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From: | "Nigel Bree" <nbree@kcbbs.gen.nz> |
Date: | Wed, 19 Jul 2000 23:14:06 +1200 |
Steve Moxham wrote: > e.. Our geographical location makes it difficult to attract large > wealth creating businesses to New Zealand. Amend this to _physical_ wealth creating business. > f.. The Government has too tight a reign on monetary policy and a > trigger happy approach to adjusting interest rates to control inflation. In case you've been asleep for a while and missed it, this is not under the control of the elected government thanks to National placing the reigns of monetary policy outside political control. Rather like National painting everyone into a corner by paying large salaries to incompetent officials (Rankin being only the most visibly offensive and braindead) to their "rebranded" departments together with contracts that make them impossible to dismiss. Labour, of course, could try and change the Reserve Bank Act, but I suggest that the incoherent views of the business community and even more brainless and factless commentary from Fran O'Sullivan would turn to screams for blood should the idea be mooted. > g.. Not enough Government assistance for new businesses and entrepreneurs. Isn't that what Anderton's schemes are about? > h.. Not enough investor friendly policies to attract investment e.g. Lack > of mkt depth and concerns about insider trading. The NZSE seem blithely unconcerned. But then, the Serious Fraud Office has never actually done much about any other form of white-collar crime in this country either. > i.. A lack of education about investing on the stockmarket. Lack of education about investing is definitely a problem. But then, with listed companies having proven to be destroying shareholder value at an incredible rate, better education might suggest that steering away from NZ's business community is a better bet. > j.. Low public participation compared to the U.S. See above. Given company performance, most people are wise to give the NZSE a wide berth. Lack of publicly available information on NZ businesses doesn't help either. > k.. Elephant like memories of the 1987 crash and the perception of the > stockmarket as a gamblers den. Indeed. That perception is wrong, Sky City offers much better odds of coming out ahead than the NZSE and is, I am told, actual fun. > Naive culture that 'money is evil'. Indeed. Like the naive view that business is solely about return on investment. Money is _amoral_. Different thing entirely. Potential Solutions: > a.. NCM - The NZSE has developed the New Capital Market which I believe > is a good start towards addressing the issue of bringing new companies onto > the market. *shrug* New companies, perhaps, but well-run, profit-generating companies or lots of pump'n'dump penny dreadfuls? > b.. Begin an active drive approaching companies who have never considered > a listing on the market. If they are growing organically, why seek additional investment funds? Too- rapid growth is _dangerous_ to companies moving from a fluid entrepreneurial phase to a size that needs middle tiers of management. Company cultures at such a point are rapidly destroyed, and innovation with it. > d.. Encourage companies to seek a public listing instead of private > funding/venture capitalist/ bank. Why? VC or private funding for technology start-ups, for instance, often comes with valuable management and marketing expertise attached, and the VC/private investor is aligned with the interests of the start-up in very useful ways. > e.. Raise the profile of the NZSE in the public psyche as an alternative > to putting your money in the bank. Not a bad suggestion. Banks are vulnerable, particularly now that on-line banking demonstrates to all consumers just how badly banks are treating retail customers in terms of rates offered. > k.. More grants for research and development. Grants are not the only form of incentive, nor even the best. Changes to tax law are more effective incentives, and increase NZ's attractiveness relative to other locations. Note, by the way, that in this Week's _New Scientist_ the "Antipodes" column contains a vigorous call for the Australian Government to add further incentives to private R&D nothing that their level of R&D as a percentage of GDP has slipped badly. What does that make NZ? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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