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THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL TURMOIL

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Risks in the market for asset-backed commercial paper and the credit crunch ... will be sold, triggering further price declines in a debt deflation spiral. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL TURMOIL


1
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL TURMOIL
AND ITS IMPACT ON EAST ASIA
IIR
Presenter Pham Tuong Van
2
The causes of the current financial turmoil
  • Problems in the U.S subprime mortgage market
  • Risks in the market for asset-backed commercial
    paper and the credit crunch
  • Increasing investors caution and re-assessment
    of the risks associated with assets, creating a
    chasing down spiral
  • In some countries, it coincided with the end of
    an overlending/ borrowing period, and
    over-optimism about the economic prospect.
  • Developments in U.S subprime were more a trigger
    than a fundamental cause of the financial turmoil

3
The scope of the current financial turmoil
  • The credit crunch situation in banking sector.
    Significant deterioration in market functioning
  • Raising costs of credit access for enterprises,
    negatively affecting investment
  • Slump in stock markets world wide, stocks lost
    20 -40 of their peak values
  • Big financial institutions experienced serious
    losses or bankrupcity
  • Exchange rate volatality and weakening trade
    performance
  • Dramatical volatality of oil and gold prices
  • High inflation in many countries

4
SE Index world wide
5
Slump in stock markets
Dow Jones Index
FTSE Index
Hangseng Index
Nikkei 225 Index
6
Consequences
  • Wanning investor confidence
  • A repricing of risky assets and deleveraging by
    investors. Risk asset prices are under downward
    pressure across the developed and emerging world
  • Wider payment difficulties with mortgages and
    corporate bankruptcies.
  • More aggressive rationing of credit on the part
    of banks, with adverse feedback effects into the
    real economy. Banks under pressure to improve
    their balance sheets force investors to liquidate
    even their good investments to meet margin
    requirements. As this process expands, more
    assets will be sold, triggering further price
    declines in a debt deflation spiral.
  • Worst senario systemic financial crisis,
    including bank failures, declining asset prices
    and widespread insolvency problems

7
Forecasting the good, the bad and the ugly
  • According to The Economist Intelligence Unit
  • Scenario 1 (60 probability) the turmoil will be
    contained by timely monetary policy action, with
    only a modest effect on the global economy.
  • Scenario 2 (30 probability) the US falling into
    recession, with substantial fallout in the rest
    of the world.
  • Scenario 3 (10 probability) the US could enter
    recession, corrective action fails, and severe
    economic repercussions cascade from the US into
    the world economy with devastating effect.

8
Forecasting the good, the bad and the ugly
9
Implications for East Asia
  • On financial and investment aspects
  • Deteriorating global financial conditions rising
    uncertainty and risk aversion. Serious downward
    pressure in all regional stock markets.
  • Wanning external as well as regional investors
    confidence
  • Volatile currency swings, affecting East Asian
    trade performance
  • US companies would cut back on investment abroad
    as profit falls and financial conditions tighten.
    Also, the portfolio inflows by foreign
    institutional investors could reverse rapidly in
    the event of a flight to safety.
  • Companies in the regions still rely heavily on
    banks and financial markets for funding, both of
    which will be hit by tightening credit. Also,
    profit falls would reduce opportunities for local
    businesses to self-fund investments.

10
Implications for East Asia
  • Should it be another Asian 1997 crisis or like
    the Japanese bubble burst in 90-91 and its lost
    decade?
  • East Asia now is far better placed to withstand
    financial shock than it was in 1997.

11
East Asian balance of payments 1997 - 2007
Source World Bank data
12
East Asia Non Performing Loan ratios 2002-2007
13
Implications for East Asia
The NPL ratios of East Asian economies have
declined dramatically during the last 5 years
Chinas NPL ratio was just 7.5 at end-2006,
compared with almost 30 in 2001.
China is the largest oversea holder of US
mortgage-backed securities around USD 260
billion, mostly through the central banks
international reserve holdings. Yet, the majority
of China's US mortgage-backed securities were
underwritten by US government agencies (as Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac), which made them less risky
and allowed them to keep their value.
Unlike before the 1997-98 crisis, many regional
economies now have large foreign reserves,
stronger current-account positions and more
flexible exchange-rate regimes (although in some
cases still heavily managed). Extensive
regulatory reforms and consolidation have
improved the health of the banking sector in a
number of countries. Commercial banks net
foreign asset positions are also generally much
healthier
14
Implications for East Asia
Countries in the region have so far remained
sound macro economic-indicators, thus, direct
impacts of the US financial turbulence on
regional banking system and balance sheets have
been limited up to now.
Yet, a sharp US slowdown could indirectly expose
financial-sector weaknesses that have been hidden
until now as a result of strong economic growth
and buoyant asset prices in the region.
15
Implications for East Asia
On trade aspect
  • Weakening demand from the US would hurt East
    Asian trade-dependent economies.
  • Most Asian countries still send a substantial
    share (typically 13-20) of their exports to the
    US. Just as importantly, many of the exports that
    Asia sends to China are ultimately destined for
    the US as well, and therefore again dependent on
    US demand.

16
East Asian highly trade-dependent economies
Exports as percentage of GDP
17
Intra trade may help East Asia to decouple from
US economic slowdown?
  • The more integrated, the more structurally
    vunerable the region is through the trade
    channel. Intra-Asian trade has surged in recent
    years (accounting for 51 of the total regional
    trade volume), but this largely reflects the
    increasing integration of supply chains across
    Asia.
  • East Asian countries tend more to produce inputs
    and intermediate goods and raw materials that are
    exported to China in turn China, given its lower
    labor cost, processes these inputs and assembles
    them into final goods that are exported to the
    US.
  • According to the ADB, 70 of trade within Asia
    (excluding Japan) consists of intermediate goods
    used in manufacturing processes, and a large
    share of goods still ultimately end up in rich,
    developed countries.
  • East Asia, therefore, would face the prospect not
    only of weaker demand from the US, but also of
    weaker demand from China.

18
Implications for Japan
  • Growth in Japan over the last five years averaged
    1.7, of which more than one-third came directly
    from exports. Consequently, a downturn in export
    demand from a languishing US economy will
    undermine the Japanese expansion.
  • Japan has limited room for a policy response,
    since short term interest rates are already at
    0.5 and the country boasts the worst fiscal
    position of the developed world.
  • Also, Japans prospects will be undermined by a
    sharp appreciation of the yen, as dollar falls
    further.

19
Implications for China
  • The implications for China specifically is
    important to the rest of the regional outlook,
    given the huge contribution the country makes to
    regional (and global) growth and the strong
    linkages with the US.
  • The more integrated into the global economy, the
    more vunerable the country is to external shocks.
    After its entry to the WTO in 2001, China is now
    more entrenched in global supply chains, thus,
    more vunerable to turmoil in other markets.
  • China has its own problem before the turmoil
    break out inflation, overpricing stocks,
    (signals of an overheating economy)
  • China holds about 260bn in US mortgage-backed
    securities, largely as part of its reserves and
    stakes in foreign commercial banks.
  • Exports of goods and services accounted for
    around 40 of Chinese GDP, double the share a
    decade earlier. Weakening demand from the U.S
    would negatively impact on Chinas growth.

20
Implications for China
  • Yet, Chinas economy may be least affected among
    the region for reasons belows
  • the majority of China's US mortgage-backed
    securities were underwritten by US government
    agencies, which made them less risky and allowed
    them to keep their value.
  • Chinas NPL ratio was just 7.5 at end-2006,
    compared with almost 30 in 2001.
  • China has a largely closed financial system
    despite moves under way to ease restrictions on
    outward investment, which help them decoupled
    from the financial contagion
  • Historic data shows the correlation between US
    recessions and Chinese economic growth is very
    little
  • WB forecast China's economy will grow by 10.8
    this year, down from 11.3 in 2007.

21
Implications for Vietnam
  • The more integrated into the world economy, the
    more Vietnams economy affected by the up and
    down in the world economy. Yet, the economy has
    its own issues before the global turmoil break
    out.
  • High inflation (2007 12, first quarter of 2008
    15) as the results of various factors
    (over-expanding money supply in the previous
    years, untimely and insufficient monetary policy,
    oil price hike, large capital inflow with weak
    risk management policy)
  • Bubble bursting in stock market and adjustment in
    real estate market
  • Drying up of liquidity as the consequence of
    tightening monetary policy and rising uncertainty
    (interbank interest rates reached record heigh in
    Feb 2008)
  • Increasing trade deficit (gt USD 12 billion)

22
Vietnam Inflation rate
23
Vietnam signs of financial vulnerabilities?
24
Easing risk factors
  • Vietnams economic fundamentals remained sound.
  • Big SOE play important roles as the driver of the
    economy
  • SME competitiveness and performance were enhanced
    significantly
  • Vietnam remain the recipient of large inflow of
    FDI and remittances in the near future
  • Capital account has not been fully liberalized
  • Appropriate macro-policies are being applied,
    promising a favorable outcome.

25
Policy recommendation?
  • Reducing the dependence of East Asian currencies
    on US dollar (in the context of dollar
    volatality) CMI Multilateralization, Asian
    Currency Cooperation
  • Enhancing intra- trade flows in East Asia,
    reducing the impact of the slowdown in US demand
    on EA exports
  • Finding new channels to help enterprises to cope
    with the current drying-up of liquidity
  • Improving financing supervision capability (legal
    framework, organizational arrangement skills and
    coordination) as well as risk pricing capacity
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