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</td></tr> <tr> <td class="msgtxt"> http://www.yoursdp.org/index.php/pe.../1882-holding-lee-kuan-yew-accountable-part-2
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Holding Lee Kuan Yew accountable – Part 2 </td> <td class="buttonheading" align="right" width="100%"> </td> <td class="buttonheading" align="right" width="100%"> </td> <td class="buttonheading" align="right" width="100%"> </td></tr></tbody></table> <table class="contentpaneopen"> <tbody> <tr> <td class="createdate" valign="top">Tuesday, 10 February 2009 </td></tr> <tr> <td valign="top"> Chee Soon Juan
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In Part I of this essay, I drew attention to the fact that Mr Lee Kuan Yew was negligent when he, in a speech he delivered in July 2007, called on Singaporeans to “maximise our opportunities in this golden period.” This happened at a time when the world's economy was already teetering on the brink.
But some argue that Mr Lee is no longer the prime minister and hasn't been one for nearly two decades. Why should he be the one to take the blame? Take a look at what he wrote in his memoir:
But why is a speech Mr Lee made in 2007 even important in the present crisis?
If you were a Lehman Brothers' investor back then and had heeded the MM's advice, you would have ploughed even more money into buying the minibonds. (Some of the Town Councils obviously did.) If you were looking to buy a house, you would have paid top-dollar for the bubble property price. And if you were looking to start a business then, you would have borrowed heavily to capitalise on the boom.
And if you were Mr Lee or his daughter-in-law, Ho Ching, you would have placed tens of billions of dollars of our reserves in Western banks. Which is exactly what they did.
Banking on banks
The Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) and Temasek Holdings, led by Mr Lee and Madam Ho respectively, were merrily maximising their opportunities by bailing out European and American banks even as these companies were going bust due to corruption, greed, and bad management.
In the second half of 2007 Swiss bank UBS had written off US$33 billion due to bad debts and exposure to the US subprime crisis. Despite this meltdown, the GIC incredibly injected nearly US$10 billion into the bank in December that year. Four months later, UBS wrote down another US$19 billion.
Matters for the bank worsened in November 2008 when one of its senior officials, Raoul Weil, was indicted in the US for conspiring to help 20,000 wealthy Americans evade taxes amounting to an estimated US$20 billion. He was declared a fugitive by the US Government and has since stepped down from his post at the bank. The latest news is that the Swiss bank has posted a total loss of US$17 billion for 2008.
Despite what had happened at UBS, Mr Lee was still feeling bullish with our money and made another investment of US$6.9 billion in January 2008, this time in Citigroup. Within months, the US banking giant collapsed and had to be rescued with a bailout of more than US$300 billion from the US Government.
But Citi's executives, as financially and morally bankrupt as they were, still found enough chutzpah to take receipt of an exclusive luxury jet worth US$45 million. They only reversed course after warnings emanated from the US Government about their profligacy. These are the kinds of people with whom MM Lee had entrusted our savings.
Not to be outdone, Temasek announced in July 2007 that it had invested $4.5 billion in Barclays Bank. That same year the bank announced a US$2.7 billion write-down.
Temasek also started to invest in Merrill Lynch in December 2007. Madam Ho Ching gradually increased Temasek's stake in Merrill until it reached US$5 billion in 2008. The company, owned by the Ministry of Finance, said that it was buying in to Merrill because of its "great franchise, which has existed through many crises through a long period of time.”
In September 2008, the American company went bust and had to be taken over by Bank of America.
Temasek gave another reason for the investment: It "had great confidence in [Merrill's CEO] John Thain.” Four months after BoA's takeover Mr Thain was forced to step down. The reason? He had not fully disclosed all of Merrill Lynch's losses. Even in the firm's dying months, Mr Thain had spent US$1.2 million of company money to renovate his office – including US$87,000 for a rug, US$25,000 for a table, US$87,000 for guest chairs, US$35,000 for a commode and US$1,400 for a wastebasket.
Madam Ho must have a rather liberal definition of "great confidence". It obviously doesn't include due diligence.
As a result of these escapades, it was revealed that Temasek is estimated to have lost 40 percent, or an equivalent of $74 billion, of its portfolio due to exposure to the finance industry. Madam Ho announced last week that she was stepping down -- with no regrets -- as its chief executive.
In the meantime, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam stuck his neck out and assured everyone that Temasek and the GIC had "assessed the proposals rigorously" before jumping in to make the investments, a statement he'll probably live to regret making.
I wonder if these rigorous assessments included looking at how both banks invested their funds. The latest revelation is that Citi, UBS, Merrill and Barclays had all invested in the Bernie Madoff scam. Mr Madoff ran the biggest Ponzi scheme in corporate history and duped his investors to part with nearly US$50 billion of their money. In fact UBS is being sued in France by a wealth management company for its involvement in the Madoff madness.
All this was happening at a time when investment guru Jim Rogers was warning that "I'm shorting investment banks on Wall Street...It grieves me to see what Singapore is doing. They are going to lose money."
Investing in the banks was, of course, part of Mr Lee's mega scheme to build Singapore up as a financial centre. Another part of the plan was to attract as many financial professionals to the country as possible: "We have drawn in many professionals, especially in financial services, which has expanded to its highest ever levels. Many financial institutions have moved their top people and their regional headquarters to Singapore to manage the wealth that is flowing from the Gulf oil states, the US, EU and Japan."
Continue on next page...
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</td></tr> <tr> <td class="msgtxt"> http://www.yoursdp.org/index.php/pe.../1882-holding-lee-kuan-yew-accountable-part-2
<table class="contentpaneopen"> <tbody> <tr> <td class="contentheading" width="100%">
Holding Lee Kuan Yew accountable – Part 2 </td> <td class="buttonheading" align="right" width="100%"> </td> <td class="buttonheading" align="right" width="100%"> </td> <td class="buttonheading" align="right" width="100%"> </td></tr></tbody></table> <table class="contentpaneopen"> <tbody> <tr> <td class="createdate" valign="top">Tuesday, 10 February 2009 </td></tr> <tr> <td valign="top"> Chee Soon Juan
</td></tr></tbody></table>
In Part I of this essay, I drew attention to the fact that Mr Lee Kuan Yew was negligent when he, in a speech he delivered in July 2007, called on Singaporeans to “maximise our opportunities in this golden period.” This happened at a time when the world's economy was already teetering on the brink.
But some argue that Mr Lee is no longer the prime minister and hasn't been one for nearly two decades. Why should he be the one to take the blame? Take a look at what he wrote in his memoir:
Singapore's financial centre was considered over-regulated compared to Hong Kong's. Critics wrote: "in Hong Kong, what is not expressly forbidden is permitted; in Singapore, what is not expressly permitted is forbidden”...Only after the MAS (Monetary Authority of Singapore) had demonstrated the strength of its system to weather the financial crisis of 1987 and 1997-98 did I feel confident enough to move closer to a position where what is not expressly forbidden is permitted.
Note the pronoun. It was he, not the cabinet, who allowed the financial system to become less regulated. Note also the period: It was post 1997. He was not the prime minister then, it was Mr Goh Chok Tong. Why was PM Goh not the one to decide which course our financial system should take?
But why is a speech Mr Lee made in 2007 even important in the present crisis?
If you were a Lehman Brothers' investor back then and had heeded the MM's advice, you would have ploughed even more money into buying the minibonds. (Some of the Town Councils obviously did.) If you were looking to buy a house, you would have paid top-dollar for the bubble property price. And if you were looking to start a business then, you would have borrowed heavily to capitalise on the boom.
And if you were Mr Lee or his daughter-in-law, Ho Ching, you would have placed tens of billions of dollars of our reserves in Western banks. Which is exactly what they did.
Banking on banks
The Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) and Temasek Holdings, led by Mr Lee and Madam Ho respectively, were merrily maximising their opportunities by bailing out European and American banks even as these companies were going bust due to corruption, greed, and bad management.
In the second half of 2007 Swiss bank UBS had written off US$33 billion due to bad debts and exposure to the US subprime crisis. Despite this meltdown, the GIC incredibly injected nearly US$10 billion into the bank in December that year. Four months later, UBS wrote down another US$19 billion.
Matters for the bank worsened in November 2008 when one of its senior officials, Raoul Weil, was indicted in the US for conspiring to help 20,000 wealthy Americans evade taxes amounting to an estimated US$20 billion. He was declared a fugitive by the US Government and has since stepped down from his post at the bank. The latest news is that the Swiss bank has posted a total loss of US$17 billion for 2008.
Despite what had happened at UBS, Mr Lee was still feeling bullish with our money and made another investment of US$6.9 billion in January 2008, this time in Citigroup. Within months, the US banking giant collapsed and had to be rescued with a bailout of more than US$300 billion from the US Government.
But Citi's executives, as financially and morally bankrupt as they were, still found enough chutzpah to take receipt of an exclusive luxury jet worth US$45 million. They only reversed course after warnings emanated from the US Government about their profligacy. These are the kinds of people with whom MM Lee had entrusted our savings.
Not to be outdone, Temasek announced in July 2007 that it had invested $4.5 billion in Barclays Bank. That same year the bank announced a US$2.7 billion write-down.
Temasek also started to invest in Merrill Lynch in December 2007. Madam Ho Ching gradually increased Temasek's stake in Merrill until it reached US$5 billion in 2008. The company, owned by the Ministry of Finance, said that it was buying in to Merrill because of its "great franchise, which has existed through many crises through a long period of time.”
In September 2008, the American company went bust and had to be taken over by Bank of America.
Temasek gave another reason for the investment: It "had great confidence in [Merrill's CEO] John Thain.” Four months after BoA's takeover Mr Thain was forced to step down. The reason? He had not fully disclosed all of Merrill Lynch's losses. Even in the firm's dying months, Mr Thain had spent US$1.2 million of company money to renovate his office – including US$87,000 for a rug, US$25,000 for a table, US$87,000 for guest chairs, US$35,000 for a commode and US$1,400 for a wastebasket.
Madam Ho must have a rather liberal definition of "great confidence". It obviously doesn't include due diligence.
As a result of these escapades, it was revealed that Temasek is estimated to have lost 40 percent, or an equivalent of $74 billion, of its portfolio due to exposure to the finance industry. Madam Ho announced last week that she was stepping down -- with no regrets -- as its chief executive.
In the meantime, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam stuck his neck out and assured everyone that Temasek and the GIC had "assessed the proposals rigorously" before jumping in to make the investments, a statement he'll probably live to regret making.
I wonder if these rigorous assessments included looking at how both banks invested their funds. The latest revelation is that Citi, UBS, Merrill and Barclays had all invested in the Bernie Madoff scam. Mr Madoff ran the biggest Ponzi scheme in corporate history and duped his investors to part with nearly US$50 billion of their money. In fact UBS is being sued in France by a wealth management company for its involvement in the Madoff madness.
All this was happening at a time when investment guru Jim Rogers was warning that "I'm shorting investment banks on Wall Street...It grieves me to see what Singapore is doing. They are going to lose money."
Investing in the banks was, of course, part of Mr Lee's mega scheme to build Singapore up as a financial centre. Another part of the plan was to attract as many financial professionals to the country as possible: "We have drawn in many professionals, especially in financial services, which has expanded to its highest ever levels. Many financial institutions have moved their top people and their regional headquarters to Singapore to manage the wealth that is flowing from the Gulf oil states, the US, EU and Japan."
Continue on next page...
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