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September 21, 2008 Words from the (Investment) Wise for the Week That Was (September 15 - 21, 2008) |
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These are the quick market stats for the past week: the MSCI World Index up by 0.3%, the S&P 500 Index up by 0.3%, the Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index down by 0.1%, the US Dollar Index down by 1.6% and the ten-year US Treasury Note yield up by 4 basis points. An uneventful week? Not if you consider the monumental swings that characterized trading from hour to hour and resulted in the most turbulent week in financial markets since 1987. Credit markets virtually seized up during the first three days of last week as a modern-day bank run occurred with investors withdrawing money from brokerage, money-market and bank accounts, sending the three-month US Treasury Bill, a beacon of safety, to nearly 0% - its lowest level in more than 60 years. Actions by the US government on Thursday and Friday, however, saved the day, resulting in the yield on short-term Treasuries spiking to just more than 1% by the end of the fateful week. Thomas Meyer, chief economist of Deutsche Bank in London, summed up the situation most appropriately: "If a body dehydrates, it falls over and if it gets worse it can die. Likewise the financial system is starved of liquidity right now so the central banks will have to keep providing it."
Also, Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, a bank consortium, including three banks in the US and seven in the EU, revealed plans to create a $70 billion fund to provide emergency liquidity, the Fed announced several initiatives to provide additional support to financial markets, which include broader collateral eligibility at the Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) and Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF), Bank of America (BAC) agreed to buy Merrill Lynch (MER) for $50 billion, and AIG (AIG) became nationalized by means of a $85 billion secured loan from the US government. (Any guess who replaced AIG as Man United's principal sponsor? Click here for the sad truth.) According to Bespoke, one can tell that a story is really important when the The Wall Street Journal runs the lead headline across the entire front page. During the past week the headline ran the entire front page on five occasions!
And for good measure, here is the front page of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper on the day of the initial Wall Street Crash in 1929 (Hat tip: Charlestone Voice).
Next, a tag cloud of the text of all the dozens of articles I have read during the past week. This is a way of visualizing word frequencies at a glance. Not too many surprises here, especially not seeing "banks" featuring prominently.
Commenting on the outlook for equities, David Fuller (Fullermoney) remarked as follows: "... central banks are now in a position to switch their policy emphasis from fighting inflation to stimulating GDP growth. They may remain crisis oriented, but at least we are beginning to see the coordinated intervention that I have been discussing and expecting. "I will certainly not be selling during what I expect is the beginning of the end of this bear market. However, as conditions improve I am likely to shift some of my 'just in case' cash holding into equities over the next few months." Following an analysis of bear market troughs, Goldman Sachs concluded: "Using returns and valuation in prior bear markets as a template to assess the current situation implies the S&P 500 would bottom at 1070. ... profit cycle ... suggests the market bottoms four months before corporate profits trough, which we anticipate will occur in 1Q 2009. This pattern suggests the S&P 500 will trough in 4Q 2008." Next week is likely to be pivotal to stock markets' recovery, but I am still of the opinion that markets are bottoming out. I would not be surprised if a year-end rally has in fact already commenced. Before highlighting some thought-provoking news items and quotes from market commentators, let's briefly review the financial markets' movements on the basis of economic statistics and a performance round-up. Economy The Federal Open Market Committee held the Fed funds target rate steady at 2% on Wednesday for the third straight meeting. The accompanying statement cited the recent turmoil in financial markets and the ongoing slowing in economic growth, but said that growth should soon pick up. The statement noted recent high inflation, but said this should ease, although it did say that "the inflation outlook remains highly uncertain". The FOMC cited both downside risks to growth and upside risks to inflation that were of "significant concern". There was no indication of a bias towards lower rates. The decision to hold the Fed funds target rate steady was unanimous. Putting the US economic situation and the proposed Treasury action in perspective, Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust) said: "The optimism surrounding the Treasury plan is justified but it should be noted that economic recovery is several quarters ahead. The credit crunch and household balance sheet position will both play a critical role in how soon the economy gathers steam. Lest we forget, occupants are necessary for the huge number of unsold homes, which will occur only with significant gains in employment." For the rest, economic fundamentals took a back seat as investors reflected on the effects of the bail-out mania. Week's economic reports
Source: Yahoo
Finance, September 19, 2008.
In addition to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke testifying at Congress's Joint Economic Committee on Wednesday, September 24, next week's US economic highlights, courtesy of Northern Trust, include the following: 1. Existing Sales (September 24): Sales of existing homes are predicted to have declined in August to an annual rate of 4.92 million from 5.00 million in July. 2. Durable Goods Orders (September 25): A 1.8% decline in orders of durable goods orders is the most likely forecast for August. Consensus: -1.6% versus 1.3 in July. 3. New Home Sales (September 25): The consensus forecast is a 510,000 annualized sales pace of new homes in August, down from 515,000 in July. 4. Real GDP (September 26): The 3.3% preliminary estimate of real GDP growth in the second quarter is expected to be unchanged. Consensus: 3.3%. 5. Other reports: Consumer Sentiment Index (September 26). Click here for a summary of Wachovia's weekly economic and financial commentary. A summary of the release dates of economic reports in the UK, Eurozone, Japan and China is provided here. It is important to keep an eye on growth trends in these economies for clues on, among others, the trend of the US dollar. Markets
Source: Wall Street Journal Online, September 21, 2008. Equities
The table below, courtesy of Bespoke, highlights the percentage changes that global equity markets experienced from their Thursday lows until Friday's close. Russia led the way with an increase of 20.2%, followed by Hong Kong (+18.7%), China (+15.1%), Singapore (+10.9%) and the UK (+10.0%). Forming the rear guard, Japan (+5.5%) and Australia (+6.1%) registered the most "muted" gains.
With the exception of the Dow Jones Industrial Index (-0.3%; YTD -14.1%), the US stock markets all edged higher over the week as shown by the major index movements: S&P 500 Index -3.2% (YTD -15.4%), Nasdaq Composite Index (+0.6%; YTD -14.3%) and Russell 2000 Index +4.6% (YTD 1.6%). Friday's session, which also happened to be a quarterly options expiration day, saw the highest volume (2.98 billion shares) ever traded on the NYSE, including significant short squeezes. The outperformance of small caps is noteworthy as they have a history of often turning up before large caps at market bottoms. A breakout through the 760 level should be positive for the broader market.
The Russell 2000 Index has already managed to break through both its 50- and 200-day moving averages, whereas the Dow Jones Industrial Index and S&P 500 Index are still flirting with their 50-day lines. On the other hand, the Nasdaq Composite Index still has some work to do in order to catch up with its moving averages. Click here or on the thumbnail below for a market map, courtesy of Finviz.com, providing a quick overview of the performance of the various segments of the S&P 500 Index over the week.
The table below, prepared by Bespoke, shows the performance of the ten S&P 500 sectors for the past week. Only two sectors, Energy and Financials, managed gains. Defensive sectors such as Utilities, Telecom, Consumer Staples and Health Care had the largest declines.
Bespoke also provided the best- and worst-performing stocks in the S&P 500 for the week. As shown, Merrill Lynch (MER) (+73.0%) was the best performer, while AIG (AIG) (-68.3%) was down the most. Investor interest in financials stocks was sparked by governmental bail-out efforts, including a temporary ban by the SEC on short selling of 799 financial stocks and reports that the Treasury Department was working on a plan designed to help banks dispose of troubled assets. The extreme spread of the gains/falls summarizes the tumultuous nature of the trading.
Fixed-interest instruments The ten-year US Treasury Note rose by 4 basis points to 3.76%, the UK ten-year Gilt yield was unchanged at 4.60% and the German ten-year Bund increased by 5 basis points to 4.23%. Emerging-market bonds tumbled as investors shunned risky securities.
US mortgage rates also increased, with the 15-year fixed rate rising by 13 basis points to 5.70% and the 5-year ARM 18 basis points higher at 5.97%. Interbank lending markets were in crisis during the first part of last week as demand for cash sent yields on the three-month US Treasury Bill, a beacon of safety, to nearly 0% - its lowest level since 1941. Actions by the US government on Thursday and Friday thwarted the run on brokerage, money-market, savings, and even checking accounts, resulting in the yield on short-term Treasuries spiking higher to 1.01% by the end of the week. The TED spread (i.e. 3-month dollar Libor less 3-month Treasury Bills), a measure of risk aversion and illiquid repo conditions, widened to 313 basis points on Thursday before easing back to 221 basis points by Friday afternoon. Currencies
Over the week the US dollar declined against the euro (-1.8%), the British pound (-2.2%), the Swiss franc (-2.3%), the Japanese yen (-0.5%), the Australian dollar (-1.4%), the New Zealand dollar (-3.3%) and the Canadian dollar (-1.3%). Commodities Gold bullion scored its biggest daily gain since 1980 on Wednesday, rising by 9.0% on the back of safe-haven buying and hitting an intraday high of $902.60. The entire precious metals complex - gold (+13.1%), platinum (+5.1%) and silver (+15.6%) - recorded strong gains for the week. "In a total disaster, where there is a run from paper currency, you'll get your biggest bang for your buck in gold," said legendary Peter Bernstein. "You don't have to buy much gold to have an effective hedge," he added, noting that "if everything hits the fan, gold should be worth several thousands dollars an ounce". West Texas Intermediate recovered from a low of $91.02 a barrel on Tuesday to close the week at $102.75 on the back of violence in Nigeria, hurricane disruptions to oil production and refining activity in the Gulf of Mexico area, and US gasoline stocks sinking to their lowest levels in 39 years. Commenting on the outlook for oil prices, BCA Research said: "The growth slump has spread across the developed world and is threatening many emerging markets, causing investors to scale back expectations for energy demand and allowing prices to plunge lower. Implied option volatility has been high and rising for many commodities, which is typical capitulation selling. While these phases do not typically last long, we advise against buying into weakness at this time." The following chart shows the past week's movements for various commodities.
Now for a few news items and some words and charts from the investment wise that will hopefully assist in optimally managing our wealth. And also remember what Elroy Dimson from the London Business School said: "Risk means more things can happen than will happen."
Source: Slate Jon Stewart (The Daily Show): The economy & you - Wall Street collapse Source: Jon Stewart, The Daily Show, September 18, 2008. John Authers (Financial Times): Wall Street's wild week Source: John Authers, Financial Times, September 19, 2008. Francesco Guerrera (Financial Times): Wall Street's rescue Source: Francesco Guerrera, Financial Times, September 19, 2008. Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Proposed Treasury action reassures markets "But the coast is not clear on the money market front. The spread between the 3-month Libor and 3-month Treasury bill rate was 224 bps as of this writing, down from 297 bps yesterday compared with a spread of 111 bps on September 8. "Equity market rallies have been impressive on both September 18 and 19. The self-off in the Treasury market at the long-end signals market fears about the implications of the debt that is piling the balance sheet of the US economy. The 10-year Treasury note yield was around 3.77% today, up from 3.41% on September 17. "The optimism surrounding the Treasury plan is justified but it should be noted that economic recovery is several quarters ahead. The credit crunch and household balance sheet position will both play a critical role in how soon the economy gathers steam. Lest we forget, occupants are necessary for the huge number of unsold homes, which will occur only with significant gains in employment." Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, September 19, 2008. Financial Times: Push for crisis breakthrough "The US Treasury said the meeting discussed a 'comprehensive approach to address the illiquid assets on bank balance sheets that are at the underlying source of the current stresses in our financial institutions and financial markets.' "The Treasury added that Mr Paulson and Mr Bernanke were 'exploring all options, legislative and administrative, and expect to work through the weekend with Congressional leaders to finalise a way forward'. "Democratic leader Harry Reid said the administration had not yet presented a detailed proposal but congressional leaders looked forward to receiving one 'in a matter of hours not days'." Source: Krishna Guha, Michael Mackenzie, Ralph Atkins and Paul Davies, Financial Times, September 18, 2008. BCA Research: Unwinding Armageddon "The announcement that US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke are developing a plan to remove troubled assets from the balance sheets of financial companies is extremely encouraging for equity markets. We have published several times over the past year a checklist of events that need to ease banking sector stress and restore confidence in financial markets. While the details of the plan have not yet been decided, let alone released, on the surface this appears to be the 'open ended' commitment that we have been waiting for to put a floor under risky assets. "That said, not all is rosy heading forward: the U.S. economic outlook remains bleak and financial sector deleveraging will likely persist, providing a tough earnings environment. Correspondingly, it will be critical that investors refocus on fundamentals and be selective once fears of Armageddon have been unwound. Stay tuned." Source: BCA Research, September 19, 2008. Jim Sinclair (MineSet): Potential infinite bailouts to explode money supply Source: Jim Sinclair, MineSet, September 19, 2008. BBC News: Soros - bank problems to worsen Source: BBC News, September 16, 2008. ABC News: Greenspan's take on weakening economy Source: ABC News, September 15, 2008. Financial Times: Panic grips credit markets "Barometers of financial stress hit record peaks across the world. Yields on short-term US Treasuries hit their lowest level since the London Blitz, while gold had its biggest one-day gain ever in dollar terms. Lending between banks, in effect, stopped. "Speculation mounted that the Federal Reserve, which refused to cut rates on Tuesday, could be forced into an embarrassing U-turn or might further expand its market liquidity operations. "The $85 billion emergency Fed loan for the troubled insurance group AIG, announced on Tuesday night, failed to curb the surge in risk aversion. Instead, markets were hit by a fresh wave of anxiety. "One cause for fear came when shares in a supposedly safe money market mutual fund fell below par value - or 'broke the buck' - owing to losses on debt in Lehman Brothers, which filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday. "This raised the risk that retail investors in other such funds could panic and pull out their money. "All thought of profit was abandoned as traders piled in to the safety of short-term Treasuries, with the yield on three-month bills falling as low as 0.02% - rates that characterised the 'lost decade' in Japan. The last time US Treasuries were this low was January 1941. "Shares in the two largest independent US investment banks left standing - Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs - fell 24% and 14%, respectively, as the cost of insuring their debt soared, threatening their ability to finance themselves . "Morgan Stanley was holding preliminary merger talks with Wachovia, a troubled regional lender, and could approach other banks and look at other options in the coming days, people familiar with the situation said. Washington Mutual, another regional lender, has hired Goldman Sachs to contact potential buyers. "HBOS, a leading UK mortgage lender pressed into sales talks by the government after its share price halved this week, agreed to a £12bn takeover by Lloyds TSB. "A key measure of fear in the fixed-income markets - the so-called Ted spread, which tracks the difference between three-month Libor and Treasury bill rates - moved above 3%, higher than the record close after the Black Monday stock market crash of 1987. "US authorities fired back with the Treasury announcing it was borrowing $40bn to give to the Fed to use for its emergency lending - in essence removing balance sheet constraints on the size of this assistance. "The Securities and Exchange Commission announced new curbs on short selling." Source: Krishna Guha, Michael Mackenzie, Gillian Tett, Financial Times, September 18, 2008. Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Markets recover after distrust and anxiety
"Thomas Meyer, chief economist of Deutsche Bank in London, sums up the situation most appropriately: 'If a body dehydrates it falls over and if it gets worse it can die. Likewise the financial system is starved of liquidity right now so the central banks will have to keep providing it.' The extent of risk aversion and fear is reflected in the spread between the 3-month Libor and 3-month Treasury bill rate. It shot up to 303 basis points yesterday. Today this spread widened further to 313 bps. This is 76 bps higher than the peak spread (237 bps) posted on August 20, 2007, the month when the ongoing crisis commenced."
Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, September 18, 2008. MarketWatch: Fed acts to help money market funds Source: Robert Schoeder, MarketWatch, September 19, 2008. Bespoke: Fed to accept lower quality assets as collateral "'In an obscure but highly important announcement late Sunday evening, the Fed said it would let Wall Street firms post as collateral much riskier assets - including equities, junk bonds, subprime mortgage-backed securities and even whole mortgages - in exchange for emergency loans through the Primary Dealer Credit Facility.' "You think a Gregg Jefferies rookie card is worth anything in collateral? How about those old Beanie Babies? Or maybe old Cabbage Patch Kids dolls? Who knows what they'll take at this point."
Source: Bespoke, September 15, 2008. Yahoo News: Banks roll out $70 billion loan program "The ten banks, which include JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, said they were committing $7 billion each for the pool. The pool would act as a signal to the marketplace that banks, brokerages, and other financial companies can lean on the fund to take care of borrowing needs. "The banks said the program will be available to participating banks which can get a cash infusion up to a maximum of one-third of the total size of the pool. The size of the loan program might increase as 'other banks are permitted to join.' "All participating banks intend to use this facility beginning this week, the statement said. "The banks also include Bank of America, Barclays, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and UBS." Source: Joe Bel Bruno, Yahoo News, September 15, 2008. Charlie Rose: A discussion about the crisis on Wall Street Source: Charlie Rose, September 15, 2008. Charles Kirk (The Kirk Report): Bailouts are band-aids "Yet, it seems, this lesson is lost among all who continue to work against the natural evolution of the market and free market economy. Right now, the government is pulling every string possible in an attempt to save the country from financial ruin. We've watched our leaders go from telling us that there is no problem to worry about to now taking billions of dollars out of our pockets (and those of future generations) to help the rich and powerful who've made poor choices over the past few years. "I say enough is enough. The rich and powerful want us to pay for their problems and they threaten our financial futures if we don't follow along. This is ransom, pure and simple, and we should not tolerate it any longer. "Bailouts are band-aids. While they reduce the pain, they don't cure the disease. We need to get back to a country that generates wealth because it is the smartest and most creative and that its businesses are the most productive, profitable, and competitive. Not a country that continues to lie to itself and creates one bubble after another in a desperate attempt to continue a standard of living that simply is no longer deserved. "As Americans, we value money above all else, but we've lost a true understanding of how to create it. Instead, we try to look for short cuts that wreak utter havoc. And, even amid our darkest days, we continue to try to do the same instead of facing facts, owning up to our mistakes, and punishing those who deserve to be punished so we can move on. "In sum, let Rome burn. What will result is a much better America and a stronger financial system. But, if we continue to let our government transfer wealth in the same manner we've seen all year, the road ahead will be much tougher than anyone currently wants to think about. It will only delay the inevitable and the quicker we face and own up to our mistakes, the better off we will be. It is time for the system to punish the stupid. Let's make sure they do so we can move on, get on the right track, and prosper once again." Source: Charles Kirk, The Kirk Report, September 17, 2008. YouTube: Peter Schiff - let the free market work it out! Source: YouTube, September 18, 2008. Peter Schiff (SafeHaven): Comrade Bernanke does it again Source: Peter Schiff, SafeHaven, September 17, 2008. David Fuller (Fullermoney): Impossible to know how and when all this will
play out "A good thing too, since every newspaper that I have seen today features - 'Crisis' - on the front page headline and stock markets are in turmoil. "We are now seeing the beginning of a coordinated policy response from central banks ... This is much more likely to cushion rather than draw a line under stock market declines because the west's banking debacle is of unprecedented severity, at least in my lifetime. Inevitably it has global repercussions, as we are also seeing. "It is impossible to know how and when all this will play out, because the final chapters have yet to be written by central banks and their respective treasuries. However, I assume that they have begun the process of shifting their main focus from fighting inflation to reviving growth. "Central banks need to stimulate economic growth because the current trends are very disinflationary. They will want to ensure that welcome disinflation does not slip into a Japanese-style deflation of the 1990s, let alone a sustained global deflation which would be far worse. "Meanwhile, the disinflation is certainly not all bad because property and other asset bubbles are inflationary, and will always burst at some point. However it is not easy to be philosophical about this process when one's own asset bubbles, in terms of participation, happen to burst. "Global deleveraging continues, which is why crude oil traded near $91 today, well down from its peak at $147.27 on July 11th. It is also a partial explanation for the strength of the US Dollar Index and yen, the latter shown here in terms of the euro's fall against the Japanese currency. "Is this Back to the Future, to use the title of Steven Spielberg's film in another context? I believe so, in that we will be able to participate in a renewed bull cycle for Fullermoney themes which served us so well earlier in the decade - precious metals and other resources, Asian-led emerging markets and global infrastructure development - all of which should be among the leaders of the next up cycle. However we will have to be patient for a while longer, awaiting evidence that the down cycle has ended." Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, September 16, 2008. John Hempton (Bronte Capital): What comes around goes around "The problem was that Herstatt received irrevocable payments of Deutsch Marks in the German time zone against a delivery of US Dollars in New York later the same day. Herstatt failed between acceptance and delivery. "The German failure triggered losses around the world. "Well what comes around goes around. It appears that KfW - a German government owned lender - transferred Euro 300 million to Lehman on the day of its bankruptcy. "It was very kind of the German taxpayer to contribute so much for the benefit of Lehman creditors! Far more than the US taxpayer did ... 34 years is a long time for pay-back. But pay-back came." Source: John Hempton, Bronte Capital, September 17, 2008. Bloomberg: Roubini - US financial industry facing "disaster" Source: Bloomberg, September 15, 2008. CNBC: Meredith Whitney on Wall Street's future Source: CNBC, September 15, 2008. CNBC: Wilbur Ross - possibly a thousand banks will close Click here for the full report. Source: CNBC, September 15, 2008. Financial Times: BofA to buy Merrill Lynch for $50 billion "In a dramatic U-turn on Sunday, BofA entered discussions with Merrill after pulling out of the bidding for Lehman, partly prompted by the US government's refusal to supply financial help for a Lehman takeover. "BofA's chief executive Ken Lewis has long coveted Merrill in the belief that a merger of the lender's commercial banking operations and Merrill's retail brokerage arm would be a formidable combination in the US financial services industry. "However, a deal could saddle BofA with more troubled assets. The bank bought the stricken mortgage-lender Countrywide and a purchase of Merrill would force it to clean up the bank's trading books, which have already cost Merrill some $52 billion in writedowns and credit losses." Source: Francesco Guerrera, Financial Times, September 14, 2008. Barry Ritholtz (The Big Picture): Layman's explanation of AIG vs Bear vs
Lehman "Here is what I said to them: • Lehman Brothers was like the little kid pulling the tail of a dog. You know the kid is going to get hurt eventually, and so no one is surprised when the dog turns around and bites the kid. But the kid only hurts himself, so no one really cares that much. • Bear Stearns is the little pyro - the kid who was always playing with matches. He could harm not only himself, but burns his own house down, and indeed, he could have burnt down the entire neighborhood. The Fed stepped in not to protect him, but the rest of the block. • AIG is the kid who accidentally stumbled into a bio-tech warfare lab ... finds all these unlabeled vials, and heads out to the playground with a handful of them jammed into his pockets." Source: Barry Ritholtz, The Big Picture, September 17, 2008. Barry Ritholtz (The Big Picture): The lessons of Bear Stearns Source: Barry Ritholtz, The Big Picture, September 17, 2008. Financial Times: US Treasury raises Fed funding "The move was intended to deal with fears that the US central bank's balance sheet was overstretched following the AIG loan announced on Tuesday. "The Treasury said it would sell bills at the Fed's request as part of the process of helping it better manage its balance sheet. "The Fed said on Tuesday it would lend AIG up to $85 billion in emergency funds in return for a government stake of 79.9% and effective control of the company - an extraordinary step meant to stave off a collapse of the giant insurer that plays a crucial role in the global financial system. "The Fed said the loan was expected to be repaid by the proceeds of selling AIG operating companies. A senior Fed staffer said the most likely outcome was an orderly liquidation of AIG, though it was possible that the firm could survive as an ongoing business. "The loan is at a punitive interest rate of three-month Libor plus 850 basis points, giving AIG a strong incentive to repay it as soon as possible. It will be secured on all AIG's assets, including those of its subsidiary companies. "The Fed said in a statement it was acting to prevent 'a disorderly failure of AIG' which would 'add to already significant levels of financial market fragility and lead to substantially higher borrowing costs, reduced household wealth and materially weaker economic performance'." Source: Francesco Guerrera, Aline van Duyn and Krishna Guha, Financial Times, September 16, 2008. Economagic: Borrowings sky-rocket
Source: Economagic, September 15, 2008. Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): FOMC holds Fed funds rate steady "The policy statement shows a shift to a neutral intermeeting bias, with the risk of higher inflation and weaker economic growth placed on equal footing. September 16, 2008 August 5, 2008: "However, the language and tone of the first paragraph leans toward greater concern about growth in the inflation-growth debate. The statement duly noted that financial market stress 'has increased significantly' and 'labor markets have weakened further'. The statement listed three factors - tight credit conditions, the ongoing housing contraction, and some slowing in export growth - that are likely to hold back economic activity. 'Slowing export growth' was included in this statement, which is consistent with the nature of economic reports from abroad."
Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, September 16, 2008. Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Leading index points to continued weak
economic conditions "In August, orders of consumer durable goods, stock prices, interest rate spread, and consumer expectations made positive contributions. The recent sharp decline in equity prices implies that this component will make a negative contribution in September. The interest rate spread should make a smaller positive contribution compared with the August reading. Building permits, orders of durable capital goods, the manufacturing workweek, initial jobless claims, supplier deliveries, and real money supply made negative contributions." Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, September 18, 2008.
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Dr Prieur du Plessis
He holds the following degrees: BSc (Quantity Surveying) (Cape Town), HonsB (B & A) (cum laude) (Stellenbosch), MBA (cum laude) (Stellenbosch); and DBA (Doctor of Financial Management) (Stellenbosch). Prieur is chairman of the Plexus group of companies, which he founded in 1995. Previously he was general manager: portfolio management at Sanlam, responsible for the management of investment portfolios with total assets in excess of $5 billion. Plexus is a pioneer in the mutual fund industry and has achieved a number of firsts under Prieur's leadership. These include the authoritative Plexus Survey, a quarterly analysis of the consistency of the performance of unit trust management companies, the Plexus Offshore Survey, the Plexus Unit Trust Indices, and the PlexCrown Fund Ratings. Plexus is the South African partner of John Mauldin, American author of the most widely distributed investment newsletter in the world, and also has an exclusive licensing agreement with California-based Research Affiliates for managing and distributing its enhanced Fundamental Index™ methodology in the Pan-African area. In 2001 Prieur received the Santam/AHI Business Leader of the Year award for corporate leadership, business acumen and entrepreneurial flair. He was also profiled in the book South Africa's Leading Managers (2006). Plexus received the AHI/Old Mutual Enterprise of the Year award in 1997 and was also included in the book South Africa's Most Promising Companies (2005). Prieur is 52 years old and lives with his wife, TV producer and presenter Isabel Verwey, and two children in Welgemoed, Cape Town. His recreational activities include long-distance running, motor cycling and reading. He belongs to the Cape Town Club, Johannesburg Country Club, Gordon's Bay Yacht Club and Swiss Social & Sports Club. Copyright © 2008-2009 Dr Prieur du Plessis Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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