The markets can handle some uncertainty, but the lead-up to the Fed’s eventual announcement on tapering may be stressing the system
Friday, August 26, 2011
Recent issue about halal and haram in forex
Financial information gap in India.
In the financial world, information is money. And before we decide to invest, we need to learn more about the company in order to make an educated decision. Heckyl, an Indian-based start-up, helps to make financial information and fact-finding about a stock, FOREX or commodity really simple. It’s basically an investment help tool that aggregates content in real-time from social platforms (Twitter, YouTube, blogs), online news publishers, and analyst reports. (Screenshots below)
The tool is specifically built for brokerage firms in India and we’re told that there are about 20 of them serving over 18 million investors in the country. Users can access these information for free through the brokerage firm’s online platform. There is also an option for them to gain additional insights if they pay a monthly subscriber fee. The brokerage firm and Heckyl will do a revenue share at 20:80 ratio.
Heckyl has so far partnered with three brokerage firms which gives them a good 500,000 users head start. It is growing very quickly and I was told that the one million users milestone is soon approaching as well.
That’s a quite a few users to start. But I was curious why investors in India didn’t just use Yahoo Finance when doing research? The founders told me that many layman investors do use Yahoo Finance but also said that unfortunately Yahoo doesn’t have much information about the Indian financial market (see below).
Logging on to different sites when researching a stock is cumbersome and slow. And the expensive Bloomberg terminal obviously isn’t something that every layman investor can afford. So Heckyl came in to narrow the information gap in the financial market in India.
The team looks solid too. All four Heckyl’s founders used to work as banking engineers at Merrill Lynch prior to taking on this entrepreneur route. The folks built the product in the last two year while they paid for bread and bills with their own savings and a small investment from a friend. With the product now ready, the team is hunting for brokerage firms to work with. They added:
The partnership with the first brokerage firm took us about three months to seal the deal. The second one took about two months and the third one about one month. It gets easier as more firms come on board.
From what I have understood, Heckyl is looking to add a killer feature very soon. There should be some good news coming from the team as they seek for more mega partnerships and investment money in order to scale faster, and expanding to markets like the U.S, U.K, China, and Singapore.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
snippet
london riot ? does riot effected to financial market.
The riots that turned London and some other English cities upside down this week have undermined that model, raising questions about the sustainability of spending cuts and a widening gap between rich and poor.
From many of the dealing rooms and offices in the skyscrapers of Canary Wharf, traders, wealth managers and analysts could see billowing smoke in several directions this week as rioters torched buildings and looted shops.
Order was restored in the capital at least on Tuesday night with a massive show of force by police, but they too face the drastic spending cuts that will affect everything from the military to social benefits and inner-city services.
Britain's coalition government says it remains committed both to cutting a record budget deficit and staying in power until elections due by 2015.
Investors have always had mixed feelings about austerity. They want the British government to tackle the huge deficit to slow its accumulation of debt. But they also fear that cuts will push the economy back into recession, hitting corporate earnings and tax income while raising social spending costs and actually pushing the country deeper into debt.
Nevertheless, they had generally compared British determination to cut the deficit favorably with the indecision or infighting paralyzing much policy-making in the euro zone and United States. Now, they are not so sure.
"If you'd asked me at the weekend, I would have said that with the problems of the euro zone and U.S., (Britain's) sterling (currency) might be poised to become an appealing safe haven," said Simon Derrick, head of foreign exchange at the London branch of Bank of New York Mellon.
As he spoke, from his dealing room Derrick could still see smoke on the horizon from a distant burning warehouse. "This has certainly shaken that... it's probably still too soon to say what it means for policy, but it certainly makes austerity look more difficult."
The short-term market impact looks to have been limited. Derrick said U.S. media coverage of the London riots prompted a modest sell-off in the pound late on Tuesday, but markets have largely shrugged off the violence.
Indeed, the cost of insuring Britain's debt in the credit default swaps market edged below that ofGermany this week for the first time -- with investors clearly believing worries that Germany might have to bail out Italy and Spain outstripped concerns about Britain.
After unexpected uprisings shook the Middle East and North Africa earlier this year, wealth managers say billions were transferred to London in particular as nervous regional leaders and business elites raced to move their wealth to safety.
Attracted by a reputation for stability and the opportunity for a luxury lifestyle -- as well as a strong legal system and systems allowing them to conceal their wealth through trusts and other structures -- they bought property and other assets.
But this week's events have undermined London's safe haven appeal and some analysts expect louder calls for both tighter controls on unfettered wealth and a rethinking of planned cuts.
Some countries such as Latvia and Ireland have pushed through massive cuts with relatively little unrest but not everyone can pull off the same trick. The British riots could point to similar risks in other European and U.S. cities as cuts start to bite.
ONLY THE BEGINNING?
"I don't think the implications of this have been fully thought through or accepted yet," said Pepe Egger, western Europe analyst for London-based consultancy Exclusive Analysis.
"What we have here is the result of decades of growing divisions and marginalization, but austerity will almost certainly make it worse. Yes, the police can restore control with massive force but that is not sustainable either in the long term. You have to accept that this may happen again."
Speaking to Reuters late on Tuesday, looters and other local people in east London pointed to the wealth gap as the underlying cause, also blaming what they saw as police prejudice and a host of recent scandals.
Spending cuts were now hitting the poorest hardest, they said, and after tales of politicians claiming excessive expenses, alleged police corruption and bankers getting rich it was their turn to take what they wanted [ID:nL6E7J91RM].
"They set the example," said one youth after riots in the London district of Hackney. "It's time to loot."
Unsurprisingly, the criminality produced a swift popular backlash. Vigilante groups patrolled some streets, while media and social networks were deluged with demands for tough action.
This itself could pose one of the greatest initial challenges to spending cuts. Prime Minister David Cameron made it clear all necessary resources would be available to the police, but the government also says it will still stick to its plans to cut police spending by roughly a fifth.
POLICE CUTS CHALLENGED
That contrasts with the 1980s approach of Margaret Thatcher, who slashed public spending and took on trade unions in the face of unrest but plowed money into the police and military.
Support for police cuts is dwindling. London Mayor Boris Johnson, a leading member of the ruling Conservative party, called on Wednesday for them to be watered down.
Analyst Louise Taggart at security consultancy AKE said that in time urban unrest worries could make it harder to cut other programs as well, including sorely needed education and community services. It went well beyond Britain, she said.
"Across Europe, we've already seen some incidence of civil unrest," she said, saying it would almost inevitably impact policy. "There's definitely a likelihood that similar scenes might erupt when austerity cuts really start to be felt."
If slashing spending is less of an option, Western states may have little option but to pursue ever more rounds of quantitative easing, effectively printing money whilst keeping benefits, wages and spending programs largely static.
That could bring its own problems -- not just inflation hitting the savings of the rich and the buying power of the poor but also increased tensions between Western states and emerging economies such as China that hold their debt.
"The most likely path from here is for no changes being made and moving into inflating the debt away -- unfortunately" said Steen Jakobsen, chief economist at Saxo Bank.
However, he warned that this alone would not restore social or financial stability without more fundamental systemic change. "For a society to grow and move forward all social classes need to benefit from growth," he said.
ref : http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/10/us-britain-riots-austerity-idUSTRE77953X20110810