FiNETIK – Asia and Latin America – Market News Network

Asia and Latin America News Network focusing on Financial Markets, Energy, Environment, Commodity and Risk, Trading and Data Management

Nomura launches Electronic Trading Platform In Asia-Pacific – Trading Live In Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia

Nomura, the pre-eminent Asia-based investment bank, this week announced the launch of its Asian Electronic Trading platform, providing clients with Direct Market Access (“DMA”) and Algorithms via its “ModelEx” platform connecting to equity markets in Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia. ModelEx is Nomura’s algorithmic trading platform which allows clients to electronically access its suite of automated trading strategies.

The firm expects to launch the platform in India, Taiwan and Korea by April 2009.

Nomura is unique in the electronic trading services (ETS) business for its award winning quantitative analytics and risk models, which provide pre- and post-trade analytics, market microstructure and quantitative research to help clients generate new and innovative trading ideas.

The new ETS team combines the best electronic trading capabilities of the Lehman Brothers acquisition, including the quantitative analytics team, developers of the algorithms, information technology and operations personnel, with Nomura’s strong client relationships and dominance in Japan.

Previously, Nomura has been active in the Japan ETS market in both DMA and Direct-Strategy-Access (DSA), utilizing its “Experts” algorithmic platform. The current ETS team, led by Managing Director Rob Laible, has maintained the Nomura platform while at the same time building-out the pan-Asian capabilities of ModelEx in order to ensure seamless execution and provide superior analysis and a competitive edge for its clients.

“Nomura is committed to establishing a world-class suite of electronic trading products for its customers globally, and we’ve been very focused over the last few months on re-establishing a market-leading platform in Asia,” said Rob Laible, Head of Nomura Electronic Trading Services in Asia. “We are well-positioned to offer our long-only clients, hedge funds, pension funds, and other institutional investors value-added and customized trading solutions and execution services.”

Nomura’s Asia-Pacific Equities division delivers the full resources of a multi-product execution platform to its clients globally. Committed to a state-of-the art risk management platform and market-leading research coverage and insight, Nomura provides its clients with a full-service equity broker offering, including structured and flow derivatives sales and trading, cash sales and trading, program and electronic sales and trading, quantitative advisory/analytics, structured derivatives and prime services.

Source: MondoVisione, 26.02.2009

Filed under: Asia, Australia, News, Trading Technology , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

World edges towards autarky

Evidence at the CLSA Japan forum suggests that economies have no choice but to turn inwards and become self-sufficient.

 

We are told by economists of the classical school that protectionism in the 1930s made the Great Depression worse. But evidence from the CLSA Japan forum suggests it is free market policies themselves that are forcing countries to become increasingly autarkic — a word last used in the 1930s, referring to economies becoming self-reliant.

One of the most striking comments in this vein came from CLSA’s auto analyst Christopher Richter. His solution to the Japanese carmakers being clobbered by the strong yen is to move their production offshore.

“Toyota would have made a profit this year if the yen had not strengthened so much against the dollar. In order to avoid such a terrible currency mismatch, Toyota should build its cars in the markets where it is selling them, in the US and Europe. Factories outside Japan should therefore be expanded at the cost of factories inside Japan,” he says.

Currently, Toyota builds more cars than it can sell in Japan, and exports them.

The implications of Richter’s comments are remarkable: namely that FX rates have become so incredibly volatile that normal trade is value-destroying. (Volatility hasn’t been confined to FX of course: the performance of oil prices has been equally extreme and equally baffling to many observers.) The traditional solution is for companies to hedge their exposure through financial products bought from investment banks. For reasons that are unclear — perhaps simply because the swings have been so unprecedented — this strategy has clearly not worked very well.

One lesson is that one should not assume free trade benefits from free flows of capital — indeed, the experience of the Japanese carmakers proves the contrary. During the first period of globalisation and free trade in the decades before World War I, free trade was anchored by a very strict version of the gold standard (that is, compared to the post-World War I version), which prevented countries going into long-term deficit or surplus. In other words, it would have been impossible for export volumes to rise to the levels they have risen to in Japan, Germany and China.

 

Some Japanese observers, always less keen on the unregulated markets than the American and UK schools of thought, have long believed that volatility in free financial markets is excessive and helpful to investment banks rather than to manufacturing, export-oriented businesses.

In fact, rather than urging everybody to keep their borders open, Western leaders should note that the explosion in world trade in recent decades has been the symptom of a dysfunctional financial system, where trade was financed by debt and extreme imbalances. So a decrease in trade will naturally accompany deleveraging.

A second factor which indicates that international trade flows will slow is the fact that US consumers have increased their savings rate, meaning that they will reduce their spending on imports. According to CLSA’s head of Japan research, Andreas Shuster, America’s savings rate is now higher than Japan’s. For their part, Asian consumers are being urged to spend more, to make up for the loss of demand from trade deficit countries in the West. But spending on imports from Western countries will not stimulate domestic demand. Spending on imports is the equivalent of exporting jobs in an environment when unemployment is soaring — CLSA’s chief strategist, Christopher Woods, estimates the jobless rate could reach 10% in Japan by the end of this year, for example.

A third factor which will turn economies inwards is fiscal stimulus. Whether the stimulus comes in the form of traditional public works, as in Japan, or combined spending on social security, health and education as well as public works, as in Western countries, such benefits, almost by definition, will stay within the domestic economy. It would be a wasteful contradiction to generate expensive jobs through what are government/taxpayer subsidies while encouraging imports. After all, imports detract from GDP figures, and maintaining GDP is what today’s governments are all focused on. (This is not mercantilism, since exports have crashed anyway, as the Toyota experience testifies.)

A fourth factor is that people are poorer, which will diminish demand, including trade, in any case. Academic theories advocating free trade in conjunction with free markets have not yet been defeated. But there seems to be a substantial shift afoot reflected in companies re-focusing within their borders, or as in the Toyota example, combining factories and sales in one country. Clearly, free trade with free capital markets created a terrific bubble, which is now deflating with terrible consequences.

Source: FinanceAsia.com

Filed under: News , , , , , ,

Challenges and opportunities for Islamic finance; BMB Islamic UK

Humayan Dar, chief executive officer of BMB Islamic UK, discusses new developments in Shar’iah-compliant finance.

BMB Islamic was founded in 2007 in London to provide Shar’iah advisory and structuring services. It enlists Shar’iah scholars and Islamic financial consultants to guide investors, lawyers and other investment professionals.

What new developments are taking place in Islamic finance?
There is little in the world of conventional finance that Islamic finance cannot replicate – whether in terms of financial instruments or funds. Sukuk — similar to bonds — are of course very well established now, and going forward it will be interesting to see which jurisdiction, whether Malaysia or the Middle East, will evolve as the dominant one for issuance and trading. But even sophisticated fund structures, such as private equity, hedge funds or specialist funds, are being set up so they are Shar’iah-compliant. We, at The BMB Group, have recently formed a private equity joint venture with Emerging Markets Partnership (EMP) to invest in emerging markets. BMB Islamic is also helping an investment bank to set up a Middle East infrastructure.

What about regional cooperation?
On February 18, The BMB Group formed a partnership with the International Zakat Organisation (IZO) to set up and manage a 2 billion Malaysian ringgit Global Zakat and Charity Fund, which will manage zakat (the act of giving alms to the poor) and other charitable funds to alleviate poverty in the 57 states which are members of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference. It is a long-awaited initiative. There has been inevitably a huge emphasis on Shar’iah-compliance in Islamic banking and finance, but the announcement of a Global Zakat and Charity Fund is the beginning of a new Islamic financial trend, which favours social responsibility and community development.

Will there be a resolution of what seems to be conflicting jurisdictions and centres for Shar’iah interpretation, and also competing centres for Islamic business?
In Malaysia there is strong inherent demand for Islamic products and the country has rapidly developed as a centre for Islamic finance. Perhaps most importantly, the government has provided institutional support, particularly through Bank Negara Malaysia (the central bank) but also through favourable legislation and tax treatment, for Islamic products. Middle Eastern financial houses have recognised this, and hence have entered the Malaysian market either directly or through partnerships and joint ventures. Malaysia is also correctly perceived as a gateway to other Asian markets.

Significantly too, Shar’iah-compliant financial products are now seen as competitive alternatives for non-Islamic people, who will happily buy them if they prefer the returns or their risk profiles compared with conventional products. Islamic finance is in the mainstream in Malaysia and is likely to become so elsewhere in the world — even Europe. Product standardisation will come through time, not by edict but through a wide acceptance of a particular norm.

What about Indonesia?
Indonesia, with its vast Muslim population obviously has tremendous potential. Once the institutional framework is in place — and already the government has issued its first sukuk — then the market should develop quickly. Perhaps the authorities need to be more like Malaysia and be more proactive and encouraging. Islamic finance will expand to countries and regions where there is a friendly regulatory environment, supported by a clear legal framework.

How will this year pan out, and what will be your main role?
This year will be tough, as it will be for all financial markets. However, pressure on government budgets, especially in the Middle East due to the lower oil price, means that some significant sukuk issuance is likely.

But, actually, the current conditions also offer the potential to take advantage of new opportunities and provide new products. With so much uncertainty, investors are seeking alternative havens for their capital, while depressed asset values of all kinds means there is a chance to build portfolios from a reasonable cost base. For instance, Islamic art funds are becoming popular.

An essential role for us is to monitor the Shar’iah-compliance of funds which are advertising and marketing themselves to Islamic customers. Integrity and credibility is all important.

Source: FinanceAsia.com, Rupert Walker , 26.02.2009

Filed under: Banking, Islamic Finance, News , , , , , , , , , ,

Industry Fears Proposal in Congress Would Destroy High-Frequency Trading and Liquidity

Trading industry experts said the passage of a new bill to tax each buy and sell transaction by up to 25 basis points would devastate liquidity in the equities market.
The proposed House of Representatives’ bill-H.R. 1068: Let Wall Street Pay for Wall Street’s Bailout Act of 2009-would, they say, dramatically increase trading costs, widen bid-ask spreads, kill off high-frequency market making firms, slash volumes and move trading to overseas markets.

“It would have a really major impact for the high-frequency players,” said Jeff Bell, with Wedbush Morgan Securities’ clearing and technology group. “It would end that whole business.”

Since equities began trading in penny increments in 2001, the trading industry has undergone a massive overhaul, moving to an electronic trading world. Today, roughly 65 percent of all volume is executed by high-frequency traders, who have replaced specialists and market makers who fled the inside market due to narrower bid-ask spreads that raised their risk profile.

The concern within the trading industry is that if high-frequency traders were taxed, they would exit the business, because their current razor-thin margins would turn to losses. The result? Liquidity would disappear for all market participants.

Wedbush clears the trades for many of the industry’s largest high-frequency firms. Bell calculated, for example, that Wedbush’s fee for the tax would have been more than an estimated $50 million on Monday alone for having done more than $20 billion worth of securities transactions that day.

“That’s a huge tax; 25 basis points is enormous,” said Dan Mathisson, the head of Credit Suisse’s Advanced Execution Services.

The proposed bill would add 5 cents per share to the cost of trading an average stock, at around $20 a share, Mathisson added. By comparison, electronic trading commissions for services cost a penny-or just under a penny.

“You’re talking about raising the trading costs more than five times,” he said. “That would bring liquidity presumably down to levels from 10 years ago, which is the last time transaction costs were that high. I assume you would see volumes drop from about 10 billion shares a day to one billion shares a day.”

Details for the bill have yet to be worked out. As written, the bill would amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to impose a tax on certain securities transactions enough to recoup the net cost of the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., authored the bill.

DeFazio introduced the bill on Feb. 13. It has since been referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means, according to the House of Representatives’ Web site.

The bill’s findings argue that because the $700 billion TARP fund and the new Federal Reserve lending facilities were created to protect Wall Street investors, the same Wall Street investors should pay for the infusion of taxpayer money.

“The easiest method to raise the money from Wall Street is a securities transfer tax, a tax that has a negligible impact on the average investor,” the bill states. “This transfer tax would be on the sale and purchase of financial instruments such as stock, options and futures. A quarter percent (0.25 percent) tax on financial transactions could raise approximately $150 billion a year.”

The offices of Representatives DeFazio and Michael Capuano, D-Mass.-the only one of seven additional sponsors of the bill who is on the House’s Financial Services Committee-did not return calls for comment.

There is precedent for such a tax. The United States imposed a transfer tax of 0.2 percent on stock trades between 1914 and 1966. In addition, investors now pay the federal government $9.30 per million dollars of face value to fund the Securities and Exchange Commission-under Section 31 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

With such a steep climb in transaction costs, high-frequency market makers operating on razor-thin margins would be the first to fall, several in the industry said. By some accounts, they comprise an estimated two-thirds of average daily volume.

And with less liquidity, by definition, spreads would widen, said Eric Hess, general counsel for Direct Edge ECN. They could widen by a factor as great as three or four, according to some estimates.

“It would have a cascading effect over time,” Hess said. “In the same way that liquidity begets liquidity, draining liquidity has the tendency to drain even more liquidity.”

The extra cost would most likely get passed on to investors. Because of tight margins, broker-dealers wouldn’t assume the cost themselves, unless they were for their own proprietary accounts, Hess added.

The Security Traders Association circulated a letter to its members earlier this week that described the tax’s potential impact. In it, the letter laid out the bill’s impact on high-frequency market makers and overall liquidity in the equities, options and futures markets.

“The deeper and more liquid the market, the better the price discovery and related information provided,” the STA letter said. “Impairment of liquidity lessens the value of the information and the functioning of a market-based economy.”

And with less liquidity, firms would be encouraged to trade overseas, where costs are cheaper, Hess said. Consequently, more companies could be encouraged to list overseas.

As many stocks can be listed overseas, the tax would create an immediate market for them. Market venues such as the Toronto Stock Exchange and or Chi-X, in Europe, could likely start listing U.S. equities, some industry pros said.

Mathisson laid out one scenario

“How long does it take for off-shore entities, such as the Chi-Xs of the world, or the London Stock Exchanges of the world, to cross-list a significant number of U.S. companies and get everybody to start to trade there?” he asked. “And then volume in the U.S. would drop even more, or maybe just stop. Maybe the U.S. equities are traded at exchanges overseas. And then the [transaction] tax generates a negligible amount of revenue because it shuts down the U.S. exchange industry.”

The bill won’t generate the anticipated revenues if trading behavior changes and volumes plummet, Hess added.

“You’re talking about imposing a tax on behavior that can change overnight and over time,” he said. “Algorithms will be changed. Trading patterns will be changed. People will seek to minimize the impact of this tax on them and that will result in less revenues, not to mention the additional costs it will impose on an already fragile system.”

Many of the half dozen in the industry pros interviewed for the story said the bill was too obviously flawed to pass. But each added that in an environment where the entire financial world is blamed for banks’ ills, and many are desperate to close budget gaps, no one is sure how seriously the bill will be taken.

“It’s better to be proactive on a poorly designed investor tax than it is to sit and wait for it to pop up on the mainstream radar,” said Peter Driscoll, current STA chairman, and senior equity trader at The Northern Trust Co.

Source: Traders Magazin by James Ramage 25.02.2009

Filed under: Exchanges, Trading Technology , , , , , , , , , , , ,

InterBolsa S.A. joins Tradeware’s GlobalX™ Network increased efficiency in Capital Flows to and from Colombia

Tradeware Global Corp., the leading broker-neutral solution provider for electronic access to 105 equity markets worldwide, today announced that it is live with InterBolsa S.A. Comisionista de Bolsa. Interbolsa S.A. will serve as an executing broker on the GlobalX network and will support order flow into the Colombian market.

Tradeware’s GlobalX broker-to-broker network serves as a utility for global order flow, with a full settlement support in place. It enables brokers to trade globally on the agency basis, thus increasing efficiency of cross-border trading.

InterBolsa S.A. Comisionista de Bolsa is the largest securities broker in Colombia. It engages in fixed income & securities trading, as well as Government debt market making, additionally it has asset management and investment banking businesses. The company also offers retail and corporate brokerage services. InterBolsa S.A. Comisionista de Bolsa was founded in 1990 and is headquartered in Bogota, Colombia.

Source: MondoVisione, 25.02.2009

Filed under: Colombia, FIX Connectivity, News, Trading Technology , , , , , , , ,

The Economic Outlook: 2012 and beyond

To see into the future of our economies, with some small degree of certainty, we have to pay attention to what is happening around us and what we do.  American Cronical 22.02.2009 full article

But to get an idea of how the future will be, one has to have a real picture of the present. This is important since a false picture will present us with false alternatives, on which we act which in turn will result in unexpected outcomes (i.e., future that we are not prepared for).

It is not always easy to see through all the false pictures and data that we are constantly presented with. For example, in Norway on February 18th, the real-estate association came out with the statement that the housing crisis was almost over and the bottom was reached. This was plastered all over the place. Next day on February 19 th, the Norwegian Centre for Statistics came out with its own forecast; stating that house prices will continue to fall for the next year and that situation will deteriorate further.

It was clear to some of us that the real-estate association was putting out false information to drum-up business for its members. But if banks, industrialists, and even politicians also send out false and misleading information, then the average person will make decisions that may be contrary to his or her best interests.

Most of us do not have the time, energy, or even the necessary knowledge to gather and sift through large amount of data. We rely on news media, and the experts to make most of our decisions. Until last year, very few people were talking about the tremendous crisis that was well under way; even though as early as 2006, there were clear signs that the economy was under tremendous pressure.

In this article I will try to provide you with a picture of the present situation and then try to extrapolate based on the current policies adopted by various governments, what the near future will look like.

The current economic situation

Let me tell you in no uncertain terms that we are facing a synchronised global economic depression and I am not the only one that is saying this. In early February, the International Monetary Fund’s chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the world’s advanced economies — the U.S., Western Europe and Japan — are “already in depression”. Gordon Brown, the UK’s Prime Minister also used the word “depression” to describe the global economy, although his aides quickly said it was a slip of the tongue.

The politicians and others of course avoid using the term “depression” for fear of creating a panic; instead they use terms such as “severe recession” or “one of the most serious financial crises since the great depression”, etc. But they all are saying the same thing, we are in a depression and all the available data support this. An important fact to remember is that this depression is synchronised and this synchronicity has been made possible by the globalization and accompanying deregulation; the very things that were making workers poorer and the rich, richer.

Now the chickens have come home to roost. All economies are now suffering. Such promising economies as Iceland’s saw its GDP shrink by 10%, while the success show case of Europe, Ireland, had its GDP shrink by 6%. Germany, the euro zone’s biggest economy shrank by 2.1% in the three months to December, seconded by Italy, which suffered a 1.8% drop in GDP. The French economy also contracted by 1.2% while IMF put Spain on its vulnerable list. UK ‘s GDP has also suffered and is forecasted to contract by 3.5% in 2009.

The misery list includes most of the Eastern European countries as well with some such as Ukraine set to experience severe contraction. According to IMF Ukraine’s GDP will shrink by 8 to 10% in 2009. The Russian economic growth is also set to fall. According to the Russian Deputy Economic Development Minister Andrei Klepach the forecast for the Russian economy has worsened to a 2.2-percent contraction in GDP.

Japan’s economy, the second largest in the world, contracted by 12.7 per cent on a seasonally adjusted annualised basis in the fourth quarter and is set to contract by. According to the Taiwanese government, Taiwan’s GDP will shrink by 3% in 2009. Another big economy in Asia is Korea. According to S&P sovereign ratings, Asia’s fourth-largest economy will contract by about 3.5 percent this year. All other South East Asian economies are reporting severe slow down or outright contraction except China.

According to National Bureau of Statistics of China, by comparing the fourth quarter 2007 to that of the fourth quarter 2008, China had achieved a 6.8 percent growth in 2008. However, many believe that this figure is misleading and that the Chinese are hiding the extent of the economic contraction of its economy. They point out that energy consumption in China has substantially been reduced. This could not have happened without a marked slowing down of the economy.

According to the article published in The Epoch Times (17 Feb 09) “Economists at the Standard Chartered Bank estimate China’s growth rate to be around 1 percent. Morgan Stanley analysts estimate it to be at 1.5 percent. This is much lower than the CCP reported 15 percent for the first quarter of 2007. According to economists at Merrill Lynch, the sequential growth rate of fourth quarter of 2008 was zero percent.”

Middle Eastern countries have also been severely affected by the financial crisis. The revenue from their major source of income, oil, has fallen at an incredible rate. Oil prices that were around 120 to 140 dollars last year have come down to around 30 to 40 dollars this year. Every country has slashed its expenditure with the accompanying slowing growth. For example recently UAE was forced to halt construction projects worth $582 billion or fully 45% of all projects. A recent report in New York Times (11th Feb. 09) paints a grim picture of the situation in Dubai. The report states that ” with Dubai’s economy in free fall, newspapers have reported that more than 3,000 cars sit abandoned in the parking lot at the Dubai Airport, left by fleeing, debt-ridden foreigners (who could in fact be imprisoned if they failed to pay their bills)”. Iranians, Saudis, Iraqis, Kuwaitis and others have also been forced to slow down or freeze many projects. One must not forget that many of these countries’ petro-dollars are re-circulated back into the US and European economies. Those funds are drying-up fast.

Turkey sitting between the Europe and Middle East is also suffering. Turkey has the largest GDP in the Islamic world. Turkey’s GDP was 750 billion in 2008, the GDP of Saudi Arabia was 600 billion dollar for the same period. A once dynamic economy is now negotiating with IMF for help.

Having surveyed most of the economic landscape of Europe and Asia, we can now look at the world largest economy, the US. The US economy is in a terrible shape, with all sectors going through severe depression. Housing market has completely collapsed. The auto industry is going bankrupt. The banking sector is alive only by the grace of the government handouts. The entertainment industry (TV and film industry excluded) is facing severe problems and unemployment is increasing rapidly. The Federal Reserves’ forecast for 2009 shows a contraction of 0.5 to 1.3 percent of the GDP with official unemployment rising to 8.5 or 8.8 percent. Here one should note that this official unemployment rate does not present a true picture, since all those who give-up registering with the unemployment office or are barely working (part-time workers, etc) are not counted as unemployed.

The missing engine of growth

Before we look at the future development we have to remember that there are four factors that power an economy: consumers, investors, government, and a favourable trade balance. Some economies such as China rely on favourable trade balance and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) for their growth. For example according to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, from 1990 to 2007, China received $748.4 billion in FDI. At the same time, since its economic liberalization, China has recorded consistent trade surpluses with the world. For example China has registered trade surpluses of $102 billion for 2005, $177.47 billion for 2006, $262.2 billion for 2007, and $295.47 billion for 2008. China currently has accumulated nearly two trillion dollars in foreign exchange reserves.

In contrast to the China, the United States has relied on consumers and the government for its growth. According to Peter G. Gosselin citing Roach of Morgan Stanley Asia, U.S. consumers constitute only about 4.5% of the global population, yet they bought more than $10 trillion worth of goods and services last year. In contrast the Chinese and Indian consumers combined which account for 40% of the global population bought only $3 trillion worth. He goes on to point out that according to government statistics, from 2001 to 2007, U.S. consumer spending shot up from a little over 73% of the economy to nearly 77%.

If we just look at the differences in consumption levels between US and China-India, we’ll see that these countries are not in a position or have the financial resources to pick-up the slack left by the US consumers. Anyway, China’s growth is based on its exports and the FDI and not its consumers. When the international market shrinks, the Chinese will see (as they do now) a sharp drop in their actual growth. If they try hard they may be able to keep their people’s standard of living at its current level (highly unlikely); but they will be unable to increase consumption. Anyway, according to the Bloomberg (19 January 09), the Chinese unemployment rate has jumped to its 30 year high and will most likely increase further.

How about Japan? Japan also started its economic miracle by export-led growth. Japan saved hard, and worked hard to become one of the largest economies in the world. However, the bursting of the housing bubble of 1990-91 started a deflationary period that Japan never really recovered from.

If we look at the Consumer Price Indexes (CPI) for Japan, the U.S., and the Euro Area from 1999 to 2006, with 1999 being the base (100), we’ll see that by 2006, the CPI index for US was 122.8, 118.5 for EU and 97.7 for Japan. This shows that until 2006 Japan was still in the grip of deflation.

Add to this the recent financial crisis and you’ll see that Japan is once again entering another deflationary period. In deflationary periods, consumers spend less and try to save more. The fear of losing one’s job, the psychology of ever decreasing prices, and general feeling of doom act against free spending by the consumers. One should also understand that Japanese consumers are reluctant to spend like their American counterparts. According to the available figures (2005), the Japanese consumption was only 55% of the GDP. Compare this to the American consumption of 77%. So the Japanese consumers cannot help either.

What about the EU? Euro zone consumers have a slightly better consumption rate than the Japanese. The consumption rate for Euro zone (2005) was 57% of the GDP. In addition the Euro zone is facing severe financial problems with many countries such as Spain, Ireland, Italy and others facing mounting debt and shrinking export market. Consumers already hit by the housing crisis, financial crisis and now the imminent unemployment crisis cannot be expected to start spending wildly.

So who is going to take the position left vacant by the US and act as the world’s economic locomotive and pull the world out of the depression? The answer is no-one and everyone. US is clearly not able to do that much. As a matter of fact the US consumers have to get used to lower spending levels for at least a decade, if not for good.

According to Howard Davidowitz, chairman of Davidowitz & Associates, as quoted by Aaron Task in Yahoo Finance, American’s standard of living is undergoing a “permanent change” – and not for the better as a result of:

  • An $8 trillion negative wealth effect from declining home values
  • A $10 trillion negative wealth effect from weakened capital markets.
  • A $14 trillion consumer debt load amid “exploding unemployment”, leading to “exploding bankruptcies.”

“The average American used to be able to borrow to buy a home, send their kids to a good school [and] buy a car,” Davidowitz says. “A lot of that is gone.

The diminishing wealth
Last year when the depth of financial crisis became apparent the US Feds started to aggressively cut interest rates, in the hope of reducing the severity of the crisis. Other countries specially the Europeans soon followed the Americans in cutting their interest rates. As the crisis spread to Asia and the Middle East, they also began to cut their interest rates. But soon it became apparent that this crisis was not like any they had seen since the great depression and simply cutting interest rates was not going to solve the problem.

To start with the housing market had collapsed completely leaving many banks holding worthless pieces of paper. In addition, these papers were (partly) insured by many insurance and financial institutions that weren’t banks, but because of financial deregulations, had acted as banks. They were also hit by the bad mortgage problems. In short, all the financial institutions, banks, insurance companies and others were suddenly in trouble.

This hit the stock markets, with the shares of these institutions taking a nose dive. These institutions are extremely important for the economy. They provide the logistics for financial transactions. Any problem here affects all parts of the economy. So it was not a surprise to see that all normal financial transactions suddenly came to a halt, hitting other sectors of the economy. Share prices of all the affected sectors began to go down and with it the fortune of the share holders. To see the extent of the damage done one just has to look at how much various stock markets have fallen.

The following stock markets data was published by The Economist (21 Feb. 2009) which shows the extent of the fall since Dec 31st 2007:

US (NAScomp) – 44.7%, US (DJIA) -43%, US (S&P 500), Japan (Nikkei 225) -41.3%, China (SSEA) -55.1%, Hong Kong (Hang Seng) -52.9%, Canada (S&P TSX) -53%, Australia (All Ord.) -61%, Britain (FTSE 100) -55.8%, Euro area (FTSE 100) – 59.5%, Euro area (DJ STQxx 50) – 58.7%, France (CAC 40) -56.1%, Germany (DAX) -55.3%, Greece (Athex comp) -73.7%, Italy (S&P/MIB) -63.1%, Netherlands (AEX) -60.4%, Norway (OSEAX) -64%, Denmark (OMXCB) -55.2%, Sweden (Aff.Gen) -57.7%, Russia (RTS, $ terms) -77.1%, Turkey (ISE) -70.3%, India (BSE) -64.9%, South Korea (KOSPI) -62.6%, Taiwan (TWI) -50.5%, Brazil (BVSP) -53%, Argentina (MERV) -56%, Mexico (IPC) -52.9%, Venezuela (IBC) – 55.6%, Saudi Arabia (Tadawul) -56.8%, South Africa (JSE AS) – 54.1%…. WORLD all (MSCI) -51.2%.

For people in general, shares act both as saving and investment. The average person buys share in hope of getting better return than the banks. It is also easy to get in and out of the market. The advancements in information and communication technologies, the costs of buying and selling have fallen steadily in the last decade. So now anyone with a computer can buy and sell shares. This ease of entry enticed an ever increasing number of ordinary people to enter the stock markets.

Now the people have been hit by three disasters. First they lost a lot of money in the housing market. This was both real and illusory. First they were hit with the housing crisis. Many have lost their homes or have seen the value of their homes depreciate heavily. Then they were hit with the collapse of the stock markets. Trillions of Dollars, Yens, Euros and Yuans have been wiped-out in a relatively a short time. Then many have lost their jobs and many are uncertain about the future job security. All these have had a tremendous impact on the consumers, forcing many to heavily reduce their consumption, which in turn have begun to affect businesses which in-turn are shedding workers to compensate for the loss of sales and revenues. This is a classical deflationary circle that feed on itself.

The governments’ response to this threat has been to stimulate the economy by pumping large sums of money into the economy. A decade ago, a hundred billion dollar was an astronomical sum. Today we don’t even bother to look at it twice. Today we talk of Trillions. A few hundred billions here and a few hundred billions there soon add up to a few nice trillions; especially the trillions that we don’t have.

Now we face a classical problem: the increasing budget deficits. Exactly when the economy is contracting and tax receipts are falling, the government expenditure is rising rapidly. In addition, the governments are buying bad debts (US, UK, etc) and trying to spend more on whatever they can in order to arrest the increasing unemployment and stimulate the economy. These large sums have to come from somewhere. They can be borrowed or money can simply be printed. The problem is that some governments are opting for both.

The most important economy is of course the US economy. The US government under Bush spent close to one trillion dollars, and now the Obama administration is promising to spend trillions in the years to come to stimulate the economy. With official US debt now close to 11 trillion dollars and climbing fast, the situation is becoming untenable. According to treasurydirect.gov, last year (2008) US government paid $451 billion dollars interest on its debt. Add to this the Medicare and social security obligations and suddenly things look a lot worse than they appear.

So how can the US continue its deficit spending? By issuing treasury bonds and other security certificates of course. Both public and foreign governments buy these securities which are guaranteed by the US government. According to Reuters (February 18th 2009), foreign central banks alone held $1.76 trillion dollars in US treasuries. According to the same report “The combined holdings of Treasuries and agency securities by foreign central banks at the Fed totalled $2.573 trillion, up $11.223 billion”.

The coming inflation

So far the foreign governments and businesses have been willing to buy US debt, but with the current economic downturn things are beginning to change. According to New York Times, in the last 5 years China has spent as much as one-seventh of its entire economic output buying mostly American debt. However, with the sharp slowdown in its economy, China is finding it difficult to keep buying. China has also come-up with its own $600 billion stimulus plan. This along with the falling trade surplus and the falling tax receipt will make it exceedingly unlikely that China can keep financing part of the US government’s deficit spending. The same applies to other countries as well.

So as the economic downturn continues we can see two things: the interest on US treasuries increase substantially to make it attractive and or printing money. Printing money is not so farfetched as many would like to believe. Already countries that cannot find willing lenders are resorting to this. A good example of this is UK. With the current plans to nationalise a few more banks (Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland), the UK national debt is set to surpass the £2.2 trillion pound mark. This is 150% of UK’s GDP. It is not then surprising to see that the Bank of England voted unanimously earlier this month to seek consent from the government to start the process of quantitative easing by buying gilts and other securities. Quantitative easing means printing money. With interest rates at 1%, printing money is likely to increase inflation.

Already many governments find it difficult to cover their deficits. It is only a matter of time before they also begin to print money. It is especially appealing for the US government to do this since inflation means a real value reduction in debts. With mounting trade and budget deficit and decreasing tax receipts and the shrinking of the number of willing lenders, US government may not have any choice but to print money.

So far, all governments are reducing their interest rates to historic lows and at the same time spending a lot of money that they don’t have. It will take at least two more years for the economy to stabilise. Here we should note that by stabilise I mean an arrest in decline rather than outright growth. Once that point is reached we will begin to see the effects of the loose monetary policy: a tremendous rise in inflation which can be accompanied by low economic growth or in other words stagflation.

The fear of stagflation arises from the fact that from all indication, growth will not strengthen anytime soon. It is quite clear now that the US and to a large extent the European consumers have been hit hard by the current crisis. There is also the possibility that another banking crisis may still ensue such as the commercial real-estate mortgage defaults and above all the repetition of currency crisis (1997 Asian Financial Crisis). Already we see that China Japan, Korea and others are setting-up $120 billion currency defence fund to protect Asian currencies against speculative attacks.

The current economic crises have left many countries’ local banks with foreign currency loans that they find difficult to repay in that currency. This and the possibility of defaults have made these countries a good target for speculators. If such an attack starts, many countries will automatically have to devalue their currencies (even more than they already have) or try to defend their currencies. In either case this may trigger yet another crisis that may actually destroy a good portion of many economies around the world.

Even if we assume that no more nasty surprises will appear in the next two years and the economies stabilise, we are left with the reduced levels of consumption around the world, especially in major economies. As I have mentioned above, it is very clear that at least in US, the consumers are not going to recover anytime soon. I have also shown that the Chinese and Indian consumers cannot replace the US and European consumers. So there will be a dearth of market for the goods and services produced by others. In absence of US, the question will be: which country or countries are able to increase demand to such a degree as to trigger a recovery; a recovery that most likely will be accompanied with high inflation.

In 2006 in the article “the coming financial crisis”, I stated the following:

“At the end of the WWII, 45 nations gathered at a United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to address the problems of reconstruction, monetary stability and exchange rates.

The delegates agreed to establish an international monetary system of convertible currencies, fixed exchange rates and free trade. To facilitate these objectives the delegates agreed to create two international institutes: the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank). An initial loan of $250 million to France in 1947 was the World Bank’s first act.

Since then there has already been considerable criticism of the roles of IMF and the World Bank. The above mentioned problems and the ongoing trade imbalance in the world have to be addressed by a similar gathering. Sooner or later, both the United States and the rest of the world have to address the existing problems. These problems are not the United States’ alone. We cannot ignore the largest economy on earth. It is said that if United States sneezes, the world catches cold. We have to either make sure that the United States doesn’t catch cold or vaccinate ourselves against it.”

Once again I restate my earlier arguments: we need a new “Bretten Woods” agreement where we can address the existing problems and restructure the world’s economic system. If we don’t do this, and soon, we will face protectionism, low economic growth, and even trade wars. We have ignored this problem for a long time and are now paying the price. What would the price be if we continue to ignore the existing systemic problems?

Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar lives in Norway. He is a management consultant and a contributing writer for many online journals. He’s a former associate professor of Nordland University, Norway. He can be contacted at : Bakhtiarspace-articles@yahoo.no

Source: American Cronicle, 22.02.2009

Filed under: Asia, Australia, Banking, Brazil, China, Energy & Environment, Japan, Korea, Latin America, Malaysia, Mexico, News, Singapore, Venezuela , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

MexDer and Institutions successfully deploy RTS Front-End Technology for Mexican Derivatives Exchange

RTS Realtime Systems Group, a leading trading solutions provider, announced today that its front-end trading solutions were successfully launched and deployed at the Mexican Derivatives Exchange (MexDer).

RTS announced last summer that MexDer had selected RTS to provide its next generation front-end for its electronic trading platform, replacing the exchange’s proprietary trading terminals.

The official roll-out to MexDer’s Mexican members occurred in January. On February 25, RTS is hosting a reception for the Mexican trading community to celebrate the successful launch. The roll-out was preceded by customization and implementation of market specifics as well as intensive on- and off-site training courses for all participants.

“We are continuing our efforts to facilitate international access to our markets and our benchmark Latin American products. We are pleased to see that market participants confirmed our choice for the versatile RTS technology,” said Jorge Alegría, Chief Executive Officer of MexDer.

MexDer’s members have begun trading via RTS’ high-performance trading platform, the RTD Realtime Trading Desktop, and eRTD, the white-labeled and web-based front-end.

Said John Dempsey, Vice President, Business Development at RTS: ‘We are very encouraged by the initial response to our state-of-the-art trading software, designed and customized for Mexican traders.”

MexDer recently celebrated its 10th anniversary. The exchange lists premier products on interest rates, index stock options and foreign exchange.

Source: MondoVisione, 24.02.2009

Filed under: BMV - Mexico, Mexico, News, Trading Technology , , , , , , , , ,

Asean bourses pledge electronic trading link

So far Southeast Asia’s stock exchanges have been good at signing MOUs but not so good at actually harmonising markets. Will this time be different?

Five Southeast Asian stock exchanges have signed an agreement to establish a single electronic trading link for regional or global investors to access their markets on a uniform basis, and thereby establish Asean markets as an asset class.

The mechanism among the five countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand — will enable their clearing houses to act as central counterparties that can clear and settle cross-border trades among them.

Brokers with seats in any of the five exchanges would not need to consider other participating exchanges as foreign, thereby reducing risk. Investors may come to see Asean as a trading bloc, with economies of scale helping to bring down transaction costs and improve liquidity. Creating a single market would spur liberalisation in other areas.

That, at least, is the theory, as announced after business hours yesterday. Executives at these bourses have been talking about building an electronic link for years. These markets are small, which drives up the cost of cross-border trades.

At a time when major bourses around the globe are tying up, alternative electronic trading venues are penetrating the region, and events are being driven by pan-European directives such as Mifid, Southeast Asia’s fragmented markets risk falling well behind. New technologies such as dark pools and direct-market access trading have marginalised them further, because of their illiquidity.

So exchange officials and politicians have long recognised the need to harmonise their systems in order to remain attractive to global investors, market Southeast Asia as an asset class, and enhance the pool of capital available locally.

But politics have gotten in the way: Singapore is the obvious hub for the region, a fact that Singaporean officials like to point out, which makes the other players jealous and unwilling to give up control over their little patches.

Nonetheless, there has been bilateral progress. SGX CEO Hsieh Fu-Hua first proposed such a multilateral link in 2006. The following year, SGX and Bursa Malaysia unveiled a cross-border electronic link for trading securities.

Now, along with this announcement of Asean-wide cooperation, SGX and the Stock Exchange of Thailand are also pledging to jointly promote market activities, as well as operational and regulatory information, and discuss the idea of cross-border trading of securities and derivatives.

SGX’s Hsieh says the e-trading link will be operational sometime in 2010. By putting a date on the project, he and his counterparts at other exchanges are taking a concrete step towards harmonising their markets for the first time.

Source: AsianInvestor, 24.02.2009

Filed under: Asia, Exchanges, News, Trading Technology , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Fidessa Expands in Asia Pacific / Fidessa 擴展亞太區市場

Fidessa group plc , provider of the award winning trading, portfolio management, compliance and global connectivity solutions for financial markets participants, has today announced the expansion of its Asian operations to cope with growing client demand across the region.  This expansion includes the appointment of new staff as well as the opening of a larger Asian headquarters in Hong Kong.

Fidessa’s growth in Asia has been fuelled by the rapid take up and interest in new products and services which have been made available to both the buy-side and sell-side communities across the region.

Fidessa’s hosted Asian trading, market data and connectivity platform for brokers, which was launched just over a year ago, has quickly gained a strong foothold in the marketplace.  With 10 clients signed up and a strong local pipeline, Fidessa’s credentials as a global supplier to blue-chip clients of powerful, reliable international trading solutions, have proved a real winner against the incumbent competition.

Another impetus to growth has been the regional debut mid last year of the Fidessa LatentZero portfolio management, compliance and order/execution management product suite for the buy-side.  This full asset-class solution is used by nine of the top ten asset management firms in Europe and the USA, and is already live at its first major client in the region.

“As our client base expands across the Asian region, it is important that we have the staff and infrastructure required to support these customers.  The expansion of our operations in Asia demonstrates Fidessa’s commitment to the region and is a measure of the huge opportunity that we see here.” comments Nevin Price, Fidessa’s regional manager for Asia.

“The staff numbers in Hong Kong have increased by over twofold in the last couple of years to 100 people, and the new office here, combined with the business continuity centre we opened last year, will allow us to scale our operations further as our business grows.  It will also ensure we are able to continue to offer the first class service for which we are renowned going forward” adds Price.

New staff appointments in Hong Kong will grow the client support and sales teams across the product suites, and for the Fidessa global connectivity network for which Hong Kong serves as a regional hub. New staff in Singapore will also add important local support capabilities for the growing customer base that operates from there.

“Our solutions in Asia allow clients to automate their business flows, improve their efficiency and to compete on the international stage.  The demand from both the buy-side and sell-side segments in the region for these solutions is growing, and these investments in our business will ensure we remain at the front of the pack of potential suppliers to this audience” concludes Price.

Fidessa’s products serve around 22,000 users across over 630 clients around the world and are used by over 85% of tier one financial institutions. Fidessa’s network provides connectivity to over 2,200 buy-sides and 360 brokers across 115 markets globally.

香港-爲全球金融市場參與者提供屢獲殊榮的交易系統、投資組合管理,法規遵從及環球連接解决方案的Fidessa group plc(倫敦證券交易所上市代號:FDSA)今日宣佈擴展亞洲區營運業務,其中包括增聘員工及在香港遷至更大辦公室作為亞洲區總部,以配合區內客戶日益增長的需求。

Fidessa在亞洲市場的業務增長迅速,主要原因是其多種新穎產品和服務令區內買賣雙方社群感興趣及採用。
Fidessa 自一年多前起為證券經紀提供寄存的亞洲交易、市場數據和連接平台等服務,並迅速在市場上建立穩固基礎。Fidessa被譽為一間專門為藍籌客戶提供功能強勁且可靠的國際交易解決方案供應商,加上在本地擁有強大的銷售渠道,目前已有十名亞洲交易平台客戶簽約採用其服務。在當前市場競爭激烈的環境下,Fidessa 脫穎而出成為市場的赢家之一。
另一刺激業務增長的原因是 Fidessa 於去年中在區內為買家推出 Fidessa LatentZero 投資組合管理、法規遵從及買賣盤/執行管理產品組合。歐美十大資產管理公司中,有九間正採用其全面的資產級解決方案,而首名亞洲主要客戶亦經已使用。
Fidessa 亞洲區域經理 Nevin Price 表示:「鑒於我們的客戶基礎已擴展至亞洲區各市場,因此我們必須在區內擁有足夠的員工和基礎設施,為客戶提供支援。是次擴展亞洲區業務正反映出 Fidessa 對亞太區的承諾,亦是我們在看到龐大發展機會所採取的重要一步。

Price 補充說:在過去數年,香港僱員人數增加超過兩倍至一百人,而新的辦事處,及去年開幕的業務持續中心,使我們有能力因應業務增長而調整我們的營運和服務範圍;同時也確保我們昭著的優秀服務質素。
在香港新增聘的員工將加入客戶支援和銷售隊伍,專責支援和銷售 Fidessa 各種產品及把香港發展為亞洲區樞紐的環球連接網絡。而新加坡增聘的員工將加強當地的支援能力,以配合當地客戶基礎日益增長所需。

Price 總結說:「我們在亞洲推出的解決方案可把客戶的業務流程自動化;改善其效率及提昇在國際舞台上的競爭力。區內的買家和賣家對這些解決方案的需求正不斷增加,而我們在業務上作出的這些投資將確保我們在芸芸的供應商之中保持領先地位。

Fidessa 的產品服務全球超過 630 個機構客戶合共約 22, 000 名用戶,並獲全球超過85%一級產權經紀所採用。Fidessa 的網絡在全球 115 個市場為超過 2,200 名買家和360 間證券經紀提供系統連接。

Source: Fidessa, 24.02.2009

Filed under: Asia, Data Management, Market Data, News, Trading Technology , , , , , , , , , , ,

BMB Group to partner with International Zakat Organization to establish and co-manage a Global Zakat & Charity Fund

International Zakat Organization (IZO) announced today its partnership with the prestigious BMB Group to establish and co-manage a multi-billion Global Zakat and Charity Fund. In his address at the signing ceremony, the Honourable Dato’ Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, Minister in the Malaysian Prime Minister’s Department and Chairman of the Board of Directors of IZO, said, “The purpose of IZO is to uphold Zakat as a tool for economic development, social Takaful, the enhancement of solidarity and the promotion of cooperation between Muslim communities and countries around the world, especially for the sake of Ummah.

The Global Zakat and Charity Fund will offer us the required transparency in operations and financial expertise for the management of funds.” He further added that “Every Muslim should take into consideration the fact that the whole Muslim nation, both individuals and governments, has the responsibility to solve the collective crises of poverty, corruption and inequality suffered by millions of Muslims throughout the Islamic World. The only way to solve these crises is through the duty of Zakat. The implementation of Zakat will be in accordance with the Quran and Sunnah. We will see how a properly implemented system can solve the current economic problems of not just Muslims, but of the whole world.”

The proposed Fund will manage Zakat and other charitable funds to alleviate poverty in the member committees of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (“OIC”). “It is a long-awaited initiative,” said Dr Humayon Dar, CEO of BMB Islamic, a subsidiary of The BMB Group. “There has been inevitably a huge emphasis on Shari’a compliance in Islamic banking and finance, but the announcement of a Global Zakat and Charity Fund is the beginning of a new Islamic financial trend which favours social responsibility and community development.”

OIC has 57 member states of which some have already committed themselves to IZO and its various initiatives. In addition to co-managing the fund, The BMB Group will assist in involving the remaining governments in this special project. The expected size of the fund will be Two Billion Malaysian Ringgit in the current calendar year.  Mr. Mohammad Hassan Esa, Managing Director and CEO of IZO, who has played a pioneering role in establishing the IZO, was thrilled by the prospect of contributing to poverty alleviation among poor Muslim communities. He commented “Zakat is a tool that can single-handedly eradicate poverty not only from the Muslim world but from the entire world. The only condition is that we collect and manage the funds efficiently. The Global Zakat and Charity Fund is a step towards achieving that efficiency.”

The proposed fund will be co-managed by the IZO and The BMB Group, which benefits from Shari’a advisory and structuring capabilities of BMB Islamic. BMB Islamic was recently voted voted the Best Shari’a Advisory Firm for the year 2008 at the IFN Awards. The fund will invest in community development projects with an emphasis on sustainability. The three major areas to be targeted are: (1) income generation through the provision of affordable financing to small and medium enterprises; (2) development of social enterprise through the establishment of hospitals, educational institutions and housing associations; and (3) the provision of relief and emergency funding.

Rayo Salahadin Withanage, Chairman and CEO of The BMB Group commented, “The BMB Groups lead role in this initiative reinforces our heart found commitment to Islamic communities around the world. At this juncture in history where the world faces serious economic challenges, it is important for Muslims around the world to unite behind the common good of helping with the social, economic and environmental challenges that face our planet. We are delighted to be part of the IZO initiative.”

Source: BMB/UpStream Asia 24.02.2009

Filed under: Islamic Finance, News , , , , , , , , ,

Fidessa LatentZero’s EMS Workstation sees almost 60 per cent growth in 2008

Fidessa LatentZero, one of the world’s leading providers of front-office software to the buy-side has announced an increase of almost 60 per cent in users of its EMS Workstation in 2008, a year which saw it take top prize at the Buy-Side Technology awards for the second year in a row in December.  The increase takes the total number of EMS Workstation clients to around 190.

The EMS Workstation is an internet-deployed, broker-neutral low-latency trading platform for equities and equity derivatives.  It is available as a standalone workstation, as a staged solution from any OMS or order source through FIX, or as part of Fidessa LatentZero’s Minerva OEMS, the market’s first order and execution management system.  The workstation is a truly global offering, providing out-of-the-box access to more than 115 execution venues and 360 brokers worldwide.  It offers integrated access to algorithms from over 40 brokers, and TCA is incorporated from Citigroup, Credit Suisse, UBS and BARX.  Global market data and news is fed in from Fidessa’s high-performance ticker plants.  Due to its broker neutrality, clients have complete control over which brokers they trade with, enabling them to diversify and reduce risk by doing their own DMA.

The first phase of development in 2009 saw the integration of the Fidessa Fragmentation Index (FFI) which was completed at the end of January.  Launched in 2008, the FFI has quickly emerged as the definitive measure indicating how trading is fragmenting across established and new venues.  The focus for the EMS in 2009 will be the addition of US options and improved handling of program trades.

Russell Thornton, EMS product manager at Fidessa LatentZero, comments: “We’ve been investing heavily in extending the functionality and coverage of the EMS over the last twelve months and it’s great to see this uplift in clients as a result.  Our continued focus on our clients’ functional and connectivity priorities coupled with the low cost of the system, and the confidence afforded by Fidessa’s global backing makes our EMS a powerful solution.”

Source: Fidessa, 23.02.2009

Filed under: FIX Connectivity, News, Trading Technology , , ,

Malaysia raises profile as an Islamic fund hub

Malaysia now has more sharia funds than Saudi Arabia, but is still second in terms of assets under management. Malaysia’s efforts to promote itself as a global Islamic investment hub are paying off.

The country has overtaken Saudi Arabia in terms of the number of locally domiciled sharia funds, and is second to the huge Middle East market in terms of sharia assets under management (AUM), based on data from financial services research firm Cerulli Associates.

As of November 2008, sharia funds domiciled and managed in Malaysia totalled 145, compared to just 131 in Saudi Arabia. These range from investments in money markets and sukuks (bonds) to regional and global equities.

Malaysia has, over the past few years, worked to establish itself as a centre for sharia fund manufacturing, in line with its efforts to promote itself as a global Islamic investment hub. Malaysia now possesses the most highly developed regulatory structure for Islamic finance in the world, according to Cerulli.

So far, Malaysia has attracted eight international sharia fund managers by offering a host of tax and other incentives.

However, in terms of sharia AUM, Saudi Arabia is still the clear winner worldwide. Sharia AUM in Malaysia has grown from $1.4 billion in 2003 to $4.6 billion in November 2008. That’s nevertheless just a fraction of Saudi Arabia’s $13.9 billion in sharia AUM. Malaysia’s sharia AUM is also small compared with the estimated $40 billion in AUM of conventional funds managed onshore.

“Malaysian-domiciled sharia funds are still unable to compete with Saudi funds in terms of asset size,” says Ken Yap, Singapore-based head of Asia-Pacific research at Cerulli.

To illustrate his point, Cerulli data shows that the AlAhli Saudi Riyal Trade Fund in Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest sharia portfolio, with $3.6 billion in assets. In contrast, Malaysia’s largest sharia portfolio — Public Ittikal Fund — has $421 million in assets.

“While the Malaysian sharia market has shown impressive growth, managers need to do more to build up assets in each of its sharia funds, rather than simply continuing to launch more funds,” says Shiv Taneja, London-based managing director at Cerulli. “This means marketing sharia funds to high-net-worth individuals and institutions, and working with the banks, including Islamic banks, to improve sharia fund distribution to the public.”

Saudi Arabia’s obvious advantage over Malaysia, Cerulli’s Yap notes, is the deep pockets of its institutional, high-net-worth and retail investors.

In Malaysia, the focus has been mostly on retail investors — understandably so because they are an easy target for the asset management arms of banks, for example. Asset management companies with a conventional funds business in Malaysia are also setting up sharia units and they are targeting existing clients.

“The sharia funds in Malaysia are focused more towards the retail client base, which needs more variety and, thus, fund managers need to launch more funds. In Saudi Arabia, the funds are focused more towards the wholesale client base,” says Trica Sum, a Singapore-based analyst at Cerulli.

Both Saudi Arabia and Malaysia are capable of attracting and managing offshore funds, but the Gulf state has done more to cultivate that market over the years.

Cerulli’s Yap believes that in the near-term the potential for sharia AUM growth in Malaysia still rests with the retail market. Over the long-run, however, he says there is strong potential for growth in the offshore market of sharia firms in Malaysia, the demand from institutional investors and pension funds in Malaysia, and in new businesses from new Islamic fund management company license holders.

Malaysia’s Securities Commission has awarded eight foreign Islamic fund management licenses to Aberdeen Islamic Asset Management, BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management, Nomura Islamic Asset Management, Kuwait Finance House (Malaysia), DBS Asset Management, CIMB-Principal Asset Management, Global Investment House and Reliance Asset Management.

The Malaysia government allows 100% foreign ownership of Islamic fund management companies, in line with its bid to attract more key fund players to the country. The incentive is part of ongoing liberalisation measures in Malaysia’s capital market as well as being aimed at complementing the broader Malaysian International Islamic Finance Centre (MIFC) initiatives of positioning the country as a hub.

Islamic fund management companies are allowed to invest all their assets overseas and will be given income tax exemption on fees received until 2016. They will also be able to tap into M$7 billion ($2.1 billion) in seed money from the Employees Provident Fund, the national pension fund for the private sector in Malaysia. Tax incentives are also being offered to existing stockbrokers that set up Islamic subsidiaries.

Cerulli estimates that global sharia fund assets totalled around $35 billion in October 2008 and had been growing at 23% over the past five years, well ahead of conventional mutual funds. Although this rate is expected to ease during the course of the global financial crisis, the firm believes Islamic finance has only started to take root in many Muslim nations and has plenty of room for expansion.

Source:AsianInvestor, 19.02.2009

Filed under: Islamic Finance, Malaysia, News, Services , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

SZSE Shenzhen Stock Exchange rolls out XBRL information service

The Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) has rolled out an XBRL information service platform for listed companies. The platform, optimized and upgraded on the basis of the XBRL trial application website, was launched when listed companies started to unveil their annual reports for 2008.

The platform (http://www.szse.cn or http://xbrl.cninfo.com.cn/XBRL/index.jsp), serves small and medium investors, was based on XBRL standardized data and was incorporated with functions such as display, analysis and download of listed companies’ information.

The launch of the platform indicates the SZSE is heading towards a multi-layered and diversified approach for its XBRL standardized information service for listed companies.

It is noted the XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language), a global standardized technology for financial information, was widely recognized and promoted across the world because it’s readable and comparable in computers and easy for data flow and data treatment.

Currently, the platform provides the query and display of XBRL document data of the reports of all 740 companies listed in Shenzhen from 2004 to 2008.

Principals from the SZSE introduced that investors can find financial indicators in an easy and quick way through the platform’s functions like information query, analysis and comparison, graph display and file download. Comparison and display of historical financial indicators of the same company or a certain financial indicator in a number of companies are also available.

Meanwhile, the application of XBRL in securities industry has a far-reaching impact in securities information disclosure. It can achieve the information share and operation of listed companies in the industry and the securities industry, pushing the standardized advancement of listed companies’ information disclosure and the securities information service industry.

By closely tracking the change of business rules and timely amending the XBRL information disclosure standard for listed companies, the completeness and consistency of information disclosure documents made by listed companies can be testified.

Source: SZSE, 18.02.2009

Filed under: China, Data Management, Exchanges, News, Standards , , , , , , , , ,

FPL Announces the Release of the FAST Protocol Version 1.2

FIX Protocol Ltd (FPL) is proud to announce the release of the FIX Adapted for STreaming (FAST) Protocol(sm) Version 1.2.  FAST 1.2 offers incremental improvements to previous releases, enabling the industry to benefit from even greater efficiency gains.

Working with existing adopters of the FAST Protocol, the FPL Market Data Optimisation Working Group (the team responsible for developing the FAST Protocol), has sought opportunities for improvement and has included enhancements in this latest release that enable greater compatibility for the use of FIX with FAST, specifically with regards to enumerations, time stamps and boolean data types.

Based on the feedback received from the user community, the enhancements included within FAST 1.2 have also been developed in a manner to enable full compatibility with version 1.1.  FAST 1.2 is now publicly available and downloadable from the FPL website, at www.fixprotocol.org/fastspec.

The FAST Protocol(sm) is a data compression methodology that has been developed in response to ever-increasing electronic trading volumes and market data messaging rates.  The FIX Protocol(sm)  has achieved very wide adoption, and it was clear that it would benefit from additional facilities to deal with high-volume messaging situations that would normally require greater network capacity.  Other alternatives that had been developed to address this issue presented performance limitations with respect to compression and latency.

By leveraging concepts including implicit tagging, field encoding and binary representation of data, the FAST Protocol(sm) offers a solution that optimises communication in the electronic exchange of financial data and in particular when used in combination with the FIX Protocol.  FAST provides greatest benefits when handling large quantities of data that share similarities in content and structure, and it is now actively used by a growing number of execution venues globally.

Commenting on the launch of FAST 1.2 Greg Maynard, System & Product Strategy Officer at the International Securities Exchange (ISE) and contributor to the FPL Market Data Optimisation Working Group, stated. The development of the FAST 1.1 standard presented a fantastic opportunity for the industry to benefit from reduced message size, reduced bandwidth requirements and improved latency.  FAST 1.2 offers enhanced computing performance and I believe this will drive even greater adoption of the standard.

Rolf Andersson, Co-Chair FPL Market Data Optimisation Working Group, CEO of Pantor Engineering added. The incremental improvements that we have included to create FAST 1.2 present an excellent example of the value that FPL brings to the future development of the electronic trading industry.  FAST 1.2 was created through close collaboration between industry experts to improve the functionality available and to advance the global trading process for all market participants.

Source: FPL, 18.02.2009

Filed under: FIX Connectivity, News, Standards, Trading Technology , , , , , , , ,

BM&FBOVESPA certifies Patsystems as ISV for Derivatives

Patsystems has been certified as an ISV for Brazil’s BM&F, the derivatives segment of BM&F Bovespa, Latin America’s largest exchange. Patsystems will provide direct market access to the exchange for both local and international participants, joining a line of trading technology suppliers that have recently announced connections in the region.

Source: ATEAM- Electronic Trading, 18.02.2009

Filed under: BM&FBOVESPA, Brazil, Exchanges, News, Trading Technology , , , , , , , , ,

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