'Blackout towns' named

A leaked document shows that a number of municipalities are not paying their Eskom accounts and may end up without electricity.

Old Gs never die

Leave the grandstanding to the G20 - the G7 is where the real talking gets done, says CNN International Correspondent Richard Quest.
Where am I? Fin24.com  > Companies

Rupert: Forex controls saved SA

Oct 07 2008 18:09 Marc Hasenfuss

Cape Town - South Africa can be thankful that foreign exchange controls precluded local investment institutions from participating in the kind of investments that caused major international financial institutions to buckle in recent months.


This was the opinion of Johann Rupert, chairperson of long-term investor Remgro, who as early as May 2007 expressed concern about global financial systems (an opinion that at the time earned him the tag "Rupert the Bear").


Addressing shareholders at a general meeting in Somerset West on Tuesday afternoon, Rupert said if forex restrictions had not been in place, local investment institutions would probably have joined the (sub-prime) party.


'I blame everybody'


"Thank goodness for forex controls, otherwise our investment geniuses would have participated."


He said SA was in a "lucky position" - thanks to the treasury - of having the country's banks still in shape, although it was unlikely all local banks would emerge completely unscathed.


Rupert argued that blame for the gridlocked financial system could not be put on Wall Street and investment bankers. "I blame everybody."


He said in the quest for superior returns investors piled debt onto equity. "People assumed bigger and bigger risks ... to blame investment banks then is a little short-sighted."


Rupert pointed out that initially, investment banks were taken to task for not offering credit to poor communities. "They did just that, and now they are in the dock for providing this funding."


Rupert hoped the international financial system would hold and that central bankers and bankers would work together. "What we have now is gridlock. Banks don't trust one another."

Reuters reports that shareholders in Remgro backed a plan to spin off its 10.7% stake in British American Tobacco on Tuesday, taking Switzerland's Richemont a step closer to completing its restructuring.


Remgro and Richemont said in August they would spin off their combined 30.1% stake in BAT under a revamp prompted by tax changes, a move that will make the Swiss firm Europe's second biggest pure luxury specialist.


"At the general meeting of Remgro shareholders held today ... all the special and ordinary resolutions were approved by the requisite majority of votes," Remgro said in a statement.


Shareholders in Richemont, maker of Cartier watches and Piaget jewellery, are due to vote on the plan on Thursday.


- Fin24.com and Reuters

More on Remgro, BAT, Reinet Investments and shareholder activist Theo Botha in next week's Finweek.


 

Add your comment

(No bad language or hate speech, please)

Comments Order    

Pattipan
Oct 14 2008 17:14 Report this comment

Hi Mpho R, When you get to ECS 201,you will learn about the global economy; investing in other countries; and how difficult that is to do with a weak currency. That's why we tend to fixate on the exchange rate. That, and we like going overseas on holiday. Meanwhile we export our raw materials and intellectual capital without any thought to the long-term economic development.
 
Fin
Oct 08 2008 12:24 Report this comment

... guys, I will delete duplications. These sometime happen when you hit refresh or back, but normally when the submit button below is pressed more than once (even if by mistake). Thanks for all the great comments.
 
Emperor
Oct 08 2008 12:18 Report this comment

Hmmm - I didn't hit back, but I did refresh the page. I only clicked Submit once though. Seems like a software bug to me. Mr. Editor?
 
sasoros
Oct 08 2008 12:10 Report this comment

Its because you keep clicking the "back" icon after posting...
 
Emperor
Oct 08 2008 12:05 Report this comment

I only posted my comment once, don't know why Fin24 keep on repeating it!? Maybe it makes a lot of sense :-)
 
GWW
Oct 08 2008 11:26 Report this comment

Just to add to that , legislation by government forced banks to adopt non-capitalist policies (lending to risky individuals- so everyone could get a house and live the American dream), now they are in danger of collapsing , and in the aftermath government will add more legislation to prevent this. We will unfortunately never get back to pure capitalism. The downfall of capitalism is socialism... never mix the two!
 
Emperor
Oct 08 2008 10:59 Report this comment

Rupert the Bear has hit the nail on the head! These problems started when banks were forced by governments to lend to the underprivileged, contrary to pure capitalism where they would have protected their interests and only loaned to quality lenders. The world needs to return to pure capitalism, and government should only provide the legal structures.
 
sasoros
Oct 08 2008 08:23 Report this comment

How do know our local institutions would have gone for subprime debt? Many have been concerned about subprime for a while, in any case local institutions have long preferred equities over bonds - for good reason. I think you are bashing them to burnish your own credentials. Stick to the facts.
 
 
Your name  
Email  
Comment
(500 characters remaining)
 

 
Please enter the text below(Case sensitive)
 
 
If you can see the following field, please ignore it, as it is used to verify that you are human.

 
  Disclaimer

Fin24.com encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of users published on Fin24.com are therefore their own and do not represent the views of Fin24.com. All posts are monitored by Fin24.com's editors and grossly derogatory posts will be deleted. The Fin24.com editorial team will delete your comment should you post abusive comments, use vulgar language or make discriminatory observations.

Company Snapshot

Video

5 questions with John Munro
2010/02/08 05:25:00 PM

Fin24.com spoke to the Rand Uranium CEO at the 2010 Mining Indaba about the company's planned R3.5bn plant. Time: 2:08

Search engine friendly content

Blogs

Podcasts