Friday, August 24, 2007

Temasek's investment leadership

I have been thinking of late about the recently-published annual report of Temasek Holdings, one of Singapore's sovereign wealth funds. Temasek is boasting that it now has more than US$100 billion under management, making it a sizable investor by almost anybody's scale. My recent ramblings on this page have been based on the idea that sovereign wealth funds may, together, make-up the next massive wave of investment around the world. I have also long seen Singapore as a leader in investment-related matters. So I wonder what this report may tell us about Singapore's role in the future of global investment.

Moving things around - "intermediation" may be the more technical term - is among Singapore's core skills. Singapore's deep history is rooted in its being the mid-point - by sea - between major ports in India and China. As a port, Singapore has long made a living getting things in and out of the place. This trans-shipment tradition continues today, as Singapore remains the busiest container port in the world. Singapore intermediates other things as well. Perhaps most importantly these days, oil and money. The amount of money that makes it into Singapore's financial institutions (and tax coffers) is just enormous. In many senses, Singapore is the Switzerland of Asia for Southeast Asia's Overseas Chinese. In its own way, which is quite different from the loud and machismo ways of Wall Street, Singapore serves a very important function in keeping funds flowing throughout Asia from investors to businesses in need.

Temasek is undoubtedly a core part of that activity. US$100 billion, and look at where its annual report tells us Temasek is busiest - China, India, and Vietnam. These are places where intelligent capital is very much in demand. Temasek says it plans to play an expanding role in these places. I also think it is fascinating to note in what industries Singapore invests. Unsurprisingly, 74% of Temasek's investments are in financial services, telecom/media, and transport/logistics - classic intermediation industries. Talk about money that knows what it's doing!

Large sums. Managed quietly. Deployed in businesses the fund's management well understands. These are fundamentals that are becoming more attractive again these days, as we watch Wall Street's labyrinthine financial structures come apart at a few seams. No wonder Temasek sees the Barclays/ABN deal as an opportunity. Expect to see much more of that, if you are alert.

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