Ukraine wants to revise gas deal with Russia

The base price for Russian natural gas is still disadvantageous for Ukraine despite a new deal reached last April and the Kiev government will press Moscow to bring it down, Ukraine’s prime minister claims.

“We have set as a goal a revision of the extremely unfavourable agreement with the Russian Federation and we will continue to try to convince our Russian partners of the need to do this,” Prime Minister Mykola Azarov told a cabinet meeting.

A January 2010 agreement between Russian gas giant Gazprom and Ukraine’s gas holding Naftogaz set a base formula for the price of Russian gas which the Ukrainians say is onerous despite a subsequent deal in Kharkiv last April.

In that deal, President Viktor Yanukovich’s administration secured of $100 discount on the price for 1,000 cubic metres of gas in exchange for allowing Russia to keep its Black Sea fleet in a Ukrainian port until 2042.

But it is now saying that this is not enough.

Azarov said his government would work to persuade the Russian side that the January agreement, reached by the previous administration of Yulia Tymoshenko, was unfair.

“This formula continues to weigh on us and this is a fact that can not be denied. The price goes up by $25 every quarter,” Azarov said.

He said that in the fourth quarter this year the price of gas without the $100 discount would reach $390 tcm. “Such a price would mean catastrophe for the economy and the people of Ukraine,” Azarov said.

Under pressure from the IMF which has just opened up a $15bn stand-by credit line to Ukraine, the Azarov government has announced austerity measures including a 50 percent rise in the price of gas for the Ukrainian householder.

Yanukovich has said that his administration will launch a campaign to explain to people the need for tough reforms to modernise the economy.

Aggreko ups 2010 view after orders, profits jump

Aggreko said events such as the Vancouver Winter Olympics and the soccer World Cup, for which it provided generators and chillers, brought its Local Business unit £48m ($74m) in revenues in the first half.

“We believe that we will make further good progress in the second half and the outcome for the year as a whole will be slightly better than our previous expectations,” Chairman Philip Rogerson said in a statement.

“What’s led us to nudge our views forward is that our local business seems to be over the worst and rates, which took a hammering last year, are coming back up”, CEO Soames told reporters.

A Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S poll of analysts taken before the results showed a mean estimate of £285m ($440m) for 2010 pretax profit.

Bit of a desert
The company, which is supplying cooling and power equipment to people cleaning up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill on the Louisiana coast, said it also planned to raise the interim and final dividend by 50 percent each to reflect recent profit growth.

The company saw record orders for its International Power business, which provides temporary power stations mainly to developing countries, signing contracts for 860 megawatts in 18 countries in the first half.

While demand for temporary power in emerging countries is set to remain good, Aggreko’s local business is unlikely to benefit from such high-profile events contracts in 2011.

“Nearly all the big events happen in even numbered years so next year will be a bit of a desert,” said CEO Soames, who is a fan of the Glastonbury music festival for which Aggreko supplies generators.

For the six months to the end of June, underlying trading profit rose 23 percent to £131.2m ($202m) on revenue up 17 percent at £585.6m.

Pretax profit rose 19 percent to £127.1m and the interim dividend is being increased to 6.55 pence.

Antofagasta H1 EPS up 92%, cuts year output target

Chilean miner Antofagasta has posted a near doubling in first-half earnings per share on higher production and a rebound in prices, but trimmed its annual production target

“Group copper production from the three operating mines is expected to be approximately 530,000 tonnes, slightly below the forecast of 543,000 tonnes announced in March, reflecting updated forecasts at Los Pelambres and El Tesoro,” a statement said.

The London-listed group said earnings per share for the first six months rose 92 percent to 46 cents from 24 cents last year on a 50 percent rise in turnover to $1.76bn.

Earnings were largely in line with an average forecast of 47 cents from five analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

Antofagasta declared an interim dividend of four cents, up from an interim payout of 3.4 cents last year.

South Africa looks to boost investment from China

South African President Jacob Zuma has called for greater investment in his country from China, as South Africa seeks to narrow its trade deficit with Beijing and bring growth to its sluggish economy.

South Africa is looking for expanded trade that will help it meet its development needs, especially by improving infrastructure and livelihoods, Zuma told a forum of business executives from China and South Africa.

“China is indeed a key strategic partner for South Africa, and South Africa is open for business in a big way,”  he said, on the first full day of a trip to China.

For Beijing, Zuma’s visit is an opportunity to consolidate ties with African countries, where China is increasingly turning for resources, markets and diplomatic support.

Late last year, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao offered Africa $10bn in concessional loans over three years.

South Africa and China could cooperate in infrastructure, the benefaction of minerals, engineering, energy, information and communications technology and electronics, Zuma said.

With GDP growth forecast at 2.3 percent this year, South Africa stacks up unfavourably against China, and Zuma is looking to narrow his country’s trade deficit with Beijing.

China is South Africa’s largest trading partner, but last year South Africa ran a $2.7bn trade deficit with China.

South Africa’s trade minister Rob Davies told the same forum that China would be a key driver of growth for the world and his own country.

“We will be looking to encourage and support investments in our country which will manufacture components into infrastructure programmes,” he said.

After Zuma left, Chinese and South African officials signed a series of memorandums of understanding about investments in clean energy, power transmission and railways, as well as a 240 million euro ($303.6m) loan agreement between South Africa’s third-largest mobile phone operator, Cell C, and China Development Bank.

Further details were not immediately available.

Chinese Vice Minister of Commerce, Gao Hucheng, said that China’s demand for energy and resources, and South Africa’s assets in these areas, meant there was much room for cooperation.

“There is strong complementarity between our economies and fine prospects for economic and trade cooperation,” Gao said.

What could emerge from Pakistan/IMF talks?

The International Monetary Fund is to review Pakistan’s budget and macroeconomic prospects following catastrophic flooding during talks with senior Pakistani officials in Washington.

The meetings are set to focus on the future of Pakistan’s $10.66bn IMF programme agreed upon in 2008, which faced hiccups over meeting the fiscal deficit target even before the floods hit.

The disaster is set to compound Pakistan’s economic problems as the government is forced to deal with more than four million homeless and widespread damage to crops and infrastructure.

Here are some scenarios that could emerge from the meetings:

The IMF agrees to ease targets
The talks will evaluate the economic impact of the flooding, assess the measures needed to address the damage and discuss ways in which the IMF can help. If help translates into lowering some of the targets of the loan programme, that may only provide a short-term sigh of relief for Pakistan’s government.

The government will still be under IMF pressure to implement fiscal reforms as the country tries to recover from one of the worst catastrophes in its history. It could take years.

The reconstruction phase may offer the government a chance to improve its image after it was heavily criticised for its perceived slow response to the flooding. That may not be possible without a long-term economic safety net from the IMF. In the short and medium term alone, millions of flood victims will be expecting new homes, livestock and farmland from the government.

If it doesn’t deliver soon, Islamist charities with suspected links to militants, who have already been far more effective in providing relief than the state, may gain more supporters.

IMF abandons programme and opts for disaster-relief loan
That could be great news for Pakistan’s government, depending on the size of the relief loan.

Pakistan had been struggling, even before the floods, with its fiscal deficit and been granted a waiver on several occasions as it has one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratio in the world and authorities have not been able to cut back expenditure.

Pakistan’s government – still accused of being lax more than  three weeks into the flood crisis – could save face by telling Pakistanis it had persuaded the IMF to come to the rescue of millions of flood victims.

Abandoning the programme could also allow the government to avoid some politically-explosive measures the IMF had been demanding such as the elimination of food and energy subsidies and raising electricity tariffs to counter its fiscal imbalances and keep inflation in check.

The government fails to deliver on the ground
Anger over the government’s handling of the crisis is growing and hardships could get far worse. Pakistanis have long accused their government of widespread corruption. Flood victims have already expressed doubts they will ever see any of the international funds that have been donated or pledged.

So the government, under immense damage-control pressure, will need to deliver, in a very public way, any assistance the IMF may offer. The military has done most of the heavy lifting in the aid relief effort, and unless the government wants to reinforce the view that only the army is reliable in times of trouble, it has to act now.

HSBC to buy up to 70 pct of S.Africa’s Nedbank

HSBC will buy up to 70 percent of South Africa’s Nedbank, in a potential $6.8bn deal that would give Europe’s largest lender a bigger presence in Africa’s top economy and a gateway to the fast-growing continent.

HSBC and Anglo-South African insurer Old Mutual, which owns a controlling stake in Nedbank, said in separate statements that they were in exclusive talks about the deal.

Old Mutual said HSBC could acquire up to 70 percent of South Africa’s fourth-largest bank, a deal that could be worth about 49.9 billion rand ($6.8bn), given Nedbank’s current market value.

It was not immediately clear whether HSBC would get the necessary clearance from South Africa’s regulators to buy a stake in the bank.

South Africa’s head of bank regulation, Errol Kruger, told reporters it was still too early to comment on the deal.

“They still have to submit all the applications they need to go through and then we’ll need to apply our minds to it,” he said in a telephone interview.

For HSBC, which has lagged rival Standard Chartered in Africa, the acquisition would bulk up its presence as more of its Chinese customers are looking to do deals on the resource-rich continent.

“This is the right thing for HSBC to do if it wants to focus on emerging markets,” said Dominic Chan, an analyst at BNP Paribas in Hong Kong.

“Trade between Africa and China has been growing very rapidly, and HSBC doesn’t have the same presence there as Standard Chartered, which makes this buy especially crucial if it wants to continue expanding there.”

Media reports had previously said that Standard Chartered may bid for Nedbank.

For Old Mutual, the deal would help it in a strategic overhaul to slim down its complicated structure.

Nedbank, which said in a statement that HSBC was an attractive international banking partner, has been struggling with a money-losing retail unit.

The bank has posted flat first-half earnings and said it would struggle to meet its medium-term forecasts.

Shares of Nedbank are up about 5.7 percent this year, helped by speculation that it would be the target of a bid.

Bank targets future generation

After more than a century of relentlessly meeting and satisfying customers’ needs, FirstBank of Nigeria Plc (FirstBank) has continued to adapt and innovate to meet the different challenges and opportunities presented by different generations of customers, competitors and other stakeholders, thus assuring not only its longevity but also sustaining its market leadership.

With over 5 million customers, ten financial subsidiaries, 581 locations in Nigeria, and presence in the UK, France, South Africa and China, the bank is arguably the country’s most diversified full-suite financial services group. The aspiration of its holistic brand transformation exercise initiated in 2006 is to reposition the financial services icon for sustainability and leadership in the next century and beyond.

Established 116 years ago in Nigeria, FirstBank’s increasing globalisation has seen it set up a branch in London in 1982, which became FBN Bank (UK) Limited, Nigeria’s first full-fledged subsidiary bank in the UK. Furthermore, FBN Bank (UK) opened a branch in Paris in 2008, driving FirstBank’s financial services to other parts of Europe. FirstBank also has a presence in South Africa and China, through Representative Offices which are  key drivers of promoting excellent business relationships between South African and Chinese companies.

Led by an auspicious chairman, Oba Otudeko, and GMD/CEO Bisi Onasanya, FirstBank has 1.5 million shareholders. Otudeko, one of Nigeria’s most successful businessmen was appointed Chairman in 2009, having been on the bank’s board for 12 years. He says FirstBank is committed to the development of Nigeria. 

Dr. Otudeko said the new leadership will continuously optimise its people, processes and systems to connect with the younger generation who, undoubtedly, are the market of the future.

“This has become inevitable in view of the fact that half of our population is under 18 years of age. In other words, half of our population of around 150 million will be responsible for key buying decisions until mid-century. If we successfully connect with this critical demographic group, we would have positioned the bank within touching distance of the future of the economy and of the nation,” he said.

Dr Otudeko affirmed that the bank would also ensure that the diverse expectations of customers, shareholders, regulators, and other stakeholders are constantly exceeded to ensure sustained growth for another century. He reiterated the need for operators within the financial services industry to follow FirstBank’s example of exercising prudence in managing the balance sheets and its traditional commitment to a strong ethical operating standard, which has stood it in good stead over the years.

“Now, more than ever in the rich history of our bank, we must not lose sight of this pedigree. Not just because recent industry developments place an enormous premium on a stronger moral backbone amongst the nation‘s bankers, but also because banking is essentially a conservative industry. Therefore, we need to return to the time-tested basics of conservatism and probity,” he said.

The group managing director and CEO of FirstBank, Bisi Onasanya, has a strategic focus for the FirstBank Group: to become a top-5 bank in Africa, and to be the clear leader in sub-Saharan Africa (excluding South Africa), as well as a top-3 ranking for each of its subsidiary businesses. According to Mr. Onasanya, “Our strategy is to initially focus on consolidating in Nigeria towards achieving a clear number one position in profits and assets. Next, we will work towards diversifying the group and drive the bank’s transformation to completion, building scale in key industries such as insurance and investment banking.

In later years, we will then concentrate our efforts on expansion and growth in banking and selective international forays in non-bank financial services in sub-Saharan Africa.”

The bank believes that in all its businesses, economies of scale – in areas such as operations, innovation, branding and risk diversification – are critical success factors. The key elements of FirstBank’s strategy are growth, service excellence, performance management and people. Growth is premised on attaining the full benefits of scale and scope by accelerating growth and diversification of assets, revenue and profits. Both organic and inorganic options are being considered to execute this strategy. Hence, FirstBank would continue to proactively analyze the industry landscape and take any necessary steps towards a synergistic merger or acquisition.

To deliver an exceptional customer experience, FirstBank’s operational excellence strategy is aimed at achieving unparalleled service levels through best-in-class processes, systems and capabilities within an optimal organisational structure. The bank has commenced a number of initiatives, including a holistic branch transformation, channel strategy, process re-engineering, shared services/centralisation, procurement excellence, migration to electronic channels and frontline training. In recognition of the importance that the human capital pool, as a key asset, plays in achieving its goals, the bank has implemented a performance driven strategy designed to make it the premium employer brand and a talent magnet in the Nigerian banking industry.

The bank’s management believes that long-term success will require the creation of a cadre of staff that is “comfortable owning all the bank’s processes from conception to the end.” In attracting the required skill sets from the topmost tier of the pecking order, then it “must continue to build an institution that remains the bank of first choice on the continent.”

 “While we are implementing growth initiatives, we also have open eyes on the opportunities that we can afford to, especially in connection with redemptions of certain banks in place that have value added to our system and fit into our strategy,” said Mr. Onasanya. The bank’s annual statement for 2009 reported a steady, organic revenue growth in its financial highlights, despite the difficult operating conditions experienced globally.

Group financial highlights as at June 30, 2010
The Bank recently released half year results for the period ending June 30, 2010 are as follows:
– Gross Earnings of N122.3 bn, a decrease of 6.7% compared with the equivalent period in 2009 (N131.1 bn June 2009), due to declining lending rates.
– Profit Before Tax of N31.7 bn (N4.3 bn June 2009), an increase of 637.4% on the prior year
– Profit After Tax of N25.3 bn (N3.4 bn June 2009), an increase of 637.4% on the prior year
– Total Assets of N2.3 trn, an increase of 14.6% (N2.0 trn June 2009)
– Deposits & liabilities of N1.4 trn, an increase of 24.1% year on year (N1.1 trn June 2009)
– Loans & Advances[2] of N1.1 trn, a year on year increase of 19.9% (N912.7bn in June 2009)
– Loan loss provision in balance sheet of N35.1 bn (N26.9 bn in June 2009)
– Net loan loss expense of N3.8 bn, includes a credit related write back of N1.1 bn
– Net write back on investments and other assets of N4.7 bn
– Total net write back of N954m
– Shareholders’ Funds of N308bn, an 10.6% decrease on N344bn in June 2009
– Basic Earnings per Share of  77 kobo (12 kobo June 2009)[3]

Risk ratios
– Loan-to-deposit ratio of 79.2% (78% June 2009 and 89.7% as at March 2010
– Improved non-performing loan ratio of 5.75% relative to 6.9% as at March 2010 (4.72% June 2009)
– Capital adequacy ratio of 18% (26.5% June 2009)
– Liquidity ratio of 40.4% (49.2% June 2009)
– Coverage ratio of 53.9% (61.4% June 2009 and 77.2% as at March 2010)
– Cost to income ratio of 74.1% (96.7% June 2009)

Shift to Shankong

The heart of the main retail district in Seoul could hardly be more different than that of western cities. Instead of competing businesses being dispersed among outlets selling non-competing products as you’d find elsewhere, in South Korea’s capital city they are all congregated together.

Standing side by side on the main retail strip – the Jongno road – are dozens of businesses selling car parts, dozens more selling lighting products or textiles or electrical fittings or homeware.

And further down the road, one of the oldest east-west thoroughfares in the city, there’s an old, multi-level department store standing directly in front of a modern one. Inside the first, entire floors are filled with tiny booths staffed mainly by women watching soaps on television. Piled high on benches are locally manufactured jeans, shirts and jackets. There are no lifts in the store, only stairs, and elderly porters with whip-cord leg muscles stagger up and down them bearing massive loads on their backs. Nobody bats an eye at a sight that would stop western shoppers in their tracks.

In total contrast, the modern store is organised along western lines with elaborate displays of mainly international brands, generous spaces and attentive counter service. Escalators replace the stairs and staff speak excellent English.

Poster boys
The symbolism is clear. An economy in rapid transition, South Korea can be taken as a proxy for the rest of Asia. While China and India attract most of the publicity as poster boys for the Asian miracle, South Korea could just as easily be substituted instead. It’s in the throes of a breakneck transformation from an economy built on domestic sales to a highly international one that trades global brands such as Samsung Electronics, Hyundai Motor and LG Electronics.

And although this country is one of the least understood examples of the “Asian miracle”, the re-making of South Korea says a lot about the rapid shift of economic power from west to east that’s lately become known, albeit inaccurately, as “Shankong”.

Few westerners realise the untroubled way that Asia sailed through the crisis. The result, say economists, is a marked change in the epicentre in global trade and finance.

The latest statistics tell the story. According to a June study by the IMF on the performance of emerging nations since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in November 2009 that triggered the cataclysm, the west continues to flounder while Asia booms. Between the region’s low point and December 2009, average GDP grew by 6.4 percent while average industrial growth shot up by a staggering 26.7 percent. In Europe, the comparable and highly thought-provoking figures were 1.2 percent and 4.3 percent, or roughly six times lower on both counts.

Predictably, China led the charge. Its economy grew by 8.7 percent while foreign trade soared by nearly 45 percent, a number totally beyond the ambitions of any European government in the immediately foreseeable future.

Gravitational shift
According to Asia-watchers like Yale’s professor Jeffrey Garten, these numbers illustrate a gravitational shift that’s triggered in part by a flight of banks, manufacturing and other sectors from bloated, mis-managed western economies to more relaxed and less hidebound eastern nations. He cites the USA and UK in particular as being over-regulated, over-taxed and under-invested. (South Korea’s annual investment in R&D, for example, is higher than that of Germany, the USA and UK).

Professor Garten also notes the growing number of global-sized companies congregating in regional capitals such as Singapore, Mumbai, Beijing, Hong Kong and Seoul. Following in their coat-tails is a financial services sector anxious to service them. And for good measure, as the Yale economist points out, most of these nations are big savers. China will be “the world’s largest creditor for decades.”

Meantime most of the region’s economies are banking torrents of western capital, with China the stand-out example. Last year, according to the IMF, China booked over $200bn in FDI. Much of that may be hot money attracted by the undervalued renminbi which has been pegged to the greenback since the beginning of the crisis, but it marks an important milestone in the “Shankong” phenomenon. Last year China’s foreign reserves rocketed by 23 percent to $2.4trn, two thirds of them in US dollars.

Even more startling, Asian nations now hold the lion’s share of the reserves held by the world’s central banks. At present these stand at $7,500bn, an all-time record, with nearly 60 percent sitting in the vaults of just six nations. Five of these are Asian – China, Japan, India, Taiwan (surprisingly so to many) and South Korea – with Russia the odd man out.

Bigger say in G20
At this rate it’s only a matter of time before the region is given a bigger voice in the G20 major economies.

Already six of the big 20 nations are from the Asia-Pacific region, yet it qualifies for only 20 percent of IMF voting shares instead of the nearly 30 percent to which it’s entitled as measured by economic power. “It is only natural for Asia’s voice to become increasingly influential in global economic and financial discourse,” points out the IMF.

And, as Asia’s leaders well know, the west desperately needs the region in the rebound from the crisis. This is for two main reasons. “First, unlike in previous global recessions, Asia is making a stronger contribution to the global recovery than any other region,” adds the IMF. “Second, also in contrast to previous episodes, recovery in many Asian countries is being driven by two engines – exports and strong domestic demand.”

Many westerners fail to appreciate how outward-looking some of these previously “hermit” economies have become – and how quickly. Since 1990, emerging Asia’s share of world trade has doubled and its share of world GDP has tripled.

A two-speed world
And nothing’s changed recently. Since the crisis, the west is stuck in first gear while the east is in overdrive. “It’s a two-speed world”, explains Philip Lowe, assistant governor (economic) of the Reserve Bank of Australia, a nation that is sitting in the sweet spot of Asia’s economic take-off. “As a group, the G7 countries are experiencing only relatively weak growth. In contrast, the picture in Asia is quite different, with many of the economies in the region having had near V-shaped recoveries.” That is, the recovery was as rapid as the decline, modest as it was in the first place.

Hardly surprisingly, there’s been a sharp jump in M&A action throughout Asia. According to Mergermarket, the first quarter of the year saw $89.4bn worth of deals in the region, and that’s excluding Japan. That represents an increase of over 90 percent on the corresponding quarter in 2009.

Also unsurprisingly, western banks are flocking to the region and particularly to China despite some teething troubles by pioneering western banks such as Royal Bank of Scotland which has now sold out its business there. According to McKinsey, some 30 percent of the increase in global financial services revenue in 2007-12 will come from China alone.

Inevitably, these bright prospects have sparked a contest between the region’s cities to become the preferred business capital. The main contestants are Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore. Right now, the latter seems to be winning.

Nearly four hours flight south from Hong Kong, the city state has gone out of its way to put itself in the middle of this benign storm by, among other things, offering sweeteners for foreign companies such as tax-free status on qualifying profits for high-value, “pioneer” businesses. This is a big reason why global names such as Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, Dell, Capgemini, Chevron, Glaxo¬SmithKline and Diageo have chosen Singapore as their regional headquarters.

The fund management industry has also adopted Singapore. According to Magnus Böcker, chief executive of the Singapore Exchange, some $1,250bn assets are under management in the state, roughly twice those of Hong Kong. “There is an attractiveness for them in reaching out to the Singapore-based institutional market,” says Böcker.

However Hong Kong is fighting back. It will host some blockbuster IPOs this year including the massive $20bn one of Agricultural Bank of China, probably the plum offering of the year.

Meantime banks are reinforcing their treasury operations to cope with the demand. For instance, HSBC announced in June it was seeing “unprecedented levels of client activity across the region as clients have heightened their focus on treasury and working capital management [in the wake of] the global financial crisis.”

However there’s still work to be done in the region and the shift in economic power seems to have spurred on governments, central banks and the private sector to embed important reforms that are intended to cement Asia’s position in the global economy. As the region’s dominant economy, China has come in for criticism for not opening up rapidly enough. It is repeatedly told to speed up integration with the global economy, for instance by facilitating foreign investment more than it has in the past. “The Chinese economy should become more like that of the United States—a large country that is a major global trader but whose growth is driven primarily by domestic demand,” suggests Linda Yueh, director of the China Growth Centre and fellow in economics at Oxford University, in the IMF’s latest global survey.

And despite a rapidly prospering middle class, especially in India, a high proportion of the world’s poor still live in Asia. In south Asia, for example, 40 percent of the population exist on less than $1.25 a day.

Furthermore, the poor have been hard-hit by the financial crisis. The World Bank estimates 14 million more people in Asia will be living in poverty as a result.

Hungry for market share
However South Korea has shown what’s possible. It has evolved from a state of abject poverty to one of general prosperity in a few short decades. As a McKinsey study noted recently, it’s “a manufacturing powerhouse that has virtually eradicated poverty, malnutrition and illiteracy.”

And also like the rest of Asia, it’s not stopping there. Economists Stephen S Roach and Sharon Lam point out that the financial crisis was almost an irrelevancy for the nation. “Despite its heavy reliance on exports, South Korea registered only a single sequential quarterly decline in real GDP during the global downturn. Among Asia’s “tiger economies” South Korea suffered least from the crisis and recovered the most rapidly,” they explain.

The performance of electronics brand Samsung is one reason why. Less than a decade ago, hardly any consumer outside South Korea had heard of it. Today Samsung ranks 19th on Interbrand’s top-ranking global names ahead of much longer-established brands such as 29th-ranked Sony.

Samsung is leading the way for other South Korean exporters who actually gained market share during and since the crisis. They now have 33 percent of the global market in mobile phones, up from 22 percent at end 2007, 37 percent of the LCD television market (up from 27 percent), and nine percent of the automotive market (6.5 percent).

A decade ago, these gains would have been considered unthinkable but they still aren’t enough for a newly ambitious South Korea, or Asia.

Transforming business

Some companies like to think big and move fast. Aabar Investments PSJC, based in Abu Dhabi in the UAE, shows how it is done. Incorporated in 2005 with a mandate to develop an oil and gas business focusing on exploration and production, Aabar has since transformed itself into a global investment fund with holdings in real estate, automotive, financial services, infrastructure and transportation.

“Was this transformation part of the plan from the company’s inception?” asks Mohamed Al-Husseiny, Aabar’s Chief Executive Officer. “Not at first. It was an evolution. Eventually, hydrocarbon assets were shed and put to work in a more profitable way.”

Within a month of incorporation the company had launched a successful IPO, raising $245m which it used to go on a shopping spree. Drilling services company, Dalma Energy was acquired first, followed by the purchase of oil and gas exploration and production company, Pearl Energy. That deal was completed in May 2006 and the following year saw several major exploration and production projects established as far afield as Algeria, Indonesia and Thailand. Then in 2008, both subsidiaries were sold, IPIC (International Petroleum Investment Company, an Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund) became a major investor in the business and HE Khadem Al Qubaisi was appointed Chairman.  The company has not looked back.

Leadership
The appointment of Al Qubaisi was an inspired choice for spearheading the transformation.  Having started his career working as a senior financial analyst in North American equities with the UAE sovereign wealth fund, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, Al Qubaisi developed strong international investment skills. Today, he sits on the Boards of several investment organisations in the MENA region, Europe and Asia. In his capacity as Chairman, he has grown the Aabar asset base from $874m in 2008 to roughly $13.525bn today.  

“Our Chairman has provided the vision, set the agenda and provided hands-on guidance throughout this growth period,” comments Al-Husseiny. “Without that clarity of focus we could not have grown as quickly and successfully as we have. Given the current global environment, we see several potential deals every day. Without a clear vision, we would tie ourselves in knots. With that guidance, we more often than not find our own deals, because we know best what works for us.”

Key to the company’s ability to maintain its focus is a clear set of guidelines, which Al-Husseiny refers to as Aabar’s four investment philosophies. These are: #1 – backing new technologies and ground-breaking ideas; #2 – backing “blue-chip” companies at attractive valuations; #3 – building strategic relationships, and #4 – realising inherent value in Abu Dhabi’s future. The guidelines have seen the company make significant investments over the past two years in organisations as diverse as UniCredit, Tesla, Daimler and Virgin Galactic (subject to regulatory approvals).

“Our shareholders aren’t looking for us to take wildly speculative risks,” Al-Husseiny explains. “Because we are long-term investors, we can look at fundamentals but we also look for growth opportunities. For example, Virgin Galactic employs proven technology that has already been to space, but these are technologies and capabilities that will be relevant for decades to come. That is where the growth comes from. We also see opportunities in today’s valuations. The Euro-zone crisis caused a sell-down of many stocks which turned sound businesses into good investments.”

In June of this year the company announced its latest deal – the purchase of a 4.99 percent stake in UniCredit, a rapidly growing pan-European banking institution based in Italy. Aabar’s investment makes it UniCredit’s second largest shareholder behind Italian investment bank Mediobanca. Noting how the deal sits well within Aabar’s guidelines, Al-Husseiny says, “We have known UniCredit for some time. We believe it to be sound, with strong opportunities in Eastern Europe and elsewhere. The valuation spoke to us.”

The team does not expect to just sit back and wait for the money to flow in from its investments, however. The third point of Aabar’s investment philosophy is predicated on the belief that they will be able to create value within the portfolio through strong relationships and synergies. Their foray into the automotive sector is a good example.

When Aabar acquired 9.1 percent of Daimler stock in March 2009, Dr Dieter Zetsche, Chairman of the Board of Management of Daimler AG said: “We are delighted to welcome Aabar as a new major shareholder that is supportive of our corporate strategy. We look forward to working together to pursue joint strategic initiatives.”
By July, the two companies started their first joint project with a shared investment in Tesla Motors, Inc. Tesla is the world’s sole producer of electric vehicles that are capable of operating over long distances. Daimler is keen to integrate Tesla’s lithium-ion battery packs and charging electronics into its electric smart car, and the joint project with Aabar will enable further collaboration on the development of battery systems, electric drive systems and individual vehicle projects.

In November Aabar and Daimler launched their second project with a joint bid to acquire 75.1 percent of Formula One racing team, Brawn GP.  “Daimler has been a great investment for us,” says Al-Husseiny. “The share price has more than doubled, but also, we have a strong relationship with management which has allowed us to put our capital to work alongside their expertise and using their relationships in the industry. As a result, we have invested in Tesla and the Mercedes F1 team, and we’re looking to make further investments together.”

Sharing the vision
The fourth investment philosophy is about enriching Abu Dhabi’s future by bringing in new technologies, jobs and investment opportunities. In 2007, the government of Abu Dhabi launched its new economic vision, citing a non-oil trade deficit of approximately $21 billion in 2006. The plan calls for the continued development of the oil and gas sector in parallel with achieving 7.5 percent annual growth in other sectors to establish a neutral non-oil trade balance by 2030.  

To achieve this economic transformation, Abu Dhabi will be focussing on building infrastructure, re-skilling the labour force and strengthening its financial markets. For Aabar, the vision creates many opportunities. 

“Being on the ground, we understand and appreciate the vision laid out by HH Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan and his government,” says Al-Husseiny. “The investment opportunities this vision represents are extraordinary. We’ll play a role in that development and we’ll reap the benefits.  I challenge you to find another economy in the world with such exciting near term opportunities for growth and profits.”

Already, the company’s investments are beginning to create benefits for the Abu Dhabi economy.  The investment in Daimler is expected to bring highly skilled job opportunities in the automotive industry to Abu Dhabi, as well as creating industrial synergies with other Abu Dhabi joint ventures and developing new products to be used in automotive manufacturing. Another investment, a 3.3 percent stake in Atlantia, owners of the largest concessionaire on the Italian autostrade network, is creating opportunities for Aabar to get involved in infrastructure projects in Abu Dhabi and the MENA region.

The acquisition of the private banking arm of defunct American financial services giant AIG has enabled Aabar to introduce the benefits and services of private banking to customers in Abu Dhabi. The renamed Falcon Private Bank Ltd. focuses on providing wealth management services to private clients, wealthy families and institutional investors in Switzerland, Asia and the Middle East.

And finally, Aabar’s investment in the space travel company, Virgin Galactic, includes plans to develop and launch small space satellites from Abu Dhabi and to develop science and technology capabilities in the Emirate.

Global business
Despite its commitment to developing the local economy, Aabar sees itself as a global player. “Today, it’s a global economy,” explains Al-Husseiny. “Abu Dhabi, and the region, have been playing important roles for many years. Aabar is merely playing its own part in an existing global relationship, and our role is not just about investing in the West. It’s also about opening a door to Western investment in the region, in support of our global vision.”

As an investment company, Aabar also takes the view that creating value takes time. “We’re long-term investors,” says Al-Husseiny. “We’re not tortured by quarterly earnings management. We expect to be exiting deals and taking profits from time to time, particularly on our property development projects, so net growth may eventually slow, while gross growth keeps ticking along.” 

That long-term perspective, combined with visionary leadership, has led Aabar to invest in businesses working at the leading edge of new technologies, before commercial applications are fully proven. Virgin Galactic is one. Started by Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group, the company plans to provide sub-orbital space flights to the paying public within the next two years. Asked if Chairman Al Qubaisi plans to take a trip on one of the early flights himself, Al-Husseiny laughs. “Just one? You’re selling us short!” he says. “Seriously, it isn’t just a joyride. The business is also about developing new technologies and furthering scientific experimentation.
“But I’ll reserve a seat for you if you are interested!”

Real estate booms in Asia, slumps elsewhere

“Crisis, what crisis?” cry China’s hundreds of thousands of developers in both residential and commercial real estate, in unison with their counterparts in the rest of the region, Japan excepted.

The volume of transactions tells the story. While deals remain largely stalled in the west, in Asia they bounded back during 2009. Total transactions in the region hit $119bn – and 67 per cent of that was in China – in the first nine months of last year. Indeed it’s fair to say that Asia was the only region where real estate isn’t under water.

In stark contrast to the train wreck that’s hit the property sector in USA, UK, much of Europe and particularly northern Europe where bankruptcies are off the scale, and parts of the Middle East, there’s been no crash in Asia. Indeed there have been only a handful of distressed sales in the entire region, once again with the exception of Japan which has been littered by bankruptcies. Property research company Real Capital Analytics reports only $29bn in Asia Pacific distressed sales through the first half of 2009, most of these coming in the first three months. In the Americas the equivalent figure was $136bn, nearly five times greater.

No fire sales
This is much lower than even Asia-based analysts expected and may have a lot to do with the culture. As a fund manager in Singapore told PricewaterhouseCoopers for the consultancy’s 54-page, annual Emerging Trends in Asian Real Estate, one of the most prized bodies of research in the sector: “Generally speaking, fire sales are frowned upon by government, they are frowned upon by business, and they are frowned upon, basically, by society.” Also, major investors often prefer to hold losing assets rather than lose face.

Inevitably, there was a shake-out in the first few months of the crisis as money tightened and deals slowed. However transactions in the commercial sector made a recovery that stunned observers. According to RCA, they bottomed regionally in the first quarter of 2009 before rocketing by 66 percent in the second quarter followed by a further 57 percent in the third quarter. “[That brought] them back to 2007 levels and makes Asia by far the most active global theatre in terms of sales,” summarises the PwC report.

Summarised, Asia is the only region where real-estate business is on the boil. With China inevitably making the pace through massive, economy-boosting injections of mainly government-sourced funds, transactions have well and truly taken off again. In the last quarter of 2009, sales of assets valued at $10m or more topped $60bn. That’s nearly three times those of the Middle East and four times those of the Americas.

The picture isn’t uniformly rosy however because of swings and roundabouts throughout the region. While most first and second-tier cities in China as well as Hong Kong rode the downturn, rents and values collapsed in Singapore and in some Indian cities, albeit from wild gains posted in the run-up to the crisis. “The contraction has been especially severe in the office sector, as export and finance-related businesses have come under pressure,” notes the PwC report. (Seoul, capital of South Korea, was the stand-out exception.)

And although by historical standards transactions are still down on the pre-crisis boom levels, there’s no doubt other regions would be more than happy to claim this level of business.

A different culture
From where did the region’s resilience spring? After all, this is the scene of the real estate-driven crisis leading up to 2000. Investors cite several robust reasons.
– Ample, bank-supplied liquidity kept afloat the minority of developers who were in trouble.
– Prudent loan-to-value [LTV] ratios meant developers hurting from declining rentals could still service their debt, although under the close eye of the lenders. “Ratios never reached the nose-bleed heights seen in the west,” opines the PwC report.
– The region exudes a confidence that’s not seen in the west – “business sentiment remains generally sanguine”.
– Importantly, lenders exhibit a patience with struggling borrowers that’s also not obvious in the west. “Local business culture generally frowns on foreclosures,” notes the report. A risk-averse financial sector helps here because fully-capitalised banks are less likely to force borrowers to sell. But, say insiders, the banks’ is cultural rather than technical. In Singapore, for example, investors can hardly remember when a lender took the ultimate action. “The banks just won’t foreclose,” says one source. “The last time there was a commercial foreclosure was something like 25 years ago. And in China you’ve basically got to be comatose, on your deathbed.”
– And related to the above, the commercial culture is much less litigious throughout Asia, in part because the law tends to be stacked in favour of borrowers in terms of repossessions.

China’s story
Commercial real estate aside, the pace of development in the residential sector is breakneck, and especially so in China. The mainspring for China’s rapid growth is what economists like to call endogenous – internally-triggered – factors. It all started in the late 1970s in the turbo-charged transition from an agrarian to an urbanised economy. Thereafter house prices increased in rapid bursts, rising by over 70 percent between 1985-1987 for example. Almost overnight, investment in housing became a viable proposition and a status symbol for all.
 
And although Beijing intervened in 2008 to slow things down, the government jumped into the market again in early 2009, this time to speed things up. It did so with a variety of measures including cuts in property taxes for first-time buyers and waivers on stamp duty and other taxes during a two-month window.

The main stimulus was however the $586bn that Beijing injected into the economy, freeing up the banks to pump out more mortgage money. This enormous sum came with specific allocations for housing and infrastructure. “Property prices raced upwards at a furious pace as real estate developers and home buyers jumped on the band wagon”, points out investment fund Thomas White International in an April report on the region.

Naturally, the sector is awash with liquidity.  “Last year, you were lucky if you could borrow for construction.

Today, you can borrow long term for developing construction finance, you can borrow to buy land, you can borrow to buy a company, “one source told PwC. “There is virtually no end or no limit to the amount of credit available in China—we’ve gone from famine to feast in a matter of a few months.”

As a result real estate has become the glamour sector. As Thomas White International adds: “Real estate investment more than doubled to $156.2bn in 2009 compared to the USA which slumped 64 percent to $38.3bn.”

Foreigners remain largely excluded from the boom, deliberately so. Beijing has passed laws limiting foreign ownership of real estate, commercial or residential. However according to figures from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, mainly speculative money has managed to slip through the net and accounts for roughly 15 percent of the Chinese real estate market.

Triple-figure revenue growth
Whatever the origin of the capital, there wouldn’t be a real estate company anywhere that doesn’t envy China Vanke, China’s numero uno  in the sector. Voted by Euromoney to be the world’s leading developer in residential property for 2009, the firm has averaged earnings growth of 37.5 percent over the last three years on the back of the housing boom in the fastest-prospering regions of China where it mainly operates. The consecutive numbers are: 110 percent in 2007, minus 16.7 percent in 2008, bouncing back last year with 19.2 percent. The publicly listed firm derives 44 percent of its profit from five core cities – Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Beijing and Tianjin.

Revenue figures posted by other leading Chinese developers are similarly stupendous. China Overseas Land & Investment, the only Hong Kong blue chip in China’s real estate sector and a subsidiary of China State Construction Engineering Corporation – biggest firm of its kind in the country, returned three-year figures of 76.29 percent, 20.78 percent and 48 percent.

Topping them all is Evergrande Real Estate, which has adopted western-style strategies in planning and design, use of materials, bidding, project management and marketing. Holder of the largest land reserve among all mainland developers, most of them in second and third-tier cities, it posted a 233 percent jump in revenue in 2007 and, after struggling in the slump year of 2008, nearly hit 100 percent growth in 2009. A favourite with investors, Evergrande’s initial public offering on the Hong Kong stock exchange’s main board in November last year raised $722m.

Could we be seeing the beginning of a bubble? Sounding a note of caution, a study by Goldman Sachs points out that the rise in house prices “far exceeds the rise in incomes, by 30 percent in Shanghai and 80 percent in Beijing.” This year alone, prices in the big cities have jumped by 20-30 percent.

And, adds Thomas White International, the office sector is hardly slowing down. “Office sales prices in Beijing and Shanghai have continued to rise, despite an upcoming supply overhang expected to push vacancies even above the already high current rate of 30 to 40 percent.

China’s bank regulator is certainly worried, warning recently that this massive surge in lending may lead to a wave of bad debt down the road. The regulator would be somewhat mollified by the government’s clamp-down on indiscriminate lending, especially to speculators. Twice this year already, bank reserve requirements for development investments have been increased and the total volume of loans will be reduced by 22 percent over the rest of this year. Still, that still leaves up to 7.5trn yuan, or $1.09trn.
 
Top cities
Meantime the boom continues unabated across Asia. According to the latest rankings compiled by the Urban Land Institute, the current top three cities for prospective real-estate investment are all in China – Shanghai (up four places on last year), Hong Kong (which has benefited from a spill-over in investment from the mainland and is up by one place), and Beijing (up three places). However five of the other seven are outside China. They are fourth-ranked Seoul, fifth-ranked Singapore, seventh-ranked, eighth-ranked Mumbai and tenth-ranked New Delhi. Other regional cities such as Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur and Singapore are working their way up the rankings.

The obvious implication is that the property boom is Asia-wide. The consensus of opinion is that it will slow down, but not by much.

Businesses turn to balkans platform

Montenegro is certainly one of the most interesting spots in the world. Even though it only covers around 14,000 km2 and it only has about 650,000 citizens, its contribution to the World cultural heritage is impressive compared to its size. Montenegro is a Southern European and a Mediterranean country. Its landscape combination of mountains, deep valleys, natural ice lakes, sandy beaches and attractive islands is breathtaking.

Since regaining its independence in 2006, Montenegro has proved to be a safe, politically stable and economically viable state with the potential to grow rapidly. The country has signed the Stabilisation and Association Agreement with EU, has liberalised visa regime with the Schengen zone and become member of NATO’s MAP program.

Montenegro is rapidly changing and becoming the business platform of the Western Balkans. With many projects under way, consistent and strong economic development, euro as its currency, competitive labour costs, close proximity and access to South East European Market, emerging private universities and lifestyle advantages, Montenegro is already a new business and residential location. With over 80 percent in privatisation of the state enterprises, strong competition in telecommunication, gasoline import and distribution, transportation, with one private bank per 55,000 people and one university per 200,000 people, you can feel the upcoming dynamic of change. It is diverse, open, with its eyes on the future and better connected every day. At the same time country has low level of public debt (around 30 percent of GDP) and deficit (below four percent).

During the three-year period before the crisis, Montenegro recorded the fastest GDP growth in the region, with the average growth rate reaching nine percent. A key driver of economic growth was an influx of FDI. For five years in a row, the country has attracted increased FDI, becoming a leader in Europe according to the level of FDI per capita. Despite the global financial crisis in 2009 Montenegro recorded even higher level FDI than ever before (€1.07bn), with a somewhat changed structure of investors’ preferences compared with previous years and the energy sector attracting more interest.

This was possible due to the overall course of continuing economic reforms relying on: (i) openness, (ii) monetary stability, i.e. the euro as a legal tender, (iii) a low level of business regulation, (iv) a low level of taxation (with corporate income tax amounting to 9 percent, as well as personal income tax, while VAT rate amounts to 7 percent and 17 percent); (v) free regime of capital flows; (vi) a high level of the economy privatised or under the process of privatisation. In addition investors are able to remit dividend and interest profit in the full amount, without any restrictions.

All this has resulted in improvement of Montenegro’s position in various rating lists of relevant international institutions and organisations like the World Bank, World Economic Forum, Transparency International, Heritage and Fraser Foundation, etc. Growing economic freedom is becoming countries hallmark. Standard & Poors has given Montenegro a credit rating of BB+, confirming that Montenegro is a stable country with somewhat fragile economy, interdependent from various factors, but with strong motivation for further reforms in accessing the European Union.

Foreign investors in Montenegro are guaranteed national treatment by law. You can freely set up a new company, invest in it or buy an existing company or share of a company. Foreign persons can have property rights on movable or immovable assets and property, and have inheritance rights the same as a Montenegrin, as well as free transfer of assets and property to foreign or domestic legal and natural persons. There is no limit on the amount of investment capital. Foreign investors are allowed to invest in any industry and freely transfer all financial and other assets, including profits and dividends. All major national and international investment insurance companies insure investment projects in Montenegro.

Several important investment projects are recently completed, such as reconstruction of an icon of Montenegrin tourism – St. Stefan (now managed by Aman Resort), completion of the first phase of Porto Montenegro – the first marina for mega yachts in Mediterranean or development of the Lustica peninsula by Orascom.

Over 5,000 foreign companies from 86 countries are conducting their business in Montenegro and the number is growing from one year to the next. Their positive experience are resounding testimonials for the further attraction of new investors and further progress of Montenegro. Despite being a small country, Montenegro has a significant potential, opportunities and clear vision of future development. The confidence that is crucial for such development is already achieved and serves as a guarantor for the future investments.

Montenegrin Investment Promotion Agency (MIPA) is a promoter of investment projects. Among other things, MIPA assists investors in obtaining permits and licenses; helps investors in locating greenfield and brownfield site options according to their specific requirements; and also gives initiatives and supports cooperation with domestic supplier companies and other local partners. So far, MIPA has provided many one-stop-shop services for potential foreign investors.

Investment opportunities
Tourism: 13km long send beach with an unobstructed view of the Adriatic Sea, the islands Ada Bojana and Mamula, as well as spectacular hillsides of Jaz and Buljarica.

Energy: construction of four hydropower plants of a 740 MW on the River Moraca, Maoce coal mine with construction of 500 MW thermal power plant and exploration of the natural gas. After signing an agreement with the government of Italy for connection of the electricity networks of two countries through an undersea cable with 1,000 MW capacity energy sector is becoming more and more attractive.

Infrastructure: construction of two highways, reconstruction of the railroad, long-term concession of the Port of Bar and Airports, privatisation of Adriatic Shipyard Bijela and Montenegro Airlines.

Banking and Insurance: are opened for greenfield investments that can support overall economic development.
Industry: Plantaze 13 jul, the largest producer of wine in the Balkans; Tobacco Company with the network of retail stores and warehouses; industrial, service and warehousihng zones around capital Podgorica.

Dr Petar Ivanovic is CEO of the Montenegrin Investment Promotion Agency (MIPA). Tel: +382 20 203 140; Email: info@mipa.me. Find more resorts and info at www.mipa.co.me

Brazil reforms corporate governance

During a period of recession that has hit most of the world’s influential economies, Brazil has still managed to develop a strong corporate governance programme that builds on legislation changes and promises to protect the country should future global financial problems occur.

Deloitte has worked hard in building Brazil’s corporate governance, a process which is designed to withstand another battering from a global recession, strengthen the country’s long term financial security and produce an economy that is attractive to investment.

The reputation and status worldwide enjoyed by Deloitte for being innovators in their market has seen them help the 140 countries it operates in to create a foundation and method to deal with problems within the financial sector.

From its base in Brazil, Deloitte has helped the South American country to launch itself as a leader in the world market through its thriving and strong internal market.

Recent years have seen dramatic changes in Brazil’s financial and political system, with radical reform following a period of structural analysis of the country’s infrastructure.

The introduction of perhaps one the most important business developments in its history, the 2005 Company Recovery and Bankruptcy Law, created a structure which saved Brazil from baring the full force of the global recession and set about Deloitte’s campaign to change corporate governance to better the business market.

Luis Vasco Elias has been at the forefront of the campaign, encouraging the country to fully accept that changes needed to be made in order to encourage growth and most importantly stability.

“We realised around 12 years ago that important changes needed to be made to our financial system.” explains Elias. “These changes were started by our previous Government, who realised that we needed to create stronger regulations in order to protect investors and creditors.

“Previous attempts at reform were never long-lasting. They worked for a short period of time and then stopped. The recent reforms put in place, however, are strong but there is still much to do.”

Brazil’s Government seemed to prophesise the global recession by making the changes before it fully hit in 2008, ensuring that the country already had a plan in place.

“Our country had 25 million people that crossed the poverty line,” said Elias. “We had a very bad income distribution, with 80 to 90 percent of the population having weak salaries and this was mainly due to deflation. Now, we don’t have inflation anymore. It’s all controlled.

“The Government created measures to reduce the taxes on servicing cars, and on white line products, such as household items. The decrease in prices helped 25 million people who were on the poverty line and, with a banking system reform introduced to help stabilise our currency, created the strong internal market we have today.”

Improvements in restructuring process
The Brazilian Government’s restructure of the tax system also saw struggling regions of the country benefit, as they offered companies a strong tax reward for moving from the South to the North-East. The land in the South began to become increasingly expensive as companies earned more money. The Government therefore offered discounted taxes in the North East to encourage businesses and their investors to move to the region, perhaps contributing to it being recognised as the most prosperous part of the country in Deloitte’s 2010 Business Outlook Survey.

A monetary reform was also introduced during the changes and this allowed the stabilisation of Brazil’s currency; something which many global economies longed for.

Indeed, it is important for the country to gain stabilisation as soon as possible, as the world’s eyes will be firmly fixed there over the coming few years. Both the World Cup 2014 and Olympic Games 2016 are to be held in Brazil, and with the current reforms steadying the economy, Elias believes there is still much work to be done to prepare for these events.

“Although poverty is diminishing and our population is steadily becoming richer, we need still need reforms elsewhere. Labour and social sector reform is essential, as are the political and legal sectors. We need to also improve our transport systems in order to prepare for the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympic Games in 2016.

“We don’t have a successful health system and financial costs have actually increased a lot. We want Brazil to play a big role in the international arena and this can only be achieved with further reforms.”

Perhaps the biggest indication of Brazil achieving global recognition is its export level. Currently, the country is the biggest exporter of coffee in the world, but Elias feels that this is not enough; that they must develop their productivity in other industry sectors.

“Brazil shouldn’t be looking to only export commodities,” comments Elias. “We need to increase our exporting to other areas. The recession caused many problems for our exporters and suppliers. We used to have a thriving connection with the US and Europe, who purchased our machinery, but this has decreased, causing many problems.

“To fully withstand another recession, we should export goods with a higher value and attract countries and companies who we can give a better benefit to. We should interacting with businesses and countries that focus on technology, so that Brazil can also benefit.”

The country has already begun to invest more in education, so that it too may prosper from increasing technological advances and increase its attractiveness to foreign investors.

“We reduced financing costs and increased our foreign investments to encourage interaction with other countries. It has helped and will continue to help to push us onto the global stage.

“Our currency is very strong, as is our internal market, and this certainly is appealing to foreign investors.”

Incorporating the “new” law
Encouraging investment is the key reason why Brazil has managed to overcome the recession and create a reform that will hopefully last for generations.

The “New” Law of Restructuring and Corporate Restructure has not only caused waves within Brazil, but has also created discussion worldwide.

Elias explains, “This new law introduced important measures to protect creditors. We had a very weak system, where creditors didn’t have participation in the level of recovery for a business.

“The new law now increases protection for the creditors and they have an important role in the recovery process.”

Helping companies through the bankruptcy process is key to turning a flailing economy around; giving extra time to pay off debt before the seizing of assets whilst also protecting investors, which is essential.

“The previous law had a lot of flaws. If you invested in a company, you received all the debt and this applied to new owners of a company too. Now, however, this is disregarded.

“Also under the new law, if a company files for bankruptcy they get 180 days in which to give money to the creditors. All investors’ money is safe, regardless of whether or not they invest after the filing for bankruptcy process has begun.

“Previously, when a company couldn’t pay debt, some felt very bad about it but now because of maturity, people have realised that it is not something to be ashamed of: it’s something that happens. The important thing is how you can fix the problem, how you manage the situation and how you begin the recovery.”

Increasing protection for investors and creditors stands to further increase Brazil’s profitability to foreign investors. The country will now be viewed as prosperous, innovative and perhaps even recession-exempt.

Elias believes that further measures must be taken to ensure this, however: “Brazil needs to reach our full potential. We were helped by our strong internal market previously, but we now need to concentrate on exporting a wider range of goods.”

Being a strong economy is important now more than ever and Deloitte plans to contribute to suggesting further ideas to the Government to prevent the country turning back on its excellent work.

“We have good reserves, a good internal market and our population is increasingly gaining a higher income, but corporate governance is very important. It is something we put a lot of effort into promoting in Brazil, not only to increase internal investors but to also encourage foreign investors.

“We hope that other countries can look to Brazil as a benchmark; that we have good companies and a fantastic market to invest in.

“What we have already conquered is not enough. We need to keep this reform going, so that Brazil may ultimately prosper and grow into a leading market on the global stage.”

India’s affluent spur development

In terms of Indian currency denominated debt, the total size of the market as of March 2010 – as per the national Stock Exchange of India (NSE) – was just over $705bn. Of this, government debt – including public sector undertakings and local government bodies such as municipals – accounted for 88 percent ($38.5bn) of the total national debt while corporate debt amounted to just seven percent ($25.8bn).

There are a number of reasons behind the relative underdevelopment of the corporate debt market in India.

Apart from the conspicuous absence of borrowing facilities against corporate bonds, there is also a variation in the various corporate bonds issued. For example, different issues by Power Finance Corporation (a frequent borrower) have different day counts for periodic interest payments. While most bond issues have a minimum denomination of Rs 10 lakh (Rs 1,000,000), that of Power Grid Corporation is Rs 12.5 lakh (Rs 1,250,000).

Finally the standards of disclosure and transparency in India are relatively poor compared with the western benchmark.

Turning to foreign currency denominated debt, the total size of External Commercial Borrowings (ECB) – including Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds (FCCB) – made by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was just over $80bn as of March 2010. Of this, FCCB accounted for 15 percent ($12bn) of the total.

Driving the growth of Indian FCCBs are a number of factors, including interest rates that are lower than than of traditional debt, the option to convert debt to equity upon the maturity of a loan, the easy transferability of debt between non-residents outside India, and the fact that average term of a loan is approximately five years.

Acquisition finance
The Indian debt market grew from $342bn in 2006 to just over $705bn in 2010, representing a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 20 percent. However, as we have seen, some 88 percent of this debt is composed of government securities and just seven percent of private debt. As such, the availability of debt to fund transactions in India is low. By comparison, in the US, some 75 percent of total debt comprises private debt, while the figure stands at 65 percent for the Eurozone and 35 percent in China.

Liquidity
In 2006, India’s total financial assets totalled $1.8trn, equating to 202 percent of the country’s GDP. This compared well with other emerging economies but was significantly low compared with developed nations such as the US and the Eurozone, where the financial assets where 424 percent and 356 percent of GDP respectively. China’s financial assets stood at $8.1trn; 307 percent of GDP. Under the Indian financial system most of the capital is channelled back to the government, and state owned enterprises and the public sector absorbs nearly 70 percent of the nation’s savings. As a result, there is inadequate capital available to fund successful private enterprises.

Private equity
Private Equity (PE) deals have shown a decline both in volume and value since January 2007. The total private equity investment since 2007 to 2010 till date is $27bn. The global financial crisis has changed the PE landscape altogether, resulting in fewer deals and even fewer exits. Allocations to PE funds by Limited Partners (LPs) were down in the first half of 2009, with some LPs even requesting a rescheduling of existing commitments. In response, some PE funds – most notably the international players – have reportedly reduced their management fees and reduced their commitment to the asset class.

Given the current economic situation, global LPs are likely to invest in fewer funds than they would have done three years ago, and today they are picking those funds with management teams which have a genuinely sound track records and exceptional operational experience. In addition, going forward, the emergence of domestic LPs investing from family and corporate accounts are expected to offset – at least in part – the reduction in capital from overseas.

In terms of exit activity, the majority of exits in 2009 were made by funds that made their initial investments between 2004 and early 2006. In addition, many of these divestments have only been partial exits. Exit multiples have been varied, with ChrysCapital making an 8.5x return on its investment in Shriram Transport Finance, whereas the majority of other divestments have seen more austere returns, for example Citi Venture Capital International (CVCI) recorded returns of 1x on its sale of Techno Electric & Engineering Co.

Family-owned businesses
Traditionally in India, there has been a reluctance among privately-owned family companies to share ownership or surrender control of their business. However, this scenario is changing, as family businesses are becoming increasingly larger entities, and as such their need for funds has increased. Private equity firms present a distinct advantage over traditional methods of fundraising as they take a more active advisory role and have a greater ability to raise growth capital – a combination that business owners and promoters are finding more attractive. In this way, there is a growing openness to private equity by Indian businesses and this is likely to increase further in the coming years.

Local knowledge
There is a growing trend for global funds to seek domestic LPs as they acknowledge their superior knowledge of the local market, in particular on regulatory issues and in their understanding of the mechanisms of the Indian private equity industry. This expertise, therefore, helps protect the interests of both GPs and LPs alike.

IPOs and FPOs
The appetite for IPOs and FPOs in India seems to have increased despite the current economic climate. In the first three months of 2010, some 30 Indian companies raised a combined $6.9bn through initial share sale offerings (including both IPOs and FPOs). This is slightly surprising, as over the same period the total value of IPOs globally was $53bn. With 20 IPOs in the first quarter of the year, India had the third largest number of IPOs globally, after China and the US. Global IPO activity witnessed five-fold growth during the period with a total of 267 IPOs valued at $53.2bn in the quarter ending March 2010, compared with 52 deals, which raised $1.4bn, in the same quarter the previous year.

India’s leading sectors in terms of IPO and FPO activity were infrastructure (including logistics, real estate and construction) as well as retail and IT. In addition, as of the beginning of April 2010, there were a further 117 more IPOs in the pipeline.

Cross-border M&A
The fast-growing Indian economy offers huge opportunities for cross-border M&A, which has the benefit of bringing in the necessary skills, expertise and resources that are presently not readily available in India. In the resources sector, Indian companies are actively seeking to acquire energy and mining assets in the CIS and Africa. Also, the IT, Manufacturing and Healthcare sectors present the strongest growth opportunities for cross-border M&A. Over the last three years, one-third of all deals has been in these sectors.

As to the location of India’s partners, both in terms of volume and also the value of deals, India engages most with US and Northern Europe for cross-border M&A. Even in Northern Europe, the UK is the dominant country. Other regions of good activity are Western Europe and South East Asia. Based on the number of deals concluded over the last three years, India has completed the majority of its transactions with the US. In value terms, however, over the same period, India has been most actively involved with African nations. Having said that, India’s involvement with Africa is principally the result of the 2010 Bharti Zain deal, bearing a transaction value of $10.7bn.

India’s financial services
Financial services in India are not well recognised and there is not much demand for financial services products such as insurance. The exceptions to this rule are Unit-Linked Insurance Plans (ULIP), which are viewed mainly as tax-saving instruments. Demand for non life insurance such as automobile insurance has been present in India for some time as it is a mandatory government requirement, but the situation is not the same for life insurance.

In recent times, however, there has been a growing awareness of the financial services industry and the products on offer to individuals. India’s growing economy has also bolstered this awareness. Financial services offered to individuals range from banking and insurance to investments in equity markets and mutual funds.

Financial services’ future
An increasingly affluent middle class is one of the most important factors spurring the development of the Indian financial services industry. A relatively stable economy and a consistently-high GDP growth has also fuelled this development. The social fabric of India – which is increasingly encouraging individuals to save their money – has also created a need for further financial services. Gross financial savings is expected to rise from $2bn in today to $6.6bn by 2017, creating growth opportunity groups such as banks, insurance providers, mutual funds, the stock markets and wealth management firms.

Data-quants and biologically inspired intelligence

Evolution has carefully preserved two distinct hemispheres in our brain – the right side pays wide open attention to the world, seeing the whole, whereas the left is adept at focusing on a single detail. The right hemisphere sees things in context and connected, recognizing the implicit meaning in vast amounts of information. In contrast, the left hemisphere isolates what it sees, focusing on what is unambiguous and logical.

Advances in computer technology and communications have given us machines with tremendous “left brain” capability, but even the most powerful systems struggle with the simplest right brain tasks. To solve the big problems facing our scientists, governments and financial institutions, a new line of machine intelligence is needed.

ai-one inc., based in San Diego and Zurich, has developed an adaptive holosemantic data space with semiotic capabilities (“biologically inspired intelligence”) that allows users to quickly analyze and discover meaningful patterns of interleaved text, time related data, and images. With the ai-one™ SDK, developers create intelligent applications that deliver better sense-making capabilities for semantic discovery, knowledge collaboration, sentiment analysis, image recognition, data mining and more. It also provides complex AI with reasoning and learning capabilities that get smarter with each use.

As has happened in the past, the breakthough comes not from the giant technology companies but from some brilliant, independent minds at a small company in Switzerland.

What is it and why does it matter?
The amount and types of information generated today are enormous and the access we enjoy due to the Internet are unprecedented. From an EMC/IDC report on the Digital Universe: “At nearly 500 billion gigabytes the Digital Universe, if converted to pages of text and assembled into books, would stretch to Pluto and back 10 times. At the current growth rate, that stack of books is growing 20 times faster than the fastest rocket ever made.

The Digital Universe is also messy… more than 95 percent of the data in the Digital Universe is unstructured, meaning its intrinsic meaning cannot be easily divined by simple computer programs…..”

This is creating an “information overload”. While for some the issue might be a nuisance, in the realm of research, knowledge management and global finance, “information overload” is a major and compounding problem for the experts and professionals we depend on to keep our physical and financial lives healthy and safe.

According to ai-one’s CEO Walt Diggelmann, conventional computing, i.e. “left brain” capability, cannot be forced to deliver “right brain” functions like pattern recognition and “sense making”. The behaviour of financial markets, terrorist organisations, and biological systems cannot be reduced to the elegant mathematical models of the physical world. ai-one’s new line of evolution can help “connect the dots”, whether we are trying to find a terrorist, build safer financial markets or understand the human genome.”

Understanding ai-one technology
One of the big visions of mankind is to build an equivalent to the human brain. At ai-one inc. the goal is to emulate the ability of the brain to think and to recreate that same ability in a computing system. By understanding the functions of the elements and pathways in the neocortex, technology could have the capability to process information and solve problems like the human brain.

Computers are generally based on the theories of Konrad Zuse and John von Neumann. These are formal data handling concepts. In order to build a biologically inspired machine with the same abilities as our brain, ai-one needed to replicate the biological structure and processes.

Cracking the neural code
The first key was to discover the genetic algorithm. This algorithm not only describes why and how the neurons fire, but also successfully interprets the actual meaning of the stimuli. The discovery of this algorithm and the creation of a data space within which the information could be stored lead to the development and introduction of ai-one, the name used to describe it’s technology.

ai-one consists of several genetic algorithms which enable the generic detection of recurrent patterns in all types of data, including but not limited to binary data, text, and specified formats. These patterns can be recursively nested in the input data and still found by the algorithms.  The recognition of these basic patterns is not based on a linear algorithm that tries to detect significant changes in the input data stream, instead the detection of these patterns is an inherent characteristic of the way the data is stored in ai-one.

ai-one uses a new kind of neural network, called a holosemantic data space (HSDS) where the incoming data is transferred into its generic representation as neural cells and synapses. By introducing the data into the HSDS, the inherent patterns are recognised by the interconnection of the resulting neural cells. The smallest amount of data processed by ai-one is called a data-quant. Depending on the application, a data-quant can be a binary digit, a pixel, a character in text, an atomic data value of a particular protocol/file format, etc.

The HSDS does not contain weights or thresholds within its neural cells, therefore the semantic context of the input data is established only by the interconnection over synapses of the cell cores. After data is introduced into the HSDS, the system produces no human viewable structure of the data, as it self-organizes the resulting cells and synapses. The communication with the HSDS is done by the stimulation of the neural cells (with a question or command), which then produces a human viewable structure that can be used for further processing of the data or used by an application.

ai-one employs a combination of formal and neural computing. This environment has specific features such as recognizing concepts, discovering intrinsic information structures and concept patterns with the concept of language, understanding Boolean logic.

As in the brain, time is an inherent dimension in the data, providing the connection to pragmatics. When something was learned by the system is a factor in understanding the semantic. As the meanings of concepts and structures evolve, ai-one learns from the new content but can also discern and track those changes over time.

Teaching, not programming
“ai-one, like a child, has to be fed information and taught what to do, not programmed”, says Manfred Hoffleisch, its inventor and Head of R&D. For ai-one to converse with a user, it has to learn basic knowledge and goals. In order to understand the semantic meaning and semantic association of words, where something is said and by whom is considered. The location where something is written defines the meaning and importance of the content. Once a given set of information has been loaded, ai-one learns from fulfilling specific tasks through interaction with experts and applications. The resulting knowledge base can be extracted and transferred to the next ai-one instance or a new generation of products.

Comparison with known ai approaches
Since there are no weights or thresholds for the calibration of the HSDS, it differs fundamentally from today’s known neural approaches. The main advantage is that the system doesn’t suffer under so called over-learning or under-learning conditions.

The quality of the result is no longer limited by the intelligence of the developers and the rules they create, but by the data itself. Prof. Ulrich Reimer, University of St. Gallen says “the HSDS uses a different paradigm based on context resulting in directed associations that provide better metrics, faster performance, and incremental learning from a smaller set of inputs”.
 
Product and value proposition
ai-one inc.’s (ai = autonomic intelligence) is used as an application programming interface (API) for the development of “best in class” products. It is incorporated into three API libraries, Ultra-Match™, Graphalizer™ and Topic-Mapper™. Ultra-Match is specialized for the field of imaging, Graphalizer for time related value chains and Topic-Mapper is specialized in the area of data and language (semantics). 

The libraries are delivered as a Software Development Kit (“SDK”) with training and custom development. Once an application embedded with ai-one is marketed, the Company receives licensing fees for the life of the product. Adoption of a powerful new technology must have a strong value proposition for the developer.
– Short learning curve & fast application development
– Binary data handling for speed (proprietary chip version for more speed)
– Architectural design flexibility using small (500KB) core program

Success with early adopters
After some dramatic results using ai-one on a laptop in a NIST competition, the Company was approached by the BKA (German counterpart to the FBI) to develop an application for crime scene shoe print matching and analysis. The outcome of this project was the commercial product, ASTIS™, which began selling in the EU and US forensic lab markets in 2010.

In a project with Swissport, ai-one was used to solve the problem of name verification and matching between airline passenger manifests and the no-fly list from the Department of Homeland Security. This application is being used by airports in Zurich, Frankfurt, and New York’s JFK.

Aggressive and innovative companies have worked with ai-one on a variety of new projects. Brainup, a semantic search tool for enterprise search engines, is hitting the market now. The CENDOO “butler” will launch later this year. A tool for searching, analysing, modeling and trading on financial patterns correlated with events monitored with text analytics is under development. Additionally, ai-one has partnered with universities on studies to assess the performance of ai-one technology.

The road ahead
The latest developments in the industry referred to as the “Semantic Wave” or Web 3.0, are a clear validation of this new direction. Microsoft’s Bing search engine, Googles acquisition of Metaweb, and Apple’s acquisition of SIRI at huge multiples underscore the value of effective semantic technology. With ai-one’s revolutionary technology, the best may be yet to come.

For more information contact Tom Marsh. Email: tm@ai-one.com; www.ai-one.com