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Saturday, February 28, 2009

Wall St dumps film deals on Hollywood investors


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The financial crisis is forcing Wall Street banks and hedge funds to pull out of billions of dollars worth of film deals, opening the door for specialty investors to scoop up Hollywood assets at discount prices.

From 2005 to 2008, hedge funds partnered with all the major banks from Merrill Lynch to Lehman Brothers to pump an estimated $15 billion into films, taking on risks formerly absorbed by studios like Sony (6758.T) Pictures and News Corp's (NWSA.O) 20th Century Fox in return for a share of profits.

Typically, investors help finance "slates" of as many as a dozen movies and collect their returns after the films are released, or start to generate DVD and television revenue, which could be years from their initial investment.

But after some box office duds, such as Tom Cruise's "Lions for Lambs," and the credit freeze, most banks with the exception of JPMorgan (JPM.N) have reduced their presence in Hollywood. Some are trying to sell off their positions in slate deals for discounts of 30 percent to 70 percent.

"Because of the credit crisis, banks and hedge funds have been writing down securities, including those backed by film assets, and are willing to sell them at lower prices," said Stephen Prough, founder of Salem Partners, which advises investors on how to maximize film investments.

Prough and others cited strong interest and deep pockets for movie assets at current, reasonable prices from seasoned entertainment investors who specialize in the industry, know it well and take a longer-term view on returns.

For example, Content Partners LLC backed by Mark Cuban and Todd Wagner is a pioneer in acquiring films in the secondary market from hedge funds, private equity firms and banks.

"Not only are we buying from financial sellers but we're also looking at transactions for the first time with studios and networks for participations in TV shows and film profits," said Content Partners President Steven Kram.

"We've already purchased 34 films and over 200 hours of television. We can provide a new source of financing for studios and networks who are being squeezed for every penny."

Another investor swooping in on slates of movie deals in Hollywood is David Molner, managing director of Beverly Hills, California-based Screen Capital International.

"I'm five times as busy as I used to be. We launched a $500 million fund that is financing the acquisition of assets in studio slate deals," said Molner. "We are taking the participants in finance deals out of their capital positions in studio slate deals."

FEWER FILMS

With these deals, many studios have enough financing to make movies through 2010 and are cutting costs while waiting out the credit freeze to thaw before seeking further funding.

Nonetheless, the number of films released by major studios are expected to continue to decrease to correct an oversupplied market. Less than 200 films are slated to hit theaters in 2009, down from about 219 major studio releases in 2008 and 236 in 2007, according to industry estimates.

"There was too much money and too many films. The market couldn't sustain it and the competition was too great to provide the returns the equity and hedge funds were looking for," said PriceWaterhouseCoopers Managing Director Ron Cushey.

Some studios like The Weinstein Co and DreamWorks Studios, led by Steven Spielberg and Stacey Snider, are seeking financing.

Others like Viacom Inc's (VIAb.N) Paramount ditched efforts to raise $450 million for a slate of films, and instead will co-finance on a picture-by-picture basis, after many of the big slate deals of recent years did not deliver as expected.

In some cases, investors racked up hundreds of millions of dollars in losses and complained the studios tilted terms to keep sure-fire hit movies out of the slates.

Moody's Investors Services analysts Neil Begley said about $80 million in debt tied to Paramount's so-called Melrose I slate, covering films released from 2003 to 2005, including "Get Rich or Die Tryin,'" may soon default.

"Based on the expected cash flows for the film assets, the Class A notes will not be paid in full by their legal final maturity," said Begley. Paramount declined to comment.

Bankers told Reuters that investors in Paramount's subsequent Melrose II film slate, with titles like "Blades of Glory," are now unloading their stakes.

"There are numerous film securitization deals being shopped around right now," said Ken Schapiro, managing partner at media investment firm Qualia Capital. He declined to say which deals his firm was exploring.

Other studios like Sony Pictures adjusted terms of their revenue-sharing agreements after films in a $600 million slate deal called Gun Hill Road I underperformed.

The next big round of financing for Hollywood will likely come from overseas or via deals that are backed by assets, such as film libraries, to minimize risk, bankers say.

Prough cited one situation where a studio's film assets were worth much less than the $500 million it had raised in a private equity financing. "Eventually, they either have to find new money to keep going or sell the assets to get investors their money back," he said.

Independent film and television studio Lions Gate Entertainment Corp (LGF.N) has attracted interest from activist investor Carl Icahn, who raised his stake in the company to 14.28 percent even after it reported disappointing earnings and underperforming films.

Molner, Schapiro and Prough all said film assets generate good returns over the long term.

"The good thing about investing in film is that you have an asset that continues to generate revenue on pay TV, free TV and in every country around the world," Schapiro said.

Denmark, Finland officially in recession


Denmark and Finland officially joined the ranks of recession-hit countries on Friday with the release of figures showing their economies contracting, while Sweden saw its economy sink further.

The Nordic countries' traditionally robust, export-driven economies were long believed to have escaped the worst effects of the global economic crisis.

But they are now struggling to overcome dramatic drops in demand from abroad, and in consumer confidence and industrial production at home.

Denmark, which became the first European country to enter recession last year after its economy contracted for two quarters running, briefly returned to growth in the second quarter of 2008 before falling back in the hole.

The Scandinavian country officially dived back into recession after its gross domestic product (GDP) contracted 2 per cent in the fourth quarter, according to numbers released by the national statistics agency. Its economy shrank by 0.8 per cent in the third quarter of 2008.

"Investments and private consumption fell clearly in the fourth quarter, while there was little increase in public spending. The fourth quarter was also impacted by large declines in both imports and exports," Statistics Denmark said.

"Denmark is perhaps experiencing its worst crisis since World War II," Anders Matzen, chief analyst at Nordea bank, told AFP. "But it is only natural that a small economy that is heavily dependent on exports finds itself in this position."

Finland meanwhile saw its fourth quarter GDP shrink 1.3 per cent after slipping 0.3 per cent in the previous three-month period, according to revised figures.

"Finland's economy can be considered as being in recession," said the national statistics office, which had previously said Finland's economy had grown 0.1 per cent in the third quarter.

"Demand in the national economy diminished in the last quarter: private consumption decreased by 1.2 per cent and investments by 2.1 per cent from 12 months back," Statistics Finland said. "Exports and imports contracted exceptionally strongly, by over 14 per cent."

Home to the world's largest mobile phone maker, Nokia, Finland for years enjoyed sky-high economic growth, with its GDP expanding 4.5 per cent in 2007.

Last year however, the Nordic country's economy grew just 0.9 per cent, according to the latest statistics.

Neighbouring Sweden's predicament is even more dire, with its economy plunging 2.4 per cent in the fourth quarter compared to the previous three-month period, according to data released by the national statistics bureau.

And compared to the fourth quarter of 2007 the figures are even worse, showing that Sweden's GDP plummeted 4.9 per cent in the last quarter last year.

Statistics Sweden spokeswoman Sofia Runestav also told AFP revised figures showed the country had in fact entered recession in the second quarter of 2008 and not in the third as previously stated.

Sweden, especially hard-hit by the troubles plaguing car makers worldwide, saw its exports fall 7.2 per cent, imports decrease 5.4 per cent, and industrial production shrink 6.1 per cent in the fourth quarter.

"We are in the midst of a long, cold and dark winter," Swedish finance minister Anders Borg said after the numbers were released. "Sweden is obviously experiencing a very dramatic economic slowdown."

Norway meanwhile said last week its economy as a whole grew 1.3 per cent in the fourth quarter, largely due to its position as one of the world's leading oil and gas exporters.

Excluding its oil, gas and shipping industries however, the country's mainland GDP tumbled 0.2 per cent during the period.

Recession has been predicted across the region for 2009.

Australia signs ASEAN free trade agreement

AUSTRALIA and New Zealand have signed a major free trade agreement with 10 Southeast Asian countries in a deal aimed at curbing the effects of the global economic crisis.

The pact is the most wide-ranging ever signed by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), while it gives the two Pacific nations access to a market of nearly 600 million people.

Australian Trade Minister Simon Crean and his New Zealand counterpart Tim Groser signed the agreement along with their ASEAN counterparts at the grouping's annual summit in the Thai beach resort of Hua Hin.

"This agreement is a significant agreement for the region," Crean told a press conference after the signing.

"It's the most comprehensive FTA (free trade agreement) that ASEAN has ever signed and the largest FTA that Australia and New Zealand have ever signed in terms of two-way trade."

The deal was also the first of its kind that Australia had signed "since the onset of the global financial crisis", he said in a statement before the ceremony.

"It powerfully demonstrates... the region's strong commitment to opening up markets in the face of this crisis," he added in a statement.

"This will keep trade flows open in the region, increase growth and give a much-needed boost to confidence."

Australia and New Zealand agreed on the pact with the Southeast Asian regional bloc in August last year following talks that began in 2005.

ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. It has a combined gross domestic product of more than 1.4 trillion dollars.

The accord covers trade in merchandise, services, investment, financial services, telecoms, electronic commerce, movement of people, intellectual property, competition policy and economic cooperation.

Australia and New Zealand's combined two-way trade with ASEAN was worth 100 billion Australian dollars (65 billion US dollars) and Australia's alone was worth 80 billion Australian dollars, Crean said.

With the new agreement, the Southeast Asian bloc has forged free-trade links with all its key regional economies. It earlier signed deals with China, Japan and South Korea.

ASEAN plans to establish a single market and manufacturing base by 2015 in a bid to remain competitive, especially with the rise of India and China.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Financial crisis tests European Commission authority

EU economy commissioner Joaquin Almunia will this week name the first group of states to receive disciplinary action by Brussels for breaching the rules underpinning the euro.

Ahead of Wednesday's (18 January) move, the commissioner insisted that member states adhere to the Stability and Growth Pact, which requires that countries keep their budget deficits below three percent of GDP.

"The rules were established for everybody and must be respected," he said before a debate in the European Parliament on Monday.

"What they say as far as budget discipline is concerned is clear: In the case where countries have recorded or plan deficits above the three percent barrier, we must launch procedures established in the [EU] treaty," he added.

Of the countries up for review on Wednesday, France, Spain and Greece are expected to attract excessive deficit action from the commission, according to draft documents seen by Reuters.

The Irish deficit for 2009 is also predicted to exceed the three percent ceiling, according to the commission's interim forecast published last month.

But the biggest question is whether the commission's actions will have any bite as member states grapple with the effects of the economic crisis at home.

Karel Lannoo, head of the Centre for European Studies, a Brussels-based think-tank, thinks the pact is already on its last legs.

"Today, it is almost entirely dead," he said of the pact, noting that it went into decline after 2005 when it was reformed to accommodate France's deficit.

Speaking about Europe's reaction to the global economic downturn, Mr Lannoo said that the bloc made mistakes from the very start.

"The fault was already made in October when there was no willingness to consider this as a European problem but rather as national problems," he said, adding that the European Economic Recovery Plan signed by EU leaders in December seemed more of an afterthought than a genuine attempt at co-ordination.

Since then, the EU has witnessed a barrage of unilateral actions to save national banks and prop-up structurally flawed industries, with scant regard paid to potential negative consequences for other member states.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has attracted the most attention by calling on French car companies to relocate back to France, but he is by no means alone is seeking national solutions for his constituents.

"The same has been happening in the financial sector for four months and who is shouting about it? Almost nobody. But it's enormously distorting," says Mr Lannoo. "I'm surprised by the degree to which there is almost no willingness to challenge this."

With new initiatives being announced on an almost daily basis, the commission is struggling to deal with the rising number of protectionist attacks to the internal market.

Writing in the Financial Times last week, former Italian Prime Minister Giuliano Amato and former EU commissioner Emma Bonino outlined a credible alternative to the current approach.

Both the financial and car sectors should be declared in a state of crisis, they argue. Then, two task forces of national officials should be set up and chaired by the commission.

"Their mandate would be to co-ordinate state aid, making sure that national measures re-inforce each other to the greater benefit of the sectors concerned and avoid bending competition rules," they said.

It is doubtful whether member state governments would agree to such a project, however.

Eurozone problems

The single market is not the only EU pillar currently under threat. While the euro celebrated its 10th anniversary last month and welcomed Slovakia as its newest member, the eurozone itself has been put under great pressure by the unfolding crisis.

One of the biggest issues is spread in rates offered on government bonds. Markets have grown increasingly uneasy over ballooning government deficits in recent weeks, prompting investors to demand higher yields when buying sovereign debt from EU states whose finances are perceived as vulnerable.

The subsequent rise in borrowing costs increases the threat of a national default, prompting the question of whether such an event could cause a current member to leave the eurozone.

"The probability of this split is zero. The list of members to join the euro is very long," Mr Almunia told MEPs on Monday in an apparent attempt to quash such speculation.

Mr Lannoo has a more nuanced approach. "Every country will ask itself: 'Is it better that I stay inside [the eurozone] or is it better that I go outside?'" he said, referring to the cheaper financing of public debt enjoyed by euro members versus the option of currency devaluation enjoyed by non-members.

Euro-bond idea

In the meantime, calls for a "euro-bond," first suggested by Italian finance minister Giulio Tremonti, are likely to go unanswered, with Germany baulking at the idea of picking up the bill.

Yields on a common "euro-bond" used by all eurozone states would be significantly lower than those currently paid by a number of peripheral countries, as the risk of a eurozone default is highly unlikely. However "euro-bond" yields would probably exceed those currently paid by Germany.

Instead, member states could start by co-ordinating their bond issuance calendars to reduce competition between countries attempting to raise capital.

To some, greater co-ordination at the EU level would seem to be a solution for much of the EU's current woes but it is hard to see where this would come from./EUobserver


Eastern Europe banks get bail-out

The banking sectors in Central and Eastern Europe are to get a 24.5bn euro ($31bn; £21.8bn) rescue package to support them in the economic crisis.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the World Bank have pledged the investment.

The funds are particularly aimed at helping small firms survive.

Countries such as Latvia and Hungary have seen their economies particularly hit by the global economic slump.

The two-year joint initiative will include equity and debt financing, and access to credit and risk insurance aimed at encouraging lending, the three groups said in a joint statement.

This initiative is on top of national government responses and was designed to "deploy rapid, large-scale and coordinated financial assistance... to support lending to the real economy through private banking groups, in particular to small-and medium-sized enterprises."

'Diverse challenges'

The EBRD will provide up to 6bn euros for the financial sector, the EIB will put up 11bn euros of lending facilities, while the World Bank will provide about 7.5bn euros.

"The response takes into account the different macroeconomic circumstances in, and financial pressures on countries in Eastern Europe, acknowledging the diversity of challenges stemming from the global financial retrenchment," the groups added.

Founded in 1991, the EBRD aims to assist the transition of former communist nations to market economies - investing across 30 countries including Ukraine, Moldova and Russia.

"The institutions are working together to find practical, efficient and timely solutions to the crisis in eastern Europe," said EBRD President Thomas Mirow.

"We are acting because we have a special responsibility for the region and because it makes economic sense.

"For many years the growing integration of Europe has been a source of prosperity and mutual benefit, and we must not allow this process to be reversed."

Exposure outgrown?

Earlier this week, ratings agency Moody's said that faltering economic conditions in Eastern and Central Europe would hit the local subsidiaries of Western banks.

Austria, whose banks have large exposure to Eastern Europe, has seen the cost of insuring its debt rocket.

On Friday, the country's Erste Group Bank signed a long-expected deal to get up to 2.7bn euros of government support.

But the talks to secure the funding have been going on since October, with some analysts saying that the mounting problems in emerging Europe meaning Erste's exposure may already have outgrown the government injection.

Japan says suffering worst economic crisis since WWII

TOKYO: Japan warned yesterday it was in the deepest economic crisis since World War II, after Asia’s biggest economy suffered its worst contraction in almost 35 years.
The economy shrank for a third straight quarter in the three months to December as the global slowdown crushed demand for Japanese exports, a key pillar of the world’s number two economy.
The government said the slump was even worse than the recession of the 1990s when the country’s economic bubble burst, ushering in a decade of economic stagnation and deflation.
Japan’s economy contracted 3.3% in the fourth quarter of 2008 - 12.7% on an annualised basis, official data showed.
It was the weakest performance since 1974 when the country was reeling from the first oil crisis, and the government said this slump would be even more severe.
“This is the worst ever crisis in the post-war era. There is no doubt about it,” Economic and Fiscal Policy Minister Kaoru Yosano said, warning that a rebound is impossible before the global economy improves.
The figures were even more dismal than analysts had expected and marked a sharp deterioration compared with the third quarter’s 0.6% contraction.
The current recession will be Japan’s “longest, deepest and most severe in the post-war period,” said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia economist at Societe Generale in Hong Kong.
The deepening gloom came as Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa faced calls to be sacked over his performance at key talks on the world economy at the weekend in Rome, where he appeared drowsy and slurred his words.
Nakagawa apologised yesterday for his behaviour but denied being drunk, blaming cold medicine.
Japanese exports plunged a record 13.9% in the fourth quarter as demand for Japanese cars, electronics and other goods slumped in recession-hit overseas economies.
“Exports absolutely collapsed,” BNP Paribas economist Hiroshi Shiraishi said.
“The first quarter could be even worse. Exports continued to fall very sharply in January and producers are planning to cut production very, very aggressively,” he said.
Business investment slumped as companies scrambled to reduce their costs to cope with the recession, while household spending slipped as consumers tightened their belts following a wave of layoffs.
Japanese firms including Sony, Nissan Motor and Hitachi have announced massive job cuts in response to the country’s deepening economic woes.
The government estimates at least 125,000 temporary contract workers have been laid off or will be fired by March when the fiscal year ends.
As the growth data was released, hundreds of sacked workers protested outside the headquarters of major companies, calling for better social security.
Temporary worker Hideo Yamamoto, 34, who said he was suddenly dismissed in December from truck maker Isuzu Motors, said his meagre savings were now stretched thin.
“I don’t know if I can continue to survive in the coming months,” he said. “It’s unfair that companies treat regular and non-regular workers separately. I have lost trust in companies.”
Before the global financial crisis erupted, Japan had been enjoying its longest economic expansion in post-war times.
But the recovery from the recession of the 1990s was driven almost entirely by soaring exports. With demand now cooling rapidly overseas, Japan’s economy has seen a dramatic deterioration in its fortunes.
The economy should bottom out in the third quarter of 2009, Barclays Capital analysts predicted.
“With the US and China hammering out fiscal measures centered on infrastructure, the Japanese economy should benefit through an increase in exports,” they wrote in a note. - AFP

Global banking reshaped

This multimedia snapshot brings together coverage of the mounting crisis and its impact on the markets through links to in depth packages, interactive maps, audio, video and blogs.

The rising defaults on subprime mortgages in the US triggered a global crisis for the money markets. Many of the world’s leading investment banks have collapsed as a result and the US government has proposed a massive bail-out.

The crisis has become one of the most radical reshapings of the global banking sector, as governments and the private sector battle to shore up the financial system following the disappearance of Lehman and Merrill as independent entities and the $85bn government rescue of AIG.

What Went Wrong With Our Financial System?

The whole thing was one big scheme. Everything was great when houses were selling like hot cakes and their values go up every month. Lenders made it easier to borrow money, and the higher demand drove up house values. Higher house values means that lenders could lend out even bigger mortgages, and it also gave lenders some protection against foreclosures. All of this translates into more money for the lenders, insurers, and investors.

Unfortunately, many borrowers got slammed when their adjustable mortgage finally adjusted. When too many of them couldn’t afford to make their payments, it causes these lenders to suffer from liquidity issue and to sit on more foreclosures than they could sell. Mortgage-backed securities became more risky and worth less causing investment firms like Lehman Brothers to suffer. Moreover, insurers like AIG who insured these bad mortgages also got in trouble.

The scheme worked well, but it reverses course and is now coming back to hurt everyone with a vengeance.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Who Caused the Economic Crisis?

MoveOn.org blames McCain advisers. He blames Obama and Democrats in Congress. Both are wrong.
Summary
A MoveOn.org Political Action ad plays the partisan blame game with the economic crisis, charging that John McCain’s friend and former economic adviser Phil Gramm “stripped safeguards that would have protected us.” The claim is bogus. Gramm’s legislation had broad bipartisan support and was signed into law by President Clinton. Moreover, the bill had nothing to do with causing the crisis, and economists – not to mention President Clinton – praise it for having softened the crisis.

A McCain-Palin ad, in turn, blames Democrats for the mess. The ad says that the crisis “didn’t have to happen,” because legislation McCain cosponsored would have tightened regulations on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But, the ad says, Obama "was notably silent" while Democrats killed the bill. That’s oversimplified. Republicans, who controlled the Senate at the time, did not bring the bill forward for a vote. And it’s unclear how much the legislation would have helped, as McCain signed on just two months before the housing bubble popped.

In fact, there’s ample blame to go around. Experts have cited everyone from home buyers to Wall Street, mortgage brokers to Alan Greenspan.
Analysis
As Congress wrestled with a $700 billion rescue for Wall Street's financial crisis, partisans on both sides got busy – pointing fingers. MoveOn.org Political Action on Sept. 25 released a 60-second TV ad called "My Friends’ Mess," blaming Sen. John McCain and Republican allies who supported banking deregulation. The McCain-Palin campaign released its own 30-second TV spot Sept. 30, saying "Obama was notably silent" while Democrats blocked reforms leaving taxpayers "on the hook for billions." Both ads were to run nationally.

And both ads are far wide of the mark.
Blame the Republicans!

The MoveOn.org Political Action ad blames a banking deregulation bill sponsored by former Sen. Phil Gramm, a friend and one-time adviser to McCain's campaign. It claims the bill "stripped safeguards that would have protected us."

That claim is bunk. When we contacted MoveOn.org spokesman Trevor Fitzgibbons to ask just what "safeguards" the ad was talking about, he came up with not one single example. The only support offered for the ad's claim is one line in one newspaper article that reported the bill "is now being blamed" for the crisis, without saying who is doing the blaming or on what grounds.

The bill in question is the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which was passed in 1999 and repealed portions of the Glass-Steagall Act, a piece of legislation from the era of the Great Depression that imposed a number of regulations on financial institutions. It's true that Gramm authored the act, but what became law was a widely accepted bipartisan compromise. The measure passed the House 362 - 57, with 155 Democrats voting for the bill. The Senate passed the bill by a vote of 90 - 8. Among the Democrats voting for the bill: Obama's running mate, Joe Biden. The bill was signed into law by President Clinton, a Democrat. If this bill really had "stripped the safeguards that would have protected us," then both parties share the blame, not just "John McCain's friend."

The truth is, however, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act had little if anything to do with the current crisis. In fact, economists on both sides of the political spectrum have suggested that the act has probably made the crisis less severe than it might otherwise have been.

Last year the liberal writer Robert Kuttner, in a piece in The American Prospect, argued that "this old-fashioned panic is a child of deregulation." But even he didn't lay the blame primarily on Gramm-Leach-Bliley. Instead, he described "serial bouts of financial deregulation" going back to the 1970s. And he laid blame on policies of the Federal Reserve Board under Alan Greenspan, saying "the Fed has become the chief enabler of a dangerously speculative economy."

What Gramm-Leach-Bliley did was to allow commercial banks to get into investment banking. Commercial banks are the type that accept deposits and make loans such as mortgages; investment banks accept money for investment into stocks and commodities. In 1998, regulators had allowed Citicorp, a commercial bank, to acquire Traveler's Group, an insurance company that was partly involved in investment banking, to form Citigroup. That was seen as a signal that Glass-Steagall was a dead letter as a practical matter, and Gramm-Leach-Bliley made its repeal formal. But it had little to do with mortgages.

Actually, deregulated banks were not the major culprits in the current debacle. Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and J.P. Morgan Chase have weathered the financial crisis in reasonably good shape, while Bear Stearns collapsed and Lehman Brothers has entered bankruptcy, to name but two of the investment banks which had remained independent despite the repeal of Glass-Steagall.

Observers as diverse as former Clinton Treasury official and current Berkeley economist Brad DeLong and George Mason University's Tyler Cowen, a libertarian, have praised Gramm-Leach-Bliley has having softened the crisis. The deregulation allowed Bank of America and J.P. Morgan Chase to acquire Merrill Lynch and Bear Stearns. And Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have now converted themselves into unified banks to better ride out the storm. That idea is also endorsed by
former President Clinton himself, who, in an interview with Maria Bartiromo published in the Sept. 24 issue of Business Week, said he had no regrets about signing the repeal of Glass-Steagall:
Bill Clinton (Sept. 24): Indeed, one of the things that has helped stabilize the current situation as much as it has is the purchase of Merrill Lynch by Bank of America, which was much smoother than it would have been if I hadn't signed that bill. ...You know, Phil Gramm and I disagreed on a lot of things, but he can't possibly be wrong about everything. On the Glass-Steagall thing, like I said, if you could demonstrate to me that it was a mistake, I'd be glad to look at the evidence. But I can't blame [the Republicans]. This wasn't something they forced me into.
No, Blame the Democrats!
The McCain-Palin campaign fired back with an ad laying blame on Democrats and Obama. Titled "Rein," it highlights McCain's 2006 attempt to "rein in Fannie and Freddie." The ad accurately quotes the Washington Post as saying "Washington failed to rein in" the two government-sponsored entities, the Federal National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae") and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac"), both of which ran into trouble by underwriting too many risky home mortgages to buyers who have been unable to repay them. The ad then blames Democrats for blocking McCain's reforms. As evidence, it even offers a snippet of an interview in which former President Clinton agrees that "the responsibility that the Democrats have" might lie in resisting his own efforts to "tighten up a little on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac." We're then told that the crisis "didn't have to happen."

It's true that key Democrats opposed
the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005, which would have established a single, independent regulatory body with jurisdiction over Fannie and Freddie – a move that the Government Accountability Office had recommended in a 2004 report. Current House Banking Committee chairman Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts opposed legislation to reorganize oversight in 2000 (when Clinton was still president), 2003 and 2004, saying of the 2000 legislation that concern about Fannie and Freddie was "overblown." Just last summer, Senate Banking Committee chairman Chris Dodd called a Bush proposal for an independent agency to regulate the two entities "ill-advised."

But saying that Democrats killed the 2005 bill "while Mr. Obama was notably silent" oversimplifies things considerably. The bill made it out of committee in the Senate but was never brought up for consideration. At that time, Republicans had a majority in the Senate and controlled the agenda. Democrats never got the chance to vote against it or to mount a filibuster to block it.

By the time McCain
signed on to the legislation, it was too late to prevent the crisis anyway. McCain added his name on May 25, 2006, when the housing bubble had already nearly peaked. Standard & Poor's Case-Schiller Home Price Index, which measures residential housing prices in 20 metropolitan regions and then constructs a composite index for the entire United States, shows that housing prices began falling in July 2006, barely two months later.

The Real Deal

So who is to blame? There's plenty of blame to go around, and it doesn't fasten only on one party or even mainly on what Washington did or didn't do. As The Economist magazine noted recently, the problem is one of "layered irresponsibility ... with hard-working homeowners and billionaire villains each playing a role." Here's a partial list of those alleged to be at fault:
  • The Federal Reserve, which slashed interest rates after the dot-com bubble burst, making credit cheap.

  • Home buyers, who took advantage of easy credit to bid up the prices of homes excessively.

  • Congress, which continues to support a mortgage tax deduction that gives consumers a tax incentive to buy more expensive houses.

  • Real estate agents, most of whom work for the sellers rather than the buyers and who earned higher commissions from selling more expensive homes.

  • The Clinton administration, which pushed for less stringent credit and downpayment requirements for working- and middle-class families.

  • Mortgage brokers, who offered less-credit-worthy home buyers subprime, adjustable rate loans with low initial payments, but exploding interest rates.

  • Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, who in 2004, near the peak of the housing bubble, encouraged Americans to take out adjustable rate mortgages.

  • Wall Street firms, who paid too little attention to the quality of the risky loans that they bundled into Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS), and issued bonds using those securities as collateral.

  • The Bush administration, which failed to provide needed government oversight of the increasingly dicey mortgage-backed securities market.

  • An obscure accounting rule called mark-to-market, which can have the paradoxical result of making assets be worth less on paper than they are in reality during times of panic.

  • Collective delusion, or a belief on the part of all parties that home prices would keep rising forever, no matter how high or how fast they had already gone up.
The U.S. economy is enormously complicated. Screwing it up takes a great deal of cooperation. Claiming that a single piece of legislation was responsible for (or could have averted) the crisis is just political grandstanding. We have no advice to offer on how best to solve the financial crisis. But these sorts of partisan caricatures can only make the task more difficult.

–by Joe Miller and Brooks Jackson
Sources
Benston, George J. The Separation of Commercial and Investment Banking: The Glass-Steagall Act Revisited and Reconsidered. Oxford University Press, 1990.

Tabarrok, Alexander. "The Separation of Commercial and Investment Banking: The Morgans vs. The Rockefellers." The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics 1:1 (1998), pp. 1 - 18.

Kuttner, Robert. "The Bubble Economy." The American Prospect, 24 September 2007.

"The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999." U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. Accessed 29 September 2008.

Bartiromo, Maria. "Bill Clinton on the Banking Crisis, McCain and Hillary." Business Week, 24 September 2008.


Standard and Poor's. "Case-Schiller Home Price History." Accessed 30 September 2008.

"Understanding the Tax Reform Debate: Background, Criteria and Questions." Government Accountability Office. September 2005.

Bianco, Katalina M. "The Subprime Lending Crisis: Causes and Effects of the Mortgage Meltdown." CCH. Accessed 29 September 2008.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Why an Economic Crisis Could Be the Right Time for Companies to Engage in 'Disruptive Innovation'

While globalization has witnessed the decline of U.S. dominance in manufacturing, energy and even finance, one thing had long been presumed unassailable: Good old American ingenuity.

Now it appears that's not safe, either. China, whose industries have been envied in the West more for their tenacity than their ingenuity, has established a multi-year framework to become more innovative and, therefore, competitive. So has Singapore. Finland is merging its top business school, design school and technology school to create a multi-disciplinary "university of innovation" next year.

Council members of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering have "expressed concern that a weakening of science and technology in the United States would inevitably degrade its social and economic conditions and in particular erode the ability of its citizens to compete for high-quality jobs," according to a 600-page report from the National Academies published in 2007 and titled, "Rising Above the Gathering Storm."

The wild card these days is what will happen to innovation -- the advance of progressive ideas in science, technology and business -- now that the world economy is in a tailspin. The conventional wisdom might suggest that business, government and academia will be less willing to embrace the risk-taking and short-term costs that come with the territory of innovating.

Yet Paul J.H. Schoemaker, research director for the Mack Center for Technological Innovation, suggests that, for some companies, the economic crisis can actually provide an innovation platform. "The crisis has multiple impacts," Schoemaker says. "Loss of revenue and profit will at first instill a cost cutting mentality, which is not good for innovation. But if the patient is bleeding you need to stop that first. Then, however, a phase starts where leaders ask which parts of their business model are weak (and perhaps unsustainable) and that, in turn, can lead to restructuring and reinvention."

He also cautions against too much caution -- over-reliance on incremental innovation versus transformative, or "disruptive," innovation. In innovation circles, the two have come to be differentiated as "little i" and "Big I" innovation. "The largest gains in business come from more daring innovations that challenge the paradigm and the organization," Schoemaker says.

The Business of Being Disruptive

While "disruptive innovation" has enjoyed office buzz-phrase status for only about a decade, the idea is quite old: Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter had it in mind when he borrowed the phrase "creative destruction" to describe his theories of how entrepreneurs sustain the capitalist system.

So just how does an entrepreneur or business go about being "disruptive?" How does one convince investors or top brass of a radical idea's worth?

One person who knows something about bringing disruptive innovations to market is Jeong Kim, president of Bell Labs at Alcatel-Lucent and a successful tech entrepreneur. He offered some suggestions in a recent presentation titled, "Paving the Way for Disruptive Innovation," that was part of the Executive Master's in Technology Management (EMTM) program's ongoing lecture series: Aligning Emerging Technology and Business.

Among the most critical assets one can possess, he says, is company-wide recognition that disruptive innovation is actually important. In a company that's already successful -- or one with layers of bureaucracy that hinder new ideas -- this can prove difficult. The firm also must commit itself to research. "Disruptive research is absolutely critical, especially in the technology space."

Furthermore, it is not enough to simply have brilliant engineers. Without competent management on the business side, the most elegant technology can wind up on the scrap heap of business history, or even worse, usurped by a competitor: "Disruptive innovation is not sufficient," says Kim. "You can [cite] numerous examples of companies that came up with [new] technology but eventually were displaced by somebody else."

In the innovator's lingo, these "somebody elses" are known as "fast followers" -- that is, companies with better funding or sharper management who were able to exploit a technology more quickly and effectively in the marketplace than the original creator. "You like to be the first to develop technologies," Kim says. "But the more flexible, the more innovative in terms of business model that the company is, the longer you can maintain advantage."

That point gives rise to the question: What is the best business model for fostering innovation? As it turns out, numerous decision-making tools exist to help firms systematically manage an innovation program, says Schoemaker, co-author of a book titled, Wharton on Managing Emerging Technologies.

According to Schoemaker, when it comes to innovating, the analogy is to firing a shotgun, not a rifle. Given the high failure rate of innovative projects, companies are smart to develop an array of possible situations and contingencies, rather than pin all their hopes on one plan. "Sticking to our knitting" might appear to be a sound business cliché -- it worked for a lot of companies that survived the dot.com era. But Schoemaker and other innovation gurus advocate looking at areas adjacent to one's main business as fertile soil for innovative breakthroughs. Old-fashioned, linear approaches that rely on standard measurement schemes are often outdated if relied upon solely. "By examining a company's growth gap, developing scenarios, exploring adjacencies and venturing more into blue oceans, companies can reap greater benefits," Schoemaker says. ("Blue ocean" is innovator-speak for unrealized, and therefore uncontested, markets.) "The investment approach, however, has to emphasize more of an options and portfolio strategy rather than static NPV (Net Present Value valuation method)."

Wharton management professor Mary Benner sees the "stick to our knitting" syndrome as impinging on large companies' ability to react to competitive threats. "I find that firms' innovation into radically new technologies or new markets can seem to shareholders and securities analysts like too great a departure from their expectations for these firms. Investors and analysts often prefer that firms maximize shareholder value by 'sticking to their knitting.' The result is that large firms, particularly those expected to have stable, predictable earnings and dividend payments -- i.e., "income stocks" -- are not likely to be rewarded by the stock market for entering new technologies or undertaking radical innovation, and instead may be punished by reductions in stock price and market value."

A prime example she has found in her own research, she noted, is Verizon Communications, the giant telecommunications firm. Stock analysts questioned Verizon's large capital outlays on FiOS, a high-volume fiber-optic network intended to counter a "triple-play" threat to its business posed by Comcast's cable television, high-speed Internet and voice-over-Internet phone service.

"Recent research suggests the stock market is not good at valuing intangibles, uncertain innovation or technological change," Benner says. "What this means for large, publicly traded firms is that they may face a disadvantage in engaging in radical innovation, and this innovation may instead take place in venture capital-funded startups."

Indeed, outsourcing of innovation itself could turn out to be the wave of the not-so-distant future. "Particularly in the pharmaceutical area, there has been a focus on how firms acquire innovation that has been undertaken by small, privately funded firms such as biotech startups," Benner says. "It may be that the locus of much really radical innovation is shifting outside of the large organizations to small start-ups."

That points to a "big trend" emerging in product development, so called "Open Innovation," according to Wharton marketing professor George S. Day, co-director of the Mack Center for Technological Innovation and co-author of Wharton on Managing Emerging Technologies. Open Innovation, also known as "crowdsourcing," entails collaborating with partners to solve business problems.

The archetype of that model is Waltham, Mass.-based InnoCentive. It matches corporate "seekers" who have science, engineering and business problems with amateur "solvers" worldwide. The "solvers" then compete -- for bragging rights and often token rewards -- to provide the best answers to the corporate problems. "Most companies are not looking for a big innovation they can knock out of the ballpark," Day says. Rather, they want a relatively quick fix for a specific piece of a larger puzzle.

For firms that want the "secret sauce" to always come from in-house, previous success can present a huge roadblock to innovation, according to Kim. The problem is that success creates a virtual construct, a paradigm of "How to Do Things," inside of which new thinking cannot flourish. Kim calls it "The Curse of Knowledge." Cross-discipline teaming "is one way of breaking the Curse of Knowledge," he says. Another is "experience pairing," or matching a senior employee with an individual who has considerably less experience, but a fresh perspective on how to solve problems.

An incredible opportunity to innovate disruptively lies in the problem of information overload, says Kim. Knowledge is being created at a far faster rate than any one human can ever hope to assimilate. The flip side is that we constantly filter out vast stores of data because we are bombarded with information like never before in history.

To prove his point, Kim showed audience members a movie clip that repeated an old psychology experiment. Two teams, one dressed in white, the other in black, dribbled basketballs and passed them back and forth. Audience members were told to count the number of passes made by the black-shirted players. A few of the students missed the person in the gorilla suit who nonchalantly walked through the middle of the scene, because they were not looking for it. "I can assure you that all of you saw the gorilla. But some people processed it, stored it, some people missed it. You were looking for a particular thing."

Seven Hours of Whitewater Rafting

The term "disruptive technology" went viral in the late 1990s after the release of Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen's book, The Innovator's Dilemma. But in practice, Bell Laboratories has served as an incubator of paradigm-shifting, "disruptive" innovations since its creation in 1925 as a joint venture of AT&T and Western Electric.

Researchers at northern New Jersey-based Bell Labs have won six Nobel Prizes and take credit for an inventory of innovations: The photovoltaic cell, the silicon-based transistor, statistical process control, the UNIX operating system, the C programming language, digital cell phone technology and wireless local area networks are just a few of the better-recognized innovations that have taken shape there.

Today, Kim said, Bell Labs researchers are working on similarly ground-breaking technologies. They are developing, for instance, a liquid sensor that can be transformed to any shape by applying voltage -- Kim envisions it being used as a zoomable lens. The division is also using nanotechnology to create 3-D images. "You have seen, in science fiction movies, 3-D holographic movie images? It can be done. It can be done using these technologies today. It's just not very cost effective."

Kim offered a case study from Alcatel-Lucent -- Lucent Technologies at the time -- on how to inject a spirit of disruptive innovation into an existing and stagnant culture. Lucent's optical networking division was severely underperforming and the company fired the unit's top managers. "I was really convinced that the reason I was put in there was that nobody else would do it, and they needed somebody to blame," says Kim.

The division was moribund: Financial results were disappointing and morale was low. Kim shook up the management team and took the survivors to an off-site retreat that featured whitewater rafting. "First thing they do is say, 'Why are we doing this ...?' After a while, they get really bored." The exercise, intended to foster teamwork and cooperation, was designed with the help of a psychologist. Instead of cooperating, the managers began splashing one another with their oars, "like little kids."

But the exercise-psychology experiment wasn't over at the end of the rafting run. "After six or seven hours of whitewater rafting like this, they were tired." That evening over dinner, people let their "at-work" guardedness down and spent time learning about one another.

The next day included all the off-site strategizing and white board sessions one might expect, but Kim says the interaction was more genuine and productive than if they had met as they were previously, a grouping of near strangers. In the first quarter following that meeting, he says, the group posted revenues of $510 million, $560 million the next quarter, then $730 million, then $970 million. The point, he adds, is that "teamwork is so critical for the success of a company."

Kim's advice for jumpstarting disruptive innovation is not exactly revolutionary, though it can seem exceedingly rare when many companies still think quarter-to-quarter and employees take a similarly short-ranged view.

Not even storied Bell Labs, it seems, is immune from the pressure to produce quickly exploitable technology. In a shock to the science world, Alcatel-Lucent all but shuttered its funding for the Lab's basic physics research over the summer. Company officials said the move was done to align the Lab more closely with the parent company's commercial pursuits in wireless, optics, networking and computer science. Or, as Alcatel-Lucent spokesman Peter Benedict told Wired Magazine in August, "In the new innovation model, research needs to keep addressing the needs of the mother company."

Basic research investigates the most fundamental of scientific questions and has no direct commercial application. At the same time, it has laid the groundwork for most of the modern technological conveniences we enjoy today, including commercial aviation, the GPS system and lasers.

"You have to make an investment in capital, human knowledge and networking," says Kim. "That's the way to get ahead."

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Massive retreat by banks from emerging markets

According to the Bank for International Settlements' quarterly review, banks "retreated massively" from emerging market economies in the volatile third quarter of 1998. Besides pointing to emerging markets being confronted with an international credit squeeze, the BIS report also commented on the risk evaluation and management structures of banks, which have been found wanting even as the latter have expanded their range of activites.

by Chakravarthi Raghavan


GENEVA: Banks "retreated massively" from emerging market economies, and sharply cut back new loans to non-bank customers in the industrialized world, according to detailed data for the third quarter of 1998, the Basle-based Bank for International Settlements reported in its quarterly review of international banking and financial market developments.

The available data provide evidence of an international credit squeeze for most emerging market borrowers, the BIS said.

The cutback on lending to non-bank customers inside the BIS area is probably indicative of the unwinding of leveraged positions, and net repayments by non-banks in the Caribbean and other offshore centres, where many of the highly leveraged hedge funds are technically located. Borrowers appear to be reducing their gearing since 1997, and the data reported by the BIS show a repayment of about $4.7 billion in the third quarter. Repayments are also indicated in the data from the Cayman Islands.

The claims of reporting banks (from the BIS area) on Asian countries declined for the fifth consecutive quarter by $23 billion, bringing the outstanding exposure of banks to the region back to its end-1995 level.

At the same time, the banks have begun to retreat from Eastern Europe and Latin America, with credit flows to Russia and Brazil being particularly affected.

The decline in banks' outstanding claims on developing countries and eastern Europe, following the Russian debt moratorium of 17 August, the BIS said, amounted to $35 billion.

At the same time, there was stagnation in lending to non- bank customers inside the reporting area (industrialized countries) and this was "consistent with reports of significant deleveraging towards the end of the third quarter, entailing substantial repayments of bank credit," the BIS added.

Market volatility

While detailed data for the fourth quarter will only come in the next quarterly review, the BIS reports that global financial markets suffered from extremely volatile conditions in the fourth quarter of 1998.

The flight to safety and liquidity, in the aftermath of the Russian debt moratorium in August, reached a climax in October. Benchmark yields and equity prices retreated, while credit spreads widened markedly.

Massive deleveraging and, in the process, the near collapse of a major hedge fund (the US-based LTCM) added to price swings and further contributed to a drying up of liquidity in a wide range of markets and instruments.

While in November tensions eased somewhat, following the cuts in US official interest rates and approval of an IMF-led support package for Brazil, and improved economic and financial prospects in Asia, there continued to be high volatility in most market segments, suggesting that concerns about market and counter-party risks remained pervasive.

In the bond market, credit spreads widened again in December due to fears surrounding the situation in Brazil, in contrast to what the BIS calls "continuing euphoria" in equity markets in Europe and the USA.

[The latest IMF agreement announced with Brazil would however suggest a conditionality, requiring a turnaround in Brazil's trade deficit by a massive $15-20 billion, that is difficult to comprehend except in the context of a major recession.]

The various proposals put forward (in the aftermath of the Asian crisis) for ensuring an orderly and cooperative resolution of future crises, in particular to involve the private sector, are now of more immediate concern, the BIS notes.

Events in Russia have reversed the bias towards excessive risk-taking, but by causing a massive unwinding of positions in a broad range of markets and instruments, they created the risk of a systemic failure, prompting official action aimed at restoring market confidence.

Authorities' dilemma

Authorities in the major industrial centres are now faced with the heightened dilemma of letting private players bear the cost of their own investment decisions, while having to look at preserving the stability of the system as a whole.

"The improved management of future crises will depend on the resolution of this dilemma."

In international financial markets, data for the fourth quarter clearly indicate strains. Despite a recovery in deals related to mergers and acquisitions in Europe and the USA, total announcements were at $190 billion, 16% below those of the third quarter.

There has been a near halving of facilities arranged for emerging market names. The average maturity of loans has fallen to less than four years, while pricing conditions have tightened for virtually all non-prime borrowers, pushing the weighted average spread charged to emerging market signatures to a new peak.

The international inter-bank market, the BIS says, performed relatively well during this period of upheaval, its natural role of accommodating the changing behaviour of investors offsetting the continuous pullback of Japanese banks and the indirect impact of the turmoil on banks with actual or perceived links to the countries most affected by the turbulence - such as German banks to Russia. In view of the abrupt turnaround in credit flows to Brazil and Russia, internationally active commercial banks "seem to have been caught by surprise by the drying up of market liquidity in a wide range of currencies and debt instruments."

"While banks in recent years have considerably broadened the range of their activities, becoming for instance increasingly active in securities trading, their systems for evaluating and managing credit risk have generally lagged developments in the area of market risk," comments the BIS.

"Even when this has not been the case, internal models have often failed to cope with the abrupt swings which took place in correlation, volatility and liquidity," adds the BIS.

"The deterioration in the value of collateral assets, coming as it did on top of the weakening in the quality of counter- parties, may have acted as a further incentive to retreat, in both cash and derivative markets. Indeed, while collateralization may have initially contributed to delaying the drying up of liquidity, it may have amplified the subsequent turnaround and the associated reduction in credit exposure of banks."

OTC derivatives

But the global financial crisis helped support activity in the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives market in the fourth quarter of 1998.

[The OTC derivatives market, as distinct from exchange- traded derivatives, which are very profitable to the banks (by way of commissions and fees, but without risks), is non- transparent, and often even the parties to such derivative instruments are not fully aware of the range of risks they bear, some of the studies since the Asian crisis have brought out. The Basle Committee on Banking Supervision and other institutions dealing with various segments of the markets, are grappling (so far not very successfully) with ways to make the OTCs and their trades more transparent for countries and regulators.]

Faced with heavy losses, proprietary traders and hedge funds unwound their positions and attempted to shift exposures through the creation of structured securities, the BIS said. However, this boost to business was temporary as downgrades and defaults intensified risk aversion and led to a sharp cutback in credit lines to non-bank intermediaries. Market participants reconsidered their dependence on value-at-risk calculations, giving greater weight to potential future exposure and liquidity risk factors. A similar reassessment took place in the repurchase market. Intermediaries had granted highly favourable financing terms to leveraged investors and relied heavily on collateral at the expense of credit analysis. A number of financial institutions have since announced changes to their risk management structures that will result in a better integration of market and credit risks, the BIS says.

In the interest rate swap market, spreads on major benchmark rates reached an eight-year high in October owing to concerns about credit risk. Although margins narrowed somewhat in November, the prevailing climate of uncertainty hampered underlying sources of business. One of the notable features of the quarter was the unusual evolution of interest rates in the Japanese interbank market. Western-based banks began offering negative rates on yen-denominated deposits, while Japanese banks faced new upward cost pressures on their interbank liabilities. These developments prompted Western banks to reverse outstanding yen-denominated interest rate swaps and led some intermediaries to offer yen interest rate floors.

In the area of cross-currency products, market volatility reached unprecedented highs in the early part of the fourth quarter. In particular, the sharp appreciation of the yen in October, which was exacerbated by the reversal of short yen positions held by leveraged investors, was associated with record volatility in yen-related options. Its persistence thereafter suggested ongoing fears of a further unwinding of outstanding yen carry trades. (Third World Economics No. 205, 16-31 March 1999)

The above article was originally published in the South-North Development Monitor (SUNS) of which Chakravarthi Raghavan is the Chief Editor.