October 2008

Dr. Doom Roubini Predicts the Demise of Hedge Funds

Dr. Doom is back.

Hedge funds closures will eliminate about 30 percent of the industry, and policy makers may need to shut markets for a week or more to stem panic

From Bloomberg

It appears he is not alone in this prediction, Emmanuel Roman, head of GLG one of the biggest hedge funds, is saying the same thing.

25% TO 30% of the world's 8,000 hedge funds would disappear "in a Darwinian process", either going bust or deciding meager profits are not worth their efforts.

This will go down in the history books as one of the greatest fiascos of banking in 100 years

Roubini is saying 500 hedge funds will fail within months and calculating out Roman, that would be 2000 to 2400 hedge fund failures.

Beyond Peak Credit

I was invited by Manfrommiddletown to stray from my usual Blog home at European Tribune and post on the subject of Credit Default Swaps.

I find it hard to post on CDS without reference to the wider context, and in fact the reference here yesterday to the proposed Gas OPEC gives me the perfect excuse, since I have in recent days had a direct and intimate exposure to that initiative.

I have just returned to Scotland from ten days in Teheran, and was asked - by the head of the Iranian Majlis (Parliament) Energy Commission among others, to propose my ideas as to a possible structure for such a global gas market initiative.

For those who don't know, I was once upon a time a Director of the International Petroleum Exchange (now ICE Futures Europe), and since then have been busy in the area where markets and the Internet converge.

A Global Emerging Market Crisis

At some point over the last few years, many of us have considered moving our retirement savings overseas in order to avoid the financial calamity now sweeping the nation.
Almost without exception that strategy turned into a major loser. Amazingly when you consider the collateral damage on Wall Street, just about every market in the world has done worse than America's this year.

And just when you didn't think it couldn't get any worse, the global financial crisis appears to be mutating from a credit crunch to a more serious global currency crisis.

Iceland's financial system and currency suffered a complete collapse last week. A default on sovereign debt now seems imminent.
The question on the minds of everyone on Wall Street is: who's next?

Why most economic forecasters get it wrong

Rummaging around for information regarding the average lead time for "leading economic indicators", I came across this 2005 article at Economist's View written by Catherine Baum who accurately called the banking crisis last year, explaining why economic forecasters are so often wrong:

The Index of Leading Economic Indicators [ ] isn't a bunch of randomly selected components .... The 10 components of the LEI were all chosen because of a demonstrated ability to predict future economic activity.

The index includes both financial (stock prices, the money supply and the spread between the funds rate and 10-year Treasury note yield) and real-side variables (building permits, capital goods orders and vendor deliveries).
....
The level of the LEI [ ] has an average eight to nine months lead time at peaks and troughs -- shorter at troughs ....

Russia, Iran, and Qatar to form Gas OPEC

Today's UK Guardian has an article about how Russia, Iran, and Qatar are forming a natural gas cartel rivaling what OPEC has done for oil.

The move by the three countries, which control 60% of the world's gas reserves, was met with immediate opposition from the European commission, which fears the group could drive up prices.

Alexey Miller, chairman of Russia's Gazprom, said they were forming a "big gas troika" and warned that the era of cheap hydrocarbons had come to an end.

"We are united by the world's largest gas reserves, common strategic interests and, which is of great importance, high cooperation potential in tripartite projects," he explained. "We have agreed to hold regular - three to four times a year - meetings of the gas G3 to discuss the crucial issues of mutual interest."

Women Techies Getting the Diss & Silicon Valley Uses the Crisis as an Excuse

Just what women techies need to hear when massive layoffs are headed to Silicon valley. Oh yeah, get this, the layoffs aren't really layoffs but more of an excuse to offshore outsource even more jobs, age discriminate and our usual high tech blame game, insulting people working their ass off as dead wood to justify their staff thrashing....(TechCrunch loves to blame the victim and promote global labor arbitrage).

Back to women techies....they are not having families, working their ass off, much more than their male counterparts and yet...all of that effort just isn't paying off:

It's a Dangerous Business, Pat Choate Chronicles America's Globalization Follies

Dangerous Business - Pat Choate

 

Pat Choate's new book, Dangerous Business: The Risks of Globalization for America
is a must read book on the realities of globalization, trade, the lobbyists surrounding D.C., corporatism and China's modern mercantilism. Choate not only describes some of the corruption, insanity and erosion of the United States through bad trade deals, elitism and globalization, he prescribes solutions.

 

In the below talk on his book, Choate details massive intellectual property theft, biased trade deal provisions, emerging markets, deficits with minute detail :

When Band-Aids No Longer Work

Argentina To Nationalize Private Pensions

What this means is anyone's guess. Argentina Proposes Nationalization of Pension Fund:

Argentina's leftist President Cristina Kirchner proposed nationalizing the country's private pension funds in what could be seen as a grab for cash and power amid the global economic crisis.

The proposal, which triggered a steep drop on Argentina's stock market after it was leaked by union officials and reported in the Argentine press, reinforces Argentina's image as a pariah in financial circles and represents a repudiation of a system of private pensions that had been in vogue in developing countries. In 2001, Argentina announced the largest sovereign debt default in history.

Brokers work at the Buenos Aires Stock Exchange, in Buenos Aires. Argentine stocks fell by more than 11% in reaction to news that the government plans to nationalize private pension funds.

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