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Weekly Update - 27 March 2009 |
“I predict a riot” (Thank you Kaiser Chiefs)
No doubt there has been some concentrated brick
polishing over the past few days. The
more intelligent will be preparing their debating brickbats to argue
the merits or otherwise of the G20 meeting. Those who may be somewhat
more intellectually challenged will no doubt be reverting to the
physical brick over the metaphorical. I am
sure that the protestors will vary from the well meaning demonstrators
through to the
usual suspects of radical anarchists. Actually though, for once I
think that a large proportion of the population would like to have
their own brick, albeit a rubber one, to
lob at a bank - or come to that any representation of capitalism. Such
anger is quite
understandable - such behaviour is totally unacceptable.
There is no denying that the world is angry and this
frustration is certainly not just
restricted to extremists but rather to the “reasonable man” on the
“Clapham Omnibus”
who feels both let down and misled by a failed system that has
destroyed savings,
investments and jobs. From Clapham to Canton the language may be
different but the
feelings will be the same. Perhaps I should camouflage my red braces
this week?
What the leaders of the G20 must ensure is that they
do not waste the event. Those
who use it as a moment of parochial populism will have failed their
citizens. Those on
the other hand who take this moment to stand up and take the global
view of a
responsible statesman should earn our respect. This is the moment when
the world
needs some leadership to build on the actions already taken by certain
nations.
The one figure which I would like them to consider is
that of global trade - or more to
the point the lack of it. Just over a year ago global trade was
growing at 6% per annum
which was certainly very respectable. However, within the space of a
few months the
World Trade Organisation has estimated that it will decline by 9%,
which is an
astonishing turnaround and in fact the worst since the end of World
War 2. We seem to
have gone from globalisation to “de-globalisation” in a matter of
months as demand has just fallen away.
The key therefore will be to rebuild confidence in
such a way that demand can be
nurtured again. This is no quick fix - especially with a barely
functioning finance sector.
Perhaps then we will see a greater focus on domestic and regional
trade where local
competition is seen as being more acceptable within the group - as
opposed to those
damn foreigners from the other end of the globe. This is easily
achieved within areas
such as the EU, and the USA and even with a less bound group as ASEAN.
So, from
globalisation to potential regionalisation? This of course could only
be made worse by allowing further protectionist measures, but this is
the cowardly politicians’ route out. In
this case it would be true that “Patriotism is the last refuge of a
scoundrel”. The US went
through this in the 1930’s where, in the face of all logic, their
populist politicians
wrapped themselves in the stars and stripes and passed the
Smoot-Hawley Bill which
effectively condemned the world to a decade of depression.
***
God Save Ireland - Well he might just be required to
because the once vaunted Celtic
Tiger has just turned feral. After years of exciting growth, the
Republic has found itself
in a vicious place at the wrong time in the cycle. To quote Brian
Lenihan the Finance
Minister “The economy has fallen off a cliff”. A ballooning budget
deficit which could
rise to 11% of gross domestic product has shattered their requirement
to keep it within
the Eurozone’s tight corset of a mere 3%. Tax receipts are falling and
inward investment
is vanishing - the picture is poor. The risks were of course made all
the higher by the
government’s somewhat foolhardy (or just reckless) decision to
guarantee all their
banking system last year (although few asked the question as to what
the guarantee
was actually backed up by?) which may still come back to haunt the
government as
some of those banks are foreign. Guaranteeing somebody else’s banks is
just what they
don’t need to be doing right now.
Of course Ireland is not alone in this position. Being
in the Euro means that they do not
have the luxury (that we have in the UK) of being able to devalue
their currency by 30%
as we have done. Rather, they are left with a painful choice of how
much deflation they
are willing to apply to their economy and are able to suffer. The
Irish government has
bravely decided to confront this head on and act to cut their deficit:
compare that with
Greece’s position where the problem is not only barely recognised, let
alone being dealt
with. The Greek government debt as a percentage of GDP is over 100%;
Ireland’s is just
30%.
So the Irish are doing the right thing whilst others
are frankly just being irresponsible.
Even “Perfidious Albion” isn’t helping them either as the fall in
Sterling has led to a
cross-border shopping spree into Ulster and a consequent loss of VAT
income. Time to
find some luck of the Irish.
***
And finally...
It may be home to the Manure Bank but there is
something rotten in the state of
Vermont. Seven year old Joshua Boothe has won the 34th national “Odor-Eaters
Rotten
Sneaker Contest” for owning America’s most malodorous trainers. I
really don’t want to
know about the judging but given the amount of bacteria and
potentially useful
penicillin concentrated in the contestants’ shoes, I am surprised it
wasn’t sponsored by
Glaxo.
The offending shoes will now be on display for
posterity, hopefully in a sealed cabinet, in
the Odor-Eater Hall of Fumes in Vermont - now known as the Rotten
Sneaker Capital of
the World.
Have a good week,
Justin A Urquhart Stewart
Director
Seven Investment Management Limited
For
previous editions of our Weekly Update, please click here
This article represents a personal and
light-hearted
view from Director, Justin Urquhart Stewart of Seven Investment
Management Limited, and is based on current financial news and events
around the world. Its content should not be used for investment
purposes and you should contact an independent financial adviser
before making any investment or financial decision. Seven Investment
Management Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial
Services Authority. Member of the London Stock Exchange. Head office:
23 Austin Friars, London EC2N 2QP. Telephone 020 7760 8777. Registered
in England and Wales number 4092911. Registered office: 3 More London
Riverside, London SE1 2AQ.
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