Monday, August 20, 2007

The Bernanke Rally

The Federal Reserve cut the discount rate from 6.25% to 5.75% and encouraged banks to borrow at the discount window. The effect was stunning!

The HK market opend up 700 points and closed the day up 1,208 with turnover HK$105.3 Billion. The question is "Is this the end of the correction, or a dead cat bounce"?

The Fed has shown that it is ready to step in to correct market imbalances by providing much needed liquidity. Borrowings at the discount window can now be repaid after 3o days instead of the more usual 1 day. There is no question that the Fed will continue to inject liquidity until the storm blows over. That does not mean that it will rescue players from their own folly. By not cutting the Fed Funds rate at this time the Fed is treating this as a liquidity crunch only.

The worry is that this will spill over into the larger economy impacting the man in the street. It will certainly make it more difficult for unqualified buyers to get a mortgage which may not be such a bad thing. However, the homes market drives an increasingly large part of the economy, and a slowdown there will have an effect. This will affect US consumers and ultimately US imports of goods and services.

Right now, the Mainland is insulated from the worst of the battering. In fact, the correction comes at an opportune time for Mainland funds to start acquiring quality assets in HK at much lower valuations than 2 weeks ago. The market basically took off on the announcement of QDII relaxations even before Mainland funds were able to put in their applications to invest overseas.

The current problems in the US is also good news for the HK stock market because Mainland investors will prefer t5o stay closer to home and to invest in companies that they are more familiar with rather than exotic instruments. When QDII was first conceived, it was supposed to invest only in fixed income products on the assumption that they are "safer" than stocks. How time changes!

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