Apocalypse Capital

by | Mar 11, 2008


Dark times in western markets. The financial press at the moment reads like a particularly gloomy prophesy from the Middle Ages. This from Euroweek:

Undreamt of volatility in dollar swap spreads…Debt professionals watched in disbelief as dollar swap spreads shot out to their widest level in years. ‘Now the world is definitely coming to an end, right? It’s been nuts, just nuts’, said a stunned swaps dealer on Thursday in New York.

The surge in levels was so savage that some onlookers suggested it presaged the failure of a major US financial institution…Citigroup has taken a terrible beating through subprime, and its failure, or that of a big bank like it, is whispered as a possibility in the corridors of Wall Street.

The market was also upset by the news from Ambac, the troubled monoline bond insurer. It’s not getting a bailout from the banks after all, but intends to raise $1.5 bn of new capital in the stock market. If Ambac is downgraded, over $1 trillion of securities it has insured face a rating downgrade as well, which could spark a vast bond firesale and consequent losses for banks holding that paper.

Mortgage bonds are screwed too, as are hedge funds who own lots of mortgage bonds, including the Carlyle Group’s hedge fund, Carlyle Capital, which owned several billion dollars’ worth of mortgage bonds, and which now appears to be heading for default. And who is the biggest investor in Carlyle Capital? Citigroup.

Meanwhile, in other markets, things are looking fantastic. The IPO of China Railways managed to attract $68 billion in Chinese retail orders. $68 billion! The Middle East is also completely flush with cash. Russia is embarking on a $1 trillion infrastructure renovation programme.

And these investors are now buying up Wall Street bit by bit – Credit Suisse has sold a big stake in itself to Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund, while Citigroup is being propped up by other big Middle East investors at the moment.

This may not be enough to save it though. Even they think it might go down without US government support. This from Dow Jones last week:

Mideast sovereign wealth funds may fail to save troubled U.S. banking giant Citigroup unless more cash is pumped into the lender, the head of a $13 billion Dubai-owned investment firm said Tuesday.

Sameer Al Ansari, Chief Executive of Dubai International Capital told delegates at a private equity conference that it will take more than the combined efforts of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, the Kuwait Investment Authority and Saudi investor Prince Alwaleed bin Talal to save the bank.

“It’s going to take more than that to rescue Citi,” Ansari said. He added that more write downs are expected and that Gulf investors would be required to bolster Citi.

We’re seeing a major shift in the balance of power. Just 15 years ago, western financial institutions like the IMF, the US Treasury and Citigroup called the shots in emerging markets, and emerging market countries had to go to them on their best behaviour, like Oliver Twist saying ‘please sir, could I have some more!’.

Now, as one banker from the beleagured UBS told me today, ‘these developing countries don’t need us anymore’. No, I replied. They don’t need you…they own you.

Author

  • Jules Evans is a freelance journalist and writer, who covers two main areas: philosophy and psychology (for publications including The Times, Psychologies, New Statesman and his website, Philosophy for Life), and emerging markets (for publications including The Spectator, Economist, Times, Euromoney and Financial News).


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