Saturday, April 12, 2014

More Signs of Cracks in China’s Massive Bubble: Bond Auction Failure, Rising NPLs, More Defaults

Aside from this week’s slump in external trade where both China’s export and imports fell in March y-o-y by 6.6% and 11.3% indicative of an intensifying economic slowdown, reports also say that property developers have substantially scaled back in raising money through the shadow banking system via trust sales

Chinese developers raised 49 percent less through trusts in the first quarter as the collapse of Zhejiang Xingrun Real Estate Co. highlighted default risks.

Issuance of property-related trusts, which target wealthy investors, slid to 50.7 billion yuan ($8.16 billion) from 99.7 billion yuan in the fourth quarter, data compiled by Use Trust show. The yield on AA rated five-year bonds has climbed 175 basis points in the past year to 7.23 percent, according to Chinabond. That compares with a2.74 percent on corporate securities globally, Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes show…

New property trust offerings accounted for 30 percent of total trust sales in the first quarter, down from 33 percent in the last three months last year, according to data compiled by Use Trust. Figures from the research firm are for collective products only, which are sold to more than one investor.
And even more signs of debt delinquency or risks of debt default…
Companies with other kinds of building projects are also facing repayment concerns. A unit of China Sports Industry Group Co. (600158) failed to repay 144 million yuan of principal on a 600 million yuan trust loan for a sports center development, according to a statement from the company to Shanghai’s stock exchange dated April 4.
And the exposure on trust products, which are part of the shadow banking system, have been sizeable.
Outstanding property trust products, including collective and single, totaled 1.03 trillion yuan as of the end of last year, accounting for 10 percent of all types of trusts, according to data posted on the website of China Trustee Association.
And as more delinquent companies surface, these have been reflected on Non-Performing Loans (NPL) of banks.

Here is an update from Marketwatch/Caixin:
Bad loans have sharply increased for many Chinese banks as more companies struggle to make repayments, data from recent bank annual reports show.

The total value of non-performing loans at 12 major banks was 467 billion yuan on Dec. 31, an increase of 76.3 billion yuan ($12.3 billion), or 19.5%, from the beginning of 2013.
And in jeopardy are big state owned companies and their subsidiaries involving steel producers and traders and the coal mining industry.
Among the defaulters were subsidiaries of big state-owned enterprises (SOEs), which banks normally view as safe clients, a loan officer at a joint-stock bank said. In many cases, he added, the parent SOEs did not save their subsidiaries, mostly because they were in deep trouble themselves.
In addition, importers have been defaulting too. From Reuters/Chicago Tribune
Chinese importers have defaulted on at least 500,000 tons of U.S. and Brazilian soybean cargoes worth around $300 million, the biggest in a decade, as buyers struggle to get credit amid losses in processing beans.

Three companies in the eastern province of Shandong had defaulted on payments for shipments as they were unable to open letters of credit with banks, trade sources said on Thursday.

The same report cites that along with commodity firms, semiconductor and software companies are among the most at risk of credit defaults
Many defaults seem to be surfacing in many corners of the Chinese economy almost simultaneously.

But as rising incidences of defaults emerge, in desperation Chinese investors have shunned private sector debt and have gravitated into the riskier local government debt in hopes that the latter will be supported by the national government. This despite warnings from authorities.

From another Bloomberg report:
China’s first default is prompting investors to discriminate against privately-owned companies, boosting demand for local government bonds even as the central bank warns of the dangers of a $2.9 trillion pile of debt…

Premier Li Keqiang said last month that failures of financial products are “unavoidable,” a week after a solar company whose controlling shareholder is the chairman became the first Chinese issuer to default on its onshore notes. Risks of nonpayment have climbed as economic growth slows after a five-year credit binge. Li said there would be no “regional financial risks,” prompting investors to bet the state would stand behind local-government financing vehicles.
So despite the Premier Li’s  pronouncement last week that there will be "no major stimulus"We will not take, in response to momentary fluctuations in economic growth, short-term and forceful stimulus measures…We will instead focus more on medium- to long-term healthy development"assurances of containment from debt woes has provided investors the incentive to shift towards LGY debt. 

The Chinese government has announced at the start of April of a 'minor' stimulus program consisting of “additional spending on railways, upgraded housing for low-income households and tax relief for struggling small businesses”, as discussed here.  Importantly the formal declaration had been “short on specifics”.

This shows that in the world of politics, communications are meant to be opaque, and promises are meant to be broken. While the conflicting position by the government gives her leeway or the flexibility adjust, unfortunately this has also been aggravating the risk environment.

And as the same report indicates, many of the private sector debt exposure signify as offspring of the local government. 
Regional authorities, which aren’t allowed to sell debt directly, have set up thousands of financing vehicles to raise funds to build subways, highways and sewage works. Local governments are responsible for 80 percent of spending while they get only about 40 percent of tax revenue, the legacy of a 1994 tax-sharing system, according to the World Bank.

A 2008 stimulus package deployed amid the financial crisis and funded with off-balance sheet lending added to the debt burden for local governments. Their liabilities rose to 17.9 trillion yuan as of June 2013 from 10.7 trillion yuan at the end of 2010, according to National Audit Office data.

LGFVs were among the three riskiest types of debt highlighted by the People’s Bank of China in its fourth-quarter policy report. Their debt is headed for a “mini crisis” because defaults will be needed for restructuring, Li Daokui, a former adviser to the central bank, said March 25.
In other words, many Chinese local governments have been circumventing rules set by the national government as previously noted here which has been a potential source of China’s Black Swan. The above also serves as a showcase of deep conflicts within governments. 

And speaking of internal conflicts, in the face of intensifying debt concerns, the friction between Chinese financial regulators particularly the central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) and China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) has likewise been deepening. According to the Financial Times, the PBoC accuses the CBRC of being “too close to the state banks” or regulatory capture while the latter blames the former for creating the current conditions and “promoting financial innovation” or “regulatory arbitrage”. The report also says that the CBRC warned of such risks from the stimulus launched in 2008.

All these seeming state of confusion has brought about even more risks and uncertainties. Yet these are indications that current adjustments to the China's debt burden would most likely be disorderly.

Finally, last week the Chinese government also suffered her first bond auction failure since June of last year.

From another Bloomberg article:
China’s Ministry of Finance failed to sell all of the bonds offered at an auction today for the first time in 10 months amid speculation short-term interest rates will climb as corporate tax payments tie up funds.

The ministry sold 20.7 billion yuan ($3.3 billion) of one-year debt today, less than the planned issuance of 28 billion yuan, according to a statement on its website. The average yield of 3.63 percent compared with the median estimate of 3.4 percent in a Bloomberg News survey yesterday, when the yield on similar-maturity existing notes was 3.32 percent.
The credit crunch has now been spreading from the private sector, to the local government and now to the national government: such is the periphery-to-core dynamics in motion.

And my impression is that 'tax payments' serve as smoke screen to the real dynamic—which as shown from the compilation of reports above, are signs of the widening fracture of China’s bubble.

The USD-Yuan and yields of 10 year lcy sovereign debt closed the week almost unchanged. 

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Nonetheless despite all the above, China’s stock market bulls pushed the Shanghai index nearly to February highs after this week’s 3.48% run. 

Maybe the stock market sees a world differently from that of the real economy.

Quote of the Day: War fever feeds on ignorance

Ignorance is a primary fuel of nationalism and aggression. Patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrel, as Dr . Johnson observed, and the first platform of fools.

Three professors from Princeton, Dartmouth and Harvard University just did a poll that found only 16% of Americans queried could find Ukraine on the world map. Actually, that’s better than I expected, given American’s notorious geographical illiteracy. Seeing Ukraine’s map on TV every night no doubt helped.

Worryingly, but hardly surprisingly, the poll also found that the further a poll respondent thought Ukraine was from its real location, the more likely he was to support US military intervention in Ukraine. Few Americans could find Iraq (Eye-raq to most), Afghanistan, or Iran (Eye-ran) on the map.

“Let’s get those dirty Commies,” goes the latest wave of war fever to sweep the US, “if we can only find them!” Some respondents put Ukraine in Australia, or South America…

War fever feeds on ignorance. If mobs in Paris had known in August, 1914, that they would die on the mud of Flanders few would have been so eager for war. All sides in World War One mistakenly believed in a short, sweet military victory. The great French voice against the folly of war, Jean Juares, was assassinated by nationalists.

“The proportion of collage grads who could correctly identify Ukraine (20%) is only slightly higher than the proportion of Americans who told Pew (the respected polling outfit) that President Obama was Muslim in August, 2010,” found the Ivy League professors.

About the same percentage of Americans believe that Elvis is still alive, or that an Islamic Caliphate will shortly rule America. Ever since the Bush administration, stupidity and ignorance have become fashionable.
This is from historian Eric Margolis—commenting on the controversial poll published at the Washington Post Blog, where the less Americans know about Ukraine’s location, the greater the desire to intervene—at the LewRockwell.com

I find the observation of the relationship between ignorance (which should not be limited to geography) and militancy highly relevant. And this applies everywhere, not just to American's perception to the Ukraine geopolitcal conundrum.

I’ve noticed that for the many who agitate and pine for war are mostly those with hardly any inkling of war’s horrors. Their conception of war seem to emanate from the movies or shows they’ve watched or from games that they have played—as third party or from the audience perspective.  They perhaps expect somebody to do the fighting for and in behalf of them, while like in sport games, they cheer from the sidelines. They hardly seem to grasp that in war, the lives of their treasured family, relatives, friends or their neighbors may be at stake while their homes devastated and ravaged. They also seem to see wars as cost—free (I mean economic aside from social costs).

And mostly the same group usually serve as unwitting instruments or mouthpieces of the major beneficiaries of war: the political class—who pitch the war fever amplified by media to gain popularity via the herding effect to justify the imposition of taxes, inflationism and economic repression in order to expand their control over society and their resources. Wars after all are not only about politics, but about business too.

So the other beneficiaries or the cohorts of the political class are the defense industry and their financiers aside from mainstream media.  And all it takes to push for war is to rile up on the emotions of the unthinking electorates. As a saying goes, if all you have is a (emotional) hammer, everything looks like a nail.

Friday, April 11, 2014

US Tech Stocks Falls Most Since 2011: More Signs of the coming Wile E Coyote Moment?

One of the classic ‘chase’ sequence in the Looney Tunes cartoon series of the Road Runner and the Coyote, is where the villain Wile E. Coyote pursues the protagonist the Road Runner at the edge of the cliff. 

But the Coyote runs over the cliff, thinking that he still has been running on the ground.  The Coyote temporarily defies gravity, until he discovers that there is NO ground underneath. And that’s where he plunges to the ground.

I’ve been saying that outrageously overvalued and grossly mispriced stocks, from central bank puts, are equivalent to the Wile E. Coyote running off the cliff.

They can run run & run way until….

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…the delusions wear off. (Wile E Coyote portrait from the BobcatinBeijing)

Following two days of rebound, outlandishly priced technology stocks suffered another bout of drubbing, but this time with more forcefulness.

From Bloomberg:
U.S. stocks fell, with the Nasdaq Composite Index sinking the most since 2011, as technology shares resumed a selloff on concern valuations are too high as earnings season begins. Treasury rates sank to a three-week low on speculation interest-rate increases won’t be accelerated.

The Nasdaq Composite Index sank 3.1 percent at 4 p.m. in New York to a two-month low that erased its gain this year. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 2.1 percent to the lowest since Feb. 19. The 10-year Treasury note fell five basis points to 2.64 percent.

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I know it may be premature to call for an inflection point or the Wile E. Coyote moment. But there are increasing signs of these.

One is the developing pronounced volatility in both directions, but now with a downside bias. Such is a sign of a topping process. This can be seen developing in the high flyer indices as the Nasdaq (-6.9%) and the Russell 2000 (-6.7%). 

Two deterioration in market breadth as I called out a few days back. The Nasdaq Biotech is just about 1% away from the bear market.


First to be affected has been commodities, then emerging markets. This has now spread to the developed economies. The initial impact in developed economies has been in the fringes: overpriced technology stocks. Now even the blue chips are affected.

Falling yields of the 10 year notes reinforces the sign of pressures on risk asset deflation.

Emerging markets have been buoyed lately by foreign money whom have been recklessly chasing yields. However when the decline in the stocks markets of developed economies worsen, the statistical growth numbers backing these will be exposed as a charade. 

Remember, the global real economy has hardly been growing due to the invisible transfers from negative real rates (financial repression) via zero bound rates and QE. So whatever statistical growth we are seeing have mostly been carved out from the artificial spiking of the asset markets bolstered by credit.

Such sustained risk off scenario will ricochet back to emerging markets where both the stock markets and the economies of developed-emerging market in tandem will substantially sputter. Then the Global financial-economic Black Swan manifested by the Wile E. Coyote moment appears.

The Cyprus model of 'deposit haircuts' will likely be a standard response by global governments, thus cash in the banking system may also be at risk.

A global risk asset meltdown will hardly bring about a safehaven or that there will be no place to hide—except perhaps in gold and gold related assets.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Indonesian Stocks Sinks, Chinese Stocks Soar and More on the Peso and the BSP ‘Tightening’

As noted here, like the Philippines, Indonesian stocks have been in a frenzied mania. 

In mid March, reports where the populist leader—Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo announced that he would be running for presidency—sent the JCI to a one day boom of 3.23%. Despite a interim few obstacles, Indonesian stocks charged to approach the pre-taper highs of May.

Today, what seems as a ‘one way trade’ embedded in Indonesia’s Wall Street’s expectations may have hit a roadblock as the man on the streets have voted in a different direction and this sparked a mini-selloff.

Indonesian stocks fell on Thursday — sending the main index to its biggest decline in seven months — after early legislative results showed that presidential candidate Joko Widodo’s party may not have enough seats to secure its own pick and would have to form a coalition, disappointing investors who hoped for an easy nomination…

Joko’s Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) managed to get about 19 percent of the votes, as shown by most quick count polls in Wednesday’s elections, but short of the 25 percent needed to secure its own presidential candidate. PDI-P collected 19.64 percent of the popular vote, according to a survey by LSN. Official results are scheduled to be released on May 7-9.

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The JCI tanked by 3.16% today

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The Indonesian currency ,the rupiah, was also hit. The USD-rupiah gained by .61%.

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I doubt if today’s steep decline may turnout to be an inflection point. Like in the Philippines, the Indonesia’s Wall Street will likely find other justifications to “buy the dip”.

Stocks have now become a one way trade. The bigger the risks, the more frenetic the upside response have been. 

For instance, Indonesia whom almost tipped into a crisis, have instead incited violent rallies in bonds, stocks and the currency at a pace seemingly beyond the pre-taper levels.

Nonetheless the importance of today’s event has been the revelation of a vital disconnect between Indonesia’s financial markets and her version of the main street.

And such divergence or parallel universes can be seen not only in Indonesia, but in Chinese stocks as well. 

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Despite the news of a sharp fall of external trade in March for both exports –6.6% and imports –11.3%, signifying a deepening slowdown in the Chinese economy (chart from Zero Hedge)…

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…the Shanghai Composite Index surged by 1.38% today.

Why?

Because supposedly of a proposed cross listing…

From Reuters
Hong Kong shares closed at their highest level in more than three months on Thursday, lifted by news that Beijing's securities regulator will allow cross-border stock investment between Hong Kong and Shanghai.

The announcement also boosted mainland indexes, with the Shanghai composite index reaching a two-month high…

The new rules will allow mainland investors to trade shares in designated companies listed in Hong Kong, and at the same time let Hong Kong investors buy shares in Shanghai-listed firms.
Cross listings are indeed a positive signal over the LONG term, but there are considerable short term activities that can serve as impediments to the long term.

One example, another prospective default. Just the other day, a small polyester yarn manufacturer in Zhejiang, the Zhejiang Huatesi Polymer Technical Co Ltd filed for bankruptcy and thus heightening the risks of another bond default. (Reuters). Week in week out, we get more reports of troubled Chinese companies or financial institutions.

As one would note the feedback loop between credit woes and economic slowdown has been intensifying. Again more signs of parallel universes. And again more interim potential sources for economic or financial black swans which can upend any long term gains from reforms.

The same divergence can be said of the rally in the Peso today. 

I wrote earlier today that  the BSP has been intervening and that exports as driver of the rallying peso has been largely misguided.

And I belatedly read a media report where the BSP chief supposedly hinted at 'tightening'. The BSP governor said that they are “mindful of strong domestic liquidity and credit growth that could heighten financial stability risks”. [As a side note, the same report shows how demand morphs into a black hole when discussing inflation]

Yet the market’s response has been divergent. While the peso rallied strongly partly perhaps to such proposed actions, stocks ignored the threats and even got bidded higher, and Philippine treasuries seemed indifferent.

So soaring stocksmostly publicly listed companies which have been acquiring alot of debtfrom the BSP’s signaling only heightened financial stability risks. What do you call stocks trading at 30-60 PERs and PBVs at 3 and above?

I have argued lengthily why so far this has just been a rhetoric. That’s because the so-called magical transformation of the Philippine economy has all been about the domestic markets response to distortive policies which has promoted 'aggregate demand' that went 'specific' demand or select supply side credit driven demand. In short, a credit fueled demand boom or an inflationary boom.

And since July, the BSP governor has sporadically attempted at influencing the markets by threatening to tighten—  unfortunately a tightening that has hardly occurred except for superficial or symbolical actions like the thinly raising of the reserve requirements.

And market divergences are a natural consequence to discounting such a move.

Behind the Furious Rally of the Philippine Peso

Last weekend I wrote
Yet we cannot discount any temporal relief rallies in both the peso and the treasury markets mainly due to interventions and secondarily from the interim RISK ON mode.

Remember Philippine treasury markets have not only been an illiquid market but have been tightly controlled by the government and their cohorts, the banking sector. I also expect the BSP to deploy some of their forex reserves rather than use the interest rate tool to keep the financial repression stimulus for the government ongoing.

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The Philippine Peso mounted a fantastic (+1.33%) comeback the during the past 4 days.

This has been pillared by today’s whopping almost one percent (+.95%) run. The USD-peso chart above reveals of a seeming breakdown.

Mainstream media tell us that today’s export data and foreign flows has been the catalyst for the surge in the Peso

From the Bloomberg:
The Philippine peso strengthened to a one-month high as a report showed exports increased the most since 2010.

Overseas shipments in February rose 24.4 percent from a year earlier, the government reported today, compared with a revised 9.2 percent increase in January and the 16.6 percent gain forecast in a Bloomberg survey. Overseas investors have pumped $100 million into local stocks this month, taking inflows this year to $494 million, according to exchange data.

The peso advanced 0.5 percent to 44.533 per dollar as of 10:49 a.m. in Manila, according to Tullett Prebon Plc. The currency touched 44.475 earlier, the strongest level since March 11. One-month implied volatility, a measure of expected moves in the exchange rate used to price options, fell 15 basis points to 4.77 percent.

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It has not been stated why a surge in exports should boost the peso. It was just rationalized or assumed in a post hoc manner that today’s export data from the Philippine government equates to the strength in the peso.

The above chart from the Philippine Statistics Authority reveals of the February jump in exports which has been led by electronic products which accounted for 40.6% of total exports.

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Now if we look in the context of nominal US dollar trade where February’s huge jump accounts for $4.654.15 billion (preliminary), the 2014 data would look very less than impressive.

Why? For one, the level of February exports have not reached any new milestone highs. In fact, the February data has been lower than the level of exports during the third quarter of 2013 (red rectangle as superimposed by me on the chart of tradingeconomics).

What has really punctuated the supposed growth in exports has been the depressed export data of February 2013 (red arrow). This has made the February 2014 look outstanding. 

Thus, all the buzz on February exports has all been about the contrast principle—what you see depends on where you stand or what you compare with.

The Philippine government have not yet disclosed on the figures for February imports. So it is a curiosity to see why a supposed strong export growth (based on an statistical outlier) would influence the peso positively.

Yet if the growth of imports exceed exports then a trade deficit is in the order. Ceteris paribus, this isn’t peso bullish.

Nonetheless the recent ballooning of trade deficits have been offset by remittances and BPO proceeds—and as noted in the above report—the influx of money to chase extremely overpriced Philippine equities. The Phisix broke the 6,600 level to gain .64% today. Mania at its finest.

Yet since the peso’s meltdown during the third week of March, aside from last week’s raising of reserve requirements, the Philippine government seem to have been using the signaling channel to massage the Peso’s direction. Last week, the BSP reported “slower” statistical price inflation. Today aside from “strong” export data, the BSP reported positive FDI inflows. And as I previously noted above, the RISK ON environment has helped in the peso rebound.

But what has been largely ignored is that the BSP has been intervening to firm up the Peso. 

Two weeks back I wrote
Aside from the raising the reserve requirements ratio, given the wild intraday movements of the peso during the week, I deeply suspect that the BSP may have used anew forex reserves to defend the peso. 

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My suspicion has been confirmed the Philippine forex reserve in March has indeed dropped, although by a margin.  

From the BSP:
This level was lower by US$0.7 billion than the end-February 2014 GIR of US$80.5 billion…The decline in reserves was due mainly to outflows arising from payments by the National Government (NG) of its maturing foreign exchange obligations, foreign exchange operations of the BSP, and revaluation adjustments on the BSP’s gold holdings and foreign-currency denominated reserves.
This simply proves my point that any improvement in the peso will have the BSP’s fingerprints on them.

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Ironically, to my surprise, yields of local 10 year treasuries have yet to get caught up with the mania—surge in the peso and in the Philippine stocks, they should be declining along with the USD-peso. 

The BSP and the Philippine government has been applying direct interventions as well as indirect measures (via the Talisman effect) to influence the "managed" domestic financial markets. Unfortunately, unless they address the 30++% growth in the domestic money supply, the effects from the above will be evanescent.

Oh by the way, the Chinese government today reported a substantial decline in her merchandise trade for March 2014, specifically for y-o-y exports fell 6.6% and imports 11.3% (Guardian)! This is significant. China has been the Philippines second largest export market after Japan with a 14.7 share of overall exports.

And going to Japan, the largest export market for the Philippines (with a 25.4% share in February), the Japanese government raised sales taxes from 5% to 8% this April. Unfortunately the Japanese consumers have hardly used the prospects of the coming higher taxes to stack up on daily necessities, but instead they drove a binge on big ticket items. 

From Reuters: (bold mine)
Japanese consumers spent more aggressively on higher-priced items like art works in the run-up to the tax than Takashimaya had expected, based on its experience in 1997, President and Chief Executive Shigeru Kimoto told a news conference. 

For April, the retailer forecasts a 14 percent drop in sales, followed by a nearly 6 percent decline in May and then an almost 4 percent drop in the three months to August
If the said forecasts becomes a reality, then Asian exports will suffer huge declines. So with Philippine exports. 

Good luck to the bubble worshipers.

Tuesday, April 08, 2014

Signs of deteriorating US Stock Market Internals?

While the recent declines in major US stock indices looks like just another typical “buy the dip” correction, market breadth appears to exhibiting signs of deterioration.
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The average US stocks, according to Bespoke Invest, has been down by an average 12.8% from their recent 52-week highs.

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By size category. Small caps have been the biggest losers. I suspect that this may be in proportion to the earlier gains.

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By sector. Of the 10 sectors, half have fallen below the average. I have no clue yet whether the current degree of declines by each sector have reflected on the scale of their earlier gains. But recent declines seem as largely broad based with exception of the Utilities

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Nevertheless the Nasdaq Biotechnology index has been down by 17.04% as of last night and seems to be knocking at door of the bear market. If the biotech falls into a bear market will it drag the rest? Or will it be the other way around, where stocks of major composites buoy the Biotech away from the grasp of the bear market?

We will see soon if these have merely been a shakeout or an inflection point

Interesting developments.

The Foundations of Man Made Global Warming are Crumbling as More Scientists Defect

Cracks in the pedestal of anthropogenic global warming have increasingly become evident.

The former leader of global warming alarmism, James Lovelock continues to pound against the green advocacy.

Writes Austrian economist Gary North at the Tea Party Economist: (bold mine)
Green guru and geophysicist James Lovelock, considered one of the pioneering scientists of the 20th century, has officially turned his back on man-made global warming claims and the green movement’s focus on renewable energy. Lovelock conceived the Gaia theory back in the 1970s, describing the Earth’s biosphere as “an active, adaptive control system able to maintain the earth in homeostasis.”

In an April 3, 2014 BBC TV interview, Lovelock has come out swinging at his fellow environmentalists, accusing the new UN IPCC global warming report of plagiarizing his now retracted climate claims from his 2006 book ‘The Revenge of Gaia.’

“The last IPCC report is very similar to the (now retracted) statements I made in my book about 8 years ago, called The Revenge of Gaia. It’s almost as if they’ve copied it,” Lovelock told BBC Newsnight television program on April 3.

BBC interviewer Jeremy Paxman noted to Lovelock during the April 3 program:  ”Sure. But you then, after publishing these apocalyptic predictions, you then retracted them.”

The newly skeptical Lovelock responded: ”Well, that’s my privilege. You see, I’m an independent scientist. I’m not funded by some government department or commercial body or anything like that. If I make a mistake, then I can go public with it. And you have to, because it is only by making mistakes that you can move ahead.”

Lovelock dismissed the entire basis for global warming concerns in his BBC television interview. “Take this climate matter everybody is thinking about. They all talk, they pass laws, they do things, as if they knew what was happening. I don’t think anybody really knows what’s happening. They just guess. And a whole group of them meet together and encourage each other’s guesses,” Lovelock explained.
I have earlier posted James Lovelock’s proselytism here and his continued bashing of the environmental politics of global warming here.

And Mr. Lovelock has now been joined by Dr. Richard Tol, a former lead author for the IPCC.

Writes the New American: (bold mine)
Professor Richard Tol, a prominent climate researcher from Sussex University and a coordinating lead author of an important chapter of the IPCC report has also drawn negative attention to climate frenzy — in more ways than one. First of all, he has embarrassed the UN/IPCC by refusing to sign the report, which he says is an “alarmist” concoction of “scare stories.” However, perhaps even more damning than his original criticism of the report are his subsequent claims that climate change mafia have retaliated against him with smears aimed at destroying his professional reputation and credibility.
But even then, politicians keep drumming up the global warming bogeyman. Nevertheless more scientists have reportedly been defecting

Again from the New American
To that end, they are ramping up the dire climate forecasts, even as more and more scientists jump off of the global warming bandwagon and leading alarmists admit there is no evidence of global warming over the past seventeen years.

However, even many of the veteran AGW activists are acknowledging that their fellow alarmists have cried wolf too often, and that the new wave of fright peddling is failing. In an April 3 Bloomberg News column entitled, “Scare Tactics Fail Climate Scientists, and Everyone Else,” AGW advocate Clive Crook asks: “Why aren't climate scientists winning the argument on climate policy? It sure isn't for lack of effort.”

“I take seriously the harms that man-made climate change might cause,” says Crook. “Action does make sense: It's a question of insuring against risk…. But this cause isn't advanced by exaggerating what is known in order to scare people into action, nor by denouncing everybody who disagrees with such proposals as evil or idiotic.”
Well the increasing revelation of the “emperor has no clothes” in the environmental politics of global warming reminds me of the great libertarian Henry Louis Mencken (From HL Mencken’s 1918 book In Defense of Women)
Civilization, in fact, grows more and more maudlin and hysterical; especially under democracy it tends to degenerate into a mere combat of crazes; the whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary. Wars are no longer waged by the will of superior men, capable of judging dispassionately and intelligently the causes behind them and the effects flowing out of them. They are now begun by first throwing a mob into a panic; they are ended only when it has spent its ferine fury. Here the effect of civilization has been to reduce the noblest of the arts, once the repository of an exalted etiquette and the chosen avocation of the very best men of the race, to the level of a riot of peasants…

A politician normally prospers under democracy, not in proportion as his principles are sound and his honour incorruptible, but in proportion as she excels in the manufacture of sonorous phrases, and the invention of imaginary perils and imaginary defences against them. Our politics thus degenerates into a mere pursuit of hobgoblins…

Accounting Magic: Double Economic Growth Overnight, Nigeria Edition

All it takes for Nigeria to magically double the size of her economy is to apply some accounting-statistical trickery.

From Simon Black at the Sovereign Man (bold mine)
Over the weekend, Nigeria’s government made an accounting adjustment in how it calculates its GDP statistics.

By changing the base-year in GDP calculations from 1990 to 2010, Nigeria increased the reported size of its economy by 89% over the weekend.

So with a stroke of a pen, the West African nation leapfrogged South Africa to become the continent’s largest economy.

And in doing so the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio fell below 20%. The ratio of bad loans in the banking system when compared to the overall size of the economy also dramatically declined in proportion.

The same thing happened in Poland last year when the government there made a grab for private pensions, then counted those new assets against government debt.

It was just another accounting scam. But it dramatically lowered Poland’s debt-to-GDP ratio on paper, even though the government had not actually gotten any ‘richer’.
And how the same accounting-statistical manipulation can be seen applied to the balance sheets of the ECB and the US Federal Reserve. Again Mr. Black
Just hours ago, the European Central Bank released its 2013 annual report, showing a massive 44% surge in profits.

Diving into the numbers, though, it turns out that most of the ECB’s profits come from funny accounting tricks—revaluing a permanent swap line they have with the Federal Reserve, and moving funds from the “risk provision” column into the profit column.

I’m also reminded of the Federal Reserve’s own admission that they had $50+ billion in ‘unrealized losses’ due to the erosion of their portfolio of US Treasuries.

This is almost as much as their entire capital reserve… meaning that the Fed is practically insolvent by its own admission.

Not to worry, though. The Fed gets to employ its own accounting tricks to make these losses disappear, marking the assets on the balance sheet at their much higher ‘book value’, rather than the much lower ‘market value’.

Of course, the US government does exactly the same thing… often conveniently leaving out huge portions of its total debt such as the non-marketable securities it owes to the Social Security trust funds.

All of this really just goes to show how absurd it is to rely on these numbers conjured by politicians and central bankers.
And I’ve been repeatedly saying that since government issues all the accounting based statistics they will show what they want to show rather than what really has been.

To give you more example of fallacies of mainstream statistics,  the great dean of the Austrian school of economics Murray N. Rothbard exposed on the flagrant errors of the Keynesian multiplier. Mr. Rothbard’s case more lucidly explained by Professor Steven Landsburg: (bold orginal)
If you studied economics from one of the classic textbooks (like Samuelson) you might remember how this goes. We start with an accounting identity, which nobody can deny:

Y = C + I + G

Here Y represents the value of everything produced in (say) a given month, which in turn is equal to the total income generated in that month (because producing a $20 radio allows you — or perhaps you and your boss jointly — to earn $20 worth of income). C (which stands for consumption) is the value of the output that ends up in households; I (which stands for investment) is the value of the output that ends up at firms, and G (which stands for government spending) is the value of the output that ends up in the hands of the government. Since all output ends up somewhere, and since households, firms and government exhaust the possibilities, this equation must be true.

Next, we notice that people tend to spend, oh, say about 80 percent of their incomes. What they spend is equal to the value of what ends up in their households, which we’ve already called C. So we have

C = .8Y

Now we use a little algebra to combine our two equations and quickly derive a new equation:

Y = 5(I+G)

That 5 is the famous Keynesian multiplier. In this case, it tells you that if you increase government spending by one dollar, then economy-wide output (and hence economy-wide income) will increase by a whopping five dollars. What a deal!

Now, though I cannot seem to find a reference, I have a vague memory that it was Murray Rothbard who observed that the really neat thing about this argument is that you can do exactly the same thing with any accounting identity. Let’s start with this one:

Y = L + E

Here Y is economy-wide income, L is Landsburg’s income, and E is everyone else’s income. No disputing that one.

Next we observe that everyone else’s share of the income tends to be about 99.999999% of the total. In symbols, we have:

E = .99999999 Y

Combine these two equations, do your algebra, and voila:

Y = 100,000,000 L

That 100,000,000 there is the soon-to-be-famous “Landsburg multiplier”. Our equation proves that if you send Landsburg a dollar, you’ll generate $100,000,000 worth of income for everyone else.

The policy implications are unmistakable. It’s just Eco 101!!
See how accounting identities can create a paradise for everyone?

Monday, April 07, 2014

Phisix Melts Up as Money Supply Growth Sizzles for the Eight Month

Anyone who looked only at the index of prices would see no reason to suspect any material degree of inflation; whilst anyone who looked only at the total volume of bank credit and the prices of common stocks would have been convinced of the presence of inflation actual or impending. For my own part, I took the view at the time that there was no inflation in the sense in which I use this term. Looking back in the light of fuller statistical information than was then available, I believe that while there was probability no material inflation up to the end of 1927, a genuine inflation developed some time between that date and the summer of 1929—John Maynard Keynes

In this issue:

Phisix Melts Up as Money Supply Growth Sizzles for the Eight Month
-Statistical Growth: Lather Rinse and Repeat
-BSP’s Price Inflation and Credit Growth Bait-and-Switch
-The Correlation between the Phisix and Banking Loans to Financial Intermediation
-Philippine Peso: The Argentine Paradigm
-Differentiating the Philippines from Argentina
-What A Replay of the 2013 Mania Means
-Celestially Valued Issues Are Soon Earth Bound

Phisix Melts Up as Money Supply Growth Sizzles for the Eight Month

Statistical Growth: Lather Rinse and Repeat

When the Philippine government raves about economic growth, they rhapsodize about the “consumer economy”[1], and subsequently, the underlying support that industries have provided to them. For mainstream media, such has all been ‘lather, rinse and repeat’.

Yet there has been little investigative work on how such supposed ‘robust’ growth have been attained or how this has led to asymmetrically or unevenly distributed growth, that has concentrated benefits (as well as risks) to select sectors and how these industries have been financed.

Importantly there have hardly been attempts to scrutinize at the accuracy and representativeness of statistical growth data with the real economy. For instance, during the latest peso meltdown which came amidst supposed strong external account data, smuggling has been raised by the bewildered consensus as one of the culprit.

And the same dynamics hold when the government and chieftains from the industry benefiting from the supposed boom parrot the so-called demand side growth. Remittances, BPOs, trade, and foreigners have been popularly thought as providing the bulwark of the so-called demand. And once again for mainstream media, this has been ‘wash, rinse and repeat’.

The general impression have been that Filipino consumers have unlimited spending power. And because of such perceived permanence of infiniteness, the bulk of statistical economic growth has emerged from select industries, who have indulged in a wild and ridiculous pursuit to satisfy such ‘demand’, and thus the ‘lopsided’ growth.

For the consensus, demand has been visible but supply has been invisible. Never mind the spectacular rate of growth in the supply side in order to chase the highly touted consumer demand. For the consensus supply has little impact on demand.

Paradoxically, when the government talks about price inflation, demand becomes invisible.

From the latest inflation data by the Philippine central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)[2], “The continued deceleration of headline inflation in March was traced mainly to the slower increases in the prices of non-food items. This was attributed to the downward adjustment in electricity charges and price reductions in LPG and kerosene products. By contrast, food inflation increased slightly as most food commodities, particularly rice, meat, fruits, and oils posted higher prices due to limited domestic supply.”

So for the mainstream media and for the consensus experts, price inflation has strictly been a function of supply. Lather, rinse and repeat. All of a sudden, the consumer economy evaporates in thin air.

So when perusing at mainstream discussions or literatures there has been a predominance of selective perceptions (ignoring opposing messages) or magnificently huge blind spots (biased perspectives).

The important message conveyed here is that statistical growth is seen as a politically correct theme. And to go against this populist tide has been perceived as sacrilege.

BSP’s Price Inflation and Credit Growth Bait-and-Switch

But such populist sentiment is now in jeopardy.

I asked last week if the crash of the Peso a few weeks back and the BSP’s raising of reserve requirements was in response to the anticipation of the M3 (domestic liquidity) data—“Could it be that the Philippine currency and the Philippine treasury markets have both been anticipating another 30++% M3 growth??? Has the BSP’s response also been in reaction to the coming report?”[3]

The BSP’s latest report appears to reinforce my suspicions. Let’s read it straight from the BSP[4]…[bold mine]
Domestic liquidity (M3) grew by 36.4 percent year-on-year at end-February 2014 to reach P6.9 trillion. This increase was slower than the revised 37.3-percent expansion recorded in January. Month-on-month, seasonally-adjusted M3 rose slightly by 0.9 percent, following the revised 5.1-percent growth in the previous month.

Money supply continued to expand due to the sustained demand for credit in the domestic economy.  Domestic claims rose by 14.3 percent in February as bank lending accelerated further, with the bulk going to real estate, renting, and business services, utilities, wholesale and retail trade, manufacturing, as well as financial services.
Didn’t you notice, domestic liquidity abruptly transformed into a ‘demand’ issue—particularly demand for credit? The seeming bait-and-switch in 2 different reports suggests that price inflation (said as supply side) has been uncorrelated—or of more importance—have little or no causal relationship with credit growth (said as demand side).

Some relevant statistics first: the banking sector’s claims on the non-financial private sector and other financial corporations constitute 67.93% of February’s M3. The banking sector’s claim on the national government (NG) net of deposit stands at 16.5% while the rest has been distributed to “state and local government” and to “public nonfinancial corporations”. Note: BSP’s money supply excludes demand deposit by the National Government, and holdings of “checks and other cash items” and “Interbank deposits” by other depository corporations[5].

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The growth in money supply, as defined by the National Statistical Coordination Board, “consist of currency in circulation and peso deposits subject to check of the monetary system. Also called Narrow Money” In short, money supply growth is simply growth of money in circulation. So the dramatic growth in money supply has mainly been brought about by a credit boom to specific industries.

As shown above, even while the annualized rate of the construction sector has slowed in February to 41.59% from January’s 51.67%, the astounding growth rate by the other bubble sectors[6] namely hotel (41.33%), real estate (20.25%) and specially the financial intermediation (14.46%) have essentially offset the construction sector’s decline. The rate of growth from these industries has lifted overall banking loans.

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Most importantly, banking loans to these bubble industries have now crossed the 50% threshold; specifically 50.46% as of the February. This is from 49.61% at the end of 2013. The fast expanding share of banking loans to these sectors proves my point of the increasing concentration of credit risks assimilated by the banking industry.

Then I wrote[7], (bold original)
The point of the above exercise is to show the size and scale of banking exposure on a significant critical segment of the statistical economy. In short, a bubble bust will tend to have a major direct impact on the statistical economy, aside from the potential contagion

Yet what appear as quite disturbing have been in the growth figures of the construction, real estate and hotel industries. For every 1.9 pesos of loans acquired by the real estate sector generated only 1 peso of additional growth. More staggering has been the proportionality of each peso growth for the construction and the hotel industry that has been financed by borrowings of 3.25 pesos and 2.7 pesos respectively.
Although not generally in a bubble, I always include the manufacturing sector, because some segments of the manufacturing sector may have participated in the supply to the bubble industries of certain goods, e.g. basic metals and fabricated metals, and etc…

And yet the incredible surge in banking sector loans have ballooned the banking system’s deposits by 36.2% in 2013. The tremendous rate of bank lending growth which is being reflected on money supply, should also reflect on bank deposits. [As a side note: I may have implied that deposits have been created at the receiving end, let me restate that banking loans (money from thin air) are credited as deposits to bank accounts of borrowers—particularly demand deposits—before such proceeds are spent into the economy.]

This brings us back to the seeming bait-and-switch where price inflation (said as supply side) have been alluded as having little or no causal relationship with credit growth (said as demand side).

What does credit growth mean? Credit growth simply means additional purchasing power, which will be spent or allocated in the real economy. The fantastic rate of money supply (circulation) growth is just a symptom of such rapid pace of demand from credit growth.

At 30++% growth of credit, this extrapolates to more than 3x growth in the statistical economy. This won’t be a problem if domestic supplies will grow enough to cover such incredible amount of rate of spending growth or demand. But 30++% money supply growth vis-à-vis 7% statistical economic growth implies that there has already been an immense variability between the rate of growth in spending and the available quantity of goods and services. This implies an intensification of price inflation.

Moreover, bubble areas have been rapidly building edifices to service mostly consumer demand, e.g. hotels, shopping malls and residential units. But upstream (higher order) producers, say cement, construction equipment and tools, bolts and nuts, etc…, have not coped up with the increase in the demand for goods that are required for the property boom. This again implies of a deepening of relative price inflation that has already been percolating into the real economy.

Of course the firms can opt to source such requirements abroad. But the problem is that if the Philippines do not expand exports enough to pay for ballooning imports, then trade deficits can be expected to widen which will corrode on her current account (surplus), and consequently, the Balance of Payment (BOP) standings. The broadening of trade deficits will have to be financed by other means. If there won’t be sufficient capital flows or financing from elsewhere, then the Philippine government will likely run down her on much vaunted foreign exchange reserves. So a sustained dependence on imports in order to service the huge credit driven domestic demand growth will imply of a decline in the BOP conditions which also extrapolates to a lower peso. This is aside from the relative quantity of money growth.

And as I have been pointing out, we shouldn’t expect material improvements in domestic export industry even amidst a weak peso environment due to substantial resources already committed by a large segment of the formal economy in the redirection of their efforts towards bubble blowing industries rather than to the production for exports. In short, current easy monetary policies have incented a shift in the Philippine economy’s production structure favoring bubble industries at the expense of external trade.

And a decline in the peso will also impact domestic prices which will affect the allocation of goods and services. As I previously wrote[8],
Even if sourced locally, if the demand surpasses available stocks then prices will rise. And rising domestic prices will likely push domestic companies to seek relatively affordable alternative sources from abroad

But the latter window will now be closing. The falling peso should mean higher priced imports. And the slumping peso will even impact more supplies with limited competition or availability from domestic sources. Eventually high prices will increase project costing of companies and thus reduce demand or expansion
And both 30++% money supply growth and a falling peso will function as a 1-2 punch against the local real economy. As I said last week, a feedback loop mechanism between domestic inflationary forces with the falling peso has been progressively intensifying.

So despite the BSP’s signaling channel tactic of employing the Talisman effect—cite the recent reduction in statistical inflation—to ward off the “inflation” spirits, we should expect price inflation in the real economy to magnify overtime. Put bluntly, the BSP hopes that statistics will subvert the fundamental economic laws.

The US dollar-Philippine rose by .13% to 44.94 this week from last week’s 44.88. Yields of Local Currency Unit 10 year treasuries fell by 5.2 basis points to 4.419% from 4.471%. Yet we cannot discount any temporal relief rallies in both the peso and the treasury markets mainly due to interventions and secondarily from the interim RISK ON mode.

Remember Philippine treasury markets have not only been an illiquid market but have been tightly controlled by the government and their cohorts, the banking sector. I also expect the BSP to deploy some of their forex reserves rather than use the interest rate tool to keep the financial repression stimulus for the government ongoing.

So even if we go by the mainstream definition where price inflation represents an “an increase in the price of a standardized good/service or a basket of goods/services over a specific period of time (usually one year)”[9] such price changes manifesting symptoms of monetary inflation represents an expression “of the value judgments of the individuals involved” according to the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises in the “the special conditions of the concrete act of exchange”[10]. Also prices reflect “not only a division of labor”, according to another great Austrian economist F. A. Hayek, “but also a coördinated utilization of resources based on an equally divided knowledge has become possible”[11].

The bottom line is that credit growth will affect prices in the economy and markets.

The Correlation between the Phisix and Banking Loans to Financial Intermediation

Monetary or credit inflation affects the economy with a relative time lag. But when credit is used to push up the asset markets, the effects have the tendency to be more immediate. In the US, record stock markets have been accompanied by record margin debt.
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Since the Philippines have no official data on margin debt for the stock market, I rely instead on the bank growth data to the financial intermediation sector as proxy.

The undulations from the trend of the annualized growth rate of financial intermediation banking credit seem to reveal signs of consonance with the month end Phisix data. The rebound in the Phisix last November coincides with the resurgence of bank credit to the financial intermediaries. Growth rate of bank lending to financial intermediaries in February was at 14.46% from January’s 10.89% or an amazing 32.8% jump.

[note: I initially planned to use average close per month for the Phisix which should exhibit a more elaborate picture but due to time constrains I had to use the month end to align with BSP’s data.]

While correlation is not causation, it is not farfetched to see that some of the sector’s loaned money may have been used to bid up prices of Philippine equities.

Philippine Peso: The Argentine Paradigm

This brings us back to the 30++% M3 growth.

Mainstream media backed by the consensus has been implying that due to the current boom the Philippines have been on path to become a developed economy.

Unfortunately, current policies and market’s behavior in response to such policies tell us otherwise. Instead we seem to be headed towards the Argentina paradigm.

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February’s annualized 36.4% in M3 growth represents a stunning EIGHT months of over 30% growth which began in July 2013!!! These are facts based on BSP data.

Unless the BSP’s statistics is wrong (hopefully it is—which should be good news), the Philippines has been massively inflating faster than Argentina—in current terms and when the latter began to use the printing press to finance the lavish spending by the government in 2009-2010, as shown by the World Bank’s Money and quasi money growth (annual %) with my embossed updates.

Argentina’s money supply expansion has backed off to 27% in November of 2013 from a high of 38% a year ago[12]. Yet in 2010 when Argentina’s money supply rate hit more than 30%, this immediately fell back to the mid 20s before another resurgence in 2012. In other words, while Argentina money supply growth rate has been sturdily up over the past 4 years, money supply growth of over 30% hardly lasted for successive months.

The Philippines has EIGHT successive months of over 30% in M3 growth from the last semester of 2013 until the present!

Of course there are structural differences between the Argentine and the Philippines’ political economy.

The government of Argentina defaulted on her debt in December 2001. The debt restructuring has been an ongoing process[13]. The Argentine President Mrs. Cristina Kirchner, can even hardly use the Presidential airplane, the Tango I, for international travels because of the risks of being impounded due to legal disputes with Vulture funds as legacy to the 2001 debt crisis[14]. This is a revelation of Argentina’s dire financial conditions.

In other words, because of the lack of access to credit, the government of Argentina has used the printing press to finance her increasingly socialist spendthrift government.

Since coming into office in 2007, the Kirchner regime has nationalized 7 companies[15] which includes the nearly $30 billion private sector pension funds in 2008[16]. So by nationalizing pension funds the Kirchner regime virtually gained access to private sector savings held by these funds. But of course such has never enough for insatiable governments.

So to stem capital flight and to synthetically address price inflation, the Kirchner government has imposed various commercial restrictions via imports controls (including books[17] supposedly due to health concerns), currency-capital controls and even price controls. When the Argentine government devalued by more than 10% in January 2014[18] while simultaneously raising interest rates, the Kirchner government eased some of the currency controls[19]. There are presently almost 200 supermarket items under price controls[20].

So by stoking demand from the government printing press, via 25-30+% monetary expansion, while at the simultaneously restricting supplies via assorted controls, the result has been serious stagflation.

The government has essentially censored the economic industry by threats of jail terms for those questioning the validity or by those who reports on inflation figures outside the announced numbers by the government[21]. The former central bank president Mercedes Marcó del Pont even ridiculously argued that printing money does not lead to inflation[22].


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So one cannot just rely on Argentina’s vastly manipulated government statistics, all one has to do is to look at Argentina’s credit ratings, interest rate levels, and credit default swaps to see the Kirchner’s regime growing desperation for funds.

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A better picture has been the difference between the Argentine pesos’ official and black market rates. Since the Argentine government has ramped up on the use of the printing press in 2009, the Argentine peso has basically been in a rapid descent or in a collapse. While official inflation rates have been at 10.93% (December 2013), Cato Institute’s Troubled Currency Projects estimates Argentina’s inflation at 32%[23].

Argentina’s stock market benchmark the Merval which is at record highs may perhaps be indicating that the Argentina economy could be in the fringes of hyperinflation. In hyperinflationary episodes, people seek the safety of their savings (store of value) in stocks. In the case of Zimbabwe, thousands in % of returns in stocks only maintained a purchasing power of three eggs, says fund manager Kyle Bass.

Differentiating the Philippines from Argentina

As I have tried to demonstrate here, the shared objectives of the government of Argentina and the Philippines have been one of access to credit. The basic difference has been the means of action to accomplish the desired ends. Argentina has been deprived of such access and thus has resorted to the printing press, while the Philippines has sold to the domestic and international audiences—a boom story—in order for the government to have easy access to credit. The central bank engineered credit boom combined with the government publicity ‘anti-corruption’ stunt paid off, the Philippines got three credit rating upgrades in 2013.

Yet in contrast to Argentina, the Philippine banking system has been responsible for the massive inflation through loan-deposit creation.

By adapting financial repression via negative real rates, such has produced invisible subsidies for government liabilities. The incumbent government has deftly shifted her debt profile from foreign denominated to predominantly local currency denominated to benefit from such transfers.

Importantly, via credit inflation, corporate earnings have been inflated. This produced inflated tax collections which has sustained extravagant growth in government fiscal budget.

In short, the Philippine boom story has been pillared in credit inflation, thus the preposterous eight month 30++% M3 growth which if sustained ushers in the amplified risks not only of a bubble bust but worst—a currency crisis.

Although I believe the risks of a currency crisis may seem remote for now, all these depend on the BSP and the government’s actions.

Again monetary (credit) inflation affects prices in the economy and markets. Importantly monetary inflation will extrapolate to increases in interest rates. Even the US is beginning to show signs of this.

Because it is the banking system that has been doing the inflating in the Philippines by amassing boatloads of debt, the resultant price inflation will bring about rising rates that will increase the cost of servicing debt as well as curb demand.

The falling peso will also affect inflation and subsequently interest rates.

The government may resort to price management measures on the peso and on Philippine treasuries but for as long as these policies are maintained the King Canute effect will melt in the face of rudimentary economic laws.

Interest rates from both domestic inflation and falling peso will PRICK the bank credit bubble (the source of inflation). This is simply falls under basic law of economics.

Although I expect the Peso to fall substantially from current levels, it won’t likely collapse. But if the government will undertake massive measures to bailout favored interest groups that would be a far different story.

The Philippine government has been showing signs of embracing Argentina like policies. The sustained onslaught against the informal economy by supposedly widening tax base to include lechon dealers, mounting a public shame campaign and harassment on doctors and others, intrusions on household affairs, currency controls as the ban on coin savings/collections, the cybercrime law[24] which represents slippery slope towards censorship of the net (eventual censorship on inflation reporting?) and others—are symptoms of economic repression. Combine economic repression with financial repression—the latter signifying a transfer to the government and to cronies—these are hardly signs of real economic growth but politically manipulated economic activities.

The refusal to curtail the credit boom exposes on the chronic addiction by the Philippine government on easy money stimulus. Yet the government has been boxed into a corner. Tighten money supply, credit shrinks and so will the economic sectors who breathes in the oxygen of credit that has played a vital role in the sprucing up of the pantomime of the pseudo economic growth boom

Tolerate more negative real rates, debt accumulation intensifies, price inflation will rise, the peso will fall and such credit inflation will be reflected on interest rates, where the outcome will be market based tightening regardless of the actions of authorities.

And eight successive months of 30++% M3 growth is a clear and present danger signal that exhibits the forces that underpins the Black Swan[25] has been progressing fast.

Bottom line: the fundamental difference between Argentina and the Philippines: Argentina has been conspicuously a government bubble headed for a collapse. The Philippines has been a bank credit bubble which the government has been using as cover to conceal her own bubbles. Yet the days of the Philippine banking credit bubble have clearly been numbered. And this has been ensured by eight consecutive months of an incredulous M3 growth rate at 30++%.

What A Replay of the 2013 Mania Means

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Just recently I raised the issue of the uncanny resemblance between boom days of 2013 and today via a creeping Déjà vu of the February 2013 Mania[26], where I noted of three similarities: (one) parabolic-ballistic move by the Phisix, (two) similar “marking the close” on the trading session of February 28th for both years, and (three), the short correction cycle, began in March 11, 2013 as against March 12, 2014.

As against 2013 where a 6% correction took place, the current correction phase turned out to be only half, but the correction phase today has been a little longer

I further pointed out that the reason for the similarity has been due to current participants attempting to resurrect the boom which sailed with the tailwinds of easy money, as against the current conditions, where the boom has been running against strong headwinds of the M3 at 30++% (!) and a falling peso.

So far the 2013 and 2014 mania has amazingly rhymed. Yet if the 2013 cycle will play out in the entirety, then sad to say that this boom will abruptly end in June.

Celestially Valued Issues Are Soon Earth Bound

I have demonstrated how market participants have embraced delusions of grandeur by frenetically bidding up of the outrageously overpriced Philippine stocks based on Price Earning Ratios (PER)[27]

I now present to you the price to book value of the 30 member companies of the Phisix.

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The price to book value is simply the stock market value relative to the book value[28]—cost of an asset net of depreciation, net asset value of a company net of liabilities goodwill and patents or initial outlay for investment net of gross expenses[29].

Based on Friday’s close and based on 2013 book values, the numbers have simply been astoundingly outlandish. One third of the Phisix components have PBV of over 4 (yellow). Also only one third of the same companies have seen their compounded annual growth for the past four years at over 10% (green). Many of the 10+% 4 year growth have been products of the 2013 expansion driven by the BSP’s 30+% M3. Yet not all of the high growth in asset values has high PBVs.

What does investopedia.com[30] say about high PBVs?
A company with a very high share price relative to its asset value, on the other hand, is likely to be one that has been earning a very high return on its assets. Any additional good news may already be accounted for in the price.
In short, whatever anticipated good news has already been priced in. Yet speculators haven’t had enough of these acutely expensive, overvalued and immensely mispriced securities.
 
Proof?

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Based on Friday’s close and the highest and lowest PE ratio, we see the Phisix returning 11.4% year to date because many continue to panic-buy into astronomical PE stocks. Why panic buying? Are these people simply afraid to miss out?

But the lowest PE stocks have lent some support on the Phisix with 3 out of the 5 outperforming the Phisix. This means that growth expectations has been seen by the consensus as a one way trade or one way street. There is no room or margin for error.

Remember PE ratios are historical data. Once the impact of the 30% M3 growth will be felt in the real economy, conditions will dramatically change to impact negatively Earning Per Share (EPS) and Book Values (BV), thus rendering current prices at even a pricier state.

In my view these reckless yield chasing have been representative of the central banking PUT on the stock markets.

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And if the consensus believes that Philippine stocks have been ‘dirt cheap’ compared with galaxy valued US technology stocks as previously shown here, the current meltdown in the same popular technology stocks that has brought them to bear markets is sign of a return to reality or normalcy.

LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and Netflix have all entered their respective bear markets.


Pretty soon illusions will be unmasked.

Take it from John Maynard Keynes who as quoted in the heading has admitted that he failed to see the Great Depression coming because of blind spots and selective perception.




[2] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Inflation Decelerates Further to 3.9 Percent in March April 4, 2014


[4] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Domestic Liquidity Growth Remains Strong in February March 31, 2014

[5] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Depository Corporations Survey January 2014

[6] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Bank Lending Expands Further in February March 31, 2014



[9] Investopedia.com Price Inflation

[10] Ludwig von Mises 13. Prices and Income XVI. PRICES Human Action Mises.org

[11] Hayek, Friedrich A. The Use of Knowledge in Society Library of Economics and Liberty












[23] Professor Steve H. Hanke: The Troubled Currencies Project Cato Institute






[29] Investopedia.com Book Value

[30] Investopedia.com Using The Price-To-Book Ratio To Evaluate Companies February 23, 2013