Monday, October 20, 2008

Nigeria and the Global Financial Crisis Part 2

Last week I argued that with the exception of our sound macroeconomic conditions, every other element of the current global financial crisis is present in Nigeria. These include the existence of asset bubbles (share prices and probably property values), excess banks’ capital, imprudent financial sector lending, excessive capital market exuberance, and weak regulation in the financial sector and capital markets. As I wrote this article, I thought it would be interesting to review some of the things said in relation to the economy and particularly the financial sector in this column over the last two years.

Business in 2008 (February 13, 2008)

“The CBN policy of a uniform year end for all banks will mean tighter liquidity not just for the banks but all borrowers and corporates as the banks all seek to call-in loans and strengthen their balance sheets at the same time of the year…Many economists continue to question the link between corporate earnings and the pricing of shares in the Nigerian Stock Exchange. If this concern becomes a mainstream one, then there may be risky times ahead for capital market investors…On the whole sensible investors will be cautious.”

The Banking Industry in 2008 (February 20, 2008)

“I thought the imperatives for the industry at the end of consolidation included stronger corporate governance, professional ethics and transparency in financial reporting, stronger regulation, tighter credit standards, regional and continental expansion, putting in place institutional mechanisms for consumer finance (such as credit bureaus, abolishing the Land Use Act, instituting a national identity management system and faster commercial adjudication) and strengthening capacity-human, risk management, information technology and systems and processes-in the industry. I also thought that further consolidation was required in the industry to eliminate the two-tier structure such that the more marginal entities could be acquired by stronger local players or international banks and to guarantee sustainable levels of investment returns… But the emphasis in the industry has been a second round of capital raising, rather than further consolidation through mergers and acquisitions. The only notable merger transaction was the IBTC Chartered tie-up with Standard Bank of South Africa…questions will remain (and may generate heightened attention in the years to come) about the efficiency of the increased capital and assets that the banks now carry and their returns on investment.”

Soludo Again!!...Well? (August 29, 2007)

“I think we have done well with macro-economic and banking reforms, but I think we are both over-celebrating and doing so too early! A large part of the macro-economic success has been “wind-assisted”, aided by extra-ordinarily high oil prices. We remain dependent on oil for export earnings, the economy is still import-dependent, infrastructure is still decrepit and domestic productivity is still weak….our economy is still highly susceptible to internal and external shocks-stock market bubbles and high oil prices being my biggest concerns.”
Nigerian Banking: Differentiating or Commoditising? (August 1, 2007)

“This trend may also be re-enforced if over capacity emerges as banks build overlapping branches, duplicate ATM locations, chase the same markets and acquire capital in excess of current requirements. The classic sequence then is for price competition to ensue, margins to drop, and in the specific context of banking, imprudent loans and transactions to be booked. These sequences will be amplified if the market is not growing or growing slower than the rate of capacity accumulation. There is nothing that suggests that Nigerian banking must follow this sequence, but nothing precludes the possibility.”

Conclusion

It does seem that if policy makers and market participants had taken a few of the things written on these pages seriously, we would at the very least not be surprised by much of what has happened-the liquidity implications, and consequent failure of the uniform bank year end policy; the capital market collapse; the implications of excess bank capital (one notable exception-Skye Bank went to the market to raise just as much capital as it needed rather than follow the Joneses!); the sequence leading to imprudent lending; and weak supervision; we might as well have recognised the real imperatives for the industry-such as regional and continental expansion (which Access Bank for instance seems to get) and strengthening capacity, governance and systems.

Nigeria is not completely immune from the global financial crisis as some have suggested. On the other hand, we are unlikely to suffer as severe a financial and economic crisis as the western economies, even though individual institutions may get into trouble. But we have common attributes which if not well managed can deteriorate into crisis. If macroeconomic management and regulatory capacity are not improved, adverse scenarios may develop. So far however the regulators are simply in denial. Deferring banks’ recognition of already bad loans is not a good idea-like merely covering a wound with plasters, it merely postpones the evil day, makes the wound fester, and makes the required treatment more radical and expensive. Restricting the downward price movement of shares is a similar regulatory error. opeyemiagbaje.blogspot.com

Agbaje is CEO of Resources and Trust Company Ltd-a strategy, consultancy and business advisory firm. RTC POLICY is the policy, government and political consultancy division while RTC Strategy and Advisory offers private sector advisory services.

4 comments:

Whole Truths said...

The panic is palpable. The fear is obvious. People and populations the world over are now responding to the global financial meltdown with fear and anger. The World is on the precipice of disaster.
George Soros must be reeling in excitement now.RenownedBillionaire investor, George Soros, has been vitriolic in his criticism of the American government. "Globalisation, America as the centre of the globalised financial markets, was sucking up the savings of the world. This is now over. The game is out. It does mean a very serious adjustment for America."
Mr. Soros criticized the US Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson, whom he accused of having stuck too rigidly to "market fundamentalist ideology". He said Mr. Paulson should not have allowed the collapse of Lehman Brothers Bank. "That's what actually kind of unleashed the current phase of meltdown," he said.
Mr. Soros's comments seemed to re-echo with those of the former Harvard University economist Jeffrey Sachs, who is now a special adviser to the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon.
"The age of Reaganism is over," Mr. Sachs said in a separate television interview. "The no-regulation, low-taxes philosophy has broken the back of our economy.
"We now have to get serious about reconstructing normal government that pays its way and a normal financial sector that's properly regulated."
The great American economy, with its 100 year old financial institutions, and trillion Dollar balance sheets has finally collapsed, or at least is on the verge of doing so.
Two years ago, I wrote an article on the ‘awesomeness’ of Goldman Sachs. I remember that article took me about 2 months, 30 packs of cigarettes, 5 bottles of Absolut vodka and lots of yellow legal paper to write. I came across specialized vocabulary that even financial experts in Nigeria could not understand! I came across options and futures (the original derivatives).
It used to be that when financial tools and instruments were developed, regulatory authorities demanded rigorous theoretical, empirical, and quantitative analysis of these instruments. Of importance also were the safe guards that will be introduced along with this tool.
Well, I dare say that Wall street was light years ahead of The American Treasury!
The now notorious JP Morgan & Co. (now JP Morgan & Chase, infamously developed credit default swaps.
Essentially an insurance contract, it involves the transfer of risk from one party to another by synthetically creating or eliminating credit exposure. One party is expected to make periodic payments on the referenced asset, while the other makes no payments unless a ‘credit event’ occurs. Credit events would usually mean a default, bankruptcy or debt restructuring. If such a credit event occurs, the party makes a payment to the first party, and the swap then terminates.
Most credit derivatives entail two sources of credit exposure: one from the reference asset and the other from possible default by the counterparties to the transaction.
Since this arrangement is not regulated by the SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission), best estimates are put at 62 Trillion! Imagine the sheer impact of a default on this arrangement!!
In the immediate, this may have served as a hedging device, but as is usual with any trend in this sector, ‘the sharks’- risk speculators, got a hold of this, and without any government regulation or intervention, made a killing!
SUB PRIME MORTGAGE CRISIS:
The Real sector in America had long been a thriving touch point of the American economy. Lush green fields and white picket fences; the quintessential American dream!
America introduced the World to the American dream, without telling us how to finance this dream! We were not told that this dream would be financed effectively and entirely through credit! Pray tell i hope we havn't just witnessed the end of Capitalism in our lifetime Opeyemi!?

opeyemiagbaje@blogspot.com said...

Whole Truths,

I like your analysis. I don't think we have seen the end of capitalism, but its clear extreme, right wing, no regulation, no taxes, unregulated free wheeling capitalist ideology has been seriously discredited. more sensible economists have always recognised that you need free markets and effective regulation and anti-trust policy.
Opeyemi

Whole Truths said...

Opeyemi, Coming from you, this means a lot! Thank You very much! All this knowledge has consistently ensured over the years that i remain Girlfriendless! Back to serious issues. If i remember clearly, where we not all against Government Regulation and intereference? My memory fails me now! Alcohol, Cigarettes and all! But i have a funny feeling that all of a sudden, all our Economists are pretending to be prescient. Again it may be the Alcohol and Cigarettes!!

laolu7 said...

I have always read yr articles and taken most of yr recommendations seriously,i have noticed that pple in govt never respond to the important issues like this except where they are insulted or there's a slight innuendo on thier personality.
As for the global economic crises i think the reason we might escape include the fact that very few nigerian banks have foreign shareholding in them in excess of 5% but thats not sufficient immunity,the issues of corporate governance and complince standard that is suited to our own mentality,is not present within a banking industry that is not servicing the economy in anyway, nor is it present in an over valued capital market that is controlled by the banks is quite very alarming.
i think Sec should have allowed the market to fall the usual way and not impose a "1% illiquidity" as Dr okiti calls it,we must take serious matters seriously and not the usually blame strategy and fire brigade approach we always seem to adopt in Nigeria.
one wonders why the Cbn has not issued any serious information to the public on the possible impact of the global financial crises,the government seems to disagree with soludo on this matter,at least that what one of yaradua's minister's said.
what your take on this sir?