Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Philippine Elections: So Where Is The Election Failure?

Since the start of the year, we’ve been repeatedly told by mainstream media that that domestic markets had been affected by jitters arising out of a 'general election failure'.

Yet, over the months, the markets steadily climbed and signalled the opposite to what was being reported.

And we argued in Why The Presidential Elections Will Have Little Impact On Philippine Markets and Philippine Markets And Elections: What People Do Against What People Say, there is simply little incentives for the outgoing administration to destablize elections given the balance of risk-reward tradeoffs.

And any aspiring political groups are also unlikely to desire a tumultuous outcome, except probably for those who are on the extreme ends and are not in active in the present political process. But the latter would have a different version of troublemaking than the peddled automation based failure.

In short, media and the politically obsessed crowd had been forcing a causal relationship even when there was little evidence for it, a behavioural fallacy known as the available bias.

Last week, this so called election jitters had even been more pronounced [see Has Election Jitters "Caused" Falling Philippine Peso and Stocks?]. Yet media and 'experts' ignored or downplayed the role of external evidences, even if domestic markets were indeed tracking external developments more than domestic politics.

With over 50% of votes tallied, it safe to ask, where is all the brouhaha over election jitters? Apparently only in the imaginative minds of the politically frenzied crowd.

Today, we will see the same biased reporting.

Following a massive rally in the Phisix 3.85% which likely reflects on the rally in Wall Street (3%+) and in Europe (+5%) last night, aside from a rebounding Peso, in response to the monster bailout of the Euro currency, news reports will focus on associating the current gains with domestic politics-a vote for the new administration!

Of course local markets will likely have a "presidential honeymoon cycle" as with the previous, but this will be more of a rationalization fueled by a global zero bound interest rate regime and worldwide inflationism.

Bottom line: a culture obsessed with politics is likely to misread and gloss over the genuine factors driving the markets or the economy.

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