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

China and Latin America; the new conquistadors – Update 1

When Hugo Chávez first met Barack Obama at the Summit of the Americas in April, the Venezuelan leader could not resist pressing one of his favourite tracts into the US president’s hands. Eduardo Galeano’s Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent, a staple of student radical literature, tells the story of a continent that has long seen itself as the victim of foreign exploitation. Mr Chávez, though, may have given the book to the wrong leader. It should have been given to the Chinese.

China’s links to the region are deepening fast. Indeed, if the mooted $15bn bid for Repsol YPF’s Argentine oil unit by China’s state-owned energy companies CNOOC and CNPC comes off, South America will also be the recipient of China’s largest outward investment to date. Bilateral trade with the region has risen 10-fold since 2000, reaching $143bn last year. China is now Brazil’s largest trade partner. It takes almost three-quarters of the iron ore produced by Vale, the world’s largest iron ore company. It has been a bigger buyer of Chilean copper than the US, and it is already a major investor in Venezuelan oil – even as Caracas has nationalised several western concerns.

FiNETIK recommends:

    Beijing formalised this heightened level of Latin attention last November. In a policy statement, it talked amicably of “win-win” strategies, and mutual political respect. Deeds followed words, with a renminbi currency swap extended to Argentina worth $10bn, a $1bn pledge to invest in an Ecuadorean hydroelectric plant and, in the Caribbean, loan packages to Jamaica and continued trade credits to Cuba. Meanwhile, Chinese light manufacturers eat their Latin American counterparts for lunch. A few years ago, the most oft-cited economic statistic in Mexico was that more sombreros were made in China than at home.

    Filed under: Argentina, Asia, Brazil, Chile, China, Energy & Environment, Latin America, Mexico, News, Venezuela , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Singapore’s private banks lacking back office automation in trade processing – study

    Research on the post-trade processing practices of private banks in Singapore has revealed that nearly 60% of private banks in the region lack back office automation in trade processing.

    The study was conducted by InsightAsia Banking & Finance Consulting, a division of InsightAsia Research Group, that specialises in the Asia Pacific region, and commissioned by Omgeo, the global standard for post-trade efficiency.

    Against a background of the growing importance of Singapore to the global private banking sector, Insight Asia surveyed a group of Singapore-based private banks regarding their post-trade processes. The study focused on a range of issues related to trade processing, including the effects of the recent financial crisis on the private banking sector and the current mechanisms that private banks are using to process trades.

    The study showed that nearly a third of private banks continue to manually carry out trade allocation and confirmation, rather than processing their trades electronically. Manual processes can make a firm more vulnerable to trade failure and create a more risk-prone environment because there is more room for error in comparing trade details.

    Many of the Singapore private bank executives surveyed highlighted the importance of having efficient and flexible banking and processing systems as a key area of development. There was general agreement that higher levels of automation in trade processing would result in a reduction in operational risk. In fact, of the executives interviewed from within private banks currently carrying out trade matching in Singapore, 59% said they either wanted to make improvements to their system or were in the process of doing so.

    “This study suggests that Singapore private banks are becoming increasingly aware of the benefits of introducing automation into their back-offices,” said James Drumm, Executive Director, Asia Pacific for Omgeo. “At present, many private banks operate in a manual environment, but there is a growing consensus that introducing more automated processes will significantly decrease their operational and systemic risk.”

    In addition to the findings on electronic trade processing, the study also found general agreement from the private bank executives interviewed that, while recent events in financial markets were unprecedented and posed some challenges to the sector, Asia, and in particular Singapore, remains a key element in their global expansion strategies.

    Another key finding of the research was that there was almost universal agreement among executives that the focus on counterparty risk has increased substantially over the last 12 months, and is likely to continue in the foreseeable future.

    “We conducted this study against the background of the global financial crisis,” Phillip King, Head, Banking & Finance Consulting for InsightAsia noted. “The impact of these events at a group level for many private banks is still ongoing; however the long term growth story in Asian wealth markets remains intact. The COOs and operations executives interviewed reveal that Singapore has a solid corps of seasoned and highly capable professionals in senior roles in its private banking sector. They are a strong collective asset to the ongoing development of Singapore as a private banking hub.”

    Source: Finextra, 06.07.2009

    Filed under: Asia, Banking, News, Risk Management, Services, Singapore, Wealth Management , , , , , , ,

    Islamic banks need to ‘revamp model’

    Islamic banks in the Gulf Arab region need to adopt a new business model and take on more customers to weather the economic downturn, Ernst & Young’s head of Islamic finance said.

    Islamic banks, many of which are investment houses, have been heavily exposed to the real estate market, which saw prices start to plummet at the end of last year.

    FiNETIK recommends:

    Islamic finance: Sukuk market on trial as Islamic bonds default, Euromoney July 2009

    They channelled the wealth accumulated during the six year oil boom that ended in mid-2008 into regional real estate through private equity and asset management.

    “They relied heavily on selling investments and placements and that business model is being questioned,” Sameer Abdi, who is also a partner at Ernst & Young, said.

    The global liquidity constraints will force Islamic banks to look for new customers and sources of funding, including moving into corporate banking, trade finance and retail banking, Abdi said.

    Islamic banks cater to investors who do not want to earn or pay interest, viewed as usury under Islamic law.

    Some banks have already started to set up funds that enable retail customers to buy sukuk, or Islamic bonds, which in the past were mostly bought by regional banks and large Western financial institutions.

    However, analysts have said that it will not be easy for Islamic banks to reduce their heavy exposure to real estate, as they are too small to move into such areas as regional infrastructure and energy projects, which require large investments.

    Islamic and conventional banks in the region still have more of the financial crisis ahead of them, Abdi said. “The financial industry is not out of the woods in the Middle East at all, in fact we are still in the middle of our crisis,” he said.

    “It’s going to take some support from regulators and governments to actually come out of the crisis, and that may be six to nine months away, at least.”

    The restructuring of the debts held by troubled Saudi family groups Saad and Algosaibi could heavily impact many banks in the region.

    The United Arab Emirates alone face at least $3bn in potential losses from their exposure to the two groups, an Emirati newspaper reported on Thursday.

    Abdi also said corporate defaults of private sector companies in the region were very likely over the next six months.

    Source:Gulf times, Reuters/ Manama, 06.07.2009

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

    China Takes Aim at Dollar – Update 07.07.2009

    Update 07.07.09:   Long live the all mighty US dollar as reserve currency, says China. Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister He Yafei said on Sunday the US dollar would continue to be the world’s leading reserve currency for years to come. The announcement comes before this week’s summit of the Group of Eight in Italy.

    Source: MercoPress, 06.07.2009

    First published 27.06, 2009: BEIJING — China called for the creation of a new currency to eventually replace the dollar as the world’s standard, proposing a sweeping overhaul of global finance that reflects developing nations’ growing unhappiness with the U.S. role in the world economy.

    The unusual proposal, made by central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan in an essay released Monday in Beijing, is part of China’s increasingly assertive approach to shaping the global response to the financial crisis.

    Mr. Zhou’s proposal comes amid preparations for a summit of the world’s industrial and developing nations, the Group of 20, in London next week. At past such meetings, developed nations have criticized China’s economic and currency policies.

    This time, China is on the offensive, backed by other emerging economies such as Russia in making clear they want a global economic order less dominated by the U.S. and other wealthy nations.

    FiNETIK recommends:

    However, the technical and political hurdles to implementing China’s recommendation are enormous, so even if backed by other nations, the proposal is unlikely to change the dollar’s role in the short term. Central banks around the world hold more U.S. dollars and dollar securities than they do assets denominated in any other individual foreign currency. Such reserves can be used to stabilize the value of the central banks’ domestic currencies.

    Monday’s proposal follows a similar one Russia made this month during preparations for the G20 meeting. Like China, Russia recommended that the International Monetary Fund might issue the currency, and emphasized the need to update “the obsolescent unipolar world economic order.”

    [Dollar Dominated]

    Chinese officials are frustrated at their financial dependence on the U.S., with Premier Wen Jiabao this month publicly expressing “worries” over China’s significant holdings of U.S. government bonds. The size of those holdings means the value of the national rainy-day fund is mainly driven by factors China has little control over, such as fluctuations in the value of the dollar and changes in U.S. economic policies. While Chinese banks have weathered the global downturn and continue to lend, the collapse in demand for the nation’s exports has shuttered factories and left millions jobless.

    In his paper, published in Chinese and English on the central bank’s Web site, Mr. Zhou argued for reducing the dominance of a few individual currencies, such as the dollar, euro and yen, in international trade and finance. Most nations concentrate their assets in those reserve currencies, which exaggerates the size of flows and makes financial systems overall more volatile, Mr. Zhou said.

    Moving to a reserve currency that belongs to no individual nation would make it easier for all nations to manage their economies better, he argued, because it would give the reserve-currency nations more freedom to shift monetary policy and exchange rates. It could also be the basis for a more equitable way of financing the IMF, Mr. Zhou added. China is among several nations under pressure to pony up extra cash to help the IMF.

    John Lipsky, the IMF’s deputy managing director, said the Chinese proposal should be treated seriously. “It reflects officials’ concerns about improving the stability of the financial system,” he said. “It’s interesting because of China’s unique position, and because the governor put it in a measured and considered way.”

    China’s proposal is likely to have significant implications, said Eswar Prasad, a professor of trade policy at Cornell University and former IMF official. “Nobody believes that this is the perfect solution, but by putting this on the table the Chinese have redefined the debate,” he said. “It represents a very strong pushback by China on a number of fronts where they feel themselves being pushed around by the advanced countries,” such as currency policy and funding for the IMF.

    A spokeswoman for the U.S. Treasury Department declined to comment on Mr. Zhou’s views. In recent weeks, senior Obama administration officials have sought to reassure Beijing that the current U.S. spending spree is a short-term effort to restart the stalled American economy, not evidence of long-term U.S. profligacy.

    “The re-establishment of a new and widely accepted reserve currency with a stable valuation benchmark may take a long time,” Mr. Zhou said. In remarks earlier Monday, one of his deputies, Hu Xiaolian, also said the dollar’s dominant position in international trade and investment is unlikely to change soon. Ms. Hu is in charge of reserve management as the head of China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange.

    Mr. Zhou’s comments — coming on the heels of Mr. Wen’s musing about the safety of China’s dollar holdings — appear to be a warning to the U.S. that it can’t expect China to finance its spending indefinitely.

    [The Haves and Have Mores]

    The central banker’s proposal reflects both China’s desire to hold its $1.95 trillion in reserves in something other than U.S. dollars and the fact that Beijing has few alternatives. With more U.S. dollars continuing to pour into China from trade and investment, Beijing has no realistic option other than storing them in U.S. debt.

    Mr. Zhou argued, without mentioning the dollar by name, that the loss of the dollar’s de facto reserve status would benefit the U.S. by avoiding future crises. Because other nations continued to park their money in U.S. dollars, the argument goes, the Federal Reserve was able to pursue an irresponsible policy in recent years, keeping interest rates too low for too long and thereby helping to inflate a bubble in the housing market.

    “The outbreak of the crisis and its spillover to the entire world reflected the inherent vulnerabilities and systemic risks in the existing international monetary system,” Mr. Zhou said. The increasing number and intensity of financial crises suggests “the costs of such a system to the world may have exceeded its benefits.”

    Mr. Zhou isn’t the first to make that argument. “The dollar reserve system is part of the problem,” Joseph Stiglitz, the Columbia University economist, said in a speech in Shanghai last week, because it meant so much of the world’s cash was funneled into the U.S. “We need a global reserve system,” he said in the speech.

    Mr. Zhou’s idea is to expand the use of “special drawing rights,” or SDRs — a kind of synthetic currency created by the IMF in the 1960s. Its value is determined by a basket of major currencies. Originally, the SDR was intended to serve as a shared currency for international reserves, though that aspect never really got off the ground.

    These days, the SDR is mainly used in the IMF’s accounting for its transactions with member nations. Mr. Zhou suggested countries could increase their contributions to the IMF in exchange for greater access to a pool of reserves in SDRs.

    Holding more international reserves in SDRs would increase the role and powers of the IMF. That indicates China and other developing nations aren’t hostile to international financial institutions — they just want to have more say in running them. China has resisted the U.S. push to make an immediate loan to the IMF because that wouldn’t give China a bigger vote. Ms. Hu said Monday that China, which encourages the IMF to explore other fund-raising options, would consider buying into a bond issue.

    The IMF has been working on a proposal to issue bonds, probably only to central banks. Bond purchases are one way for the organization to raise money and meet its goal of at least doubling its lending war chest to $500 billion from $250 billion. Japan has loaned the IMF $100 billion and the European Union has pledged another $100 billion.

    Source: Wall Street Journal, 24.06.2009 Terence Poon in Beijing, James T. Areddy in Shanghai, and Bob Davis and Michael M. Phillips in Washington contributed to this article.

    Filed under: Asia, China, News, Risk Management, Services , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,