing United's employees, who have had to give up substantial pay and benefits in an unsuccessful attempt to restore profitability and undoubtedly will have to give up more. United has asked the bankruptcy court to allow it to break labor contracts with its six unions if it can't reach new concessionary agreements by mid- January.

Vietnam's economic planners, as well as Vietnam Airline's management, should keep a close eye on United and take notes. The world of international business competition is a rough one, and quite unforgiving of enterprises, especially fledgling ones, that can't keep costs in line.

To contact the writer of this column:

Doron Levin in Southfield, Michigan at dlevin5@bloomberg.net.



Businessworld: Peso falls by 12.5 centavos

Peso falls by 12.5 centavos

By IRA P. PEDRASA, Reporter

The peso yesterday plunged by 12.5 centavos against the dollar following what traders said was a big correction for the greenback's value versus most regional currencies.

It went to as low as PhP56.40 in early trade, wiping out gains in the last few days. It settled at PhP56.335 against the dollar.

"The sentiment is still for a weak dollar but it was already due for some correction. Besides, central banks in other countries have been saying that their currencies should not appreciate too much. Intervention talk abounds," a trader at a local bank said.

A strong local currency makes export products less competitive in the global market, thus stunting the growth of export-oriented businesses, analysts said.

The Japanese yen, after hitting multimonth highs at ¥102, traded at ¥105.15 at the last count. Talks abound that the Japanese central bank was looking at a ¥105.5 resistance to even-off the strength of the dollar.

"[Locally], the banks also continued covering their short-dollar positions, taking profit at trading after previous days of continuous selling," the trader added.

Oil and other manufacturing companies also came in to purchase dollars as they anticipated a bigger correction for the dollar. Total volume of transacted dollars increased to $291.3 million against $287.3 million previously.

Seeing that the PhP56.40 resistance can't be breached, banks that already took some profits tried to unload their dollars until the peso settled at PhP56.335.

"I think a lot of banks were also hit by their stop-loss requirements. There are limits within banks by which one can only loose a certain amount for a day. So whatever the current value, they'll just have to trade there," the trader added.

At the Philippine Dealing System, the country's electronic currencies exchange, the peso averaged weaker by more than 17 centavos to PhP56.335 from PhP56.164. It opened at its intraday high of PhP56.25.

Against the previous day's close of PhP56.21, it indicated that the peso was bound to depreciate for the day.

"It was an expectation, that was why a lot of trades came in today," the trader added.



Thursday, December 09, 2004

Prudent Investor: Explaining Gold's Decline

Explaining Gold's Decline
In last week’s newsletter your prudent investor analyst said,

“The US dollar has fallen to a record low against to Euro (1.345!!!) while its trade weighted dollar index is similarly below the 81 level or at 80.92 for the first time since May of 1995 and this should entail for a big bounce considering the rather steep and prolonged fall.

“In sum, over the short term the US dollar has been greatly oversold and is over due for a big rebound against the free floating currencies as the Euro, Sterling, Francs, while against the managed floats as most Asian currencies, and for a possible remimbi adjustment this may indicate for continued upward movements for the Asian currencies.”

Since there were no signs of a dollar crash it is quite evident that after a frothy run by free floating currencies as the Euro, and the precious metals as Gold, the US dollar was poised for a big rebound as Timesonline’s commentator Anatole Kaletsky aptly describes as, “the characteristics of a financial speculation reaching its climax.”

The US dollar finally made its long awaited counter reaction after being pummeled for ELEVENTH consecutive week against the Euro reversing in a dramatic fashion to gain .8% in a single day as reflected by its trade weighted index. The US dollar index was down 8.4% as of last Friday’s close from the week ending Sept 24th


While the Euro plummeted by.9%


Quoting Aaron Pressman, Senior columnist of thestreet.com, “The dollar was helped by a confluence of macro developments including a weak GDP report from Japan that depressed the yen, plus renewed comments by European bankers threatening to intervene and drive down the euro. Central banks in Canada and Australia also declined to hike their rates, a move that would have made their currencies more attractive relative to the dollar. The Treasury's surprisingly successful $15 billion auction of five-year notes also helped.”

US Treasury yields fell as Central banks bought into the US dollar, dispelling recent rumors of currency diversification

Naturally Gold and its sibling precious metals, which has been moving in consonance with ex-dollar currencies followed the anti-dollar sentiment and plunged 2.9% alongside silver (crumbled by 9.5%) and copper (dropped by 2.7%).


In TECHNICAL lingo as seen in the charts above, the EURO and GOLD are notably overbought while the US dollar index depicts an extremely oversold position, ergo, the natural CORRECTION phase as anticipated. Although fundamentally and on the long term outlook, the bearish case of the US dollar and the bullish proposition for the metals remain.

It was quite a surprise to see that local investors reacted strongly to the Gold and its sibling’s recent price movements as the Philippine Mining Index dropped by a stunning 6.8% the largest among its peers in a generally mixed bearishly inclined sentiment.

In the past, price movements of the metals relative to the local mining issues were largely uncorrelated, meaning that even as the precious metals prices surged, these were hardly reflected in the mining issues stock prices. Does this mean that local investors have now come to their senses to see that the underlying prices of these metals are the fundamental drivers of the mining companies’ share prices?

Finally, it is important to note that since the Mining Act of 1985 have been rendered constitutional by the Supreme Court, there has been a notable stream of portfolio money flows into the industry. Today’s activities registered P 11.986 million worth of inflows reflecting 20.2% of cumulative turnover mostly to Index component Lepanto Mining in spite of the carnage. If the recent foreign money flows were to be a gauge of the efficacy of recently ratified law, then the intended benefactors appears to manifest on the direction as anticipated. Hence, these corrections pose as propitious opportunities to accumulate, instead of the knee jerk consternation brought about the recent decline of its underlying fundamentals.


TimesOnline's Anatole Kaletsky: Why the buck will rebound

Why the buck will rebound
TimesOnline

The dollar's collapse has all the characteristics of a financial speculation reaching its climax

IN THE past week, the value of the pound has risen to almost $2, the first time that sterling has been anywhere near this level since just before Black Wednesday in September 1992. The euro has been hitting record highs against the dollar almost daily. And everyone from Alan Greenspan, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, to the humblest foreign exchange clerk, seems convinced that the dollar is bound to keep falling.

Does this mean that British businesses and investors should prepare themselves for a pound worth more than $2, a level never breached since 1981? Or is this a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for British savers to buy dollars at a bargain price?

Economists who want to protect their academic reputations are usually careful to avoid financial predictions. This is especially true of currency movements, which are considered impossible to forecast. Fortunately, journalists do not have reputations to protect and need not be bound by this convention. Thus, the cover story of this week’s Economist magazine has the headline “The Disappearing Dollar”. It bravely predicts that devaluation of the dollar from its present level is “inevitable” and suggests the possibility of a further 30 per cent fall. I take the opposite view. In my opinion, the dollar has now reached a level from which it can only rise, at least against the euro and pound.

Anyone who buys dollars at the present exchange rate may suffer some sleepless nights in the short term, since pure momentum could continue to drive the dollar downwards for another month or two. But looking slightly further ahead (and don’t ask me to be too specific about the timing), it will seem incredible that £1 could be worth $2, just as it is now incredible that companies such as AOL, Amazon and Yahoo! were once worth the hundreds of millions of dollars which investors paid for them in late 1999.

The rise of the pound to almost $2 has been driven entirely by bearish views on the dollar, rather than any particular enthusiasm for sterling. British currency investors should focus on the relationship between the dollar and the euro, rather than the virtues or otherwise of the pound, for once the dollar recovers against the euro, it will also rise against sterling.

In the past few weeks, the dollar’s collapse against the euro has acquired all the characteristics of a financial speculation reaching its climax. That so many experts are so completely convinced of the market’s direction is a classic sign of this. At some point, the policy mistakes and economic imbalances which have driven the dollar downwards will start to be corrected — and that point is probably not far off. The most important of these imbalances is not the US trade deficit or budget deficit, but the weakness of consumption and employment in the eurozone.

A falling currency can be dangerous and unpleasant for a country that is threatened by inflation, but because of intense competition and plenty of surplus labour, America is unlikely to face any serious inflation, at least for the next year or two. Thus the US has no reason to worry about the declining dollar, still less to change its policies.

But America’s trading partners, especially Europe, face a very different prospect. The falling dollar makes American goods cheaper in world markets. It helps to boost US export industries at the expense of industries in Europe, Britain, Japan and the rest of the world. But Europe suffers far more than other exporting economies for two reasons.

First, Europe, and especially Germany, are currently much weaker and more dependent on exports than other economies such as Britain. Secondly, most exporting countries outside Europe link their currencies either formally or unofficially to the dollar. Asian countries are prepared to intervene forcefully in the markets to stop their currencies from getting too uncompetitive — and they have done this to the tune of almost $1,000 billion during the past three years.

The Europeans, by contrast, have followed a dogmatically free-market approach to currency management — bizarrely so, given that the weaknesses of the European economies are mainly due to the rejection of free-market policies in domestic economic management. Thus when the dollar goes down against the euro, so do the Chinese renmimbi, the Korean won and the Japanese yen.

The declining dollar therefore exposes Europe to a devastating pincer movement. At the top end of the market — technology, high-end services, luxury goods and so on — European exporters lose global markets to American and Japanese competitors. At the bottom end, ever cheaper Chinese and Korean exports destroy the low-cost, labour-intensive industries which still provide millions of Europeans with jobs.

If the dollar continues to fall against the euro or even remains near its present level for more than a few weeks, the European Central Bank will face intense pressure to reduce interest rates. If it does so, Europe will have its first serious chance of economic recovery since 1999. And a European recovery would reduce the US trade deficit, underpin the dollar and allow an orderly decline of the euro to a reasonable, competitive rate.

But what if Europe’s central bankers refuse to respond to the dollar’s weakness by easing monetary policy? The market will then do the job for them. This process has already begun. By pushing the euro even higher against the dollar, currency speculators will extinguish all remaining hope of a European economic recovery. As Europe slides into recession, the ECB will be forced to cut interest rates for purely internal reasons. This easing may come too late to revive the European economy, but it will certainly trigger a euro collapse. Either way, the euro will fall, the dollar will recover and, in the process, the pound’s value against the dollar will move back to more reasonable levels. The days of the two-dollar pound are numbered.

Buttonwood of the Economist: The case for Asia

The case for Asia
Dec 7th 2004 From The Economist Global Agenda
Foreign investors have been pouring money into Asian shares. For once, their bets may pay off

TO THE probable surprise of those who think of this column merely as a font of scepticism, there are indeed a few markets for which Buttonwood holds a warm affection. Take Asian stockmarkets. To the surprise of almost everyone (including your columnist), most of them have actually gone up lately. True, Japan has wobbled a bit in recent months, but the Nikkei aside, Asian markets have generally recovered strongly since the sell-off in April and, according to a widely watched index from Morgan Stanley, this week reached a four-year high. A few of the more exotic destinations—Karachi is one—have never been higher.

The region has been a magnet for foreign money, especially American money, attracted by cheap stocks and heady growth—since 2000, emerging economies have grown two and a half times faster than rich ones—and deterred from investing at home by meagre bond yields and over-generous share valuations. Flows into American mutual funds specialising in international equities have jumped, according to EmergingPortfolio.com. So far this year, some $67 billion more has been invested in these funds. And an increasing proportion of it has been popped into emerging markets. Flows into both international funds and dedicated emerging-market funds jumped sharply in November.

The Institute of International Finance expects Asia to attract almost half of all private capital going to emerging markets this year, though it expects its share to be below last year’s. Although portfolio flows fell sharply in April, when many investors fled, they have picked up smartly in recent weeks. Money invested in Japan funds has risen by 57% so far this year and, until recently at least, international investors were mostly bullish on the prospects for Japanese shares.

The contrarian in Buttonwood would take this as reason to sell. But just because investors are wading into Asia does not necessarily make it wrong. The problems of the American economy, and by extension its stockmarket, are all too well known. Clearly, investors are underwhelmed by such arguments, for the American stockmarket still accounts for just over half of the world’s stockmarket capitalisation. In contrast, Japan accounts for 9%, and the rest of Asia just 3.5%. But even if you think that Japan is long past its sell-by date, the region includes the fastest-growing economies on the planet, and the most populous: Asia, after all, is home to 3.8 billion people.

About 1.3 billion of these are, of course, in China, which also happens directly to have accounted for about a quarter of world growth over the past three years, measured in terms of purchasing-power parity, and a good deal more indirectly, given how much Chinese imports have fuelled activity elsewhere in Asia. Japanese exports to China are growing by anything up to 40% a year; its exports to America, in contrast, are shrinking. Intra-Asian trade is growing by leaps and bounds.

This raises four big questions. The first is: to what extent is Asia’s growth rigged by exports subsidised by cheap currencies? Quite a lot, is the short answer. As Bank Credit Analyst, a research firm, points out, since 1992 emerging Asia's exports have grown 80% faster than consumption. Lack of consumption, lots of savings and currencies quasi-pegged to the dollar—in China’s case, fixed—have resulted in huge current-account surpluses and rapidly mounting foreign-exchange reserves. Asia’s central banks have been recycling these into US Treasury bonds.

Of late, many of these countries, with the exception of China, have let their currencies rise against the dollar, perhaps for fear of an altogether sharper and more unpleasant adjustment down the road. The yen has risen especially fast. Of course, rising currencies raise questions about whether heady growth rates will be sustainable; shares in exporters have suffered somewhat. It is hard to say how much further Asian currencies will rise, how much it will affect exports, or how long it will take for consumption to take up the slack.

Which brings up the second big question: how much will Asian growth benefit investors? A big reason why emerging economies have not emerged is that property rights are generally someone else’s. And this is doubly true if you are a foreign investor. Just ask any investor in China, which continues to account for the bulk of foreign direct investment in Asia. Still, domestic plays, though risky, are not without reward. Banks in Japan, a country where outside investors are treated shoddily, are, in essence, a purely domestic play. Although there was a sharp sell-off in April, shares in Japanese banks are some three times higher than at their low in the spring of 2003, and the rise has picked up pace in recent weeks.

The third question concerns the sustainability of Chinese growth. The country’s investment boom was hugely helpful in pulling the rest of Asia out of its slump in 2001. Were it to falter, so the rest of Asia would stumble; and, for all its size, Japan would not be immune to such a shock. Still, though investors were fearful earlier in the year that giddy growth would lead to a hard landing, the signs are that, while China is slowing somewhat, it is not headed for a fall. Inflation shows signs of dropping, and the central bank may need to do little more than it has already done to cool the economy.

The final question is about American markets. Were these to tumble, appetite for risk would fall sharply, and Asian markets would suffer as much as those anywhere—probably more so, given their illiquidity and the extent to which they have been propelled upwards by foreign money.

Still, that would seem to be as good a chance as any to buy. And at least investors are somewhat protected by valuations. For all their recent rise, Asian shares are still almost 40% below their 1994 peak. The cheapest market in the region, South Korea, trades on a price-earnings ratio of seven, less than half that of American shares. At the height of its stockmarket bubble, Japan accounted for the same proportion of the world’s stockmarket capitalisation as America does today. Now you can buy the whole of Asia for a quarter of that.

Tuesday, December 07, 2004

Stuff.co.nz/Reuters: Papua New Guinea chasing world commodities boom

Papua New Guinea chasing world commodities boom
TUESDAY , 07 DECEMBER 2004

SYDNEY: Impoverished Papua New Guinea is racing to overhaul its foreign investment laws to cash in on a world boom in commodities prices, a senior PNG minister said yesterday.

Gold, oil, copper and other mineral commodities found in abundance in the South Pacific nation are selling for the highest prices in decades on world markets, setting in motion a global exploration boom.

The country may miss a "window of opportunity" due to political instability and a lack of much-needed public and private sector reforms that were keeping foreign investment away, PNG's minister for mines, Moi Avei, told a gathering of miners and investors.

"PNG has a real opportunity to capitalise on the boom in commodities," said Avei, who gave the address, filling in for PNG Prime Minister Michael Somare who was ill.

"However, there is lingering doubt in the marketplace (about its ability). Avei said. "It's been going on for years."

Plans to lay a 3000-km pipeline under the Coral Sea to connect eastern Australia with the remote gasfields of the PNG Highlands and inject up to $US285 million a year into the domestic economy are still under review by ExxonMobil Corp, more than two years after Somare made the project a national priority.

The last big gold discovery was nearly a quarter-century ago on Lihir Island. More recently, the world's biggest mining company, BHP Billiton Ltd, relinquished its stake in the OK Tedi copper mine on environmental grounds.

Mining accounts for about a third of PNG's gross domestic product (GDP), though this contribution is more than washed out by national debt, which this year will account for 55 per cent of GDP, down from 75 per cent of GDP last year.

Hoping to rope in more investment in mining, PNG is abolishing a 2 per cent levy on imported goods – most mining equipment is shipped in as PNG has little domestic manufacturing – and extending foreigners' work visas to 10 years from two.

"The minerals and energy sector is certainly our lifeline," Avei said.

But even if PNG becomes more friendly to the mining industry, other problems persist.

For years, successive governments have failed to combat growing HIV infections, street crime and poverty. More than 200 Australian police have been dispatched to help an understaffed local force patrol PNG's most crime-plagued ditricts.

"Inefficiency in the public sector has become entrenched," Avei said.

PNG's Treasuer Bart Philemon told the conference the government was completing its 2005 budget amid signs the country's coffers were improving.

The national currency, the kina, was stablising, inflation was going down and economic growth was nearing 3 per cent, he said.

PNG is made up of 600 islands, where 85 per cent of its 5.3 million people live subsistence lives in villages clinging to jungle-clad mountains. It is divided by 850 languages, where tribal allegiances dominate and tribes engage in bloody wars.

Sunday, December 05, 2004

Bloomberg: Newmont Says Legal Wrangle Won't Deter Indonesian Investment

Newmont Says Legal Wrangle Won't Deter Indonesian Investment
Dec. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Newmont Mining Corp.'s legal dispute with Indonesia over alleged pollution won't deter the world's biggest gold miner from investing $85 million in the nation next year, said Chief Executive Wayne W. Murdy.
``This is a nation that has huge potential from a geologic standpoint'' Murdy, 60, told reporters in Jakarta yesterday after meeting government officials on his four-day visit. ``It has a lot of mineral wealth, and it's a place we want to do business and make a long-term commitment.''
Indonesian Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar on Nov. 25 said the government would sue the Denver-based company, citing a report that said dumping of waste from its Minahasa mine in North Sulawei province caused arsenic levels in a nearby seabed to rise to 10 times the levels allowed in the U.S.
``It's shocking thing to see these allegations,'' Murdy said. ``Some of these allegations... I don't know what the intent is.'' He said it's the first time Newmont has faced criminal charges in any country.
The dispute comes as Indonesia is trying to boost investment from overseas. Mining investment in 2003 declined for a sixth year, a drop companies operating in Indonesia blamed on conflicting regional and national laws and on illegal mining. Third-quarter production of gold, copper, nickel, aluminum and other precious metals fell 6 percent from a year earlier.
High-Level Talks
Murdy, who left yesterday, met Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Aburizal Bakrie and Mines and Energy Resources Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro during his visit.
Indonesia accounts for 30 percent of Newmont's net income, Murdy said. More than $2 billion has been invested in the company's operations there since 1985. About $735 million was directly invested by Newmont company and the balance by partners that include Sumitomo Corp. of Japan, he said.
Newmont's only working mine in Indonesia now is in Batu Hijau in West Sumbawa province, where 7,000 workers excavate copper and gold. The mine has resources to ensure production up to 2033, said Robert Gallagher, vice president for Newmont Indonesia.
Most of the company's 2005 investment will go toward development of the mine. Newmont invested about $20 million last year on exploration in Indonesia.
``We look long and hard before we go into a new country,'' he said. ``One of our strategies is to operate in relatively few places, in very large mines that can have very long lives because you can train the workforce.''
Villager Complaints
The Minahasa mine at the center of the legal dispute closed in August after gold reserves were depleted. It started operation in March 1996 with an investment of $135 million.
Villagers living near the mine complained to police about five months ago that they were suffering health problems after eating fish from nearby Buyat Bay. Newmont has said its waste- disposal processes are in line with legal limits. Police earlier detained and released five Newmont executives before formal charges were filed.
Bakrie gave assurances the company will get a fair hearing, Murdy said. Lawyers estimate the case may drag on for up to three years if the dispute goes all the way to the Supreme Court.
``We have a government that's just been elected and that's been very, very vocal about dealing with corruption,'' Murdy said of Indonesia. ``This case has gotten a lot of notoriety.''
In the quarter ended Sept. 30, Newmont's net income rose 12 percent to $128.7 million, or 29 cents a share, as revenue rose 32 percent to $1.16 billion. The company's shares closed up 51 cents, or 1.1 percent, at $46.38 in New York trading on Dec. 3.

http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000006&sid=aFEciTsHj6AY&refer=home

Saturday, December 04, 2004

China Daily News: New wave of gold rush hits China

New wave of gold rush hits China
By Liu Jie (China Daily)
Updated: 2004-12-02 10:13
The gold rush is reaching a feverish pitch in major cities across China.
In a Beijing store, 300 kilograms of gold bars minted by the China Gold Coin Inc to commemorate the Year of the Rooster, going for a retail price of 125 yuan (US$15.60) a gram, were sold out within seven hours on November 19.
To avoid a stampede for the precious metal, the store, Beijing Caishikou Department Store, arranged the sale of the second batch of gold bars on November 26 through a telephone hotline rather than over its counters. Although the price for each gram of a bar has increased to 128 yuan (US$15.42) this time, demand exceeded supply by a big margin, according to Wang Chunli, the store's general manager.
Gold, as a symbol not only of wealth but also of good fortune, has always had a special place in the hearts and minds of the Chinese people.
Other than tradition, the latest round of the gold rush has been fuelled by a combination of factors, including the depreciation of the US dollar, the world's major reserve currency; and the surge in prices of a wide range of commodities, including oil, otherwise known as black gold.
Unsurprisingly, China's 300 or so gold producers are smiling all the way to the bank.
Their combined profits for the first three quarters of 2004 jumped 35 per cent from a year earlier to more than 2 billion yuan (US$240 million). China's gold production during those three quarters increased 7 per cent from a year earlier to 149 tons, while demand is expected to increase to 220 tons in 2004 from 207 tons in 2003.
The strong demand for the yellow metal has not gone unnoticed by the nation's banks and other financial institutions, which are gearing up to cash in on the boom.
For instance, Bank of China's Shanghai branch, in November introduced "Gold Treasure," a gold-based investment instrument operated by the People's Bank of China, the central bank.
"Gold Treasure" has been designed to make it convenient for the public to invest in the precious metal. Instead of taking physical delivery of the gold, the investor is given a document issued by the bank certifying the amount purchased. The investor can sell the gold back to the bank and surrender the certificate.
A central bank source says that trading in "Gold Treasure" has been increasing by more than 40 per cent in volume per month this year. Demand has consistently exceeded supply by a wide margin, the source said.
Investors who take pleasure in counting gold they have can opt for the CGS bullion bars that come in three weights: two, five and 10 ounces.
They all come in one purity standard: 99.99 per cent. Minted by CGS Limited, a joint venture between mainland and Hong Kong bullion traders, CGS Standard Gold Bars have become a favourite of China's gold investors since they were introduced to the market in July.
Pricing of the CGS bars is based on the daily gold price on the London Precious Metal Exchange with the quotations on the Shanghai Gold Exchange serving as a reference.
Sales agents for the CGS gold bars say that demand from investors has been rising. What's more, buyers are holding onto their gold expecting further increases in the price, the agents say.
For example, figures released by China Merchants Bank show that sales of CGS gold bars at its Beijing branch amounted to 180 kilograms in the period from July 12 to November 15, while repurchase of the bars previously sold totalled only 15 kilograms.
An executive of the bank's branch figures investors in CGS gold bars have, on average, made a gain of around 5 per cent.
"But still, few investors are willing to take the profit at this time because of the continuous strong up trend (of the price of gold)," he says.
Like thousands of investors, Long Jing, a middle-aged executive of a foreign-funded enterprise in Beijing, bought 2.5 kilograms of CGS gold bars on July 23 at 105.2 yuan (US$12.67) a gram.
But unlike most others, she sold the gold back to the bank in mid-August when the price went up to 117.26 yuan (US$14.13) per gram and pocketed a total profit of 37,000 yuan (US$4,458), excluding commissions and other charges.
Describing herself as a "proactive" investor, Long says she was back in the game in October buying 3 kilograms of gold bars. "I am watching the market very closely for the best time to sell," she says.
Banks are also getting into the game in a big way. China Merchants Bank, for instance, has applied to the China Banking Regulatory Commission for permission to provide an on-line gold trading service to its customers and allow customers to use the gold they own as collateral to secure loans.
CGS is understood to have made a similar application to the bank supervisory agency.
A recent questionnaire by the Beijing Gold Economic Development Research Centre in 10 major cities in China showed 70 per cent of respondents said they would invest in the gold trade if they had the money.
More than 20 per cent of securities investors would transfer part of their capital to gold trade considering the gloomy stock and securities markets on the Chinese mainland.
While the average punters have been hit by gold fever, the professionals on the Shanghai Gold Exchange are keeping their cool.
After a 40 per cent surge in the first 10 months of this year, trading began to level off.
"We are seeing a cooling-down in activity as traders become increasingly cautious," says an exchange manager.
"The big price jump in the past several months has many traders worried about an impending correction which could be equally dramatic," he says.
In the face of the continuing price surge, experts and insiders hold various views about the trend of the market.
Paul Walker, CEO of GFMS Ltd, the London-based precious metals consultancy, says "a slump in the dollar and a surge in (gold) investment is likely to continue.
Walker made the comment at an international forum on global gold outlook, infrastructure support and market development held on Monday in Beijing.
An analysis report, conducted by ANZ (Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited), indicates the gold price is expected to exceed US$500 per ounce.
The report said the double deficit surge in the United States, which could not be offset in a short period of time, might drag the US dollar further down, stimulating gold to climb to a new record.
However, Liu Shan'en, an analyst at Beijing Gold Economics Research Centre, describes the current bullion price as "incredible."
He says the market is reaching the apex of the up-cycle. "I expect that it (bullion price) will return to a more rational level anytime soon," he says.

Japan Times Editorial: Asia takes a historic step

Asia takes a historic step

Historians may well look back at this week's summit of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations and call it the first real move toward creating a regional economic group that unites all of Asia. It pushed the political agenda forward as well, signaling a shift in the ASEAN-Plus-Three (Japan, China and South Korea) get-together that follows the summit, and inaugurated new relations with ASEAN's other dialogue partners.
The organization's unwillingness, however, to fully confront problems among its members, most notably in Myanmar and Thailand, is a reminder that ASEAN's operating principles may yet undermine its ambitious plans.
The highlight of this week's meeting was the signing of a China-ASEAN trade accord that calls for the elimination of tariffs on a range of agricultural and industrial goods by 2010 -- the first concrete step toward the China-ASEAN free-trade agreement (FTA). The limits of the deal -- the absence of a dispute settlement or an enforcement mechanism, as well as the restrictions on goods and the omission of services -- means that all will depend on the implementation of its provisions. Historically, that is a problem: Despite previous trade deals, nontariff barriers continue to plague regional economic relations.
Nevertheless, the trade accord consolidates China's position as the nation leading Asian economic cooperation and development. Beijing's signing of a declaration on a code of conduct within the region is another important step that helps diffuse concern about China's long-term intentions.
Just as important is the impetus the deal gives ASEAN to accelerate its own plans for integration. ASEAN leaders agreed to move up by three years -- to 2007 -- the deadline for eliminating tariffs on intra-ASEAN trade in 11 major product groups. It is estimated that these cuts will affect one-third of the $720 billion in trade among the group's members. Eliminating barriers among ASEAN nations is crucial if Southeast Asia is to stay competitive with China. Without those tariff cuts, trade will increasingly move between individual nations to China. Creating a free market within ASEAN will spur trade within the region, and the region's own growth.
Conscious of the region's growing reliance on the Chinese market, ASEAN has been reaching out to other dialogue partners too. At this week's meeting, the prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand made historic appearances, even though hopes for a leap in relations with Australia were dampened by Canberra's refusal to join ASEAN's Treaty of Amity and Cooperation. The group also signed a partnership agreement with India, which could boost trade between the two from the current $13 billion to $30 billion by 2007.
Japan was another winner at the meeting. Japan and ASEAN issued a joint statement calling for negotiations on a comprehensive economic partnership to begin next April and conclude within two years. This partnership should result in a FTA by 2012. In another statement, the two restated their resolve to prevent and fight terrorism. ASEAN also endorsed Japan's bid for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council.
ASEAN has now agreed to conclude FTAs with all three of its Northeast Asian trade partners, although each has a different target date. These trade deals are designed to create a trade bloc that rivals the European Union and North American FTA. They will provide a huge boost to the region's economic prospects, spurring growth and sharing prosperity. ASEAN's efforts to diversify its trade relationships also serve a strategic purpose: They ensure that Southeast Asia is not excessively reliant on China. Japan, India, and Australia and New Zealand all provide strategic counterweights to China.
This balancing act also allows ASEAN to maintain the initiative in its relations with other nations. Ultimately the success of that effort depends on ASEAN's ability to remain unified and to act when needed. Unfortunately, those two imperatives can clash, as was evident in this week's meeting. ASEAN's reluctance to interfere in the domestic politics of its member nations -- in this case, Myanmar's standoff with a prodemocracy opposition and Thailand's approach to the violence in the south -- makes it look weak and ineffectual, and it alienates other governments with which it must work. ASEAN is overcoming this aversion to such moves, although at a glacial pace.

ASEAN's readiness to tackle those problems is essential if the organization is to take its place on the global stage. ASEAN's success will provide the foundation of Asia's own rise as a political power to rival the Americas or Europe. This week's summit makes that future possible; ASEAN's actions can make it happen.
The Japan Times: Dec. 4, 2004

(C) All rights reserved

Daniel Lian of Morgan Stanley: Navigating Long Macro Voyage for Southeast Asia

Navigating Long Macro Voyage for Southeast Asia
Daniel Lian (Singapore)
Morgan Stanley
Navigating Southeast Asia’s Structural Investment Themes and Avoiding Cyclical Noise and Rhetoric
International investors are clearly excited about the prospects for Southeast Asia, especially Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. All sorts of cyclical and structural reasons are being advocated to justify reweighting of the region. Last week, we highlighted to investors that despite an improved macro environment, a favorable shift in economic restructuring strategy, and momentum in political economy reform, Southeast Asia remains quite heterogeneous. Different Southeast Asian countries have made different degrees of progress in each of the positive areas highlighted by international investors.
Favorable cyclical factors are often fickle. We believe Southeast Asia must navigate a long macro voyage. On this voyage, investors must carefully analyze and appraise structural developments, and eliminate unsustainable cyclical noise and rhetoric. Last week, we began our voyage by discussing the common favorable factors cited by international investors, on a country-by-country basis, and analyzing their merits and demerits (Macro Cherry-Picking Southeast Asia, November 24, 2004). This week, we examine the “investment theses” advocated by various quarters of the investment community.
Political-Economy Reform and Domestic Security — Geopolitical Risks
A large number of international investors are clearly excited by the prospect of political economy reform and the probability of some containment of domestic security and geopolitical risk. The emergence of new leaders (Malaysia and Indonesia) and stronger mandates on second terms (in the Philippines and possibly Thailand) are key factors in such excitement.
We do share the excitement to some degree. There are clearly some prospects of political economy reform concentrating on elimination of or substantial reduction in the rent-seeking complex (Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines) that, in turn, would substantially improve the distribution of economic fruits and the multiplier impact on growth, as well as probably reduce domestic security and geopolitical risk (Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines). However, both efforts require a favorable political climate where the politicians who drive the present reform stay in power. One cannot rule out probable “offenses” and “responses” by vested interest groups and local separatist or extremist elements where they will fight to retain their rents and their goals. It is probably fair to price in some positive development, but, in our view, the market risks substantial mispricing on both. For example, over the past year or so, the market has been fairly optimistic on Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines, but pessimistic and punitive on Thailand. It remains somewhat uncertain whether investors are correctly pricing the risk premium linked to political-economy reform and domestic security in Southeast Asia.
The “Natural Complementary Economic Relationship” with China
One of the strongest reasons that investors cite for investing in Southeast Asia is that the four bigger Southeast Asian countries (Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and the Philippines) are well positioned to continue “exploiting” the “natural complementary economic relationship” — China manufactures for the world, and Southeast Asia supplies agriculture and resources to China as its manufacturing dwindles with the rise of China.
We have been strongly advocating the deployment of a dual-track strategy to develop the vast but underdeveloped non-manufacturing second-track sectors. Our argument is that this would reduce Southeast Asia’s dependence on manufacturing, multinational corporations, and their foreign direct investment. Pricing power would be improved by securing economic niches not “threatened” by China. Nonetheless, I am skeptical that the region is now fully ready to effectively exploit the complementary relationship opportunity with China.
There is indeed an elementary complementary economic relationship between China and Southeast Asia. China is single-mindedly pursuing industrialization, whereas Southeast Asia has the endowments and the development niche to be an even bigger agriculture, agro-business, tourism, and other soft-hard commodity supplier to China. However, the Southeast Asia niche in this aspect is relatively underdeveloped. Without proactive development of such a basic complementary niche through comprehensive economic strategy shifts, Southeast Asian nations cannot expect to make a good living out of the basic complementary economic relationship. We believe that a well thought out “dual-track strategy” emphasizing the development of the “second-track” sectors — agriculture, agro-business, rural and grassroots, small and medium enterprises, resources encompassing both soft and hard commodity development — and complementing the “first track” that emphasizes only mass manufacturing and urban-centric service infrastructure development is a critical strategy shift required by Southeast Asia in order to prosper together with China.
However, Southeast Asia ex-Singapore is far from fully exploiting its second-track potential. The whole region has become more manufacturing-dependent, in terms of both output and exports, over the past decade. Manufacturing output’s share of ASEAN 5 GDP rose from 25.2% in 1994 to 30.2% in 2003, and manufactured exports’ share of GDP went up from 35.5% to 49.3%. The growth in manufactured goods and merchandise (all goods) production and exports is the principal reason why Southeast Asia has survived the onslaught of China and recovered from the Asia Crisis over the past decade.
However, the intensified manufacturing dependence is not a bad development at all. It demonstrates that the “Sino Hollow” thesis is probably not valid (see our October 7, 2004, note of this title), and that Southeast Asia retains good manufacturing growth potential and can grow strongly and structurally if it further develops and exploits its complementary economic relationship with China.
Export- or Domestic Demand-Led Growth?
A large number of international investors believe that Southeast Asia will either have to export well, i.e., economies will have to stay extremely export-driven/outward-oriented, or successfully shift to a sustainable domestic demand strategy. They thus tend to build their investment case on either rising trade with a prosperous China or a stronger domestic demand thesis.
These investors are not wrong. However, Southeast Asia is likely to have to continue to count on both. We believe it is quite possible that the region will continue to enjoy both export and domestic demand growth. Positive GDP growth trends and output potential can accommodate both. Hence, the correct investment theme would be to appreciate that traditional exports — mass-manufactured or generic soft or hard commodity exports — will not generate enough income to see the region to prosperity. The larger Southeast Asian nations need a balanced strategy as outlined in the dual-track discussion above.
The balanced dual-track strategy is the key, because it provides the critical economic linkage between growth in the second-track sectors, with both second-track-driven exports and second-track-led structural resilience in domestic demand. Thai Prime Minister Thaksin’s dual-track experiment over the past four years has clearly demonstrated that properly stimulated second-track sectors create domestic demand resilience. Underdeveloped agricultural, rural, grassroots, and SME sectors are capable of generating better multipliers, as leakage to imports on income created is fairly small. At the same time, new entrepreneurs in the non-mass manufacturing sectors are carving out export niches that are not in direct competition with China or other generic manufacturers elsewhere.
Exports have consistently outgrown domestic demand in ASEAN over a long period. ASEAN can structurally underpin the export sectors through the development of export-oriented non-mass manufacturing in the second-track sectors. This would generate a great deal of domestic demand resilience as second-track sectors are stimulated. Every ASEAN economy has increased exports faster than domestic demand over the past decade — this is where the opportunity lies for sustainable second-track-driven domestic demand growth.
Private Consumption- or Investment-Led Growth?
International investors who subscribe to the domestic demand boom thesis tend to put their faith in Southeast Asian private consumption. They believe the region over-saved and over-invested in the 1980s and ’90s. Hence, they think a private consumption boom is both a “default” outcome — as investment gives way to private consumption — and a necessary one if Southeast Asia is to salvage its growth, given the rise of China and the Asia Crisis. I was a subscriber to such a consumption thesis until quite recently. However, I now disagree on the basis of the following observations:
First, with the exception of Indonesia, Southeast Asia has used exports rather than private consumption as the engine of growth over the past decade. The so-called structural boom in private consumption has taken place only in Indonesia. For the other four countries (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines), private consumption to GDP ratios in 2003 remain roughly the same as in 1994, as well as the average over the 1994–2003 period. In other words, there is no fundamental “macro” expansion in private consumption (however, the banking system’s orientation towards consumers and away from corporates in the region over the past decade may have contributed to expansion in household balance sheets). More significantly, in Indonesia, the structural lift in private consumption — from sub-60% in 1994 to almost 70% in 2003 — was hardly a sign of economic strength or economic prosperity but rather a “default” phenomenon of corporates and households massively scaling back their investments and contracting their balance sheets. Concomitantly, households trimmed their wealth or reduced their rate of savings in order to sustain living standards in the face of massive inflation, currency devaluation, and falling real income after the Asia Crisis.
Second, there are serious institutional barriers to raising private consumption. Young demography, institutionalized or forced saving social structures, the high price of property relative to income, unequal distribution of income and wealth, and undervalued exchange rates all contribute to excessive saving. In my view, these institutional barriers will remain for a long time, thus dimming the prospects for private consumption.
Instead of private consumption, we see Southeast Asia embarking on a structural boom in domestic investment. The economic and policy rationale for a structural investment boom, the macro magnitude and economic implications of such a boom, and the “content” of such investment are critical to understanding the forthcoming investment boom.
Economic and policy rationale. While Japan and the four Asian Tigers (Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea) may have already passed the phase of rapid capital accumulation, the larger ASEAN four that are still low in per capita income must use new productive investment to boost future growth potential. (We believe Singapore has largely exhausted domestic investment opportunities and may not raise its domestic investment ratio further. That is why its external economy strategy centers on deploying excess saving in acquiring foreign assets.) Sources of productive investment would include appropriate infrastructure, upgrading the value chains of existing economic activities, and new second-track economic development.
Macro magnitude and economic implications. Among the larger ASEAN four, Thailand and Indonesia possess more certainty of generating a structural investment boom. Thailand’s average savings rate of 34% from 1994 to 2003 means there is considerable room for its gross investment rate to rise from the present 25% to perhaps 35–36% over the next few years. We believe that is exactly what Mr. Thaksin wants to do over the next few years. In the case of Indonesia, its gross investment ratio has fallen from 31% in 1994 to only 19% in 2003, while its gross savings ratio stood at 24% at the end of 2003. Its much higher average savings ratio of nearly 28% indicates room to lift the gross investment ratio by 10% of GDP. In our view, shrinking the present current account surplus to zero or even running a small deficit at 1–2% of GDP would not have a negative influence on the macro prudence and stability enjoyed by both economies.
Both Malaysia and the Philippines possess good scope for a lift in investment as well. Malaysia has consistently generated very high savings (44% of GDP), and the Philippines has considerable scope to raise its present savings rate to at least in the low 20% area, if the present round of revenue enhancement efforts coupled with structural fiscal reform results in a significant reversal in the government’s deficit trend. Raising the investment rate to the low 20% level could trigger a significant rise in investment in the Republic. However, in the case of Malaysia, some investment uncertainty emanates from the fact that the government is attempting to reduce its investment role. In the Philippines, the battle on the present round of revenue enhancement moves and structural fiscal reform is far from complete.
Content of investment boom. During the last phase of the investment boom, i.e., the late 1980s to mid-1990s, Southeast Asia splurged largely on unproductive investments (many high-end condominiums, golf courses, and white elephant infrastructure) that are wasteful and on generic mass manufacturing production capacity that is no longer relevant to the region’s new growth strategy. The new phase of investment will require the region to boost the productivity of second-track sectors such as services, agriculture, agro-businesses, SMEs, and grass-roots sectors. It should also focus on boosting the productivity of education and the government, as well as infrastructure to support these second-track activities.
Currency Revaluation — Boon or Boom?
Some quarters of international investors are advancing the idea that as the US Federal Reserve drives down the value of the dollar and China finally submits to outside pressure to revalue its currency or implement exchange rate flexibility, the unwinding and revaluation/appreciation of the ringgit peg as well as appreciation of other Southeast Asian currencies under their managed float/basket peg regimes would warrant rising optimism on Southeast Asian markets.
We think these investors would be proved right if the Fed succeeds and China succumbs. There would be short-term capital gain on Southeast Asia investment holdings. Also, currency revaluation/gains would render a domestic demand boom quite probable in Southeast Asia. However, there might be at least two opposing structural impacts — one positive and one negative — resulting from such a titanic currency move.
A positive structural development could take place as Southeast Asia exploits its currency gains to help fund its own investment boom, since foreign capital goods that are essential for capital formation would become cheaper. The currency gains would also favor domestic demand in general as imports become cheaper, and a typical monetary response to currency revaluation is to allow for some degree of domestic monetary expansion. More significantly, the currency gains would help sharpen the region’s focus on second-track development as its generic mass-manufactured exports become less competitive and less in demand in the global marketplace.
A negative structural development would occur if a domestic demand boom were not managed properly. The region might take the easy route of compensating stronger currency-induced export deterioration with a loose money-induced unproductive asset boom rather than the tough journey of restoring export competitiveness through productive investment. This has happened in Japan and, to varying degrees, in the four Asian Tigers since the Plaza Accord in 1985.

Friday, December 03, 2004

New York Times: Economists Have Advice for Buyers as the Art Market Heats Up by Eduardo Porter

Economists Have Advice for Buyers as the Art Market Heats Up
By EDUARDO PORTER

Art prices are setting records again. In early November "No. 6 (Yellow, White, Blue Over Yellow on Gray)" by Mark Rothko was auctioned at Sotheby's for a record $17.4 million, almost 50 percent above the top end of Sotheby's estimate. "The Ninth Hour," a room with a lifesize wax pope felled by a meteorite, by the Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, fetched $3 million at auction at Phillips, de Pury & Company, also exceeding its top estimate by half.
Not only are modern and contemporary artists being treated like pop stars, but earlier American masters are also soaring like late-1990's Internet stocks. Today Sotheby's is putting "Group With Parasols (a Siesta)," by John Singer Sargent on the block with a top estimate of $12 million. This would be a record for the artist at auction.
"We have more collectors today willing to spend more money than we've ever had," said Dara Mitchell, a director of the American paintings department for Sotheby's.
These rates of return are now attracting the interest of financial investors. In Britain, there is the Fine Art Management Fund, which has been in the market since March. A former co-owner of Phillips, de Pury & Luxembourg established Artvest, an art investment company, in the spring. The New York-based Fernwood Art Investments plans to establish several funds next year to buy and manage art portfolios. And virtually every bank on Wall Street has an art advisory group to assist rich clients.
The renewed appetite for art as an investment is rekindling interest in developing systematic ways to assess the value of art and is drawing attention to a small number of scholars who have been applying economics to this new asset class.
Two pioneers are Michael Moses and Jianping Mei of the Stern School of Business at New York University. Mr. Moses and Mr. Mei developed an index of repeat sales of the same work of art, compiled from the prices of thousands of artworks sold at auction since 1875. They found that the compound annual rate of return of art from 1953 to 2003 was 12.1 percent, slightly higher than the Standard and Poor's 500 stock index.
Mr. Mei and Mr. Moses also found that art prices have a low correlation with stocks, so art can enhance the performance of a portfolio of equities. Perhaps most interestingly, they found that the art-dealer maxim that masterpieces are the best investment is wrong. According to their index, masterpieces - usually meaning the most expensive works of art - tend, instead, to appreciate less, or depreciate more, than the art market as a whole.
Economic analysis has also exposed some other peculiar behavior. Two economists from Oxford University have found that presale estimates by auction houses have some systematic biases. In contemporary art, for some reason, the most recently executed artworks are overvalued. For Impressionist and modern art, physically wider paintings may be underestimated.
David Galenson, a professor of economics at the University of Chicago, has been using the prices of artworks at auction to study patterns of creativity. His findings include useful insights into what makes art valuable. For instance, collectors might think again before paying big prices for late pieces by Pop artists. Their most expensive and critically acclaimed work, according to Mr. Galenson's analysis, was done at the beginning of their careers, when the breakthrough idea that took them to the top - the mechanical reproduction of serial images, for example, or blowing up cartoon frames - was still fresh. The Abstract Expressionists, on the other hand, might be better bought old - once they have experimented enough.
Mr. Galenson splits creativity into two camps, inductive and deductive. Inductive-minded artists - say, Claude Monet or Jackson Pollock - will experiment endlessly, with no precise endpoint in mind. Deductive conceptualists, on the other end, rely on the great revolutionary idea that springs forth fully formed - Marcel Duchamp's 1917 urinal, "Fountain," for instance, or "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon," which Picasso painted when he was 26. "With conceptual artists you can usually express their real contribution in a sentence," said Mr. Galenson. Mr. Galenson also picks out a broad shift in the market's taste over the last half century, as the appetite for innovation favored the quicker, deductive approach and thus tended to reward younger artists. In particular, he found that artists born before 1920 tended to do their most important work after the age of 40, while those born after 1920 peaked before hitting 40.
"A persistently high demand for artistic innovation has produced a regime in which conceptual approaches have predominated," Mr. Galenson wrote in a paper. "The art world has consequently been flooded by a series of new ideas, usually embodied in individual works, generally made by young artists who have failed to make more than one significant contribution in their careers."
Todd Millay, vice president in charge of strategy and product development at Fernwood Art Investments thinks this economic approach is helpful. "It's taking the tools and techniques which have been useful to understand other sectors of the economy and applying them to the art market," he said. Mr. Millay is developing quantitative techniques that Fernwood will use to build its art portfolio. Mr. Moses said he and Mr. Mei are also putting together a pricing model based on variables including the number of times an artwork work has been exhibited, written about or sold. And their analysis can provide some benchmarks.
For instance, the Sargent up for auction today will be sold, by Sotheby's estimate of $9 to $12 million, at a price somewhere between 375 and 500 times what it fetched in 1962. But Mr. Mei's and Mr. Moses's index of American art has appreciated only 136-fold in that period. "If I'm looking for a financial return, maybe these prices are a bit high," Mr. Moses said. "If you tend to buy above the index-inflated purchase price, your future returns are going to suffer."
Ms. Mitchell of Sotheby's stands by the value of the Sargent nonetheless. "Paintings of uniquely superior quality appreciate to a greater degree," she said. "Great paintings have a different curve." She argued that auctioneers have a pretty good handle on what an artwork is worth, benchmarking against other recent works by the artist sold and the overall state of the art market.
Auction houses have a big advantage: they already know the fairly small number of people who can spend a few million dollars on a painting. That means they have a pretty good idea of who is likely to bid how much for the next big artwork to be put on the block. "We have relationships with collectors seeking works from certain artists," said Matthew Carey-Williams, senior specialist for contemporary art at Sotheby's. "The first thing we say when we look at a piece of art is 'who is going to buy this?' "
Indeed, many art dealers tend to mistrust these economic approaches to art. Andre Emmerich, the New York collector and dealer, argues that there is no systematic method that can measure the shifting tastes that ultimately dictate the value of art in the market. "I'm not very good at these abstract theories at all," Mr. Emmerich said. "Art has much more to do with gut than with anything else."

Even some of the proponents of a more analytical approach to art say it is uncertain how much these ideas will help investors beat the art market. Merely measuring the market is tough, because there are so few public transactions to base any analysis on. And many deals take place privately between dealers and collectors, so their details are frequently not known.
Mr. Galenson argues that the art auction market is pretty efficient. Indeed, prices tend to reflect what art critics like and dislike. Orley Ashenfelter, a professor of economics at Princeton who studies art auctions, said all this analysis wass interesting, yet "I don't know how you can make money from this."