Bankers in Denial

Denial is a ubiquitous psychological defense mechanism. It involves the repression of , unpleasant information, and -inducing . Judging by the German press, the is in a state of denial regarding the waning health of its and the dwindling of its system.

Commerzbank, Germany’s fourth largest lender, saw its shares decimated by more than 80 percent to a 19-year low, having increased its -loss provisions to cover -submerged east German debts. Faced with a precipitous drop in net profit, it reacted reflexively by sacking yet more staff. The shares of many other German trade below book value.

Dresdner - Germany’s third largest private establishment - already trimmed an unprecedented one fifth of its workforce this year alone. Other leading German - such as Deutsche and Hypovereinsbank - resorted to panic selling of equity , real-estate, non-core activities, and securitized to patch up their ailing . Deutsche , for instance, unloaded its US leasing and custody businesses.

On September 19, Moody’s changed its outlook for Germany’s largest from “stable” to “negative”. In a scathing remark, it said:

“The rating agency stated several times already that difficult that are hurting the banking in Germany come on top of the legacy of past strategies that were less focused on strengthening the ’ recurring earning power. Indeed, the German private-sector , as a group, remain among the lowest-performing large European .”

Last week, Fitch Ratings, the international agency, followed suit and downgraded the long-term , short- term, and individual ratings of Dresdner and of Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank (HVB).

These were only the last in a series of negative outlooks pertaining to German insurers and . It is ironic that Fitch cited the “bear equity (that) have taken their toll not only on results but also on to private customers, the fund management and on .”

Germans used to be immune to the exchange and its lures until they were caught in the frenzied global equities bubble. Moody’s observes wryly that “a material and stable retail franchise in its , even if more modestly profitable, can and does represent a reliable line of defence against temporary difficulties in and .”

The -laden and scandal-ridden Neuer Markt - Europe’s answer to America’s NASDAQ - as well as the SMAX exchange for small-caps were shut down last week, the former having a staggering 96 percent of its value since March 2000. This compared to Britain’s , which “only” half its worth. Even Britain’s infamous FTSE-TechMARK faded by a “mere” 88 percent.

Only 1 company floated on the Neuer Markt this year - compared to more than 130 two years ago. In an unprecedented show of “no-”, more than 40 companies withdrew their listings last year. The Duetsche Boerse promised to create two new classes of shares on the Frankfurt Exchange. It belatedly vowed to introduce more and openness to .

have been accused by irate customers of helping to list inappropriate firms and providing fraudulent advisory services. Court cases are pending against the likes of Commerzbank. These may dash the ’s hopes to move from retail into .

To further compound matters, Germany is in the throes of a tsunami of insolvencies. This long-overdue restructuring, though beneficial in the long run, couldn’t have transpired at a worse time, as far as the go. Massive provisions and write-downs have voraciously consumed their base even as operating have plummeted. This double whammy more than eroded the of their painful cost-cutting .

German - not unlike Japanese ones - maintain incestuous with their clients. When it finally collapsed in April, Philip Holzmann AG owed to Deutsche with whom it had a cordial working for more than a century. But the also owned 19.6 percent of the ailing construction behemoth and chaired its supervisory board - the relics of previous shambolic rescue packages.

Germany competes with Austria in over-branching, with in souring , and with Russia in overhead. According to the German daily, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the cost to income ratio of German is 90 percent. Mass and - voluntary or enforced - are unavoidable, especially in the cooperative, , and savings sectors, concludes the paper. The process is a decade-old. More than 1500 vanished from the German landscape in this period. Another 2500 remain making Germany still one of the most over-banked countries in the world.

Moody’s don’t put much in the cost-cutting of the German . Added competition and a “more realistic pricing” of and services are far more important to their shriveling . But “that light is not yet visible at the end of the tunnel … and challenging conditions are likely to persist for the time being.”

The woeful state of Germany’s system reflects not only Germany’s economic malaise - “The Economist” called it the “sick man” of Europe - but its failed to imitate and emulate the inimitable centers of London and New-York. It is a rebuke to the misguided that capitalistic - and - can be transplanted in their entirety across cultural barriers. It is incontrovertible that - and the core competencies it spawns - still matter.

When German insurers and , for instance, branched into faddish businesses - such as the Internet and mobile telephony - they did so in vacuum. Germany has few venture capitalists and American-style entrepreneurs. This misguided resulted in a frightening erosion of the strength and base of the intrepid .

In a sense, Germany - and definitely its eastern Lander - is a in . -aversion is giving way to -seeking in the forms of in equities and derivatives and venture . Family ownership is gradually supplanted by exchange listings, imported management, and mergers, acquisitions, and takeovers - both friendly and hostile. The social contracts regarding employment, , the role of the trade unions, the balance between and pecuniary , and the carving up of - are being re-written.

Global integration means that, as sovereignty is transferred to supranational entities, the cozy between the and the German government on all levels is over. Last October, Hans Eichel, the German minister, announced OECD-inspired anti- laundering that are likely to secrecy and client anonymity and, thus, hurt the German - sometimes murky - banking . Erstwhile rampant government intervention is now mitigated or outright prohibited by the .

Thus, German Laender are forced, by the European Commission, to partly abolish, three years hence, their to the Landesbanken (regional development ) and Sparkassen (thrifts). German to Austria and central and east Europe will provide only temporary respite. As the EU enlarges and digests, at the very least, the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland in 2004-5 - German franchises there will come under the uncompromising remit of the Commission once more.

In general, Germans fared worse than Austrians in their extraterritorial banking ventures. Less cosmopolitan, with less exposure to the parts of the former Habsburg Empire, and struggling with a stagnant domestic - German found it difficult to turn central European around as successfully as the likes of the Austrian Erste did. They did make into structured in north Europe and the USA - but these seem to be random excursions rather a studied shift of emphasis.

On the bright side, Moody’s - though it maintains a negative outlook on German banking - noted, in November 2001, the ’ “intrinsic strength and diversified operating base”. reform and the hesitant introduction of private are also cause for restrained .

Pursuant to the purchase of Drsedner by Allianz, Moody’s welcome the of bancassurance and Allfinanz - services one stop shops. German are also positioned to reap the of their considerable in e-commerce, , and the restructuring of their branch networks.

The on 1929-1936 may have started with the meltdown of , especially that of - but it was exacerbated by the of the concatenated system. The is even more integrated. The of one or more major German can result in dire consequences and not only in the zone. The IMF says as much in its “World Economic Outlook” published on September 25.

The Germans deny this - and the diagnosis - vehemently. Bundesbank President Ernst Welteke - a board member of the European Central - spent the better part of last week implausibly denying any crisis in German banking. These are mere “structural problems in the weak phase”, he told a press conference. Nothing can’t solve.

It is this consistent refusal to confront reality that is the most worrisome. In the short to medium term, German are likely to outlive the storm. In the process, they will lose their iron grip on the domestic as customer loyalty dissipates and competition increases. If they do not confront their plight with and open-mindedness, they may well be reduced to glorified back-office extensions of the global giants.

About The Author

Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West the East. He is a for Central Europe , PopMatters, and eBookWeb , a United Press International (UPI) Senior Correspondent, and the editor of and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory Bellaonline, and Suite101 .

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

Visit Sam’s Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com; palma@unet.com.mk

Using Technical Analysis To Profit In Forex Trading

There are two basic ways to approach the analysis of the : Technical analysis and . Someone who is using a fundamental analytical approach will look at the economic , political events, a of , and so on to try to predict moves. What we will examine is technical analysis, or the use of historical in to predict future moves in the . We will also look at the tools used for technical analysis.

The three major assumptions underlying technical analysis are:

1 - All forces are taken into in . can affect the price of a . Some of these factors would be , political happenings, natural disasters, seasonal and even the . Technical analysis, however, does not to take these into because the has already done that. Rather, a technical analyst is concerned with the actual movements of the , not with the reasons for the movement.

2 - There are observable trends in prices movements. There are known patterns that follow predictable paths.

3 - There are historical trends in . Over a century of data collection has shown that interacts with events in predictable ways. Thus, when are similar in the , the same patterns will show up.

Technical Analysis: Is It Necessary?

in the usually use technical analysis most heavily, though they may supplement it with . Technical analysis has the huge of being applicable to a wide range of and simultaneously. To properly do requires a good of events and conditions in a certain so the number of any particular can analyze by the is necessarily limited.

Technical analysis can seem so complicated to the beginner that they may be tempted to wonder if it is really needed. The is that all requires a and technical analysis is a proven way to set by predicting movements. Of course, no or method is always successful, which is one many also do some as a supplement.

USing In Technical Analysis

Charts lie at the of technical analysis and you will find a good selection available from any online . Not only are the charts updated constantly, , but they can be viewed in a of ways. You can see movement over various of time, broken down into scales, and with various analytical overlays applied. With the provided you can see the broad picture over a long period or zoom into the most minute detail. The basic is free from most online brokers but there may be a fee for the more professional, in-depth, information.

Sometimes the charts are a built-in part of the ’s package. Alternately, they may be available on the ’s website.

Practice, or , accounts are available from most brokers on their website. These allow you to use the charts and tools of that particular to learn the techniques of following charts, noticing and learning about trends and studying movements. Nothing can substitute for this valuable period of becoming intimately familiar with charts and behavior.

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How To Trade Forex Technical Analysis.Advice

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