Marty Hermsen

Talks around the ICT and Financial Coffee Corners

Dutch banks no longer count

November 16
by Marty Hermsen 16. November 2009 21:19
Dutch banks worked for years to penetrate markets abroad. Now that ABN Amro has been split in three and ING is withdrawing to Europe, little remains of their efforts.

By Heleen de Graaf in Amsterdam

For a long time the Dutch banks were among the world’s best, but now they are withdrawing to Europe and primarily their home market, involuntarily or otherwise.

In 2005 ING had a balance sheet total of 1,159 billion euros, just 100 billion less than French BNP Paribas. And ABN Amro was almost as large as Deutsche Bank. The two could measure up to the top banks in Europe. Last year Deutsche Bank and BNP grew to over 2,000 billion euros, but ABN Amro fell to 666 billion. Once ING has split itself up, the financial group will be only a shadow of its former self.

ING and ABN Amro have fallen to the level of the 1990s, the period in which both major banks were created from mergers. It is a development that will affect the strategy for the coming years and which will also have consequences within the national borders. The competition will most likely become even tougher and the slimmed down institutions can become prey to takeovers once the recession is over.

“The scope of the financial sector gave the Netherlands a great deal of influence and prestige in the world, certainly considering the country’s size. There is good reason we are among the G20,” says Sjoerd van Keulen, former CEO of SNS Reaal bank and since May chairman of the Holland Financial Centre, a foundation to boost the financial sector. “The scope of the financial sector is still relatively large, but our prestige has taken a blow.”

Financial superpower

Not long ago there was talk of the creation of one Dutch financial superpower. At the beginning of 2007 the merger of ABN Amro and ING was in the works. It would have become a giant that could measure up to the largest banks in the world. But the merger failed and an exposure of the sector followed.

At the end of 2007 ABN Amro, the national financial flagship, was bought up by a consortium and split into three parts. The bank, which had a presence in 53 countries and followed Dutch businesses to every part of the globe, fell into foreign hands. It was the credit crisis that ensured that the Dutch part of the bank just barely survived, thanks to nationalisation by the government.

When ABN Amro dropped out of the game, ING was still a player. The bank-insurer was one of the leading players in the world in its segment. That changed last week. ING found itself in major difficulties as a result of the credit crisis and required a bailout from the state not once, but twice, to stay afloat. Under pressure from the European Commission, which had to give permission for the government support to the bank, ING announced a drastic reorganisation. It will split into two parts in the coming years and sell internet bank ING Direct in the US, following orders from Brussels. ING will divest 45 percent of its balance sheet total. ING will no longer be a worldwide group, but a mid-sized European bank with its centre of gravity in the saturated markets of the Benelux.

The third largest Dutch bank, Rabobank, has emerged relatively unscathed from the crisis so far. The bank is the largest in the Netherlands, but is a relatively small player internationally, certainly in comparison to the ‘old’ ING and ABN Amro.

Consequences for the domestic market

The question is whether the situation is so bad that the financial sector, which accounts for just under 7 percent of the gross domestic product, is losing ground internationally. "Should you want a Dutch bank to have large subsidiaries in the US or Brazil? I don’t think so,” says economist Jaap Koelewijn, professor of finance at Nyenrode. “Local competitors are often much larger and often do better.”

The new reality for the international position will also have consequences for the domestic market. The fact that these two (former) major powers are becoming more dependent on the home market for their profits will have consequences for the other players. Competition is expected to increase in a market where rivalry is intense in all market segments and the margins are low.

Added to this is the fact that new foreign players are appearing who have a great deal riding on securing a solid position. Deutsche Bank will soon buy ABN Amro subsidiary HBU. With the takeover of the thirteen regional consultancy offices and two offices in major cities the Germans will secure the position they so desire on the market for small and medium-sized enterprise.

And soon the Dutch banks will probably be able to expect yet another competitor. ING will create a new bank from the parts of the old company. This entity will have a market share of 6 percent on the mortgage market and about 500,000 saving accounts. The buyer will most likely be a foreign player. Sjoerd van Keulen would bet on it being a French company. “BNP has traditionally had a great interest in the Benelux, as has Crédit Agricole.”

So while the merger of Fortis Bank Nederland and ABN Amro and the bankruptcy of DSB create less competition, strong newcomers will also be joining the market.

More likely prey

The margins will probably only become smaller, which could in fact be reason for foreign players to stay away from the Dutch market, says Van Keulen. But even if the home country offers little growth, foreign banks will probably venture a try nonetheless.

“If the economy picks up again, I see the Dutch institutions growing once again as well," says Van Keulen. “ING is still strong in Eastern Europe and Asia and ABN Amro will also rebuild its network for commercial banking in order to facilitate the business sector.”

Van Keulen says that in future, banks must not try to do everything for everyone, but should choose specific niches. That is something that banks should look into, the former CEO says. “The Netherlands is very good in payment transactions. And in financing sustainability projects, such as biomass and wind energy.”

ABN Amro does indeed plan to combine the offices that it has acquired as part of the integration with Fortis. ABN Amro can merge the international network that it still has in the division for wealthy private individuals with Fortis’ foreign offices that support the business sector. This involves about 30 foreign offices, which could form the basis for ABN Amro’s new commercial bank for the Dutch business sector abroad.

Does this threaten a return to the unbridled expansion of the 1990s once the recession dies down? “I do not see any large takeovers or a return to large-scale private banking on foreign markets,” says Van Keulen. Koelewijn says the end of the economic malaise could bring about the round of European consolidations that experts have been forecasting for years. Dutch banks were long seen as buyers. But their new smaller size makes them more likely prey.

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Financial News | Fortis en ABN

Financial Books recommended

September 10
by Marty Hermsen 10. September 2009 20:57

CEO Mr. Gerrit Zalm from the new Dutch ABN Bank recommends on his weblog the book
The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

This book is an entertaining and enlightening book, and fairly easy to read. It has an important message regarding how the world works; that the world is governed not by the predictable and the average, but by the random, the unknownable, the unpredictable -- big events or discoveries or unusual people that have big consequences. Change comes not uniformly but in unpredictable spurts. These are the Black Swans of the title: completedly unexpected and rare events or novel ideas or technologies that have a huge impact on the world. Indeed, Taleb argues that history itself is primarly driven by these Black Swans.

 

Another book which I personal recommend for reading is Restoring Financial Stability: How to Repair a Failed System (Wiley Finance)

Restoring Financial Stability is the single most comprehensive book published to date on the great credit meltdown that began in 2007 and is now nearing two years in length. The book is organized as a series of parts covering different aspects of the crisis, each of which is in turn divided into 2-3 chapters that are essentially "white papers" written by different contributing authors. The book begins with a well-written overview chapter describing the key events of the crisis up to the time of publication. The book then moves into the causes and sub-causes of the crisis, with the general thrust moving over time from descibing what happened to prescriptions for preventing future occurrences.

While the individual chapters are written by different contributors, the book reads smoothly and does not feel disjointed as is sometimes the case with books that have multiple authors. The book's organization and editing makes it seem as if it was written by a single author. While it offers much more sophisticated insight than what has generally been written in the business and financial press (let alone the general news media), I think that most readers with a decent working knowledge of financial markets will find it to be quite accessible.

On my vacation in Turkey, begin september 2009 I readed this book under a palm tree....

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Fortis en ABN

Project Turquoise

August 20
by Marty Hermsen 20. August 2009 16:13

Project Turquoise, an alternative European cash equities trading platform established by a group of big investment banks, will go live on August 18, a senior Turquoise executive said on Wednesday.

Backed by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, UBS, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas and Societe Generale, Turquoise is one of the multilateral trading facilities, or MTFs, being set up to challenge the virtual monopolies long enjoyed by many traditional national stock exchanges in Europe.

"We will go live on August 18," Turquoise Chief Operating Officer Adrian Farnham told reporters in Frankfurt, Germany's financial capital.

Turquoise expects to have signed up about 50 trading members by that time, Farnham said. That compares with 65 banks and brokerages now trading on rival MTF Chi-X Europe, part of Japanese Nomura Holdings' broker agency Instinet.

In operation for 15 months, Chi-X Europe has by now reached average daily turnover of between 2.7 billion and 3.0 billion euros, Chi-X Europe Chief Executive Peter Randall told the same briefing.

Chi-X trades primarily British, French, German, Swiss and Dutch blue-chip stocks.

Frankfurt stock exchange operator Deutsche Boerse said last week average daily turnover in its electronic order-matching system Xetra fell to 7.6 billion euros between April 1 and June 16 compared with 11.3 billion in the whole of the first quarter and 10.3 billion in full-year 2007.

Randall said trading data suggested that MTFs such as Chi-X, which says it is cheaper and faster than traditional exchanges, have taken market share from the incumbents.

Farnham said Turquoise, too, aimed to be a serious contender.

"We are not a niche player. We are a true pan-European market. We expect to compete head-to-head with the London Stock Exchange, Deutsche Boerse and NYSE.L Euronext" he said.

On its launch date, Turquoise would offer trading in five securities. This would grow to 300 open order-book securities and an additional 1,200 so-called dark pool securities, or stocks for which neither the price nor the identity of the trading company is displayed, by early September, Farnham said.

source

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Financial News | Fortis en ABN

Voorzetje voor Wouter Bos en Wellink....

August 19
by Marty Hermsen 19. August 2009 01:04

The world economy has been hit by a severe financial crisis, resulting in the worst global economic downturn for over 60 years. Triggered by difficulties in the US housing market that exposed the way that banks and other lenders had been underestimating real risks for too long, the crisis spread so quickly throughout global financial markets that banking systems around the world were severely destabilised. As a result, the impact has spread beyond the financial system,hitting economic growth, prosperity and jobs throughout the world.


First and foremost, the crisis has been caused by the failure across the world of many in the banking sector, including boards and investors, to understand the true risks created by the innovation and rapid growth of interconnected, globalised markets for financial services in recent years. The firms that have failed in the UK typically allowed their businesses to become
overextended through:


• excessive leverage and risk taking;
• over-reliance on wholesale funding;
• overdependence on particularly risky product streams, such as buy-to-let mortgages or derivatives; or
• poor management decisions in respect of acquisitions.


These failures of commercial judgement brought the world’s financial system to its knees in October 2008.


As a result, the Government had to intervene in unprecedented ways to protect depositors in UK banks and building societies, to enable banks to continue to lend to the UK economy during the recession, and to restore financial stability. At Budget 2009, the Treasury estimated that the cost of Government action could eventually be as high as £50bn. But the costs of Government inaction would have been far higher, as a modern economy cannot function without a stable banking system.


The way firms manage risk, the quality and quantity of capital they hold, and the way regulators monitor firms need to change. The Government will build on reforms already implemented to
improve the way banks are managed and regulated in the UK, to ensure that banks and financial markets will be more resilient to any global shocks that may in future threaten our financial system.


The Government is advocating similar changes across the world, in discussion with the EU, the G20 and international partners. Reform of how banks operate globally, and improving how
regulators across the world work together, will be key to preventing global financial crises from recurring in the future.

This document sets out the Government’s analysis of the causes of the financial crisis, the action already taken to restore financial stability and the regulatory reforms necessary to strengthen the financial system for the future, so that consumers, businesses of all sectors and the economy as a whole continue to have access to the stable credit that is so essential to building Britain’s future through growth, investment and innovation.

Please click here to read the complete PDF document

 

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Financial News | Fortis en ABN

Chi-X Consolidates Liquidity

August 18
by Marty Hermsen 18. August 2009 23:44

The pan-European multilateral trading facility (MTF) launches its Chi-Vision smart liquidity consolidation service and confirmed Instinet Europe as the first client.

Pan-European multilateral trading facility (MTF) Chi-X has launched smart liquidity consolidation service Chi-Vision, and has confirmed that its sibling firm, agency brokerage Instinet Europe, is the first client.

Chi-Vision offers customers an additional way to access the Chi-X visible book, the Chi-Delta non-displayed order book, and external liquidity providers including Citadel Securities and Knight Capital Europe. It is available immediately for technical connectivity, and pilot operation will be available later this month. All trades executed through Chi-Vision will be novated to Fortis subsidiary the European Multilateral Clearing Facility (EMCF) as central counterparty.

"Our approach to onward routing will enable Chi-Vision clients to efficiently access a number of external liquidity providers in addition to our own order books through a single connection, while also reaping the benefits of central counterparty clearing," says Hirander Misra, COO of Chi-X Europe. "We look forward to announcing connectivity to additional external liquidity providers in due course," he says.

The service helps consolidate liquidity that clients otherwise could not access easily by offering a range of flexible smart routing strategies to onward route the order to the best possible destination depending on a client's preferred configuration, say Chi-X officials. Some external liquidity providers will be proximity hosted within the same primary datacenter as the MTF's matching engine, so roundtrip latencies for onward routing with Chi-Vision could be below 400 microseconds in some cases.

"We are delighted to be Chi-Vision's first client," says Richard Balarkas, CEO of Instinet Europe. "Not only will our clients now have faster access to both the visible and non-displayed Chi-X Europe order books, but they will also have the ability to access the external liquidity providers."

Source

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Fortis en ABN

Go DUTCH on New York’s GOVERNORS ISLAND September 10 - 20

August 07
by Marty Hermsen 7. August 2009 23:54

Direct from Holland, the New Island Festival will set up stakes on New York City's Governors Island from September 10–13 and again from September 17–20. The festival will kick off the fall with concerts, exhilarating DJ sets, provocative theatre, stunning site specific performance and dazzling visual arts, performed by world class Dutch performers. More than 100 artists will perform during the festival.

Did you know I am living in Holland ?  My advise GO there and feel, see and hear about my country.  For US the story about Hansje Brinker and the finger in the dyke, original written by Mary Mapes Dodge.  Most people in Holland believes a dutchie would write that story ?  

Portions of the festival will be free to the public. A select number of performances will require paid tickets, which can be purchased in advance or upon arrival on the Island. Visitors can also purchase a festival pass, which will provide them with access to all events for the duration of the festival.

The New Island Festival brings the greatest elements of European outdoor performing arts festivals to Governors Island. It will combine works that have previously been featured in the world-renowned Dutch “Oerol and De Parade Festival” and provide opportunities for artists to create site-specific works on the Island. All of Governors Island will be the stage for the Dutch, who will utilize the waterfront promenade, historic homes, barracks and open green spaces to re-imagine this Island in the middle of New York Harbor.

Highlights of the festival include the return of Director's Ivo van Hove's Toneelgroep Amsterdam (last season's Opening Night at BAM) and his acclaimed productions of Hedda Gabler and Streetcar Named Desire at New York Theatre Workshop; TUIG's Salto Vitale, an enormous site specific outdoor spectacle that has toured summer festivals all over Europe; and the US premiere of Silent Disco - a joyous dance party where all the participants wear headphones. The complete program will be announced in the coming weeks.

Producer David Binder, whose credits range from Broadway's 33 Variations starring Jane Fonda to offBroadway's edgy hit Fuerza Bruta, said “The Dutch excel at creating unusual work in non-traditional spaces that is innovative, brilliant and just plain fun. New Island Festival will do for The Netherlands what Fuerza Bruta and De la Guarda have done for Argentina. It’s going to be a spectacular 10 days of performances and parties.”

The New Island Festival is part of NY400, which celebrates the 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's voyage from Amsterdam to New York Harbor, and commemorates 400 years of enduring friendship between the Netherlands and the United States. Frans Timmermans, Minister for European Affairs and Cabinet coordinator for NY400, said “New Island Festival will celebrate our common history and strengthen the cultural networks and relationships between New York and the Netherlands.” “Governors Island is a home for the arts,” said Leslie Koch, President of the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation. “We are so pleased to introduce a new kind of festival to New York City here on Governors Island.”

PRODUCERS/SPONSORS
New Island Festival comes to New York under the artistic leadership of Joop Mulder and Terts Brinkhoff.
David Binder and Eric Bijleveld are producers, and Henk Scholten is general manager. Co-presenters are New York Theatre Workshop, The Joyce Theater, and The Figment Festival.

Amstel Light, Heineken and Time Out New York are the official sponsors of the festival.

New Island Festival is made possible by NY400, Oerol Festival, Mobile Arts, Netherlands Theatre Institute, City of Amsterdam, The Province of Fryslân, and the Consulate General of The Netherlands in New York.

TICKETS AND HOURS OF OPERATION

New Island Festival will play Thursday–Sunday on the following schedule:

Thursday & Friday Noon to Midnight

Saturday 10:00 AM to Midnight

Sunday 10:00 AM to 10:00 PM

A festival pass to this spectacular international event will be just $35 and allows entry to all events for the duration of the festival; single tickets will be available beginning at $5 per event. All performances are in English. The festival will be accessible via a free ferry from southern Manhattan.

TRANSPORTATION TO GOVERNOR'S ISLAND

The Governors Island Ferry departs from the Battery Maritime Building located adjacent to the Staten Island Ferry. The ferry terminal is accessible by subway: the 1 to South Ferry, on weekdays the 4 or 5 to Bowling Green, weekdays the W to Whitehall and R on weekends and weekdays to Whitehall.

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FIX Protocol | Fortis en ABN | Private

Ontmanteling Fortis Nederland kan doorgaan

August 06
by Marty Hermsen 6. August 2009 14:16
AMSTERDAM (AFN) -  De Nederlandse Staat kan doorgaan met de ontmanteling van Fortis in Nederland. De rechtbank in Amsterdam heeft deze week een streep gehaald door een poging van de Stichting FortisEffect om de verkoop van Nederlandse Fortis-onderdelen te verbieden.

FortisEffect wilde de belangen van aandeelhouders in de voormalig beursgenoteerde bankverzekeraar behartigen door verdere ontmanteling van het bedrijf te voorkomen. Maar de rechters zien daar niets in, mede omdat Fortis zelf geen zin heeft om mee te werken aan het bijeenhouden van de onderneming. Bovendien is vorige maand al een Nederlands bedrijfsonderdeel definitief verkocht aan de Britse verzekeraar Amlin. Het gaat om een Fortisonderdeel dat transport-, brand- en personeelsverzekeringen levert aan bedrijven.

Minister Wouter Bos van Financiën heeft ook laten weten dat hij de Nederlandse verzekeringstak van Fortis op termijn los wil verkopen. Het verzekeringsbedrijf is al apart gezet onder de nieuwe naam ASR Verzekeringen.

Advocaat Adriaan de Gier van FortisEffect is teleurgesteld in het vonnis van de rechtbank, maar zal niet in hoger beroep gaan. FortisEffect wil zich volledig concentreren op twee andere zaken over de deconfiture van de bankverzekeraar. Die richten zich op een schadevergoeding voor beleggers en een getuigenverhoor van kopstukken die een belangrijke rol hebben gespeeld bij de nationalisatie van de Nederlandse Fortis-onderdelen afgelopen najaar. Het gaat onder anderen om premier Jan Peter Balkenende en minister Bos. De rechtbank besluit halverwege september of die getuigenverhoren zullen plaatsvinden.

Source

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Fortis en ABN

Global transaction in Nanoseconds

August 01
by Marty Hermsen 1. August 2009 01:05

In the ultra-geek world of machine-to-machine trading, the New York Stock Exchange is now measuring some of its processes in nanoseconds, or one billionth of a second.

The traders’ requirement for speed isn’t new of course. But the absolute numbers and measurement of the most precious commodity – time – have changed enormously. The ‘latency’ of information has moved from weeks to days, to hours to seconds to milliseconds. We are just at the moment in history when microseconds are becoming significant. nanoseconds and waiting for picoseconds.

 

Nanosecond Picture

 

NYSE nice work. I always thought New York would be one of the three  ! Amsterdam second !  third.. Sydney... or upcoming HK

How we (and they) did get that nanoseconds ! Define patterns in the application architecture and use add ins as your co-processors !

Create a platinum fiber ring and increase the GUID on a usefull way... (is this a precedent !) Increase your network latency and doom the CPU's

but....

When it comes to nano seconds it will take over by emotion. Someone must push the button somewhere. !

When it comes to pico seconds the buttons are taken over by the algorithm.

Again... the finance world is changing in data modelling and algorithms...  you asked for !

Nowadays the question is: what is the latency between machines and data centres? How large are your pipes? How many hops? What is the throughput of your computers? What kind of messaging do you use? What type of routers? And a more fundamental question is – where is your data centre? Each of these areas is a specialism even within the information technology field.

A very few individuals can successfully navigate all these realms......>>>>

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Fortis en ABN | SEPA

About Me

My name is Marty Hermsen, 45 years young, living in the Netherlands, married with Denise for almost 16 years now, without children but with our 'child' dogs in the small village Kamerik near Woerden, between cows and cheaps, in the middle from nature.... a paradise in the dense populated area in the world...

I am working at Fortis Bank Netherland and ABN Amro as IT Architect with current activities in separation Fortis Netherlands and Fortis Belgium and in integration Fortis Bank Netherland with ABN Amro. Creating a new Enterprise Microsoft Windows Platform based on Windows 2008 and integrating webapplications, sharepoint etc etc.

Creating a newbank...

click here for more about me

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