Monday, August 19, 2013

Rupee in deep plunge and India in crisis

That Indian economy is in crisis was something I suppose, people in India have been realizing slowly over the past year or so. International investors have been much later to realize that and are now in panic putting the markets in free fall. Ostensibly, all this is happening because of recent reset of growth expectations and bad economic policies of the Government.  It now seems the global traders are trying squeeze the life out of the economy and hasten the downfall. Nothing else can explain 2.5% drop in rupee in a single day and another big fall in stock market after massive loss last Friday.

India is a huge country, both in terms of geographical size and population. It has a large middle class which has grown increasingly prosperous over the last two decades since the economic reforms of the government of P V Narasimha Rao. While one can debate that this prosperity has been lop sided in favor of urban population, no one can deny the overall prosperity. All that wealth and productivity gains have not gone anywhere. Growth rate of about 4% projected is still a lot better than what any of the developed countries will be experiencing in the near future.

So what's the panic ? I think it is the hedge funds, the same ones which caused crisis in EU, one country at a time causing huge headaches, are now preying upon India. They are betting that by shorting Indian securities , currency and stocks, they can make money when India will be forced into debt restructuring.

That is not to say India is blameless and it is all fault of International investors. India does have several systemic fault lines that its rapid growth in the recent years has kept hidden :

Endemic Corruption : For a common Indian, corruption has become a part of life. Indians have never ever invaded another country. That is a virtue they are proud of. But that meant they had to tolerate millennia  of aggression from others. That tolerating nature has now manifested into a general acceptance one has to pay a bribe to get a job done. While rich use bribes to break the rules, other are forced to pay bribes to stay compliant with the rules. Like for example, a common man has to pay a tax to the government, the clerk will not do the paperwork till he gets a bribe. The person who is paying the bribe thinks he is doing no wrong but does not realize that the clerk can demand a bribe only because people are willing and this ignorance, is the root of the corruption in India. If the corruption at lower levels happens due to ignorance, at the top echelons, it happens due to greed at its purest form. Politicians with insatiable hunger for money and power collude with capitalists, both national and multi-national to put interest of the common man on the chopping block. 2G scam, Coalgate, Wal-Mart are only a very few examples among many. Increasing corruption in public life has bled money from the real economy into black economy. A proof of this is soaring prices of property and gold, two assets which can easily acquired using black money.

Vote bank Politics : One big reason the government is in policy paralysis is that elections are approaching. The government does not want to alienate communities which can swing the vote.  The current government has taken vote bank politics to a pinnacle, with no consideration at all for the economic realities. To keep the vote banks intact, political parties also starve the communities of proper education and encourage communal divisions.

Poor civic sense and civic responsibility : One of the worst aspects of India is the poor civic sense and lack of respect for rules displayed by the general population. It is easy to find even a well educated person willingly breaking rules of the road, driving past a red light or driving on the wrong side of the road, equally willing to pay a bribe if a policeman is encountered. Littering the streets is common place. A typical response when confronted will be 'I am not the only one doing it'. Generations since Indian independence have been passed down with very little moral education.  Decades of brain drain has only aggravated the problem. Most well educated and intellectual part of the population has moved out of the country and gradually, the resulting brain drain has made its contribution in bringing down the moral values and civic sense. This is a problem that when fixed, can potentially fix every other problem India has.

While problems are plenty and may justify scepticism about India, none of these can justify the sudden plunge in the markets we are witnessing. 

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Signals are getting stronger that Greece may leave EMU


There is more openness by Greeks now than ever to talk about the possibility of Greece leaving Euro. It may be another round of brinkmanship before the bailout discussions. But it could also be that the Greek officials have evaluated all the options and option to leave Euro may not be looking that bad at all compared to staying in the Euro.

They will have to default in any case. That being the case, instead being straight-jacketed by France & Germany, they better default big, leave the euro, have their own currency and start afresh. That way they can insulate their economy from Franco-German bulwark.

Some are saying the pain of leaving Euro will be much more. But staying in Euro is slow death. What happens if they stay ? and what happens if they leave ?

If they stay :
- Half their debt is forgiven
- But debt again adds up with bail out money
- Debt servicing costs will go down but will still remain high for the size of their economy
- Austerity will worsen recession and tax revenues will be down
- As a result deficits will stay where they are
- After a few years another default will be on the horizon

If they leave and default
- Their debt will be down to near zero.
- The new currency will be highly devalued vis-a-vis euro, making everything imported very costly and standard of life will take a big hit if one is dependent on imported goods.
- Exports & Tourism will get boost as Greece will be cheaper for anyone spending in Euros and Dollars.
- Their borrowing costs will be high for a couple of years till the new economy takes hold. Lenders will return once they see economy is getting better.

Which is better much pain and a cure forever or painful slow death ?

This is not to say the same is good for Ireland as well. Ireland is an export oriented economy and need to be much more careful before alienating countries which have lent us money. Whereas Greece is different. Though I believe it is bunkum to say staying in EMU is important for exports - look at China if you want proof. They are furthest from Euro as anyone can be but 90% of what I buy is made in China.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Windows 8 first look

I downloaded and installed Windows developer preview on a Core i3 VAIO. Here are some observations from 30mins or so I had a look :

  • Can be installed side by side with an existing OS for Dual boot.
  • Needs about 20GB of space. I installed on a 60GB partition which I created after shrinking one of the existing partition.
  • The OS folder is 15 GB... Don't know if it is going to be the same for Tablets. If so it is doomed...
  • Installation ran quicker than I expected but then the machine reboots a couple of times to complete installation.
  • Very neat looking boot loader shows you the OS options available.
  • Here are some instructions on how to do it http://blog.concurrency.com/infrastructure/dual-boot-windows-8-from-vhd-using-windows-setup/ (I used a logical partition rather than a VHD though)
  • One other thing I did was to create a bootable USB key with installation files following the steps here - http://kmwoley.com/blog/?p=345 . That saved me from having to burn a DVD.

I didn't notice significant change in startup time. I was hoping it will be much faster than Win 7. I guess a SSD will make a big difference and due to this it will be much quicker on Tablets.

After startup displays the metro interface with the program shortcuts arranged in tiles. Was able to get the tiles scroll across using the touchpad - but this seemed to freeze now and then. Was able to rearrange the tiles by dragging them around.

Tried IE from the metro interface. Looks very different from normal IE with the address bar showing at the bottom instead of the top, with larger buttons etc to make touch input easy. However anything in Flash shows up ugly like a image with missing source. Not good.

Mouse right click doesn't bring up a context menu, either in the tile layout or within the Metro apps.

Tried a few of the metro apps which came with it - all seemed to have been hastily put together, but they worked without crashing. I have not figured out yet as to how to exit those apps. All I have been able do is to hit the windows key on the keyboard to go to Tile layout or use Alt+Tab . I guess there must be a way to exit the programs without having to kill them using task manager.

Clicking the Desktop tile displays familiar Win 7 style desktop with a task bar. Clicking on IE icon opens IE in Win 7 fashion. I tried a website which uses Flash and was promptly asked if I wanted to install Flash. I confirmed and installation completed without any hassle and the website worked as normal.

I installed Chrome browser successfully and it worked fine.

That's where I stopped.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

What exactly does Goldman Sachs do?

I am not surprised to see Goldman Sachs making a profit. But certainly the amount of profits they have made has surprised me immensely. The bank bailout in US was a creation of Goldman thru their proxy Paulson. So one would have expected that their interests were safegaurded well in TARP. But seeing the vulgar amount of profits made this quarter, it appears that TARP was tailored so that all the money flows into Goldman.

I also believe this kind of profits in falling markets & highly pessimistic investment climate is only possible thru not so straight business dealings. In other words I think there was rampant misuse of insider knowledge.

Goldman might be the biggest of the scavengers feeding on the rotten capital markets. But they aren't the only one if Galleon will turn out to be the scandal it seems to be.

Obviously insider trading is rampant. How often it has happened that earnings results are preceded by share price movements which leave no surprise at all about earnings. It seems to be happening most of the time, at least, for the handful shares I track.

I bet Goldman will be safe from any insider trading investigations due to their connections in the establishment. Perhaps a key factor Warren Buffer would have considered when he invested $5 billion in Goldman.

One thing which I don't understand at all is why Governments world over are so meekly listening and doing what bankers say. Makes me think time is up for capitalism.





Saturday, October 10, 2009

Pullback of EU generosity begins

EU leaders want a review of the assisance that was promised to Dell workers on the eve of Lisbon referendum.

http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/uncertainty-over-euro14m-package-for-dell-workers-102905.html

Only a few days ago I blogged that EU's generosity to Ireland is going to end soon. Didn't know it's going to begin so immediately...

On another note, I am shocked indeed to see the support Nama got in Green party conference. Most people are worried about the program for goverment and that it prevents required cutbacks. But that is chicken feed compared to money to be spent on Nama. Suddenly Greens as a party are looking and sounding like Fianna Fail. The same desperation to stay in power, whatever it may take.

It was heartbreaking to see Ireland leading twice against Italy but end up with a draw. Why is it that Ireland always seems to exceed expectations when playing stronger teams but underperform when playing lower rated teams?

A Moody's analyst has come out and said that over paying banks for properties is fine as we will have to shell it out anyway later as banks will need more capital.
It's like moving money from one pocket to another, he says. It is with such out of place and over simplified analogies people are being fooled. This is money from people's pockets moving to the pockets of bankers and investors.

Let's for a minute assume that Nama is going to make some profit. How will that profit get back to the tax payer who is the investor? I can't see a way. What's more likely to happen is the ministers and civil servants using this money to inflate their already substantial pay packets.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Nama and asset pricing

IMF, ECB & many world reknowned economists have been together in saying that government should not pay above market value prices for the assets in bank bailouts.

Almost everyone in the country is saying the same thing except the Fianna Fail. The two opposition figures who supported Nama have been proven to have links to banks and hence are biased in their views.

That makes me wonder how sincere is Brian Lenihan when he says his Nama proposals are in the best interest of the country.

I am certainly not convinced for following reasons:

1. Current market value is an estimate. There is no guarantee that if the asset is put up for sale , it will get sold for exactly what it's estimated value is. One may argue that the plus and minus over a big number of transactions and all the properties together will get a price close to the estimate. Well, that is correct in a normal situation. But on a situation where there is huge over supply, it is likely the difference between estimate and actual price will be negative most of the time. Those have sold their properties or have them up for sale in the past year or so will vouch for this. My own house is up for sale and the offers I have got have been less than 80% the estimate I got from estate agent. Estimates can easily vary by +/- 20% even in normal situation. In a situation like this it will be more like -20%. But let us be optimistic and assume a -10% difference i.e property valued at €48billion can as well turn out to be worth €43 billion. Remember swathes of development land worth 20% of the price paid for it and you will realize this is a very real risk. Who will be taking on this risk ? Not the banks but the public. This itself puts a big question on the assumption Nama needs just 10% increase in property values to not make losses.

2. Brian Lenihan has said that interest for ECB loan taken for this purpose will be serviced by income from the properties. He has not said that this income will cover any principal repayments. So that means at 1% interest rate, interest payments match income(€540million) What about increase in interest rates? For every 1% increase in interest rate, state will have stump up half a billion euro. Assuming interest rate averages at 1.5% over the 10 years (again optimistic), the bill for addl interest we will have to foot comes to €2.7billion.

3.Brian Lenihan has been giving himself too much power with respect to Nama. While this itself is leading to lack of transparency in Nama affairs, there is also a question mark on his competency to be holding such decision making power. He seems to have caved in to the fear mongering with the I'll thought out bank guarantee scheme. That forced us into the nationalization of Anglo-Irish . He promised a "orderly wind down" of the bank after nationalization. But is still pumping money into it from annual exchequer funds and will only result in cut backs in public services or tax increases next year. When it came to Nama he has again been overly dependent on the brainstrusts of the banks rather than economists, blundering his way into it - proposing to pay over the odds to the banks and not asking for any guarantees to lend. It was only the pressure from Greens which made him add elements which make banks share the risk, that too minimally. Being a lawyer he is very forceful and convincing at the surface. But I believe he lacks sound knowledge and reasoning in economical matters like, say, Richard Bruton and most of the time comes across as a bully. He has also not done himself any favors with his reactions & statements in the cases of Rody Molloy ("it is a normal procedure", he said) and John O'Donoghue . Such concentration of power in his hands is a worrying.

Even with an optimistic view, common sense dictates that it is likely state will have bear an additional burden of €7 billion for Nama if we go with what we have today. If things don't go as planned it will be much more.

How about doing this instead of Nama:
- Banks revalue their books and write down losses due to non performing loans
- State will step in and assist banks in two ways 1) recapitalize to the extent that they will still remain private 2) provide additional finding through soft loans on the same terms as ECB lending.

I am hoping Greens will bring more diligence into Nama exercise.

If not then I hope ECB will step in and block over payment to the banks.




It is sickening...

It is sickening to hear politician after politician express sympathy for John O'Donoghue, saying he was a scapegoat and hasn't been given a fair chance to explain. Have they just woken up from months of sleep. It has been months since this man's cavaliar wanderings have been made known to the public. Was that not enough time?

One of them went on to say it was not right to follow the lead of Sinn Fein in demanding resignation as they themselves claimed millions in expenses and are down to robbing banks. Fair enough. But if Fianna Fail etc. have to be told by Sinn Fein what's the right thing to do, that really shows the depth at which Irish politics is at.

Enda Kenny is not the cleanest hand. But I was surprised to see him so pleased a couple of weeks ago when declaring the issue as closed just based on a grudging apology from John O'Donoghue.

If Bertie Ahern sympathizes with a guy that is the surest proof that this person cannot be straight ;)

On another note, it was equally sickening to hear people from south Kerry say how great a person he was and how much he worked for their development. It reminds me of the selfishness with which Irish public voted Bertie back to power a couple of years ago, weeks after tribunal revealations which left no one in doubt that he is corrupt. It's the same thinking - I am doing well and that's because of him. So whatever else he is, it doesn't matter.

It is the same attitude which made the government splurge money at whoever wanted it, leaving the nation in tatters that it is now.

After fifteen years of boom, we have nothing to show except some roads in terms of development. But economy is on it's knees just after one year of downturn. Why? Just about everyone has been busy taking care of themselves. That is why!!!

And we blame Bankers & developers!