Have you are learn anything from the Business Leaders and Politicians currently at Davos ? I've been catching them on and off on CNBC, CNN & E-mail alerts and I've not heard anything that I've not heard before ...
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Singapore Says Wealth Funds May Play Bigger Role in Markets By David Yong
Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Institutional investors, including sovereign wealth funds,
may play a bigger role in stabilizing the global financial system as leveraged banks and hedge funds stumble, the Government of Singapore Investment Corp. said.
“With many key debt and equity real estate markets pushed to extreme under-valuations, institutional investors like pension funds and SWFs will play an important role in the stabilization and eventual recovery of asset markets,†said Tony Tan, deputy chairman and executive director of GIC. “Real money investors, particularly un-leveraged global institutional investors, would become relatively more important players†in
bank recapitalization efforts, he said.
Tan made the comments in a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland yesterday. A copy of the speech was made available in Singapore. GIC manages more than $100 billion of the city-state foreign-exchange reserves.
Global financial institutions have written down $1.06 trillion in assets and credit losses after the collapse of the U.S. subprime mortgage market and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.
Hedge funds’ assets slumped 48 percent to $988.4 billion in 2008 because of investment losses and client withdrawals, according to TrimTabs Investment Research and BarclayHedge.
“Leveraged financial institutions have been significantly damaged by the disruptions in funding markets and the bursting of the housing bubble,†Tan said in the speech. “Similarly, hedge funds and private equity players will find their activity and growth more constrained.â€
UBS, Citigroup
Investors, including SWFs, with their long-term investment horizons, could be important sources of demand for undervalued assets, thus steadying financial and household sector losses and restoring credit creation and demand in the economy, he said.
“Given their large asset size, SWFs would have to step up to the plate in the global financial restructuring, †said Song Seng Wun, a Singapore-based regional economist at CIMB GK Securities Ltd. “It’s a positive for their bargaining power. The downside is that we don’t know how long or how deep this situation will be.â€
Singapore’s state-owned GIC and Temasek Holdings Pte, each managing more than $100 billion, have
invested about $24 billion in the recapitalization of UBS AG, Citigroup Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co. in the past 14 months even as the finance ministry said this week the worst of the credit crunch is yet to come.
( Do you see the Diversification ? They are all in the Financial Industry

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Capital Injections Governments in the U.S., U.K. and across Europe have injected capital into their banks to ensure that lending to companies and consumers doesn’t freeze up. European Union regulators this week approved France’s proposal to increase its funding for recapitalization of banks to 11 billion euros ($14.1 billion). Ireland last month said it would inject 2 billion euros in Allied Irish and Bank of Ireland.
As governments and central banks end up taking over or buying up large swathes of assets from distressed owners, GIC’s Tan said the markets risk being saddled with over-regulation that stifles efficiency and discipline.
“As the financial system and economy stabilize, governments will have to eventually divest their asset holdings,†he said. “It’s in the interest of governments to retain the confidence of investors by keeping their economies and markets open, competitive and attractive to private investors.â€
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"