I recently had the privilege to meet Mr. Paul Donovan, Global Economist, Managing Director UBS Investment Bank on September 23, 2013 in Dubai. Paul co-authors the Global Economic Perspectives publication with other members of the Global Economic team. Paul regularly appears on CNN, Bloomberg TV, and CNBC.
Paul, very comprehensively, covered various developments in the global economy ranging from the selection of US FED chair to the Japanese issuing bonds, devaluation of currencies and region-wise economic outlook.
There was a Q/A session which allowed me to put forward questions/opinions to Paul and I am glad he answered those questions to my satisfaction. The following were the communications exchanged
Paul, very comprehensively, covered various developments in the global economy ranging from the selection of US FED chair to the Japanese issuing bonds, devaluation of currencies and region-wise economic outlook.
There was a Q/A session which allowed me to put forward questions/opinions to Paul and I am glad he answered those questions to my satisfaction. The following were the communications exchanged
1 - Creation of Fake Capital
“I own apples and Paul owns oranges and we both agree to exchange
each fruit worth millions. Paul sells me the oranges and I sell Paul apples.
Next morning, we are no more fruit vendors but banks with assets worth
millions. How this creation of fake
capital is preventing organizations and economies to bounce back?" I related this to what happened in Iceland (shift from fish to investment banking) and other European economies.
Paul’s response: As this was the very first question to
Paul that evening, he smiled to me and said that this is quite unfortunate and many bankers in the hall will not like us for discussing this. He added that banks have realized this and regulations are being brainstormed and
developed to overcome these issues. Banks are becoming more systematic
than before. He added that a bad situation in Euro will result in good
outcomes. Many banks have recently either ceased or limited their operations in
the Middle East and other regions. Banks like BNP Paribas have ceased operations
in most of the gulf countries and Barclays has limited its operations too. These
banks have been influenced by their respective countries’ governments to return
and invest in their local economies. The increase in lending within the Euro bloc will improve the economic conditions over the medium term.
2 - Volatile Commodity Prices
“Theoretically prices decline when demand falls. Prices of
coal, gold and several other commodities have either declined or remained volatile amid increasing demand trends year over year. What is to be blamed for
low commodity prices? Am I right in saying that high capex is to be blamed for
low commodity prices ?”
Paul’s response: “Yes, it is true that excessive capex in
certain regions has resulted in volatile commodity prices.
Expanding upon your statement mis-allocation of capex and resources is to be blamed for volatile commodity prices.”
3 - Asset Nationalization
“Asset rationalization, by Jan 2014, in countries like
Indonesia can create serious issues in the global economy as China imports more
than 80% of its bauxite requirements from Indonesia. What implications will
this carry for the Global economy ?”
Paul’s response: “As a global economist I am more concerned
whether the world’s global resource requirements will be fulfilled. China has
invested in countries in Africa and has acquired mines, which it cannot fully
rely upon because in the past sudden shifts in the governments in Africa has also
caused disruptions in the mining activities and complicated ownership
structure. As a global economist Indonesia must continue to supply raw material to
China as China processes resources primarily for its local economy. Indonesia’s move is
politically correct but not on economic terms because it has energy crisis and
processing industries need adequate and cheap energy supplies. This move will
worry the Chinese and will have a global impact.”
And, the intellectual evening came to an end.
No comments:
Post a Comment