Showing posts with label Indonesia Rupiah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indonesia Rupiah. Show all posts

Monday, October 01, 2018

The BSP in a Panic: Drastically Hikes Policy Rates and Slashes Deficit Financing To Curb Demand as M3 Growth Plunges!

The difficulty of having people understand monetary theory is very simple—the central banks are good at press relations. The central banks hire people and the central banks employ a large fraction of all economists so there is a bias to tell the case—the story—in a way that is favorable to the central banks. — Milton Friedman

In this issue:

The BSP in a Panic: Drastically Hikes Policy Rates and Slashes Deficit Financing To Curb Demand as M3 Growth Plunges!
-Rising Interest Rates Represent a Global Phenomenon
-The Inflation Club in Motion, The BSP Gambles by Curbing Demand
-What Happened to BSP’s Inflation Targeting Policy? The National Government’s Low Margin of Safety
-BSP in Panic: Drastically Hikes Policy Rates in the Face of Plunging M3 Growth!
-BSP in Panic: Slashes Deficit Monetization in August! Build, Build, Build Prices Fall!
-National Government Used External Debt to Finance Record Deficit, Peso Will Rally Temporarily on the BSP’s Dramatic Tightening

The BSP in a Panic: Drastically Hikes Policy Rates and Slashes Deficit Financing To Curb Demand as M3 Growth Plunges!

Remember this?

From the BusinessWorld (September 14, 2018): “We are not in a major crisis. It may be a serious problem for some people, but for the nation in general it’s not a major crisis,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told reporters yesterday at the Senate…“It was decided that there will be no off-cycle (meeting). You really think we are panicking? You are panicking, not us. That’s why you have to have perspective,” he said.” (bold added)

Recent actions, not comments or denials, should reveal on who DID panic.

Rising Interest Rates Represent a Global Phenomenon

First, the big picture.  

The Reuters reported: “China, Taiwan and New Zealand sat tight after the Federal Reserve’s latest rate hike, but Indonesia and the Philippines pulled the trigger on Thursday to prop up their battered currencies and temper risks to inflation and financial stability.”

Led by the US Federal Reserve, the Philippines and Indonesia were among the 12 nations which central banks have increased interest rates this week

Rising interest rates represents a global phenomenon. Or, global liquidity is in the process of receding substantially.
 
Figure 1

So access to external funding will become increasingly scarce which will be reflected by rising rates.

Yields of 10-year bonds of the Philippine sovereign and its equivalent in UST Treasuries have moved in a lockstep fashion since 2016. (figure 1, upper window)

However, coupon differentials have risen faster in the Philippines (figure 1 lower window)

The reduced access to external funding which is reflected by its increased costs should lead to diminished cross-border arbitrages (carry trades) and investment flows.

And reduced cross-border transactions will be magnified by the escalation of protectionist policies.

Importantly, real servicing costs of domestic exposure on external liabilities should also balloon.

Now if access to external funding has become more prohibitive, how about domestic financing?

As noted above, this week’s 50 basis points rate hike added to the cumulative 100 bps increases during the BSP’s last three meetings (MayJune and August). Or policy rates soared by 150 bps in the last 5+ months!

Compared to Indonesia’s central bank, Bank Indonesia, which increased rates by the same proportion in 5 months, the 4-four month action by the BSP reflects the degree of apprehension by monetary authorities.

Despite the Indonesian rupiah falling to 1997-98 levels, the BSP jacked up rates faster than its neighbor!

So who panicked?

The Inflation Club in Motion, The BSP Gambles by Curbing Demand

Last week’s BSP’s policy action had been characterized by mainstream media (Inquirer September 28) as follows: (emphasis mine)

Saying the country’s near decade-high inflation rate may get worse in the coming months, the central bank yesterday raised its key interest rate by 50 basis points, marking the most aggressive monetary policy tightening streak since the crisis-ridden Joseph Estrada presidency.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Deputy Governor Chuchi Fonacier said the rate hike—the second half percentage point increase in two months, and the fourth consecutive over four Monetary Board meetings since May—was necessary to “further anchor inflation expectations and to safeguard the inflation target over the policy horizon.”

“The Monetary Board recognized that a further tightening of monetary policy was warranted by persistent signs of sustained and broadening price pressures,” she said, briefing the media in lieu of BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. who is on medical leave.

The last time the BSP raised interest rates this aggressively was in May 2000 when the peso was dropping sharply during the administration of President Estrada. That month, the central bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points twice in a single week to defend the currency from speculative attacks.

Explaining the Monetary Board’s latest decision, Fonacier said that the latest baseline forecasts for inflation “have shifted higher for both 2018 and 2019, with risks to the outlook still leaning toward the upside. With supply-side forces expected to continue to drive inflation in the coining months, inflation expectations have remained elevated amidindications of second-round effects.”…

Fonacier explained that a tighter monetary policy stance would help steer inflation toward a target-consistent path over the medium term by reducing further risks to the inflation outlook, including those emanating from exchange rate volatility given the continued uncertainty in the external environment amid geopolitical tensions and the normalization of monetary policy in advanced economies.

In order not misquote, the first five paragraphs and the eighth paragraph has been excerpted in full.

Heck, just where in the six paragraphs does it show how rising rates will “further anchor inflation expectations”, curb “supply-side forces” and “help steer inflation toward a target-consistent path”???

How are interest rates transmitted to the economy to affect statistical inflation???

That inflation is all about policy levers, constructed out of abstruse econometrics, has represented the essence of BSP's programming of the public's beliefs.

The gullible laypeople have been told to accept, without question, the technical wizardry of authorities.

See what I mean by this?

The first rule of the Inflation Club is: You do not talk about the BSP’s contribution. The second rule of the Inflation Club is: Remember the First rule.


To better understand the communique’s opaqueness, the BSP-led FSCC FSR’s report lays out the source of the country’s risk.

The low interest rate environment greatly encouraged the search for yield as greater risks were taken in exchange for higher returns. However, the change in market prices (i.e., rising interest rates and depreciating peso against the US dollar) could trigger negative outcomes which, if not properly addressed, would amplify into systemic consequences (p.24)

Cutting through the fog of technical jargon, since interest rates represent the price of time expressed in money in the loanable fund markets, higher rates should mean reduced demand for credit. And such would likewise entail a reduction in the demand for goods and services dependent on credit finance. Consequently, diminished demand should lower prices.

Yes folks, in desperation, the BSP have decided to implement policies that would WITHDRAW demand!

As I wrote back in May…

3) If the government stops from its current undertaking, it will severely slow the GDP, prompt for a fall in tax revenues which should spike deficit as well. Credit risk will surface and subsequently impact the banking system. Markets will demand more collateral or increases in credit risk premium (higher yields!). 


What Happened to BSP’s Inflation Targeting Policy? The National Government’s Low Margin of Safety

But who shaped the “low-interest rate environment greatly encouraged the search for yield”?

Or, who has been responsible for the massive buildup of excess demand or consumption which had incited by the “low-interest rate environment” that has destabilized the supply chain to force up street prices?

In contrast to popular thinking, demand doesn’t exist in a vacuum.

Hasn’t the surge in street prices been a symptom of immense malinvestments?

In particular, have there not been massive overinvestments in the bubble segments (real estate, shopping mallsand hotels) of the economy, which concomitantly emerged with substantial underinvestments in the consumer goods industry, specifically, the agriculture industry?

Or has the bubble economy not crowded out the agricultural economy?

Haven’t resources and labor from the agriculture industry been drawn away to build, build and build and other political boondoggles which led to reduced output of the former?

Or has the centrally planned economy not crowded out the agricultural economy?

So haven’t price dislocations been a symptom of supply chain disruptions brought about by expanded demand from the low-interest rate regime fostered by the BSP?

The principal channel from which the BSP executes its inflation targeting policy is interest rates. 

The BSP joined the crowd of global central bankers to artificially lower rates to ward off the untoward effects of the Great Recession. But instead of using these for emergency purposes, the BSP became addicted to its balming (boom) phase and doubled down on it.

And not only has the BSP engaged in tampering with the interest rate but likewise have deployed another emergency tool: money printing.

The consensus worshipped as a sound model, the artificial incipient beneficial effects of monetary emergency tools.

The BSP had been mesmerized by the benefits, but ignored the cost. Now the chickens have come home to roost.

The gravity of misperception has spilled over to the political sphere.

The leadership, who saw a centrally planned political economy as an ideal governance template, was ushered in. In wanting to take advantage of the free money sponsored boom to execute his dream society, the regime transformed another emergency tool into a developmental model.

Deficit spending mainly on infrastructure, used in 2009 as a shield against the Great Recession (Economic Resilience Plan in 2009), essentially became a primary vehicle to divert resources in pursuit of the shift to a neo-socialist state.  

Now the unforeseen consequence from the toxic combination of stretching and converting emergency tools policy into economic growth engines has emerged.

The $64 trillion question: with monetary and fiscal emergency tools still in place, what will be left for the government and the BSP to use once “dislocations of crisis proportions have come as a surprise” becomes “evidence of a looming crisis”????

Since the government and the BSP have stretched themselves thin, they are in effect operating with a very low margin of safety making the economy susceptible to a 'black swan'.

BSP in Panic: Drastically Hikes Policy Rates in the Face of Plunging M3 Growth!

Reactive rather than preemptive signifies the BSP’s “aggressive” and drastic interest response. 

And it seems a reaction out of fear.
Figure 2

The BSP has been compelled to react to the massive selloff in domestic Treasury securities as seen in the spikes in yields.

Yields of domestic Treasuries have been rocketing across the curve! (figure 2, upper window)

With the surge in the cost of credit, demand for it should slow. 

Consumer loans have already been tumbling fast! August consumer loan growth clocked in at 15.8%, significantly lower from July’s 16.85% and June’s 17.75%. Salary loans contracted for the second month. Production loans growth retreated to 19.11% in August slightly down from 19.74% in July and 19.18% in June. Total bank loans growth in August dropped to 18.83% from July’s 19.49% and June’s 19.06% (figure 2, lower window)

And combined with narrowing interest margins, cash-starved banks will see more liquidity drought from a considerable decrease in loan volumes.

And surging rates would be detrimental to the highly fragile banking system.
 
Figure 3

Through the issuance of various loans, cash-starved banks, in heightened competition with the National Government, have been draining liquidity away from the financial system.

And it is striking to see money supply dropped to 2015 levels!

The BSP reported M3 growth at 10.4% in August down from 10.98% in July. The downdraft in the growth rate of the banking system’s peso deposits and cash and due banks has resonated with M3.

And yes, the BSP just raised rates against such a backdrop! 

And the buck doesn’t stop at interest rates.

BSP in Panic: Slashes Deficit Monetization in August! Build, Build, Build Prices Fall!

Having been so spooked morbidly by inflation, the BSP resorted to an eye-popping cutback of direct financing to the National Government!

From the BSP, “Net claims on the central government also rose at a slower pace of 8.7 percent in August from 12.3 percent in July on account of higher deposits of the National Government with the BSP”.

On a month to month basis, the BSP slashed its holdings of National Government arrears by Php 74.05, the largest since April 2017! (figure 3, middle window)

So the two critical sources of financing demand, bank credit and debt monetization will be drastically chopped so as to meet the government’s agenda on the CPI! 

And curiously, despite the slump in domestic liquidity, the BSP sees September CPI in the range of 6.3% to 7.1% which may settle at 6.8%. On the other hand, the Department of Finance expects September CPI at 6.4%

Since the BSP’s net claims on the national government and or money supply growth lead the CPI with a time lag, current declines should extrapolate to a pullback in street and statistical inflation soon.

The government’s other numbers have already been showing this!
 
Figure 4
The grand “build, build and build” projects are, what I discern, as the epicenter of street inflation.  Money from this politicized sector spreads or ripples across the economy to affect general price levels.

And that pullback by the BSP on the direct financing of the NG has also appeared in construction material wholesale prices in August (+7.86%) to possibly reinforce its rollover since its zenith in June (+8.79%).  (Figure 4, upper window)

Construction retail prices have dropped by even more. Following a peak in May (+2.61%), August prices registered a 2.05% sharply down from 2.54% in July. That’s a 19% plunge! (Figure 4, upper window)

Demand from the government, which sizably spiked wholesale construction material prices, have percolated or spilled over to retail or private sector construction prices. The wide gap between wholesale and retail prices underscores the "crowding out effect" of government projects. Hence, with “build, build and build” slowing down, the downturn in retail prices have only been magnified.

General wholesale prices have also shown a possible inflection point. In July, wholesale price inflation was marginally down at 8.97% from 9.8% in June. With M3 even lower in August, growth in wholesale prices may have also turned down more. (Figure 4, lower window)

The effects of the BSP’s drastic hikes in interest rates (in August and September for a total of 100 bps) and NG financing (in August) have yet to appear!

That’s how desperate the BSP is! They have lost control!

And it wouldn’t be a surprise if the outcome would be a 2015 template or worse (most likely outcome).

In 2015, in response to the elevation of the CPI brought about by 10 consecutive months of 30% money supply growth, the BSP raised policy rates twice then.

Real and nominal GDP fell, earnings declined, shopping mall vacancies appeared and disinflation became a chief concern of the ex-BSP governor.  The banking system was at the risk of 'disinflation' which the BSP responded with the nuclear option!

Will the BSP’s dramatic tightening strangulate the economy that would result in a shock?

National Government Used External Debt to Finance Record Deficit, Peso Will Rally Temporarily on the BSP’s Dramatic Tightening

And there’s more.

Because the BSP withdrew from financing the government’s record fiscal deficit in August (Php 74.05 billion month on month), and because the Bureau of Treasury also saw a decline in domestic debt (Php 27.6 billion month on month), the National Government utilized external sources to finance the month’s narrow deficit.
Figure 5

FX liabilities grew Php 87.9 billion (month on month) and 11.01% or Php 251 billion (year on year.) The NG was reported to have raised about Php 74.4 billion worth in yen-denominated Samurai bonds. (Figure 5, upper window)

The substitution from domestic to external financing was designed to limit the siphoning liquidity in a rapidly tightening environment.

See? More signs of having lost control of the situation!

And such represents more signs of the entrenchment of US dollar shorts. 

Meanwhile, total Public Debt reached a record Php 7.104 trillion last August, 10.45% up from a year ago!

And with higher debt levels and rising rates, the NG’s eight-month debt servicing, which reached Php 582 billion in August (30.48% of revenues), has now surpassed the annual debt service levels of the last 5 years. (Figure 5, lower window)

At the current pace, debt service may hit a fresh record at the year’s close (estimated Php 873 billion).

I have shown here how domestic financial conditions have tightened and will get tighter, as the banking system and national government are in a frantic race to secure resources. That would be aside from the coming stagflation (elevated inflation and economic stagnation).

And with interest rates also rising abroad, access to free money is drying up.

Surging rates have only been amplifying the FSCC’s 3Rs repricing, refinancing and repayment risks (3Rs) which could bring about the Minsky Moment soon.

With bank led M3 down significantly and with the BSP retreating from deficit monetization, I expect the peso to mount a modest rally.  

But it is a rally which wouldn’t last, because of capital flight and because of the BSP’s path dependency for credit expansion or money printing which will be resorted to again.

And for the same demand withdrawal factors, CPI should also fall significantly.

For a system heavily dependent on credit for demand, not only will its retrenchment choke the economy; it may also incite considerable social tensions.   

Attachments area

Monday, July 02, 2018

Asian Crisis 2.0 Watch: The Second Semester is Vulnerable To Crashes, The PhiSYx Syndrome

In this issue

Asian Crisis 2.0 Watch: The Second Semester is Vulnerable To Crashes, The PhiSYx Syndrome
-Philippine Equity Rally Amplifies The PhiSYx Syndrome
-Sustained Tremors in Asian Markets
-Asian Crisis 2.0 Redux
-The Second Semester is Vulnerable To Crashes


Asian Crisis 2.0 Watch: The Second Semester is Vulnerable To Crashes, The PhiSYx Syndrome

Will an oversold bounce morph into a fifth bull market in the PSEi?

Though anything can happen, if the epoch of free money is over that scenario would be a small or remote possibility

First of all, it has not just been in the Philippines, but liquidations have been occurring in Asia. 

Secondly, liquidations have not been limited to stocks but on currencies and bonds as well.

Thirdly, the epicenter of a likely financial tremor should be of concern to serious investors.

Asian equity markets continue to hemorrhage.

Philippine Equity Rally Amplifies The PhiSYx Syndrome

But first the Philippines.

After last week’s tremendous drubbing, the Philippine PhiSYx was yanked higher to close in the positive. Yes, that’s right. Since the Sy’s virtually control the market capitalization share distribution of the headline index, the Philippine equity benchmark should be re-baptized as PhiSYx or PSYEi.

Because SMPH flew by 8.12% due mainly to an engineered pump, which sent the index 1.8% higher, the three Sy-owned companies has taken control of the index with a shocking 29.98% share, as of Friday. SMPH contributed more than 30% share of the week’s gain.  

And the addition of the three Ayala firms should translate to six firms having an aggregate market cap share of a striking 50.84%! That’s right. The PhisYx is not about 30 firms as popularly assumed but about primarily the Sys and the Ayalas.

So persistent brazen price fixing process has benefited mainly the Sys, which led to their current standings in market cap ranking, and their prestigious Forbes wealth status. 

Has any expert ever talked about this?

So the recent bear markets have only consolidated the Sy’s stranglehold of the index.

Be it known that I have no personal beef with the Sys. However, as a disciple of the markets, I am outraged by whosoever has been mangling the pricing system unfettered.

Sustained Tremors in Asian Markets
Figure 1

The Philippines (+1.85%) along with the national bourses of Mongolia (+2.44%) and Pakistan (+.66%) were the week’s outliers for posting positive returns defying the general sentiment.

This week’s risk-OFF mode appears to be a continuation of the general mood of the region’s equity market for the first semester of the year.

Of the 19 listed in Bloomberg, only 5 or 26.32%, have scored positive returns for the period: New Zealand (+6.49%), India (4.76%), Pakistan (+2.95%), Australia (+1.98%) and Taiwan (+1.82%).  

Equity bellwethers of the Philippines (-15.95%), China (-13.9%) and Bangladesh (-13.57%) were the main laggards for the period.

The Indonesian central bank has raised rates for the third time this year, last week, yet the rupiah fell by 1.4% this week. Down by 5.35% year to date, the rupiah appears to be fast catching up with the peso

Yes, I am reminded of relative returns. The PhiSYx (+25.11%) trounced the US-php (+.4%) in 2017. That was an enormous margin 24.71% margin in favor of the PhiSYx.

However, at the end of the June 2018, the USD php (+6.83%) almost caught up with PSYi 30 (-15.95%) for a margin of 22.78% in favor of the US php.

And given the gargantuan Php 181.1 billion of QE year to May, which is about half the size of 2016’s Php 341.5 billion, the peso is likely to fall faster when inflation gets a second wind.

Asian Crisis 2.0 Redux

Neither has this been about the Philippine peso nor the Indonesian rupiah, the best performing emerging market currency has weakened against the US dollar.

I mentioned last week that “current events reek of the Asian crisis”, I am not alone now as analysts from the Bank of Americasees an “eerily similar to the prelude to the Asian/LTCM crisis of 1998”. 

What seems to be happening has been liquidations which appeared in the peripheries (emerging markets) and has begun to spread into the core (advanced economies)


Figure 2

In contrast to 2013 where the global central banks eased in response to the taper tantrum, the reverse has been happening.

As developed economies have commenced on withdrawing liquidity or have begun tightening financial conditions, these actions have exposed internal fragilities such as inflation and the offshore (Eurodollar) dollar imbalances to send a scramble for US dollars and or abrupt closure of “carry trades” and or a stampede out of the emerging markets by foreign arbitrageurs.   

And if this dynamic persists or escalates into a sudden stop, it won’t be long before one or several of the emerging markets crack.

Hong Kong’s interbank rates (HIBOR) have been undergoing incredible liquidity stress which could be the reason why the yuan has been falling anew. Perhaps this may be about Hong Kong banks providing US dollar funding to Chinese banks whichhave turned haywire.

And worst, if Chinese economy implodes, so will the world.

Every crisis has been unique, though. However, if we are going to use the 1997 episode as a template, then the last semester could prove to be very interesting

The Asian crisis surfaced in July, six months after liquidations appeared.  I am not forecasting that this would happen in July. It may or it may not. It is immaterial.

Instead, since a lot of stock market crashes around the world has occurred in the windows of August to October, current financial conditions make the last semester of 2018 highly vulnerable to one.

The Second Semester is Vulnerable To Crashes

Figure 3

And in looking for fun in patterns, this year’s 15.95% decline broke a 10-year streak.

Except for 2008, the first semester has been favorable to the Philippine stocks or the Phisix. (It was legitimately a Phisix then) Because of another frail semester, losses in the first semester had been compounded to close the year in a deep red. And that was due to the Great Recession.

Meanwhile, first semester gains of 2013, 2015, and 2016 were either trimmed or reduced to losses by the end of the year due to the pronounced weakness in the second half.

That said, there has no consistent streak underpinning the last half. The common denominator has been the degree of price changes or volatility.

Of course, volatility may have been induced by excessive gains in the 1H or by changes in internal and external dynamics.

For this year, and the 2018 bear market cycle, the backlash from easy money policy and prodigious political spending have surfaced through politicized street inflation, an accelerated declining trend of the peso and spikes in treasury yields.

Unlike the previous bear markets were recovery had been based on the extension of easy money policies, the present strain has been upsetting its very foundations 

So for a full recovery to take hold, authorities would have to successfully reinstate a regime of easy money by clearing current obstacles.  

Good luck with that!

And no, minimum wages, endo and price controls won’t do that. Instead, these would accelerate the cycle’s death knell