Archive for March 22nd, 2008

South Africa- a different team, a different series

India’s win against Australia in the Commonwealth Bank series is already a few weeks old. It is time to move on. South Africa has arrived in India, after recent successes in Bangladesh and Pakistan before that. The Proteas have proved their ability to play- and win- in “sub-continental” conditions, and India cannot afford to take them lightly.

Sadly, South Africa’s selection policy has kept out Andre Nel. No doubt several black and “coloured” cricketers from South Africa were denied the opportunity to play for their country for much of the late sixties, seventies, eighties and early nineties, under the abhorrent apartheid regime. But is the current policy really not doing the same thing, except that now, it’s the “white” cricketers who are being kept out? Two wrongs can never make a right. The recent selection controversy in South Africa has also resulted in Charl Langeveldt (who was picked ahead of Nel) withdrawing from the tour because he is not in the right frame of mind given the selection fracas (after all, the selectors have all but said that he was in the team because of his colour and not skill- which is hurting to anyone, and Langeveldt is no exception). In the final analysis, South African cricket has lost, as indeed, has the overall game.

Dale Steyn has emerged as South Africa’s frontline fast bowler. In the time since India toured South Africa in 2006 (was it early 2007? I can’t recall), Steyn has acquired pace and he dangerous ability to swing the ball. That he is lethal even on the sub-continent’s flat and dusty wickets is now known. What is unknown for the moment is how India’s top order batsmen negotiate him.

At 27 years of age, Graeme Smith has had almost 5 years at the helm. During this time, he has performed well (and consistently) both as batsman and as captain, proving that young age per se does not preclude a shrewd cricketing brain.

As is often said, getting to the top is easier than staying on top. And India have to beat South Africa if they are to move forward towards achieving the stated ambition of being the top test cricket team in the world.

I am sure cricket fans are in for a treat. As always, may the better team win!

PS: I am sure the visitors will miss the all-round ability that “Polly” (Shaun Pollock) brought to the party.

Add comment March 22, 2008

The lessons from Bear Stearns

Bear Stearns, one of Wall Street’s leading investment banks (it was ranked 5th in the US, I think), collapsed dramatically last week. This is so far the biggest corporate victim of the current financial crisis triggered by indiscreet lending, as it were (the so-called “sub prime crisis). Bear’s clients withdrew over $17B in two days, amid fears of a cash shortage. Bear was on the verge of declaring bankruptcy. The Fed intervened to prevent a larger, systemic collpase of the larger markets and virtually forced Bear to sell out. JP Morgan Chase, one of America’s largest banks (by assets) was the “white knight”, as it were, and agreed to buy Bear’s stocks.

Prima facie, it would appear that the “system” is working. So what’s all the fuss about? Several reasons, as I see the situation:

  1. Should Bear not have warned the Fed and SEC earlier?
  2. Should the Fed have loaned Bear enough to tide over the crisis (it seems to have agreed to loan money to JP Morgan Chase)?
  3. Was it right to have given Bear just a day to find a buyer?
  4. Was it right that JPMC was allowed to virtually annihilate Bear’s shareholder interests- they paid $2 per share, when the book value was closer to $80? To offer another data point, Bear stock was trading at $170/share just an year ago.

I think this situation is symptomatic of a bigger malaise. Although regulators and fiancial institutions around the world are talking more and more about “Governance, Risk Management & Compliance” (GRC), the “system” is still leaving a lot to chance. Some of it may be a case of looking the other side even as “financial engineers” come up with newer and newer “products” that are supposedly designed to offer investors a wider choice of risks and returns. But some of it is possibly because the underlying information systems in the financial services industry are not as “real time” as we think they are. Or perhaps executives responsible for GRC do not monitor their “dashboards” as often as they should.

Perhaps financial services companies should focus more on strengthening their GRC capabilities in the next few months, instead of spending money on “improving customer experience”. After all, no customer can experience anything more painful than being told that his/her investments are worth far less than the capital s/he had originally invested.

Just as importantly, regulators around the world should evolve a global GRC standard (before you say ‘Basel II’, let me point out that adherence of Basel II norms varies betwen Europe, America and yes, Asia). And then work hard at making sure people adhere to these standards.

2 comments March 22, 2008


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