Thursday, January 24, 2008

Interest Rate Cuts & Cash Flow

It was common knowledge that a US interest rate cut was in the works. Instead of waiting for their scheduled meeting next week, the Federal Reserve cut the overnight lending rate on 22 January 2008 (US time), 23 January 2008 (Hong Kong time) to 3.5% from 4.25% and cut the discount rate (i.e. the rate at which the Fed lends money to commercial banks) to 4% from 4.75%.

The Fed wants to be seen acting aggressively and proactively. But it’s beginning to sound like wishful thinking. Global stock markets, in Asia and Europe went in 2 different reactions: Asia, re-bounded on 23 January 2008. Hong Kong in particular, soared over 2000 points after slumping over 2000 points the day before. But, at the time of writing this, Europe and the US are sliding.

There’s no shortage of suggested reasons: more US sub-prime leakage, more US housing slumps, more US consumers defaulting on credit card debt, more US manufacturing slowdown, more weakening of the US Dollar, more US and global unease on commercial credit and the authenticity of bond insurers. They’re all related. Putting it another way, it’s just another stack of derivatives.

But 2 points need to be made.

First, interest rates are being seen as both the cause and the cure. The sub-prime mortgage fiasco was due to spiraling Adjustable Rate Mortgages that screwed US mortgagors into a colossal wall of mass defaults, triggering a complex global inter- bank credit panic which is still lingering and might get worse. Sub-prime lending went on in full view and knowledge of the US Federal Reserve which encouraged, and turned a blind eye to, what was unfolding.

Now, the US Federal Reserve is slashing interest rates as the simple solution to stimulate economic growth across the board.

Second, even if a full-blown US recession is avoided, the depth and global scope of the suspicious sub-prime derivatives has yet to be accurately measured – or estimated. Whilst central banks around the world stand ready to pump funds to ensure liquidity, a potentially more serious issue is the solvency of individual finance companies holding worthless bonds derived from sub-prime products. The first shots have already been fired with 2 US monoline insurers singled out – and whose credit rating was promptly dumped.

What does this mean for SMEs? Watch your debt exposure – both long term and short term. Tighten up your incoming cash flow because inflation is kicking in and your Accounts Payable will rise. If SAW is right and corporate solvency is the next major issue, SMEs need to be aware that even if the accounts indicate the business is profitable, it can still be insolvent. Cash flow, not the cost of money, is the name of the game. Don't expect banks to be overly-thrilled to lend to SMEs, even if interest rates have fallen. The control of your Receivables and the credit-worthiness of your debtors will save you or sink you.

© 2008 Sanjeev Aaron Williams & Cashwerks All Rights Reserved

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