1 / 12

The current economic climate. “Will tomorrow be as good or as bad as today?”

The current economic climate. “Will tomorrow be as good or as bad as today?”. CILA SIG conference. My theme - from "Macro to Micro". 1 Where can we learn about the financial future? 2 What does that information tell us? 3 Some thoughts on 2 sectors banking and retail

glynnis
Download Presentation

The current economic climate. “Will tomorrow be as good or as bad as today?”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The current economic climate.“Will tomorrow be as good or as bad as today?” CILA SIG conference

  2. My theme - from "Macro to Micro" 1 Where can we learn about the financial future? 2 What does that information tell us? 3 Some thoughts on 2 sectors banking and retail 4 What does the stock market tell us - is it a bell weather of recession or its own market? 5 What is the shape of this recession? How do we turn the corner? 6 What might this mean for us?

  3. Setting the scene FSCS Set up under FSMA – the fund of last resort 10,000 to 25,000 compensation claims a year Contingency planning for industry failures Forecast and budget – predicting the future What do adjusters bring to the table? Crisis management Claims handling Real answers to real problems

  4. Sources of views IMF FSA - Financial risk outlook Bank of England economic review Mintel sector reports Analyst and city reports Robert Peston (and other journalists) Others – CBI, IOD, LSE

  5. Winners and losers?

  6. Winners and winners?

  7. Some of the winners?

  8. Stock market growth Good years 79 of the last 109 years have seen +ve growth Greatest number of returns + 10 – 20 % Beware a +ve skew as the market recovers prior year losses And the bad Very bad years often followed by good ones But…. Not always A negative year does not always mean another will not follow Source: Credit Suisse Investment Returns Yearbook

  9. What type of recession are we in? W V L U BUT: Recession deeper in manufacturing than services Shape reflects market as a whole Only when there is recovery will shape be clear

  10. What could this mean for us Sector versus individual performance There are counter recessionary influences Need to look at the micro – the business Trends do not always continue – when do they turn? Companies are now more sophisticated at managing production Keep stocks low Ramp up fast

  11. Why does this matter? Insured Loss? Covered Loss? Actual Sales Economic impact Actual Sales Economy Date of Loss Actual Sales Actual Sales Loss

  12. Closing thoughts Around '75 when the recession hit, club owners started going to disco because it was cheaper for them to just buy a sound system than it was to hire a band. So we’re thinking 2009 is going to be the worst of it We are enjoying sluggish times and not enjoying them very much.

More Related