Title: UNDERSTANDING
1UNDERSTANDING THE FINANCIAL PRESS Participants
BILAL ILAHI. PRIMA CORPORATE TRAINERS .
For Banks ICAP
2 BILAL ILAHI Educational Qualification 1977
Masters in Business Administration
.(U.S.A). 1973 B Com. Punjab University (Hailey
College). Work Experience 2006-Present CEO.
PRIMA CORPORATE TRAINERS. 1988-2006
Self-Employed. CEO, METROCON (Construction
Firm). 1991-2004 Self-Employed. CEO, Granada
Textile Mills (19, 000 spindles ). 1980-1988
Self-Employed. Owned and managed motels/hotels
in U.S.A. 1978-1980 Officer, BCCI.
3 Corporate Training Experience 2006-Present
Conducted Seminars and Workshops for Institute
of Chartered Accountants of Pakistan, MCB, Bank
of Punjab, UBL, Bank Alfalah, ABL and HBL.
Teaching Experience 2002- Present Taught MBA,
EMBA , BBA , classes at Beaconhouse Business
School / Curtin University Lahore and Imperial
College Lahore.
4MACRO-ECONOMIC POLICY FISCAL POLICY
MONETARY POLICY.
5- MACRO - ECONOMIC POLICY CONSISTS of MONETARY
POLICY and FISCAL POLICY. - The objective of MACRO - ECONOMIC policy is to
have sustainable GDP GROWTH while containing
INFLATION and achieving an acceptable rate of
UNEMPLOYMENT. - The fact that GDP rises or falls shows that
BUSINESS CYCLES are unavoidable and
MACRO-ECONOMIC policy can never really conquer
them.
6GDP GROWTH. Country's annual output and of good
and services. Same as economic growth. UNEMPLOYMEN
T. The number of people of working age without a
job as a percentage of the workforce. INFLATION.
Rising prices across the board. Monetarists (
Milton Friedman) believed it is a monetary
phenomena. To stabilize prices the rate of growth
of money supply needs to be carefully controlled.
7- GDP UNEMPLOYMENT purchasing power INFLATION.
- PHILLIPS CURVE. There is a trade off between
INFLATION and UNEMPLOYMENT. - The lower the UNEMPLOYMENT RATE the higher is
the INFLATION RATE. Governments have to choose
between the two evils. - Too much GDP growth will cause an increased rate
of inflation called overheating in the economy.
(e.g. concern in China today) which can lead to a
recession and a hard landing.
8- FISCAL POLICY
- One of 2 instruments of Macroeconomic policy.
- FISCAL POLICY comprises TAXATION and PUBLIC
SPENDING. - It is used to influence the level of DEMAND in
the economy with the twin goals of getting
UNEMPLOYMENT as low as possible without excessive
INFLATION. - Keynes preferred to manage DEMAND through fiscal
policy.( Monetarists through money supply ie
monetary policy)
9- FISCAL POLICY is targeted on long - term goals.
MONETARY POLICY is used for short-term
adjustments. - TAXATION may be a bad thing. Necessary to pay
for public and social services. Also defense. - HORIZONTAL EQUITY and VERTICAL EQUITY . To
ensure fair taxation. Only then will people pay.
10- LAFFER CURVE. Laffer argued that higher tax rate
would increase revenue but at some point further
increase in tax rates would cause revenue to
fall. Basis of Supply side economics in USA UK
in the 80s. Governments could raise more revenue
by cutting tax rates.
11 TAXES IN PAKISTAN Income
Tax - Direct Tax.
FBR Customs Duty - Indirect
Tax. FBR G.S.T. -
Indirect Tax. FBR Federal Excise Date
- Indirect Tax. FBR Property Tax
- Direct Tax. Provincial
Motor vehicle Tax - Direct Tax.
( // ) Stamp Duty -
Direct Tax. ( // )
12- PUBLIC SPENDING includes spending by federal,
provincial, local governments and some government
backed institutions (e.g.. WAPDA) - Government should borrow only to invest and not
to finance current PUBLIC SPENDING. (The golden
rule)
13BUDGET. An annual procedure to decide how much
PUBLIC SPENDING there should be in the year
ahead. And what mix of TAXATION and government
borrowing should finance it ? These are the
questions which the budget seeks to answer.
14- Pakistans Fiscal Policy 07-08.
- Pakistan's Budget, 07-08
Total Resources Rs.1.87
tr. ( 30 bn.)
CBR Receipts Rs.1.02 tr.
Defense
Rs. 275 bn.
Development
Rs.520 bn. PSDP infrastructure HRD.
Budget deficit 4 of GDP. Rs.398 bn.
Subsidies
Rs.113 bn. For WAPDA , KESC, textiles,
Utilities store.
Transfer- Provinces 46
Rs.491 bn.Fed div pool, grants. (does not
include project aid and straight transfer to prov)
15- CBRS Collection. In fiscal yr. 07-08 budgeted
at Rs.1.02 tr. Tax collection showing rapid
growth BUT as a of GDP not improving !!
Tax to GDP ratio is 9.25 . In 1998-99 it
was 11. - Capital Gains of Rs 2 tr , in 2 yrs , in the
Stock Mkt . Transactions in floated shares not
taxed. CVT marginal. - Agriculture Income ? ? ?
16- Fruits of improved economy would not go to the
common man if population growth of over 1.5
Dr. Salman Shah , Advisor Finance. - MDG Millennium Development Goals of UN. Cut
global poverty in half by 2015. Focus on 8 points
primary education, gender equality, child
mortality, environment protection, fight AIDS
etc. Pakistan has signed on this document. - Social safety nets ie Zakat , Bait-ul-mal, EOBI,
wheat subsidies etc add to 0.5 of GDP. - Illiteracy poverty terrorists.
17- MONETARY POLICY
- One of the two tools of MACRO-ECONOMIC POLICY and
the side-kick of FISCAL POLICY. - Objective of both FISCAL MONETARY POLICY is to
have an economy with GDP growth, relatively full
employment and stable prices. BUT in the absence
of consistent FISCAL POLICY in many countries eg.
USA the central bank ( THE FED ) has taken over
the management of the business cycle.
18- The function of a Central Bank is to control
INFLATION and UNEPLOYMENT while managing
sustainable GDP GROWTH. -
-
19- ECONOMIC SPEED LIMIT or POTENTIAL RATE OF GROWTH
or TREND RATE OF GROWTH is the same. The pace at
which the economy can grow without fuelling
inflation ie. without getting overheated. - For inflation to fall the economy has to grow
below its TREND RATE OF (GDP) GROWTH. - If TREND RATE is dropping the task of central
bank becomes harder. - Higher TREND RATE if there is productivity
and/or labor supply. Eg. China adds 10 million
workers a year.
20FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVES IN ASIA. (July 2007)
- China 1,500. bn.
- Japan 913. bn.
- Taiwan 266. bn.
- South Korea 250. bn.
- India 213. bn.
- Singapore 144. bn.
- Hongkong 136. bn.
- Pakistan 16. bn.
-
21- Monetary Policy is the process by which the
Central Bank manages the money supply to achieve
specific goals e.g. Controlling inflation
,maintaining an exchange rate achieving full
employment GDP growth . - Monetary Policy can involve
1)Changing interest rates through OMO.
2)Setting reserve requirements for banks.
3)Trading in foreign exchange.
- 4)Setting discount rate.
22- OMO tool of implementing monetary policy by
which a Central Bank controls the national money
supply by buying and selling govt. securities or
other instruments. - MONETARY TARGETS such as INTEREST RATES or
EXCHANGE RATES are used to guide this
implementation. - EXPANSIONARY MONETARY POLICY increases the total
supply of money in the economy by lowering
interest rates to fight unemployment.
23-
- INFLATION is controlled by managing liquidity
through OMO (Open Market Operations). - GDP Unemployment Inflation
Interest Rates Inflation
24- Central Banks
- U.S.A - THE FEDERAL RESERVE (THE FED)
- U.K. - THE BANK OF ENGLAND (B.O.E)
- E.U. - THE EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK .
.
(ECB) - JAPAN- THE BANK OF JAPAN (BOJ)
- INDIA - THE RESERVE BANK OF INDIA (R.B.I)
- PAKISTAN- THE STATE BANK OF PAKISTAN . .
(SBP)
25- FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVES.
- INFLOWS EXPORT PROCEEDS
. REMITTANCES
(INWARDS) .
FDI
.
FPI
.
FOREIGN AID
. FOREIGN BANK
LOANS - OUTFLOWS IMPORTS
.
REMITTANCES (OUTWARDS) .
FDI
.
FPI
.
PAYMENTS ( Dividends , loans,) -
26- Reserve Currencies
- U.S
- EURO
- POUND STERLING
- YEN
- SWISS FRANC
27 - Typically a country needs enough foreign exchange
reserves to cover 3 months imports or settle its
short-term foreign debt. - Proposals to spend money at home misunderstand
the nature FOREX RESERVES. This would put
downward pressure on the Rupee once is
converted to Rupee for domestic spending. This
would force the SBP to buy in the market thus
returning the reserves to original position !!
28----MARKETS---
29CURRENCIES Pak Rupee U S Euro Yuan (China)
Indian Rupee ( Inr )
30Increased demand for a currency is due to
transaction demand for money.
OR speculative demand for money.
31- Transaction demand for money is highly
correlated to the country's level business
activity ,GDP and employment level - Speculative demand. An investor may choose to
buy a currency if the return is high enough i.e
.INTEREST RATE is high enough. - Difficult for Central Bank to control.
32- FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET. One of the largest in
the world---- 2 trillion of currency changes
hands every day. - SPOT EXCHANGE RATE - Current Exchange Rate.
- FORWARD EXCHANGE RATE - Quoted and traded
today but for delivery and payment on a specific
future date. -
-
33- U.S.
- The IMF counts 13 countries using as their
currency eg. Ecuador. - 350 bn. are held outside of USA. Half of all
notes in circulation. -
34- THE FED, The Federal Reserve, is the central
bank of the USA. - FOMC. The Federal Open Market Committee of the
FED sets INTEREST RATES (The discount rate and
The Federal Funds rate ). - The FED carries out O.M.O. (open market
operations) to control liquidity and inflation
and set Interest Rates. - Interest Rates affect the U.S. E.g. U.S. GDP
Unemployment Inflation Interest Rates
U.S..
-
35- 17.11.07
- Cut in interest rate of 75 basis points since
Sept.
- The FED is trying to improve credit flows in
view of the slump in US housing market.
Sub-prime mortgage problem. - Credit squeeze in inter-bank market because banks
refuse to lend to each other not knowing which
bank exposed to Sub-prime mortgages.(through
mortgage backed securities CDOs) - Further slowing the housing market GDP growth (
08 estimate down 2 from2.75.) Vicious cycle.
36- EURO
- Euro is the currency of the EURO ZONE (13
countries) and not the entire E.U.(28 Countries). - E.C.B. is the central Bank of the E.U.
- ECBs medium term inflation target is 2
(Growth and stability pact of EU for the
Eurozone). - Euro gained 12 against US in 2007.
- Manufacturers considering moving production to
-based zones. Eg.Airbus Industries.
37- . Euro is , presently, appreciating because the
EUROZONE economy is performing well. GDP growth
brings with it inflation or risk of inflation
therefore higher interest rates from ECB . This
makes the Euro more attractive than the .
Demand for Euro goes up hence its appreciation ! - Recent record strength of the Euro ( _at_ 1.48
means ECB not expected to raise interest rate. - Higher interest rates will curb both inflation
and economic growth (put Eurozone exporters at a
disadvantage). But also cause the Euro to rise
further !!
38- YUAN (China)
- 2.6 tr. Chinese economy. Only 5 of global GDP.
But 1/3 of total increase in global GDP in 2006. - Leaders now want to slow the economy. From 11.1
in 2006 to 8 in 2007. From exports and
fixed investment to consumer led economy.
39- CHINESE YUAN UNDERVALUED.
- Record-breaking trade surpluses with the U.S.
which should have caused the Yuan to appreciate. - From 1994 to 2005 --------
Fixed peg _at_ 8.28 Yuan / allowing
the currency to fluctuate only in a narrow band.
40- How was the FIXED PEG of 8.28Y/ employed
successfully.?? - 1. EXPORTS GDP YUAN EXPORTS GDP
- 2. P.B.O.C (Chinas Central Bank) buys U.S
,sells Yuan. - 3. YUAN (8.28Y/) EXPORTS
- 4. Above action releases too much liquidity
(YUAN) in the economy. - 5. MONEY SUPPLY INFLATION
- 6. P.B.O.C. does O.M.O to suck in excess
liquidity . - It sells Government Securities and buys Yuan.
41INTEREST RATES MONEY SUPPLY INFLATION 8. High
Interest rates cause businesses to slow down. 9.
Exports GDP 10. Subsidies on interest rates by
the government for export industries. 11.
INTEREST RATES EXPORTS GDP .
--------- and the cycle continues ! !
!
42- INDIAN RUPEE ( Inr. )
- Re.40.20 per US .
- External inflows on the rise FDI, FPI, overseas
commercial bank loans etc. Pushed up the
Re. and complicated monetary policy management by
the RBI. - Asian currency that has grown the most against
in 2007.Indian exporters unhappy. -
43- RBIs monetary policy 07-08
a.) Raised banks
reserve requirements from 6.5 to 7.
b.) Held
interest rates steady so as not to attract
further funds into the rupee. Good for exporters.
c.) Tightened rules on foreign commercial
bank borrowing. Firms borrowing 20 m. will have
to use the proceeds abroad. d.) RBI
intervenes by buying and injecting Rupees.
This is inflationary.
44- PAK RS.
- Pakistan's FOREX RESERVES affect the value of
the Pak Rupee. - Our RESERVES are approx 16 bn.
- Political, economic uncertainty can also affect
the value of a currency. - Interest Rates affect currency value.
45- FPI also called hot money. FDI preferred over
FPI. - FDI is investment in fixed assets. Long-term.
-
46- SBPs Monetary Policy for 07-08.
- Assuming real GDP growth target of 7.2
inflation target of 6.5 broad money supply
growth should be 13.7 for 07-08. - Monetary growth target for 07-08 is 13.7 . For
the last 6years SBP has not met its target. - Effective 1.8.07 SBP raised its key discount rate
to 10 from 9.5.
47Increased monetary tightening in 06-07 helped in
downward movement in inflation. Core inflation
ie. Non-food Non-energy measure of inflation
fell to 5.5 in 07. BUT food inflation rose to
17 in 07-08 because of supply issues and
headline inflation at 8 instead the targeted
6.5. Tight monetary stance helped reduce import
demand. However lower supply of credit to
important sectors of the economy would be
counter-productive.
481st half of 07-08 actual monetary expansion
19.2. because of govts bank borrowing . Feb
1st 2008 ,SBP raised the Discount Rate to 10.5
Cash Reserve Ratio to 8. SBP Governor
advises government
1.Hold auction of long term PIBs.
2.Generate more inflows in National
Savings.
3. Issuance of Sharia
compliant instruments. The risk to inflation
outweighs risk to growth.
49Currencies are increasingly demonstrating a
strong correlation with other markets
particularly equities. E.g.. Yen-carry trade in
March 2007. Shanghai dropped 9 in Feb.2007.
50COMMODITIES. CRUDE OIL COTTON GOLD COPPER WHEAT
PALM OIL
51COMMODITY PRICING Contango. When commodity
prices are lower in the spot market and higher
in the futures market. Normally interest costs
means that futures prices are
higher. Backwardation. When commodity prices are
higher in the spot market and lower in the
futures market. Maybe because there is
currently a supply bottleneck.
52CRUDE OIL
53- The share of CRUDE OIL in Pakistans total
imports is 23 .We import 82 of our needs. 11
bn. expected in 07-08. - Pakistans CRUDE OIL import is the prime cause
of our TRADE DEFICIT. - Increase in the price of oil (64 in 07)
contributes to global inflation. Eg. Increased
transportation cost and the higher prices of
4,000 bye-products like plastics , polyester ,PET
bottles, etc.
54Some Related Definitions and Terms
- Fossil fuel Crude oil Natural Gas Coal
- Hydro carbons Release their energy when burned
e.g. Crude Oil Natural Gas . - Bio-fuels Ethanol Bio-diesel
- Alternative fuels Ethanol Bio-diesel
tar sands - Renewable Energy Hydro-electric Solar Wind
Hydrogen fuel-cell.
55Crude oil
- The most important component of energy equation
is crude oil. It is a dark sticky liquid found
trapped below the earth crust. Scientifically
classified as hydro carbon - Uses
- Refined into gasoline or petrol
- Refining by-products are LPG, kerosene etc.
- Non-fuel by-products are lubricants, asphalts etc
- End products are 4000 plus e.g. plastics,
synthetic fibers, chemicals, fertilizers . etc.
56Types of Oil
- There are 161 different internationally traded
crude oils. They have different characteristics
quality and market penetration.
57Cont
- West Texas Intermediate (USA).
- API gravity 39.6 (light crude)
- Sulphur contents 0.24 (sweet)
- A very high quality oil. Excellent for refining,
a larger portion of gasoline - Brent (UK-North Sea)
- API gravity 38.3 degrees (light crude)
- Sulphur contents 0.37 (sweet)
- Less sweet than WTI ideal for making gasoline and
middle distillates.
58Measurement of Oil
59 RESERVES PRODUCTION CONSUMPTION
60Reserves
- Total Endowment 2 trillion barrels
approx. - Drilled to date 850 billion barrels
- Reserves (proven) 950 billion barrels
-
- Located and found1,800 billion barrels
61Consumption
- In 2005 the world consumed 84 million barrels per
day. ( bpd) - IEA energy policy advisor to G-8.
- IEA estimates for 2007 is 86 million bpd.
- USA consumes 25 of worlds production,60 of
which is imported. - The world consumes 2 barrels of crude oil for
every barrel discovered. - 40 of worlds supply comes from OPEC. Daily
ceiling of 27 mn. bpd.
62Price
- Internationally the price of oil is set in US
dollars per barrel, by the forces of demand and
supply. - Oil is traded on international markets at a price
set by the marginal barrel. - In Jan 2007 the price of both New York light
sweet and Brent were approximately 54 per
barrel. - The most important oil market is NYMEX (New York
Mercantile Exchange).
63- DEMAND FACTORS
- U.S. Demand.
- a.) Summer Driving Season
- b.) N.E. Winter Season.
- China.
- Expected to overtake Japan as the 2nd
largest crude oil importer. - 3. India.
64Supply Factors
- Iran
- Iraq
- Nigeria
- Venezuela
- Choke points
- Hurricane season
- Tanker capacity
- Refinery capacity
- Strategic reserves of USA. Also Japan and
India
65Choke Points
- Given the fact that oil consumption occurs mainly
in the industrialized west while oil production
takes place largely in the middle east, former
soviet union a significant volume of oil is
traded internationally - By pipe line 40 - transcontinental
- By tankers 60 - intercontinental
- (3500 tankers)
66Strait of Hormuz
- It has two 1-mile-wide channels for marine
traffic separated by a 2-mile-wide buffer zone. - It is the only sea passage to the open ocean for
large areas of the petroleum exporting Persian
Gulf States. - Some 40 percent of the world's oil supply passes
through the strait. - It is on this vital waterway then that the US
receives 12 of its oil and Western Europe and
Japan get 25 to 66 of their oil respectively. - In addition 15 of the world's commerce is routed
through Hormuz.
67(No Transcript)
68Straits of Malacca
- The Strait of Malacca is a narrow, 805 km (500
mile) stretch of water between Peninsular
Malaysia and the Indonesian island of Sumatra. - The Strait carries 50,000 vessels per year
- One-fourth of the world's sea trade ie 11
million barrels a day - At Phillips Channel near Singapore, the Strait
narrows to 1.5 nautical miles (2.8 km). - 80 of japan oil supplies passes from hare.
69(No Transcript)
70Supply Factors
- Iran
- Iraq
- Nigeria
- Venezuela
- Choke points
- Hurricane season
- Tanker capacity
- Refinery capacity
- Strategic reserves of USA. Also Japan and
India
71Important Hurricanes
- U.S. Hurricane Season from 30th June
to 30th November. - Katrina in August 2005.
- Katrinas impact on U.S. gasoline markets,
initially taking out 25 of U.S. crude oil
production 15 of U.S. refinery capacity.
72Important Hurricanes
73Supply Factors
- Iran
- Iraq
- Nigeria
- Venezuela
- Choke points
- Hurricane season
- Tanker capacity
- Refinery capacity
- Strategic reserves of USA. Also Japan and
India
74In 2007 oil prices not determined so much by
supply- demand mismatch as by speculation.
75COTTON
- 5 largest PRODUCERS
China , USA , India , Pakistan
, Uzbekistan. - 5 largest EXPORTERS
USA ,Fr Africa ,Uzbekistan ,Australia, India.
- Total international trade is 12 bn.
- Africas share doubled since 1980.
- Cotton is a thirsty crop .Water resources?
Cotton relies on fertilizers insecticides. - Worldwide mostly produced by Genetic Eng.
76- Rate 1 maund (37/ 32 Kg) RS. 3,200.
(Pakistan -KCE).
1 bale
of Cotton 4.05 maunds.
1 Lot
100 bales.
- 1 1b 0.65. (U.S.A New York Cotton
Exch.) -
-
77Demand Factors
1.)Global consumption 98
million bales. Subject to global demand of
textiles. Eg. economy and purchasing power in the
EU, USA etc. 2.)Pakistans
demand 16 million bales based on 10 million
spindles. Supply Factors
1.) USA ,
Pakistan , India, China etc crop. Acreage and
Yield. Pakistans production 11.5 million bales.
Estimate of 07-08 import 3 mil. bales.
2.) Supply of man-made fibers eg polyester,
nylon, acrylic, etc. (substitutes)
78- Normal cotton seed yeild 15-20mds per acre
BT cotton seed yeild 60-100 mds
// - Govt. of Pakistan has not approved.
- GOP will have to import the seeds every year from
MONSANTO because they lose their pest resistance
qualities after one crop and spread virus which
is difficult to control. - Mealybug damage in 07-08 crop caused by
uncertified BT cotton seeds. - Experiment with blending to make it more
economical.
79- PALM OIL
- Rate 888 per ton. Or Ringitt 2,959 per ton.
Up 53 in 2007. - Demand Factors
- Global Demand for energy and food. Used for
edible oil, sweetmeats , bio-diesel etc. - Supply Factors
- 1.) Malaysia is a major producer.
Requires lots of land.
. 2.) Soya oil is a close substitute (
Brazil). . 3.)
Demand for Biomass for Bio-diesel.
80- COPPER
- Rate 7,970 per ton.
- Market London Metal Exchange (LME)
- LME prices and trends provide the benchmark
direction for metals future prices the world
over. - Demand Factors-
- 1.) China. 2.) India.
- Supply Factors-
A supply shortage
triggered the rally. No new investments in mining
since last commodity boom. - There is a demand supply mismatch
-
81WHEAT
- Pakistan produced 22.5 million tons of wheat in
06-07. - Demand factors Not volatile . 21 mn. tons /
yr. - Supply factors a) Volatility created by
weather . . b)
Export and smuggling.
82- 24.9.07
- In 6 months wheat up Rs.24/kg. from Rs.12.
- Export price Rs.13,000/ton in Mar-Apr. 07.
TCP to float tender to cover lean
period from Dec. 07 to Feb. 08.
Landing cost
Rs.27,000/ton. Import bill 400 mn. - SBP advice to GOP in Dec 06. Build up
strategic reserves(7 m. tons before exporting.)
83- GOLD
- Rate 1 0z. 914( Jan08. International
market.). Highest 850/oz on 21.1.80. - 10 grams Rs 17,900. ( //
Pakistan. 24-ct) - Market London Bullion Market.
- Demand Factors-
- 1. Safe havenUS. or Gold.
International political economic situation.
Inverse relationship. - 2. Lower interest rates, lower ,
higher gold. - 3. Hedge against oil-led inflation.
- 4. Indian wedding season.
- 5. Alternative form of money.
- Supply Factors-
- Stable in short run.
84- THE RELATIONSHIP OF GOLD AND U.S.
- Central Banks, world wide, in 2000 owned ¼ of all
the gold ever mined in their RESERVES. Now they
started selling because it does not a.) have
liquidity b.) earn interest c.) keep pace with
inflation. - GDP Purchasing Power UNEMPLOYMENT
INFLATION INTEREST RATE US GOLD - GDP Purchasing Power UNEMPLOYMENT
INFLATION INTEREST RATE US GOLD
85CAPITAL MARKETS
DOW JONES (DJIA) USA
NASDAQ
USA SP
USA FTSE
UK CAC
France DAX
Germany
NIKKEI
Japan KSE
Pakistan BSE
India
86- CAPITAL MARKET includes institutions that
channelize supply demand for long term capital
e.g. Stock Exchange, Banks, Insurance cos. - CAPITAL MARKET vs. MONEY MARKET
- STOCK EXCHANGE. A market in which shares are
bought and sold. They facilitate saving and
investment. - Primary markets e.g. IPO,s Secondary markets.
- BOND MARKET. In Pakistan TFCs.
- KSE market cap.70 bn. Bombay 1 tr.
8715
RISK-RETURN TRADE-OFF
RISK PREMIUM
SHARES / COMMON STOCK
RATE OF RETURN.
12
PREFERRED STOCK
TFC / CORPORATE BONDS
9
GOVERNMENT BONDS /SECURITIES
RISK-LESS RATE OF RETURN
RISK TO INVESTORS.
88ANALYSING LISTED COs.
- Companies Products Services. History, future,
competition.
- Management. Track Record.
- Board of Directors. Eg. Syed Babar Ali.
- Auditors. Top 4.
- Stock Price History.
- Financial Analysis.
89EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS All available
information is rapidly taken into account in
share prices. Eg. factored inor priced in
90- KSE 100 index . May 98 - 800
- Jan 04 - 4800
- Mar 05 -10,300
- Apr 07
-12,000 - Market Capitalization.
- Nov 2002. Rs.
525 bn - Sep 2003.
Rs. 1 tr - Feb. 2004
Rs. 1.2 tr - June.2005
Rs. 2 tr.
. Sept 2007
Rs. 4.2 tr.
91- Mutual Funds. Diversification. Low risk.
- Volume Leaders Eg. BOP, LUCKY CEMENT, HUBCO, MCB
- Technical action of the stock versus
Fundamental action. - SECP is the govt. watchdog. Protect investors.
Trust is the cornerstone of the capital
markets. Eg in USA , DJIA fell twice as much at
the time of financial scandals of 2003 than it
did on 9/11. - 1.5 DISCOUNT RATE cut by SBP gave a boost to
KSE 100 index in Nov 2002.
92COMMODITIES MARKETS , CURRENCY MARKETS and
CAPITAL MARKETS and other markets are constantly
reacting within themselves AND with each other
e.g. 1.)Palm oil and Soya oil ,as substitutes. (
within commodities markets )
2.) Crude oil and palm oil
.When crude goes above 70,bio-diesel story
begins. ( within commodities markets)
3.) Yen-carry trade
.Yen , NZ , NZ stock mkt, Shanghai stock mkt.
(currencies markets and capital markets )
93 4.) Crude Oil and US. (commodities markets
currency markets)
5.) US and Gold. Inverse
relationship. Both safe havens. (currency markets
and commodity markets.)
94MONEY MARKET
- MONEY MARKET is a financial market for short-
term financial instruments( 1year) obligations
called paper. Treasury bills, REPO agreements,
Commercial paper Bankers acceptances are bought
and sold by banks dealers. - CAPITAL MARKET is for longer term funds
- INTERBANK MARKET is wholesale money market in
which only banks / financial institutions can
operate.Not a physical market. - .
95- LIBOR. London inter-bank offered rate.
Daily (at 11.00 am) reference rate based on
the interest rates at which banks offer to lend
unsecured funds to other banks in the London
wholesale money market. LIBOR is the basis for
the worlds most liquid and active interest rate
market. - LIBID. London inter-bank bid rate. Lower than the
LIBOR rate. - LIBOR used as reference rate for a.) forward
rates agreements b.) currencies. C.) variable
rate mortgages. - KIBOR. Karachi inter-bank rate.
96INTERNATIONAL TRADE
W.T.O.
97DEFINITIONS
EXPORTS. Sales abroad. IMPORTS. Purchase of
foreign goods and services. INTERNATIONAL
TRADE. Measured by the volume of imports
exports which has grown 17 times between 1950
2000 when output (GDP)increased only 6 times.
98There are a few cases of rapid development in
modern history that have not relied on exports as
an engine of growth. ie. GDP growth.
99(No Transcript)
100 TARIFF. Tax on goods produced abroad. E.g.
Custom duty by CBR. PROTECTIONISM. To protect a
countries economy from foreign competition.
Opposite of free trade . SUBSIDY. Money paid by
government to keep prices below what they would
be in a free market. A form of protectionism. QUOT
A. A limit on the number of goods that can be
imported . Also protectionism
101NON-TARIFF BARRIERS. Eg. Pak cement export to
India. Opposed by WTO. DUMPING. Selling goods in
export market for less then the cost of producing
it. Opposed by WTO. ANTI-DUMPING DUTY. As per
WTO. Imposed by NTC in Pakistan FREE TRADE
AGREEMENT. Eg. between Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
FREE TRADE AREA.
E.g. ASEAN, EU. SAFTA. In initial stages.
102(No Transcript)
103LETS LOOK AT PAKISTANS EXPORTS! An important
component of our GDP the most important
contributor to our FOREX RESERVES. Pakistans
EXPORTS are expected to reach 18
bn. in 07-08. If Pakistan hopes to sustain 7
GDP growth rate we must have 14 growth rate in
exports.
104PAKISTAN EXPORTS- COUNTRY WISE BREAK-UP.
Exports FY2006
Country
- U.S.A
- UAE
- UK
- Hong Kong
- Afghanistan
- Germany
- Italy
- China
- Spain
- France TOTAL
3.69bn 1.3bn 899m 719 831m 682m
521m 412m 379m 365m 9.80
bn.
105- Exports heavily dependant on US EU.-where we
export low-tech manufactures like textiles,
surgical goods sports goods. - India ( next door) is missing ?
- Exports to China negligible .China is a huge
market for citrus fruits (0.5 bn.), rice and
processed herbal medicines. Chinas Imports will
grow.!! - SAFTA in initial stages. Pakistan not part of any
FREE TRADE AREA Eg. ASEAN, G.C.C. - Lack of geographical diversification.
106- PAKISTANS EXPORTS- PRODUCT WISE BREAK-UP.
- 1. Textiles. 62.00
- 2. Argo Products. 10.30
- 3. Leather 7.40
- 4. Chemical Pharma. 4.00
- 5. Sports Goods. 2.70
- 6. Carpets Rugs 2.50
- 7. Surgical Instruments. 1.60
- 8. Engineering goods 1.60
- 9. Other. 7.90
- TOTAL 100.00
107WORLD BANKS CLASSIFICATION OF EXPORTS
WORLD GROWTH
CATEGORY.
PAKISTAN PRODUTS.
RATE
5
N.A
1)RESOURCE BASED 2) AGRICULTRE 3)LOW TECH
MANUFACTURES 4)MEDIUM TECH MANUFACTURES 5)HIGH
TECH MANUFACTURES
COPPER, etc. RAW COTTON, WHEAT,SUGAR,FRUITS. TEXTI
LES,CARPETS, SPORTS LEATHER, SURGICAL AUTOMOBILES,
AUTOPARTS PHARMA, CHEMICALS BIO-TECH, HI-TECH
SOFTWARE ELECTRONICS
12
N.A
77
10
3
20
3
20
108- World Banks advice climb up the ladder from
low-tech manufactures to medium and hi-tech, to
increase its share of world trade. - Auto-parts (medium-tech) Philippines 800 mn.
India 600 mn. Pakistan 10 mn. in 2003. - 67 Pak. Exports are textiles But only 2 of
world textile exports. Competitive Advantage ? - Textiles trade now called Rag trade. 5 global
growth. - Lack of product diversification.
109COUNTRY PAKISTAN INDIA B,DESH THAILAND MALAYSIA S
INGAPORE JAPAN CHINA U.S.A HONGKONG
EXPORT In bn 18 112 11
123 158 283 590 974 1,024
611
110 Diversity of exports in S.E. Asia ( geographic
products ) where export growth is 20 .
THAILAND- cars (med-tech manufactures) and
rice (agricultural) .TO rich countries like Japan
USA and poor countries like Laos.
MALAYSIA- Palm oil and electronic
components. TO USA and India.
PHILIPINES-Computer chips and fruits .TO USA and
China.
111- Government of Pakistans claims!
- GOP claims exports have more than doubled between
1998-99 and 2005-06. - From 7.8 bn to 16.5 bn. GOP also claims that
GDP has doubled. - This means exports as a of GDP were the same
ie.12.9. - After GDP rebased in 1999-2000. This means an
improvement of 0.1 by this govt! - GDP growth coming not from export growth but
domestic consumption (cheap credit).
112- High export growth requires high manufacturing
growth. - Large scale manufacturing sector declined from
10.7 to 8.8 in 06-07.This reduced our
exportable surplus ! - Consumption is going up at a higher rate as
compared to GDP. This also reduces are exportable
surplus. - Savings should be higher for Investment to GDP
ratio to improve. Need higher real interest
rates.
113Why has Pakistan lagged behind ? 1.)Exports was
never a central pillar of our development
strategy. 2.) Domestic markets after 1947 were
heavily protected. Exports were not as
profitable.
114Future prospects of Pakistans exports.
- 2003-2005. 5 bn. investment in textiles in
expansion and modernization .Positive effect
showed in next 3 yrs. In 07 450mn!! - After 30.6.08 under FTA with China, textile will
enjoy special access not available to other
countries eg. India, Bdesh, Vietnam. - ISSUES. Infrastructure, human resource, govt
policies, etc.
115PAKISTANS IMPORTS
- CRUDE OIL (includes oil products)7.7bn.
- PALM OIL.
116PAKISTANS TRADE DEFICIT CURRENT AC.
DEFICIT.
- Trade deficit 10 bn. (Trade imbalance)
- Current account deficit 7 bn.
- 06-07 Exports financed only 57 of our Imports.
In 99-2000 it was 83.
117THANK YOU !!!
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