埃德蒙顿华人社区-Edmonton China

 找回密码
 注册
查看: 2696|回复: 3

市场评论

[复制链接]
鲜花(3) 鸡蛋(0)
发表于 2011-9-17 13:14 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
老杨团队,追求完美;客户至上,服务到位!
下面是九月八号Conference call 对市场评论的总结,贴出来,希望对大家有帮助。) a% T& X3 u( n! P: t( ]' h
- h' S2 |( U! h% W; |4 ~
Market Commentary
4 h3 p1 E2 t- V& `, M) l% rEric Bushell, Chief Investment Officer: }( n5 F) d5 D1 ?5 s
James Dutkiewicz, Portfolio Manager) N  k) K3 n; Q% s. P. q
Signature Global Advisors8 g) |) P% \4 Q/ X4 d5 ]; e. k
# L: |5 T+ w& y: U3 y
3 A3 l, O* ]4 ?" \9 y/ R$ O8 ^7 P
Background remarks
; H" ~0 E6 D5 A8 C2 J4 r Governments’ costs associated with stabilizing the crisis, including recent government stimulus programs, are) c& A# y$ U: K* d+ a% ~
as much as 20% or even 60% of GDP.' t: x4 k5 g  \6 Q8 G+ r$ @6 P
 Some governments have reached limits of sustainable debt loads and markets are beginning to insist on fiscal
0 U7 F* C3 l" Madjustments.2 _# h; ~# n6 B) e- s/ a5 M
 This marks the beginning of what will be a turbulent social and political period, where elements of the social5 z4 d) P! ^+ ?( w  |
safety nets in Western economies are no longer affordable and must be defunded.
* o$ o6 ]5 s" y7 U: _ Templates for fiscal adjustment are appearing in peripheral and core Europe, the U.S. and elsewhere. There are2 U% p4 b8 S! y8 `' [
lessons to be learned from the frontrunners.
" F# A" b% V* m4 _8 Q We see policy interventions playing a bigger role in financial markets. Policymakers are trying to ease these
) R' Q6 H; ?' Y/ y, Zadjustments for governments and consumers as they deleverage.
0 X# N" y3 V! H) y Policy interventions are shaping markets more than fundamentals. Examples include the U.S. Federal Reserve’s
; j5 d% s+ l* d8 ^: t3 m1 R% iquantitative easing (QE2) program and the ECB intervention in the European sovereign bond market.
2 b% a; c# N; I$ ^, C Developed financial markets have now priced in lower levels of economic growth./ |& w- e  O- p1 \: s9 r' W$ T1 j3 J
 Credit markets are now less resilient to shocks because of Basel III and the Dodd-Frank bill. Brokers have: M. ~' ^0 g6 v" R9 T5 Y; L+ N
reduced capacity to hold risk. Therefore, risk shedding by others is going to have a greater impact.
鲜花(3) 鸡蛋(0)
 楼主| 发表于 2011-9-17 13:16 | 显示全部楼层
Current situation  c' n6 s9 |! s1 G
 The lesson we learned from the 2008-2009 credit crunch is how credit markets affect stock valuations. As long
( H1 f% v2 s  j* Ras funding markets stay open, equities are valued as going concerns. But if credit markets close, markets may
$ Q- n* d! T6 M! b' a" a" Q# Y3 cimpose liquidation values.( G, d, x6 `! U1 O, X, V2 l
 In the summer, the European credit crisis caused another round of market worries about a credit shutdown. In
' P5 ~7 A/ K8 f; o: YAugust, we said a credit shutdown was unlikely – we continue to hold that view.
% y4 v* Y2 R( p4 [' m The collapse of interest rates on 10-year Treasuries to 2% leaves banks, insurance companies and pension
6 `& S2 j( b8 E; lscrambling for higher yields to satisfy their obligations – this is supportive of corporate bond markets.
( ]) v  \/ W8 y8 r5 M" l& F4 ~4 j7 w* d' D! Z
A look at credit markets
1 t- q" Q7 Y8 x3 ~ Investment grade – $17 billion in new issues were placed last Wednesday. We’re expecting $80-$100 billion in
; Y9 [% @$ _$ `/ _! K6 ?1 k5 R0 TSeptember. Non-financial investment grade is the new safe haven.
" S3 W7 h, s' e1 D; D; J High yield – In March, the spread above governments was 450 basis points, today it’s 740 bps. Yields were 7%
# d' ]" P1 Q8 R3 Bthen, now they are 8.5%. New issuance has been about $30 billion a month, although August saw only $1
8 r* J6 X8 Y4 u1 A& A" N0 abillion. That said, the market is still open. Risk has been repriced – but appropriately priced issues still have/ |) e- ?: I9 q; m
access to the market. There are only two parts of the global bond market having difficulty – ultra-low-grade
; _3 d7 X% I: C- ?, i# NCCC issues and European high yield, which are both down about 2.5% year-to-date. All other bond markets are7 S3 o. e) A1 C# h
positive for the year-do-date, including high yield.+ x9 |  \/ G7 o; t( b8 X( K
 Mortgages – There is no funding for new construction, but existing quality properties are having no trouble
2 Q# K; F, i7 u0 ?8 Cfinding financing.
, v( W( a1 f2 l# B3 [ Commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) – In the summer, there were two failed transactions, but they
$ U% f" _4 m  o* V. W- gwere subsequently repriced and placed. In the fall, there will be more deals.! C  }  l% b$ R# ^  U* ^
 Leveraged floating rate collateralized loans – The index was trading at $90 last September, $96 in March and
9 `( x! a, c. \" T% e  m1 Zis now back to $90. Changes were a result of interest rate expectations (people thought that interest rates were
7 ~7 i, U# Q/ N" I2 bgoing up) rather than liquidity. Chapter 11 companies have no problem getting secured and when they file for
5 O* ^8 y- ^& ?# }0 Ebankruptcy, they already have debt financing in place.9 Z3 q* i% O0 D2 h$ s
 European banks – European bank lending conditions are tighter. This is the weakest link in the financial chain  ]$ U) u: C- l$ \; J0 Q! X2 x
today.4 I2 Q( T; a0 ]+ `
 Emerging markets – Sovereign rates have rallied along with U.S. Treasuries. High-grade corporates in
0 f/ _, x, ]- Lemerging markets have no problem with funding.
鲜花(3) 鸡蛋(0)
 楼主| 发表于 2011-9-17 13:18 | 显示全部楼层
European Union agenda
2 `8 \  p# s- J) U! A9 ]3 E* q9 @& d Europe is frantic and will remain so for at least another four months – which is what we see as the timeline for
0 Q/ q+ v  t5 `4 ^/ u6 Ythe Greek default.
5 h% g  q5 H! ?  o/ q# O& C As we see it, the following firewalls need to be put in place:
% \# a& D2 K! p( G0 f1. Making sure that banks have enough capital and deposit insurance to survive a Greek default2 D+ j# \/ m' ?# _
2. The European Financial Stability Facility, which is to be used for the bank capital injection and sovereign, P  C! L- q* Q+ E% J; G
debt stabilization, needs government approvals.; X" M. C# J- [' D0 s, M
3. Measures of assistance to help European banks to make $1.7 trillion in refinancing easier and allowing9 Y$ y/ E* K. a% _( p5 R
banks to shrink their balance sheets over three years) @9 Q* \2 h" g* }( x: S0 {6 j
4. More fiscal reform for Spain, Italy and France is a precondition for stable sovereign debt markets.
% n0 ^- b* W0 o
7 P% q' A( \$ l; F1 A; tBeyond Greece0 q* |8 G3 k: G/ ?
 The EFSF #2 plan announced in July was a toolkit to deal with the PIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain),
- M; ?3 Y# A( Vbut that was before Italy.. J% i. X7 w& ]4 Y: r
 It provided a $500-billion loan program, but $250 billion was already spoken for by the PIGS.3 T; n% V) Q. M) U6 r
 It’s an undersized framework and if negative growth/interest rate dynamics keep investors from sponsoring the8 E0 P& r* x4 k: @
Italian bond market, the EU crisis will escalate further.( h6 y; Q0 _; }3 `$ S! M$ Y0 c4 }
8 u7 w. {+ g4 [1 A& y7 l  e
Conclusion8 R0 Z0 G) G. @! K2 o' L+ J
 We want to have safeguards in place and continue to be liquid, so that we can capitalize on future turbulence.
鲜花(7) 鸡蛋(0)
发表于 2011-9-19 15:03 | 显示全部楼层
老杨团队 追求完美
kasnkan
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

本版积分规则

联系我们|小黑屋|手机版|Archiver|埃德蒙顿中文网

GMT-7, 2026-3-5 14:02 , Processed in 0.150276 second(s), 11 queries , Gzip On, APC On.

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表