My Diary 393 --- The Fed Supercop and Japanese Play; The Worst Q1 in 16 Years; The Fiscal-Periods Ends of US Dollar
March 31, 2008
Today, Asian stocks failed to hold up on last week's positive momentum, sending the region's benchmark to its biggest Q1 decline in 16 years, on concerns of faltering US consumer spending will erode exports of cars, clothing and electronics. YTD, S&P500 decreased 10.43%, Euro area stocks slipped avg 11%, and MSCI AP also lost 12%. So far, about US$3tn in value has been erased from global stock markets t according to BBG.
Over the last weekend,
Elsewhere, 1MWTI declined to $104.86/bbl, moving up $3 during last week. US Dollar inched up 0.3% against YEN (99.51) and fell 2.4% against EUR (1.5782), which hit a new all-time high on last Wed at $1.585. The 3MUST yield is up nearly 80bp on the week to 1.37 after last week’s rally squeezed the yield to less than 60bp. UST yield curve is flattened somewhat with 2yr yield lost 3bp@1.646, and 10yr slid 9bp @3.438.
Well, well, as we are heading to the end of one of the worst quarters in the history, an new effort to deal with the current severe credit crisis is coming into birth by its promoter, President Bush and Treasury secretary Henry Paulson…
The Fed Supercop and Japanese Play
Today Wall Street is waiting for the biggest ever regulatory structure since the Great Depression to be announced by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. The so-called “Fed Supercop” plan maps out a course for broader oversight of US financial markets by consolidating power into the Federal Reserve. It will eliminate overlapping state and federal regulators and give the Central Bank an expanded role in looking at the books of investment banks and brokerages…Any interest to apply for a job with US Fed, it is time now … However, what remains unclear is exactly how much the Fed would be able to control Wall Street's freewheeling I-Banks, which have lost billions of dollars over the past 6 months from buying risky mortgage-backed securities. While the proposal will for the first time impose regulation of hedge funds and private equity firms … Does it mean the risk appetite will be suppressed going forward?
Having said thus far about the regulatory reform, the messy US financials now is more looking like a replay of many of the events that happened in Japan in 1990s as everyone is talking about a borrower rescue, not a lender rescue … While the biggest difference is
This is what we have to see happen in the US, according to Nomura Research --- 1) there are 8,500 local banks in the US with no access to SWFs or other bailout money – if the big banks were ok, then they could help out --- But this is not the case. So the small banks have to reduce their lending, creating a major credit crunch in the US; 2) the Tokyo area housing bubble in the late 1980s is exactly the same magnitude as the US housing bubble today, but the commercial real estate problem in Japan was far bigger than the one facing the US today.
The Worst Q1 in 16 Years
The 1Q08 stock markets looks very different from what markets had expected at the start of this year……So far S&P500 lost 10% -- the worst start to a year since 2001, while Europe DJ Stoxx 600 Index fell 18.55% and Nikkei Index retreated 18.18% ... Simply looking at the YTD performance, I don’t think these figures support the argument of Asian ”decoupling'' as China ( HIS -17.85%, CSI300 -28.99%) and India ( SENSEX -22.35%) markets are among the 10 worst-performing equity benchmarks globally.
The question is why the large and faster-growing economies like
Thus, we still have not seen any sustained long-term buy interest and stocks may repeat that pattern and fall to the lowest levels of the year amid forecasts for 4 straight Qs of declining profits and worsening bank credit losses … According to Bloomberg, while S&P500 is trading at the lowest valuation (14X FWPE) in almost 20 years, S&P500 members may report a 9.9% decrease in Q1 profit and 3.1% in Q2. I think the market will have more downside risks skewed as the falling of earnings beside the financial sectors have not been fully anticipated and priced in yet……Talking about valuation and earning growth, MSCI China is now trading at 13.7X PE08 and 27.1%EPSG; MSCI HK at 16.5X PE08 and 3.1% EPSG, vs. MSCI AxJ at 13.5X PE08 and 14.2% EPSG. In addition, the H-shares premium contracted significantly last week from 101% to 64% with trading volumes continued to slide down and realized volatility climbed most for HSCEI (82.7%)…
The Fiscal-Period Ends of US Dollar
It is interesting to compare the two central Banks across Atlantic Ocean…In short, the combination of aggressive
In fact, the