Showing posts with label Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Money. Show all posts

MF Global Debacle-Singapore Moral Chapter


What is the difference between gaming and proprietary trading? The most obvious is on how you place your bets. In gaming, it is primarily based on instinct. There are some theorems that by card counting in the game of black jack, you are almost guaranteed in placing a winning bet but let's leave this controversial practice aside for the time being as casino operators have proven that they are guaranteed to be winners the world over.

In proprietary trading, it is usually based on a whole lot of analysis on the predictable and visible The little left that is not predictable and blind corners, human instinct and experience complete the process and a bet is made. Perhaps this is why a gaming license is needed to operate a legitimate casino but for proprietary trading, the amount of control that the monetary regulators ( MAS is the case of Singapore is both the central bank as well as banking regulator ) depends largely on your funding source. If funded by sophisticated investors with no retailing to the general public, MAS does little to control proprietary trading as well as protecting their investors in the name of free market. MF Global melt down is now common knowledge but little is mentioned that they also have a Singapore branch. Before I forget, the local press did mention that SGX has frozen their operations here for exchange traded products to reduce SGX counter-party risk. How about their positions in non-exchange traded derivatives and the like and their local investors and counter-parties? SGX stands for Singapore Exchange and also operates as security and exchange regulator of the stock market. A bit like NYSE and SEC all rolled in one in USA for efficiency and not to possible defray conflict of interest.

Singapore has been showcased the world over as a miracle economy that managed to achieve spectacular growth in the face of adversity starting with a tiny island state with no natural endowment of mother nature except for her people and geographical location along the major maritime trade lanes of East and West. The one and only ruling party since her independence is the well known Peoples' Action Party ( PAP ) and till date, they still hold more than 2/3 of the seats in parliament enabling them to change constitution, laws and policies almost unilaterally. To add injury, being a parliamentary system, there is the party whip to keep their own members of parliament in line. PAP's success both in winning the mandate of the populace at every election as well as making and keeping Singapore successful is based on a pragmatic moralistic meritocracy strongly espoused by the founder of PAP Lee Kuan Yew and I suppose accounts partly for their choice of all white 'uniform'.

Hong Kong is big in proprietary trading but has no legalized gaming and the same goes for major financial centers like New York, Chicago, London, Tokyo and Frankfurt. Cities known for big league legalized gaming like Macao, Los Angeles, Atlantic City and Monte-Car-lo have limited proprietary trading. If we combine casino gaming or what Singapore government white washed label as 'Integrated Resort' and proprietary trading in the financial center into the same gaming sector, this might place the city of Singapore uniquely in the gaming capital of the world. Well done PAP.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

Cheaper Stock Brokerage?

Of late, the competition in stock brokerage has intensified drastically with non-clearing members offering brokerage rates unheard of previously. As with all cheap things, there is always a catch to it. If you are thinking of fattening your trading profits or reducing your trading losses, do read the fine print carefully. The list of clearing members in the case of Singapore is available at www.sgx.com The differential between trading with clearing and non-clearing members are mainly as follows:

  1. For trades with clearing members, stocks would be placed in a custodial company or custodial division of the stock exchange that would also have a common modus operandi with companies providing share registrar service. Trades though non-clearing members are normally held in a separate custodial company normally owned by the non-clearing member as well. Some do use the custodial services not owned or operated by them.
  2. Voting rights at annual or extraordinary general meetings are non-existent for the smaller retail traders as the custodial company is listed as the owner of the shares. If you are a big player, arrangements can be made for the custodial company to proxy it back to you. If you are in the habit of collecting nicely printed annual reports for your coffee table, there will be none in this case. The situation is similar to trading using CPF and SRS funds.
  3. The custodial fees charged by the custodial company are standard and transparent and same for all clearing member. The custodial fees and fees structure varies widely and this is where the savings on brokerage fees can get wiped out. The fee structure for custodial fee can be broadly classed into transaction fees for buy and/or sell and a custodian charge levied based on a mix of quantity and value of share as well as the custodian period.
  4. Switching between clearing members is seamless because of a common custodial operator so the clearing members fight tooth and nail for customers especially institutional and private clients. Switching from a non-clearing member either to a clearing or another non-clearing member can be a nightmare as any existing open positions would have to be unwound in one way or another and this is most probably not where anyone wants to be in. The switching cost can be very high and the process tedious. Once the non-clearing members have you, they have you for good ad infinitum because of this switching nightmare.
  5. The security of the custody is normally more secured because the common custodial service has a more protective legal framework to guard owners interest in case of liquidation, bankruptcies or dissolution. For non-clearing member, the protection element varies. After Lehman Brothers, no one is too big to fail.
  6. Most non-clearing members tend to be larger and international geographically and might hold non-clearing or clearing memberships in markets outside of Singapore. Very useful for trading across markets.
  7. These non-clearing member also tend to have more products especially forex based products that can lower your forex transaction cost by offering more competitive forex rates on spot or forward hedging options as well positions in multiple currencies on demand or fixed tenure. Only applies to the more sophisticated traders.
Before making any brokerage decisions, you cannot be too careful especially with non-clearing members and only trading on the local market not that I have anything against them.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

Privatizing Profits/Socializing Losses-Economic Spring

Holidaying in one of Thailand's tiny beach island in La Laanta resort that offers both beaches with pristine water and modern day creature comforts like air-conditioning and internet to attend my brother's twin city wedding has awaken some deeply recessed thoughts on capitalism,socialism,communalism and communism. These topics have disturbed my intellect endlessly with no absolute truism or compromised resolution.

Deeply stalked by the apparent lesser of two evils between capitalism and communism as well as the humanity of socialism and communalism. I have long threw communism out as an essentially non-viable state of being. I believe the empirical evidence on the break down of communism in USSR and eastern european countries have fortified my beliefs. Thinking I could rest my case and out comes the rise of China's economy makes me want to be more guarded in wanting to throw the bath water of communism together with the baby. Communism is not only entirely non-viable but has powered strong economic growth in China. Confusion confronted me and shifted my grey matter into higher gear.

On the other end of the spectrum lies capitalism and I have always assumed that since much of the world and USA success at being the largest economic and military power must show the relevancy of capitalism. This was until the capitalists wanted to have the whole nine yards of privatizing the profits of capitalism into their own self interest but when matters head southward, the capitalists wanted to socialize their losses on the premise of too big to fail trump card. This has not happened not only on wall street like the banks and insurance companies and main street represented by the big three auto companies of GM, Chrysler and Ford but also the sovereigns like Greece. Cerebrally, I pause to fathom that this is liken to heads I win and tails you loose. This is tantamount to cheating in my humble sense of justice. 

The banks and insurance threatened the sovereigns that their failure might lead to ca-strophic and almost non-recovery of the world economy. When the economy seems to have recovered with a rally in wall street, the executives and rain makers started paying themselves what some might term as obscenely large pay packets. The 'occupy wall street' fever has spread to many countries and I believe rightly so on the basis of justice which should sometimes rise above arcade written laws. 

Some of the main street executives travelled in their private corporate jets to Washington to beg for money. I do reverb some of the congressmen for chewing these executives about new theorem of begging. When the Euro became a common currency more than a decade ago, I was elated that finally, there is a disciplined currency with good foundations and principles against the fiat issue of USD that in a single announcement made the convertibility of USD into gold vaporize into thin matter. Next came slowly but surely a USD currency printing press based economy. The joke or reality is that their sovereign bonds promise to pay the bearer at a future date in USD full stop. I do not think that China which is currently the largest holder of USA sovereign bonds is likely to be bullied into seating pretty without any counter-measures. 

Greece government came next as a nation that has not exercised fiscal discipline and spiraling their national debt into an un-manageable state and threatening to either default or exercise some form of reset including resurrecting their old Drachma or a substantial hair cut of about 50% which could possibly start a nuclear like fission in destroying the economy of the world. To make matter worse, their citizenry has already taken to widespread protest as a preemptive move to warn their government, ECB, ESFS, IMF and possibly the world that they will not swallow the likely prescriptive bitter medicine of fiscal discipline as pre-conditions for bailing them out. My question is why these bodies are taking Greece more seriously as they have forced such bitter measures into some governments especially those in the 3rd world in the past without as much as betting an eye-lid. Perhaps IMF has failed like the league of nations and ought to re-constitute and have a clean re-birth like the United Nations.

Do you think there ought to be an 'Economic Spring' along the same lines as 'Arab Spring' to inject a good dose of justice into the world economy?

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

Lesser Evil-USD or Euro?

There aren't many international currencies to hide under current torrent of financial storm. In mind, USD and Euro is most probably the most liquid. Yen is predominantly still a bilateral currency used mainly in trade with Japan. RMB is not deliverable now although there are synthetic products by CME for RMB non-deliverable futures settled in USD. There are signs that the Chinese government is seriously examining the pro and cons as well as timeline and method to unleash RMB having been caught with one of the largest cachet of sovereign bonds issued by USA and Euro zone countries that seems to be in trouble. Of course we cannot exclude the shinning king of the hill Gold as an alternative but with many caveats.

My choice is simply and clearly the Euro instead of USD.

Now the complex reasons:

1. Euro is a good choice in the long or even medium term if Euro zone does not implode by itself.
2. Although USD is solvent as the Fed can monetize the debt by printing more USD to pay their sovereign bonds. Joke being that they promised to pay you at a future date stated on the bond in USD and definitely will.
3. Euro is structurally more secure on the monetizing front as ECB has a rigid golden constitution to prevent it from doing so. It seems that ECB has broken her silver constitution of not being allowed to buy sovereign bonds of its member states but has done so for 5 (PIIGS) countries on the open market.
4. Euro zone seems to be in a big mess and the most powerful man or oops lady i.e. Chancellor of German has kept almost silent and nonchalant about it. While I understand the need to turn domestic as her election is due in 2012 but surely this might be too early and careful. Sexist joke that she can hide under her own skirt for cover since she is a lady. Please laugh for my dry sense of humor.
5. Of the five problematic countries PIIGS, only Greece is real trouble if we were to take a second and more careful look of the situation. The rest Italy, Spain, Ireland and Portugal are most probably only knee deep if we keep speculators playing the credit default swap market betting on their failure and therefore might be self full-filling. A good numbers of the speculators are investment bankers in their seville row suits and my view of them is so low threatening that their extinction will not spell the extinction of mankind.
6. Another major stumbling block is the domino effect on the sovereign default is on the major banks that hold a large portion of these sovereign bonds and their failure will therefore spread like wild fire from wall street to main street. The major banks are mostly too poorly funded for what they are doing. We should revive Glass-Stegall to separate investment banks from commercial banks. I think it was a big mistake in the 2008 crisis to allow them to merge like ML brought under BofA. Commercial and investment bank can then have different funding ratios. Looked how Soc Gen stoc was hammered down by about 20% in a single day few weeks ago.

As a Singaporean, wonder if my fellow country men has noticed that SGD has weaken against USD in the last 3 weeks from about 1.19 to 1.29? Reasons like making our exports more competitive etc are tossed in state control media but might reflect the depth of market that hot funds occupy in our market. Perhaps money is going into USD for short term cover if arguement above is correct.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

SGX Prediction for 8 Aug 2011

I predict that SGX index will take a hit and might even test the 2900 point intraday for the following reasons even though DOW recovered on Friday on the back of better than expected employment figures:

1. A portion of the sell-off on SGX last Friday could be due to foreign funds selling index linked stocks due either to profit taking or to increase their liquidity for margin calls on funds that are more highly leveraged.
2. SGD weaken against USD last Friday on both the spot and forward market partly because foreign funds that have convert back to their home currency. I am not sure if MAS has intervened to support SGD.
3. SGX is closed on Tuesday 9 August due to national day celebrations.
4. To add additional time window risk, there is a FOMC meeting also on Tuesday 9 August in USA.

Just my common sense and I can be wrong.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

Monetary Quadratic Mysteries-USD/Euro/Yen/RMB

Sometime back in May 2005, I wrote a similar topic called The Currency Trilogy Impact of USA Policy on the world Economy and it is timely for a review as RMB has gained much ground to warrant being ranked as one of the major currencies of the world. The economic backdrop and her twin sister; the political struggle has also changed significantly.

Technically, there are only 3 main currencies for international trade and reserve purpose because the RMB is non deliverable outside China due to exchange controls imposed by China. This is fast changing as China is experimenting on a limited scale in denominating both import and export in RMB. There is much controversy within China that it might in fact worsen the currency imbalance much like some patients dying from the chemotherapy treatment for their cancer instead.

While this is happening, fast thinking and creative investment bankers whom are partly if not mostly to be blamed for the economic hardship in 2008 following the demise of Lehman Brothers and CDO market have started to offer products like non-deliverable RMB forward contracts where the settlement is mostly in USD/Euro/Yen. Such products has reached such maturity for Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CMB) being the first exchange globally to offer clearing facilities for such instruments to provide more liquidity, price transparency and reduce counter-party risks which wrecked havoc in 2008 for non-exchange traded products. Various exchanges has also jumped on the band wagon to provide such facilities with Singapore Exchange (SGX) being one of them for Asia Pacific region. Being a Singaporean, instead of being jubilant for Singapore, I felt uneasy as the exchanges will now bear the counter party risks. Let's hope that SGX will be disciplined and shrewd in its conduct of such trades if not God help us all in the next crisis.

In addition, a number of Chinese Banks with overseas branches have started offering deposit taking accounts denominated in RMB. The catch is that they are both non-interest bearing and acceptance and delivery is not in RMB but usually the home currency of the branch or USD. Customers are attracted by the money making possibilities based upon the upward trajectory of the RMB.

The US federal government reached its debt ceiling of USD 14.3 trillion in May 2011 and is likely to face a technical default in August 2011 if the dead lock in Congress in approving an increase in the debt ceiling continues. Surprisingly or not so surprisingly, US federal debt instruments continue to maintain investment grade rating by all 3 rating agencies i.e. Fitch, Moody and S&P. Not known to many, the oligopoly of this industry by these 3 companies is protected by US laws therefore there is bound to be COI as these rating agencies does a delicate balance of maintaining its external reputation  and not biting the hands that feeds it.

In today's complex web of financial derivatives, the impact of a technical default of US Federal Government will be further ashore than USA and beyond the holders of the bonds unlike similar circumstances when US defaulted on its bond sold in london by George Peabody of JP Morgan in 1800. Some instruments or products can vaporize into zero value if they have a Credit Event clause tied to the US Federal Government embedded within. Many of these instruments are likely to be traded off exchange and it might take longer for such defaults to become visible. There is also the domino effect of such systemic failures to contend with. All things considered, it is likely to be a larger fire ball compared to Lehman Brothers.

Since the probability of such Credit Events happening is deemed as highly unlikely, correct risk pricing becomes more complicated normally resulting in a bipolar price situation of swinging between extremes at very short notice. This could wipe out products or instruments deemed as safe haven to reach cynaide grade toxicity in a blink of an eyelid. Post Lehman Brothers, only the shorter termed instruments would have expired or re-termed on better conditions but the longer termed instruments continue unabated in carrying such risks. Another class of assets that are likely to be at risk are issuers Credit Default Swaps (CDS). Go check the definition of Credit Events in www.isda.org which is frequently referenced and used and you will be surprised by how wide and easily invokable the definition is.

With the US presidential election due in 2012 and Obama playing his cards towards a second term presidency, he is likely to go for temporal pain relief type of measures than hard to swallow bitter medicine to garner more votes. Surprisingly, his own Democrats in Congress are calling for a more difficult double barreled measure of spending cuts and increasing taxes while the Republicans are only calling for spending cuts.

Both the Euro and the Euro zone seems to be deep in trouble with Greece topping the list at present followed by lesser counter parts like Portugal, Italy, Ireland and Spain nick named (PIIGS). Greece seems to be in locked horns over the populace unwilling to swallow the bitter pre-conditions of ECB/IMF lead rescue package of spending cuts and increase in taxes reasoning that the economy is already in dire straits with high unemployment. Monetizing their debt is not an option if they continue to stay un ECB as only ECB can print money and not the member states who typically finance their deficits by issuing Euro denominated bonds. The differential for CDS on German Bundesbank considered the gold standard in Eurozone now against Greek government bonds have been rising to proportions equating such bonds on par with junk bonds regardless of how the rating agencies peg them. This makes it very expensive for Greece to finance its deficit compounding the problem further.

Should the inevitable but not impossible event happens that Greece gets out of the ECB, the whole un-winding process back to their own currency is likely to be 10 times more complicated, painful and long drawn than when Greece entered the ECB. Firstly, valuation wise, the formulation, basis would be so wide ranging and controversial that market sentiments will likely rule the day. Perhaps break fuse would be enforced to prevent sudden unprecedented drop but such relief is only temporal and finally, the market still dictates its valuation. Secondly, with little or no bilateral or multilateral currency swaps agreement with partner countries, the new currencies is wide open and naked to predatory practices of short term market speculators. ECB is most likely to be provide this air-cover as part of the agreement but it is likely to be only effective for short to medium term as the politicians behind the ECB are likely to loose voter support especially in Germany and France. As the ECB is an economic and monetary union with each member state preserving their own political sovereignty, the election time table is on a staggered time line unlike in USA and this would buy the ECB some more time albeit a small measure.

Perhaps the national anthem for Japan should be changed to "God Saved our Prime Minister" in japanese language of course. Naoto Kan was on the brink of being booted out of office by a no confidence initiative when a devastating earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident hit Japan on 11th March 2010. The aftermath of both the earthquake and tsunami rebuilding is underway but the nuclear accident is still un-resolved with unpredictable future outcomes as of now. With the nation facing a national calamity, Kan stay in office was temporarily secured as he promises to step down once the situation is more conducive and stable for a power transition. Kan is still in office amidst smaller calls for him to step down. Although Japan is the 3rd largest economy GDP wise, it is drowning in a huge internal fiscal deficit luckily it has a strong external trade balance to buffer it. There are concerns that the disruption in her industrial output could hamper production capabilities of other countries because less forgiving supply chain measured in days instead of weeks or months. It is not uncommon for a product to consists of parts from at least a dozen of countries or more. The re-construction will add to the huge fiscal deficit and the benefit is less likely to be broad-based but more narrowly focused on construction related industries. This could also a cause of worry for the re-emergence of Yakuza power as many construction related companies are infested with Yakuza elements in some way like the post 1972 Kobe earthquake re-construction.

If history can be relied upon to repeat itself, we could most probably rest more easily about Japan and Europe as most world-wide recessions in recent past have their roots mainly in US save I think for the Asian and Latin American economic crisis.

Of bigger concern is the forth-coming shift in economic and military power. Of the USD 14.3 Trillion debt, about USD 1.3 Trillion is held by China. In addition, China is also a major holder of Euro zone government bonds. These were the results of trade surpluses accumulated by China. It is almost a no brainer that if the current growth and decline continues with China and USA, China's GDP will surpass that of USA in about 2020. On a per capita basis, pro-literate camps in USA argue that USA still reign supreme on a per capita basis and this is what counts most. The flip side to this 'per capita' argument will also mean that China's GDP has far more growth potential to tap on as development continues in the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and subsequent tiers of urban areas. My parting worry is that shifts in economic power rarely goes on peacefully and could result sew the seeds for another potential world war yet again.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

Economist-Wisdom of Recognizing Limitations

In medical-pharmacology, new drugs are put through a series of test both within the laboratories as well as in the field to ensure their safety and efficacy are known before they are released for general use. Even with such rigors, it is by no means a 100% guarantee. We continue to have issues surfacing way after their their release for general use. Some of these were a result of  ethically questionable treatment of information during trials to conceal information like in the case of Vioxx but many are due to our honest lack of knowledge as the human body is a very complex and we are no where near a complete understanding of although we have made great strides in recent past.

I used to discuss with my mentor Uncle John that recognizing how little we do not know about the unknown is one of the mark of maturity. Being a very curious and inquisitive teenager, I was hungry to understand all I could like reading the encyclopedia and dictionary from cover to cover. It dawned upon me one day how little I knew and it was a very humbling sensation.

Although mankind has made great stride in discovering the unknown especially in recent past, I doubt any worthy scholar would dare say that he has full understanding of everything in his field of speciality. In fact, it is sometimes such people that raise red flag to beware of the unknown.

Against the backdrop of the recent global economic meltdown, governments and central banks reacted differently and even for those that reacted similarly, the outcome varies. Unlike medical-pharmacology
discipline, economics is a relatively younger science or perhaps art where laboratory for controlled experiments for testing hypothesis is badly lacking due to the subject/object that simply cannot be contained in a laboratory for controlled studies. Most studies are a result of what I call a rear view mirror historical analysis and synthesis. Even with such studies, the limitations are vast due to its subjective nature.

Given such challenging vagaries that economists are subjected to, should they just throw caution to the wind and toss a dice instead. I think not. Rather I would venture to postulate that we need people with certain psyche where the unknown/blind corners are their best partners in crime and yet be able to apply what they deemed as appropriate in a very moderate manner.

I believe that economics has been plagued by extremism, dogmas and larger than life characters in addition to fashion and fades. It is so severe that economists are proud to trumpet their "religion" without any need for apologies. Milton Friedman, a proponent of free market and minimal government. Lord John Maynard Keynes on the other hand championed the limitations of free market and the need to for fiscal intervention. Leading the monetarist camp, we have Anna Schwartz where supply and demand of money becomes the central theme. Inflation buster like Alan Greenspan with a strong faith in the free market in pricing risks and the firm belief that central banks should titrate interest rate to control inflation. The list goes on ad infinitum.

Under such a situation, perhaps we should champion situational economics for those who that are prepared to park their egos at home, recognize that what they know constitute most probably the tip of the ice berg. Like all good sailors navigating through ice berg infested water, it is the unseen and unknown that will most probably decide their fate.

Parting thought from Ronald Rumsfleld about the middle east war "[T]here are known knowns; there are things we know we know.We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know.But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don't know we don't know."

Cheers,,,, Pete aka http://lkypeter.blogspot.com

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Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Copyrights of all contents in this blog belongs to Peter Lye unless stated otherwise.

Schumann Symphony No 4 in D minor Op 120

Schumann music has not figured very much on my radar for unknown reasons but one day while at a music store, I was introduced to his symphonic works and I decided to give it a try. It was interpreted by Eliahu Inbal and was like love at first sound. I could not figure out why but I recently learned that we might be hard wired to some musical forms unconsciously. In that experiment, they got a volunteer who loves Bach music. Played some obscure pieces from both Bach and Beethoven and ask the person to choose which composer each piece belongs to. It came as no surprise that the participants were able to get the correct composer most of the time as the two composers belongs to different eras with markedly different styles. However, there were some wrong answers also.
In a second series of tests, they now put the participants insides a MRI machine and used special ear phones to play the music to the participants while taking an MRI of their brain. The ear phones had to be special as nothing metallic would survive an MRI machine. The participants were also equipped with an A/B switch to indicate whether the music was Bach to Beethoven. The percentage of right and wrong answers were about similar. Two notable observations were made during the experiment. Firstly, the MRI almost consistently showed two markedly different patterns according to the composer and very little differential between pieces by the same composer. Secondly, even when the participants gave the wrong answers, their brain seems to have gotten the correct answer according to the image on the MRI.

Would love to acknowledge the owner of the above experiment but I could not recall the names and my apologies. My point being that perhaps I am hardwired to like Schmann symphonies without knowing.

Getting back to music, the symphony no 4 has two versions ie the 1841 and heavily revised 1851 with the latter being the more commonly played and recorded version. My collection of this piece quickly grew from 1 to 6 of which only 1 is the 1841 version. It was also opinionated by some Schumann experts that symphony no 4 was actually a heavily revised version of his symphony no 3 but after much listening to both, I cannot hear the similarity personally.

I would start with the Eliahu Inbal version with the Philharmonia Orchestra. Schumann being a German and Inbal being Jewish and given the history of the two races, it is interesting that music can be a common denominator that glue things together. This version is more subdued interpretation right from the first note. Inbal most probably considered the circumstances surrounding the composer when the piece was written and the fact that his wife Clara Schumann is said to have a hand in the revision closer to his death after an attempted suicide. A widow under those circumstances is more likely to be more subdued mood wise as she internalize her husband death.



The version by Riccardo Muti with the New Philharmonia Orchestra also mirrors that of Bernstein and this is perhaps because the recordings were done at about the same time.

Nikolaus Harnoncourt did a fairly recent recording with his Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and this is most probably what I would term as a catching the train interpretation tempo wise. Sonically, it has the advantage of better recording technology and also a markedly larger orchestra.

Thomas Dausgaard and Swedish Chamber Orchestra is next on my list. I have this on SACD and with a smaller orchestra, it actually sounded sweeter.

Although I have not heard the 1841 scoring, some might say that the scoring of the earlier 1841 version is like an uncut diamond and perhaps the beauty is most probably in rawness and capturing the initial intent of the composer.

The more authoritative version by Leonard Bernstein with Vienna Philharmonia is quite the opposite interpretation with gusto and much extremities of emotions throughout the piece. Perhaps Bernstein is registering the probable mood swings that Schumann was going through in his final hours of life. This is also a live recording and the audience sounds very disciplined or the sound engineers did a good job to mask it.

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The last version is most probably one of its kind. I got this piece second hand off the internet and it happens to be a recording made at the bequest of the German Bank West LB when they sponsored the concert in Dusseldorf where the composer once lived. The conductor was Hans Vonk that has recorded this piece with Czech Orchestra before but this one was with a German Orchestra. The entire liner notes was in German and rightly so as it is supposedly given away as a memento to guest of West LB at the concert. I do not wish to trace its origin further but it is a good recording with enough energy to move my heart strings.

For my lawyer friends out there, Schumann actually wanted to be a lawyer but decided that he is more suited for a musical career. Perhaps one of the reason his symphonic pieces are not heard that often is because it was recorded that he was not a good conductor but I think one need not be a good conductor to write good symphonies.

Lastly, for my more religious friends, Schumann is a so called atheist it was documented that his life was the pursuit of wine women and song although his wife Clara continued to carry his torch even after his death.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter

Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye

Mark to Market in a Turbulent Market - Reasonable but not within Reasonable Doubt-April 2009

Bloomberg reports that "But the accounting change, which incorporated a proposal that would bring about US$ 900 Billion onto the lenders' book....." on the impact of such a change on the top 19 financial institutions in US which includes banks and insurance companies.

The whole practice of mark to market to instill transparent financial reporting seems reasonable and very prudent. During the mark to market process, assets are being assessed at the prevailing market value instead of the book value. Any differences that result from this exercise is taken into the profit and loss of the period normally as an extraordinary item either as a write-down or gain. The backbone of such an ancient practice rest upon the fact that the market is the correct reference point.

For listed assets, the practice seems more objective and transparent after one of the many prescribed valuation method is chosen and applied consistently based on a gambit of open, closing, average etc prices provided by the exchange and we have the valuation of the asset. For other forms of assets, objective 3rd party valuers are called upon to provide a valuation of the asset which seems less objective compared the listed assets. As for off balance sheet items, the valuation becomes more murky for some of the more sophisticated synthetic instruments, it takes a Phd in mathematics to unravel only the basis let alone the value and the counter party risks can go through the roof without a mediating exchange to guarantee and clear the trades and so as to allow market participants to trade on a blind basis as far as counter party risk is concerned.

Now that we have arrived that mark to market is a good discipline to adopt to ensure more transparent financial reporting, we shall now shift the burden of proof the other way round and for those opposing this cause to cast reasonable doubts especially its applicability in a turbulent market like what we are facing now.

Firstly, we have to proof beyond reasonable doubt that market price is a true reflection of value. On the surface, it seems that the battle is won hands down in a capitalistic view of things. Adam Smith's invisible hand and how the selfish pursuits of individuals will result in the overall goodness for everyone has not only been challenged in the communist and socialist camps but has also been quietly questioned in the capitalistic camp on its effectiveness. Chief among them is the recognition that in the short run, market prices might not be a a good indicator of value as the market does goes into a sticky phase at times before converging at a point where supply meets demands. In addition, it also pre-supposes that there are sizable diversified market participants and liquid enough market of both buyers and sellers to prevent the market from being cornered or being illiquid. One example being that it is not uncommon for some ETFs to trade against their underlying index. I believe there are enough evidence to cast reasonable doubt to the jury on this count.

Secondly, we shall examine how mark to market itself can serve as overly strong draft forces that could cause chronic declining markets to suffer a pre-mature self full-filling crash or for a bull market to spin inflation out of control through a inflationary spiral. However, it seems to work just fine when the market is relatively stable. It is liken to the doctor that is always not when needed most. Whether in a bull or bear market, mark to market is needed to have a realistic measure and a compass on where it is headed valuation wise. This is also where on a micro basis, mark to market is likely to become an innocent by stander but on a macro basis, it can be the very pill to poison either a bull or bear market. The practice of cross equity holding amongst companies is a fairly common phenomenon especially in countries like Japan. These mega corporations in Japan known as Zaibatsu are on the the surface competing with each other in the market place but a closer examination of their shareholding is likely to bring us into a spider web of complex cross shareholding which can make their share prices impregnantrable or stabilized in the short term but could grow into a bubble that would burst suddenly either way positively or negatively when valuations defy the most common logic. During the height of the Japanese real estate bubble, it was estimated that the value of the land on which the royal palace sits in Tokyo is equivalent to the value of all properties in the state of California.

There are various versions of this joke on engineers, lawyers and accountants in circulation and here is my recent construct. An engineer, lawyer and an accountant happened to visit an optician for a color test. As the optician use the flip charts which uses varying polka doted colors to form numbers to be deciphered. The first number on the flip chart was supposed to be the number 9. As these 3 gentlemen were no ordinary kinsman but were recognized as being captains in their field with their names on the signboard of their sizable firms and therefore did not give a straight forward answer to the optician like all and sundry. The engineer said that the number appears to more like a 6 instead of a 9. He reasoned that depending on how the optician has angled the flip chart. The optician reaffirm his answer as a 6 and told him that it was actually a 9 and he protested that it was the optician's fault for not positioning the flip chart properly and therefore the reference point was setup wrongly and it was not his fault. Next came the lawyer who said that it can either be a 6 or a 9 depending on whose point of view; yours or mine. The now impatient optician replied it is you who is having the test and not me and the lawyer interjected politely that it is a 9 in that case. The optician nudged him on saying that at least the lawyer is not color blind. The accountant baffled the optician when he told the optician that it can be any number or even an alphabet depending what the optician ordered.

Valuation, pricing and markets are so important for our capital market to function well that we sometimes need very basic commonsense to unravel the highly complex. We should not allow a change in accounting treatment to write US$900 into the books of the top 19 financial institutions in the US nor shall we allow the ancient straight jacketed rules to ruin fortunes and livelihood of many overnight. What we need is a return to good old commonsense.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter

Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye

Economic Recession-Inflationary Spiral vs Confidence Crisis-Singapore

The written world is full of recessionista that I thought hard about contributing further to it? The markets seem to react to bad news with a vengeance and good news is being question marked all over that it normally barely moves the market. In such a climate, the down draft is definitely going to be stronger that the bullish tendencies.

Great economists like Alan Greenspan has always put forth evil that lurks behind the inflationary spiral as the most difficult to tame and goes all out to combat it with the weapon of choice which is the FED discount rate. The basic premise being that price stability is important for the growth of the economy in the longer run. That I fully agree with.

However, the reverse which is hardly spoken about is what I would term as a confidence crisis like what we are very much experiencing right now. It is almost like the mirror image of the inflationary spiral ; business expect revenue to be bad therefore hold back on their investment and staffing level leading to lower business volume both upstream and downstream. The consumer that expects to have a rough ride in terms of retrenchment, pay cuts etc will also scale back on spending and all this would translate itself into self full-filling recessionary overtone.

Between the two evils, I believe confidence crisis is the larger of the two as a consumeristic outlook is easier to tame and we have many weapons in our arsenal to fight the inflationary spiral tooth to nail. 

In a confidence crisis, our ability to spend our way out of a recession is hampered by issues like shrinking multiplier effect in a recession and for a small and fairly open economy like Singapore, there are further issues of leakages as we tend to import almost everything and the domestic economy is of limited size and amplitude thus eroding the classical economics virtue postulated by Keynesian. 

Moving over to the monetarist viewpoint, it also suffers from episodes like liquidity traps like what is happening in Japan where the interest rate is nearing zero and monetarist end up with a very blunt tool to fight the confidence crisis. There are of course other policy options like trying to increase the velocity of currency by having the government help the banks to under write part of the credit risk in the hope of the banks being more prepared to extend credit to the businesses and consumers to lift us out of the confidence crisis. A first round of such policy has been put in place in Singapore with limited success as bankers hardly budge on easing credit as they have learnt how fast toxicity can build up in their balance sheets which will at some point in time needs to be de-leveraged in a painful manner like now.

Perhaps, it is during times like these that we need strong leadership with an equally strong mandate from the people not only measured by the polls but by how the leadership can inspire the populace to a greater cause in life and paint a believable light at the end of the tunnel or a rainbow after a storm. Such leaders are normally born and not bred in ivy leagues of the world. Although I do not condone what Adolf Hitler has perpetuated during the second world war, there is much to be learned from his ability to rally people to a cause. Another good example is Robert F. Kennedy but it is unfortunate that his was short lived. Winston Churchill; the wartime prime minister of Britain was another with great ability to rally the populace. Perhaps, this time, Barack Obama would save us.


Peter Lye aka lkypeter.blogspot.com

Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye

Free Market and Economic Tsunami of 2008

In October 2008, I wrote an article about Lehman Brother fallout and in it, I quote "In 1993, the much respected Alan Greenspan went before the US Congress to testify in his capacity as chairman of the Fed that the government should leave the credit derivative market to its own devices as it serves to transfer risk from those who cannot afford to carry it to those are willing to take the risk for a price.". Being a free market advocate, 2008 has been a year of much unlearning and humbling acknowledgement that free market is not all that perfect and to coin Adam Smith's famous "Invisible Hand" as the be all and end all in terms of market pricing except that he also have a caveat on the hazards of monopolies undermining the greater good of mankind. Milton Friedman in his book "Free to Choose" strongly advocated that "markets always work and only market works" and therefore doubt "government intervention" could ever serve a useful purpose.

All these economists are my heroes and I still do believe them to be fundamentally correct in their posture on world economics but would place the following caveats in light of the events unfolding before our eyes in 2008.

Firstly, in light of the break down of the credit derivative market bring down with it Lehman Brothers as well as AIG, I think that Greenspan could be wrong about leaving the credit derivative market un-regulated. I think there is a marked difference between market regulation and market intervention although the two seems to be similar but their differential makes its practice a world of difference. Regulation has to do with setting up rules of engagement for market participants, increasing price transparency and reducing product differentiation factors, ensuring proper market clearing and making buyers and sellers 'blind' in terms of counter-party by guaranteeing counter-party ability to full-fill the trade. This is normally done through a regulator like SEC and an exchange like NYSE. It is important to note that the regulator and exchange should preferably be two separate entities to ensure that they do not land into a conflict of interest situation. In addition, the regulator like SEC must be government controlled but the exchange like NYSE can have its ownership in the hands of the market. This is what I meant by governmental market regulation. Government market intervention on their hand is the participation of the government either directly or indirectly as a market participant. Examples of which are government ownership of enterprises that provides goods that are also provided by private enterprises. The key here is that the goods can or are already provided by private enterprise and therefore, there is very little reason for governmental participation in the market. The exception would be 'public goods' which Milton Friedman also agreed should be produced by government. Conceptually, public goods such as policing, fire safety, major infrastructure that is enjoyed by all and sundry in the economy like parks, roads, fire service,education etc and are necessary for a community to function properly.

Secondly, there is an issue of time frame by which these concepts are tenable. In most if not all cases, the economic concepts will apply in the longer run rather than in the short run. There is general consensus in the economic community that in the shorter run, there could be price disturbances and market imperfection. However, the period of such shorter term market imperfections in terms of the intensity of the impact as well as its duration could make such models untenable as the economic tsunami during such period could have far reaching social and political impact that could de-stabilize a society beyond redemption. Chief amongst the shorter run social ills like unemployment and stagflation could destroy a whole generation before time could be in time to heal it. Economists have long recognized these situations and even labelled them as business cycles. In the past century, we have witnessed a few of these major ones that like in the years 2008, 1998, 1973 and 1929. Of course there are some who will argue that such cycles were made worse by inappropriate governmental intervention for example the monetarist camp and the keynesian camp on whether pump priming and controlling money supply as key to ridding out such cycles successfully. For the free market to always work and the market is the only workable solution, we will need a solution to the issue of business cycle for which there is no common consensus on what is right and workable.

Thirdly, we come to the issue to what is the correct and equitable distribution of economic wealth and woes in a society. Gini's coefficient is commonly used to measure the dispersion of income in a society. The greater the coefficient, the greater the gap between the rich and the poor in a society. Of late, there has been a re-thinking of Gini's coefficient accuracy in portraying the state of the rich poor gap as it measures only income and not wealth but this a minor detail. 



Generally, we can see that on a global basis, there seems to be little significant trend pointing to an upward or downward trend of this coefficient but we do note that for USA which is one of the louder proponent of free market that the coefficient has risen over time since world war II. It is also interesting but not surprising to note that when economies like China move from centrally planned to free market, we can see a marked increase in the coefficient as the free market economy takes shape over time. An interesting thing point to note that the coefficient for the Nordic countries has been on a downward trend and these are the countries with one of the higher effective tax rate globally. What I see missing is a correlation between the Gini coefficient and business cycle and perhaps I should take up this challenge when my circumstances allow me to. However, to me a lack of demonstrable correlation between business cycle and the Gini coefficient is worrying enough as I would expect the Gini coefficient to be southward bound in tandem with the business cycle as non-linear or a northward bound Gini coefficient would mean that the poorer shouldering a larger share of the economic downturn of a business cycle. This could actually have societal instability if the impact of on the poorer segment becomes unbearable or there is a general lack of economic equalizers in terms of either transfer payments,estate duties or equal opportunity rules in terms of access to education and employment opportunities that allow for mobility both ways across the rich poor continuum.

In concluding, I would only say that although free market might not be perfect, it is most probably the best that is available to us. The secret lies in how we fine tune this wild animal of the free market to behave in a socially acceptable to all humanity.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter.blogspot.com


Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye









Lehman Brothers Afterthought - Peter Lye 11 Oct 2008

Lehman Brothers Afterthought - Peter Lye 11 Oct 2008 - lkypeter.blogspot.com

On September 28, I wrote an article on whether the financial meltdown and concluded that it was mainly a regulatory failure. I would like to further this cause by examining some the of events in the past that could have contributed to the melt down and whether there was possibility in averting this crisis by having the right party make the break glass warning soon enough. I am a free market proponent and have Milton Freeman and Alan Greenspan as gentlemen for which I admire much for their thoughts and actions in their professional space. However, the unfolding of the recent events has lead me to re-think on the sufficiency and adequacy of the free market system in all things sundry and how then do we decide what should or should not come under heavier scrutiny and control. I can still remember vividly that Milton Freeman said that the best thing that the government can help the economy is by staying out of it in his book Free to Choose.I am not proposing a communistic state of affairs but that our free market system near perfect but not perfect and might need some fundamental adjustment for it to be relevant in the coming centuries.

One thing that occupies my mind these couple of weeks is Lehman Brothers and whether the ensuing action and in action might have contributed to the crisis. The American government stand on not being held hostage because a bank is to big to fail is a good policy to hold onto as it can set the wrong precedent and cause a larger breakdown of our financial systems. The various financial melt downs in the past has indeed shown that some of these institutions are too big to fail with wide ranging ramifications on the public at large but we must never never yield to this as the equity of the entire rescue no matter how hard we try will be very very inequitable to the population at large.

The Lehman collapse have a few special ramifications that could have contributed to the credit crunch as follows:

1.AIG is on of the major originators of credit default swaps that is estimated to run into the trillions based on its par value but AIG actual exposure could be a fraction of it. In this case, it is anxiety of how big this fraction is that can kill the market system of trust.

2.These credit default swaps does not have an orderly clearing house to ensure that trades are properly settled and this brings to bear that most of these are bilateral contracts that are kept out of the purview of the public especially on exposure to such instruments. Therefore, we can get current situation of trust no one leading to a credit squeeze. Although the central banks have done a great job in bring down their respective discount rates and windows and through open market operations to re-purchased their own sovereign bonds to increase the money supply. However, both of these are not working as we witness the normal con-tango relationship between discount rates and inter bank rates going in almost opposite directions. The LIOBR overnight, and shorter term 1 -3 months rates has sky rocketed in-spite of lowering of the discount rates. My explanation for this gap is not a case of simple demand and supply but that the counter-party risks has increased tremendously and the differential to a large extend represent this risk premium. No banks are saying they are not exposed neither are they saying they are. So the free market makes a guess and this is reflected in the risk premium it tags on them.

3.It is bad enough that the credit default swaps does not have a clearing house, to add injury to the whole episode, neither does it have a formal exchange either so that the prices are open and there is a fairer valuation of the instruments. Price disclosure is also not as transparent in exchange traded instruments. Price opacity does not help in these times as well.

Given the situation above having the benefit of a rear view mirror that the policy makers largely did not have, would I have recommended a rescue of Lehman instead of letting nature takes its course into bankruptcy? The answer is a resounding no to the rescue as it would create too much of a precedent. We are now eating the bitter pill of its consequence but the market will heal in time as these instruments are de-leveraged in due course and we can then separate the wolves in sheep clothing from the sheep and get rid of them again with some more pain before the market reaches some equilibrium.

In 1993, the much respected Alan Greenspan went before the US Congress to testify that in his capacity as chairman of the Fed that the government should leave the credit derivative market to its own devices as serves to transfer risk from those who cannot afford to carry it to those are willing to take the risk for a price. I do not think that Greenspan was wrong in the second instance but I am not so sure about the first instance of leaving the credit derivates market to its own device. We should not throw away the baby away together with the bath water. Credit derivates does have a role to play in risk transference however as it grows to such proportions, we should perhaps consider having an exchange to improve transparency and also a clearing house whereby trades can be cleared in an orderly fashion and prevent a bubble effect.

Last but not least, we have to decide how the credit rating agencies which have tremendous market and pricing power in ensuring their fair and proper participation in the market. It cannot be like the stock analyst in the stock market as their pens are much much more powerful than that of the stock analyst.

I do not have all the answers or even part of it but write this with a view that encourages communal participation in shaping our children's future as ours might already be too late as these reform takes time to materialize.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter.blogspot.com

Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye