Kenna notes

Busy week of Fed speak


Will they or won’t they (ease monetary policy further)? The question will again garner investors’ attention this week as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and a number of regional Fed bank presidents take to the podium. The speeches come against a backdrop of ongoing worries about economic growth, but on the heels of a number of releases that were not as bad as feared. The bar remains high for the Fed to actively engage in a third round of quantitative easing or QE3 — it would probably take renewed deflationary rumblings to get there. For now, the Fed is likely to focus on less drastic steps, such as new ways of communicating its policy targets, to satiate wobbly financial markets’ apparent need for ongoing monetary support. Here is the line-up of speakers for this week: Bernanke will deliver remarks on â€The Effects of the Great Recession on Central Bank Doctrine and Practice” at the Boston Fed on Tuesday at 1: 15 pm EDT. Monday: Chicago Fed President Charles Evans will speak on “U.S. Monetary Policy and Economic Outlook” before the Michigan Council on Economic Education at 1:15 pm EDT. Jeffrey Lacker of the Richmond Fed also give a talk on the outlook, speaking at 7:30 pm EDT an event sponsored by the Salisbury-Wicomico Economic Development. Tuesday: Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart will give remarks on the economy before the Chartered Financial Analyst Society of East Tennessee in Chattanooga at . Wednesday: The Fed releases its monthly Beige Book, a collection of anecdotal data on economic conditions around its 12 districts. Thursday: Fed Board Governor Daniel Tarullo speaks on “Unemployment, the Labor Market, and the Economy” at the Columbia University World Leaders Forum in New York at 6 pm EDT. Cleveland Fed President Sandra Pianalto speaks at a manufacturing conference in Toledo, Ohio. Friday: Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota will give a speech to the Harvard Club of Minnesota at noon CDT. Don’t know about you, but I’m exhausted already.


Volatility worries US investors, unsure what to do


Three years after the onset of the financial crisis, the survey found that 80 percent of investors believe volatility continues to affect the investment landscape while 66 percent have changed expectations about future returns.Despite recognizing the need for diversification as a factor in managing risk, many investors still appear to be in the dark regarding their own portfolios. Only 49 percent said they understood their portfolio’s risk “moderately” or “very well.”“At the end of the day, investors know they need to invest, but they are searching for ways to protect their principal. They need better tools to manage risk and lessen volatility,” said John Hailer, president and chief executive officer for Natixis Global Asset Management.Hailer said portfolio construction now demands a broader set of tools to better manage risk — moving past traditional cash, bonds and long-only investing to strategies that also employ active management and products such as alternative investments that could limit volatility or provide returns uncorrelated to the markets.Investors, however, appear reluctant to change their strategy. The survey found that 63 percent of investors say they will invest only in products with which they are familiar, and 69 percent say they need to learn more about alternatives before investing in them.


Superman fan takes adulation to new heights


For more than a decade, the 35-year-old Chavez has undergone a series of procedures that have made his nose higher and slimmed down his thighs. He has had surgery on his cheeks, lips and chin, and injections to whiten his skin.”Superman is my idol. I want to look like him,” Chavez said.”That’s why I copied his nose and the proportion of Superman’s face.”Once a typical-looking Filipino, Chavez now has the firm-jawed face of Clark Kent.A curl of black hair falls on his forehead, and he occasionally sports the thick, black glasses of his idol’s nerdier incarnation, mild-mannered reporter Clark Kent.He is planning an operation that will give him a more muscular abdomen and is looking at specialized surgery in Japan that will insert metal in his legs to make him taller.He has designed his own Superman costumes.His admiration began when he was a child and watched Superman lifting a stack of cars on the big screen. He later began collecting Superman memorabilia, amassing a huge collection over the years.Now his house is packed with Superman cups, bed spreads, action figures and life-size Superman statues.Just like Superman, Chavez has two identities, working during the day as a dress designer and pageant trainer. His Superman persona comes to life after work.People in Calamba, south of Manila, refer to him as the “village superman.” Children play with him when they see him in the streets.”It’s ridiculous when you look at it, but it’s a source of happiness for the children. They don’t see, or they forget, the problems facing our world,” said resident Filipe Rabanan.Others said he teaches children good values as well as entertaining them.”If the children are happy, then I’m happy as well. The children are enjoying it,” said Boyet Mamino.Chavez says doing good deeds is what makes a hero — a lesson worth teaching children.”We should show them that even if you’re just a regular father or mother, anybody can become a superhero,” he said.”Doing good to someone, to your neighborhood or to your social life, that makes you a superhero.”


Banks face 39 pct loss on Greek debt under plan -IIF


“If people properly and correctly — and consistent with market practice in the past — evaluate the deal, they should use current discount rates. If they do that it implies the NPV (net present value) discount is 39 percent.”The private sector deal agreed on July 21 was based on an assumed discount rate of 9 percent over the next 30 years, based on an expectation that Greece’s risk profile would improve. But Greek debt prices have fallen since the plan was announced and yields have risen to about 15 percent.The proposed offer has not yet been finalised.


Liberia counts votes in tight presidential election


* Poll a test for post-war gainsBy Richard Valdmanis and Alphonso TowehMONROVIA, Oct 12 (Reuters) - Liberia tallied votes on Wednesday in a hotly-contested presidential poll pitting the incumbent, Nobel peace laureate Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, against former U.N. diplomat Winston Tubman and 14 others.The election in the West African state is a test of its fragile gains since the 1989-2003 civil war that killed nearly a quarter of a million people and, if all goes smoothly, could pave the way for new investment in its mining and energy sectors.”With the polls now closed, the reconciliation, sorting and subsequent counting of ballots has commenced,” the National Election Commission said late on Tuesday in a statement. It said provisional results would be released on Thursday.The constitution gives it 15 days to finalise results.The voting on Tuesday passed peacefully in the capital Monrovia and international observer groups said they had received no reports of trouble elsewhere in the country of 4 million people.But passions have run high in the contest that some forecast will go to a second-round run-off between Johnson-Sirleaf and Tubman. Observers have expressed concern that the results could be a flashpoint for street clashes.A dispute over the results of the 2005 election that brought Johnson-Sirleaf to power as Africa’s first freely elected female head of state triggered days of rioting.”I hope everybody, as I have appealed and appealed, will proceed peacefully and accept the results according to the rules,” Special Representative to the U.N. Secretary General Ellen Margreth Loj told Reuters on Tuesday. U.N. peacekeepers have been in the country since the war.Eight years into peace, Liberia has seen growing investment in its iron and gold mines and has convinced donors to waive most of its debt, though many residents complain of a lack of basic services, high food prices, rampant crime and corruption.A peaceful, free and fair election could bolster growing investor confidence in the country, which is also hoping to strike oil offshore.Miners ArcelorMittal and BHP Billiton and oil companies Anadarko , Tullow and Chevron are active in the country.


Insight: What a stronger Chinese yuan means for the U.S.


Then again, it may also lead to a destabilizing spike in Chinese unemployment and spark a trade war that drags the global economy back into a deep recession.These are the conflicting forces U.S. lawmakers must consider as they decide whether to pass a bill which would pressure Beijing into letting its currency rise more rapidly.The debate over whether China’s currency is undervalued is essentially closed. Beijing readily acknowledges that a gradual yuan appreciation is in its best interest, and it has allowed the currency to rise by about 6.5 percent since June 2010.Where the disagreement lies is how far and how fast the yuan ought to appreciate.”The Chinese will scream, but the only times they’ve let their currency rise is when they’re under pressure from the outside, so we should go ahead and do it,” said Fred Bergsten, director of the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics and a long-time critic of China’s currency policy.Bergsten is among the most vocal proponents of increasing the pressure on China, arguing that an undervalued yuan gives it an unfair trade advantage which harms the U.S. economy.He estimates that a 20 percent rise in the yuan would reduce the U.S. current account deficit by $50 billion to $100 billion. A more extreme move, say 40 percent, would translate into as much as a $200 billion reduction.About half of that would come from increased exports, mostly to China but also to other countries where China is now the dominant trade player. The other half would come from reduced imports from China.The United States gains about 6,000 jobs for every $1 billion improvement in the trade balance, so $100 billion would work out to 600,000 jobs, he said. That is more than the anemic U.S. economy has generated in the past six months combined, and would be enough to shave about four-tenths of a point off the 9.1 percent jobless rate.Bergsten’s view is not universally shared.Some economists argue that a stronger yuan would simply shift manufacturing to other low-cost producers such as Bangladesh or Vietnam, and the United States would still be uncompetitive.”An appreciation of the yuan against the dollar would indeed reduce the U.S. trade deficit with China, but it is unlikely to have a major effect on U.S. job creation,” said Eswar Prasad, a former International Monetary Fund official who now teaches international trade policy at Cornell University in New York.China’s state-owned Xinhua news agency was also dismissive of job creation claims.”There has been no evidence to prove the link, claimed by the U.S. lawmakers, between China’s exchange rate and the U.S. unemployment,” Xinhua said in an English-language commentary published on Tuesday, adding that Washington “has to share a great part of the blame” for the trade imbalance.The 2011 U.S. trade deficit was $428 billion through July, up from $367 billion over the same period in 2010, according to U.S. Commerce Department data.China accounts for about 37 percent of the 2011 total.THE FLIP SIDEFor China’s economy, a stronger yuan would reduce economic growth and increase unemployment, although there is a wide range of opinions among economists as to the magnitude.Deutsche Bank economist Jun Ma examined this in June 2010, when China relaxed its grip on the yuan. His study showed that a 10 percent yuan appreciation would reduce real gross domestic product by 0.6 percent, a relatively modest hit in an economy growing at more than 9 percent annually.Ma’s figures suggest a stronger yuan would increase unemployment by 0.4 percent, which amounts to about 3 million jobs in a work force of 780 million. Real exports would likely fall by 2.5 percent while imports would increase 1 percent.Xiaohe Zhang at the University of Newcastle in Australia wrote a paper in 2006 looking at the effects of yuan revaluation. His findings indicated a 20 percent yuan rise would trim about 12 percent off of China’s annual GDP.The yuan exchange rate is the clearest manifestation of a currency policy that is anything but simple. For Beijing, the yuan’s value is not just about fiscal policy. It is critical to social stability as well.China’s exports totaled $1.58 trillion in 2010, according to the International Monetary Fund, or about one-third of its gross domestic product. That’s nearly three times the share that exports comprise in the United States.The factories that fill those shipping containers with shoes, laptops, furniture and food employ millions of rural workers who migrate to China’s cities each year.That is the primary reason why Beijing has no interest in speeding up the pace of the yuan’s rise. Indeed, it pulled back on the rate of appreciation in September when fears intensified that the global economy could be heading toward a recession.Yet China has a vested interest in a stronger yuan.It would help to tamp down inflation, which stood at 6.2 percent year over year in August, far above Beijing’s 4 percent annual target. It would also boost households’ buying power, which is vital to achieving China’s goal of developing a more consumer-driven economy.But when the directive comes from Washington, China’s response is typically prickly.Part of the reason for that is a widely shared belief in China that the industrialized nations, threatened by China’s swift rise, want to hobble its economic fortunes.Many commentators point to the Plaza Accord of 1985, when the United States and other governments engineered a sharp depreciation of the dollar against the Japanese yen and German mark. China could become the next target of such a move, the thinking goes.”The Plaza Accord was in essence an American conspiracy,” said a recent commentary in the Legal Evening News, a Chinese tabloid, which was circulated on many Chinese news websites.”Whenever a country’s level of development and foreign exchange reserves reach a level that makes the United States feel uneasy, letting the dollar depreciate has been a consistent U.S. response. Now that pressure has shifted to the world’s second biggest economy, China.”WHO BENEFITS?Beijing is well aware that Japan fared poorly after the Plaza Accord.The stronger yen discouraged investment and “crushed the economy,” said Ronald McKinnon, an economist at Stanford University in California.”The only thing that didn’t fall was their trade surplus,” he said. “This could happen to China.”Tokyo’s attempts to reinvigorate the economy after the Plaza Accord have since been blamed for inflating an asset price bubble that eventually burst, plunging Japan into a deflationary spiral that it is still struggling to break.The lesson from Japan, McKinnon argues, is that a stronger yuan may not have the desired effect if it weakens China’s economy so severely that demand for U.S. goods falls.Researchers at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace drew a similar conclusion in a report released in December: a stronger yuan would widen the U.S.-China trade deficit because the rise in the price of imports from China would outweigh any gain in exports.To be sure, some of China’s neighbors would stand to benefit if the yuan rose significantly. Nations such as Vietnam which emulated the Chinese export model as a way to speed up economic development might see more business swing their way.But China itself has become a vital trading partner for other Asian countries. It is the top export destination for economies including South Korea, Taiwan and Malaysia.Even for the United States, China is becoming a bigger export market. In dollar terms, the United States imports almost four times as much as it ships to China, but exports are growing more rapidly than imports.That is why some U.S. business groups have voiced strong opposition to the currency bill, echoing China’s stern warning that Congress risked touching off a trade war.”A trade war is all that is missing to complete the parallels between the U.S. economy of today and that of the early 1930s,” said Tim Condon, an economist with ING in Singapore.