Archive for October, 2008

Accountant’s job responsibilities

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

1. Assists in the formulation of budgetary and accounting policies.

2. Prepares financial statements for presentation to boards of directors, management, shareholders, and statutory bodies.

3. Conducts financial investigations, undertakes audits, prepares reports, and advises on such matters as the purchase and sale of businesses, mergers, capital financing, suspected fraud, insolvency and taxation.

4. Examines operating costs and the income and expenditure of institutions.

5. Provides assurance about the accuracy of information contained in financial reports and their compliance with statutory requirements.

6. Provides financial and taxation advice on business structures, plans and operations.

7. Liaises with bankers and brokers to establish funds management arrangements.

8. May advise on the selection adn application of computer-based accounting systems.

9. May appraise cash flow and financial risk of capital investment projects.

Mr. ‘Bearbull’ Greenspan shocks global markets

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

By Ron Nathan
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 03:27:00 10/28/2008

In his testimony before the US House of Representatives, former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan said: “We are in the midst of a once-in-a-century credit tsunami.” He denied responsibility for the current global meltdown in equities and commodities and predicted that the United States would emerge from the current credit crisis with “a far sounder financial system.”

His remarks did not faze investors at home, and the Dow index rose 3.0 percent. However, it caused a massive sell-down everywhere else. The next day, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index dropped 8.3 percent, Japan’s Nikkei 9.60 percent fell to a 16-year low, the euro zone market went down 5.0 percent, the Saudi Arabia market dropped to a four-year low, the Nasdaq to a 5.5-year low, and the Kospi down 10.6 percent on Friday.

Worst week

It was the worst week that anyone can remember.

The commodity markets have also suffered severely with copper plunging from $4 a pound to $1.79 in 18 months and nickel plummeting 80 percent from $25 a pound to less than $5. What is worse is that the commodities index has tripled and looks as if it could fall further. Part of the reason is that Beijing closed its factories ahead of the Olympics to prevent air pollution and as a result stockpiled large amounts of metals. The factories have reopened and the surplus stockpiles should be exhausted by Chinese New Year.

Some recovery in commodities is therefore expected but they will not return to their highs because the Chinese economy is slowing.

Greenspan is shocked and doesn’t know what went wrong with his economic model. I think greed and gross misrepresentation caused the problem perpetrated by Wall Street and the people associated with it. Let us start with the real estate brokers who sold naive investors homes with adjustable mortgages. For one or two years, they paid two-percent interest, which they could afford, but after that the interest rate tripled they were unprepared for that and it was often beyond their ability to pay.

Major cause

The real estate brokers worked on commission so they didn’t care and the banks did not properly scrutinize the documents, as they wanted to lend. There were many homeowners who bought a house and when it appreciated sharply in value, they were advised, again for commission, to take out a second mortgage.

These subprime mortgages have to be a major cause of the meltdown in house prices and the 80,000 foreclosures that took place last month. Of course, you might argue that the fault was with the buyer who was not financially savvy, and I would agree with you, but sadly people who trust their advisers too much are often taken advantage of.

Stockbrokers kept telling their clients to buy and impressive circulars issued by their research departments backed this up. The brokers also work on commission and they would only tell their clients to sell if there was a good profit and an alternative investment in which to reinvest. The research departments never sent out sell recommendations because the companies would never again talk to the analysts.

Even now, 98 percent of all recommendations of US brokers are buys! As most investors balk at cutting losses (big mistake), they end up losing heavily in markets like this. The only analysts who can tell the truth without fear of the consequences are technical analysts. They are not interested in the companies, only in their charts.

The rating agencies aided and abetted the stockbrokers by giving higher ratings than many companies deserved and not cutting them until it was far too late. My comments regarding stockbrokers also apply to commodity traders and forex trades where clients rely on them for advice. They all work on commission and sometimes performance fees.

Hedge funds work the same way using higher leverage to increase income and they get huge salaries and 20 percent of the profits. The exotic derivatives, which were designed to protect risk are misused and years ago, a single trader, bankrupted Barings, a bank that had been around for 100 years.

Derivatives

The only derivatives I endorse are options. These allow you to buy or sell shares for a cost of five to 10 percent, depending on the time frame and if the trade goes wrong, that is all you can lose. On the other hand, if you hit the jackpot, your profit can be many times your option premium. Mining companies use options to protect their selling prices for a year or more ahead whenever they feel that they are vulnerable. They pay a premium for the privilege of doing a put option but it secures their profit during that time period. Philex Mining uses hedging on copper and possibly gold. I was an option trader in London for three years, so I understand the concept very well.

Another major cause of the financial crisis were credit swaps in which a buyer makes a series of payments to a seller in exchange for the right to a payoff if the credit instrument goes into default. The problem is that these swaps pass from person to person so when trouble comes, there is no connection between the buyer and the seller. There are currently $58 billion swaps at sea and they are impossible to trace. They should be abolished permanently and will probably never be sorted out.

In that excellent movie, “Wall Street,” the villain Gekko says, “Greed is good.” To sort out this mess will take a long time and with the election only a week away, there will be a bipartisan stimulus package of at least $150 billion to tide people over and possibly another rate cut. Time is of the essence in trying to save people from losing their homes but the period from the election to the swearing in of a new President is 11 weeks, far too long.

If credit swaps and adjustable mortgages are abolished and brokers, real estate salesmen, banks and rating agencies regulated, I agree with Greenspan that we will emerge leaner, fitter and more efficient than before. It will mean a lot of effort by the regulators but with Bernanke as Fed chairman, he can guide them through the maze.

I would like to thank readers for their advice on my computer. After six months of calling DSL and getting no help, my article caused the company to send a repairman and I have no more problem. This confirms the saying, “The pen is mightier than the telephone.”

Today, the market went limit down at 10 percent for the first time ever and ceased trading for 15 minutes but it continued to decline in thin trading. There are rumors that a large pension fund is selling its portfolio.
 
http://business.inquirer.net/money/columns/view/20081028-168829/Greenspan-shocks-global-markets

The Senior T-Shirt

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

We are Valuable!!
We are more valuable than any of the younger generations:
We have silver in our hair,
We have gold in our teeth.
We have stones in our kidneys.
We have lead in our feet.

And
We are loaded with natural gas!!

A primer on the Wall Street meltdown

Monday, October 27th, 2008


By Walden Bello
INQUIRER.net
First Posted 03:56:00 10/01/2008

NEW YORK — Flying into New York Tuesday, I had the same feeling I had when I arrived in Beirut two years ago, at the height of the Israeli bombing of that city — that of entering a war zone.

The immigration agent, upon learning I taught political economy, commented, “Well, I guess you folks will now be revising all those textbooks?”

The bus driver welcomed passengers with the words, “New York is still here, ladies and gentlemen, but Wall Street has disappeared, like the Twin Towers.”

Even the usually cheerful TV morning shows felt obligated to begin with the bad news, with one host attributing the bleak events to “the fat cats of Wall Street who turned into pigs.”

This city is shell-shocked, and most people still have to digest the momentous events of the past two weeks:

• a trillion dollars’ worth of capital going up in smoke in Wall Street’s steep plunge of 778 points on Black Monday II, Sept. 29, as investors reacted in panic to the US House of Representatives’ rejection of President George W. Bush’s gargantuan $700-billion bailout of financial institutions on the verge of bankruptcy;

• the collapse of one of the Street’s most prominent investment banks, Lehman Brothers, followed by the largest bank failure in US history, that of Washington Mutual, the country’s largest savings and loan institution;

• Wall Street’s effective nationalization, with the Federal Reserve and the Department of Treasury making all the major strategic decisions in the financial sector and, with the rescue of the American International Group (AIG), the amazing fact that the US government now runs the world’s biggest insurance company.

Over $5 trillion in total market capitalization has been wiped out since October of last year, with over a trillion of this accounted for by the unraveling of Wall Street’s financial titans.

The usual explanations no longer suffice. Extraordinary events demand extraordinary explanations. But first…

Is the worst over?

No, if anything is clear from the contradictory moves of the last week — allowing Lehman Brothers and Washington Mutual to collapse while taking AIG over and engineering Bank of America’s takeover of Merrill Lynch — there is no strategy to deal with the crisis, just tactical responses, like the fire department’s response to a conflagration.

The proposed $700-billion buyout of banks’ bad mortgaged-backed securities is not a strategy but mainly a desperate effort to shore up confidence in the system, to prevent the erosion of trust in the banks and other financial institutions and preventing a massive bank run such as the one that triggered the Great Depression of 1929.

What caused the collapse of global capitalism’s nerve center? Was it greed?

Good old fashioned greed played a part. This is what Klaus Schwab, the organizer of the World Economic Forum, the yearly global elite jamboree in the Swiss Alps, meant when he told his clientele in Davos earlier this year: “We have to pay for the sins of the past.”

Was this a case of Wall Street outsmarting itself?

Definitely. Financial speculators outsmarted themselves by creating more and more complex financial contracts like derivatives that would securitize and make money from all forms of risk — including exotic futures instruments as “credit default swaps” that enable investors to bet on the odds that the banks’ own corporate borrowers would not be able to pay their debts! This is the unregulated multi-trillion-dollar trade that brought AIG down.

On Dec. 17, 2005, when International Financing Review (IFR) announced its 2005 Annual Awards — one of the securities industry’s most prestigious awards — it had this to say: “[Lehman Brothers] not only maintained its overall market presence, but also led the charge into the preferred space by … developing new products and tailoring transactions to fit borrowers’ needs…. Lehman Brothers is the most innovative in the preferred space, just doing things you won’t see elsewhere.”

No comment.

Was it lack of regulation?

Yes — everyone acknowledges by now that Wall Street’s capacity to innovate and turn out more and more sophisticated financial instruments had run far ahead of government’s regulatory capability, not because government was not capable of regulating but because the dominant neoliberal, laissez-faire attitude prevented government from devising effective mechanisms with which to regulate. The massive trading in derivatives helped precipitate this crisis, and the US Congress paved the way when it passed a law in 2000 excluding derivatives from being regulated by the Securities Exchange Commission.

But isn’t there something more that is happening? Something systemic?

Well, George Soros, who saw this coming, says what we are going through is the crisis of the “gigantic circulatory system” of a “global capitalist system that is…coming apart at the seams.”

To elaborate on the arch-speculator’s insight, what we are seeing is the intensification of one of the central crises or contradictions of global capitalism, which is the crisis of overproduction, also known as over-accumulation or overcapacity.

This is the tendency for capitalism to build up tremendous productive capacity that outruns the population’s capacity to consume, owing to social inequalities that limit popular purchasing power. Profitability is thus eroded.

But what does the crisis of overproduction have to do with recent events?

Plenty. But to understand the connections, we must go back in time to the so-called Golden Age of Contemporary Capitalism, the period from 1945 to 1975.

This was a period of rapid growth both in the center economies and in the underdeveloped economies — one that was partly triggered by the massive reconstruction of Europe and East Asia after the devastation of the Second World War, and partly by the new socioeconomic arrangements that were institutionalized under the new Keynesian state. Among the latter, key were strong state controls over market activity, aggressive use of fiscal and monetary policy to minimize inflation and recession, and a regime of relatively high wages to stimulate and maintain demand.

So what went wrong?

Well, this period of high growth came to an end in the mid-1970s, when the center economies were seized by stagflation, meaning the coexistence of low growth with high inflation, which was not supposed to happen under neoclassical economics.

Stagflation, however, was but a symptom of a deeper cause: The reconstruction of Germany and Japan and the rapid growth of industrializing economies like Brazil, Taiwan and South Korea added tremendous new productive capacity and increased global competition, while social inequalities within countries and between countries worldwide limited the growth of purchasing power and demand, thus eroding profitability. This was aggravated by the massive oil price rises of the ’70s.

How did capitalism try to solve the crisis of overproduction?

Capital tried three escape routes from the conundrum of overproduction: neoliberal restructuring, globalization, and financialization.

What was neoliberal restructuring all about?

Neoliberal restructuring took the form of Reaganism and Thatcherism in the North and Structural Adjustment in the South. The aim was to invigorate capital accumulation, and this was to be done by (1) removing state constraints on the growth, use and flow of capital and wealth, and (2) redistributing income from the poor and middle classes to the rich on the theory that the rich would then be motivated to invest and reignite economic growth.

The problem with this formula was that in redistributing income to the rich, they were gutting the incomes of the poor and middle classes, thus restricting demand, while not necessarily inducing the rich to invest more in production. In fact, what the rich did was to channel a large part of their redistributed wealth to speculation.

The truth is neoliberal restructuring, which was generalized in the North and South during the 1980s and ’90s, had a poor record in terms of growth: Global growth averaged 1.1 percent in the ’90s and 1.4 in the ’80s, whereas it averaged 3.5 percent in the ’60s and 2.4 percent in the ’70s, when state interventionist policies were dominant. Neoliberal restructuring could not shake off stagnation.

How was globalization a response to the crisis?

The second escape route global capital took to counter stagnation was “extensive accumulation” or globalization, or the rapid integration of semi-capitalist, non-capitalist or pre-capitalist areas into the global market economy. Rosa Luxemburg, the famous German revolutionary economist, saw this long ago as necessary to shore up the rate of profit in the metropolitan economies. How? By gaining access to cheap labor, by gaining new, albeit limited, markets, by gaining new sources of cheap agricultural and raw material products, and by bringing into being new areas for investment in infrastructure. Integration is accomplished via trade liberalization, removing barriers to the mobility of global capital and abolishing barriers to foreign investment.

China is, of course, the most prominent case of a non-capitalist area to be integrated into the global capitalist economy over the past 25 years.

To counter their declining profits, a sizable number of the Fortune 500 corporations have moved a significant part of their operations to China to take advantage of the so-called “China Price” — the cost advantage deriving from China’s seemingly inexhaustible cheap labor. By the middle of the first decade of the 21st century, roughly 40-50 percent of the profits of US corporations were derived from their operations and sales abroad, especially in China.

Why didn’t globalization surmount the crisis?

The problem with this escape route from stagnation is that it exacerbates the problem of overproduction because it adds to productive capacity. A tremendous amount of manufacturing capacity has been added in China over the past 25 years, and this has had a depressing effect on prices and profits. Not surprisingly, by around 1997, the profits of US corporations stopped growing. According to another index, devised by economist Philip O’Hara, the profit rate of the Fortune 500 went from 7.15 in 1960-69 to 5.30 in 1980-90 to 2.29 in 1990-99 to 1.32 in 2000-02.

What about financialization?

Given the limited gains in countering the depressive impact of overproduction via neoliberal restructuring and globalization, the third escape route became very critical for maintaining and raising profitability: financialization.

In the ideal world of neoclassical economics, the financial system is the mechanism by which the savers or those with surplus funds are joined with the entrepreneurs who have need of their funds to invest in production. In the real world of late capitalism, with investment in industry and agriculture yielding low profits owing to overcapacity, large amounts of surplus funds are circulating and being invested and reinvested in the financial sector — that is, the financial sector is turning in on itself.

The result is an increased bifurcation between a hyperactive financial economy and a stagnant real economy. As one financial executive notes, “There has been an increasing disconnect between the real and financial economies in the last few years. The real economy has grown … but nothing like that of the financial economy — until it imploded.”

What this observer does not tell us is that the disconnect between the real and the financial economy is not accidental — that the financial economy exploded precisely to make up for the stagnation owing to overproduction of the real economy.

What were the problems with financialization as an escape route?

The problem with investing in financial sector operations is that it is tantamount to squeezing value out of already created value. It may create profit, yes, but it does not create new value — only industry, agriculture, trade and services create new value.

Because profit is not based on value that is created, investment operations become very volatile and prices of stocks, bonds, and other forms of investment can depart very radically from their real value — for instance, the stock of Internet startups that keep on rising, driven mainly by upwardly spiraling financial valuations, and that then crash.

Profits then depend on taking advantage of upward price departures from the value of commodities, and then selling before reality enforces a “correction,” that is, a crash back to real values.

The radical rise of prices of an asset far beyond real values is what is called the formation of a bubble.

Why is financialization so volatile?

Profitability being dependent on speculative coups, it is not surprising that the finance sector lurches from one bubble to another, or from one speculative mania to another.

Because it is driven by speculative mania, finance-driven capitalism has experienced about 100 financial crises since capital markets were deregulated and liberalized in the 1980s.

Prior to the current Wall Street meltdown, the most explosive of these were the Mexican Financial Crisis of 1994-95, the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997-98, the Russian Financial Crisis of 1996, the Wall Street Stock Market Collapse of 2001, and the Argentine Financial Collapse of 2002.

Bill Clinton’s treasury secretary, Wall Streeter Robert Rubin, predicted five years ago that “future financial crises are almost surely inevitable and could be even more severe.”

How do bubbles form, grow, and burst?

Let’s first use the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997-98 as an example.

• First, capital account and financial liberalization at the urging of the IMF and the US Department of Treasury;

• Then, entry of foreign funds seeking quick and high returns, meaning they went to real estate and the stock market;

• Overinvestment, leading to a fall in stock and real estate prices, leading to panicky withdrawal of funds — in 1997, $100 billion left the East Asian economies in a few weeks;

• Bailout of foreign speculators by the IMF;

• Collapse of the real economy — recession throughout East Asia in 1998.

Despite massive destabilization, efforts to impose both national and global regulation of financial system were opposed on ideological grounds.

Let’s go to the current bubble. How did it form?

The current Wall Street collapse has its roots in the Technology Bubble of the late 1990s, when the price of the stocks of Internet startups skyrocketed, then collapsed, resulting in the loss of $7 trillion worth of assets and in the recession of 2001-02.

The loose money policies of the Fed under Alan Greenspan had encouraged the Technology Bubble, and when the US fell into a recession, Greenspan, to try to counter a long recession, cut the prime rate to a 45-year low of 1.00 per cent in June 2003 and kept it there for over a year. That had the effect of encouraging another bubble: the real estate bubble.

As early as 2002, progressive economists, such as Dean Baker of the Center for Economic Policy Research, were warning about the real estate bubble. However, as late as 2005, Ben Bernanke, then chairman of the Council of Economic Adviser and now chairman of the Federal Reserve, attributed the rise in US housing prices to “strong economic fundamentals” instead of speculative activity. Is it any wonder that he was caught completely off guard when the subprime crisis broke in the summer of 2007?

And how did it grow?

Let’s hear it from one key market player himself, George Soros: “Mortgage institutions encouraged mortgage holders to refinance their mortgages and withdraw their excess equity. They lowered their lending standards and introduced new products, such as adjustable mortgages (ARMs), ‘interest only’ mortgages, and promotional ‘teaser rates.’ All this encouraged speculation in residential housing units. House prices started to rise in double-digit rates. This served to reinforce speculation, and the rise in house prices made the owners feel rich; the result was a consumption boom that has sustained the economy in recent years.”

Looking at the process more closely, the subprime mortgage crisis was not a case of supply outrunning real demand. The “demand” was largely fabricated by speculative mania among developers and financiers that wanted to make great profits from their access to foreign money — lots of it from Asia — that flooded the US in the last decade. Big-ticket mortgages or loans were aggressively made to millions of people who could not normally afford them by offering low “teaser” interest rates that would later be readjusted to jack up payments from the new homeowners.

But how could subprime mortgages going sour turn into such a big problem?

Because these assets were then “securitized” with other assets into complex derivative products called “collateralized debt obligations” (CDOs), by the mortgage originators working with different layers of middlemen who understated risk so as to offload them as quickly as possible to other banks and institutional investors. These institutions in turn offloaded these securities onto other banks and foreign financial institutions. The idea was to make a sale quickly, make a tidy profit, while foisting the risk on the suckers down the line.

When the interest rates were raised on the subprime loans, adjustable mortgages and other housing loans, the game was up. There are about six million subprime mortgages outstanding, 40 percent of which will likely go into default in the next two years, according to Soros’ estimates.

And five million more defaults from adjustable-rate mortgages and other “flexible loans” will occur in the next several years. But securities whose values run in the trillions of dollars have already been injected, like a virus, into the global financial system. Global capitalism’s gigantic circulatory system is fatally infected.

But how could Wall Street titans collapse like a house of cards?

For Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Bear Stearns, the losses represented by these toxic securities simply overwhelmed their reserves and brought them down. And more are likely to fall once their books — since lots of these holdings are recorded “off the balance sheet” — are corrected to reflect their actual holdings of these assets.

And many others will join them as other speculative operations, such as credit cards and different varieties of risk insurance, seize up. American International Group (AIG) was felled by its massive exposure in the unregulated area of credit default swaps, derivatives that make it possible for investors to bet on the possibility that companies will default on repaying loans. Such bets on credit defaults now make up a $45-trillion market that is entirely unregulated. It amounts to more than five times the total of the US government bond market. The mega-size of the assets that could go bad should AIG collapse was what made Washington change its mind and salvage it after it let Lehman Brothers collapse.

What’s going to happen now?

We can safely say, then, that there will be more bankruptcies and government takeovers, with foreign banks and institutions joining their US counterparts; that Wall Street’s collapse will deepen and prolong the US recession; and that in Asia and elsewhere, a US recession will translate into a recession, if not worse.

The reason for that last point is that China’s main foreign market is the US and China in turn imports raw materials and intermediate goods that it uses for its exports to the US from Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asia. Globalization has made “decoupling” impossible. The US, China and East Asia are like three prisoners bound together in a chain-gang.

In a nutshell…?

The Wall Street meltdown is due not only to greed and the lack of government regulation of a hyperactive sector. It stems ultimately from the crisis of overproduction that has plagued global capitalism since the mid-1970s.

Financialization of investment activity has been one of the escape routes from stagnation, the other two being neoliberal restructuring and globalization. With neoliberal restructuring and globalization providing limited relief, financialization became attractive as a mechanism to shore up profitability. But financialization has proven to be a dangerous road, leading to speculative bubbles that lead to the temporary prosperity of a few but which ultimately end up in corporate collapse and in recession in the real economy.

The key questions now are: How deep and long will this recession be? Does the US economy need another speculative bubble to drag itself out of this recession? And if it does, where will the next bubble form? Some people say the military-industrial complex, or the “disaster capitalism complex” that Naomi Klein writes about, is the next one, but that’s another story.

Walden Bello is president of Freedom from Debt Coalition, senior analyst at Focus on the Global South, and professor of Sociology at the University of the Philippines.

http://opinion.inquirer.net/viewpoints/columns/view/20081001-163889/A-primer-on-the-Wall-Street-meltdown

Retooling for the postfinancial crisis

Monday, October 27th, 2008

By Felicito C. Payumo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 22:19:00 10/26/2008

Warren Buffett ma-naged to stay out of trading of derivatives. He did not understand them but viewed them with suspicion. He called them “weapons of financial mass destruction.”

In good times, one cannot know who’s been taking excessive risks, he once said, “It’s only when the tide goes out that you will know who’s been swimming naked.” That’s his folksy equivalent of “In a bull market, everyone is a genius.”

In the local scene, the propensity of public officials, including a few presidential aspirants to comment on every passing issue only expose not a few vacuous minds. As a nonbanker trying to understand how a “super bubble” is inflated almost unnoticed until it pops, I found both helpful and hilarious a cartoon illustration “A Subprime Primer” that went around the e-mail circuit even before the financial crisis.

Primer

In the primer, a banker is shown looking at a pile of stinking mortgage loans. He calls a smart guy from New York and asks how he could get rid of them. The smart guy (who must be from JP Morgan?) had a brilliant idea.

Smart guy: We will create a new Security and use these smelly mortgages as collateral. We will call it a CDO. We sell that to investors and promise to pay them back as the mortgages are paid off.

Banker: But crap is crap. Who will buy them?

Smart guy: Individually, they are. But if pooled together, only some will go bad. And since housing prices always go up, we have little to worry about. We will slice the CDO into three pieces and call them “the good, the not so good and the ugly. We will promise to pay first those holding the good ones, the not so good, second and the ugly, last. And since the investor that holds the good piece has the least risk, we will pay him a lower interest rate than the other guys. Plus, we will buy bond insurance for the good ones, so the rating agencies will give them AAA to A, the not so good, BBB to B rating.

Banker: You’re a genius. So, we will now have AAA to B rating out of these stinky, risky mortgages. But who do we sell to?

Smart guy: Not to worry. We will not sell to widows and orphans but to sophisticated institutional clients, like insurance companies (like AIG?), banks, small towns in Norway (or Iceland?), school boards in Kansas, to anyone looking for high-quality, safe investments. And you don’t have to worry about carrying them in your balance sheet—we will set up a shell company in the Cayman Islands to take ownership of the mortgages so the crap goes into their balance sheet. We call that a SPV (special purpose vehicle).

In his new book, George Soros said that CDOs were even repackaged into CDOs of CDOs and called them CDO square. The securitization mania spread from mortgages to other forms of credit called credit default swap (CDS).

This synthetic market grew exponentially to an estimated nominal value of $43 trillion. To put matters in perspective, he points out that it is equivalent to the entire household wealth of the United States. The capitalization of the US stock market is $18.5 trillion, and the US treasuries market is only $4.5 trillion.

And so, that’s how we got, not just the boom-bust housing bubble but a longer term, and more complicated super bubble, which now affects not only Wall Street but main Street, not just the US economy but the world economy, because, as Thomas Friedman says, “the world is flat.”

He did not really apologize for stating a case for globalization, but for not realizing that the world is flatter than he thought. “Who would have thought that hedge funds would come from the glaciers of Iceland,” he asked. He advised that we must prepare for the long haul. Quoting a historian of financial crises, he said that men think in herds. “They go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one.”

Slowdown

So, shall we sleep soundly when our public officials say that we are insulated from the crisis because our economy stands on sound fundamentals and that we have already done a restructuring of our financial system after the Asian Contagion?

Shall we not worry about our exports when the economy of our major trading partner, the United States, is slowing down? No? Because we have a diversified market for our minerals and raw materials, like China? But doesn’t China also sell to the United States and Europe, which may slip into a recession if the credit freeze does not thaw? Shall we not worry about our workers, who will be displaced in the export manufacturing sector?

Will our unemployment problem at home not be compounded by the possible contraction of the overseas job market? Looking at the concentration of our 8.2 million overseas Filipino workers, we find that 2.9 million have permanent residence mainly in the United States, 3.4 million have temporary work contracts in various countries and 1.5 million are illegally staying, mainly, in the United States and Malaysia.

Where are these temporary workers deployed? Household helpers and related workers account for 28 percent; these are maids in Hong Kong, Singapore, Italy and other countries. Singapore is technically in recession, and the dailies carry accounts of maids worrying they might be sent home because “the master has been coming home irritable since he lost his job.”

Loss of jobs

Construction workers account for 14 percent; they are mostly in the Middle East working in oil-gas-related projects and high-rise buildings. With the worldwide recession, the price of crude has gone down to $75 a barrel. The downward price trend could put new construction projects on hold.

Another 14 percent consists of factory workers, such as those in manufacturing plants in Taiwan and Korea. Their products similarly go to West. Then, we have nurses, physical therapists and caregivers for the aging population of Europe, United Kingdom and the United States.

Their services will continue to be needed, but competition from other countries and nationals of the host countries have slowed down the deployment of our nurses.

Building services requirements absorbed 5.8 percent of our workers, while Hotel and Restaurant workers account for 5.1 percent. Will travelers, specially the business executives, continue to fly and dine in style or will they now skimp on their reduced expense accounts? Finally, the performing artists make up for 2.4 percent. This includes not only our band players in hotels and night club lounges but also GROs, a euphemism for our female night club workers in Japan. A weakening world economy does not bode well for this group either. But will our seamen encounter rough seas ahead? With reduced commerce, there can only be fewer cargo ships and tankers sailing the oceans.

Even luxury cruise ships will not be able to escape a darkening horizon. That portends gloom not only for our seamen but also for Filipino musical bands, waiters and cooks that are ubiquitous in these ships.

Only after knowing the gravity and extent of the problem, can we offer our prescriptions for the future. As companies take a market slump as opportunity to retool, countries must prepare their economies for the rebound. How? By putting our infrastructure—both hard and soft—at par with those of other countries.

1. It is obvious that our airports, seaports and roads suffer in comparison with those of other countries. Now that the SCETX has been connected to the NLEx, what we need is a direct highway connection of the NLEx to the SLEx so that motorists will be spared the traffic congestion in Edsa and C-5. But first, we have to put SLEx out of the disgraceful state it is in.

With this connection, it will also be easier to transfer passengers from Naia to Dmia in Clark, which is due for upgrading. The plan to move our International Airport to Clark is overdue. With only one runway, Naia cannot serve as a model international airport.

2. The food crisis seems to have been forgotten. But it is sure to come back as the world population increases and global warming is not abated. Our ability to increase our rice production is severely limited because we have only irrigated 45 percent of our irritable areas.

The remaining 55 percent either have irrigation facilities, which are silted and in state of disrepair, or are completely non-irrigated. Have we budgeted enough funds for irrigation and water impounding projects as we vowed to do when the crisis was upon us?

3. To be competitive, we need to upgrade not only our infrastructures but our human resources. Bill Gates, when asked what the United States should focus on in the aftermath of the financial crisis, answered “education.”

Education

He owes the success of Microsoft to the deep pool of talent in the United States, which he was able to draw on. But his aim is modest, he wants every American to finish high school. In our case, should we not aim for the same for every Filipino youth. Sen. Mar Roxas is right. With more than 30 percent of our children, who enter elementary grades not able to reach high school, we have a long way to go. While there are 13 million students enrolled in elementary, there are only 6.3 million enrolled in secondary schools.

But to achieve this, have we budgeted enough for classrooms, teachers, books and training of our mentors in Math, Science and English, and feeding program for poor school children? If not, why can we not use the P26 billion earlier planned for the mercifully scuttled Cyber-Ed project? With a good high school education, our youth can be trained for skills in industry and agriculture, which we sorely need to be competitive.

4. While we promote industries in our ecozones, there’s a lot that can be done in the countryside in agriculture. There is the dairy industry, to cite one neglected opportunity. We import $600 million of milk and dairy products for 97 percent of our consumption annually, and yet we see our hills and meadows green with cogon grass. What we have to do only is propagate the right kind of grass for improved pasture. To say that we are in the tropics is no excuse; Thailand is on the equator and yet it has succeeded to produce 50 percent of its dairy consumption.

5. And finally, equally important as hard infrastructure is the soft infrastructure for doing business. I refer specifically to our regulatory and judicial system. Former Secretary Romy Neri was being truthful when he talked of “regulatory capture.” If one Commissioner of a regulatory body can sign a Cease and Desist Order for a collegial body, and a Justice can write the transcript of a proceeding from memory, it is no brainer to conclude that all is not fair and square in doing business in our benighted country.

The root of the problem is in the selection and appointment process of our Justices and officials. It is obvious that the system and the appointing authority does not select the best, the brightest and the upright. This must change.

And perhaps, it is time to think out of the box. There is no field that is more regulated by elaborate rules and procedures than the field of sports. Golf has a thick book of rules, you watch a tennis match, a basketball game and a boxing bout and you see that rules get applied and that technology even keeps up with slow motion replay of fouls committed or balls landing out or in.

Wisdom

Why do rules get applied fairly in sports? The answer is simple: There is wisdom in the crowd. The crowd, or audience or spectators see what is happening and collectively give their instant feedback to the referees, umpires or judges. The referee makes a questionable call and the jeer comes loud and fast. He makes a good call and the cheer also reverberates.

With all sympathy and commiseration with my La Sallite friends, the crowd knew whether Ateneo won the UAAP championship fair and square. There is wisdom in the crowd! Shall we take a cue from sports and apply it to the field of governance?

* * *

(This article reflects the personal opinion of the author and not the official position of the Management Association of the Philippines. The author was three-term Representative of the 1st District of Bataan and former chair and administrator of the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority. Feedback at map@globelines.com.ph. For previous articles, please visit map.org.ph.)

http://business.inquirer.net/money/columns/view/20081026-168587/Retooling-for-the-postfinancial-crisis

Love thy parents..Part VI

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Why are you crying, Mom?

  
“Why are you crying?” he asked his Mom. 

“Because I’m a woman” she told him. 

“I don’t understand,” he said. 

His Mom just hugged him and said, “And you never will”……….

Later the little boy asked his father, “Why does mother seem to cry for no reason?” 

“All women cry for no reason” was all his dad could say……..

The little boy grew up and became a man, still wondering why women cry…

Finally he put in a call to GOD; when GOD got on the phone the man said, “GOD, why do women cry so easily?” and GOD said…….

When I made woman, she had to be special. I made her shoulders strong enough to carry the weight of the World; yet, gentle enough to give comfort….

I gave her an inner strength to endure childbirth and the rejection that many times comes from her children……

I gave her a hardness that allows her to keep going when everyone else gives up and take care of her family through sickness and fatigue without complaining……

I gave her the sensitivity to love her children under any and all circumstances, even when her child has hurt her very badly…

This same sensitivity helps her to make a child’s boo-boo feel better and shares in their teenagers anxieties and fears…….

I gave her strength to carry her husband through his faults and fashioned her from his rib to protect his heart…..

I gave her wisdom to know that a good husband never hurts his wife, but, sometimes tests her strengths and her resolve to stand beside him unfalteringly…..

I gave her tears to shed. They are hers to use whenever she needs them.  They are her secret strength.  They make her more like ME…..

— Author Unknown
                    
==========================================

FOR THIS IS WHAT THE LORD SAYS: “AS A MOTHER COMFORTS HER CHILD, SO WILL I COMFORT YOU.” ( ISAIAH 66:13 *NIV )

We can not measure the tremendous love that God has for His Children in human terms. However, I do believe the closest thing on Earth to that great love,is the love a Mother has for her child!

Therefore, on this day we will honor that special lady in our life, our Mother.  So, LET YOUR FATHER AND YOUR MOTHER BE GLAD, AND LET HER WHO BORE YOU REJOICE, ( PROVERBS 23:25 ) and may she be filled with God’s Love, Hope, Faith, and Peace today and everyday!

The Trip

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

One day, the father of a very wealthy family took his son on a trip to the country with the express purpose of showing him how poor people live.  They spent a couple of days and nights on the farm of what would be considered a very poor family.
 
On their return from their trip, the father asked his son, “How was the trip?”

“It was great, Dad.”

“Did you see how poor people live?” the father asked.

“Oh yeah,” said the son.

“So, tell me, what did you learn from the trip?” asked the father.

The son answered:

“I saw that we have one dog and they had four.  We have a pool  that reaches to the middle of our garden and they have a creek that has no end. We have imported lanterns in our garden and they have the stars at night.  Our patio reaches to the front yard and they have the whole horizon.  We have a small piece of land to live on and they have fields that go beyond our sight. We have servants who serve us, but they serve others. We buy our food, but they grow theirs. We have walls around our property to protect us, they have friends to protect them.”

The boy’s father was speechless.

Then his son added,  “Thanks Dad for showing me how poor we are.”

Isn’t perspective a wonderful thing? Makes you wonder what would happen if we all gave thanks for everything we have, instead of worrying about what we don’t have.

Appreciate every single thing you have, especially your friends!

Enjoy your coffee

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

A group of alumni, highly established in their careers, were talking at a reunion and decided to go visit their old university professor, now retired. During their visit, the conversation soon turned into complaints about stress in their work and lives.

Offering his guests coffee, the professor went to the kitchen and returned with a large pot of coffee and an assortment of cups — porcelain, plastic, glass, crystal, some plain-looking, some expensive, some exquisite — telling them to help themselves to the coffee.

When all the alumni had a cup of coffee in hand, the professor said,’Notice that all the nice-looking, expensive cups were taken up, leaving behind the plain and cheap ones. While it is normal for you to want only the best for yourselves, that is the source of your problems and stress. Be assured that the cup itself adds no quality to the coffee. In most cases, it is just more expensive, and, in some cases, even hides what we drink.

What all of you really wanted was coffee, not the cup, but you consciously went for the best cups, and then you began eyeing each other’s cups.

Now consider this:

Life is the coffee; your job, money, and position in society are the cups. They are just tools to hold and contain life. The type of cup one has does not define, nor change, the quality of life a person lives. Sometimes, by concentrating only on the cup, we fail to enjoy the coffee God has provided us.’

God makes the coffee, man chooses the cups. The happiest people don’t have the best of everything. They just make the best of everything. Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly.

Enjoy your coffee!

Is Making Money Online Possible?

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Posted by bloggista / June 17

This is probably one of the most blogged topic - making money online. So I am adding a new one to its statistics.

Everywhere you go online, you see those banner and text ads telling people how much they have earned online and for some amount, you can buy their secrets in making money online.

But - Is It Really Possible To Earn Money Online? The answer is a YES, and a NO. Yes, anyone can make money online, and No, it is not as easy as what people tell you. And it takes a lot of hardwork, open-mindedness and common sense to know that anyone can earn money online with only a few dollar investments.

SCAMS SCAMS SCAMS

They are everywhere. These people are like predators, looking for mostly willing and uninformed preys. Most scammed people are partly guilty of the crime. It is the desire to earn money “easily” that drawn people to “scammers”. And I don’t have to elaborate why - I was also scammed before.

Ways to Earn Money Online

There are many ways to earn money online. And lots of people are coming up with so many new ideas everyday. But as a rule of thumb - the easier it seems to earn “big” money, the big chance it is probably a scam. Remember there is no shortcut to money making - just as in real world business, you have to sweat it out and do some ground work. While “Passive Income” earning is possible, it won’t happen overnight, not even weeks.

Some of the ways to earn money online are (most of which are FREE to join and includes Sign-up Bonuses ranging from USD5.00 - USD100.00):

* Making a good website or blog.
* Sell advertising space. There are those who pay you just to put a banner ad on your site or blog.

* Accept paid contents or sponsored reviews.

* Put third-party ads like Google AdSense, Adbrite, Adtoll, Bidvertiser, and so on.

* Sell links. But do make sure which one suits you. Some link brokers use “no follow” so you won’t be penalized by the search engines. Others let you earn more from your links but a bit risky with search engines penalty in page ranking and search results placement.

* Surveys, PTR and PTC Programs. While its true of these programs are just scams, there are a few which are really paying “real” money. However, most are really time consuming and the earnings are small. An example is MLP (Money List Profits) - a collection of PTR (Pay to Read) email programs in one package.

* Online Business and Affiliate Marketing. By far, the best way to earn money online is through Online Business and Affiliate Marketing. Its all about selling great products of other people and earn commission for each sale. Earnings can be very generous and the potential to earn is unlimited. Some of these programs include SFI Affiliate Marketing, Global Domains International (GDI) and More Niche.

* Turnkey Business, PLR and Knowledge products. These programs allow you to create your own money-generating websites, or re-sell some popular and best-selling e-Books and online business tools for profit.

* There are also Online Marketplaces that allows you to sell products and services and manage your earnings in just one account. Just make sure you have your Paypal account to receive your earnings, as most of these programs are also using Paypal.

There are more money making opportunities online out there, but again, careful evaluation and research should be done prior to joining. It is also important that you inquire from people you know who are into these activities and get some tips from them. While you may earn by doing it alone, but collaborating with others will give the most returns.

So you’d be asking again, “Is making money online possible?” One way to find out is to try one. Are you ready?

http://bloggista.com/2008/06/17/is-making-money-online-possible/

Sharing

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Into Jollibee walked a little old couple
‘T is a very cold winter night, they walked slow.
They looked “out of place” amongst the younger jungle.
All eyes were watching them, with love’s outflow….
 
You could tell what everyone was thinking.
“They’ve loved each for more than 50 years….”
Such devotion, such loving, such sharing
Married all those many years, aged, through many tears
 
The little old man hesitated, and stood at the counter
He then ordered fries, and  just one hamburger.
Everyone noticed that he only ordered one and not two.
They slowly sat down, placing the tray on their table
For all to view.
 
Seated up against the back wall table,
He began to divide the French fries evenly
As he was able.
He then took the wrapper from the hamburger
And cut it in two.
Just one drink also, she was drinking while
This little ritual he went through.
 
A young couple sitting near them could see
They probably couldn’t afford to buy items,
More than three.
The young man simply couldn’t stand the agony.
He approached them politely and offered to buy them
Another meal for free!
 
They both thought that was so kind, but
Refused his offer,
The little old lady said, “We always share.”
The little old man continued eating and
Enjoying the hamburger’s flavor.
Another young man approached, and said,
“Please let us help you, we really care!”
 
The old man then insisted, “We’re just fine,
You I’m thanking”
To the little old lady he said, “You’re just sitting
There, why aren’t you eating?”
She said, “Because we are still sharing?
The younger man said, but you’re not eating
What are you sharing?
She answered…. …..
“The Teeth”
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~

“Too often we underestimate the Power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, Or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around.”
~Leo Buscaglia~
 
“Sharing, caring smiles!”