Why Financial Institutions Should Move to Asia

Financial Institutions around the world and especially those in Europe and the USA face a crucial set of choices about the future of their institutions. Western Governments are riddled with debt and their only way out is decades of austerity and taxes, but the new world is a mobile world, globalization has set limits on how much a government can impose it’s will on the corporations and citizenry of a nation. Excess taxes and austerity will lead to a mass financial migration to emerging markets. For advise on moving to Asia, contact us Having spent most of my life in Asia, … Read more

Global Baking Regulation Update

Enhancing financial regulation has been a common view between governments since crisis in Y 2008, but debates over implementation details continue, especially since the recent debt crisis has given rise to Double Dip recession danger. Bankers and financial experts have agreed that the Global banking system needs prudent regulation, but how to strike a balance between regulation and financial innovation is Key issue not yet solved.. Dai Peng, an official with Export-import Bank of China, one of China’s policy banks, said at Saturday’s 5th Annual Bankers Forum that increased regulation and financial innovation should receive equal attention in the reform … Read more

Fed Said to Follow Basel Capital Rules for Biggest U.S. Banks

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve officials are drafting rules for the biggest U.S. banks that won’t be more stringent than international capital standards agreed to in Basel, Switzerland, according to a person familiar with the discussions. Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Tarullo cited a “goal of congruence” between the Basel standards and the Fed’s work on rules under the Dodd-Frank Act, which overhauls banking regulation, in a June 3 speech. The central bank hasn’t veered from that, according to the person, who declined to be identified because the rules are still being drafted. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which … Read more

Hedge Fund Regulation Is Backfiring: SAC Capital Edition

Is SAC Capital going to escape hedge fund regulation? On Tuesday we learned that George Soros was returning all of the capital of outside investors to his fund, following a path laid down by legendary investors like Stanley Druckenmiller and Carl Icahn. By closing their funds to outside investors, these managers will be able to escape attempts to regulate them. They won’t be classified as hedge funds anymore. Despite their billions of dollars under management, they’ll simply be private investors or family funds. Today we learn that Steve Cohen, the founder of SAC Capital, is closing his flagship fund to … Read more

Reforming the banks

I just got back from a very interesting but hectic week in New York and Washington, followed by two days at a conference in Hangzhou.  During my meetings I noticed that much of the discussion, and many of the questions I was asked by both government officials and investors, focused on debt levels and reforms in the Chinese financial system.  I have written a lot about rising debt in China and am glad that analysts and policymakers seem to be spending a lot more time thinking about balance sheet issues.  Every case of rapid, investment-driven growth in the past century, as far as I can make out, has at some point reached a stage in which debt levels rose to unsustainable levels and precipitated either a debt crisis or a long grinding adjustment period.

The reason debt levels always seem to grow unsustainably, I suspect, is that in the initial stages of the growth model much if not all of the investment is economically viable as it pours into building necessary infrastructure whose profits and externalities exceed the cost of the investment.  The result is real growth.  At some point, however, the combination of subsidies, distorted incentives (in which investment benefits accrue to those making the investment while costs are shared broadly through the banking system), and very cheap financing costs leads inexorably to wasted investment and debt rising faster than asset values.  This is when the debt burden begins to rise in an unsustainable way.

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