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Argentine Financial Crisis Can Aydinoglu Andres Perez Jennifer Koyce Vic Chidgopkar Erik Deneergaard Introduction Argentina 2001-2002 One-fourth of all third world debt ($132b) 18% official unemployment 30 People dead during riots Devaluation cut national wealth by 30% Huge costs socially and financially Were these avoidable? What should have been done by the government? What are the strategic implications for businesses? Agenda: Theoretical Background Case of Argentina Case of East Asia Comparisons and takeaways Prevention policies Business implications What is a Financial Crisis? A financial crisis is a disruption to financial markets Extreme adverse selection and moral hazard problems Financial markets become unable to efficiently channel funds to productive investment opportunities. Stages of a Financial Crisis Increasing Vulnerability Currency Crisis Full fledged Financial Crisis Stages of a Financial Crisis Increasing Vulnerability Currency Crisis Full fledged Financial Crisis Financial Liberalization Period •Heavy Lending •International Capital Inflows •Higher yields in Ems •Government Safety Net •Currency Peg •Rapid Expansion •Excessive risk taking due to •Lack of trained loan officers •Insufficient bank supervisors •Weak government regulations •Moral hazard due to safety net •High leveraging of corporate sector Non performing loans skyrocket Substantial loan losses Shortening of loan terms High illiquidity Deterioration of Bank B/S Vulnerability to shocks Stages of a Financial Crisis Increasing Vulnerability Currency Crisis Full fledged Financial Crisis Deterioration of financial and non-financial B/S Central Bank cannot protect currency by raising rates Speculators start attacks on currency Central Bank’s Reserves melt down Collapse of Currency Stages of a Financial Crisis Increasing Vulnerability Currency Crisis Full fledged Financial Crisis Three mechanisms are triggered •Direct effect of devaluation on B/Ss •NPLs skyrocket leading to further deterioration •Depositors panic and bank runs occur •Depositors panic and bank runs occur •Inflation shoots up due to higher import prices •Nominal interest rates increase •Huge increases in interest payments •Sharp deterioration and collapse of financial and non-financial B/S •Contraction in lending and severe economic turndown Case of Argentina Increasing Vulnerability: Fiscal deficit was resolved by privatizations – Unions have a lot of power. There is no possibility to reduce salaries – 1996-2000 Net FDI ($48.9B) covered nearly 90% of the accumulated current-account deficit over the same period When all the public companies were sold, Argentina borrowed money from international markets Fixed exchange rate resolved a huge problem: the inflation – Prices fell in Argentina through a painful period of deflation – (1.8% in 1999, 0.7% in 2000 and 1.5% in 2001) Case of Argentina Currency Crisis: Results from 1990 to 2000 – Exports more than doubled (US$12.4b to US$26.4b) – Imports rose by nearly seven times (US$3.7b to US$25.2b) – Inflation was almost zero Trigger of ARS currency crisis: – The devaluation in Brazil (its largest trading partner) made the country increasingly uncompetitive and deepened the recession Case of Argentina Full Fledged Financial Crisis: Fiscal Deficit Snowballs Government Too Reactionary to pull out of crisis – Tax revenue declined due to recession and avoidance – Unwilling to devalue because it would multiply government debt – Government unable to reduce expenditures due to social instability Bottom Line: Huge fiscal deficit and the weakness of the economy triggered the default Argentina’s debt: US$150b Case of East Asia Background: The Five Asian-Crisis Countries: Indonesia Thailand Philippines South Korea Malaysia Before the Crisis: – Average Annual GDP 7% - 8% – Significant per captia income level increase over the last 30 years – Attracted nearly half of all capital inflows to developing countries – Bottom Line: Outstanding economic performance first step to financial liberalization Case of East Asia Increasing Vulnerability: Chain of Events in 1997 Feb Jun Jul •Speculation •2nd attack •Thailand on baht floats the on baht baht Aug Sep Oct Nov •Indonesia •Kia seeks •Indonesia •KRW floats the Korean court obtains IMF falls 1000 rupiah protection package of to USD from creditors$35Billion •Malaysia floats the ringgit •KRW depreicates10% Dec •Korea floats won & obtains IMF assistance Case of East Asia Currency Crisis: Asian-crisis countries experienced nominal currency deprecations of more than 50% from July 1997 to 1998 Reaction: Asian-crisis countries institute currency controls to avoid speculation – Example: Sept 1998 Malaysia restricted Foreign Direct Investors from repatriating their MYR. – Feb 1999 Foreign Direct Investors able to repatriate their MYR • However Proceeds now subject to a graduated exit levy scheme on Principal and Capital Gains Case of East Asia Full Fledged Financial Crisis: Non-Performing Loans as a % of GDP 90 80 70 60 50 1998 1999 2000 40 30 20 10 0 IDR KRW MYR THB Case of East Asia The Recovery: Rates of economic growth have rebounded in 1999-2000 Failure of investment ratios to rebound significantly Real stock market prices failed to return to pre-crisis level Bottom Line: Crisis had long-term adverse effect Comparisons and Takeaways Government Stability – ARS: Financial Crisis transferred into Political Turmoil (I.e. 5 Presidents in 2 weeks) Fiscal Deficit – ARS incurred 10 years of Fiscal Deficit Banking System: – Non-performing loans & Bank Runs diluted the assets • i.e. Bank customers did not have necessary USD to repay their USD loans – Devaluation adversely effected the liabilities since Gov’t mandated Banks absorb the devaluation & not the bank customers Financial Policies to Prevent Financial Crises 1. Adherence and supervision of banks • • 2. maintain balance sheets provide safety net yet prevent moral hazard Accounting and disclosure requirements • 3. measure risk through quality of information Legal and judicial systems • • • 4. property rights allowable collateral bankruptcy policies Market-based discipline • • credit ratings issue subordinated debt Financial Policies to Prevent Financial Crises 5. Entry of foreign banks • • • 6. Diversify and insulate strengthen foreign confidence Less like likely to be bailed out – market discipline Capital controls • • • 7. ouflows devaluation inflows debt effectiveness? Reduction of role of state-owned financial institutions • 8. not efficient and won’t manage risk if no profit motive Restrictions on foreign-denominated debt • prevents monetary responses Financial Policies to Prevent Financial Crises Elimination of “too-big-to-fail” firms 9. • no implied rescue – market discipline 10. Sequencing financial liberalization • • • lending boom precedes information gradually remove restrictions well-functioning regulatory structures limit risk, lending boom precedes information 11. Monetary policy and price stability • domestic vs foreign denominated debt 12. Exchange rate regimes and foreign exchange reserves • • • • fixed rate crawling peg capital flows low reserves Is Peso Overvalued? Or Legalized Theft! Government repealed convertibility and confessticated $18 B belonging to peso holders Goal to boost exports and GDP Prior to devaluation: Exports (10% of GDP); Rest of the GDP 50% devaluation of peso will result- Export 5%; GDP 0.5% Central Banks instead of devaluation should sell assets - & Dollarize Not a currency problem, but a banking problem, political, legal, & corruption problem……. Managerial Implications: Micro Uncertain Monetary and Fiscal Policy Banking and Political Stability Tax Structure and Tariffs on Import or Exports Corruption at all Levels – Parallel Economy (cash transactions) Legal System - Delays & Cost Unreliable Police Protection Bureaucratic and Expensive Public Workforce – Provincial legislators’ salary - $300,000/year Managerial Implications: Macro Tax Structure - VAT etc. Tariffs on Import and Exports Stability of Local Vendors and Customers Fluctuating Exchange Rate - minimize inventory & cash collection cycle Reliability of local banks Use Financial Models to Minimize Risk – debt. Managerial Implications: Macro Government approvals - Corruption Litigation is Time Consuming and Costly Illegal Tactics used by Local Competition Safety of Local Employees Unreliable Political and Banking System Use Local Resources and Minimize Dependence Factors Leading to Crises Deterioration in Bank’s B/S Uncertainty Up •Collapse of an institution •Sustained Recession •Political Instability •Contraction of Lending •Interest Rates Up Capital Outflows Dilution of Credit Quality Stock Market Crash Devaluation •Value of $ up •$ denom. debt up Deterioration of Non-Financial B/S •Collateral values down •Net worth of companies down More Adverse Selection •Borrowing short, lending long (liabilities up, assets down) •Less ability to monitor credit quality •Moral hazard and adverse selection further up •Bank runs •Collapse of Banks