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Asian Economy

'Abandon hope, all ye who enter ...'
By Aileen Saw

HONG KONG - During the 1997 Asian financial crisis and even before, the US dollar had always been the safe-haven currency du jour in Asia. Over the past few years, Asian countries have taken that relationship to the next level: US dollar-denominated structured investments, a recently popular, risky and lucrative financial animal.
To many in Asia, America remains the land of the free market movements. And the larger, more liquid Asian market for USD-denominated structures means more hedge counter-parties, meaning more banks are willing to quote USD-denominated structured investments. This means competition is keener, margins leaner - all good for the Asian investor.

As Ng Whye Keong, interest rate structurer at Fortis Bank Hong Kong, put it, "Huge demand for these kinds of structures in Asia and attractive fees for banks willing to warehouse such exotic risk result in many new entrants. As many banks model and warehouse these structures, the demand and supply means margins are lower. The once hugely popular daily range accrual structure on LIBOR [London Inter-Bank Offer Rate, the rate at which banks charge each other on short-term money] is now trading like a vanilla swap [a plain and simple instrument] - almost."

Keong was among the very few willing to speak on the record about structured investments, mainly because those who sell them, while ethically bound to explain their high risks to potential clients, are not fond of trumpeting their hazards to the world at large.

Indeed, Range Accrual and Callable Range Accrual notes (as well as the Target Redemption Notes and the Constant Maturity Swap Notes) are widely available at almost every private retail bank. They can be found on most bank websites, including those of DBS Bank, OCBC Bank, United Overseas Bank (UOB), to name a few. Because the notes have become so fashionable, banks are hiring structuring experts to set them up.

We bid farewell to the old faithfuls, Callable Range Accrual structures among them, that have reassured us through the era of the single-percentage-point USD benchmark rate and, going forward, we say hello to the new-fangled products that are just waiting in the wings to take the investment world by storm.

During the past few years of troubled times, with lean pickings in the interest rate department, what was an investor to do? Inflation in the US remained about 2-3% yearly, while most Asian countries (with the exception of the Hong Kong territory) fared little better. Until June 30, however, the Federal Reserve Board (Fed) overnight benchmark rate (the rate at which banks lend each other US dollars overnight) hovered at a meager 1%. Which meant your annual USD fixed-deposit was earning you in the vicinity of 1-3%. Which then meant, after inflation, your fixed deposit was effectively paying you next to nothing.

Tiny quarter-point rate hike has profound impact
Then the June 30 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)meeting loomed and Wall Street traders did much nervous hamster-wheel running for the two weeks before that portentous date. Then, in the deathly hush of an entire world market, holding its breath, Fed chair Alan Greenspan announced a whole quarter-point rate hike, leaving investors with all of a benchmark rate of 1.25% to digest.

Not that much to go on, you might say, not much food for thought; but that teeny 25 basis point (bp) hike is the foremost breeze heralding the winds of change for investment products. Or the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, if you buy The Inferno's warning about the dangers ahead. Here's why.

In the era of the uni-point benchmark rate, investors worked at beating the devaluation of their assets due to inflation. But in the wonderful world of structured investment products, having to take on more risk in order to have more return is as basic a law to investing as Newton's Law of Gravity is to physics. With the US economy rife with Enron-isms and consumer spending in a funk, investors both in the US and in Asia were less keen on higher yield (read: higher risk) investments. Thus began another hey-day for the interest rate note family, with all its close cousins.

In the land of the interest rate note investors punt on where interest rates will go, receiving an enhanced yield if they are right (usually nothing if they are wrong - the most popular interest rate notes are principal-protected). If the Range Accrual Note was the dependable matriarch of the family, then her daughter the Callable Range Accrual Note must be the mother of all interest rate notes. Investors clung to both, in times of need for more yield.

Taking a step back to get to know these structures better, interest rate range accrual notes offer a coupon often substantially higher than a fixed deposit. To partake of that coupon you needed to be right about where a particular benchmark rate, typically the six-month USD LIBOR was headed. You were paid a portion of said substantially-higher-than-fixed-deposit coupon based on how many days the six-month USD LIBOR fixed within a predetermined range. On days when the rate fell outside the range, no coupon would accrue to you (hence the name range accrual - your coupon accrued to you for every day the rate remained within the range.)

In other words, if you were consistently right about the six-month USD LIBOR and every single day of the coupon period the rate fixed within the range, you would get the entire substantially-higher-than-fixed-deposit coupon. Since you wanted the LIBOR rate to remain obediently in your predetermined range, this product was perfect when you thought rates were not heading north any time soon.

Add greater returns - and more risk
Then someone had the bright idea of making that substantially-higher-than-fixed-deposit coupon even higher. How? By adding more risk to the existing structure - by making the note callable. Thus the Callable Range Accrual Note was born, where, for an even higher potential return, the issuer, typically the bank selling the note, could call the note back at leisure, returning the investor's principal earlier than expected. What was the additional risk? Reinvestment. Still an acceptable risk to most, given the note would be called back at par. But if your note is doing too well (read: You made a good call, your note is going to pay you all or most of that substantially-higher-than-fixed-deposit coupon), the issuer has the right to call the note and give you back your money.

We can see why the range accrual arrangement was a marriage of convenience between savvy investor and not-too-risky product during the era of the low interest rate. Since the product was often principal-protected, the worst that could happen to an investor was that he or she wouldn't get paid any return if she or he were wrong about the benchmark rate. Not exactly a very likely possibility with Greenspan and his posse so famously eager to exorcise "an unwelcome fall in the level of inflation" (read: deflation) a while ago. Certainly all the more unlikely during the cut-happy days of the Fed, when Feddies observed Central Bank officials frantically sawing away at the benchmark rate in an effort to jump-start the stalled US economy. Add to that shot of sweet the fact the investor appeared to be gambling an opportunity cost (the same money in the investment could otherwise be placed in fixed deposit) that was just a couple hundred basis points above zero anyway.

One small step for the Fed
With one little 25bp hike the Fed has taken its first baby step along the long road to Hike City, and herein lies that rude awakening, the end of that honeymoon period for investor and product: Interest rates are not going to remain low for the foreseeable future.

Furthermore, since the investor is gambling only his potential interest, with the low interest rate levels, just how much can an investor place on the table in order to purchase the derivatives that will give him or her this wonderful substantially-higher-than-fixed-deposit coupon? Therein lies the rub: range accruals typically have to be fairly long-dated (five years or longer) before you get an attractive potential coupon.

If interest rates do not remain low as punted on, the investor could be stuck with an investment that pays low or no coupon for the long life of the note. If the investor bought a callable version, he or she would also be assured of getting their money back early if they are not stuck with a low-paying long-life note.

Hello, next-to-nothing-paying fixed deposit scenario. Only, investors don't often place five-year-or-longer fixed deposits, do they? So, either abandon hope, all ye who enter the inferno of the structured note - or hope you're right.

Aileen Saw has worked on the structured product desks in the Treasury & Capital Markets Departments of Overseas Union Bank (OUB), now a part of United Overseas Bank (UOB), and Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) in Singapore.

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Aug 31, 2004



 



 

 
   
         
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