Your guide to mystery shopping success

Moneymagpie's exciting new eBook reveals how you could be earning £££s and enjoying freebies as a mystery shopper. Enter the code MAG10 at checkout and pay just £3.49 (usual price £7!). Order here..

  • Jasmine: consumers pay over £9 billion a year in fees and lost interest on their current accounts a/c Which? (24th May 2012 - 10:27)
  • Moneymagpie: Good morning Moneymagpies! We know how keen you all are to pull in a bit of extra cash, so we've been coming up... http://t.co/uBIx1X0W (24th May 2012 - 08:37)
  • Moneymagpie: Fancy a cheap weekend away?: I can’t believe the prices of holidays this summer. What with the Olympics, the Jub... http://t.co/asHubKep (24th May 2012 - 08:30)
  • Jasmine: Good idea of Consumer Focus promote Credit Unions through Post Offices. We need to use Credit Unions a LOT more http://t.co/Hl2Vl7Os (24th May 2012 - 07:01)
  • Moneymagpie: Did you see Jasmine Birtles on Sky News this morning? We will let you know next time she's on the box! (23rd May 2012 - 14:05)
  • Jasmine: @mokbeehive Oh well, thanks for trying! Hope all good with you :) (23rd May 2012 - 14:04)
  • Jasmine: @RetirementAngel Sure tweet the link (23rd May 2012 - 13:58)
  • Jasmine: @TiraLondon Yes there should be a law against it! (23rd May 2012 - 12:42)
  • Jasmine: Lots of people having shouting arguments on mobiles outside my window today. Lighten up! This is not the weather for shouting! (23rd May 2012 - 10:53)
  • Jasmine: @EamonnHolmes :) X (23rd May 2012 - 09:48)
  • Jasmine: @EamonnHolmes and you are uniquely the one and only EamonnHolmes :)) (23rd May 2012 - 09:43)
  • Jasmine: @DronfieldShell :) (23rd May 2012 - 09:42)
  • Jasmine: Good fun on the Sky sofa this morning with@DelaneyMan @SkyCharlotte @EamonnHolmes :) (23rd May 2012 - 08:42)
  • Jasmine: @Ghostof1724 Thank you! (23rd May 2012 - 08:40)
  • Jasmine: @thegriffter Thank you! (23rd May 2012 - 08:40)
  • Moneymagpie: Good morning Moneymagpies! Picture your telly. Is it balanced on table or have you got it secured? It might not... http://t.co/Ih4NHMx9 (23rd May 2012 - 08:01)
  • Jasmine: RT @money2themasses: A map of Europe highlighting who is & isn't in recession - http://t.co/LzlGL9VN (23rd May 2012 - 07:54)
  • Jasmine: Doing the papers on sky news in a mo (23rd May 2012 - 05:28)
  • Jasmine: More people now own shares than belong to trades unions #greshamlecture (22nd May 2012 - 17:56)
  • Jasmine: RT @mrchrisaddison: Just One Book #librarypop #coalitionremix (22nd May 2012 - 16:09)
  • Jasmine: A Loan Again Naturally #librarypop (22nd May 2012 - 16:09)
  • Jasmine: The Book of Love #librarypop (22nd May 2012 - 16:08)
  • Jasmine: Good. The OFT's sticking it to Wonga http://t.co/w6qc8etr (22nd May 2012 - 15:33)
  • Jasmine: Paris most expensive place for a Club Sandwich at £20.43 a/c http://t.co/6xZRwOda. London is tenth on the list. (22nd May 2012 - 14:19)
  • Moneymagpie: Today's newsletter's got a fantastic holiday discount, a FREE money magazine and abrand new online survey site for... http://t.co/x2litxMA (22nd May 2012 - 13:34)
  • Moneymagpie: Banks need to lend or the economy will cease up: So far I haven’t been one to complain about the banks not lendi... http://t.co/nto2CDQG (22nd May 2012 - 10:22)
  • Moneymagpie: Good morning magpies! Today's money maker is all about how you can make money by answering the phone. Find out... http://t.co/qK9HYjej (22nd May 2012 - 08:13)
  • Moneymagpie: You’ll never buy salad again…: …or spinach, or chard, after you’ve read this. I’ve been on a guided foraging wal... http://t.co/XRQaaMrR (21st May 2012 - 23:25)
  • Moneymagpie: Confused about Cash Isas? You don't have to be. Here's Jasmine's video explaining them... http://t.co/RTJzdrsS (21st May 2012 - 14:21)
  • Moneymagpie: Payday loans used for food: Over 60% of people who took out payday loans were using the money to pay for househo... http://t.co/iFIiSfWF (21st May 2012 - 11:49)
  • Moneymagpie: Got a burning question about money?Now you can ask Jasmine what she thinks, through Jasmine's World: http://t.co/Tz48Qf4f (21st May 2012 - 11:14)
  • Moneymagpie: Win the ultimate street party collection! http://t.co/3wGpBIMI via @pinterest (21st May 2012 - 11:08)
  • Moneymagpie: Everyone who spends £40 or more at ASDA bet 21st May and 17th June can get a £5 off £40 bonus voucher online (21st May 2012 - 10:07)
  • Moneymagpie: #Win this gorgeous street party collection from Lakeland. Simply RT this and follow @moneymagpie for a chance to win! http://t.co/ZNPxDgJv (21st May 2012 - 09:27)
  • Moneymagpie: Good morning Moneymagpies! Did you all have a nice weekend? Kick start your week by swapping your greedy... http://t.co/TSTr37ph (21st May 2012 - 08:44)
  • Moneymagpie: National Vegetarian Week 21-27th May: It’s National Vegetarian Week, so here are some of my favourite veggie mea... http://t.co/xhsrBwqi (21st May 2012 - 00:15)
  • Moneymagpie: RT @Jasmine: My 'Smarter Living' challenge in the Telegraph http://t.co/xXdyujYZ (19th May 2012 - 11:48)
  • Moneymagpie: Make money with an oven-cleaning business: Your very own oven-cleaning business – how does that sound? Cleaning ... http://t.co/Yz3HQH7b (18th May 2012 - 16:30)
  • Moneymagpie: New article! Make money with an oven-cleaning business - http://t.co/6ZwLdZhP (18th May 2012 - 16:17)
  • Moneymagpie: What do I do if my bank won't give me an overdraft? The latest 'Ask Jasmine' question http://t.co/YBN6SHi2 (18th May 2012 - 15:09)
Finances & Investing

No Sovereign Immunity

December 7, 2009

The term ‘Sovereign Lending’ implies the delightful possibility that we could lend out the Windsors for weddings, bah mitzvahs and sundry supermarket openings, which to a great extent I suppose is what they actually do, except on a somewhat grander scale. However, back in the late 1970s and early 1980s this lending to states turned into a euphemism for trying to get ‘the stuff back’ from bust and over-borrowed nations. This national sovereign lending had become a banking fashion fad with new departments being created and the concept of lending to nations was altogether seen to be far more appealing than just lending to the same old corporate again. So why was this suddenly so popular amongst international bankers? Because countries don’t go bankrupt do they! Or do they?

Then there came a realisation that countries can and in fact do go bust. In those days we had the caricature sharp suited American banker going south of the Rio Grande to lend out suitcases of greenbacks at cheap rates to virtually anyone who would take them – so long, that is, as they had some form of a letter of comfort from the local state or government. Thus Latin America was swept up in a frenzy of bank lending with cheap money for projects many of which were seen as being hair brained even in those days.

I recall a steel plant being funded and to be built from scratch in the middle of the Brazilian forests, which to this day I don’t think has produced an ounce of metal, and also the British financing of warships to be stationed in the strategically vital port of the city of Manaus which has to be at least several thousands of miles from the nearest international border. Also at that time we had the new BAe146 being sold as a great short take-off jet, which apparently would be perfect for third world dusty African air strips – except no-one on the continent had the facilities to service four high tech jet engines in the middle of nowhere. I think one was eventually sold to Mali for important national security reasons (presumably for the president to get out of the country quickly).

So money was shipped out and the risks were for someone else to manage. The lending was big, and the fees eye wateringly generous as reflected in the acrylic ‘tombstones’ that listed all the participating banks that joined in the syndication. Where you stood on the list was according to your seniority in the debt, your fee and your banking ego. And for those who said “no” – well, they just weren’t proper players. Big was butch and size was everything. The quality of lending seemed to be a wholly secondary issue.

Of course it all ended in tears, firstly with Mexico’s default but the contagion swiftly spread around the globe and especially throughout Latin America. The low cost rates had doubled and tripled and what was previously just affordable on a good day became totally uneconomic and destructive not only to those states but of course also to the banks in due course as well. Some may recall the failure of Crocker Bank in California which was brought down by its overseas adventures, and of course this in turn triggered the mortal injury for Midland Bank which was eventually to be rescued by HSBC.

Many countries with corrupt leaders and officials were blamed but certainly this was the first time I had come across such degenerate banking behaviour as debt was shovelled out in return for fat fees, and then, to rub salt into the wounds, after the default, usurious penalties were charged just to pile on the pain.

It was not of course just the bankers, certainly the lawyers who drafted the huge tomes of legal documentation had equally astonishing fees and in one case I can recall actually just duplicated documentation within the same tome – presumably to get extra fees for production and output. Nothing seems to change.

However, now we are dealing with a different sort of sovereign debt crisis. Dubai has been a bubble waiting to burst for some time, and has been covered in detail elsewhere, but countries such as Greece and Ireland are closer to home, albeit within the Eurozone.  Here the pressures are marked by the widening in the debt spreads and the increasing aggravation of the Germans towards these junior Euro nations who lack the financial discipline to control their borrowing effectively.

This though is not just a financial problem but a political one. The issue will be which governments will have the strength and courage to face their electorate with what must be penalising measures to try and restructure the country’s finances? Well to be fair Dublin has started to act and face up to their responsibilities, but I fear others will be less determined as their politicians waver and weaken. The reaction from those citizens will not be pleasant and I fear a whiff of tear gas will be in the air before twelve months is out.

Although not in the Euro, the one name that also stands out as being a case needing urgent attention is that of the UK. Morgan Stanley’s note last week highlighted some of the threats here if political uncertainty increased and especially if we ended up with an unclear election result. Their worry was that, in extremis, we could see a fiscal crisis with capital flight and Sterling suffering severe weakness along with a sell-off of gilts. The issue must be that whoever is in charge after the election must be able to lay out a credible plan for the nation’s debt management – if not then we will almost certainly lose our valuable AAA credit rate status.

***

One of the immediate effects of investors trying to find anything better than ‘sod all’ on cash accounts has been the ‘dash for trash’ that I have mentioned before. One the consequences for that is the inevitable pulling forward of flotations and IPOs as corporate advisers take advantage of a window of opportunity to raise money for businesses and get their prospective new issues away. These may well include such names as New Look, Gartmore and Pets at Home.

These floats may well in fact have a very important structural effect on our economy as many of these companies will be coming from the private equity stables. Private Equity has suffered greatly for the past two years as they have been unable to move their portfolios of investments. This will allow the freeing up of more capital to be deployed into the next generation of ventures and aid the depleted banking system in the provision of support. After such a period of corporate constipation, some economic syrup of figs could provide some much needed relief. Eew, sorry.

***

And finally……Wisconsin, USA. Planning and timing is everything in a good crime. Maybe the bank robber needed the money to buy a watch. It would seem he needed one after arriving six minutes after the Guardian Credit Union in Waukesha closed. Police said a man wearing a ski mask entered the first set of doors at 5:36 p.m. on Wednesday with a gun, apparently not realising the bank was closed.

Police Sgt. Jerry Habanek told the press that police are reviewing security tapes and investigating. He said the robber could have planned poorly or possibly had another reason, like getting tied up in traffic.

The message is clear. If you want to really rob a bank – join one.

Have a good week.

Justin A. Urquhart Stewart
Director
Seven Investment Management Limited

Leave a Reply