``I'm in favor of achievements - degrees and wealth and that sort of thing. Still, those achievements convey formal authority but not always moral authority. The only way to acquire moral authority is through your character and contribution, to live in such a way as to merit the confidence and the trust of other people.”- Stephen Covey
Allergy to Politics and the Focusing Illusion
The Weakest Link: The Phisix
The Phisix today seems most susceptible to the present political drama than in any part of the current cycle (since 2003) because foreign money which had underpinned the run up of the entire cycle has now turned to negative (since the late semester of 2007).
In contrast, the local participants apparently have traded places with their foreign counterparts, whereby the former have been providing the backbone to the Phisix during the recent market turmoil as the former drivers exited.
Yes, as you well know, external developments have dragged foreign sentiment away from local equities which is most likely due to the ongoing liquidation dynamics as a result to the implosion of the house of cards built from highly leveraged mortgage securities and other derivatives papers in the US and in some other parts of the world.
Since many institutions had been caught holding into these papers with unrecognized value, raising funds meant selling of the most liquid holdings of their portfolio, hence the contagion effect (selling across the globe). Some financial institutions and lenders have been estimated to shrink capital assets by about $2 trillion (Greg Ip- WSJ).
Aside, this also mean adjustments in the economic and asset valuation expectations from the perceived impact of a meaningful downshift from the US economy as an offshoot to the tightening credit environment- where the same estimates say that about 1.5% percentage points would be knocked off the US economy- brought upon by the ongoing global credit crisis and the contraction of leveraged securities markets.
Figure 1: stockcharts.com: Phisix “Decouples” on Political Drama
Notably, in spite of this the net foreign selling has been greatly reduced and in fact these turned positive last week, as our market belatedly recovered (see circle).
Of course, hefty fall by the major benchmarks in the
So yes, admittedly over the short period the lack of foreign support has exposed the Phisix to some degree of political risks.
The Peso As The Strongest Measure of Sentiment
But, this is not entirely the same tune we hear if measured relative to our currency.
The Philippine Peso is likely to be a more accurate pulse of investor sentiment since they reflect capital flows across asset classes within our domain, aside from other factors such as remittances or trade surpluses or deficits.
Figure 2 shows of the historical significance of political tensions to the Peso. Tremors from major scandals, which rocked the political landscape in the Estrada Impeachment to the culmination of the People Power 2001, caused a significant drop in the US dollar-Philippine Peso exchange rate (see red arrow leftmost side).
Following the Estrada ouster in 2001, the Peso appreciated over a short period but resumed its long-term downward path.
It is the same story in 2005. The Peso which has greatly lagged the region relative to currency appreciation found itself attempting to firm up during early 2005 [as explained at What Media Didn’t Tell About the Peso]. However, as the HELLO GARCI scandal erupted- where almost the same intensity for the quest of “truth” was advocated-the Peso lost its upside momentum and consequently fell back to the 56 level (middle red arrow).
Meanwhile, the Phisix lagged the world by trading sideways then. It must not be forgotten that operating underneath the dynamics of 2003 to 2007 had been sizable foreign portfolio flows. Such that even during the outbreak of the Garci Scandal, foreign funds accounted for “net buying” even at greatly reduced scale.
Essentially, the public’s impulse of scampering for cover in response to the political scandals has been demonstrated by a loss of value of the Peso relative to the US dollar-where political anxieties has even overwhelmed foreign money flows. Or simply said the resident public exited the Philippine Peso on political antsy and sought the US dollar as safehaven.
Today we see almost the same extent of political drama but under a different set of circumstances. Yet as opposed to the past - the Peso is seen breaking into NEW highs…in fact is in a fresh EIGHT year high! Nonetheless, this comes in the light of a streak of net foreign selling in the Phisix since the advent of 2008!
This development thus leads us to several intriguing questions:
1. If the Public is seen selling from the perceived “crisis” then who is on the other side of the trade…buying? This is a big curiosity. Yet, market reaction does not suggest of high volatility or wild gyrations (just look at the chart) to indicate strains of “panic” or “fear”, accompanied by a “forcible” containment (yet!).
2. Has the public been immune to the political risks such that all the brouhaha for change could possibly translate to an “All bark no bite” scenario?
The fragmented elite, many of whom have joined the caravan to the supposed “path of enlightenment”, seem to have been jaded by the political stress as they appear to remain calmly invested! There has been NO substantial evidence of panic selling from locals in the Phisix or in the Peso. In fact, the main support in the Phisix has been from the local participants since the July 2007 credit crisis exploded or even since the start of the year! Can we deduce their actions as merely rhetoric in a political sense?
3. Has the negative real rates impelled the local investors to turn a blindeye to political risks (despite the social chatters) given the opportunity cost of holding US dollar assets? The thinking goes, “I’d like to flee but where to go? The US dollar keeps falling! Besides, inflation is eating up my peso.” (Still this does not represent a sign of panic…since they’re still thinking!)
4. Or how about this naughty thought of mine…could it be that some political entities been “manipulating” public sentiment to do a “poop and scoop” or spread bad news in order to buy assets in the hope that they fall?
With Philippine trade account registering a deficit for 2007 of $5.04 billion (forbes.com), this leaves remittances and portfolio flows as possible major contenders for the vitality of the Peso.
Yes, remittances have remained strong- as they had been during the Estrada impeachment to the People power 2001 and during the 2005 outbreak of Garci Scandal…yet the Peso fell! But it would seem dubious if they signified as the sole variable responsible for the levitated state of the Peso.
This most likely posits that the combined forces of unseen portfolio flows, the “no panic” attitude (yet) among local investors (instead of capital flight maybe a capital repatriation!) compounded by continuing of remittances may have buoyed the Peso. (Of course, this has shadowed the region's performance).
Foreign Money Are Not Zombie Investors!
It is also awkward or a cockamamie to suggest that foreign money is inured to political risks.
Yet, even then, political risks did matter. When the military successfully unseated the incumbent Thaksin Government of Thailand via a coup d'état, a financial market carnage ensued in September 2006 as seen in Thailand’s premier benchmark, the SETI, in Figure 3 courtesy of Bloomberg.
This was further exacerbated when
So, foreign investors are not zombie buyers who acquire assets regardless of risks. Since they are profit oriented enterprises (unless they are Sovereign Wealth Funds SWFs), their positions are based on estimates of a risk-reward tradeoff.
Likewise, foreign money have not been acquiring assets out of political considerations; again unlike central banks who continue to amass US dollar instruments (mostly agencies today) despite the steep losses of the US dollar or like select Sovereign Wealth Funds (e.g.
Encore: Believing In Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast
All this goes to show that words can be different from actions. One can say a mouthful of things yet act on the contrary. Politicians are the ultimate practitioners of this, they are devout followers to Napoleon Bonaparte’s advice, ``If you want to be a success in the world, promise everything and deliver nothing.”
Such abstract disparities have been equally conspicuous under today’s setting; reality according to the Philippine financial markets is starkly different from the reality as limned by the media, the politicians and their followers.
In a perspective, yes there is a crisis- but this has been limited to the political spectrum, the media space, and to social circles.
No, there is no crisis (yet) in the financial sphere or the economic front as signified by performances of the Peso or other financial markets; for whatever reasons possibly higher risk tolerance, negative real yields or buoyant social mood.
To argue otherwise is to see our reasons BLINDED by extreme fixation on politics. Besides, the generalization that Philippines in a crisis falls under a logical fallacy- the fallacy of composition, which is, according to wikipedia.org, the inference of ``something is true of the whole from the fact that it is true of some part of the whole (or even of every proper part).” As you can see, sensationalism will bring us nowhere.
To paraphrase Mr. Warren Buffett in his latest Berkshire annual letter, many of those suggesting for a crisis seems to direct descendants of the queen in
So until we see this “crisis” rear its ugly head possibly through further deterioration in the political arena which may diffuse into the real economy and most likely felt first in the markets, like the global depression tales, they belong to the genre of horror movies.
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