samedi, octobre 13, 2007

London!

On a happier note I just got back from London with a flu. Wasn't the flu that made me happy but perhaps London still brings back good memories of school days. I felt terrible on the day I flew back and blamed it on Mr WT and Ms HL and their kakis whom I thought caused the hangover from drinks the night before. No, no hangover - just a terrible cold.






I also got to see Mr and Mrs Glyn and the two handsome mini Glyns!



Other than that it was all work and no play in London ... except on the last day where I got to see Wynn, Joce and Tak for display in the British museum haha!



Madam Tussaud's

Selamat Hari Raya

As Malaysia celebrates Hari Raya, I can't help but relate the state of the Malaysians to an ancient Chinese classic titled "The Clam and the Crane".

赵且伐燕,苏代为燕谓惠王曰:“今者臣来,过易水,蚌方 出曝,而鹬啄其肉,蚌合而拑其喙。鹬曰:‘今日不雨,明日不雨,即有死蚌。’蚌亦谓鹬曰:‘今日不出,明日不出,即有死鹬。’两者不肯相舍,渔者得而并禽 之。今赵且伐燕,燕、赵久相支,以弊大众,臣恐强秦之为渔父也。故愿王之熟计之也。”惠王曰:“善。”乃止。
《战国策》


This story was told to Duke Hui of the Zhao state when he wanted to conquer the Yan state during the war of the seven states (circa 200 AD). His advisor Su then told him this story ...

A clam was out sunbathing one day when it was spotted by the crane. The crane immediately set its beak onto the clam's flesh but was trapped when the clam snapped its shell on the crane's beak. Both the clam and the crane held on thinking the other party will die a few days later. Moments later a fisherman came by and bagged both the crane and the clam who were handicapped. It was a windfall for the fisherman.

Su told Hui that if Zhao continued to attack Yan, they could both be paralysed and easily fall prey to the stronger Qin state.

Reading independent news websites like Malaysia Kini and Malaysia Today reveals just how similar the clashes between the people are with the crane and the clam. Not only are the races in constant battle (see the UPM video on YouTube), members of political parties are backlashing each other internally. Overlay that with news of a corrupt judicial system, the undependable police force and Anti-Corruption Agency etc, it really makes me feel uneasy about where will Malaysia end up by year 2020.

Let's not think 2020, it could perhaps be in 2010 when Malaysia uses up all its resources and reserves and end up being poorer than Myanmar.

While Malaysians at home get their spirits lifted by the media's euphoric news of our first angkasawan, have they considered the taxi fare involved? I'm not particularly proud of this and in fact embarassed when he is labelled an astronaut by his people but in reality, Nasa calls him a spaceflight participant. The expedition page on Nasa shows a photo and biographies of five astronauts and a tourist. Sounds like a joke to me but if you're the one paying taxes you might not think this is funny. And who's paying for all the dignitaries' trips?

There's definitely a cause for celebration this Raya - the government is spending RM1.5 million at the Raya open house today. They are catering for 200,000 people and preparing 50,000kgs of meat for a less-than-5hrs event. Simple arithmetic will tell you that if you're there, you're expected to consume 250g of meat, which is plausible. However, common sense tells you that 200,000 people would mean twice the capacity of Bukit Jalil. Malaysia Today estimates the turn out to be only 20,000, validated by today's Star reporting only "thousands" at the event. Who's going to benefit? I say the caterer or the food supplier who might turn out to be someone's relative.

Where do I see Malaysia in 10 years time? I don't know, but it sounds like a place where there is a time bomb waiting to implode.

jeudi, septembre 06, 2007

Golfing in Perth

Was in Perth recently ... had good wine, good food, good weather, but I enjoyed golfing there the most ... d***, how I wish we have golf courses like these here.
















jeudi, août 16, 2007

Financial Armageddon?

Today was one of my worst days since I stepped foot into the markets. What's this all about?!

A colleague told me it felt like the world was coming to and end, and I cheekily replied he should accept Christ now before it was too late, and that I could also baptize him with my bottled water on the spot. LoL!

Anyway this video has been passed around and while some think this may be one of the worst financial crises ever, no one describes it better than Jim Cramer!


samedi, août 04, 2007

The Kimono Traders

While sitting at my desk watching dollar yen crash, I decided to take a break and read an interesting article sent to me today. Remember my previous post on carry trades and leverage? Looks like the recent spate of volatility was caused by the unwinding of these trades ... and interestingly, my MUM sent me a text msg telling me about the credit crunch and unwinding of yen carry trades. I wonder where did she learn these financial jargons from!



The interesting article about the Kimono traders can be found here:
http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/article2187250.ece

* * *

In an elegant café overlooking Shiba Park in Tokyo, Ritsuko Shiono looks up from her book to check the foreign-exchange spot rates on her pink, sequin-dashed mobile phone. She is particularly interested in the Turkish lira. Meanwhile, 5,400 miles away in Ankara, the Turkish central bank is in panic mode because of Ritsuko – and the thousands of Japanese women like her who have quietly seized control of global currency markets.

Ritsuko, 34, is, as she puts it, “waist deep” in a fiendishly complex currency swap involving the Japanese yen, the US dollar and the Omani riyal. The trade has lost her more than 100,000 yen (£417) this morning alone. She is beginning to think she might get more joy from borrowing another 200,000 yen from her online broker and selling her yen for Turkish lira, but is irritated because the prices she’s after have not yet flickered on to her little screen.

To the growing horror of male Japan, when Ritsuko’s mind is not on the foreign exchange markets it is on stocks, bonds, property and other investment opportunities that might make her rich. She, and others like her, are blowing to smithereens one of Japan’s oldest taboos: in the emerging investment sisterhood, money is no longer a dirty word. In the past year eight new investment magazines have been launched to cater for them, and even their traditional fare of fashion and lifestyle titles have begun to incorporate sections on making money.

In the space of just a couple of years, Japanese online currency speculators – many of them housewives, elderly matriarchs or young working women – have taken the markets by storm. Economists, major corporations and investors, awed by the sheer market influence of the Japanese speculators, have been forced to rethink their analysis of global currency markets. James Gow, the British chief executive and co-founder of one of Japan’s big three internet currency brokerages, FXOnline Japan, says: “We are looking at Japanese women taking a very different attitude to risk and markets than they used to, and a lot of people have been taken by surprise by that.”

Borrowing their native yen more cheaply than any other major currency, multiplying their initial stake by as much as 200 times through margin trading and then dipping into dozens of higher-yield foreign exchange markets, the online traders of Japan now account for around $15 billion (£7 billion) of deals each day. Some have made the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of pounds in just six months’ trading, others trade with a fraction of that. They are, say currency analysts, “obsessive” sellers of the yen – relentlessly ditching the Japanese currency and its wafer-thin interest rates for the more lucrative currencies of New Zealand, Brazil, South Africa and Iceland. About a fifth of all trades that hit the screens at the Nomura brokerage are generated by “housewives” – the catch-all term the professionals use to describe Ritsuko and her powerful cohorts.

“Everyone seems so surprised that Japanese women are such energetic currency investors,” Ritsuko says, “but they really should have paid more attention to us. In an information economy, women are more powerful than men. We are the people who pay minute attention to tiny shifts in fashion and spend our lives online checking for gossip on the best restaurants and hotels.”

Ai, an investor from Nagoya in her late twenties, also argues that it is Japanese women’s ability to mine information that has now been transferred to the currency and stock markets. There are other advantages of their sex. While male online traders tend to close up their positions at 7pm and head out for a beer, she sneers, women just keep on trading. Some trade “spot forex”, dipping in and out of currencies around the world and playing directly on the volatility of markets to reap small gains. Others, by pumping up their initial stake via borrowings, take advantage of the differentials between overnight lending rates of various currencies: there is a lucrative difference between the 0.5 per cent rate for the yen and, say, the 8.25 per cent of the New Zealand dollar or the 17.5 per cent of the Turkish lira.

Turkey’s nightmare is that the Japanese housewives will lose interest and pull out of the lira, causing it to plunge. And it is not just the Turkish Government that is petrified by the Japanese housewives’ spectacular assault on its currency. Two months ago, when the New Zealand Government tried to intervene in currency markets by selling the dollar, its efforts were immediately and completely consumed by Japanese investors with virtually no effect on the exchange rate.

And as well as wrestling with the subversive, utterly unexpected cultural phenomenon of “greed is good” women, Japan itself has started to panic that this new breed of profit-hungry housewives threatens its economic revival and global standing. Because the housewives are endless sellers of the yen, any upward pressure on the Japanese currency is almost entirely absorbed by the online traders. For months now, the yen has fallen against most global currencies at every turn.

James Gow of FXOnline says: “Where the Government of Japan used to spend billions of dollars intervening in currency markets and fighting the prevailing tide to deflate the yen and help exporters, it now has thousands of Mrs Tanakas doing the same thing out of choice.” Although government intervention remains an option, things may be beyond immediate central bank control: individual Japanese have opened 600,000 margin trading accounts in the past year, with the deposits on those accounts amounting to around $5 billion.

One of FXOnline’s customers is Yoshie Akai, a 70-year-old grandmother from Kobe who has been an avid trader of forex for three years. She woke last Friday morning to find that she had lost about 8 million yen (£33,000) overnight. With more sangfroid than the most ruthless Wall Street dealing-room shark, she was trading again by mid-morning. “I was depressed in the morning. But if I leave this as it is, I will just be a loser. I’ll recover from this disaster,” she says. “I used to know when to buy. Now I’ve learnt the hard way when you should sell. You get a different sense of reality and risk when it is just numbers on a computer, not a bundle of notes sitting in front of me.”

Akai is one of two types of women traders emerging in Japan. One is the traditional holder of the family purse-strings. The once cautious housewife who routinely and unquestioningly used to deposit the family salary into postoffice savings (or might occasionally be tempted into a conservatively managed mutual fund) has decisively lost her faith in the strategy that she was told would ensure financial security. Ten years of near zero interest rates have shattered her trust that “Japan will provide”. She feels let down by Japan and she is looking for ways to make enough cash for a big holiday, or perhaps a new car.

The other is a totally new breed of investor: young women in their twenties and thirties using their own salaries to gamble on currencies or stocks and driven by the desire to make money fast. Their ambitions go far beyond a new handbag or a foreign trip. They want houses, fast cars and a lifestyle that has little in common with the thriftiness and self-denial preached by their mothers.

Both types fill the teaching room of the advanced investment class at the Nagoya financial school – a course designed for, and taught by, women. Yuko Kuriki, the instructor, says women want to use the markets to assert their independence as thinkers and create their own financial security. “Japan certainly has a sense of embarrassment about individuals getting rich but people have come to realise that without risk, you can’t get anywhere so there is a shift from savings to investment. Some women are now risking the family savings on stocks and forex: some are worried about their future, others are unashamedly greedy,” she says. “We are a culture that is traditionally most concerned with not losing money, rather than making lots of it. But the country has offered no yields for a decade so we have had to become investors.”

One of her students, 58-year old Etsuko, took to the markets after her husband killed himself during Japan’s financial crisis of 2003. “Japan has let us down, and I have to invest to make a living,” she says.

Sitting on the desk in front of Etsuko, 27-year old Ai represents the more aggressive face of Japanese women investors: “I want to challenge my lack of capital. I want to buy my own house and I’m a better investor than my husband. The markets offer me a sort of empowerment,” she says.

Proud of her class, Ms Kuriki stresses that her students, by the time she has finished with them, are not simply haphazard stock-pickers. “They are not like a lot of men. Women sell quickly when shares start falling, but they are much quicker than men to get back into the market and start buying again on the dips. Men decide on the basis of theory or past experience. Women look at the fundamentals.”

A yen for trade: Ritsuko’s day

7am: Ritsuko decides on two currency bets. She has 100,000 yen (£417) in her online trading account and the brokerage will lend her ten times that.

8am: She studies the Nikkei and Bloomberg and reckons the euro will rise

8.15am: She borrows 500,000 yen. (cheaply: the overnight interest rate is just 0.5 per cent), goes on to the spot foreign exchange market and buys euros at one euro per 160 yen.

8.30am: A medium-term bet: she borrows another 500,000 yen and buys New Zealand dollars, which will earn 8.25 per cent interest.

12 noon: Lunch and shopping (there are sales at Furla and Max Mara).

5.31pm: She was right: the euro is up 1 per cent. She buys back her yen, this time getting 176 yen per euro. After brokerage fees, her profit is around 5,000 yen – which about pays for her lunch.

2 months later: Ritsuko believes the Icelandic krone will be more lucrative than her New Zealand dollars. She exits her position with one sixth (two months out of 12) of the 8.25 per cent annual interest on the NZ dollars, pocketing around 6,100 yen – which she immediately churns into her next trade.

How currency trading works, and how to do it here

There is nothing to stop British investors doing exactly what their Japanese counterparts are doing. Those who decide to dabble in the foreign exchange markets don’t have to trade sterling just because they live in Britain. Instead they can decide to sell yen and buy New Zealand dollars, replicating the move that has been so profitable for Japanese investors.

Traditionally, British investors have been reluctant to play the currency markets. Investing in companies through the stock market has always been more popular than buying euros or yen. Experts say that investors feel safer in the knowledge that shares are likely to increase in value over the long term. Currency trading tends to be more short-term. Making money depends on selling one currency to buy another on the expectation that it will rise or fall. In effect, investors are betting on the points or “pips” between the price at which they buy currency and the price at which they sell. Each penny is worth one hundred pips. An investor must take a “postion”; in other words speculate on which way a currency will move. If they predict it will rise and it does, they will earn money. If it falls, they are liable for the difference. An investor who last week took a position that the dollar would rise would now be counting his earnings, as the price of buying a pound fell from $2.06 to $2.03 or by 300 pips, between July 24 and 27.

Alternatively, investors can choose to sell the currency of a country where the interest rate is very low to buy a currency of a country where the interest rate is high. In effect, they are borrowing currency at a low rate of interest and holding currency earning a high rate of interest. This is called a carry-trade. Each night an investor holds this position, they will receive a payment equal to the difference in the interest rates. But this can be risky as any fluctuation in either currency could result in all gains being wiped out.

There are signs that currency trading is becoming a more popular pursuit. Last year Deutsche Bank launched an online currency trading platform for private investors. It says that since then there has been a significant increase in the number of British investors trading currency. Customers need a $5,000 (£2,460) deposit to open an account.

Investors can also take a punt on the currency markets via spread-betting firms such as City Index or Capital Spreads. Tom Hougaard, chief market strategist at City Index, said: “Currency trading is as easy as walking down to Tesco and buying a can of beans. You can be up and running online within 15 minutes.” But the ease with which investors can get trading shouldn’t overshadow the risks. “It is quite daunting how much leverage you can get. This means you can buy a relatively big position with a small deposit,” Hougaard said. City Index allows customers to buy a position up to 50 times bigger than the funds that they have available. For example, those who dsposit £100 can take out a position worth £5,000 in their chosen currency. At Deutsche Bank, investors can trade up to 100 times the value of the cash they have available depending on their experience of currency trading. But just as your buying power is magnified, so are any potential losses. Investors who do not bail out of a poorly performing currency position in time may lose all the cash they deposited.


lundi, juillet 30, 2007

Penang Holiday

It's been a while. For the past few weeks my time has been swamped by short trips to Malaysia, the passing of my grandmother, turmoil in the markets, birthdays and weddings. July was never what I expected it to be...

I was in Penang for a short holiday recently with a few colleagues. The purpose of the trip was of course, to eat. I took the opportunity to try out my new Nikon D80, as well as the newly opened boutique hotel called G Hotel.






Some sightseeing in Penang

Travelling across the bridge for more food

Georgetown, and Kek Lok Si Temple






Food for the Soul

Nothing beats street food in Penang ...


Shrimp Noodles and Chee Cheung Fan

Char Koay Teow, Nyonya Kuih Talam and Lapis, and Assam Laksa
Kerabu Mee Hoon, Popiah and Fried Cempedak
Curry Mee and Seafood Sang Mien