Sunday, July 06, 2008

Phisix: Too Much of Horror Movies

``In the sky, there is no distinction of east and west; people create distinctions out of their own minds and then believe them to be true." Buddha

Local investors have been spooked by either inflation figures or elevated oil prices or both. The Phisix lost another 3.94% over the week to increase its year to date losses of 34.58%. From the Phisix peak in October 2007, the present bear market has accrued losses of about 39%.

Despite the net foreign selling this week, which was mostly due to the special block sales of San Miguel shares, board transactions reveal of a marginal net foreign buying. Again the rather slightly bearish bias to neutral outlook by foreign participants indicates of the locals at the driver’s seat.

The recent activities suggest that local participants continues indiscriminately sell the market in the assumption that the apocalypse is around the corner. This is a peculiarity though; retail investors hardly seem to know how to absorb losses which makes us suspect the ongoing selling pressures could possibly come from redemptions from indirect participants (e.g. bank UITFs, or Index funds or mutual funds).

Well we have been arguing that inflationary environments does not equate to financial Armageddon, there are industries that have been seen to benefit from the present environment see figure 7.

Figure 7 PIMCO: Winners and Losers

Pimco’s Mark Kiesel says that their company remains weighted in certain sectors (highlight mine), ``The energy, materials and metals and mining sectors remain areas we continue to favor in our credit selection process. In the case of energy, fundamentals tend to improve as price levels rise because higher inflationary periods typically result in strong top-line revenue growth for energy companies where demand is relatively inelastic. The industrialization of the emerging markets has led to significantly stronger demand growth for energy and put pressure on already tight resource supplies. Not surprisingly, gross margins for energy companies have expanded over the past several years as revenue has grown faster than costs.”

Why? See figure 7 again courtesy of PIMCO…

Figure 8: PIMCO: Who Has Pricing Power?

So inelastic demand, commodity pricing pass through, revenues growing faster than rising costs makes the aforementioned industries attractive.

Why have the local participants been selling? Because they’ve watched too much of horror movies.

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