Showing posts with label wealth management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wealth management. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Look to the East for Liquidity
We continue to see the impact from the collapse of liquidity and erosion of value in the old world economies flowing from the global financial crisis of 2007 and 2008. The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania recently reported ( In Search of Capital ) that during 2009 angel investing in the USA in start ups declined a further 8.3% to $17.6 billion - following an earlier massive drop of 26.2% in 2008. This didn't really overcome the positive news that because deals were slightly smaller in size last year there was actually a 3% increase in the total number of firms that got financing. If the US stops funding entrepreneurial activity there is something seriously wrong.
In June we saw Dave Kansas pose the question Did China Save Your Retirement in his Wall Street Journal article - proposing that unless the Chinese let their yuan appreciate against the US dollar US retirement savings were under severe threat - and expressing some relief that there appeared to be some signs that China appeared to making moves to loosen controls on their currency. More recently we have seen the US legislature approve new laws empowering the administration to take punitive action against the Chinese unless they relax their currency controls. I won't hold my breath. Why should/would they?
To me the best indicators of what is happening is to watch where the private bankers and investment bankers are going with staff, infrastructure and to source capital. And it's not Europe or North America. It's India and China. Look at the example of Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch, the small and venerable old boutique Swiss private bank - which is boosting its Hong Kong team. At the time it made this announcement in September it criticised it's larger private banking rivals also rushing to China stating that the days of product pushing are over and the future of private banking is "where the client is still the focus". "The deleveraging that has occurred following the global financial crisis in 2008 has resulted in a structural change in the market. It is not a cyclical change".
I am excited by this. As an Australian living in our island at the bottom of Asia I am living right in the middle of the largest global power shift since the war.
What opportunity there lies for the brave and the agile!
Labels:
competitive advantage,
us dollar,
value,
wealth management
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
More evidence for a shift to gold
Reflecting more on the theme developed in my last post, I was fascinated today to see the following chart and commentary today from David Moore of the Commonwealth Bank (Commonwealth Bank of Australia ):
Chart of the Day: Index of the gold price and the EUR/USD
Source: CBA
- USD fragility has been an important factor underpinning the gold price since early-November. However, we have also observed something of a ratcheting effect in the gold price. The gold price has continued to trend higher since early-November even as the USD, although being at a low level and having a fragile feel, has essentially fluctuated about a relatively flat underlying trend.
- This pattern suggests that either there is a compounding of investment flows into gold as a result of continued USD fragility or that other factors have contributed to the strength of the gold price.
- Such other factors might include inflation concerns on the part of some investors or anticipation that central bank net gold sales will remain at a lower level in the coming year.
It will be interesting to see if individual investors follow the lead of the Chinese Government and continue to move to non financial assets like gold or commodities to store value.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Where to store value now? Not the US dollar!
I live in Australia and there is a lot of interest at the moment about the Australian dollar and where it is going against the currency of our major trading partners and against the US dollar - which most trade is nominated in as a reference currency. Today one Australian dollar rose to a new high - it will now buy over 93 US cents - and just a year or so ago - it was about 60 cents. The graph below shows how the Australian dollar has risen over the last few days. Will it soon reach parity against the US dollar? This has only happened once before in my memory.
Australia imports a lot of consumer goods and a lot of its inputs for industry and construction - so a high Australian dollar is a good thing for most people on the street. It is also good for Australian travellers abroad - and Australians love to travel.
However - Australia exports a lot of grain and agricultural products and also a lot of minerals (iron ore, alumina and many other metals) and energy resources (coal, natural gas and uranium) - which drives our wealth and standard of living. For exporters a high Australian dollar is not good thing and damages our competitiveness compared to our major trading competitors such as Brazil, Canada and the US.
I came across this blog article today (http://blogs.marketwatch.com/fundmastery/2009/11/16/can-china-dump-the-dollar/tab/print/) which has one of most thought through comments I have read recently on the dollar and the interdependence between the Chinese and US economies. Bottom line is that the US will not hurry to protect the declining dollar because it needs to maintain the interest of external investors in US nominated assets relative to the value of their own currencies.
And China can't rapidly liquidate the $2 trillion plus it holds in US dollar reserves because it doesn't really have any alternatives other than the Euro or the Yen - and neither are really attractive to the Chinese because they don't really have the trading depth or liquidity of the US dollar.
Then this article gets to the punchline - which is that the Chinese have developed a strategy to hold their sovereign wealth reserves also in commodities - hence their buying spree over recent months in base metals, soft commodities and fuels. Some of these have been going into the rebounding industrial production in China, which has been increasing again during 2009:
But a lot of the commodities bought by the Chinese are just sitting stockpiles - they have bought far more than than they will consume in the medium term. So the proposition is that the Chinese are storing value in commodities to reduce their reliance on their holdings of US dollars.
Still getting my mind around that one - it defies a lot of contemporary thinking and academic training - but after the meltdown of the global financial crisis - maybe people (and governments) just don't trust paper based assets any more - and are looking for something that won't disappear down a computer screen!
So getting back to the US dollar. Maybe it will start to be replaced as the currency of exchange - and we will see more trade in other currencies - or dare I say it - in gold! Look at the rise in gold (and silver) prices in recent years (source: www.the-privateer.com ).
We need to challenge a lot of accepted wisdom and really think about what is going on. I have a few Chinese friends who tell me their families hold value in gold. The Indians traditionally do too. There just might be something in this traditional wisdom.
Australia imports a lot of consumer goods and a lot of its inputs for industry and construction - so a high Australian dollar is a good thing for most people on the street. It is also good for Australian travellers abroad - and Australians love to travel.
However - Australia exports a lot of grain and agricultural products and also a lot of minerals (iron ore, alumina and many other metals) and energy resources (coal, natural gas and uranium) - which drives our wealth and standard of living. For exporters a high Australian dollar is not good thing and damages our competitiveness compared to our major trading competitors such as Brazil, Canada and the US.
I came across this blog article today (http://blogs.marketwatch.com/fundmastery/2009/11/16/can-china-dump-the-dollar/tab/print/) which has one of most thought through comments I have read recently on the dollar and the interdependence between the Chinese and US economies. Bottom line is that the US will not hurry to protect the declining dollar because it needs to maintain the interest of external investors in US nominated assets relative to the value of their own currencies.
And China can't rapidly liquidate the $2 trillion plus it holds in US dollar reserves because it doesn't really have any alternatives other than the Euro or the Yen - and neither are really attractive to the Chinese because they don't really have the trading depth or liquidity of the US dollar.
Then this article gets to the punchline - which is that the Chinese have developed a strategy to hold their sovereign wealth reserves also in commodities - hence their buying spree over recent months in base metals, soft commodities and fuels. Some of these have been going into the rebounding industrial production in China, which has been increasing again during 2009:
Still getting my mind around that one - it defies a lot of contemporary thinking and academic training - but after the meltdown of the global financial crisis - maybe people (and governments) just don't trust paper based assets any more - and are looking for something that won't disappear down a computer screen!
So getting back to the US dollar. Maybe it will start to be replaced as the currency of exchange - and we will see more trade in other currencies - or dare I say it - in gold! Look at the rise in gold (and silver) prices in recent years (source: www.the-privateer.com ).
We need to challenge a lot of accepted wisdom and really think about what is going on. I have a few Chinese friends who tell me their families hold value in gold. The Indians traditionally do too. There just might be something in this traditional wisdom.
Labels:
economics,
gold,
us dollar,
value,
wealth management
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Welcome to the journey
That's me on the right on the last trek in the South Island of New Zealand - when I walked the
Routeburn track with my son Julian. That was in 2007. We are about to head off again in a few weeks to walk the Milford Track - the most famous of New Zealand's Great Walks (http://www.doc.govt.nz/features-archive/great-walks/). I did the Milford about 8 years ago without Julian and can't wait to show him the beauty of this special part of the world.
This blog will be where fellow travellers can share their thoughts, memories, ideas, tips and dreams. This blog will be a place where we can assist each other navigate life - with a focus on life planning, health, sustainability and community, money and wealth management and perhaps some deeper reflections on the meaning of it all.
Together we can help each other navigate.
Together we can help each other navigate.
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