``If a man tries to question the doctrines of etatism or nationalism, hardly anyone ventures to weigh his arguments. The heretic is ridiculed, called names, ignored. It has come to be regarded as insolent or outrageous to criticize the views of powerful pressure groups or political parties, or to doubt the beneficial effects of state omnipotence. Public opinion has espoused a set of dogmas which there is less and less freedom to attack. In the name of progress and freedom both progress and freedom are being outlawed.”-Garet Garrett (1878-1954), American Journalist
Meanwhile, we are pleased to say that the first segment “
Oddball comment of the week, this from Bloomberg (emphasis mine),
``
``Increases in the price of wheat, milk and other food items pushed
Since inflation is a product of government policies, then such statement is a practical admission of arrant incompetence. What good is it for central banks to exist when they can’t control the effects of their own policies?
What Media Didn’t Tell About the Peso
The Endogenous View and the Framing Effect
As a contrarian analyst we try to follow the principles of French liberal economist Frédéric Bastiat’s who wrote about the Parable of the Broken Window in the 1850 essay Ce qu'on voit et ce qu'on ne voit pas (That Which Is Seen and That Which Is Unseen). The precept, of which, centers on the hidden costs of every decisions or the law of unintended consequences (usually seen through the prisms of government interventions). For example, applied to our field, while contrarians tend to serendipitously make occasional major accurate forecasts, the hidden cost or side effect of going against the crowd or of espousing a radically unpopular theme have been ostracization.
Applied to the Peso, domestic experts tell us that exchange rates are determined by demand and supply. True enough. But when we are contented to look at remittances, trade balances or foreign direct investments, we are then vetting from THE INSIDE LOOKING OUT or these variables are seen only as a FUNCTION of the Philippine Economy. That is not the complete picture.
And quite importantly, when we become totally entranced with politics to the point of logical paralysis like a deer who freezes in front of the headlights, such is called obsession or fanaticism and not analysis.
Again while exchange rates are indeed a function of demand and supply, these views purposely limits the public’s perception to the dimension of the Philippine Peso relative to the US dollar ALONE. Since currency markets reflect a ZERO sum game, where one wins at the expense of the other then it is easy to build a case against the rising Peso.
In other words, such arguments facilely plays into the variant of an economic concept known as the Dutch Disease, (wikepidia.org), ``The theory is that an increase in revenues from natural resources will deindustrialise a nation's economy by raising the exchange rate, which makes the manufacturing sector less competitive”. In our case, it is not natural resource exports yet, but of HUMAN exports.
Unfortunately this form of presentation is called the Framing Effect or (wikepidia.org) ``the packaging of an element of rhetoric in such a way as to encourage certain interpretations and to discourage others.” (highlight mine).
Objective analysis attempts to look from a balanced angle against biased analysis whose views are directed by a certain desired outcome. In the markets, losses are usually suffered by those who are consumed by their biases. It certainly seems applicable to everything we do. Since extreme biases “tunnels” our vision to the point of absolute rigidity, we become less open and flexible and squarely insist on our perceived outcomes. We simply cannot move forward if we are drowned by false expectations.
Myths versus Observable Reality
Well in contrast to such views our thoughts is that the currency markets operate from three divergent angles; namely endogenous, exogenous and market expectations (speculative capital). Hence the domestic frame we presented above could be called as endogenous or internal view.
Initially to give us a broader perspective let us examine the historical performance of Philippine Peso from two horizons, a long term 62 year time frame and a medium term 7 year period, as shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Philippine Peso’s Long Term or 62 year (left) and Medium Term or 7 year Historical Performance (right)
In short, like today, the Philippine financial markets and its economy has been captive to external forces rather than internal driven factors, subjecting us to external risks more than the internally generated one in contrast to what the others say.
Under such premise it pays to understand how the
As you can further see in the long term chart, it is only during the present period where the Philippine Peso has made a meaningful advance, particularly during the inflection point in 2005.
One should note that in 2005, the Peso attempted to advance in January but was spurned by “politics”, remember the “Hello Garci” scandal? Yet by September, the markets have simply discounted the political window and went on to adjust materially (see left chart of Figure 1). Since then, all of the significant blips of the Peso had been due to external factors. Not even the recent Glorietta blast was enough to turn the Peso around.
Before we proceed, it is an important reminder that the charts of Figure 1 or the historical trend of the Philippine Peso would serve as an ANCHOR for comparison to the subsequent charts in our discussion.
Figure 2: IMF: Remittance Flows (left), Yardeni.com: Philippine Trade Balance (right)
While we do not deny the fact that remittances has immensely added to our foreign exchange reserves and has been an important contributor to our economy, as a market observer we find the correlation or the causation of the remittance driven Peso argument as quite doubtful.
The left pane of figure 2 from the IMF (2007 country report) shows of the remittance trends of the
One, remittance trends has been on a 10 year uptrend and steadily growing since and
Second, the rate of remittances has accelerated since 2002.
Now revert to figure 1 or the peso’s 7 year chart (left); notice that since 2002 the Peso continued to decline in spite of the acceleration of remittances. Again the Peso made its successful turnaround only in September of 2005 a full three years after the quickening of the upside pace. Yet, the most notable part is that in all the years prior to or before 2005, even as remittances rose, the Peso continued to fall!
So the attribution of a causality relationship with its present action or otherwise stated as the rise of the Peso as due to the gains in remittances has NOT been DIRECT. The easy way to say this is that the rise of the Peso cannot be adequately explained by the remittance trends, or simply put, PRESENT correlation does not imply causation! It is a puzzle how so called experts appears to chime in on a supposed “cause and effect” when such has not been supported by price actions.
Of course there will always be some justifications for such incongruence or a simplified explanation for such outcomes such as a “lagged effect” or the Peso could have reacted only after it reached a certain unidentified level called as the “critical mass” level which ultimately served as a tipping point.
We do not argue against these premises (here we are preempting on possible responses), but our question remains which do we follow, a 10 year or 3 year lag? Or what then has been the pivotal measure for the “critical mass” of remittances, 8-10% GDP perhaps?
Then there is the argument that the state of the Peso could also reflect our trading patterns, which appears to be even more defective. Figure 2 courtesy of Yardeni.com tell us that the
Figure 3: Deutsche Bank: FDI Flows (left), IMF: Net Portfolio flows ex-US dollar assets
Next, media tells us that stock market flows have been one of its factors behind it. While this could have been true in the past, data from the Phisix should tell us of the validity of such claims.
Since the week that ended September 7, the Peso has gained by about 8% or more than half of its year to date gains of about 14%.
The reason we chose the two months of time line is to smooth out away from the talks of the latest developments in the corporate world such as San Miguel’s recent divestment of Australian Dairy National foods and Australian Premier Brewer J Boag & Son (which for us is a questionable strategy in the bottomline enhancement issue; instead the company plans to emigrate to a divergent platform of unrelated interests such as mines, energy-which deserves another article) and the privatization of PNOC-Energy Development Corp, which is said to affect further the Peso’s firming trend.
Not that we disagree with these; we do subscribe to the grounds that these “corporate events” could further support gains of the Peso. But our point is, beyond all these chatters, the fact is since September 7th the Phisix has accrued some Php 7.0356 billion of net foreign selling in contrast to what has been reported. This foreign selling occurred in 7 out of the 10 weeks, which suggests that this has not been a one-off event. Therefore, we have not seen inflows material enough to extrapolate that the Peso rose because of stock market activities.
Of course, alternatively, we do not know if the past selling activities by foreign money actually translated into outflows since the proceeds could have been used to either acquire other Peso denominated assets or remain liquid or deposited in some banks or financial institutions.
The point of all of these is to demonstrate what is reported in media which is supported by the mainstream “experts”, has less to do with the function of the Peso’s present conditions than commonly believed. In short, the Peso as a function of the Philippine economy, the ENDOGENOUS VIEW, is only one factor but has not been accurately the ENTIRE picture.
The Exogenous Perspective
Figure 4: RB of Australia/IMF: Regional Movement
To illustrate, since we have introduced the macro perspective in currency market dynamics, the left chart in Figure 4 shows to us how ASEAN countries have performed since 1985, courtesy of Glenn Stevens Governor of the Reserve Bank of
Since 1997, ASEAN countries have moved almost uniformly in terms of the general trend, i.e. from crash to recovery, albeit, the distinguishing factor comes with the degree of relative price actions.
In the right side of the same chart, courtesy of IMF, shows of how Asian Currencies have generally appreciated in 2006. In pecking order, the
Again our point is, evidences point toward the
Market Expectations or Speculative Capital
Adds Mr. Soros (highlight ours), ``To the extent that exchange rates are dominated by speculative capital transfers, they are purely reflexive: expectations relate to expectations and the prevailing bias can validate itself almost indefinitely. The situation is highly unstable: if the opposite bias prevailed, it could validate itself. The greater the relative importance of speculation, the more the unstable the system becomes: the total rate of return can flip-flop with every changes in the prevailing bias.”
So while “fundamental factors” such as Endogenous or Exogenous facets could be utilized to establish rational based valuations for investors in the currency market, cyclical factors based on price based expectations can thus lead investors to make fundamental justifications based on prevailing price actions, instead of the other way around.
Hence, under extreme ends experts are likely to be susceptible to justify or provide simplified explanations based on present prices even if the markets have been in essence prompted by unstable speculation. A view likely to be erroneous.
This is why in contrast to the “know-them-all experts” we can say through our experience that markets can in itself become inexplicable at certain times.
So as Mr. Soros implicitly warns, one must not always trust or depend on fundamental based views when markets could actually be swayed by sheer emotions, and thus lend to boom busts cycles.
We share such view.
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