Saturday 9 Nov 2024
Latest Financial Planning News
Hot Issues
ATO reviewing all new SMSF registrations to stop illegal early access
Compliance documents crucial for SMSFs
Investment and economic outlook, October 2024
Leaving super to an estate makes more tax sense, says expert
Be clear on TBA pension impact
Caregiving can have a retirement sting
The biggest assets growth areas for SMSFs
20 Years of Silicon Valley Trends: 2004 - 2024 Insights
Investment and economic outlook, September 2024
Economic slowdown drives mixed reporting season
ATO stats show continued growth in SMSF sector
What are the government’s intentions with negative gearing?
A new day for Federal Reserve policy
Age pension fails to meet retirement needs
ASIC extends reportable situations relief and personal advice record-keeping requirements
The Leaders Who Refused to Step Down 1939 - 2024
ATO encourages trustees to use voluntary disclosure service
Beware of terminal illness payout time frame
Capital losses can help reduce NALI
Investment and economic outlook, August 2024
What the Reserve Bank’s rates stance means for property borrowers
How investing regularly can propel your returns
Super sector in ASIC’s sights
Most Popular Operating Systems 1999 - 2022
Treasurer unveils design details for payday super
Government releases details on luxury car tax changes
Our investment and economic outlook, July 2024
Striking a balance in the new financial year
The five reasons why the $A is likely to rise further - if recession is avoided
What super fund members should know when comparing returns
Insurance inside super has tax advantages
Are you receiving Personal Services Income?
It’s never too early to start talking about aged care with clients
Taxing unrealised gains in superannuation under Division 296
Capacity doubts now more common
Articles archive
Quarter 3 July - September 2024
Quarter 2 April - June 2024
Quarter 1 January - March 2024
Quarter 4 October - December 2023
Quarter 3 July - September 2023
Quarter 2 April - June 2023
Quarter 1 January - March 2023
Quarter 4 October - December 2022
Quarter 3 July - September 2022
Quarter 2 April - June 2022
Quarter 1 January - March 2022
Quarter 4 October - December 2021
Quarter 3 July - September 2021
Quarter 2 April - June 2021
Quarter 1 January - March 2021
Quarter 4 October - December 2020
Quarter 3 July - September 2020
Quarter 2 April - June 2020
Quarter 1 January - March 2020
Quarter 4 October - December 2019
Quarter 3 July - September 2019
Quarter 2 April - June 2019
Quarter 1 January - March 2019
Quarter 4 October - December 2018
Quarter 3 July - September 2018
Quarter 2 April - June 2018
Quarter 1 January - March 2018
Quarter 4 October - December 2017
Quarter 3 July - September 2017
Quarter 2 April - June 2017
Quarter 1 January - March 2017
Quarter 4 October - December 2016
Quarter 3 July - September 2016
Quarter 2 April - June 2016
Quarter 1 January - March 2016
Quarter 4 October - December 2015
Quarter 3 July - September 2015
Quarter 2 April - June 2015
Quarter 1 January - March 2015
Quarter 4 October - December 2014
Quarter 3 July - September 2014
Quarter 2 April - June 2014
Quarter 1 January - March 2014
Quarter 4 October - December 2013
Quarter 3 July - September 2013
Quarter 2 April - June 2013
Quarter 1 January - March 2013
Quarter 4 October - December 2012
Quarter 3 July - September 2012
Quarter 2 April - June 2012
Quarter 1 January - March 2012
Quarter 4 October - December 2011
Quarter 3 July - September 2011
Quarter 2 April - June 2011
Quarter 1 January - March 2011
Quarter 4 October - December 2010
Quarter 3 July - September 2010
Quarter 2 April - June 2010
Quarter 1 January - March 2010
Quarter 4 October - December 2009
Quarter 3 July - September 2009
Quarter 2 April - June 2009
Quarter 1 January - March 2009
Quarter 4 October - December 2008
Quarter 3 July - September 2008
Quarter 2 April - June 2008
Quarter 1 January - March 2008
Quarter 4 October - December 2007
Quarter 3 July - September 2007
Quarter 2 April - June 2007
Quarter 1 January - March 2007
Quarter 4 October - December 2006
Quarter 3 July - September 2006
Quarter 2 of 2009
Articles
Maximising the tax free portion of a super fund in times of market down turn.
Super catch-up
Investment Markets Data - To 31st May 2009.
Master trusts outperform industry funds
Rising shares keep super losses in check
Salary-sacrificed super: the new frontier
Autumn Newsletter 2009
Budget winds back the clock on super
The Buffett way to measure your portfolio's success
Budget 2009/10 - Overview, Summary, Papers.
Fix the super shortfall
Turning back the clock
A survival plan for a retiree's worst nightmare
What are dividend reinvestment plans?
Gone Fishin'
Government Stimulus Package - Summary
Investment Markets Data - To 31st March 2009.
We still have faith in the system
Diving in and out won’t catch the wave
Be prepared - it pays
Gone Fishin'
By Robin Bowerman
Smart Investing
21st  April 2009
Principal & Head of Retail, Vanguard Investments Australia

Fortunately, Australia has not been exposed to the worst extremities of the world financial crisis that are being experienced through much of the world.

Certainly, personal bankruptcies and corporate failures are expected to markedly rise here. And our retirees and those approaching retirement are particularly feeling the losses in their superannuation savings.

And indeed, the Insolvency and Trustee Service of Australia has just reported that 7169 individuals became bankrupt in the March quarter - a rise of 13.66% over the same quarter of last year.

But a fascinating feature in the April 2009 issue of Vanity Fair magazine closely examines how things went much, much worse for a country that you don't normally read about in relation to world financial dealings. That country is Iceland.

This is scary stuff.

To write his feature, Wall Street on the Tundra, journalist Michael Lewis visited the small fishing country with a population of just 300,000 where thousands of fishermen turned into bankers between 2003 and 2007. They were caught up in the frenzy of trying to make fast money.

"While the US stock market was doubling, the Icelandic stock market multiplied nine times," Lewis writes. Real estate prices tripled in Iceland's capital, Reykjavik. "By 2006, the average Icelandic family was three times as wealthy as it had been in 2003, and virtually all of this new wealth was one way or another tied to its new investment-banking industry [that had been created almost overnight]."

Today, the country is "effectively bust" to use Lewis' words, with its debt at 850% of GDP. Its banking losses alone amount to $330,000 for each Icelandic man, woman, and child.

And when its sharemarket plunged, it fell to pieces - dropping by 85%.

And Iceland is "no longer a country but a hedge fund" in deep trouble, quoting a representative of the International Monetary Fund.

Consider the experience of 26-year-old "Magnus Olafsson" (not his real name). Magnus went from being a fisherman to earning almost $1 million from currency trading for a local bank. Today, such "bankers" are back in their fishing boats, and hauling in the catch.

The country's prime minister is actually advising his citizens to stop banking and to go fishing again.

Lewis ends his piece with the telling words: "When you borrow a lot of money to create a false prosperity, you import the future into the present. It isn't actually the future as some grotesque silicon version of it.

"Leveraged buys give a glimpse of a prosperity you haven't really earned," he concludes.

The Icelandic experience will, hopefully, serve as a lesson to the rest of us about what can go wrong when a herd mentality, crazy market euphoria, high debt, and the smell of fast money combine together. Watch out for next time around!

 



19th-April-2009