19-05-2020, 03:43 PM
(This post was last modified: 19-05-2020, 04:13 PM by specuvestor.)
yes Temasek does not manage CPF but our reserves indirectly. The foreign assets that Temasek manages is part of our reserves though it was funded primarily through TLC divestments over the decades. But I think what Karlmarx is saying is that the SSGS funding also comes partially from Temasek investment returns
There is an indirect link which people suspect but cannot articulate. The link is in the purchasing power of SGD. If we manage our reserve and FX well, a stable SGD vs imported goods will help to maintain Singaporean's purchasing power.
CPF on the other hand will never default, as it is payable in SGD, contrary to some uninformed comment by individuals on the net and election rallies. Just like if you have say Zimbabwe bonds that wil not default. Question is whether the money will become banana or funny money. Even if you get SGD retirement CPF at 5% interest when you're 67 but a cup of coffee costing $10 is not going to be any good. That's why comparison with neighbours have to be in context as well
Sorry I digress but back to SIA: I think the ineffective loss is hedging without actually consuming the underlying fuel. The problem with the hedge is not so much a decline in oil price but lack of revenue and the corresponding use of fuel. Say if SIA used $1b fuel and hedged $700m, if oil price drops 10% (approximate as they hedge jet fuel) they lose probably $70m so their PnL goes down $70m but with say $3b revenue that's still manageable on the OP line
But if rev suddenly drops to say $300m and your fuel consumption becomes say $100m as your flights get cancelled , then your hedge becomes 7X larger. That's the problem here and it will be further amplified in 1Q21
So I don't think we should expect too much MTM reversal per se as the hedges roll off but the ineffective hedge loss will continue to bite in 1Q21
There is an indirect link which people suspect but cannot articulate. The link is in the purchasing power of SGD. If we manage our reserve and FX well, a stable SGD vs imported goods will help to maintain Singaporean's purchasing power.
CPF on the other hand will never default, as it is payable in SGD, contrary to some uninformed comment by individuals on the net and election rallies. Just like if you have say Zimbabwe bonds that wil not default. Question is whether the money will become banana or funny money. Even if you get SGD retirement CPF at 5% interest when you're 67 but a cup of coffee costing $10 is not going to be any good. That's why comparison with neighbours have to be in context as well
Sorry I digress but back to SIA: I think the ineffective loss is hedging without actually consuming the underlying fuel. The problem with the hedge is not so much a decline in oil price but lack of revenue and the corresponding use of fuel. Say if SIA used $1b fuel and hedged $700m, if oil price drops 10% (approximate as they hedge jet fuel) they lose probably $70m so their PnL goes down $70m but with say $3b revenue that's still manageable on the OP line
But if rev suddenly drops to say $300m and your fuel consumption becomes say $100m as your flights get cancelled , then your hedge becomes 7X larger. That's the problem here and it will be further amplified in 1Q21
So I don't think we should expect too much MTM reversal per se as the hedges roll off but the ineffective hedge loss will continue to bite in 1Q21
(19-05-2020, 11:28 AM)weijian Wrote:(18-05-2020, 07:15 AM)karlmarx Wrote: To do so will be prejudicial to Temasek, who also has obligations to fund the state budget and CPF returns.
Since many of us have CPF, i probably have to correct the "misunderstanding" above that CPF returns are dependent on Temasek which contributes to the national budget as investment income.
There is some structural intricacies with how CPF generate its returns:
CPF buys SSGS --> SSGS bonds are guaranteed by Spore Gov --> the monies from SSGS are then held by MAS with GIC acting as the Fund Manager.
https://www.mof.gov.sg/policies/our-nati...bligations
The SSGS proceeds have not been passed to Temasek for management. Temasek hence does not manage any CPF monies
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Think Asset-Business-Structure (ABS)
Think Asset-Business-Structure (ABS)