
Cash Management Matters: Early Warning Signs and Systems for Financial Stability
Learn from Dr. Barbara S. Ismail about the key indicators and systems to watch for potential financial issues, including governmental issues, macroeconomic indicators, debt levels, and more, to ensure sound cash management practices.
Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.
The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.
You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.
The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Cash Management Matters 5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Dr. Barbara S. Ismail EVP, CMM Beirut, 4/29-5/1/13 1
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Early Warning Signs and Systems 1) 5) Information Gathering 4) Governmental Issues Macroeconomic Indicators 2) Currency 3) Debt 2
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 4) Governmental Issues 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 2) Currency 3) Debt Leading and Lagging Indicators Exporter order book and stability of flows Macro-economic indicators Re-insurance capacity Pricing ECAs on/off cover 3
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 4) Governmental Issues 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 2) Currency 3) Debt Macro Economic Factors: Country Level Credit rating of companies usually no higher than that of their home country Country monetary policy / regulatory environment impacts private companies What are some signs auguring problems in the future? o Trade balance o GDP trend o Country stock market performance o Government short and long dated bond yields o Credit default swap market indicators 4
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 4) Governmental Issues 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 2) Currency 3) Debt Macro Economic Factors: Country Level Fiscal Space This category assesses if the fiscal dynamics of a particular country are on a sustainable path. It estimates how close a country is to breaking through a level of debt that will cause it to default (i.e., the concept of proximity to distress), and how large of an adjustment is necessary in order to achieve an appropriate debt/GDP level in the future (i.e., the concept of distance from stability). External Finance Position The factors in this category measure how leveraged a country might be to macroeconomic trade and policy shocks outside of its control. Financial Sector Health This category considers the degree to which the financial sector of a country poses a threat to its creditworthiness, were the sector were to be nationalized, and estimates the likelihood that the financial sector may require nationalization. Willingness to Pay In this category we group factors which gauge if a country displays qualitative cultural and institutional traits that suggest both ability and willingness to pay off real debts. Blackrock Sovereign Risk Index 5
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 4) Governmental Issues 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 2) Currency 3) Debt Knock-On Effect Living in a bad neighborhood Financial panic in region Contagion o All happen quickly o Entire regions can be shunned financially o Panic itself leads to inability to transfer funds 6
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 4) Governmental Issues 2) Currency 3) Debt Currency Mismatch Currency pegged to foreign currency for an extended period of time Exchange rate stability may mask underlying imbalance Little room to maneuver currency valuation or trade policy: o Foreign exchange window o Domestic Interest Rates o Artificial exchange rates/devaluation 7
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 4) Governmental Issues 2) Currency 3) Debt Affecting the Value of Currency Foreign Exchange Market Currency Valuation Domestic Interest Rates Devaluation of Currency 8
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 4) Governmental Issues 2) Currency 3) Debt Currency Mismatch (continued) High amount of borrowing in foreign currency Usually avoiding high domestic interest rates Ignoring foreign currency risk, often due to long term stable exchange rate, sometimes actual pegging of rate to a hard currency (Dollar, Euro, Pound) Imports denominated in foreign currency Exports denominated in foreign currency 9
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 4) Governmental Issues 3) Debt 2) Currency Debt: Total and Short-Term A country with high foreign currency liabilities is vulnerable to any fluctuation in the exchange rate, affecting its ability to pay in foreign currency Defending the peg is expensive Not just total debt, but more specifically, short term debt, which is where the crunch comes High % of short term debt to total debt 10
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 4) Governmental Issues 3) Debt 2) Currency Asset and Liability Mismatch Credit scarcity Liquidity pressure Cost of financing pressure 11
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 4) Governmental Issues 3) Debt 2) Currency Debt and Currency Mismatch 1997 Country Short Term Debt/Intl Reserves Short Term Debt/Total Debt South Korea 3.0 67% Indonesia 1.6 24% Thailand 1.1 46% Philippines 0.7 19% Malaysia 0.6 39% 12
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 4) Governmental Issues 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 3) Debt 2) Currency Business / Governmental Signs Change of regulations for exporter s sector Withdrawal of government support Health hazards Environmental hazards Political change o Coup/Overthrow o Revolution o Breakdown of Civil society Natural disasters 13
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 4) Governmental Issues 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 3) Debt 2) Currency Weak Financial Sector Financial Institutions: banks, finance companies, mortgage companies, with explicit or assumed government guarantees Little authority over credit process crony capitalism Moral hazard 14
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 4) 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 3) Debt 2) Currency Governmental Issues On the Ground Information Capture: Pro-active and Re-active Recap Exporters Order Book Buyers Government bodies including central banks, embassies, ministry of defence Fellow Aman Union members Other ECAs: e.g., Prague Club, Berne Union Members, MIGA directly or indirectly Re-insurers/brokers Commercial Banks suffering delays and or discrepancy resolution issues re documentary or letter of credit payments Credit intelligence agencies and market bodies News via traditional and emerging channels e.g. twitter,facebook 15
5) Early Warning Signs and Systems Cash Management Matters 4) 5) Information Gathering 1) Macroeconomic Indicators 3) Debt 2) Currency Governmental Issues Information Gathering Web Exporters (Order Flow)/ Commercial Banks Aman Union Members/Berne Union/ MIGA/ Prague Club Importers (Government Regulation) ECA Governmental Agencies (Embassies, Central Bank, Ministry of Trade) Different media; traditional and non-traditional/ Online Sources/Twitter/Facebook 16