Friday, November 28, 2008

Swiss Re covers Malawi against drought risk

http://www.insurancedaily.co.uk/2008/10/20/swiss-re-covers-malawi-against-drought-risk/

Swiss Re and the International Development Association (IDA) had entered into an agreement whereby the insurer will pay out up to US$5m should Malawi farmers suffer a reduced maize crop due to drought.

The IDA, which is part of the World Bank, is supporting the first weather-based derivative contract in Malawi.

Swiss Re’s Environmental and Commodity Markets chief Juerg Trueb explains that the deal is a prime example of risk management aimed at offsetting the financial impact of potentially catastrophic weather.

The deal is particularly important for Malawi given the predominance of agriculture in its economy, meaning that a poor harvest is a very serious issue.

The maximum payout of $5m would come into effect if maize production fell to below 10% of a historical average.

Smaller payments would occur based on a rainfall index showing the projected effect of rainfall (or lack thereof) on maize production.

This is not Swiss Re’s first foray into the sphere of weather derivatives. Four years ago it made its first such deal in India, in a move that protected some 350,000 farmers.

Today the insurer has a 30% share of the global weather risks market.

The FINANCIAL, News That Makes Money, Business News & Multimedia ...


Silobreaker: Swiss Re in African drought contract


Just In Just Out: World Bank Weekly Update - October 20, 2008

Sunday, November 23, 2008

UK PRE-BUDGET REPORT OUT 24.11.2008

Alistair Darling, The Chancellor releases his PBR tomorrow and is expected inter alia to include a rate cut in VAT down from 17.5% to possibly 15%. KPMG on their website http://www.kpmg.co.uk/budget/ have predictions in the main areas of employee issues and corporate, indirect and personal taxes.

The drive is to encourage spending by reducing the total outlay on consumers and taxation on small to medium businesses, the approach was unthinkable a few months ago and shows how innovative the Brown government is.

Lets wait and see, and noting Browns growing influence on the world financial stage it may create a new age in approaches to recession correction approaches.

Other authoritative sources could be:

Pre-Budget 2008 - HM Treasury

Pre-Budget Report 2008 (Telegraph.co.uk)

Saturday, November 22, 2008

CITIGROUP WEIGHS SALE OR MERGER AFTER SLUMP



'Citigroup considers fire sale as shares dive

Bank sees share price drop below $4 in New York for first time in 15 years / Pandit insists Smith Barney is not for sale

By Stephen Foley in New York
Saturday, 22 November 2008

Citigroup assembled its board to "think the unthinkable" yesterday, with a fire sale or a break-up of the financial giant on the table.

The company's shares plunged for the fifth straight day, as the rest of Wall Street followed the twists and turns of a drama every bit as significant as the fall of Bear Stearns or Lehman Brothers earlier in the year.

The situation is different this time, however, because the US government has become a major investor in Citigroup, putting $25bn into the company in October, guaranteeing new debt issued by the company and in effect anointing it "too big to fail". Officials from the Treasury and other regulators were working with Citigroup yesterday as it examined its options for averting a crisis of confidence.......' SOURCE: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/citigroup-considers-fire-sale-as-shares-dive-1030131.html

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24684903-5017996,00.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7741463.stm

CHARTERED INSURANCE INSTITUTE UK TO MERGE WITH ANZIIF, CHANGE NAME ETC.

Excerpts:


'Dear Mr Kapito

Following the President’s message to you last month, as promised I am writing with more information on the proposed merger between the CII and ANZIIF (Australian and New Zealand Institute of Insurance and Finance)......

Name of the merged entity

On the first point I would like to make it clear that nothing is set in stone – this is a period of consultation with our members and we both expect and welcome feedback. We will be listening carefully to the feedback of our membership over the coming months.

It has become clear that a large number of our members – particularly those working in General Insurance - feel very strongly that it is important to retain the word “Insurance” in the name of the institute, both as an acknowledgement of our heritage and to accurately describe the specific sector in which they work. On the other hand, there is enthusiasm for incorporating “Financial Services” in the name to reflect the full range of activities in which our members are engaged. Given this feedback, and following consultation with the wider market, I believe we are now likely to put this latter option – the Chartered Institute of Insurance and Financial Services (CIIFS) – to the membership vote.

Information on the merger

You will be aware we have created a dedicated website for the merger – www.institutemerger.com– which already contains FAQs and also provides all members with the opportunity to provide feedback to the CII. The content of this site will expand as we proceed through the consultation process and our preference is to ask members to share their feedback through this site. This means we are able to provide a consistent approach across the entire worldwide membership and also ensure we can monitor and analyse the feedback in a structured manner.

We have already responded on the website to some of the most frequent enquiries; for instance we have proposed that the existing designations ACII and FCII will remain unchanged and that our Chartered titles for individuals will also be unaffected. Similarly, our Representative Council and other aspects of our governance so recently reviewed will remain unchanged. Therefore I would urge you to address your questions through this route.

Financial benefits

On the particular point of the finances, detailed due diligence was prepared by KPMG and reviewed by the Board. The cost / benefit analysis is a relatively straight-forward affair since, for negligible costs, we are benefiting from:

  • An additional £6m of revenue, taking our revenues from £30.5m to £36.5m (this would take a number of years to achieve this growth through other means)
  • £3.3.m net assets, with £2.2m cash assets
  • No ongoing cash drain, since ANZIIF has no pension deficit and has a record of breaking even or better and is forecast to do so again this year
  • Use of ANZIIF’s core member system which could save us incurring several million pounds to replace our core system which is over 20 years old. ...........

…in addition to a number of other benefits, such as:

  • Growing to over 105,000 members in around 170 countries with offices in London, Melbourne, Mumbai, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Singapore and Auckland
  • Creating the best possible benefit package for members wherever they are based in the world
  • Nearly doubling the number of overseas members (14,000 to 26,000) and raising the proportion of non-UK revenue from 12% to over 30% of the total
  • Becoming the clear market leader in South East Asia .......

Yours sincerely,


Dr Alexander Scott

Chief Executive Officer, CII

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

CHARTERED INSURANCE INSTITUTE HQ PICTURES, ALDERMANBURY (IMAGES)








FSA

Monday, November 17, 2008

Monday, November 10, 2008

Obama's first economic lesson: blame Bush

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/william_rees_mogg/article5119348.ece

From The Times
November 10, 2008
Obama's first economic lesson: blame Bush
As in 1933, the President-elect faces a disaster not of his making. Today, however, he may be able to stabilise the depression
William Rees-Mogg

Next Saturday there will be a meeting of the leading economic nations, the G20, in Washington to review the world economic crisis. It is not clear how much Barack Obama, the President-elect of the United States, will be involved. He faces the same dilemma as Franklin Roosevelt, who was President-elect in 1933.

Herbert Hoover, the outgoing president, was engaged in negotiating the preliminaries for the World Economic and Monetary Conference that was to be held in London in July of the same year. By that time Roosevelt would be president.

Roosevelt blamed the slump on Hoover, and was determined to create his own policies to deal with the crisis. In his perceptive biography Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Conrad Black observes: “Roosevelt fundamentally thought that the focusing on foreign causes for the Depression was a scam and an evasion... He believed that efforts to lay great stress on the potential of international conferences to achieve much that would be useful were just attempts to shirk responsibility for the monstrous failure for which Herbert Hoover as President, and for eight years before that as Secretary of Commerce, was more personally responsible than anyone else.”
There is no reason to think that Senator Obama feels as angry about the economic policy failures of George W. Bush as Roosevelt felt about Hoover, but the political situation is the same. In 1933 the outgoing Republican Administration left the legacy of the Great Depression. By 1933 that had already cost them the presidential election of 1932; as the party of the slump they went on to lose the elections of 1936, 1940, 1944 and 1948. Any competent professional politician in Roosevelt's position would have wanted to nail the Republican Party with responsibility for the slump. Mr Obama is a highly competent politician. He will want to avoid sharing responsibility for the greatest economic catastrophe since the 1930s. To start with, he will want to make sure of his second term. He will put the blame on the Republican Administration, and reasonably so.
The economic policies of the new Administration have not yet been established. The President-elect has a number of first-class advisers, people of judgment, courage and experience; yet the administrative team has yet to be appointed. During the Washington conference, Senator Obama will be well advised to listen to the visiting statesmen, as no doubt he will, but he can hardly be ready to enter into policy commitments.

During the conference one could expect Senator Obama to listen more than he talks. Quite simply, he is not yet the president; he has huge influence but no official authority. Nor is he indeed an economist by training. He will take his own big economic decisions, but he will want first of all to receive the advice he will be given by an administration that has not yet been formed.

In any case, the leading figures of the G20 countries are not themselves agreed on the best policies to pursue. The President of France, Nicolas Sarkozy, seems to want a second Bretton Woods, the 1944 conference that created the postwar fixed-rate exchange system; the system lasted until 1971, when President Nixon ended the convertibility of the dollar into gold.
It is not clear which, if any, countries other than France now want to move back towards a fixed-rate system. Gordon Brown, as Chancellor, blocked British entry into the euro, which is itself a fixed-rate currency. Mr Brown seems to want a new structure for the main global institutions, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. However, the Washington conference does not contemplate a new world monetary treaty. Nothing can be decided at this stage on structural reform, nor could it be be a cure for a depression.

In the meantime, the economic situation is continuing to deteriorate, just as it did in the early 1930s. The worst period of the Great Depression occurred between the election of Franklin Roosevelt in November 1932 and his inauguration in March 1933. That was when the largest number of American banks had to close. There is no reason to think we have yet reached the bottom of this depression.

We do now seem to have reached the stage when a financial crisis transmutes into a general crisis of the economy. It is no longer the banks that are causing the greatest worry, but the potential collapse of the American automobile industry. The two largest manufacturers, General Motors and Ford, are asking Washington for funds comparable in size to the bailout of the banks. European car manufacturers are also suffering a disastrous slump in sales.

The recession is already spreading into the wider world of business, with large businesses having to lay off an increasing number of workers, and smaller ones shutting down. There are now foreclosures in almost every street. It is a time of many domestic financial tragedies in the US and in Britain.

In 1932 one of Roosevelt's advisers, the great American economist Irving Fisher, described the critical tipping point of a depression. “There may be equilibrium which, though stable, is so delicately poised that, after departure from it beyond certain limits, instability ensues... Such a disaster is somewhat like the ‘capsizing' of the ship which, under ordinary conditions, is always near stable equilibrium but which, after being tipped beyond a certain angle, has no longer the tendency to return to equilibrium, but, instead, a tendency to depart further from it.”
Senator Obama's first task is to stabilise the depression before it passes the tipping point, as it did in the 1930s. He rightly recognises how urgent this is. Yet he has one great advantage. He is genuinely a charismatic leader whom people will follow. The economic crisis calls out for a renewal of confidence. The whole world needs to believe that “Yes, we can”.

Friday, November 07, 2008

Golfonomics - the economic phenomenon of golf

by Jim Riley

As the Ryder Cup 2008 is played out in Kentucky this weekend, I was drawn to an article that explains the phenomenal growth and value of the global sport of golf…

I hadn’t quite appreciated just how significant the sport of golf is to the global economy. It is, by some distance, the richest sport on earth. However, the economic impact of the growth of the game is being felt far and wide. Not just in places like Dubai (where Tiger Woods has his pension nicely secured) and China. But in places like Cambodia too, which is looking to benefit by exploiting the market for the golfing tourist dollars.

This article in the Independent is well worth a read.

Some of the highlights for me:

- 20 million global golf tourists
- $76bn spent each year in the US golf market each year
- 1 in every 1,000 adults in Europe works in golf-related markets

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

A note on NIKO's 2006 performance

A bit of the lizard that fell from the high iroko tree that praised itself when nobody else did (Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart), I am glad to have been part of NIKO when it grew remarkably as mentioned by http://www.globalratings.net/attachment_view.php?pa_id=268 on the Tanzania insurance market, every growth in life must be appreciated, no matter how small

" Fundamentals Non-life

Alliance is a leading non-life insurer in the Tanzanian
private insurance market, accounting for a 15% share
in 2006. Analysis of the market share trends reflect
the continued market gain by Heritage (the largest
insurer in the market) from 22% in 2005 to 25% in
2006. This reflects the strong increase in corporate
market earnings (relative to that of the consumer
market) from the leveraging of increased fixed capital
formation). It is noted that the practise of coinsurance
is a significant contributor to the premium
income share retained by the top tier of insurance
companies in the market. Accordingly, the shares for
Alliance, Heritage, Jubliee and Phoenix, representing
almost 68% of the market, remains well entrenched.
Notable movers in the class of smaller insurers was
Imperial (owned by NICO Malawi), which increased
from 2.2% in 2005 to 5.8% in 2006. This feat is
impressive considering its since-inception-premium
written (cumulative) of Tshs7.7bn has been almost
matched by the Tshs5.1bn premium written in the
2006 underwriting year."

The Obama front....


Looking good so far, as far as exit poll projections would go, 195-76. Will have to wait for the official release on this one, you know once we're over the 270 threshold.

Karl Rove (http://rove.com/election) predicts the above illustration. :-)

02:32 ITV: 200-85

02:46 BBC: 200-124

03:01 SKY 207-129

03:52 SKY 207-141

04:00 BBC 262-141

04:01 BBC 273-141 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Obama is the US president-elect.

Verbatim president-elect remarks: http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/11/05/election_night_remarks_of_pres.html

Obama speech video in full (17 minutes): http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/us_elections_2008/7710079.stm

5 minute youtube excerpt:




Well.....not to fan the Swiss Re rumours....

Insurance Law News: Swiss Re says not in ...

http://www.reinsurancemagazine.com/public/showPage.html?page=reinsurance_breakingnews_story&tempPageName=823068

Monday, November 03, 2008

The Big Question: Who was JM Keynes, and does he offer answers to the economic crisis?

By Archie Bland

Tuesday, 28 October 2008

Why are we asking this now?

For decades, undiluted Keynesian economic policies have been dismissed as irrelevant: right for their time, perhaps, but outdated by subsequent changes in the economy. But it looks as if things are changing. In the face of the current financial crisis, government after government has moved towards more Keynesian solutions to economic problems. The UK is among them. Alistair Darling recently declared that "much of what Keynes wrote still makes a lot of sense"; yesterday, in a speech on economic policy, Gordon Brown declared that it was responsible to boost spending with the aim of speeding up economic activity, even if borrowing had to increase to do so. John Maynard Keynes once said that "in the long run, we are all dead"; more than 60 years after his own passing, though, his ideas seem to have come back to life.

So who was John Maynard Keynes?

Keynes was among the most important economists of the 20th century. Even his most vociferous contemporary critic, Friedrich Hayek, said that he was "the one really great man I ever knew, and for whom I had unbounded admiration". Born in 1888, he was educated at Eton and Cambridge, where he studied economics. His influence steadily grew after he graduated in 1905; he warned of the disastrous consequences against the reparations that Germany was forced to pay after the First World War, and his views were borne out by the country's hyperinflationary problems and the subsequent Great Depression. The work that really cemented his place in economic history, though, was 1936's snappily titled General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money.

What was his big idea?

Most contemporary economists subscribed to the neoclassical theory that held that the problems of unemployment were best dealt with by leaving it to the market to reduce wage levels to a point at which employers would start to take people on again. Keynes disputed the idea that recessions were self-correcting. He made the argument that it was quite possible for an economy to be in equilibrium with less than full employment, and that high unemployment would depress demand, thus making an escape from recession difficult and slow. In his view, it was up to the government to stimulate demand by enacting public spending projects that would increase employment and by reducing taxation to encourage people to spend more.

Did it catch on?

In the 1930s, Roosevelt did enact Keynesian ideas in America, and their influence can be felt to an extent in Hitler's Germany around the same time. But the Second World War was the major boost for Keynes's ideas around the world, demonstrating as it did that large public spending – 'deficit financing' – could create something close to full employment, something conventional politicians in the thirties claimed was impossible.

Did those ideas survive the war?

They did. After Keynes's ideas were developed by economists like Paul Samuelson and James Tobin, they became the economic orthodoxy that guided most western governments for the next two decades. In the UK, expanding public spending and cutting taxes successfully kept unemployment below one million for thirty years. Even Richard Nixon declared himself a Keynesian. But in the 1970s, that orthodoxy was challenged.

Why did Keynes's ideas go out of fashion?

Keynes's approach began to appear limited in relatively uncompetitive economies, like the UK's. A labour shortage and an excess of demand triggered stagflation – the combination of inflation with economic stagnation – and traditional Keynesian remedies seemed unable to control it. When James Callaghan publicly repudiated Keynesian policies in 1976, it seemed like the death knell of his approach. "We used to think that you could spend your way out of a recession and increase employment by cutting taxes and boosting government spending," Callaghan said. "I tell you in all candour that that option no longer exists, and in so far as it ever did exist, it only worked on each occasion since the war by injecting a bigger dose of inflation into the economy, followed by a higher level of unemployment as the next step."

What was the alternative, and how did it work?

Governments like Margaret Thatcher's believed that the only way out to escape economic crisis and quell inflation was monetarism, the economic policy propagated by critics of Keynes like Milton Friedman. That involved getting a grip on the supply of money, reducing taxes, reducing the upward pressure on wages by taking on the unions – and accepting unemployment, at least in the short term, as the necessary consequence. In the recession of the early 1990s, not even the Labour party advocated a Keynesian approach.

What's different today?

By Thatcher's time, the impact of high unemployment in the 1930s was a distant memory, and so she and her government felt able to enact policies that risked increasing it; it may be that the problems that accompany high inflation are sufficiently long past to mean that the psychological barrier to Keynesian policies is no longer in place.

Today's economic circumstances do seem to fit a more Keynesian solution. Inflation is likely to stay low in the coming downturn, meaning that the upward pressure of increasing demand is likely to be manageable; and critics who say that public spending often takes too long to counter the economic problems they were instituted to solve can be answered with the point that this is likely to be a fairly long recession. In that environment, the government seems to have decided that the time is ripe for a Keynesian renaissance.

So what can we expect?

Yesterday's speech from Gordon Brown indicated that the Government is willing to borrow more money to increase public spending, and major investment projects are likely to be brought forward. Crossrail, for instance, may easily turn up years sooner than initially planned. In a speech last week, Alistair Darling also pointed to the 2012 Olympics as an obvious target for investment. The green lobby, meanwhile, will be arguing that the coincidence of the impending recession with the government's new 80 per cent target for reductions in carbon emissions by 2050 makes this the perfect moment to boost spending on alternative energy resources and more environmentally friendly housing.

Is there a consensus on all this?

Certainly not: there remain voices in the economic argument that insist the Government's shift will be a disaster. Sixteen economists signed a letter to The Sunday Telegraph this weekend that characterised the government's approach as "misguided and discredited". "The Government cannot know how to use an expansion in expenditure that would not risk seriously misallocating resources," they wrote. "If this recession has features that demand more active fiscal policy, which is highly disputable, taxes should be cut. This would allow the market to determine which parts of the economy shrink and which flourish to replace them." Whatever policies hold sway this time, one thing is clear: the battle over the wisdom of a Keynesian approach is by no means over, and probably never will be.

Should we take a lesson from JM Keynes?

Yes

*Keynes's approach is most effective at times when inflationary pressures are not particularly high – like now

*The laissez-faire approach has not been particularly successful lately, so why should we stick with it?

*Investment will be a godsend for infrastructure – and could even help solve our environmental crisis

No

*The market does a better job of working out which parts of the economy need to expand and contract

*Boosting the state could stunt the resurgence of the private sector once the downturn is over

*When Japan tried to spend its way out of recession in the 1990s, the result was huge debt

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