Friday, December 26, 2008




THE GREAT AMERICAN DREAM


Merry Christmas



This Christmas we make an attempt to assess ourselves .. the damage that has happened in the last two years., whether we have reached the bottom or whether the whirlpool is a fathom deeper. I still remember myself attending a Dealer’s meet, sometime in late 2005 where the guest speaker was a learned Economist of the country. One of my colleagues questioned expressing his ignorance on the topic – What is this subprime ? The modest speaker made genuine attempts to make us all understand what it was all about, ensuring us the insignificance of the segment and the terminology. Today in late 2008 , I would not be surprised if I hear a opinion poll revealing that Subprime is the most common word used in English newsprints this
year. I do not intend to emphasize on my fellow economist friend’s underestimation of the eventuality , I only would like to make a confession that we were ignorant of the snowball effect of the same. Let us take a quick look and take stock of what has happened in the last few sessions of the economic calendar.

In the fall of 2008, the credit crunch, which had emerged a little more than a year before, ballooned into Wall Street’s biggest crisis since the Great Depression. As hundreds of billions in mortgage-related investments went bad, mighty investment banks that once ruled high finance have crumbled or reinvented themselves as humdrum commercial banks. The nation’s largest insurance company and largest savings and loan both were seized by the government. The channels of credit, the arteries of the global financial system, have been constricted, cutting off crucial funds to consumers and businesses small and large.


In response, the federal government adopted a $700 billion bailout plan meant to reassure the markets and get credit flowing again. But the crisis began to spread to Europe and to emerging markets, with governments scrambling to prop up banks, broaden guarantees for deposits and agree on a coordinated response.



Deep Rising


The roots of the credit crisis stretch back to another notable boom-and-bust: the tech bubble of the late 1990’s. When the stock market began a steep decline in 2000 and the nation slipped into recession the next year, the Federal Reserve sharply lowered interest rates to limit the economic damage. Lower interest rates make mortgage payments cheaper, and demand for homes began to rise, sending prices up. In addition, millions of homeowners took advantage of the rate drop to refinance their existing mortgages. As the industry ramped up, the quality of the mortgages went down. And turn sour they did, when home buyers had to leverage themselves to the hilt to make a purchase. Default and delinquency rates began to rise in 2006, but the pace of lending did not slow. Banks and other investors had devised a plethora of complex financial instruments to slice up and resell the mortgage-backed securities and to hedge against any risks — or so they thought.



Into the Jaws ….


The first shoe to drop was the collapse in June 2007 of two hedge funds owned by Bear Stearns that had invested heavily in the subprime market. As the year went on, more banks found that securities they thought were safe were tainted with what came to be called toxic mortgages. At the same time, the rising number of foreclosures helped speed the fall of housing prices, and the number of prime mortgages in default began to increase. The Federal Reserve took unprecedented steps to bolster Wall Street. But still the losses mounted, and in March 2008 the Fed staved off a Bear Stearns bankruptcy by assuming $30 billion in liabilities and engineering a sale to JP Morgan Chase for a price that was less than the worth of Bear’s Manhattan skyscraper. But even till this time we were quiet sure that if I don’t have a saving’s account or own a costly house , I am not going to be affected by it.



Rome was lost in a Day..
In August, government officials began to become concerned as the stock prices of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, government-sponsored entities that were linchpins of the housing market, slid sharply. On Sept. 7, the Treasury Department announced it was taking them over. Events began to move even faster. On Sept. 12, top government and finance officials gathered for talks to fend off bankruptcy for Lehman Brothers. The talks broke down, and the government refused to step in and salvage Lehman as it had for Bear. Lehman’s failure sent shock waves through the global banking system, as because increasingly clear in the following weeks. Merrill Lynch, which had not been previously thought to be in danger, sold itself to the Bank of America to avoid a similar fate.


On Sept. 16, American International Group, an insurance giant on the verge of failure because of its exposure to exotic securities known as credit default swaps, was bailed out by the Fed in an $85 billion deal. Stocks dropped anyway, falling nearly 500 points.


But even then the glory of the American State was not at stake. Why .. ask even a school going kid which is the most powerful country in the world?? The Answer is pretty straight – United States of America. If you ask why ! the answer is beyond all the proposed bail out Plans , and the quest for my belief that America will bounce back to Honour largely lies on this. Inspite of everything going wrong US still remains the biggest storehouse for Soft Power. Now what is this soft power ? I strongly feel that it is more powerful than having nuclear power on your side . US is the Home for the brands like Coke , Pepsi, IBM , GM, Microsoft , McDonalds and so on . It is said that the terrorists who attacked the twin Towers had their last meal in a McDonalds. Such is the power of Brand building . We think of anything and the leader comes from US. Over the years this elite feeling has been made stronger through the American Centers world over. Such is the power of Soft Power . It has helped US survive and sustain its position globally inspite of its huge Trade deficit.



God save the King ….. and also his people


The bleeding in the stock market stopped only after rumors trickled out about a huge bailout plan being readied by the federal government. On Sept. 18, Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. publicly announced a three-page, $700 billion proposal that would allow the government to buy toxic assets from the nation’s biggest banks, a move aimed at shoring up balance sheets and restoring confidence within the financial system. Congress eventually amended the plan to add new structures for oversight, limits on executive pay and the option of the government taking a stake in the companies it bails out. Still, many Americans were angered by the idea of a proposal that provided billions of dollars in taxpayer money to Wall Street banks, which many believed had caused the crisis in the first place. Lawmakers with strong beliefs in free markets also opposed the bill, which they said amounted to socialism. President Bush pleaded with lawmakers to pass the bill, but on Sept. 29, the House rejected the proposal, 228 to 205, with an insurgent group of Republicans leading the opposition. Stocks plunged, with the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index losing nearly 9 percent, its worst day since Oct. 19, 1987.
Negotiations began anew on Capitol Hill. A series of tax breaks were added to the legislation, among other compromises and earmarks, and the Senate passed a revised version Oct. 1 by a large margin, 74 to 25. On Oct. 3, the House followed suit, by a vote of 263 to 171.


When the bill passed, it was still unclear how effective the bailout plan would be in resolving the credit crisis, although many analysts and economists believed it would offer at least a temporary aid. Federal officials promised increased regulation of the financial industry, whose structure was vastly different than it had been just weeks before.


The first reactions were not positive. Banks in England and Europe had invested heavily in mortgage-backed securities offered by Wall Street, and England had gone through a housing boom and bust of its own. Losses from those investments and the effect of the same tightening credit spiral being felt on Wall Street began to put a growing number of European institutions in danger. Over the weekend that followed the bailout’s passage, the German government moved to guarantee all private savings accounts in the country, and bailouts were arranged for a large German lender and a major European financial company. And even as the United States began to execute its bailout plan, the tactics continued to shift, with the Treasury announcing that it would spend some of the funds to buy commercial paper, a vital form of short-term borrowing for businesses, in an effort to get credit flowing again.



Humpty Dumpty had a Great Fall…


When stock markets in the United States, Europe and Asia continued to plunge, the world’s leading central banks on Oct. 8 took the drastic step of a coordinated cut in interest rates, with the Federal Reserve cutting its two main rates by half a point. And after a week in which stocks declined almost 20 percent on Wall Street, European and American officials announced coordinated actions that included taking equity stakes in major banks, including $250 billion in investments in the United States. The action prompted a worldwide stock rally, with the Dow rising 936 points, or 11 percent, on Oct. 13.


But as the prospect of a severe global recession became more evident, such gains were impossible to sustain. Just two days later, after Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, said there would be no quick economic turnaround even with the government’s intervention, the Dow plunged 733 points. The credit markets, meanwhile, were slow to ease up, as banks used the injection of government funds to strengthen their balance sheets rather than lend. By late
October, the Treasury had decided to use its $250 billion investment plan not only to increase banks’ capitalization but also to steer funds to stronger banks to purchase weaker ones, as in the acquisition of National City, a troubled Ohio-based bank, by PNC Financial of Pittsburgh.
The volatility in the stock markets was matched by upheaval in currency trading as investors sought shelter in the yen and the dollar, driving down the currencies of developing countries and even the euro and the British pound. The unwinding of the so-called yen-carry trade, in which investors borrowed money cheaply in Japan and invested it overseas, made Japanese goods more expensive on world markets and precipitated a steep plunge in Tokyo stock trading.
Oil-producing countries were hit by a sudden reversal of fortune, as the record oil prices reached over the summer were cut in half by October because of the world economic outlook. Even an agreement on a production cut by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries on Oct. 24 failed to stem the price decline. Stock markets remained in upheaval, with the general downward trend punctuated by events like an 11-percent gain in the Dow on Oct. 28. A day later, the Fed cut its key lending rate again, to a mere 1 percent. In early November, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England followed with sharp reductions of their own.
Federal officials also moved to put together a plan to aid homeowners at risk of foreclosure by shouldering some losses for banks that agree to lower monthly payments. Detroit’s automakers, meanwhile, hard hit by the credit crisis, the growing economic slump and their belated transition away from big vehicles, turned to the government for aid of their own, possibly including help in engineering a merger of General Motors and Chrysler.


The leaders of 20 major countries, meanwhile, agreed to an emergency summit meeting in Washington on Nov. 14 and 15 to discuss coordinated action to deal with the credit crisis.



Alien epidemic ….. We are not Alone


The credit crisis emerged as the dominant issue of the presidential campaign in the last two months before the election. On Sept. 24, as polls showed Senator John McCain’s support dropping, he announced that he would suspend his campaign to try to help forge a deal on the bailout plan. The next day, both he and Senator Barack Obama met with Congressional leaders and President Bush at the White House, but their efforts failed to assure passage of the legislation, which went down to defeat in an initial vote on Sept. 29, a week before it ultimately passed.


The weakening stock market and growing credit crisis appeared to benefit Mr. Obama, who tied Mr. McCain to what he called the failed economic policies of President Bush and a Republican culture of deregulation of the financial markets. Polls showed that Mr. Obama’s election on Nov. 4 was partly the fruit of the economic crisis and the belief among many voters that he was more capable of handling the economy than Mr. McCain. As president-elect, Mr. Obama made confronting the economic crisis the top priority of his transition. Just three days after his election, he convened a meeting of his top economic advisers, including the billionaire investor Warren Buffett; two former Treasury secretaries, Lawrence H. Summers and Robert E. Rubin; Paul A. Volcker, a former Federal Reserve chairman; and Eric E. Schmidt, the chief executive of Google. After their Nov. 7 meeting, he called quick passage of an economic stimulus package,
saying it should be taken up by the the lame-duck Congressional session, and that if lawmakers failed to act, it would be his main economic goal after assuming office Jan. 20. Mr. Obama also faced a host of other demands as president-elect, including calls to bail out the auto industry, particularly General Motors, which warned that it would run out of cash by mid-2009. And some economists and conservatives questioned whether, given the economic crisis, he could still meet some of his pledges from the campaign, like rapidly rolling back the Bush tax cuts, which some felt would hurt demand, and pushing ahead with his planned expansion of health care coverage, which could greatly increase a soaring deficit.




To be or not to be


The presidential success of President elect Barrack Obama largely depends on not how he manages this crisis , but largely on how well he can sell a dream to the people of United States. People who have already sold their pots and pans …. who knows might agree to buy His dream, for who doesn’t know that Americans love to sell their futures. It is a tough time no doubt , but then its not the toughest of the occasions. We can always build a monument somewhere in US and tell the whole world “ Let this not happen again”- once this crises gets over .

Monday, December 22, 2008

I hope to write more frequently from now on, I really have no clue as to what I should be writing here and even if I have something in mind, I do not know how to pen that down. I hope to master this art soon; rather I have to master it soon.

Change in inevitable and now I’ve accepted this fact, I always had this perception that change is something that comes only when you force something on to you and is always painful, now I realize that’s wrong, we as humans tend to change with changing times, consciously or sub consciously we tend to modify our own thought process adjusting ourselves to this world as we continue to grow. But what is important is that we should be aware of the changes in us. (The change I am referring to or would be referring to is about the thought process and our strength to analyze things) We humans often tend to get carried away with our feelings and the circumstances which we are confronted with, not realizing the direction in which we are thinking. This could lead us into what we call as bad phases of life. This has personally happened to me several times now, and every time, I only get to realize that I am on the wrong side of the road after it is too late. Thankfully I am out of one and hope that I won’t be entering to another ever again.

A lot has happened with me during this one year, I’ve shifted from my first job, for obvious reasons like better pay, better profile and stuff, Sometimes I wonder was the change too soon? But then looking at the average turnaround time for any employee in ICICI which happens to be a little less than 1 year, I am happy and find my self a reason strong enough to shift. There are many other strong reasons though; all of them I feel would lead into only one thing – peace at work place in terms of work culture and ethics. There were days when I got up just to hate myself as I was not very satisfied with what I did. I am happy with what I am doing now (so was I, when I joined ICICI in July last). The shift to indusind is only on a temporary as my main focus would be to crack GMAT for now, hope to complete the entire process and see myself in a decent B School somewhere in US by December 2009.