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Professor at Peking University casts doubts on Temasek

cunnilaubu

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http://mostlyeconomics.wordpress.com/2012/04/18/temasek-and-singapore-puzzle-is-it-another-madoff-crisis-in-making/


Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Christopher Balding of HSBC School of Business writes this riveting piece. He titles this paper interestingly as - ”Brief Research Note on Temasek Holdings And Singapore: Mr. Madoff Goes to Singapore”.

The paper makes two points.

First, there are some issues with Temasek’s financial reporting. It seems to be showing a much higher return on its portfolio since inception than most of the equity indices in the period.

Second, there is this interesting puzzle. Singapore has been running high fiscal surpluses but its public debt keeps going up. Perhaps the only country in human history to have such a record:

Financial data reported by Temasek Holdings and Singapore reveal problematic characteristics. First, Temasek reports an average annual return of 17% for 35 years despite Singaporean stock returns averaging less than 8% during this same time period. Given the range of stock market returns and its portfolio companies’ returns, it is highly improbably that Temasek has earned the returns claimed in its annual reports.

Second, Singapore has become one of the most indebted countries in the world despite supposedly running large and sustained government surpluses. Given publicly available economic data on Singaporean finances, there is a minimum of $350 billion SGD or $275 billion USD unaccounted for from historical surpluses and financing operations. Third, given these results I find that for every $1 SGD in public borrowing, Singapore has received only 25 cents of publicly held Singaporean assets. Either financial returns have been drastically overstated or there are large unreported Singaporean controlled holdings.

The paper is based on 2010 Annual Report. I checked the website and they maintain their claims of 17% TSR since inception.

The analysis of Temasek and Singapore govt finances points to two scenarios:

Scenario #1: Assuming Temasek Returns and Singapore Finances Are Perfectly Accurate
1. Temasek has established the greatest institutional track record of investment, possibly, in the history of human existence.
2. Singapore maintains large unreported asset holdings that by conservative estimates could top $1 trillion SGD or $800 billion USD from accumulated historical budget surpluses and financing operations.
3. Given the current estimate of $650 billion SGD of combined assets under management between Temasek and GIC, this results in an upward revision of assets under management by at least $350 billion SGD or $275 billion USD. Given numerous assumption parameters, this should be considered a very conservative estimate.

Scenario #2: Assuming Temasek Returns and Singapore Finances Are Not Perfectly Accurate
1. Temasek is reporting inflated returns by using methods that do not represent standard accounting practices.
2. Singapore has inaccurately reported public finance data on revenue, expenditures, surpluses, total outstanding indebtedness, and asset holdings to bolster its perceived credit risk and the state of its public finances.
3. Either by over reporting surpluses and the returns earned or underreporting its total assets, Singapore and the two sovereign wealth funds under its management have not accurately accounted for its finances to the public. The amount of the missing funds should conservatively be estimated $275 billion USD or $350 billion SGD. The missing funds may be located in a variety of places such as in poor investments returns or unreported asset holdings.

Going by the analysis, Scenario 2 is more probable:

In short, due to the large government budget surpluses and the increased debt, it seems highly improbable that the current numbers published by the Singaporean government and markets can be reconciled either to external data or to each other. If investment returns and public finance data is accurate, there must be an enormous pool of unreported assets controlled by the Singaporean government. If investment returns and public finance data as currently published is inaccurate, this represents a serious problem.

Thus her titles the paper on Madoff lines..

These are serious claims and Temasek is a big brand (atleast in Asia). I hope there are clarifications from Temasek and SG govt. This point on why SG runs higher public debt levels (around 98% of GDP just like GIPS economies) despite having surpluses needs to be explored further. I am actually surprised to see that hardly anyone points to this anomaly..

===========
Two other follow up articles:

The Mess that is Singapore: Part I Explaining the Debt

The Mess that is Singapore: Part II Explaining the Role of the CPF
 
39.9% will never find out because it takes 56 man years to calculate.
60.1% can't be bothered.
 
Thanks for such an excellent article. Maybe can use those last time, before policemen wear shorts, those Japanese issued banana money. Looks cool and cute, maybe need a huge stash of those to buy a banana.
 
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Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?
<SMALL style="TEXT-ALIGN: justify; LINE-HEIGHT: 1.5em; TEXT-TRANSFORM: capitalize; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; COLOR: rgb(119,119,119); FONT-SIZE: 0.9em" class=single-by></SMALL>Christopher Balding of HSBC School of Business writesthis riveting piece. He titles this paper interestingly as - ”Brief Research Note on Temasek Holdings And Singapore: Mr. Madoff Goes to Singapore”.
The paper makes two points.
First, there are some issues with Temasek’s financial reporting. It seems to be showing a much higher return on its portfolio since inception than most of the equity indices in the period.
Second, there is this interesting puzzle. Singapore has been running high fiscal surpluses but its public debt keeps going up. Perhaps the only country in human history to have such a record:
Financial data reported by Temasek Holdings and Singapore reveal problematic characteristics. First, Temasek reports an average annual return of 17% for 35 years despite Singaporean stock returns averaging less than 8% during this same time period. Given the range of stock market returns and its portfolio companies’ returns, it is highly improbably that Temasek has earned the returns claimed in its annual reports.
Second, Singapore has become one of the most indebted countries in the world despite supposedly running large and sustained government surpluses. Given publicly available economic data on Singaporean finances, there is a minimum of $350 billion SGD or $275 billion USD unaccounted for from historical surpluses and financing operations[SIZE=+0].[/SIZE] Third, given these results I find that for every $1 SGD in public borrowing, Singapore has received only 25 cents of publicly held Singaporean assets. Either financial returns have been drastically overstated or there are large unreported Singaporean controlled holdings.
The paper is based on 2010 Annual Report. I checked the website and they maintain their claims of 17% TSR since inception.
The analysis of Temasek and Singapore govt finances points to two scenarios:
Scenario #1: Assuming Temasek Returns and Singapore Finances Are Perfectly Accurate
1. Temasek has established the greatest institutional track record of investment, possibly, in the history of human existence.
2. Singapore maintains large unreported asset holdings that by conservative estimates could top $1 trillion SGD or $800 billion USD from accumulated historical budget surpluses and financing operations.
3. Given the current estimate of $650 billion SGD of combined assets under management between Temasek and GIC, this results in an upward revision of assets under management by at least $350 billion SGD or $275 billion USD. Given numerous assumption parameters, this should be considered a very conservative estimate.

Scenario #2: Assuming Temasek Returns and Singapore Finances Are Not Perfectly Accurate
1. Temasek is reporting inflated returns by using methods that do not represent standard accounting practices.
2. Singapore has inaccurately reported public finance data on revenue, expenditures, surpluses, total outstanding indebtedness, and asset holdings to bolster its perceived credit risk and the state of its public finances.
3. Either by over reporting surpluses and the returns earned or underreporting its total assets, Singapore and the two sovereign wealth funds under its management have not accurately accounted for its finances to the public. The amount of the missing funds should conservatively be estimated $275 billion USD or $350 billion SGD. The missing funds may be located in a variety of places such as in poor investments returns or unreported asset holdings.

Going by the analysis, Scenario 2 is more probable:
In short, due to the large government budget surpluses and the increased debt, it seems highly improbable that the current numbers published by the Singaporean government and markets can be reconciled either to external data or to each other. If investment returns and public finance data is accurate, there must be an enormous pool of unreported assets controlled by the Singaporean government. If investment returns and public finance data as currently published is inaccurate, this represents a serious problem.
Thus her titles the paper on Madoff lines..
These are serious claims and Temasek is a big brand (atleast in Asia). I hope there are clarifications from Temasek and SG govt. This point on why SG runs higher public debt levels (around 98% of GDP just like GIPS economies) despite having surpluses needs to be explored further. I am actually surprised to see that hardly anyone points to this anomaly..
http://mostlyeconomics.wordpress.co...puzzle-is-it-another-madoff-crisis-in-making/

 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

with chinese and keling kias controlling the coffers, you want 100% full transparency on the book.... :D

Don't kid yourself la. Innately, these 2 kinds are very secretive. My thoughts...
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Just wondered if WP would be interested in asking the gov where the money goes? Since an election is coming. But probably not as WP will not want to die under the gov's sword.
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Just wondered if WP would be interested in asking the gov where the money goes? Since an election is coming. But probably not as WP will not want to die under the gov's sword.

Why would the dog bite its owner? :confused:
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

with chinese and keling kias controlling the coffers, you want 100% full transparency on the book.... :D

Don't kid yourself la. Innately, these 2 kinds are very secretive. My thoughts...

For some reasons, I am uncomfortable with Tony Tan as our President.
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

For some reasons, I am uncomfortable with Tony Tan as our President.



hi there


1. hahaha!
2. who is?
3. except for those thirty odd% daft sheep mah!
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Only sinkies would believe in government statistics. :rolleyes:
 
Two possible areas for this anomaly:-
1) Bad investments written off and not included in the returns computation. You report on only the good results.
2) Privatisation, followed by public listing of public infrastructures e.g. SMRT, SingTel etc serves to boost returns e.g. SingTel's par value at IPO was 15 cts per share but started trading at $3.60 and went up above $4.00. Even though the free float was only a small persentage of its total market capital but value of government's holdings would have shot up more than 20 folds.
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

For some reasons, I am uncomfortable with Tony Tan as our President.



really ah ???


i'm uncomfortable with Tony Tan simply for being alive....................
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Looks like there's nothing to be done. The gov has the might, not to answer. So we should let time play out its' moves and we should see if there's any thing to watch.
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

For some reasons, I am uncomfortable with Tony Tan as our President.

Stupid sinkies elected TT who is now able to cover up his own blunders at the GIC.
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

it really does not matter for the peasant of singapore whether the fund are making money or losing money, because they never going to see it in the first place. It is a good thing for opposition in singapore right, as long as pap is rich, they will never lose power, if economic go bust like greece, opposition will have the chance to win power.

why opposition want to stop pap from making the mistake that will give away their power?
 
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Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

The government of the day is completely opaque when it comes to sovereign funds.
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

The Mess that is Singapore: Part IV How big is the GIC or the $500 billion Question

Part IV


The Hardware Zone thread where the Professor Balding also contributes and interacts with the common folks there, still quite alive the thread there, do take a look, getting interesting. So far Prof Balding seems to the kind of foreign talent that we need but the gov would fear.


The Make Believe World of Temasek Holdings and Singapore, Inc
 
Re: Temasek and Singapore Puzzle – Is it another Madoff crisis in making?

Singapore is one big pyramid scheme organisation. :mad:
 
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