Ed is a graduate of The School of the Ozarks (now known as College of the Ozarks) in Southwest Missouri. He spent 14 years in broadcast news in the Midwest covering, among other things, commodities. He is currently manager of a healthcare support facility doing over two million dollars a year in... More
If China isn't the 800-pound gorilla in the corner, it's definately the tiger in the kitchen. According to Reuters, China announced over the weekend that State Owned Enterprises (SOE's) will be allowed to default on commodity derivative contracts.
Default
The report cited six foreign banks that recieved letters that the SOE's reserved the right to default on contracts. Among the SOE's signaling their potential intentions were Air China, China Eastern and COSCO. All three have sustained "huge derivative losses since late last year". Concerns are being aired by financial circles that those holding underwater hedges may simply renege on them and walk away.
Among the major derivative providers in China are Goldman Sachs, UBS, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan. None of them provided any comment to Reuters on the letters and no banks were specifically named. Although some are questioning whether such a tactic has any basis in legality, the fact remains that this is China and fiscally, China can use this as a tool of leverage on the fiscal front.
If China carries through on it's annoucement, it would set a precedent that could seriously undermine the derivatives market, at the same time impacting fractional investment as well.
Potential default was the concern that prompted the fiscal crisis in the fall of 2008 as massively intertwined derivatives and speculative CDS's and CDO's began to fall apart. If China were to succeed in walking away from derivatives contracts, it could have a significantly bigger impact on the financial world. Remember that AIG unwound many of it's investments at face value thanks to massive taxpayer infusions which helped prop up other "too big to fail" banks. It looks like some of those banks may be involved in the latest Chinese Finger Trap.
Disclosure: Long SLV, GLD, Physical Metals, retirement accounts
Instablogs are blogs which are instantly set up and networked within the Seeking Alpha
community. Instablog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors,
in contrast to contributors' articles.
As the author of "A Modern Approach To Graham and Dodd Investing," http://www.amazon.com/Modern-Approach-Graham-Investing-Finance/dp/0471584150/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1260900496&sr=1-1.html I use a relatively pure form of the Graham and Dodd methodology reminiscent... More
China does not have a "rule of law," and what's worse (for now), China is not "playing the game." Instead, it is flirting with global disintermediation, and a new global Great Depression.
Instablogs are Seeking Alpha's free blogging platform customized for finance, with instant set up and exposure to millions of readers interested in the financial markets. Publish your own instablog in minutes.
Chinese Tiger raises Default Concerns 1 comment
If China isn't the 800-pound gorilla in the corner, it's definately the tiger in the kitchen. According to Reuters, China announced over the weekend that State Owned Enterprises (SOE's) will be allowed to default on commodity derivative contracts.
Default
The report cited six foreign banks that recieved letters that the SOE's reserved the right to default on contracts. Among the SOE's signaling their potential intentions were Air China, China Eastern and COSCO. All three have sustained "huge derivative losses since late last year". Concerns are being aired by financial circles that those holding underwater hedges may simply renege on them and walk away.
Among the major derivative providers in China are Goldman Sachs, UBS, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan. None of them provided any comment to Reuters on the letters and no banks were specifically named. Although some are questioning whether such a tactic has any basis in legality, the fact remains that this is China and fiscally, China can use this as a tool of leverage on the fiscal front.
If China carries through on it's annoucement, it would set a precedent that could seriously undermine the derivatives market, at the same time impacting fractional investment as well.
Potential default was the concern that prompted the fiscal crisis in the fall of 2008 as massively intertwined derivatives and speculative CDS's and CDO's began to fall apart. If China were to succeed in walking away from derivatives contracts, it could have a significantly bigger impact on the financial world. Remember that AIG unwound many of it's investments at face value thanks to massive taxpayer infusions which helped prop up other "too big to fail" banks. It looks like some of those banks may be involved in the latest Chinese Finger Trap.
Disclosure: Long SLV, GLD, Physical Metals, retirement accounts
Instablogs are blogs which are instantly set up and networked within the Seeking Alpha community. Instablog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors, in contrast to contributors' articles.
This post has 1 comment:
Latest Followers
StockTalks
-
Dec 08, 2009
-
Dec 03, 2009
-
Nov 25, 2009
More »Posts by Ticker
Latest Comments
Most Commented
Posts by Themes