Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syria. Show all posts

Monday, 2 September 2013

Beware the Ides of September: a turbulent month for the economy

It brought Lehman Brothers' collapse and Northern Rock's run, now Syria, the Fed Reserve and G20 are among new flashpoints
September is a dangerous month. Five years ago this month, Lehman Brothers went belly-up. Twelve months earlier there was the run on Northern Rock. Black Wednesday in September 1992 saw Britain's departure from the exchange rate mechanism; the pound left the gold standard in September 1931.
The signs are that September 2013 will also be an interesting month. That's interesting as in scary. There are five potential flashpoints: Syria, the G20 summit, emerging markets, the Federal Reserve meeting to discuss scaling down the US stimulus, and the German election. Any one of them has the potential to damage the global economy.
Let's start with Syria. Military action by the west against the Assad regime could affect growth in two ways: directly, through higher oil prices, and indirectly, by depressing business and consumer confidence.
On the face of it, there is no real reason why the air strikes favoured by Barack Obama should have led to the price of crude rocketing.
Syria is not an oil producer and there would only be an impact on oil supplies if Iran tried to close the Strait of Hormuz. This seems unlikely. But commodity markets quite often ignore economic fundamentals. There is already a Syria premium built into the price of Brent crude, which was changing hands at just under $120 a barrel in London last week. Any hint of the conflict spreading beyond Syria will see the cost of oil rise further, and while talk of $150 a barrel seems overly pessimistic there have been plenty of examples of rumour, fear and speculation combining to ramp up prices. Capital Economics estimates that $150 crude would knock a percentage point off global growth, turning a lacklustre performance into something close to stagnation.
The impact on sentiment is impossible to gauge. There were no long-lasting effects on confidence from the much more extensive military action in Iraq a decade ago, but that was before the Great Recession of the past five years. Businesses looking for a fresh excuse to keep investment plans on hold may find that Syria provides it.
That is more likely to be the case if the G20 summit in St Petersburg ends in acrimony. The conclave of developed and developing countries was supposed to usher in a new epoch of more co-operative global governance, and so it did – for the first 12 months after the G20's inaugural meeting in Washington in 2008.
Since then it has been downhill all the way. G20 countries have failed to agree a joint line on economic stimulus versus austerity, and in the end member countries have simply done their own thing.
But this time the summit could get really nasty if Vladimir Putin cuts up rough over US policy towards Syria, and gets backing from China. On past form, the chances of a big diplomatic bust-up are high, in which case expect markets to respond in their time-honoured fashion by seeking out safe havens in gold, the Swiss franc and the US dollar.
This would exacerbate the problems of the more vulnerable emerging market economies, which have already seen sharp falls in their currencies against the dollar. India, which saw the rupee sink to a record low last week, and Indonesia, which raised interest rates to defend the rupiah, are the most exposed. Both India and Indonesia have deep-seated structural problems and these have been exposed by the Fed's announcement that it was contemplating scaling back – or tapering – its asset purchases under the quantitative easing programme. Money has flowed out of emerging markets and back into the US as a result, prompting fears of a rerun of the Asian currency crisis of 1997.
These fears are almost certainly overblown. The trouble in the late 1990s was caused by countries with fixed exchange rate regimes trying to cope with vast hot money flows, which came flooding in and then flooded out again. The worst-affected nations had high levels of foreign currency debt and insufficient reserves with which to fight the speculators. None of that holds true today. There has been no repeat of the big capital flows seen in the 1990s, while floating exchange rates and substantial reserves mean emerging market economies are far better placed to defend themselves.
Which is just as well, since collectively the emerging markets are far more important to the health of the global economy than they were in 1997. As Nick Parsons of National Australia Bank notes, 30 years ago the advanced world made up 70% of global GDP, with emerging markets the other 30%. Today the split is 50-50. As a result, he says, the Fed needs to be careful at its meeting on 18 September.
"US policymakers must increasingly be aware of their global responsibilities. The world economy, more than at any point in history, depends crucially on the success of the emerging market bloc and its fast-growing, populous nations. In 1998 the world economy withstood the Asian crisis. An emerging market crisis now – with policy stimulus in the developed world largely exhausted – would be a global, not merely a local concern."
Of all September's potential pitfalls, policy error by the Fed is the one troubling markets the most. A year ago that would not have been the case, when pundits would have put the German election on 22 September at the top of their list of concerns. That is no longer the case as fears of a breakup of the euro have faded and Europe has emerged from an 18-month double-dip recession. But the eurozone's economic recovery is fragile and the need for a third bailout for Greece shows that the debt crisis is far from over. A tougher approach to indebted countries by the new government in Berlin would not be helpful.
Action by the Fed is likely to be modest. The US central bank is not proposing to stop stimulating the economy, merely to trim the amount of support it provides. The likeliest outcome is that asset purchases will initially be tapered from $85bn a month to $75bn (£55bn to £48bn), the equivalent of a doctor slightly reducing the dosage of a powerful drug in the hope that eventually the patient can be weaned off the medication altogether.
Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Fed, has adopted a reassuring bedside manner in his dealings with the stimulus junkies of Wall Street. He has talked through exactly what he plans to do and when he plans to do it. He has made it clear that he doesn't expect markets to stand on their feet overnight. Even so, there is still no certainty about the way things will pan out. Central banks have been using large doses of experimental drugs, and nobody knows for sure whether there will be hazardous side-effects.
In a month's time we should have some sort of inkling of just how dangerous those side-effects might prove to be.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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Thursday, 29 August 2013

Markets hit by fears that Syria attack could raise fuel prices

FTSE down but Shell and BP shares boosted while petrol retailers warn of grim outlook for consumer
Mounting prospects of a US-led military strike on Syria sent shock waves through the energy and financial markets on Wednesday with oil hitting its highest level for six months and drawing predictions that it could reach $150 (£97) a barrel.
The move in the value of crude, reflecting fears that wider Middle East output could be disrupted, gave a major boost to the share price of Shell, BP and other oil companies but sent the stock of heavy fuel-users such as easyJet and International Airlines Group, the parent of British Airways, into a nosedive.
The Petrol Retailers Association also warned motorists that it was only a matter of time before the price of petrol at the pump would have to rise and the outlook was "grim".
Motorists are warned petrol prices will rise as oil hits its highest level for six months, with investors worried the Syrian conflict could affect neighbouring countries. 
The FTSE 100 index fell further in London as investors worried about the potential for a wider conflict involving Iran and even Russia wading in on the side of the embattled government of Assad.
There was a slight rally in prices as David Cameron indicated he would first seek some kind of United Nations approval for an attack on Syria but not before shares in Dubai – the most important financial market in the Middle East – had slumped 7% and the index in Kuwait had fallen by 6%.
Michael Wittner, head of global oil research at French bank Société Générale, said the North Sea crude oil benchmark, Brent Blend, could rise from Wednesday morning's six-month high of $117 a barrel to as much as $150 if the war spread from Syria to key important oil producers such as Iraq. The US crude price, for West Texas intermediate oil, hit a two-year high, rising above $112 for the first time since May 2011.
"We believe that in the coming days Brent could gain another $5-$10, surging to $120-$125, either in anticipation of the attack or in reaction to the headlines that an attack had started," Wittner said in an investment note to clients.
"If the regional spillover results in a significant supply disruption in Iraq or elsewhere, Brent could spike briefly to $150," he added.
Syria is not an important oil producer or transit country but the wider area including Saudi Arabia produces 35% of the world's supplies. If Iraq or Iran were affected by any fallout from a military strike on Syria, the global oil market would rely on extra output from Saudi Arabia, the only member of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries with significant spare oil production capacity.
"The Saudis could handle most likely scenarios, but the markets will look at the shrinking spare capacity that remains after any disruption is made up, and that would be bullish [for higher oil prices]," said Wittner.
The oil price spike was a boost to Shell, whose share price rose almost 4% to £22.25, and BP, whose shares rose by more than 1% at 452p.
The wider FTSE 100 index of leading companies fell by nearly 0.5% early on , adding to an already 3% slump since the middle of the month on the back of fears about Syria, allied with concerns that the US would finally halt a long-running government economic stimulus package.
Stock markets in continental Europe were also down, as was the Nikkei index in Japan, which fell by more than 2% to 13,264 points, with companies such as Toyota and Sony down up to 3%. The Dubai Financial Market index closed at 2,549.61 points, with Emaar Properties leading the rout. Shares in the developer that built Dubai's Burj Khalifa, the largest freestanding structure in the world, fell almost 8.5%.
Most mining companies based in London, such as Glencore Xstrata, were hit by the political uncertainty, but the price of gold – seen as a haven – continued to rise as did the US currency. The dollar strengthened 0.5% against the Japanese yen and 0.3% versus the euro.
Ishaq Siddiqi, London-based market strategist at ETX Capital, explained the dangers to the wider economy of higher crude values on the back of foreign aircraft strikes on Syria. "Once filtered through to the real global economy, the increase in oil prices will put a halt to the pace of economic momentum we are currently experiencing in major parts of the world.
"It's plausible that Brent oil prices could be over $120 a barrel in the coming days and, if oil prices spike even higher, it wouldn't be out of the question for the US Federal Reserve to hold off on tapering stimulus measures this year."
Threats of a $150 oil price take the markets back to July 2008 when Brent briefly traded at US$147.50, the highest intraday price on record. This was the height of the economic boom, which was followed by the autumn collapse of Lehman Brothers and then a full-scale banking crisis.
Crude then crashed to $40 but has largely been priced at over $100 since the middle of 2010, despite a relatively slow recovery in the world economy. Prices have been pushed upwards due to a mixture of stronger demand and supply problems. Oil supply from Opec producer Libya has already been reduced to a trickle after an armed group shut down a pipeline linking its largest western oilfields to the ports.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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