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Global Economics

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Recessionary fears and financial stresses are stalking the developed world... Rampant commodity prices will place growing strains on current monetary order... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Global Economics


1
Global Economics
Sub-prime woes, rising inflation A battle of ills
Stuart Green Tel (44) 20 7991 6718stuart1.green_at_
hsbcib.com
June 2008
2
The key challenges
  • Recessionary fears and financial stresses are
    stalking the developed world
  • while inflation remains the major concern in the
    emerging world
  • The existing monetary order is struggling to
    reconcile these related trends
  • and policymakers are facing a long, difficult
    battle of ills between weaker growth and higher
    inflation

3
1. The developed world has moved from a condition
of excess to deficient liquidity
  • Cheap money Policy rates and emerging markets
  • Asset price booms rising collateral and a taste
    for the exotic
  • Financial innovation - originate to distribute
    model and credit quality
  • Fear and loathing - MBS losses and banking
    dislocation

4
2. Policy rates fell to unusually low levels
Source Bloomberg, and HSBC
5
3. Massive increase in emerging market central
bank foreign exchange reserve holdings
Source Bloomberg, and HSBC
6
4. most of which passed into US Treasuries,
displacing other investors

Note red lines indicate end-year consensus
forecasts made at the beginning of each
year.Source Thomson Financial Datastream
7
5. and encouraging lending elsewhere
Source Thomson Financial Datastream
8
6. Excess liquidity made housing expensive
Source Thomson Financial Datastream
9
7. and created a taste for the exotic
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, HSBC
10
8. All the ingredients pointed to a boom
  • Those involved in securitisation faced rising
    demand on both sides of their business model
  • Displaced investors, facing unhelpful
    demographics, sought yield enhancement at
    seemingly no additional risk
  • Households looked to maximise their loan
    consideration
  • Affordability constraints became increasingly
    binding
  • Households grew complacent on house
    price/interest rate risk

11
9. Surge in securitisation was focused in
mortgages
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, Federal
Reserve
12
10. and securitisation helped sustain the
housing boom
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, Federal
Reserve
13
11. The role of securitisation From hero to
villain?
  • Theoretically, securitisation can help reduce
    risks and boost efficiency of capital allocation
  • Helps institutions manage interest rate and
    duration risk
  • Makes availability of finance less dependent
    upon local economy
  • Disperses risk across the financial markets and
    according to risk appetite
  • BUT, key question is whether the originate to
    distribute model, and the resulting boom in
    mortgage securitisation, encouraged looser
    lending standards and impacted credit quality

14
12. Effect of securitisation is increasingly
apparent
  • Recent IMF working paper looks at US prime and
    sub-prime mortgage lending decisions between 2000
    and 2006
  • the study concentrates upon loan denial rates
  • it controls for factors such as income growth,
    LTV ratios and other general economic factors
  • residuals are then regressed against factors
    such as competition amongst lenders, level of
    lending activity and whether the mortgage
    originated is to be held by lender or sold for
    securitisation
  • Credit booms and lending standards Evidence
    from the sub-prime mortgage market, April 2008

15
13. and the evidence suggests there is a case to
answer
  • Overall, the evidence suggests that growth of
    sub-prime lending and rise in securitisation led
    to reduced lending standards
  • increase in sub-prime activity lowered denial
    rates
  • Fed policy had seemingly little impact on lender
    behaviour
  • loan sales and loan denial rates linked,
    especially for sub-prime

16
14. Credit quality has proved the key casualty in
recent years
Source Bank for International Settlements
17
15. generating uncertainty over the extent of
sub-prime losses
Source Bank for International Settlements
18
16. Bank failures typically take a long time to
fix
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, Haver
Analytics
19
17. but this is not just a US story. Strong
purchases of MBS by foreign investors has led to
contagion
Note Data expressed as a four quarter moving
average at an annual rateSource Thomson
Financial Datastream
20
18. with the UK and Europe seemingly most exposed

21
19. Euro-zone bank lending standards are being
tightened sharply
Source ECB bank lending survey
22
20. with the housing market a growing concern
Source ECB bank lending survey
23
21. Economic risk could be the next big factor
for conditions in the Euro-zone
Source Reuters
24
22. but exporters, particularly in Germany, have
so far coped well with the record euro
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, and HSBC
25
23. reflecting strong demand from emerging
markets
Source Thomson Financial Datastream
26
24. Indeed, the US would have faded further in
the absence of emerging market demand
Source Thomson Financial Datastream
27
24. where inflation, rather than growth, remains
the bigger concern
Source Thomson Financial Datastream
28
25. Inflationary pressures are deep-rooted, and
will not easily disappear
29
26. Various options available to EM policymakers,
but each have their shortcomings
  • A modest, one-off appreciation this may lack
    credibility and attract further capital inflows
  • A tightening of fiscal policy likely rise in
    current account surpluses will aggravate G7
  • Do nothing risks encouraging a deep-rooted
    inflation problem, particularly if other EM
    countries follow suit

30
27. Exchange rate appreciation hasnt yet helped
China control inflation
Source Thomson Financial Datastream
31
28. and the case of Brazil shows there are no
easy answers
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, HSBC
32
29. Price leadership in commodity markets looks
to be shifting eastwards
Source HSBC
33
30. reflecting the shifting balance of global
growth
Source World Bank, HSBC
34
31. and strong demand will likely persist over
the longer-term
Source HSBC
35
32. Still, disagreement remains over cause of
rising commodities
  • Markets remain unwilling to accept the
    de-coupling argument, and the reduced role of the
    United States as the global price-setter
  • Three major alternative explanations have been
    forwarded
  • A weaker dollar and the translation effect
  • Increased short-term speculative activity within
    commodity markets
  • Flow of capital into commodity markets for
    longer-term investment purposes

36
33. but the boom has now reached abnormal
proportions
Source IMF
37
34. and with volatility likely to prove
persistent
Source USDA
38
35. inflation-targeting central banks now face
some tough decisions
Source Thomson Financial Datastream, Eurostat,
HSBC
39
36. Conclusions
  • The transatlantic economies the US, UK and
    parts of the eurozone are most at risk as a
    result of deficient liquidity.
  • The US housing market is already very weak and
    the UK housing market is softening
  • but the problems arent confined to borrowers.
  • Global lenders are also at risk, and those facing
    the biggest problems are those in the US and
    across Europe who purchased mortgage backed
    securities.
  • Banking behaviour is changing, with lending
    standards tightening sharply.
  • The originate to distribute model will likely
    be a target for regulation.
  • Rampant commodity prices will place growing
    strains on current monetary order
  • with central banks in BOTH emerging and
    developed economies facing difficult decisions.

40
Summary of Economic Forecasts
41
37. GDP Inflation Americas and Europe

3.1

1.2

0.5

2.3

2.3

3.3

2.1

Norway

2.5

3.5

3.0

2.3

2.3

0.7

3.5

2.4

Sweden

4.5

2.8

2.6

2.1

1.4

2.2

3
.0

2.3

Switzerland

3.2

3.1

2.5

1.1

1.1

0.7

1.9

1.0


Note Global and regional aggregates calculated
using chain nominal GDP (USD) weights. Source
HSBC

42
38. GDP Inflation EMEA and Asia/Pacific
Note Calendar year except for which is based
upon Egyptian fiscal year (July-June) Global and
regional aggregates calculated using chain
nominal GDP (USD) weights. Source HSBC
43
39. Policy rates
44
40. Long Rates
45
41. Exchange Rates vs USD Americas, Europe
EMEA
46
42. Exchange Rates vs USD Asia/Pacific
47
Global Economics Team
48
Research
49
Disclosure appendix
The following analyst(s), who is (are) primarily
responsible for this report, certifies(y) that
the opinion(s) on the subject security(ies) or
issuer(s) and any other views or forecasts
expressed herein accurately reflect their
personal view(s) and that no part of their
compensation was, is or will be directly or
indirectly related to the specific
recommendation(s) or views contained in this
research report Stuart Green Stephen
King This report is designed for, and should
only be utilised by, institutional investors.
Furthermore, HSBC believes an investor's decision
to make an investment should depend on individual
circumstances such as the investor's existing
holdings and other considerations. Analysts are
paid in part by reference to the profitability of
HSBC which includes investment banking
revenues. For disclosures in respect of any
company, please see the most recently published
report on that company available at
www.hsbcnet.com/research. HSBC Legal Entities
are listed in the Disclaimer below. Additional
disclosures This report is dated as at 1 June
2008. All market data included in this report are
dated as at close 1 June 2008, unless otherwise
indicated in the report. HSBC has procedures in
place to identify and manage any potential
conflicts of interest that arise in connection
with its Research business. HSBC's analysts and
its other staff who are involved in the
preparation and dissemination of Research operate
and have a management reporting line independent
of HSBC's Investment Banking business. Chinese
Wall procedures are in place between the
Investment Banking and Research businesses to
ensure that any confidential and/or price
sensitive information is handled in an
appropriate manner.
50
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