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Monday, February 28, 2011

London's Luxury Homes Attract Overseas Buyers Seeking Financial Stability

The scarier things get, the better London homes look to the world’s rich.

A widening range of foreign nationals bought houses and apartments in the British capital worth more than 1 million pounds ($1.61 million), lifting values for the fourth consecutive month in February, according to property broker Knight Frank LLP. Greeks and Spaniards increased investment as their economies reeled and Asians sought a hedge against inflation.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Van Rompuy welcomes the way Romania ensures financial stability

European Council President Herman Van Rompuy on Thursday welcomed the way Romania carried out with the assistance program agreed with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

Romania managed to ensure the stability of its financial system amid a world economic crisis, stressed the visiting EC president in a press statement he made at the Cotroceni Presidential Palace with Romanian President Traian Basescu.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

FPC tasked with ensuring financial stability

The 138-page document, A New Approach to Financial Regulation: Building a Stronger System, has outlined the structure and remit of the FPC.

The new entity will function as a committee of the Bank of England's court of directors - its governing body - and will be responsible for delivering systemic financial stability through 'macro-prudential' regulation.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

SARB getting oversight committee

The Reserve Bank is to get an oversight committee co-chaired by its governor and the minister of finance, according to a policy document released by National Treasury.

"The Reserve Bank's mandate for financial stability will be underpinned by a new Financial Stability Oversight Committee," it said.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Bulgarian Socialists Frustrate FinMin's Hopes for Financial Stability Pact

Bulgaria's opposition Socialists have made it clear they will not support the Constitutional amendments known as a "Financial Stability Pact" proposed by Finance Minister Simeon Djankov.

The Bulgarian Socialist Party will oppose Djankov's brainchild, announced Georgi Kadiev, an economist known as "the red yuppie", who was a deputy finance minister the Stanishev Cabinet.

Monday, February 21, 2011

ECB's Weber: Bailouts Have Damaged Basis Of Euro Zone

The financial rescues of Greece and Ireland have damaged the foundations of Europe's currency union, Deutsche Bundesbank President Axel Weber said Monday.

In a speech to an audience of academics and business representatives, Weber said it was essential not to let the deals that have been made to keep financial stability in the euro zone become the norm.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Central bankers on the catwalk in Paris

PARIS, more used to staging fashion shows, put on a celebrity catwalk of central bankers today. The line-up of big names at a glitzy hotel in the heart of the French capital stretched from Ben Bernanke of the Fed to Zhou Xiaochuan of China, with Mervyn King of the Bank of England, Masaaki Shirakawa of the Bank of Japan and Jean-Claude Trichet of the European Central Bank. Hosting the event—on global imbalances and financial stability—was Christian Noyer of the Bank of France.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

BoE sets up interim financial policy committee

The Bank of England has formed an interim financial policy committee (FPC) and appointed four new external members.

In anticipation of legislation to create an FPC, the government and the bank have announced the establishment of an interim committee to "prepare the ground" for the creation of the full FPC .

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Austria finmin: March debt deal may take pressure off EFSF

If the European Union can agree a comprehensive package to deal with the debt crisis during March, that may remove pressure to strengthen the euro zone's temporary bailout fund, Austria's finance minister said.

Josef Proell indicated that increasing the effective capacity of the 440 billion euro European Financial Stability Facility may not be necessary if leaders can agree a complete package of measures by an end-March summit.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Eurozone agrees bail-out fund of 500bn euros

Eurozone finance ministers have agreed to set up a permanent bail-out fund for the region of 500bn euros (£420bn; $673.2bn).

The fund, which will be called the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) will replace the current 440bn euro European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

Monday, February 14, 2011

Israel an island of security, financial stability

Roni Sofer

"Israel is not just an island of security stability but also of financial stability," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a Likud faction meeting Monday.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Bulgaria’s Financial Stability Guarantees Economic Prosperity

The “stability pact” proposed by Finance Minister Djankov will ensure a sensible government for the business and the people.

Some say that trust is worth more than gold and there’s a lot of truth in this statement. Trust is of fundamental importance not only to interpersonal and business relations, but also to a successful government. Businessmen and foreign investors desperately need state guarantees of Bulgaria’s financial stability over the next few years.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

International Monetary Fund director Dominique Strauss-Kahn calls for new world currency

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, has called for a new world currency that would challenge the dominance of the dollar and protect against future financial instability.

“Global imbalances are back, with issues that worried us before the crisis - large and volatile capital flows, exchange rate pressures, rapidly growing excess reserves - on the front burner once again,” Strauss-Kahn said. “Left unresolved, these problems could even sow the seeds of the next crisis.”

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Financial Stability Board: Italy's Banks May Need To Bolster Capital Base

ROME (Dow Jones)--Italian banks may need to bolster their equity and authorities may need to make sure they do so without triggering a credit crunch, the Financial Stability Board said in its peer review of Italy published late Monday.

"Further strengthening the capital base of the banking sector, without undermining the supply of credit to the economy, may require the authorities' attention going forward," said the FSB, a global body presided over by Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi.

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Fed floats 2-year test to select 'systemic' firms

By Dave Clarke

WASHINGTON, Feb 8 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators may use a two-year test of a nonbank financial firm's revenue and assets to help determine if it is "systemic" and needs stricter supervision, the Federal Reserve said in a proposal released on Tuesday.

The Federal Reserve said it is seeking comment on how regulators should define which nonbank financial firms such as insurers and hedge funds are so big and interconnected that they could impact the stability of financial markets.

Monday, February 07, 2011

Tanasescu: IMF seeks financial stability, not tax hikes

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) does not seek higher taxes and charges and the issue of increasing taxation in the period ahead is out of question, Romania's IMF representative Mihai Tanasescu said on Friday as the IMF mission headed by Jeffrey Franks entered the National Bank of Romania (BNR) offices for talks with the BNR officials.

Tanasescu voiced optimism about Romania's chances to receive the last tranche of its loan accord with the IMF and he stressed the figures related to the national economy development are good and even very good. He anticipated the Romanian economy this year will grow 1.5 percent ‘and maybe even more'.

Friday, February 04, 2011

JP Morgan: Global focus to remain on creating financial stability

The world is to remain focused on securing fiscal stability this year, it has been said.

JP Morgan Asset Management has told corporate finance professionals that the main intention of 2011 is to create financial stability.

Results from its Global Cash Management Survey, carried out in conjunction with The Association of Corporate Treasurers, have shown that people in the corporate financing world are to remain cautious following the global economic crisis.

It found that there will be an increased emphasis on securing fiscal stability in an attempt to reduce risk.

The economic strength of banks has risen in importance for the second year in a row, the survey found.

It also revealed that liquidity remains in focus, with 68 per cent of respondents saying it is one of their five financial concerns of 2011.

Earlier this week, JP Morgan Asset Management launched an active fund called JPM UK Active Index Plus Fund to encourage investments in the passive marketplace.

Available from February 1st 2011, it comes with a reduced annual management charge of 0.25 per cent a year.

Source: http://www.commercialfinancegroup.co.uk

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Treasury Committee calls for right not rushed regulation

In July 2010, the Treasury published a consultation document, A new approach to financial regulation: judgement, focus and stability, proposing changes to financial regulation in the United Kingdom. The Government proposes to do away with the tripartite system, in which the Treasury, Bank of England, and Financial Services Authority work together, replacing it with a 'twin peaks' structure, separating macroprudential and conduct of business regulation. Today's report is the Committee's response to what has been set out so far with regard to those proposals.

The Government's timetable

The Government has said that it wishes the legislation to be introduced in "mid 2011" and to be completed by 2012. The Committee is concerned about the risks involved in such an ambitious timetable and the report underlines the importance of getting reform of financial regulation right.

It believes the legislation to establish the new regulatory structure should be subject to pre-legislative scrutiny, over a reasonable timescale. Even with proper pre-legislative scrutiny, once introduced, the timetable for the Bill should be generous enough to allow proper parliamentary consideration, using carry-over if necessary.

The Committee welcomes the establishment of the Independent Commission on Banking and notes that its work may well have a bearing on the shape of regulation required. The report recommends that the Government pay full regard to the ICB before coming to conclusions on financial regulation. This also has implications for the timetable set out.

The Committee welcomes the Government's suggestion that FSMA could be revisited in its entirety. The report calls on the Government to present a new Bill only after full consideration has been given to responses to initial consultation. Drafting the legislation will then be likely to secure a more coherent final product.

Commenting, Treasury Committee Chairman Andrew Tyrie said: "In light of the banking crisis, the Government is rightly proposing radical changes to the way in which financial services are regulated. However, having examined the initial proposals, the Committee's overriding concern is about the proposed speed of implementation.

“It is vital to maintain the momentum for reform, but there is no point in flawed change. In any case, these proposals need to be considered in conjunction with the ICB. Regulatory reform will almost certainly not be enough; the Government will also need firmness of purpose should the ICB recommend structural reform."

A super regulator

The Government proposes to give a Financial Policy Committee (FPC), based in the Bank of England, power to monitor the system to ensure financial stability, and to take action when that stability is threatened. There are sound reasons for insulating economic policy decisions from short-term political pressures. However, the report underlines the importance of democratic accountability. Moreover, 'financial stability' is a very broad concept, and may be hard to define in practice.

The report calls on the Government to give much more detail about what it considers constitutes financial stability.

The macro-prudential tools which the FPC is to use are as yet undefined and untested, and may have unexpected consequences. The Government must also decide which macro-prudential tools it proposes to make available to the FPC.

The Committee welcomes the fact the Government is going to set out these macro-prudential tools in secondary legislation and calls for that legislation to be published as soon as possible so that Parliament can assess the nature of the powers to be devolved to the FPC.

The accountability of the Monetary Policy Committee is secured by its extremely clear remit, and the mechanism for exchanging letters with the Chancellor if inflation breaches the target. In addition, the Bank of England has engaged with the Treasury Committee in an exemplary way to achieve accountability to Parliament. The need for secrecy, among other things, will mean that the accountability of the FPC will be different from that of the MPC. The Committee will consider what is required to secure FPC accountability in the light of more detail on the Government's reform proposals.

Given the high profile, yet uncertain nature of its tasks, it will be essential that the FPC has a strong core of credible external members and contains at least one person with recent experience of risk management at the highest level. The report calls on the Government to reconsider the balance between Bank personnel and external members and provide a fuller explanation of the reason for including two bank executives as part of the FPC.

Andrew Tyrie said: "Until now, financial stability has been seen as the ultimate responsibility of the elected Government. These proposals make the Bank of England a 'super-regulator.' If the Financial Policy Committee is to be given lead responsibility for securing financial stability, the Government needs to provide clarity about what such stability means.

“Such a large transfer of power also necessitates robust accountability. There is a clear structure by which the MPC is held accountable to Parliament. The structure for the FPC will have to differ from that for the MPC, but it is of no less importance. In order to ensure challenge is embedded within the FPC we would also like to see better balance of external members. The Committee will return to the issue of democratic accountability."

Source: http://www.mortgageintroducer.com

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Egypt Not Iran 1979 as Mideast Financial Stability Buoys Markets

Egypt’s turmoil is having limited impact on global financial markets, where investors see few parallels with Iran’s 1979 revolution or the contagion that followed Thailand’s meltdown 13 years ago.

World equity-market capitalization climbed to $53.6 trillion this week, the highest level since June 2008, even as protests against Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule intensified and forced the nation’s bourse and banks to close for a fourth day. Dubai’s equity index rose the most in nine months yesterday and emerging-market bonds rallied, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

While the uprising in Iran three decades ago sparked a 140 percent surge in oil and Thailand’s devaluation led to a global equity selloff, Egypt has about 0.3 percent of the world’s crude reserves and its foreign-currency holdings exceed overseas debt by $29 billion. Traxis Partners LP’s Barton Biggs says it’s a mistake to sell shares because of Egypt’s crisis, while Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Mohamed El-Erian sees signs of a “reconciliation” in the most-populous Arab country.

“The one thing to avoid is to exaggerate the probability for chaos,” El-Erian, the son of an Egypt diplomat and chief executive officer at Pimco, which oversees about $1.2 trillion worldwide, said in a Feb. 1 interview on “Bloomberg Surveillance” with Tom Keene. “There’s a lot of talk of ‘what if Egypt becomes Iran?’ I don’t think that’s the case.”

Street Clashes

Mubarak struggled to regain control of the streets yesterday, as thousands of his supporters clashed with protesters in central Cairo, live television footage showed. The president, 82, said on Feb. 1 that he intends to step down at the end of his term this year. As many as 300 people have been killed since the protests erupted on Jan. 25, according to the United Nations.

While the markets in Cairo closed after the benchmark EGX 30 Index tumbled 16 percent last week, overseas investors have been betting on a rally in Egyptian assets. The Market Vectors Egypt Index ETF, an exchange-traded fund that holds Egyptian shares, has climbed 10 percent since Jan. 28, and the fund is trading at a 13 percent premium to its net asset value, the second-biggest of about 1,400 U.S. ETFs tracked by Bloomberg.

London-traded global depositary receipts of Orascom Construction Industries SAE, the country’s biggest publicly traded building company, have gained 18 percent from a 1 1/2- year low on Jan. 31. Egypt’s 10-year dollar bonds have rallied 2.6 percent this week, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

‘Not Panicked’

Egyptian lenders will open their doors on Feb. 6 and the stock exchange may start trading the following day, according to the state-run Middle East News agency.

“I’m not selling, and I’m not panicked by these events in Egypt and the Middle East,” Biggs, 78, who runs New York-based hedge fund Traxis Partners, said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Jan. 31. “The ongoing economic data is very encouraging.”

U.S. government reports last month showed consumer confidence rose more than forecast in January, while the Institute of Supply Management-Chicago Inc.’s gauge of business expansion rose to the highest level since 1988. German unemployment fell to an 18-year low and European retail sales increased at the fastest rate in more than four years in January.

The MSCI All-Country World Index of global shares rose 0.2 percent yesterday to the highest level since August 2008, extending the rally from its March 2009 low to 98 percent. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index climbed 0.4 percent, and the extra yield investors demand to own developing-nation debt over U.S. Treasuries fell 7 basis points to 278, JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI Global Index shows.

Gulf Insulated

While protests in Tunisia led to the ouster of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali on Jan. 14 and Jordan’s King Abdullah replaced his prime minister on Feb. 1 after anti-government demonstrations, oil-rich Middle Eastern countries have been largely insulated from the turmoil.

“People are still assuming a velvet transition and do not expect this to end in a harsh outcome,” Timothy Ash, head of emerging-market research at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London, said yesterday in an e-mailed response to questions. “The consensus is that Gulf states should be okay as they have the cash to spread around and avoid some of the poverty issues which have underpinned the demonstrations in Tunisia and Egypt.”

Dubai Gains

The Dubai Financial Market General Index climbed 3.3 percent yesterday while Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index advanced 2.2 percent. Yields on Qatar’s notes maturing in 2015 declined 2 basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, the past two days to 2.87 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Saudi Arabia, the biggest Arab economy, and the U.A.E., the second-largest, are spending billions of dollars to diversify away from oil and develop their financial services industry. Dubai, which rocked global markets in 2009 by announcing plans for a debt standstill, has built a financial center that is home to the regional offices of New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and Standard Chartered Plc, the British bank that generates most of its earnings from Asia.

The Tadawul index is valued at about 1.9 times net assets, the cheapest level relative to the MSCI emerging-market index since Bloomberg began compiling the monthly data in April 2006. Qatar’s QE Index trades at 2 times book value, a 29 percent discount to the average level since June 2005.

Cheapest Shares

Investors say Persian Gulf assets are still in demand.

“This is unlikely to spread to oil-exporting countries,” Mark Diab, a money manager at GLG Partners who runs the Ocean MENA Opportunities fund and Ocean GCC Opportunities fund, said in an interview from Doha.

There are signs in the credit markets that assets in Egypt are losing value.

Credit-default swaps insuring against a default by Egypt climbed 28 basis points yesterday to 377.9, according to data provider CMA in London. Yields on the country’s 30-year dollar bonds rose 10 basis points to 7.37 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Three-month non-deliverable forwards for the Egyptian pound retreated 2.3 percent to 6.23 per U.S. dollar yesterday. The contracts suggest traders expect the currency will sink 5.9 percent in three months, from the current spot rate of 5.857 per dollar.

Auction Delays

The turmoil is disrupting Egypt’s financing plans. The government delayed two debt sales scheduled for Jan. 30 as the protests spread. Yields on 182-day bills jumped 40 basis points at a Jan. 27 auction from the previous sale to 10.6 percent. Once the government resumes auctions, it will see “less appetite” and higher borrowing costs, according to John Sfakianakis, the Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based economist at Banque Saudi Fransi.

“Things are clearly a bit messy, but the market has moved on and said ‘There’s a solution here it’s just taking time,’” said Oliver Bell, who helps oversee about $10 billion of emerging markets assets as a London-based money manager at Pictet Asset Management.

While Egypt isn’t a major oil producer, the nation’s crisis may still drive prices higher and curb global economic growth, according to Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.

“In terms of the global economic impact, it’s likely to be most felt, at least in the short-run, through oil,” Stiglitz said in a Bloomberg Television interview yesterday.

Not Iran

Egypt’s Suez Canal, which is used to carry about 8 percent of global seaborne trade, has been operating normally throughout the protests, according to the waterway’s operator. The 120-mile canal connects the Mediterranean and Red Sea and cuts the journey for a supertanker traveling from Saudi Arabia, which holds about 20 percent of the world’s oil reserves, to Houston by about 12 days, according to Riverlake Shipping SA in Geneva.

Crude oil has climbed 3.4 percent in New York trading since Jan. 24, to $90.86 a barrel.

Mass protests in 1979 forced Iran’s pro-U.S. Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to flee the country, which is now home to about 10 percent of the world’s oil reserves. The revolution, which handed power to the anti-Western Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, sent the price of Saudi Arabia’s Arab light crude to about $34 a barrel at the end of 1980 from $14 two years earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The transition of power in Egypt is likely to be smoother than in Iran because Egypt has a better-educated “middle class” with moderate political views, according to Gabriel Sterne, an emerging-market economist at brokerage Exotix Ltd. in London. Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel-prize winner and former chief of the United Nations atomic agency, has emerged as the face of the Egyptian opposition.

‘Moderate Reform’

“In Egypt there’s a constituency for democratic moderate reform in a way that there wasn’t in Iran in 1979,” Sterne said.

Egypt’s government finances are stronger than those of the Asian countries that spurred the region’s financial crisis in the late 1990s.

The North African nation’s current-account deficit will probably fall to 1.6 percent of gross domestic product this year from 2.4 percent in 2009, according to estimates from the International Monetary Fund. Thailand had a trade gap of 7.9 percent in 1996, just before the collapse of the baht sparked a wave of capital outflows across Asia and forced Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea to seek IMF bailouts.

‘Strong’ Fundamentals

The Egyptian economy, which the IMF estimates at $239 billion this year, will probably expand 5.5 percent in 2011, faster than the 4.4 percent global growth rate, the Washington- based fund predicts. Egypt’s gross government debt will amount to 72 percent of GDP this year, compared with 99 percent in the U.S., according to the IMF.

Egypt has “strong long-term fundamentals and potential,” Michael Hasenstab, co-director of the Franklin Templeton Fixed- Income Group, said in an e-mailed note to clients Feb. 1. His $14 billion Templeton Global Total Return Fund held Egyptian dollar bonds at the end of December, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The army would probably intervene to prevent the conflicts from escalating, said Barak Seener, a research fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies. Supporters of Mubarak hurled rocks at demonstrators yesterday in Tahrir Square, the focus of protests since Jan. 25.

U.S. President Barack Obama urged Mubarak to start the handover process quickly, saying at the White House on Feb. 1 that an orderly and peaceful transition in the government “must begin now.”

Egypt received about $1.5 billion in U.S. assistance last year and has been one of the biggest recipients of U.S. aid since 1979, after Egypt signed a U.S.-brokered peace treaty with Israel.

“Such periods of volatility can take time to pass,” Templeton’s Hasenstab said. “But we are confident that by maintaining exposures that we believe are attractive relative to their fundamentals, we can be well positioned to potentially benefit when the market normalises.”

Source: http://www.businessweek.com

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Chicago Fed Economists Create Financial Stability Gauge

Economists writing for the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago say they’ve come up with a new way to measure the stability of the financial system, creating a tool that could help the central bank and other officials conduct policy better.

In a research note published by the bank, economists Scott Brave and R. Andrew Butters describe two related indexes that look across a broad array of financial activity to determine the health of the banking sector. They reckon what they’ve produced will allow regulators and Federal Reserve officials to make better economic policy and help avoid being surprised by events.

“Major events in U.S. financial history are well captured by the history of our indexes, as is the interdependence of financial and economic conditions,” Brave and Butters wrote. What’s more, “it is possible to use our indexes to improve upon forecasts of measures of economic activity over short and medium forecast horizons.”

The financial sector’s starring role in driving the worst recession in generations has brought about a sea change in how the Federal Reserve looks at the actions of bankers and other money managers. The Fed is now no longer interested in just the performance of economy when it sets policy. Financial stability is something that factors into the decision making process, as Fed officials and others in the government try to ensure that they will never again be in the position they were during the darkest days of the recent financial crisis.

Fed officials and other regulators have been widely criticized for failing to understand all the changes that happened in the financial system ahead of the crash. As part of last year’s financial regulation reform legislation, policy makers picked up responsibility for promoting stability. Even so, many wondered how, having missed the trouble before, officials would get themselves more plugged in and not fall behind again.

Brave and Butters hope their work will go some way toward helping policymakers get a better handle on developments in finance.

As they describe it in the paper, their “novel” method looks at the relationship between many financial variables and then weights them and relates them to the economy. They rely on something called “principle component analysis,” the chief virtue of which “is its ability to determine the individual importance of a large number of indicators so that the weight each receives is consistent with its historical importance to fluctuations in the broader financial system.”

The economists’ financial conditions index is made up of money market, debt and equity and banking system measures, and includes everything from interest rate spreads to surveys of market participants.

“Known periods of financial crisis correspond closely with peak periods of tightness in each index, and the turning points of each index coincide with well-known events in U.S. financial history,” the paper said.

“Furthermore, our indexes contain information on future economic activity beyond that found in nonfinancial measures of economic activity,” the analysts wrote. “Our indexes are also unique in that they derive from an estimation method that captures both the systemic importance of traditional and new financial markets and the dynamic evolution of overall financial conditions,” they added.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com