terça-feira, outubro 14, 2008

Déja vu: six steps that make a great panic

From
October 13, 2008

Déjà vu: six steps that make up a great panic

For 2008, read 1907. This time, however, China and India have emerged well, unlike America, Britain and Europe

It has not been too difficult to foresee the course of the 2008 credit crisis, since it has followed the classic pattern of financial panics. There has been nothing new so far; it is just that the world forgot the lessons of previous panics: an expensive oversight.

One of the classic panics occurred in 1907, when the failure of the Knickerbocker Trust precipitated a credit crash on Wall Street, which was eventually brought under control by the great US banker, J.P. Morgan.

The following year, Marlon T. Herrick, an Ohio economist, published an article, The Panic Of 1907 and Some Of Its lessons. in which he laid out the six stages in which panics occur. “(1) Failure of an important bank or institution: the Knickerbocker Trust in 1907; (2) Heavy withdrawals of funds by depositors; (3) Demoralised stock markets affecting banks and depositors alike; (4) Hoarding of money in large amounts, not only by individuals, but by banks; (5) Gradual improvement in financial affairs;

(6) Acute trade reaction, discharge of many thousands of employees, and realisation that the country must pass through a more or less severe industrial reconstruction.”

That was 1907; it might just as well have been 2008. For the British, Northern Rock was the important bank that helped to precipitate the panic; in New York it was Bear Stearns, followed by the disaster of Lehman Brothers.

Since then the financial world has moved from step one to step four of the 1907 pattern; hoarding of money, which Maynard Keynes termed “liquidity preference”, is still inhibiting the normal flow of interbank lending. We are stuck, for the present, in phase four.

However, the world will move on, as it always does. There will eventually occur a gradual improvement in financial credit, with some resumption of interbank lending stimulated by government interventions. Unfortunately, there will also be an “acute trade reaction” and a serious rise in unemployment - phases five and six of the 1907 formula are already in the pipeline.

The 1907 panic was the sixth- largest contraction in the financial history of the United States. As one commentator, Benedikt Koehler, has observed: “Once the storm subsided, the aftermath showed the world had changed irreversibly and did not return to business as usual. The crisis of 1907 set out in sharp relief that new forces in financial markets were in the ascendance.” One could take a similar view of all other big financial crises. That is again true in 2008.

The 1907 panic led to the creation of America's central bank, the Federal Reserve Board, under the Act of 1913. Subsequently, it was the 1929 panic that led to more stringent US banking regulations and, more broadly, to President Roosevelt's New Deal. The Great Depression that followed the 1929 Crash undermined confidence in democracy throughout the world and brought Hitler to power in Germany.

More recently, the inflation of the 1970s, which destroyed the secondary banks in London, brought Margaret Thatcher, and deregulation, to power in 1979, and Ronald Reagan in 1980. Financial panics occur when there has been a long-term build-up of new forces. When the dam breaks, that changes the whole landscape.

Before the 2008 crash, the United States was already widely seen as losing relative power, in politics, economics, and even defence. Entangled in Iraq and Afghanistan, it already had a large trade deficit and was borrowing from Asia on a colossal scale.

The rising power was not seen as Europe or Russia, but as China, the largest and most successful of the emerging Asian economies. Russia does indeed have very large reserves of oil and gas, and benefited when the oil price was rising, but it was China that had become a successful modern manufacturer and exporter.

If people looked beyond China for a rising economy, they saw India, also with a population over a billion, and with a growth rate two or three times that of the West. China has about two trillion dollars of currency reserves, a crucial asset at the present time. Neither Chinese nor Indian banks have substantial investments in the toxic sub-prime mortgages, because they had much better opportunities for profitable investment at home.

If China and India have been particularly impressive in the crisis, the other emerging Asian markets have performed reasonably well. They experienced the Asian crisis of a decade ago and learnt some painful lessons about the importance of liquidity. You do not need to tell Asian bankers that cash is king.

In the early stage of the present panic, Europe was complacent, taking the view that this was an American crisis, caused by holdings of American sub-prime mortgage securities in American banks. However, if the United States has been a big loser in the crisis, so has Europe. European banks turned out to have too much toxic debt and toxic derivatives. This was bad banking, badly regulated, whether it occurred in the US, the UK or the eurozone.

If anything, the European authorities lagged behind the American and the British. There has been no big consolidated European response, either from the European Central Bank or the European Union itself.

Britain has benefited from its freedom of action outside the euro. We could take our own decisions, some of which, admittedly, proved mistaken. To the irritation of Germany, the Irish Government gave an independent guarantee to the Irish banks; how that could be reconciled with membership of the euro is an outstanding question.

The IMF and the World Bank, the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the European Union, the British regulatory authorities will all have to review their position. So will the world's largest banks. The group of eight will have to be extended to China and India. The world has changed; the world's banking system must change with it.

The West hasn't got the stomach for work anymore, only inflate & speculate on financial instruments, & now payback time.

ian cheese, london, uk

Let us see how well Asia handles a dramatic downturn in orders for manufactured goods. Factories in China are closing at record levels, causing massive payroll shifts from the private sector to the central government. A dramatic increase in crime is sure to follow. Always does.

Juan, San Diego, USA

William makes a good commentary on the 'crisis', however lessons must be learned from the 'good days' leading up to it which CAUSE the problem.

Dominic Graham de Montrose, London,

How very clubby of David UK, wanting to join the Europeans.
The world is now one very big club economically, however, as witness the current international panic. I think it behooves every nation to work collectively to maintain
reasonable economic stabilty. If this means more attentive oversight....

schmendric, Murphy, USA

I wonder why anyone would suggest entering the Euro. They have been unable to come up with a common policy and have ended up adopting ours.

Ironic when you hear people ranting on about Britain having no influence outside the Euro. You could argue that we're running the thing without belonging.

jon livesey, Sunnyvale, CA/USA

There are steps before your first point (1) failure of an important bank.... Include, banks and companies allowed to get, too big to fail and too big to manage. Also promotion of the wrong people, who don't treat other people's money like their own. When a collapse is allowed the crooks get fired.

Hugo van Randwyck, London, UK

It's a learning curve that every generation needs to go through. The goal should be to speed up the process so that pain bites sooner and is over with quicker.
Sadly though that might impair the learning process.

An interesting ride for everyone

Steve, Derby, uk

We must thank our lucky stars we have stayed out of the Eurozone. Membership would have involved a loss of independence on the exchange rate and higher and longer unemployment. America may be a busted flush but so is much of Europe. I, for one, do not want to be ruled by Brussels or Frankfurt.

William, Guildford, UK

Personnally, I would not write-off Russia in one sentence. It has all the raw materials it (& to an extent China and India) needs. It will soon own the meters on the EU gas supply. Put that into per capita terms on a population of 145m and you have wealth.

We have a "financial services" base...

Mike L, Chippenham,

A very good analysis AFTER the event.

The next crisis?

'Green financial instruments'?

Govt off-balance sheet liabilities?

Where can I lay bets on this eh?

Rhys Jaggar, Leeds, UK

This weekend proves that we can get along and lead a life without the doom-sayers having a platform to shout from. Will the panic start again Monday?

Phil, Atlanta, US

To David of Exeter,
Au contraire, recent events have only shown
disunity and an everyman for himself mentality in the Eurozone. Defections from the Eurozone, fi not break up, is more likely that any significant enlargement of the Eurozone.

Denver Watt, Osaka,

Ireland, a member of the eurozone, did its own thing. The UK, a non-member, is leading a coordinated response with France and Germany. Euro-membership has not been a relevant factor here. It would however have prevented currency devaluation in the UK with its inflationary effects.

Andrew, London,

There is an easily observable eighteen to twenty year economic cycle (once you subtract the war years) - each time Americas decline has been predicted, followed by a recovery usually lead by the United States.

Arnold Ward, Weybridge, Surrey, UK

We should thank Ireland for precipitating action within Europe. If they had instead defaulted without taking a lead, we would all be in a much more difficult situation. They forced European government to face the need to take responsibility. But rescuing the banks is only the first step to stability

Chris Coles, Medstead, Alton, United Kingdom

I would have thought this weekend proves quite conclusively that we must enter the Euro zone. America is a busted flush its time to join our European partners.

david, exeter, uk

segunda-feira, outubro 13, 2008

Prémio Nobel da Economia Paul Krugman

Press Release

13 October 2008

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2008 to

Paul Krugman
Princeton University, NJ, USA

"for his analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity"


International Trade and Economic Geography

Patterns of trade and location have always been key issues in the economic debate. What are the effects of free trade and globalization? What are the driving forces behind worldwide urbanization? Paul Krugman has formulated a new theory to answer these questions. He has thereby integrated the previously disparate research fields of international trade and economic geography.

Krugman's approach is based on the premise that many goods and services can be produced more cheaply in long series, a concept generally known as economies of scale. Meanwhile, consumers demand a varied supply of goods. As a result, small-scale production for a local market is replaced by large-scale production for the world market, where firms with similar products compete with one another.

Traditional trade theory assumes that countries are different and explains why some countries export agricultural products whereas others export industrial goods. The new theory clarifies why worldwide trade is in fact dominated by countries which not only have similar conditions, but also trade in similar products – for instance, a country such as Sweden that both exports and imports cars. This kind of trade enables specialization and large-scale production, which result in lower prices and a greater diversity of commodities.

Economies of scale combined with reduced transport costs also help to explain why an increasingly larger share of the world population lives in cities and why similar economic activities are concentrated in the same locations. Lower transport costs can trigger a self-reinforcing process whereby a growing metropolitan population gives rise to increased large-scale production, higher real wages and a more diversified supply of goods. This, in turn, stimulates further migration to cities. Krugman's theories have shown that the outcome of these processes can well be that regions become divided into a high-technology urbanized core and a less developed "periphery".

quinta-feira, outubro 09, 2008

Auditors last report on Lehman Brothers Balance Sheet...

"There are two sides of a Balance Sheet, Left & Right (Assets and Liabilities respectively):

On the Right side there is nothing right and on the Left side there is nothing left".

quarta-feira, outubro 08, 2008

Financial Institutions not communicating with customers enough in present economic turmoil

October 8: Industry Risk - Financial Institutions Not Communicating with Customers Enough in Present Economic Turmoil


Location: Princeton
Author: Lisa Olson
Date: Wednesday, October 8, 2008


Despite Wall Street Chaos, Most Investors Consider Assets Safe

According to a new survey from Opinion Research Corporation (an infoGROUP Company), banks, savings and loans, and credit unions appear to be doing a poor job of keeping their customers informed in this turbulent economic climate. Nearly half of those surveyed (46%) said the bank in which they have the most assets was not communicating with them enough.

Mutual funds fared slightly better than banks, with 42 percent of respondents that hold the majority of assets there expressing disappointment in the level of communication from their provider. Brokerage firms appeared to be doing the best job of keeping their customers informed, with sixty-two percent of respondents that hold the majority of assets there indicating that the level of communication has been good.

“With the stock market on a rollercoaster ride, financial institutions must take proactive measures to reassure their customers and shareholders and bolster confidence in their performance,” said Jeff Resnick, President of Opinion Research Corporation (US). “In the absence of information, people will fear the worst.”

Despite the chaos on Wall Street, overall confidence levels in financial services institutions remain high, with eighty-five percent of respondents saying they consider their assets to be safe. However, the study shows that levels of confidence vary by sector.

Banks, S&L’s, and credit unions were regarded as safe havens for savings by 89 percent of those who keep their assets there. Brokerage firms and mutual funds fared almost as well, with 78 percent of those who have the majority of their assets in either of these institutions saying they were confident that their assets were safe.

The survey also found that more than half (55%) of respondents thought that the crisis would have a negative impact on them, while 24 percent didn’t think it would have any impact on them.


Article Printed From RiskCenter.com

Buying commercial paper...at last!

October 8: Market Risk - US Fed Announces Creation of Commercial Paper Funding Facility to Help Provide Liquidity to Term Funding Markets


Location: Washington, DC
Author: RiskCenter Staff
Date: Wednesday, October 8, 2008


The Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday announced the creation of the Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF), a facility that will complement the Federal Reserve's existing credit facilities to help provide liquidity to term funding markets. The CPFF will provide a liquidity backstop to U.S. issuers of commercial paper through a special purpose vehicle (SPV) that will purchase three-month unsecured and asset-backed commercial paper directly from eligible issuers.

The Federal Reserve will provide financing to the SPV under the CPFF and will be secured by all of the assets of the SPV and, in the case of commercial paper that is not asset-backed commercial paper, by the retention of up-front fees paid by the issuers or by other forms of security acceptable to the Federal Reserve in consultation with market participants. The Treasury believes this facility is necessary to prevent substantial disruptions to the financial markets and the economy and will make a special deposit at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in support of this facility.

The commercial paper market has been under considerable strain in recent weeks as money market mutual funds and other investors, themselves often facing liquidity pressures, have become increasingly reluctant to purchase commercial paper, especially at longer-dated maturities. As a result, the volume of outstanding commercial paper has shrunk, interest rates on longer-term commercial paper have increased significantly, and an increasingly high percentage of outstanding paper must now be refinanced each day.

A large share of outstanding commercial paper is issued or sponsored by financial intermediaries, and their difficulties placing commercial paper have made it more difficult for those intermediaries to play their vital role in meeting the credit needs of businesses and households.

By eliminating much of the risk that eligible issuers will not be able to repay investors by rolling over their maturing commercial paper obligations, this facility should encourage investors to once again engage in term lending in the commercial paper market. Added investor demand should lower commercial paper rates from their current elevated levels and foster issuance of longer-term commercial paper. An improved commercial paper market will enhance the ability of financial intermediaries to accommodate the credit needs of businesses and households.

Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) Terms and Conditions (57 KB PDF)


Article Printed From RiskCenter.com

Financial crisis: how to cope (McKinsey Review)

How to win in a financial crisis

When is a good time to make strategic advances? During a crisis, of course.

November 2002

Simple survival is the first strategy that most managers come up with when confronting a financial crisis. The savviest managers, however, realize that a period of great uncertainty, with financial and competitive landscapes changing almost overnight, can be the ideal time to make important strategic gains.

Douglas Daft, Coca-Cola’s chief executive, knows the feeling. In 1997, as head of the company’s Asian operations, he watched capital investment turn fickle and devaluations deepen while a financial storm swept across much of Asia. As panic spread, Daft summoned his executives to a series of workshops about how Coca-Cola could capture new growth opportunities and emerge strengthened from the trauma. After all, the company had achieved one of its greatest breakthroughs in international markets at the end of World War II, when it discovered new opportunities in the broken landscape of Western Europe.

Daft emerged with a focus on acquisition opportunities that, he calculated, would be unchained by the turmoil. Over the next few years, Coca-Cola bought a bottling business in South Korea, giving the company better access to the mom-and-pop retail stores there, and gained better access in China, Japan, and Malaysia. The company abandoned its country-defined market perspective in favor of a more regional strategic view and bought several locally branded coffee and tea drinks. It also revamped its procurement business by consolidating and renegotiating purchases of aluminum, coffee, PET (a type of plastic for bottles), and sugar.

It isn’t only foreign multinationals that can take advantage of upsets in emerging markets. At the beginning of the Asian crisis, South Korea’s Housing & Commercial Bank (H&CB) was a midsize, government-controlled institution focused on mortgage lending. Its performance was mediocre, and its market capitalization stood at only $250 million. Yet in Kim Jung Tae the bank had a bold CEO who took advantage of a useful fact—that employees are more willing to accept change during a crisis—to restructure the company by changing its organization, strategy, and performance culture. Regulations governing mergers were also modified, opening the door to H&CB’s 2001 merger with Kookmin Bank.1 Just before the merger, the market capitalization of H&CB stood at $2.1 billion, and it became the first South Korean bank to list American depositary receipts (ADRs) on the New York Stock Exchange.

Consider also the case of Roust, a company that used Russia’s 1998 debacle to transform itself, in three years, from a consumer goods distributor specializing in premium alcohol brands into a holding company that includes a leading bank built from scratch. The remake took nerve, but Roustam Tariko, Roust’s CEO, spotted an opportunity: the country’s many failed banks were leaving behind important facilities and talent that could be acquired cheaply. The missing ingredient—money—was one that Roust, fortunately, did have. In six months, Tariko crafted a solid business plan, used it to recruit selected senior managers from other banks, and established the Russian Standard Bank, now one of the largest consumer lenders in Russia and growing by several hundred percent a year.

Together with the shock, threat, and uncertainty of a financial crisis comes a new landscape of broad, radical economic change

How do companies achieve such transformations amid chaos? These anecdotal examples suggest that one common approach is to recognize that along with the shock, uncertainty, and threat comes a new landscape of broad, radical change. Alert executives relax their assumptions about the boundaries that normally confine their businesses. Coca-Cola already knew that local attitudes toward foreigners were changing and that acquisition opportunities would become more plentiful because of the Asian crisis—in short, this was an ideal time to expand market share. H&CB took advantage of regulatory shifts and its employees’ new willingness to accept change. Roust stepped into banking while industry leaders were falling.

Beyond boundaries

In normal times, four boundaries limit the scope and nature of a company’s business: regulations, competition, customers’ attitudes, and the organization’s ability to change. In times of crisis, however, the boundaries often shift dramatically, and those shifting boundaries can become the means through which companies improve their competitive position. By understanding how the boundaries affect a business before the crisis hits, and how they might change during the upheaval, executives can prepare to capture strategic opportunities.

Regulations move

Regulatory restraints are embedded deep in the core assumptions of most companies. Management takes for granted parameters such as the types of businesses or markets a company can enter, the kinds of products or services it can sell, and how much market share it is allowed to capture. Often, however, these constraints are relaxed or removed during a crisis.

In South Korea, for instance, the Fair Trade Commission, which approves mergers, took a dim view of industry concentration before 1997. As the government scrambled to restructure the country’s sinking financial system, however, some formerly unthinkable bank mergers suddenly became possible.2 It was this shift that helped H&CB merge with Kookmin Bank in 2001, creating a behemoth unprecedented in South Korean banking: H&CB’s market share leapt from 11 to 26 percent in deposits, from 29 to 44 percent in retail loans, and from 5 to 24 percent in corporate loans.

Moreover, limits on foreign ownership might be liberalized or abandoned altogether. Throughout most major economies in Asia, the allowable levels of foreign ownership in banking, for example, rose from less than 50 percent to 100 percent in some cases; Malaysia was the notable exception (Exhibit 1). Similar changes took place in other industries, thereby creating new opportunities for foreign players.

Chart: Asia’s banking sector is opening up

Deregulation can also release pent-up consumer demand and create new industries, seemingly almost overnight. During the 1994 crisis in Brazil, its government extensively revamped the regulation of personal financial services. New rules designated mutual funds as legally separate entities from banks, and credit card issuers were allowed to work with a number of brands. As a result, mutual-fund assets under management rocketed from virtually nothing in 1994 to more than $120 billion in 1996. Over the same two years, the volume of credit card transactions soared from $10 billion to $26 billion.3 Institutions that anticipated the transformation saw their business take off.

Furthermore, financial crises not only spur top-down regulatory changes but also give companies leverage to influence change from the bottom up. GE Capital, for instance, was able to bargain with Japanese insurance regulators in 1998, when the government was trying to sort out the troubled industry. GE then recapitalized a failing company, Toho Mutual Life Insurance, in a $1.1 billion deal, and in return the government agreed, in a regulatory ruling, to lower the rate of interest on new policies, from an unprofitable average of 4.75 percent to a more profitable 1.5 percent.4 Executives should always work on the assumption that regulations can be changed, particularly during the throes and aftermath of a crash.

Competition shifts

Industry leaders might seem to have the best position for weathering a financial storm, but interest-payment defaults, supply chain interruptions, and a loss of confidence by creditors or investors can quickly topple them, opening the door for newcomers and changing the dynamics of the business. After both the 1994 Mexican and the 1997 South Korean crisis, rankings among the top ten companies in each nation changed twice as frequently as before, and consolidation in many industries increased enormously.

The upheaval is often greatest in financial services. Three of the top ten private banks in Brazil were bankrupted by the crisis of 1994, and several state-owned banks were privatized, leading to the consolidation of the industry and to greater foreign participation. By 2000, half of the top ten banks in the country were newcomers; moreover, the foreign-owned banks in the top ten held assets that went from zero to $63 billion, or 13 percent of total bank assets, by the end of the year. All foreign-owned banks in Brazil held as much as 30 percent ($133 billion of the country’s bank assets (Exhibit 2). In Russia, a similar story played out: five5 of what in 1996 had been the ten largest banks in the country went bankrupt by 2001, while local upstarts such as Alfa Bank rose from relative obscurity to take their place among its biggest institutions. This situation was repeated in country after country.

Chart: Changing places

Where small local players are hit hard by a crisis, they may well be acquired by larger companies, which tend to be foreign and to have more diverse operations. In Southeast Asia, cement production was dominated until 1997 by locally owned companies, many of them inefficient operators. Most are now foreign owned. Holcim, the Swiss cement giant, is one of the largest newcomers. After more than a decade of looking for opportunities to expand in Asia, it at last bought large and often controlling stakes in beleaguered local cement companies in Thailand (Siam City Cement), the Philippines (Alsons Cement and Union Cement), and most recently Indonesia (PT Semen Cibinong). By upgrading the management skills of these businesses and installing new boards of directors, Holcim turned lackluster performers into tough competitors; Siam City Cement, for instance, boosted its market capitalization fivefold in the three years after the takeover. This scenario was repeated in industries throughout Southeast Asia.

Conventional wisdom suggests that companies should put new investments and potential M&A deals on hold when markets are changing rapidly. Yet the experience of many successful companies during periods of financial turmoil clearly demonstrates the opposite. From August to December 1997, as chaos broke out in Asia, upward of 400 deals, totaling $35 billion, were completed in the region outside Japan—a more than 200 percent increase over the same period the year before.6

Certainly, it would be foolhardy to ignore the greater risk that acquisitions entail during financial crises. Nevertheless, deals can be structured to accommodate it. In 1997, for instance, the Belgian beer company Interbrew was negotiating with South Korea’s Doosan over the sale of its beer business, Oriental Brewery (OB). Given the uncertainty in the market and rumors of impending change in the liquor laws, the two companies agreed on a set of "triggers," or conditional payments, designed to bridge gaps in expectations of future value. Interbrew bought a 50 percent stake in OB, with the triggers leading to additional payouts if specific changes occurred in the industry structure or tax code. By thinking creatively, Interbrew and Doosan inked a "win-win" deal that managed the downside and the upside.

Customers’ attitudes evolve

As people lose their jobs, and sometimes their savings, their demands as customers may change. If so, retailers and manufacturers of lower-end goods are naturally well placed to prosper. The fortunes of the Indonesian company Ramayana, a discount retailer once shunned by a growing middle class more interested in global brands and upscale goods, began to improve when the country’s currency, the rupiah, plummeted in 1997 and the public’s purchasing power dwindled. Ramayana’s managers responded by holding prices steady, offering goods in smaller quantities, and providing affordable, staple items such as cooking oil, rice, and sugar. While high-end and mass-market department stores saw their sales decline, Ramayana’s sales increased by 18 percent in the year to December 1998, when the crisis was at its height.

McKinsey research shows that after 1997, consumers in many Asian markets became more receptive to new financial products, new channels, and foreign institutions (Exhibit 3). From 1998 to 2000, consumer attitudes toward credit also changed sharply: for example, the percentage of people who considered borrowing "unwise" fell from 46 to 26 percent in South Korea, from 52 to 42 percent in Malaysia, and from 55 to 45 percent in the Philippines. Not surprisingly, in many countries the once fiscally cautious public has gone on a borrowing spree; the amount of consumer loans from 1998 to 2001 increased by 30 percent in South Korea and by 129 percent in China. Similar changes in demand have occurred in other industries as well.

Chart: Customers ready for change after crisis

Public perceptions of foreign companies can alter, too. Only 47 percent of South Koreans favored incoming foreign direct investment in 1994, for instance, but by March 1998 almost 90 percent did.7 South Koreans recognized their country’s need for not only foreign capital but also the technology and new management practices that foreign companies would inevitably bring. President-elect Kim Dae-Jung played a key role in persuading the country of the benefits of foreign investment, drawing on the example of the United Kingdom’s financial-services and automotive industries, in which few companies are British owned, though well-paid jobs abound. That argument took hold, and from 1997 to 1999 inflows of foreign direct investment to South Korea increased from less than $7 billion to more than $15 billion.8

Foreign companies that respond quickly to such shifts in attitude can reap the benefits. Before the crisis in Asia, Citibank struggled to expand its operations in the region. Following the Indonesian riots of May 1998, however, Citibank set up 75 minibranches in the country’s four largest cities. In most cases, the branches consisted of only an ATM and an attendant, yet this modest investment helped Citibank increase the number of its accounts by 300 percent. In Singapore, meanwhile, Citibank employees greeted people arriving from Indonesia at the airport during the early days of the crisis with signs reading, "Citibank will help you!" Over the next few years, the bank invested more than $200 million in Asia. According to one Citigroup manager, the crisis "gave us opportunities that were beyond belief."9

Organizations change

For executives willing to make bold moves, a crisis can be a burning platform that creates an opportunity to change corporate culture and operations drastically: shareholders, employees, and creditors alike recognize that things must change, and resistance melts away. For visionary leaders, this is the time to revamp the power structure, adjust the organization’s size, create a stronger and more performance-driven culture, and throw out sacred cows.

At H&CB, for instance, CEO Kim Jung Tae drove unprecedented changes throughout the organization during the crisis of 1997 and 1998. First he set tough performance targets (a return on assets of 1.5 percent and a return on equity of 25 percent) intended to mirror the performance of US-based Wells Fargo and Britain’s Lloyds TSB. Kim declared that H&CB could "become a world-class, top-100 retail bank in three years"—high aspirations for a mediocre, midsize South Korean institution. The tumult of the times, however, enabled Kim to back his words with actions: he cut 30 percent of the staff within three months and in the first year took a salary of just 1 South Korean won (less than $0.01), receiving the rest of his compensation in stock options. In South Korea, these measures were unconventional, to say the least.

Over the following two years, Kim launched more than 20 performance-improvement initiatives in areas such as pricing strategy, retail credit scoring, and customer service. To improve accountability and make it easier to judge the performance of the bank’s divisions, he reorganized them away from their geographic focus, turning them into customer-oriented business units. The proportion of compensation based on performance was increased and the bonus system revamped. These radical reforms were unthinkable before the crisis. Afterward, though, employees and other stakeholders went along with them, so that H&CB met Kim’s ambitious performance targets within two years.

Meanwhile, Ayala (see Ken Gibson, "A case for the family-owned conglomerate," The McKinsey Quarterly, 2002 Number 4), a 168-year-old Philippine conglomerate, had always prided itself on a social pact with its employees: a job for life. In the wake of the 1997–98 financial crisis, however, Ayala’s management realized that the company would have to refresh its talent pool to remain competitive and took the unprecedented step of offering a voluntary layoff program.

Time and again we have seen crises prompt managers and shareholders to reevaluate the ways of local management and move closer to international best-practice standards in areas such as governance, staff management, and accounting. Companies that make these reforms are better placed to emerge as market leaders when the dust settles.

Seize the day

Merely recognizing that the rules have changed and looking for new opportunities is not enough, however, to make the most of a crisis. Where a company in normal times might have months to manage late-paying wholesalers, each day can make a critical difference during a crisis. This environment can brutally punish companies that are slow to adjust but offers the possibility of big rewards to those that are fast and flexible.

Moving quickly often means being the first to enter a market when its future is still clouded by uncertainty. This takes courage, but the payoff can be handsome. Consider the experience of Lone Star Funds, the first investor to purchase distressed banking assets in South Korea. Bidding against a very small number of investors in December 1998, Lone Star obtained its first portfolio of nonperforming loans from the Korean Asset Management Company (KAMCO)10 for just 36 percent of book value. Being the first company to do so seemed risky. Steven Lee, Lone Star’s country manager in South Korea, said that "No one had tested the liquidity of these assets in the market. It was a daunting due-diligence task." The move paid off, though, and the portfolio earned a very significant annualized return. At KAMCO’s next auction, in June 1999, 14 investors were in the bidding pool and prices rose.

Making strategy during such times requires fast footwork and a rapid reassessment of the way circumstances change with each major event. The sharpest executives will review the changing boundary conditions of their companies on a weekly, even daily basis. Although steering through each day’s turmoil is hard enough, managers must always keep an eye on the changes needed to make a company emerge as a winner and consider how to influence these changes before competitors do.

Financial crises shock and paralyze not only countries but also companies—and often pull companies under. For sophisticated executives, however, the tumult produces a changing backdrop for doing business, and this backdrop can be exploited, frequently to great advantage. By remaining calm while the weary and wary retreat—and by keeping an eye on fundamental changes in the regulatory, financial, and political environment—the best crisis managers have turned unfortunate circumstances into the opportunity of a lifetime for their companies.

About the Authors

Dominic Barton is a director in McKinsey’s Seoul office; Roberto Newell is a recently retired director in the Miami office; Gregory Wilson is a principal in the Washington, DC, office. This article is adapted from their forthcoming book, Dangerous Markets: Managing in Financial Crises, New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2002.

Notes

1The merged entity now goes by the name Kookmin Bank.

2Before the 1997 crisis, only one bank merger had ever taken place, and it was viewed as largely a failure, since labor law restrictions ruled out potential cost savings.

3Banco Central do Brasil.

4Falia News, Number 32, April 2000; and Nikkei News, February 11, 2002.

5Inkombank, Menatep, Mosbusinessbank, SBS-Agro, and UNEXIM.

6See Rajan Anandan, Anil Kumar, Gautam Kumra, and Asutosh Padhi, "M&A in Asia," The McKinsey Quarterly, 1998 Number 2, pp. 64–75.

7Survey on South Korean opinion about foreigners investing in the South Korean economy, Korea Development Institute, 1994 and 1998.

8Ministry of Commerce, Industry, and Energy. See "Pupil who has learned enough to tutor," Financial Times, March 21, 2002; and Foreign Direct Investment in Korea, KPMG, September 2001.

9"Citibank conquers Asia," Business Week, February 26, 2001.

10A government-run body that bought the distressed assets of banks and other financial institutions and was charged with liquidating those assets.

quinta-feira, setembro 25, 2008

A República Bolivariana da Europa e o Supervisor




A República bolivariana da Europa e o supervisor

Uma ideia singular: a publicidade, tal como a liberdade de imprensa, é nefasta para os consumidores…

Paulo Gonçalves Marcos

Escrevemos hoje sobre um pequeno país, ficcionado, de forma rectangular, banhado pelo Oceano. Imagine o caro leitor que um dos seus supervisores, se habituou a uma vida complacente, típica de organizações sem concorrência: altas remunerações para os seus gestores, pouca ou nenhuma efectividade no trabalho que deveria desempenhar: o de supervisor! Neste país, um grande banco iludiu os reguladores, anos a fio, com práticas pouco menos que recomendáveis: empréstimos ao filho do presidente executivo, com perdão de juros; empréstimos a sociedades ‘offshore’ que usavam os fundos mutuados para subscreverem aumentos de capital no banco; entre outras tropelias. Noutro banco, mais pequeno, a mistura entre política e negócios era célebre, com negócios opacos em série, activos “extravagantes” em vez de crédito ou depósitos. Esperaria o leitor que um supervisor que não supervisione fosse reformulado por inteiro, incluindo a sua equipa de alta direcção. Que práticas e procedimentos fossem revistos de forma criteriosa. Ao invés, o supervisor sujeita a consulta pública um “Aviso” em que pretende regular a publicidade dos bancos do país em causa! Qual panaceia dos males que o afligiam…Aqui chegados bem nos lembramos de como regimes e sistemas políticos, não concorrenciais, actuam no sentido de limitar a liberdade de expressão ou de opinião na vida cívica e política. E como na esfera empresarial apertam a malha sobre a comunicação empresarial, a publicidade e demais formas de contacto entre as empresas e seus potenciais ou actuais clientes. O mesmo raciocínio bafiento que o “consumidor” (ou o “povo”) não tem capacidade de discernimento suficiente. Claro que na esteira do grande paladino actual da “democracia”, também aqui o método é de estilo “bolivariano revolucionário”. Uma ideia singular: a publicidade, tal como a liberdade de imprensa, é nefasta para os consumidores…que têm que ser protegidos a todo o transe. Claro que todos os estudos académicos que provam que a publicidade aumenta o nível concorrencial e faz baixar os preços foram ignorados…Em sentido literal, o “Aviso” em consulta pública levará, se não for modificado, a que os ‘disclaimers’ e ‘disclosures’, da comunicação das instituições financeiras, sejam de tal maneira extensos e de relevada importância que a publicidade radiofónica, televisiva ou na imprensa, seja inviável do ponto de vista de inserção de conteúdos informativos. A mera menção a uma taxa de juro obrigará a citar o período de aplicação, se é de cariz temporário ou permanente, qual a taxa anual efectiva global… A consequência será a de que o Sector Financeiro irá ter mais dificuldade no seu papel formativo (sim, a publicidade informa e forma, tanto mais quanto mais intensa for a concorrência). E então teremos que também os bancos ver-se-ão restritos a seguir a esteira das telecomunicações ou dos brinquedos: cariz lúdico, humor, “felinos” em catadupa…E para completar o ramalhete, o digníssimo supervisor atribui igual “gravidade” às campanhas de incentivo à poupança que ao crédito. Ambas sujeitas aos mesmos requisitos de “sanidade”. Afinal nada de mais natural num país com uma das mais altas taxas de endividamento da Europa, com uma taxa de poupanças baixa, onde o crédito mal parado está a crescer a 30% ao ano…E, paradoxalmente, onde os operadores telefónicos e internet, localizados ‘offshore’ (afinal o mesmo paradigma das casas de apostas desportivas…) fazem impunemente campanhas de crédito de adesão instantânea, sem comprovativos de rendimentos ou bens…Um ‘subprime’ de crédito ao consumo em potência….Para acabar, o mesmo supervisor tem a peregrina ideia de pretender substituir a imprensa livre e as associações de defesa dos consumidores, através da publicação de preçários e de comparações entre produtos. Um caso clássico em que a má moeda (supervisor inapto) expulsa a boa (imprensa livre e associações de consumidores)? Como é fácil de perceber, esta “estória” é uma ficção…

www.antonuco.blogspot.com www.marketinginovador.com
____

Paulo Gonçalves Marcos, Economista ‘marketeer’ e professor universitário

Comentários
Paulo Curto de Sousa (curtodesousa@gmail.com)
Absolutamente de acordo. Será que em outros países europeus é também assim? Garanta-se a informação mas deixe-se espaço à criatividade. Afinal um bom anúncio, além de dar a conhecer, também deverá fazer gostar e fazer agir. E de uma forma eficaz e economicamente viável. Abraços.
antonio duarte
Pobre de nós que a nuvem é tomada por Juno.
Célia Ramos
Artigo denso mas ainda assim um colunista que se destaca por nao falar de lugares comuns.
Paulo Lage (paulo.d.lage@gmail.com)
Nem tanto ao mar, nem tanto à terra!Passou-se de uma supervisão muito liberal para a regulamentação absoluta.O facto do aparecimento de alguma publicidade agressiva e enganosa levou à soluçao de controle mais facil e politicamente mais visivél.É tambem certo que com as facilidades acrescidas de acesso ao credito por parte dos bancos e o apelo ao consumismo exacerbado com que somos bombardeados todos os dias faz de uma parte dos consumidores menos esclarecidos e mais influenciaveis perfeitos "patos".O problema é que a dimensão da situação se esta a tornar , mesmo para os bancos dificil de controlar e , á boa maneira Portuguesa:" casa roubada , trancas(alarme,videovigilancia e que mais haja) á porta"! Parabens pelo artigo!!
Anabela Faro
Professor, vivemos numa fase de propaganda. Os ministros a entregarem computadores a criancinhas...os reguladores a fingirem que regulam...
Pedro V. Matos
paulo ja tinha lido hoje o teu artigo, que achei fabuloso..mas noa tinha ainda tido tempo de te enviar um email..
RAF (rodrigo.adao.fonseca@gmail.com)
Paulo, Excelente artigo:) Uma das dificuldades mais dificeis de ultrpassar está na esperança que tantas pessoas depositam no regulador, essa figura supra-humana, com olhos de lince, que justifica a sua existência na imposição de trâmites burocráticos (ou serão "burrocráticos"), e que é capaz, do alto do seu posto de vigia, de monitorar a realidade e milhões de operações que diariamente se articulam. Uma regulação subsidiária da auto-regulação, focada no que importa (atenção nos focos de ganância e nos conflitos de interesse), que é o que eu defendo, é considerada uma "ideia radical". O que está a dar é sermos todos vigiados por um big brother, que tudo quer ver, e que rapidamente será aprisionado por gente que só actuará, enquanto "regulador", quando isso interessar aos interesses particulares de quem, ao momento, tiver ascendente. Ab RAF
Raquel S.
Gostei do artigo. Confesso que esperava a sua reacção apaixonada (no final de contas também está desse lado da barricada...) Mas a minha reacção (também apaixonada...) é de que uma maior transparência na publicidade dos bancos beneficia o cidadão comum. Sinceramente. É a minha opinião de cidadã e de consultora de estratégia. Não tenho pena da Banca de retalho, digo-lhe... Conheço poucas actividades onde por exemplo, ajustes de tarifário, que passam despercebidas ao consumidor 99,9% das vezes, podem ser usados como alavancas faceis de receitas. Com a informação que os bancos têm dos consumidores podem trata-los como verdadeiros fantoches... não é verdade? Já vi cada coisa... Para já não falar que há muito pouca gente que de facto saiba quanto paga pelos produtos bancários que tem... Bem, deixo-lhe a provocação! Mas concordo consigo no restante... medidas deste tipo não são resposta capaz e desejada aos problemas de supervisão do sistema
Raquel S.
Gostei do artigo. Confesso que esperava a sua reacção apaixonada (no final de contas também está desse lado da barricada...) Mas a minha reacção (também apaixonada...) é de que uma maior transparência na publicidade dos bancos beneficia o cidadão comum. Sinceramente. É a minha opinião de cidadã e de consultora de estratégia. Não tenho pena da Banca de retalho, digo-lhe... Conheço poucas actividades onde por exemplo, ajustes de tarifário, que passam despercebidas ao consumidor 99,9% das vezes, podem ser usados como alavancas faceis de receitas. Com a informação que os bancos têm dos consumidores podem trata-los como verdadeiros fantoches... não é verdade? Já vi cada coisa... Para já não falar que há muito pouca gente que de facto saiba quanto paga pelos produtos bancários que tem... Bem, deixo-lhe a provocação! Mas concordo consigo no restante... medidas deste tipo não são resposta capaz e desejada aos problemas de supervisão do sistema
AA
Muito interessante. Concordo com a primeira parte, de facto vive-se um clima de impunidade a todos os níveis, e quem regula prefere uma abordagem "laissez faire et laissez passer". Em relação à publicidade dos bancos devo dizer que acho que é necessário uma maior regulação deste tópico, não são poucas as pessoas que me dizem "Aquele banco/ aquele produto oferece 10%" como é obvio eles não percebem que "não há almoços gratis" o que se ganha de um lado tem que se pagar de outro... Acho por isso que a publicação dos prazos das taxas importantes, acho também importante outra medida mencionada no projecto para consulta pública, a regulamentação da utilização de palavras como "Grátis" e sinónimos.
Carlos Gonçalves (cg@espacoavila.com)
Um dos fenómenos mais aflitivos é sem dúvida a promoção do crédito por via de publicidade enganosa e sem critérios de rigor na informação que é prestada ao consumidor. Para o bem de muitas famílias sem formação, e para o bem de todos, seria necessário um maior controlo destas acções.
Teresa Loureiro
Muito obrigada, vai dar algum jeito de facto :). Não perco esperança de o vir a ter como "meu" autor. Não quer mesmo pensar nisso? Dávamos a volta ao mercado...
Ana P.
Óptimo artigo e infelizmente nada fictício. Devo confessar que ando um pouco alarmada com esta crise financeira, especialmente desde que vários orgãos de comunicação social começaram a explicar o que acontece se o nosso banco for à falência. Ponho-me a pensar se tanta informação não quer dizer qualquer coisa...má. Não sei que fazer ao dinheiro, apetece-me levantar tudo e meter debaixo do colchão...
Luis Rasquilha (lrasquilha@gmail.com)
boa Paulo Abraço Luis

terça-feira, setembro 23, 2008

Paying for PR

Paying for PR -- But Only When It Works

For Gift-Basket Maker, Pay-Per-Placement Is Better Than Going Solo and Cheaper Than Traditional Firms

Cynthia McKay admits she learned public relations the hard way.

The first PR professional she hired burned through $3,000 in two weeks with no results. When Ms. McKay struck out on her own, she wound up on a national television newsmagazine in a segment on rudeness in America -- as an example of how not to behave.

For years, Ms. McKay floundered trying to raise awareness for Le Gourmet Gift Basket Inc., her small company in Castle Rock, Colo. Then she found a solution: pay-for-placement public relations.

She now works with an independent PR agent, who charges only when a story about her company makes it into the press. That's a contrast to traditional PR firms, which can charge retainers as high as $20,000 per month for even small-company clients regardless of results.

Making a Pitch

A mention in a news article or television broadcast can have a big payoff for a little-known business. But small companies often struggle to get such media coverage. Most can't afford the big fees traditional agencies charge or in-house expertise to guide them. And solo efforts may yield only rejections or, worse, bad press. So many small companies are constantly looking for some middle ground.

[Le Gourmet] Steve Groer

Cynthia McKay, chief executive officer of Le Gourmet Gift Basket Inc.

One approach that's getting an increasing amount of attention is pay-per-placement PR. Critics point out, however, that it isn't for everybody. For one thing, they say, many pay-per-placement firms usually won't take on tasks other than pitching stories to the media. That means no strategy development, marketing or other work that many small businesses may need for an effective PR campaign.

Public relations "is more than being in the media," says Rhoda Weiss, chairwoman and chief executive officer of the Public Relations Society of America, a trade group in New York. "When you work with a [full-service] public-relations firm, they will develop a communications strategy."

Still, pay-per-placement PR is gaining traction with people like Ms. McKay, Le Gourmet's chief executive, who simply wants exposure for her 28-employee company, which sells gift baskets though distributors around the world.

'Nickled and Dimed'

Ms. McKay, 52, began her PR efforts in 1992 after an ad she bought in a home-building magazine brought in no new business. Hoping to get more for her money, she hired a PR agent whom she met through a business associate. Ms. McKay paid an initial $1,000 retainer. Four days later, she was asked for another $2,000.

The agent "was so charismatic," Ms. McKay recalls. "Every time she went to a cocktail party and mentioned me, she'd charge me. ...I thought, 'Of course I have to pay for her connections.' "

But after three weeks, Ms. McKay says, it became clear that she might not see results for a long time.

So, she decided to go at it alone. Ms. McKay wrote to 70 news outlets and garnered one mention in a local shopping column. She got three customer calls and two bounced checks. She earned another write-up in a paper -- but no new customers -- when she joined the local chamber of commerce.

Feeling desperate, Ms. McKay called a local TV show, hoping to appear in a segment. The producer not-so-politely declined. "That put me in my place," she recalls.

Soon after, Ms. McKay saw a PR firm mentioned in an article in a local paper about a grand opening of a woman-owned business. She called the firm and said that she'd been burned in the past. Its pitch to her: After an initial $1,200 for five placements, it would charge her per article. She signed on.

A cover story about careers in a well-known women's magazine led to a huge sales jump, Ms. McKay says. She paid the firm $2,500 for the placement.

Still, she wasn't completely satisfied with the arrangement. Sometimes, the firm didn't seem to do much work for her. If, say, a journalist emailed the firm asking if it knew of any female business owners, she says, a representative would just forward the email to her -- and charge.

A story mentioning Le Gourmet's donations of gift baskets to soldiers in Iraq was picked up by the Associated Press, which distributes articles to newspapers across the country. The PR firm charged Ms. McKay each time a newspaper picked up the story, for a total of about $11,000. She felt "nickel and dimed," she says.

Ms. McKay decided to stop working with the firm. She looked into big PR firms in Denver, but quickly realized she couldn't afford the retainers.

Good and Bad Exposure

So she tried again on her own. Last year, Ms. McKay heard that television newsmagazine "20/20" wanted to interview female CEOs. She got in touch with the show and in an interview revealed that she sometimes kept her cellphone turned on in movie theaters and slept next to her laptop. She assumed she'd be portrayed as a busy business owner.

But when the segment aired, she learned it was titled "That's So Rude! What's Happened to Manners in America?" Five minutes into the segment, she says, the hate email began rolling in. Six consulting clients left. "I never thought we'd recover," she says.

A "20/20" spokeswoman declined to comment on this episode.

A few months later, Ms. McKay hired another PR agent, Margie Zable Fisher in Boca Raton, Fla.

Ms. Zable Fisher had read about Ms. McKay's business and initially contacted her. Reassured that she could simply end the contract at any point if she wasn't seeing results, Ms. McKay paid $1,000 to get started. Ms. Zable Fisher asked Ms. McKay about her PR dream (appearing on "The Oprah Winfrey Show") and what she wasn't so interested in (radio interviews).

Ms. Zable Fisher reaches out to media contacts when she thinks Ms. McKay might be a fit for them -- on topics from women-owned businesses to her animal-rights activism.

For instance, Ms. Zable Fisher says her bill for arranging the interview that led to this article will be $6,000. Landing a feature in a large newspaper tops her price scale, which starts at $500 for a mention on a low-traffic Web site or small radio or TV show. Ms. Zable Fisher occasionally forwards interview opportunities without requesting payment. Ms. McKay likes the exposure she has gained so far.

Despite her struggles, Ms. McKay says the time spent on public relations has been worth it. She estimates that 80% of her company's growth came from spreading the word through the media. But she hasn't made the Oprah show yet.

Write to Simona Covel at simona.covel@wsj.com

Economic Woes Force Firms to Rethink Messages

Economic Woes Force Firms to Rethink Messages

New Ad Spots Seek to Allay Fears Amid Current Crisis

Wall Street's meltdown has left Madison Avenue scrambling to amend ad messages in hopes of calming investor fears -- and, in some cases, to seize on the drama to win new business.

Monday, Oppenheimer Funds is kicking off a $20 million ad effort. But last week's financial-market crisis threw a monkey wrench into the firm's plans. While the campaign's theme -- highlighting the company's ability to help customers make sense of the market -- jibed with the current upheaval, Oppenheimer decided to delay two of the TV ads until the markets settle down.

[Economic Woes Force Firms to Rethink Messages] OppenheimerFunds

Oppenheimer's spot says, 'We follow proven principles like investing for the long term so you can ride out the market's ups and downs.'

The spot Oppenheimer is going with features a woman on an escalator. "At Oppenheimer, we follow proven principles like investing for the long term so you can ride out the market's ups and downs," says a voice-over.

The two ads that are being pushed back for now are a spot that promotes retirement and another that is largely about asset allocation and balancing risk and reward. Those two ads are "more about taking proactive steps to adjust a portfolio and make an investment decision, and I think at this point we need to wait a few weeks," says Bruce Dunbar, director of corporate communications at Oppenheimer. Right now, Mr. Dunbar says, "people will be thinking about how they are going to readjust in the short term, versus thinking about long term."

Oppenheimer wasn't alone in having to do some last-minute rejiggering of ads. About two weeks ago, insurance giant Zurich Financial Services Group began thinking of how the economic environment might affect its marketing message, particularly a new $300 million global campaign also kicking off Monday. The ads are running in about 140 countries.

While Zurich's ad effort always intended to focus on how to better help consumers with insurance, Arun Sinha, Zurich's chief marketing officer, wanted to directly address the recent economic turmoil. The company went through its entire campaign, including 130 print ads and 53 different versions of a TV spot looking for appropriate spots. It was too late to change the TV ads, but Mr. Sinha decided to kick off the campaign with new print ads in key markets like the U.S., the U.K., Germany and Italy.

He says he gave his ad agency 24 hours to come up with a new print ad that would reassure consumers about the current crisis. The new ads, crafted by Publicis, say the company is "here to give you real help in an uncertain world, backed by the financial strength and stability of the Zurich American Insurance Company...It's help that's here now." The ads will run in newspapers like The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times.

The original print campaign talked about how Zurich can solve specific problems, like getting a car repaired quickly after an accident.

Some companies have worked quickly to turn the trouble into a business opportunity. The Wall Street Journal crafted an ad, which ran last week, that pushes subscriptions.

It's not just revamping the creative that is keeping ad agencies busy in the crisis. Havas's Euro RSCG is "fielding round-the-clock research" to figure out how consumers are feeling, says Andrew Benett, co-president of Euro's New York arm. The firm works on behalf of several financial companies, such as Charles Schwab and Oppenheimer.

Madison Avenue ad executives say that while some companies will be quick to jump in to reassure consumers and investors, it isn't a strategy for everyone. Some firms, they say, will be leery about telling the public that things are OK, just in case they eventually become engulfed in the downward slide.

So far, there hasn't been a rash of companies pulling ads entirely off the air. While American International Group pulled some corporate ads last week, others remain committed to riding out the storm. Mr. Sinha says that Zurich never considered pulling back ads and that it is as important as ever to show consumers that the company is "strong and that we are here for them."

Write to Suzanne Vranica at suzanne.vranica@wsj.com and Stephanie Kang at stephanie.kang@wsj.com

Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

segunda-feira, setembro 15, 2008

Wall Street awakes to 2 storied firms gone

Wall Street awakes to 2 storied firms gone

By JOE BEL BRUNO, CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER and MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Business Writers2 hours, 15 minutes ago

When Wall Street woke up Monday morning, two more of its storied firms had vanished.

Lehman Brothers, burdened by $60 billion in soured real-estate holdings, said it is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after attempts to rescue the 158-year-old firm failed.

Bank of America Corp. said it is snapping up Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. in an $50 billion all-stock transaction.

The demise of the independent Wall Street institutions came as shock waves from the 14-month-old credit crisis roiled the U.S. financial system six months after the collapse of Bear Stearns.

The world's largest insurance company, American International Group Inc., also was forced into a restructuring.

And a global consortium of banks, working with government officials in New York, announced a $70 billion pool of funds to lend to troubled financial companies.

The aim, according to participants who spoke to The Associated Press, was to prevent a worldwide panic on stock and other financial exchanges.

Ten banks — Bank of America, Barclays, Citibank, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and UBS — each agreed to provide $7 billion "to help enhance liquidity and mitigate the unprecedented volatility and other challenges affecting global equity and debt markets."

The Federal Reserve also chipped in with more largesse in its emergency lending program for investment banks. The central bank announced late Sunday that it was broadening the types of collateral that financial institutions can use to obtain loans from the Fed.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the discussions had been aimed at identifying "potential market vulnerabilities in the wake of an unwinding of a major financial institution and to consider appropriate official sector and private sector responses."

Futures pegged to the Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 250 points in electronic trading Sunday evening, pointing to a sharply lower open for the blue chip index Monday morning. Asian stock markets also tumbled, with India's Sensex sinking more than 5 percent. Japan and Hong Kong were closed for holidays.

The stunning weekend developments took place as voters, who rank the economy as their top concern, prepare to elect a new president in seven weeks. It likely will spur a much greater focus by presidential candidates — Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama — and members of Congress on the need for stricter financial regulation.

Samuel Hayes, finance professor emeritus at Harvard Business School, said the Bush administration may get a lot of blame for the situation, which could benefit Obama.

"Just the psychological impact of this kind of failure is going to be significant," he said. "It will color people's feelings about their well-being and the integrity of the financial system."

Lehman Brothers' announcement that it is filing for bankruptcy came after all potential buyers walked away. Potential suitors were spooked by the U.S. Treasury's refusal to provide any takeover aid, as it had done six months ago when Bear Stearns faltered and earlier this month when it seized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Employees emerging from Lehman's headquarters near the heart of Times Square Sunday night carried boxes, tote bags and duffel bags, rolling suitcases, framed artwork and spare umbrellas. Many were emblazoned with the Lehman Brothers name.

TV trucks lined Seventh Avenue opposite the building, while barricades at the building's main entrance attempted to keep workers and onlookers from gumming up the steady flow of pedestrians flowing in and out of Times Square.

Some workers had moist eyes while a few others wept and shared hugs. Most who left the building quietly declined interviews.

People snapped pictures with cameras and their phones. Observers pressed up against a police barricade drew the ire of one man who emerged from the building and shouted: "Are you enjoying watching this? You think this is funny?"

Merrill Lynch, another investment bank laid low by the crisis that was triggered by rising mortgage defaults and plunging home values in the U.S., agreed to be acquired by Bank of America for 0.8595 shares of Bank of America common stock for each Merrill Lynch common share.

That values Merrill at $29 a share, a 70 percent premium over the brokerage's Friday closing price of $17.05, but well below what Merrill was worth at its peak in early 2007, when its shares traded above $98.

Charlotte, N.C.,-based Bank of America has the most deposits of any U.S. bank, while Merrill Lynch is the world's largest brokerage. A combination of the two would create a global financial giant to rival Citigroup Inc., the biggest U.S. bank in terms of assets.

Strategically, most industry analysts say it's a good fit. If the deal goes according to plan, Bank of America will be able to offer Merrill's retail brokerage services to its huge customer base. There is not a great deal of overlap between the two companies — Bank of America does have an investment bank already, but it has never been terribly strong.

Where there is duplication, however, the combination of the two companies could result in more layoffs. Both Merrill and Bank of America have already cut thousands of investment banking jobs over the past year.

The deal would not come without risks, however. Merrill Lynch, like many of its Wall Street peers, has been struggling with tight credit markets and billions of dollars in assets tied to mortgages that have plunged in value. Merrill has reported four straight quarterly losses.

Bank of America's own finances are far from robust. As consumer credit deteriorates, the bank has seen its profits decline, and the company is still in the midst of absorbing the embattled mortgage lender Countrywide Financial, which it acquired in January.

Insurer AIG, hit hard by deterioration in the credit markets, said Sunday it is reviewing its operations and discussing possible options with outside parties to improve its business after a week when its stock dropped 45 percent amid concerns about the company's financial underpinnings. It was working with New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo and a representative of the governor's office through the weekend to craft a solution that protects policyholders, according to Dinallo's spokesman David Neustadt.

"It's clear we're one step away from a financial meltdown," said Nouriel Roubini, chairman of the consulting firm RGE Monitor.

The meetings that began Friday night were a who's who of financial heavyweights: Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, Timothy Geithner, president of the New York Fed, Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox, and a host of CEOs, including Vikram Pandit of Citigroup Inc., Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase & Co., John Mack of Morgan Stanley, Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs Group Inc., and Merrill Lynch & Co.'s John Thain.

For all their efforts, Lehman appeared ready to file for bankruptcy.

The end of Lehman may not stop the financial crisis that has gripped Wall Street for months, analysts said. More investment banks could disappear soon.

The independent broker-dealers "are going the way of the dodo bird," said Bert Ely, an Alexandria, Va.,-based banking consultant.

That's partly because some of the firms, particularly Merrill, made bad bets on real estate. But several analysts said that investment companies will need the deep pockets of commercial banks to survive the next few years.

On Sunday, there was also an emergency trading session being held at the International Swaps and Derivatives Association to "reduce risk associated with a potential Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bankruptcy." The ISDA, which arranges trades for derivatives, said it was allowing customers to make trades and unwind positions linked to Lehman.

Roubini said it's difficult to accurately gauge the health of companies like Merrill because their financial health depends on how they value complex securities. As a result, their finances aren't very transparent, he said.

That can lead to a loss of confidence in the financial markets, he said, which can overwhelm an investment bank even if it is financially healthy by some measures.

"Once you lose confidence, the fundamentals matter less," he said.

The common denominator of the financial crisis, analysts said, is the bursting of the housing bubble. Home prices have dropped on average 25 percent so far. Roubini predicted they could drop another 15 percent.

The crisis has begun to slow the broader economy as banks make fewer loans and consumers have begun cutting spending. Many economists are now forecasting that the economy could slip into recession by the end of this year and early next year.

That, in turn, could cause additional losses for commercial banks on credit cards, auto loans and student loans.

The Fed is widely expected to keep interest rates steady at 2 percent, below inflation, when it meets Tuesday. It was possible, however, that the central bank might decide in coming weeks to cut rates if such a move is seen as needed to calm turbulent financial markets.

The International Monetary Fund predicted earlier this year that total losses from the credit crisis could reach almost $1 trillion. So far, banks have only taken about $350 billion in losses.

Commercial banks are also starting to feel the pinch. Eleven have closed so far this year, including Pasadena, Calif.-based IndyMac Bank, which had $32 billion in assets and $19 billion in deposits.

Christopher Whalen, managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics, a research firm, predicts that approximately 110 banks with $850 billion in assets could close by next July. That's out of 8,400 federally insured institutions, he said, which together hold $13 trillion in assets.

Individual customers are starting to get nervous about the financial health of their banks for the first time in generations, he said. Whalen's firm analyzes the safety and soundness of banks for business clients, but began receiving inquiries from individuals in the past two months for the first time, he said.

"If we don't get ahead of this, we are going to face a run on the retail banks by election day," he said.

___

AP Business Writers Madlen Read, Tim Paradis and Stephen Bernard in New York, Martin Crutsinger in Washington, Ieva Augstums in Charlotte and Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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sexta-feira, agosto 29, 2008

Marca Portugal


Marca Portugal

Irá algum potencial turista ou investidor reparar nas medalhas que iremos (não) ganhar em Londres 2012?

Paulo Gonçalves Marcos

Terminou a participação portuguesa nos Jogos e julgamos útil ressalvar alguns aspectos de gestão bem como aferir do seu potencial económico. Para a China ou Cuba, regimes ditatoriais, os Jogos são uma montra de afirmação política e de determinação ideológica. Para os restantes países, os Jogos podem ser outra coisa qualquer. O caso português, contudo, é mais complexo…Uma prestação paupérrima face aos objectivos contratualizados de quatro a cinco medalhas com mais dois punhados de finalistas…Resultados obtidos estão ao nível de “grandes potências desportivas” como a República Dominicana, Trindade e Tobago, Quirquizistão…Um atleta que se declara indisponível fisicamente para participar, quase nas vésperas do arranque do certame…outra, que após uma eliminação inglória, queria entrar de férias…os árbitros, as provas madrugadoras…Enfim, uma parte dos atletas portugueses exibiu ausência de sentido de responsabilidade ou de profissionalismo. Uma liderança do contingente português entre o patético e o politicamente absurdo. Um simpático governante que fala de sorte ou de azar, como se de um Casino se tratasse…Concorrer ao mais alto nível implica conjugar mais e melhor apoio técnico, nutricionistas, fisioterapeutas de topo, acompanhamento psicológico e o uso de antigos atletas como ‘coachers’. Como fazem os EUA, a Austrália, o Reino Unido …Para evitar os desaires típicos de uma síndrome Mamede, mais de vinte anos depois…. Demitem-se os responsáveis, cobertos de vergonha? Não…A fazer fé no Diário de Notícias (27.08) aumenta-se os prémios para os atletas…A velha e improdutiva política de deitar dinheiro para cima dos problemas. É claro que uma parte dos 15 milhões gastos na preparação destes Jogos poderia ser usada de forma economicamente mais proveitosa. Na Promoção de Portugal enquanto destino turístico no Mercado Escandinavo, por exemplo. Quase 25 milhões de cidadãos de elevado poder de compra, culturalmente bastante homogéneos, privados de Invernos amenos. E aos quais Portugal pode oferecer boa gastronomia, a simpatia das gentes, a beleza da língua e a sonoridade da mesma (afinal não é apenas o italiano que é cativante!), o sossego, a paisagem, as infraestruturas turísticas. Mas os Nórdicos demandam em grandes números a Espanha, Itália, Grécia ou mesmo destinos no Extremo Oriente (reparou o leitor no número enorme de vítimas nórdicas entre as do Tsunami?). Compram residências de segunda habitação em Espanha (quase 300 000 já o fizeram). E Portugal como se posiciona nos mercados nórdicos? Pouco presente em campanhas publicitárias, as parcas aparições na televisão ou na imprensa são facilmente suplantadas em intensidade pelos outros destinos supracitados (mas também pelo Chipre ou Malta). O sucesso de alguns produtos portugueses (mormente o Vinho) ainda não é capaz de per si só provocar o efeito de arrastamento cultural que lojas e produtos espanhóis ou italianos conseguem fazer. Quatro operadores turísticos, instalados nos mercados nórdicos, dominam os programas e as rotas que são propostas aos turistas escandinavos. Numa lógica de rotatividade ao longo do mediterrâneo, em sistema de quase leilão colocando em compita os destinos. Em que uma região ou país que num ano está na “moda” é obliterado no ano seguinte, em benefício de algum outro que mais benefícios ofereceu. E por isso a nossa estupefacção com a notícia do DN. Uma parte da verba poderia ser melhor usada em mais e melhor promoção e comunicação portuguesa (também com acções locais de alto impacto mediático) na Escandinávia e na tomada de uma participação accionista nas empresas distribuidoras (operadores turísticos) locais. Afinal não é diferente do que a Inapa, Corticeira Amorim ou Tafisa/Sonae fizeram aquando do seu processo de internacionalização! Compraram ou tomaram o controlo dos canais de distribuição. De que está à espera Portugal? De algum potencial turista ou investidor reparar nas medalhas que iremos (não) ganhar em Londres 2012?


www.antonuco.blogspot.com

____


Paulo Gonçalves Marcos, Economista

Comentários
Paulo Curto de Sousa (curtodesousa@gmail.com)
Para resultados desportivos de elevado nível torna-se fundamental conjugar um conjunto de factores, entre os quais o mais importante… a atitude e confiança dos atletas. E é um factor que pode ser desenvolvido e trabalhado. Aliás, algumas das soluções são referidas no artigo. Há que responsabilizar os atletas pelas suas prestações… mas principalmente pela forma como abordam e encaram a competição. E essa atitude vai determinar o nosso posicionamento. Seja no desporto, seja na economia global. Abraço.
vg
Estou de acordo que o tempo de espera das malas ,na Portela, é um assunto mais grave para o nosso turismo
Antonio Moreira
Para alcandorar a imagem de Portugal a outros planos a participação nos Jogos Olímpicos é irrelevante. São outros os produtos e serviços portugueses que podem contribuir para isso. O nosso vinho, claro, os nossos escritores e o nosso turismo. Nisto estou de acordo com o autor.
Maria Jesus Chapelle
Esta mania de deitar dinheiro para cima dos problemas assemelha-se a deitar combustível para uma fogueira. Nada resolve. Por isso de acordo.
Jorge Oliveira
Caro Paulo : "Uma liderança do contingente português entre o patético e o politicamente absurdo". Infelizmente é verdade, mas... a liderança do próprio país não sofre do mesmo? É tudo fruto da mesma árvore.
António d'Abril (ansylva@gmail.com)
Prezado Paulo G Marcos, Identifico-me com as suas preocupações e alternativas para promover a marca Portugal. Contudo, a maior prova desportiva mundial pode ser aproveitada para elevar a marca Portugal, tanto mais que este ano decorreu na China, grande potencial escoador dos produtos e serviços nacionais. As medalhas podem não alavancar a economia mas o ambiente em torno dos Jogos poderia ser uma oportunidade a não desperdiçar. Tal como na gestão desportiva, a empresarial e governamental não tem o culto da partilha de esforços (financeiros, humanos e materiais) para atingir o objectivo comum. Assim, Londres pode ser igual a Pequim ou Sidney!

Fed launches a new online resource to help in refinancing a home loan

Location: New York
Author: RiskCenter Staff
Date: Friday, August 29, 2008

The Federal Reserve Board on Thursday announced the launch of an online resource to help consumers make informed choices when refinancing a home loan.

"A Consumer’s Guide to Mortgage Refinancing," which is available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/refinancings/default.htm, contains useful tips and answers to frequently asked questions about the refinancing process. The information provided can help consumers determine when refinancing makes sense, what a refinancing will cost, and whether it is advisable to switch into a different type of mortgage. Consumers will also learn about mortgage terms and how to calculate the time it will take to recover refinancing costs before benefiting from a lower mortgage rate.

Choosing a mortgage is the most important financial decision many individuals will make. Consumers are encouraged to ask questions about loan features when talking to lenders, mortgage brokers, settlement or closing agents, and other professionals involved with the transaction to ensure that they have clear and complete answers.

The site also provides mortgage shopping worksheets, a glossary of mortgage terms, a link to an online refinancing calculator, a printable PDF format, and links to the Board’s other consumer education resources on mortgages.

In addition, the Board has updated the publication "What You Should Know about Home Equity Lines of Credit" to include information for consumers on line of credit freezes or reductions in lines of credit. The updated information is available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/equity/equity_english.htm. Lenders and creditors may use the earlier version of the print version of this material until existing supplies are exhausted.

quinta-feira, agosto 28, 2008

Let the mind rule over the body

"Now if you are going to win any battle you have to do one thing. You have to make the mind run the body. Never let the body tell the mind what to do. The body will always give up. It is always tired in the morning, noon, and night. But the body is never tired if the mind is not tired."

- George S. Patton, U.S. Army General, 1912 Olympian

segunda-feira, agosto 25, 2008

Medals count

As recently as 1988, China won just five golds.

In these Games, it has been powered by eight golds in weightlifting, seven in diving and five in shooting. While the Chinese have won their share of heavily contested competitions, such as women’s gymnastics, the focus on more obscure sports has paid dividends.

China doesn’t apologize for it. Nor should it. It has its goal and the perfect plan to attain it.

sexta-feira, agosto 22, 2008

Requiem por Jan Palach

«Requiem por Jan Palach» (*)

Arde o coração de Praga.
Arde o corpo de Jan Palach.
Podemos dizer que o Rei Venceslau,
montado em seu cavalo,
também viu crescer o fogo
em que arde o coração de Praga.
João Huss, queimando o seu corpo,
também arde na Praça de Praga.
E os cavaleiros da Boémia,
o povo e os grão-Senhores,
os operários de Pilsen,
os poetas e cantores da Eslovóquia,
todos ardem nessa tarde e nessa praça.
Queimamos a coragem e o heroísmo,
queimamos a nossa infinita resistência.
Não é verdade, Soldado Schweik?

Eles vieram das estepes e disseram:
É proibido morrer pela Pátria,
é proibido resistir à opressão,
é proibido combater a ocupação. (Refrão)
É proibido amar os campos verdes do seu país.
É proibido amar o verde da esperança.
É proibido amar a Esperança

Estás proibido, Jan Palach!
És proibido, Jan Palach!
Estás proibido de existir, Jan Palach!
Estás proibido de morrer!

Eles vieram das estepes a disseram
todas estas palavras.
Mas também é verdade que disse um dia o Rei Venceslau,
montado em seu cavalo:
«Esta nossa terra será livre,
e nela crescerão livres
as virgens, as mães e os filhos.
E nela crescerão livres as flores.»
E das flores virão rosas,
rosas brancas, para cobrir a campa
de Jan Palach.
Arde o Coração de Praga,
arde o corpo de Jan Palach,
arde o corpo do Futuro.
E já cresce a Primavera!

(*) Letra de José Valle de Figueiredo, escrita no fim dos anos 60. Música de Manuel Rebanda. O intérprete que mais tem divulgado a canção é José Campos e Sousa.
Jan Palach imolou-se pelo fogo em Janeiro de 1969, em pleno centro da Praça Venceslau, em Praga, símbolo do fundador da nacionalidade.