Saturday, September 12, 2009

Crisis 'cost us $10,000 each'

The world's largest economies have spent $10,000 for every person in a bid to fix the financial meltdown of the past year.

New calculations by the BBC, based on IMF data given to G20 finance ministers, shows these countries have spent a total of $10 trillion (£6tn).

The UK and US spent the most, with the UK spending far more, 94% of its GDP compared to 25% in the US. That equates to £30,000 per person in the UK and $10,000 in the US.

Of course, most of this bail-out money was in the form of guarantees to the banking system, and as that system pulls out of the crisis, governments stand to recover most but not all of that money.

However, there are several other ways to measure the severity of the crisis which has led to the world falling into recession for the first time in 60 years.

They all show the extent of the damage and illustrate the point that the damage has been most severe for the rich countries - especially the US and the UK with their large financial sectors - who were at the heart of the crisis.

Private write offs

The private financial sector is estimated to have write-offs amounting to $4tn, of which two-thirds are losses suffered by the big international banks such as Citigroup or RBS.

And although about half of these losses ($1.8tn) are write-offs of securities backed by sub-prime mortgages, the damage caused by the crisis has spread much wider to other banking assets, with big write-offs of commercial mortgages and company loans as well.

These big write-offs, which have wiped out about 10 years of banking sector profits, have also made it hard for the banks to rebuild capital in order to give themselves the security to resume lending.

Many experts think it will take years, if not decades, before lending returns to pre-crisis levels, and reduced lending was one of the key causes of the economic slowdown, along with a massive collapse of confidence in financial markets.

World economy shrinks

The world economy is projected to shrink by 2.3% this year, or nearly $1tn, a loss of output shared by all citizens, but particularly affecting the rising numbers of the unemployed.

If you take into account the fact that the world economy normally grows by more than 2% per year, then the loss of output caused by the recession is almost $2tn - although some of that may be made up in future years.

However, in order to try to boost growth, governments have borrowed billions of dollars in stimulus funds.

Over the next five years, UK government debt is expected to rise from £600bn to £1.4tn, while the US national debt could double to $10tn.

This extra government debt will have to be paid by future taxpayers, whose ability to spend money on government services like health and education will be constrained. The interest on the UK government's debt in 2014 could be bigger than its entire education budget.

Wealth effect

Finally, individuals are also feeling less wealthy as a result of the drop in the value of their assets. Not only are their homes worth less, but their financial assets, such as stocks and shares, have also declined in value in the last 12 months.

The BBC, in conjunction with the Halifax, estimates that in the UK national wealth held by individuals has dropped by £815bn in the past year (comparing end 2007 with end 2008), with a 15% drop in the value of people's homes and a 9% drop in the value of their other financial assets. These figures do subtract the value of debts, such as mortgages, from the overall valuation.

Of course, wealth is distributed very unevenly, and those who are not homeowners and do not have a pension will not be feeling the effects as much - unless they are finding it hard to get a job.

But there is no doubt that it is curbing people's overall spending plans, and thus exacerbating the recession (the so-called "wealth effect").

It may be some time before we return to an era where people were borrowing against the notional value of the increase in the value of their home to buy holidays and big-screen televisions.

And, as these figures make clear, we will all be paying the price of the collapse of Lehman Brothers for some time to come.

The BBC

Friday, September 11, 2009

Low self-esteem leads to obesity


Children with self-esteem problems are more likely to be obese as adults, a research team has found.

A study of 6,500 participants in the 1970 British Birth Cohort Study found that 10-year-olds with lower self esteem tended to be fatter as adults.

The affect was particularly true for girls, researchers from King's College London reported.

One obesity expert said the results highlighted that early intervention was key to tackling obesity.

This is not about people with deep psychological problems, all the anxiety and low self-esteem were within the normal range
Professor David Collier, King's College London

The children had their weight and height measured by a nurse at the age of 10 and they self-reported when they were 30.

Their emotional states were also noted, the researchers reported in the journal BMC Medicine.

Children with a lower self-esteem, those who felt less in control of their lives, and those who worried often were more likely to gain weight over the next 20 years, the results showed.

Professor David Collier, who led the research, said: "What's novel about this study is that obesity has been regarded as a medical metabolic disorder - what we've found is that emotional problems are a risk factor for obesity.

"This is not about people with deep psychological problems, all the anxiety and low self-esteem were within the normal range."

Strategies

Another researcher, Andrew Ternouth, said: "While we cannot say that childhood emotional problems cause obesity in later life, we can certainly say they play a role, along with factors such as parental weight, diet and exercise.

"Strategies to promote the social and emotional aspects of learning, including the promotion of self-esteem, are central to a number of recent policy initiatives.

"Our findings suggest that approaches of this kind may carry positive benefits for physical health as well as for other aspects of children's development."

Dr Ian Campbell, of the charity, Weight Concern, said: "This study presents some disturbing evidence that, as we suspected, childhood psychological issues have an influence on future weight gain and health.

"Many of the adults we work with have identifiable underlying emotional and self esteem issues and are often resistant to treatment.

"The message here is that early intervention, in childhood, can be the key to combating adult obesity.

"That requires much more than health practitioners can deliver alone and needs greater alertness from parents, teachers, and anyone involved in the welfare of children."

The BBC

Belgium wants probe of Opel sale

Belgium wants the European Union to investigate Germany's role in the sale of General Motor's European units.

GM decided to sell Opel and Vauxhall to Germany's preferred bidder, Canadian car parts manufacturer Magna.

Magna has said that it will keep all four German plants open, but it has suggested it could wind down production at a plant in Antwerp.

"I think the German government sought its own advantage," said Belgian Vice Premier Joelle Milquet.

State aid rules

Germany had been pushing for the sale to Magna, which is backed by Russia's Sberbank.

The government has already lent 1.5bn euros to Opel, and will now put up an additional 3bn euros in loan guarantees for Magna.

Belgian Foreign Minister Yves Leterme also backed calls to have the European Commission probe the deal. He said Belgium would bring the GM sale up at a meeting of EU ministers next week.

The European Commission said it was following the GM sale process "very closely".

"The Commission has underlined that the financial support must be fully compliant with all aspects of the EU's state aid and internal market rules," it said.

"In particular, state aid cannot be subject to additional non-commercial conditions concerning the location of investments and/or the geographic distribution of restructuring measures."

The EU's executive body added it will be "attentive" to the "social consequences" of the sale as it comes to a conclusion about its legality.

German guarantee

The German-led Opel Trust - containing representatives from GM, the German federal government and the German states that contain Opel plants - has controlled the European operations since GM sought bankruptcy protection in the US in June this year.

The trust's chairman, Fred Irwin, said on Thursday that they had recommended - "given the burden on German taxpayers and for the sake of German jobs" - that those guarantees be used for Opel in Germany only.

The sale to Magna is being seen as a victory for German chancellor Angela Merkel - who said she was "very pleased" about it - just two weeks before the national election.

Opel employs a total of 54,500 workers across Europe, with 25,000 based in Germany.

British unions have expressed concern about the long-term future of Vauxhall's 5,500 UK workers and its two British plants in Luton and Ellesmere Port.

Magna has also suggested shifting some production from a plant in Zaragosa in Spain back to Germany.

BBC.COM

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Oil price up before Opec meeting


Oil prices have risen ahead of an Opec meeting, as a weaker US dollar made the commodity cheaper in other currencies.

Light sweet crude for October delivery rose $3.10 to $71.12 a barrel as the dollar fell to its lowest level against the euro this year, to $1.4535.

The rise came as oil ministers from the producers' cartel Opec prepared to meet for a summit in Vienna.

Saudi's oil minister said the country would keep supplies steady and did not expect Opec's supply policy to change.

"Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi, upon arrival in Vienna yesterday, has described the oil market as stable and current prices satisfactory," the Saudi-owned Al-Hayat newspaper reported.

'Hysteria-driven market'

The meeting is due to begin at 2130 local time (1930 GMT).

An hour after the meeting starts there will be figures out from the American Petroleum Institute showing how much crude oil is stockpiled in the US, with the volumes often having an influence on prices.

Traders will also be keeping an eye on Tropical Storm Fred, which is growing to hurricane force in the eastern Atlantic, but is not currently expected to threaten oil installations.

"This is very much in a dollar-driven, inflation-driven, hysteria-driven market," said Edward Meir, energy analyst at MF Global.

"Opec will likely leave things unchanged and will end the meeting with exhortations to stick to quotas."

5 lessons from the crash

One year ago a perfect storm on Wall Street nearly destroyed your portfolio - and our financial system. Now it's time to take stock.

Even one year later, the speed with which America's financial system unraveled last September still boggles the mind.

The worst financial meltdown since the 1930s began, you'll recall, with a bang. Early in the month the housing crash led to the federal government's takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM, Fortune 500) and Freddie Mac (FRE, Fortune 500) -- whose dividend-paying stocks were a cornerstone of many retirement portfolios.

Within days the crisis had spread to the investment banks. Lehman Brothers soon collapsed under the weight of its bad mortgage-backed bets, while Merrill Lynch was forced into the hands of Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500).

Then came news that insurance giant AIG (AIG, Fortune 500) faced a credit crunch, leading to an $85 billion government bailout (which turned out to be a first installment). The Bush administration, led by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, hastily crafted a Wall Street relief package that was initially rejected by Congress. The Dow plunged nearly 780 points on its way to an eventual 5,000-point rout.

This year the index has climbed about halfway back, thank goodness. But don't allow the recent rebound to make you forget the pain. Even if the worst of the crisis is over, that which didn't kill your nest egg can make you smarter about your investments.

And while your portfolio is still weaker than it was a year ago, the five following lessons from the Crash of '08 will help you strengthen your finances going forward -- and should limit the damage in the next crisis, wherever and whenever it may come.

Lesson 1: Asset allocation still works -- just don't expect a guarantee.

In the wake of the crash, you may have concluded that asset allocation -- the traditional strategy of diversifying among stocks, fixed income, and cash -- is a bust. After all, your U.S. and foreign equities and all sorts of bonds lost money last year.

"The basic principles of asset allocation need to be revised," says MIT finance professor Andrew Lo. He and other experts argue that since market volatility is rising, you must now own other assets -- such as hedge-fund-like investments -- in addition to stocks and bonds to manage risk. And you must be prepared to shift your mix tactically from time to time. "You need to be proactive and adjust as the market changes," he says.

Lo is correct that it's harder to diversify today (we'll get to that in a moment). But the argument that to reach your goals you must rely on new tactics downplays two big lessons of history -- one recent and the other long established.

The first: Many alternative investments such as hedge funds took a beating in the crisis. And in the long run, the evidence is overwhelming that investors who try to time the market generally fail to beat those who don't. As Warren Buffett says, "The stock market has a very efficient way of transferring wealth from the impatient to the patient."

The real problem with asset allocation isn't that it no longer works, but that people expect that it will always work. And that's just not true. The 2000-02 bear showed that even sophisticated asset allocations can't guarantee you won't lose money in a lousy market. "That doesn't mean asset allocation is a bad idea," says Harvard economics professor John Campbell. "If vaccines don't work for swine flu, it doesn't mean you shouldn't vaccinate for other types of flu."

And if you look at the numbers, you'll see that proper diversification did you considerable good in this meltdown. Yes, most stocks and many fixed-income categories rang up huge losses. But long-term U.S. Treasuries gained more than 27% last year (see the chart at right). High-quality U.S. corporate and global bonds also made money -- as did cash.

If you held a mix of 35% U.S. stocks, 25% foreign stocks, 10% cash, and 30% fixed income (including government and high-quality corporate bonds), you would have lost just 28% between Sept. 1, 2008, and the market's bottom of March 9. By comparison, the S&P 500 was down nearly 50%.

Lesson 2: The world is riskier -- and will stay that way.

Remember the Great Moderation? The phrase describes the recent quarter-century period when economic growth looked limitless and the long-term risk in stocks seemed to be disappearing. Between 2003 and 2007, for example, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index (VIX) (VIX) -- a well-known gauge of how risky investors think the market is -- hovered in the 1015 range. That was down considerably from the index's historical average of about 20.

Risk, of course, returned with a vengeance. Last October, at the height of the banking crisis, the VIX hit an all-time high of 80. At those levels, a conservative portfolio that held 30% in stocks and 70% in bonds would bounce up and down the way a 60% stock/40% bond portfolio did before the market meltdown.

Today the VIX has fallen back to around 25. The question is, should you brace yourself for more nerve-jangling spikes? Yes, according to many investment pros, including Yale finance professor Roger Ibbotson, founder of Ibbotson Associates.

He expects the market to remain jittery for several years. Blame the unstable economy, which is likely to deliver more corporate earnings disappointments, and shell-shocked investors who are likely to react sharply to any bad news. "Given the higher volatility today," says Ibbotson, "you may need to ratchet down the risk in your portfolio."

That doesn't mean you should reverse your 60% stock/40% bond portfolio, or that you should do something even more radical. Instead, revisit your investment mix to make sure you're taking on an appropriate amount of risk in light of your financial goals and your tolerance for more market shocks.

Studies show that most of us, not surprisingly, think we can handle more risk when the market is rising than when it's falling. That makes last year's plunge an ideal stress test, says Michael Schlachter, managing director at Wilshire Associates. So ask yourself, How well did I handle it? If you were gulping down Xanax, cut back your stocks by five or 10 percentage points while boosting your fixed-income allocation.

By easing back on equities to accommodate a slightly greater weighting in bonds and cash, you sacrifice some potential return. But not as much as you might think.

Over the past 30 years, a 70% stock/30% bond portfolio gained just two-tenths of a point less a year than an 80%/20% mix. Yet it would have lost less in the downturn. And if smaller losses keep you from undoing your long-term plans in a crisis, that may be well worth the cost.

Lesson 3: Real diversification is harder to achieve than it looks.

As AIG, Lehman, and other financial giants teetered on the edge last fall, you learned to your unpleasant surprise that Wall Street's woes were dragging down your Main Street portfolio.

Say you were the conservative type who likes funds focusing on low-priced stocks that pay dividends. Well, the typical large-stock "value" fund held more than 30% of its assets in financials before the crisis. Even S&P 500 index funds had as much as a 20% stake in banks, brokerages, and insurers (about twice the current level), since they had grown into a huge part of the market in the credit boom.

As for that bond fund delivering above-average yields, it likely held an above-average helping of subprime mortgage bonds. "People were loading up on the most speculative assets but didn't realize it," says Ibbotson chief economist Michele Gambera.

The best way to avoid too much exposure to any industry or asset -- especially frothy ones -- is to drill down in your portfolio to see what you actually own. Use the Instant X-ray tool at Morningstar.com, which will show how much your funds' holdings overlap and whether your portfolio tilts heavily toward one industry or style.

Another idea: Stick to index funds. As noted, an S&P 500 or total stock market fund can't keep you from getting caught up in the market's momentum. But it's always clear what index funds own, because they mirror well-known benchmarks for which information is readily available.

And you can use a combination of index funds to tack against the tide. Say technology stocks, which are zooming now, start to account for a huge portion of the S&P's market capitalization as they did in 19982000. You could shift some of your holdings to an S&P 500 value index fund, which holds less than 8% of its assets in tech.

Of course, owning different stock funds -- be they actively or passively managed -- won't adequately diversify you, since most equities are positively correlated. Translation: They tend to move in the same direction. And correlations among assets have been growing, as global markets are now intertwined.

That's why you must own high-quality bonds -- especially safe U.S. Treasuries and inflation-protected TIPS bonds, says Gambera. They're often negatively correlated with stocks, so they zig when stocks zag. And you should own foreign bonds to diversify your domestic ones.

Lesson 4: Recognizing a bubble is hard. Hedging against one is harder.

"To spot a bubble in advance requires a judgment that hundreds of thousands of informed investors have it all wrong," said then-Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan in 1999. He should know how hard that is: He failed to detect two of history's frothiest markets -- in tech stocks and in housing.

Then again, how many of us paid attention when Yale economist Robert Shiller -- who correctly called the Internet bubble -- started warning that homes were wildly overvalued?

Given how hard it is to shield yourself from the fallout of a bubble, you may be tempted to try alternative investments, such as long-short funds, which attempt to hedge against the market.

One type, absolute-return funds, aims for positive results in any environment. So-called market-neutral funds seek to beat Treasury bills while remaining uncorrelated with stocks. But in 2008 the typical long-short fund fell 15%, while some lost nearly 40%. When bubbles burst, you can run but you can't totally hide.

The one sure hedge: a healthy dose of cash, an asset all but forgotten during the boom. Don't ignore it now.

Lesson 5: You can't time the market, but you can time yourself.

While you can always find a few savvy folks who have managed to outguess the market, Buffett points out that the vast majority of us fail miserably at market timing.

That said, you should always be timing your own circumstances. Every year that passes is another year you get closer to retirement. Over time this will require you to dial back the percentage of your nest egg that you hold in equities. Yet heading into 2007, nearly 40% of workers ages 56 to 65 held 80% or more of their 401(k)s in stocks. A less stock-heavy portfolio would have been far more appropriate -- and safer.

Then there are circumstances specific to you and your family. Sure, your allocation may have been right when you last rebalanced your portfolio. But what if your employer has run into financial problems recently and you fear losing your job? What if your spouse is coping with a medical emergency, or you're now financially responsible for an aging parent?

If you're dealing with these kinds of situations, it's more important to preserve your principal and build up some additional cash reserves than to earn the highest possible returns. In that case there's nothing wrong with shifting some of your equities into safer, more liquid investments.

This is not a repudiation of asset allocation, but a recognition that your life has changed. And it's that kind of timing that will guide your portfolio safely through good times and bad.
By Penelope Wang, Money magazine senior writer

Monday, September 7, 2009

Trichet Says World Economy Shows Signs of Stabilizing (Update1)

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, who chaired a meeting of central bankers today, said the global economy is showing signs of emerging from its worst recession in more than 60 years.

Latest indicators have been better than anticipated and stabilization is “something which seems to be confirmed at the global level,” Trichet said at a press conference at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland. “It’s not excluded that we would have a bumpy road ahead and of course alertness remains of the essence,” he said.

Central bankers have cut borrowing costs to record lows and injected billions into the financial system after the U.S. housing slump triggered the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc a year ago, throwing the global economy into its worst slump since the Great Depression. Governments are also trying to kick- start growth with stimulus packages.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Sept. 3 that the combined economy of the Group of Seven nations will shrink 3.7 percent this year, less than the 4.1 percent contraction it projected in June. The U.S., Japan, Germany and France will all show growth in the current quarter while Canada and the U.K. will continue to shrink, the Paris- based group forecast.

Free Fall Over

“A number of projections had been slightly revised up, confirming that we’re probably, in a large part of the economy, out of the period of free fall,” Trichet said. Still, “we have to remain prudent and cautious.”

Trichet met in Basel with his counterparts from the world’s largest central banks including Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and China’s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan.

While some policy makers have stressed the need to withdraw emergency measures as soon as the economy improves in order to prevent inflation, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and ECB are still in the process of implementing asset-purchase programs in a bid to encourage lending. The ECB on Sept. 3 kept its key rate at a record low of 1 percent after loaning banks as much money as they wanted for 12 months and starting to purchase covered bonds.

Trichet said there’s “a great unity of purpose” among central bankers to deliver price stability. “This unity of purpose doesn’t mean that we do the same because we’re in different situations,” he said.

‘Lessons’

Central banks and governments around the world are seeking tougher regulation after excessive risk-taking by financial institutions sparked $1.61 trillion in losses and writedowns and led to taxpayer-funded bailouts.

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision yesterday agreed lenders should raise the quality of their capital by including more stock. Financial firms will also have to introduce a leverage ratio and devise ways to boost reserves when the economy is robust, the panel said.

Central banks and governments must “draw all the lessons from the past” in order to ensure that new bubbles aren’t created and “abnormal” risk-taking doesn’t re-emerge, Trichet said.

The Global Economy Meeting is held every two months under the auspices of the BIS, the central bank of the world’s central banks.

By Simone Meier and Christian Vits

MrsCentral banks back new regulation

Central bankers have backed new measures to strengthen supervision of the global banking industry.


ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet presided over the Basel meeting

A meeting of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), which consists of the world's central banks, pledged to increase bank's capital requirements.

The plans should "substantially reduce the probability and severity of economic and financial stress," the BIS said.

But the BIS did not set out a timeline for implementation of the proposals.

The measures will be outlined in detail by year-end and be introduced in a way "that does not impede the recovery of the real economy".

The BIS meeting comes just after the finance ministers from the Group of 20 richest nations meeting in London backed a system that rewards long-term performance rather than short-term risk-taking.

But they could not agree on specific limits on the amounts individual bankers get paid.

Tier one

The BIS, established in 1930 in the aftermath of the Great Depression, consists of 55 member central banks and is based in Basel.

The meeting, on Sunday, was held by members of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.

"The agreements reached today among 27 major countries of the world are essential as they set the new standards for banking regulation and supervision at the global level," said Jean-Claude Trichet, the head of the European Central Bank chief who presided the meeting.

In addition to holding on to more capital, the BIS agreed to boost the standards for so-called "tier one" capital requirements - which essentially means the quality of the assets that banks have on their books in relation to their deposits.

Basel Committee head Nout Wellink, also the president of the Dutch central bank, also said that banker compensation should be "properly aligned with long-term performance and prudent risk-taking."

BBC