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Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar
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Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Asia Financial CrisisBy: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar

Page 2: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

HistoryBefore 1997, Asia was attractive

By developing countries

High interest rates

“Asian economic miracle”F

our Asian Tigers

Page 3: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IntroductionJuly 1997

Countries most affected by the Asian Financial Crisis.

Page 4: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IntroductionMost affected:

IndonesiaSouth KoreaThailandHong KongMalaysiaLaoPhilippines

Page 5: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IntroductionLeast affected

People’s Republic of China IndiaTaiwanSingaporeVietnam

Page 6: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IntroductionThailand

Thai bahtReal estateBurden of foreign debt

Southeast Asia and Japan Slumping currenciesDevalued stock marketSteep rise in private debt.

Page 7: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IMF Role$40 billion program to stabilize the

currencies of South Korea, Thailand, and Indonesia.

Bailouts (rescue packages) for the most affected economies to enable affected nations to avoid default.

Structural adjustment package

Page 8: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

SAPcut back on government spending to

reduce deficits,

allow insolvent banks and financial institutions to fail and aggressively raise interest rates.

The reasoning was that these steps would restore confidence in the nations’ fiscal solvency, penalize insolvent companies, and protect currency values.

Page 9: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IMF and High Interest Rates

to attain the chain objectives of tightened money supply

discouraged currency speculation

stabilized exchange rate

curbed currency depreciation

ultimately contained inflation.

Page 10: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Consequencessignificant macro-level effects

including sharp reductions in values of currencies

stock markets

other asset prices of several Asian countries.

The nominal US dollar GDP of ASEAN fell by US$9.2 billion in 1997 and $218.2 billion in 1998.

Page 11: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

The Currency exchange rate per USD

June 1997 compare to July 1998

Thai baht: 24.5 to 41

Indonesian rupiah: 2,380 to 14,150

Philippine peso: 26.3 to 42

Malaysian ringgit: 2.5 to 4.1

South Korean won: 850 to 1,290

Page 12: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Thailand

Page 13: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Thailandfrom 85-96 Thailand grew 9% per year

Highest economic growth rate

Inflation was also low (3.4%-5.7%)

Baht value was 25 to the US Dollar

Page 14: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

ThailandMay 14-15, 1997 the baht faced very bad

speculative attacks

In June, Prime Minister Yongchaiyudh refused to devalue the baht

Thai government failed to defend the Baht, starting the crisis

Baht lost more then half it’s value

Thai stock market dropped 75%

Page 15: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

ThailandAugust 11, 1997, IMF unveiled $17 billion rescue

package

August 20, 1997 IMF approved another $3.9 billion bailout package

Rumors that former Prime Minister profited from the devaluation

Finally recovered by 2001, paid off IMF debt in 2003

Page 16: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Indonesia

Page 17: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IndonesiaIndonesia was doing good in June 1997

Low inflation$900+ Million trade surplus$20 + Billion foreign exchange reservesGood banking sector

However, many corporations were borrowing in U.S. Dollars

In July 1997, Indonesia widened the rupiah tradin band from 8%-12%

Page 18: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IndonesiaOn August 14, 1997 the managed floating

exchange regime was replaced by a free-floating system, causing the rupiah to drop more

IMF created a rescue package of $23 Billion, but didn’t help

In Sept they hit a all time low, Moody’s rated Indonesia’s long-term debt to “junk bond” status

More effects were felt in Nov when the summer’s hits were felt in the corporate books

Page 19: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

IndonesiaIn Feb, the President got rid of the governor of

the Bank of Indonesia, but this wasn’t enough and he was eventually forced to resign

EffectsRupiah was 200 to 1 USD, afterward hit 18,000 to

1 USDLost 13.5% of GDP

Page 20: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

South Korea

Page 21: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

South KoreaLarge corporations were funding big expansions,

however failed due to excess debt

Moody’s lowered their credit rating from A1 to B2

Seoul stock exchange dropped 4% on Nov 7, 7% on Nov 8, and 7.2% on Nov 24

In 1998 Hyundia took over Kia Motors, Samsung was dissolved, and Daewoo was sold to American GM

Currency dropped from 800 per dollar to 1,700

National debt-GDP ratio went from 13%-30%

Page 22: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Hong Kong

Page 23: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Hong KongAfter UK gave control of Hong Kong to China the

Hong Kong dollar was under speculative pressure

Authorities spent more then US $1 Billion to defend local currency

Had more then US $80 billion in foreign reserves

Stock markets became volatile

In Oct the Hang Seng Index dropped 23%

In Aug 98, interest rates jumped from 8%-23% overnight, and even 500% once

Page 24: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Hong KongThe Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA)

setup a system to establish rates, however speculators were taking advantage of this by short selling shares.

HKMA wound up buying HK$120 billion worth of shares in various companies to combat this

Started selling those share in 2001, profiting HK$30 billion

Page 25: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Malaysia

Page 26: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

MalaysiaIn July 1997, the Malaysian ringgit jumped

overnight from 8% to over 40%

Ratings had fallen from investment grade to junk

Lost 50% of value, from 2.50 to 3.80 to the dollar

Output of real economy declinedConstruction dropped 23%Manufacturing 9%Agriculture 5.9%GDP 6.2%

Page 27: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

MalaysiaIMF aid was refused

Various task forces were formed to fix economy

By 2005 had a surplus of US$14.04 billion

Page 28: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Singapore

Page 29: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

SingaporeSingapore dipped into a short recession

Government kept very active management to ensure security

Government programs were put forward

Made no attempt to help capital markets, instead allowed a 60% drop, however within a year fully recovered and continued to grow

Page 30: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Less Affected CountriesChina, The US, and Japan were very strong

economies and were able to survive

China held most of it’s foreign investments were in factories rather then securities

U.S. didn’t collapse, but on Oct 27,1997 the Dow Jones fell 554 points (7.2%)

Japan was affected because the economy is so prominent (yen fell to 147), but it was world’s largest holder of currency reserves so it bounced back quickly

Page 31: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

ConclusionMany businesses collapsed and millions of

people fell below the poverty line

Indonesia, South Korea, and Thailand were most affected

Heavy U.S. investment shifted from Thailand to Europe

Many countries pushed for corporate governing to avoid problems later

Investors were reluctant to lend to developing countries

Page 32: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

ReferencesKaufman, GG., Krueger, TH., Hunter, WC. (1999)

The Asian Financial Crisis: Origins, Implications and Solutions. Springer.

Weisbrot, Mark (August 2007). Ten Years After: The Lasting Impact of the Asian Financial Crisis

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997_Asian_Financial_Crisis

Tecson, Marcelo L. (2009), "IMF Must Renounce Its Weapon of Mass Destruction: High Interest Rates"

Page 33: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Any Questions?

Page 34: Asia Financial Crisis By: Phong Van and Sandeep Kumar.

Thank You