Inflation is a tax. Money for the government. A tax that people don’t see as a tax. That’s the best kind, for politicians—Lionel Shriver
In this issue
Philippine Treasury
Markets vs. the Government’s February 2.1% Inflation Narrative: Who’s Right?
I. February Inflation: A
"Positive Surprise" or Statistical Mirage?
II. Demand Paradox: Near
Full-Employment and Record Credit Highs in the face of Falling CPI and GDP?
III. The Financial Black
Hole: Where Is Bank Credit Expansion Flowing?
IV. The USDPHP Cap: A
Hidden CPI Subsidy
V. Markets versus Government Statistics: Philippine Treasury Markets Diverge from the CPI Data
Philippine Treasury Markets vs. the Government’s February 2.1% Inflation Narrative: Who’s Right?
With price controls driving February CPI down to 2.1%, the BSP’s easing narrative gains traction—yet treasury markets remain deeply skeptical
I. February Inflation: A "Positive Surprise" or Statistical Mirage?
ABS-CBN News, March 5: Inflation eased to 2.1 percent in February because of slower price increases in food and non-alcoholic beverages, among others, the Philippine Statistics Authority said Wednesday. In a press briefing, the PSA said food inflation slowed to 2.6 percent in February from 3.8 percent in January. The state statistics bureau noted that rice inflation further slowed to -4.9 percent from -2.3 percent in January…But the PSA noted that pork prices jumped by 12.1 percent in February, while the price of chicken meat leapt by 10.8 percent. The cost of passenger transport by sea also soared to 56.2 percent in February. Del Prado said the African swine fever problem continue to hurt pork prices in the Philippines. She said, however, that the Department of Agriculture’s plan to impose a maximum suggested retail price on pork may help ease price hikes.
The Philippine government recently announced that inflation unexpectedly dropped to 2.1% in February 2025. One official media outlet hailed it a "positive surprise" in its headline.
But is this optimism warranted?
While the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE)—via the "national team"—welcomed this news, interpreting it as a sign that the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) could continue its loose monetary policy—essentially providing a pretext for rate cuts—the more critical Philippine treasury markets, which serve as indicators of interest rate trends, appeared to hold a starkly different view.
As an aside, the BSP’s reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut takes effect this March 28th, adding fuel to the easing narrative.
The odd thing is that a critical detail has been conspicuously absent from most media coverage: on February 3, 2025, authorities implemented the "Food Emergency Security" (FES) measure.
This policy, centered on price controls—specifically Maximum Suggested Retail Prices (MSRP)—was supported by the release of government reserves.
Consequently, February’s Consumer Price Index
(CPI) reflects political intervention rather than organic market
dynamics.
Figure 1
Even more telling is an overlooked trend: the year-on-year (YoY) change in the national average weighted price of rice had been declining since its peak in April 2024—well before the FES was enacted. (Figure 1, topmost graph)
In a nutshell, the FES merely reinforced the ongoing downtrend in rice prices, serving more as an election-year tactic to demonstrate government action "we are doing something about rice prices," rather than an actual cause of the decline.
Nevertheless, it won’t be long before officials pat themselves on the back and proclaim the policy a triumph. Incredible.
But what about its future implications?
Unlike rice, where government reserves were available to support price controls, the impending implementation of MSRP for pork products next week lacks similar supply-side support. This suggests that any price stabilization achieved will be short-lived. (Figure 1, middle chart)
As noted in February,
However, as history shows, the insidious effects of distortive policies surface over time. Intervention begets more intervention, as authorities scramble to manage the unintended consequences of their previous actions. Consequently, food CPI remains under pressure. (Prudent Investor, 2025)
Nevertheless, manipulating statistics serves a political function—justifying policies through "benchmark-ism."
Beyond food prices, which dragged down the headline CPI, core CPI also eased from 2.6% in January to 2.4% in February.
Despite this pullback, the underlying inflation cycle appears intact. (Figure 1, lowest image)
Government narratives consistently frame inflation as a ‘supply-side’ issue or blame it on "greedflation," yet much of their approach remains focused on demand-side management through BSP’s inflation-targeting policies.
II. Demand Paradox: Near Full-Employment and Record Credit Highs in the face of Falling CPI and GDP?
Authorities claim that employment rates have recently declined but remain near all-time highs.
But how true is this?
Figure 2
The employment rate slipped from an all-time high of 96.9% in December 2024 to 95.7% in January 2025—a level previously hit in December 2023 and June 2024. (Figure 2, topmost image)
Remarkably, despite near-full employment, the CPI continues to slide.
Officials might argue this reflects productivity gains. But that claim is misleading.
Consumer credit growth—driven by credit cards and supported by salary loans—has been on a record-breaking tear, rising 24.4% YoY in January 2025, marking its 28th consecutive month above 20%. (Figure 2, middle window)
Yet, unlike the 2021-2022 period, headline CPI has weakened.
Could this signal diminishing returns—mainly from refinancing?
Beyond CPI, total Universal-Commercial (UC) bank loans have surged since Q1 2021—unfazed by official interest rate levels. (Figure 2, lowest diagram)
Figure 3
The slowing growth in salary loans seems to mirror the CPI’s decline. (Figure 3, upper pane)
And it’s not just inflation.
Despite an ongoing surge in Universal-Commercial (UC) bank loans since Q1 2021—regardless of official interest rate levels—weak consumption continues to weigh on GDP growth. The second half of 2024 saw GDP growth slow to just 5.2%. (Figure 3, lower chart)
This boom coincides with record real estate vacancies, near unprecedented hunger rates, and almost milestone highs in self-reported poverty.
So, where has demand gone?
In January 2025, UC bank loans (both production and consumer) increased by 13.27% year-on-year.
Are the government’s employment figures an accurate reflection of labor market conditions? Or, like CPI data, are they another exercise in "benchmark-ism" designed to persuade voters and depositors that the political economy remains stable?
III. The Financial Black Hole: Where Is Bank Credit Expansion Flowing?
Figure 4
Ironically, bank financing of the government, as reflected in Net Claims on the Central Government (NCoCG), continues to soar—up 7.4% year-on-year to PHP 5.41 trillion in January 2025, though slightly down from December 2024’s historic PHP 5.54 trillion.
Meanwhile, since bottoming at 1.5% in April 2023, BSP currency issuance has trended upward, accelerating from May 2024 to January 2025, when it hit 11% YoY. (Figure 4, topmost graph)
Despite this massive liquidity injection—via bank lending and government borrowing—deflationary forces persist in the CPI.
Where is this money flowing? What "financial black hole" is absorbing the injected liquidity?
IV. The USDPHP Cap: A Hidden CPI Subsidy
The recent weakness of the US dollar—primarily due to a strong euro rally following U.S. President Trump’s pressure on Europe to increase NATO contributions—has driven up the region’s stock markets, particularly defense sector stocks. This, in turn, has triggered a global bond selloff.
The euro’s strength has also bolstered ASEAN currencies, including the Philippine peso.
As predicted, the BSP’s cap on the USD-PHP exchange rate— a de facto subsidy—has fueled an increase in imports. In January, the nation’s trade deficit widened by 17% to USD 5.1 billion due to a 10.8% jump in imports. (Figure 4, middle window)
Further, to defend this cap, the BSP sold significant foreign exchange (FX) in January, only to replenish its Gross International Reserves (GIR) in February via a USD 3.3 billion bond issuance. The BSP attributes the GIR increase to "(1) national government’s (NG) net foreign currency deposits with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), which include proceeds from its issuance of ROP Global Bonds, (2) upward valuation adjustments in the BSP’s gold holdings due to the increase in the price of gold in the international market, and (3) net income from the BSP’s investments abroad." (Figure 5, lowest visual)
This disclosure confirms the valuable role of gold in the BSP’s reserves.
In short, the USD-PHP cap has not only subsidized imports but has also artificially suppressed the official CPI figures.
From 2015 to 2022, the ebbs and flows in the USD-PHP exchange rate were strongly correlated with CPI trends.
Figure 5
However, since 2022, when the exchange rate cap was strictly enforced, this relationship has broken down, increasing pressure on the credit-financed trade deficit and necessitating further borrowing to sustain both the cap and the Gross International Reserves (GIR). (Figure 5, topmost image)
V. Markets versus Government Statistics: Philippine Treasury Markets Diverge from the CPI Data
First, while global bond yields have risen
amid the European selloff, this has not been the case for most ASEAN
markets—except for the Philippines. This suggests that domestic factors have
been the primary driver of movements in the ASEAN treasury markets,
including the Philippines. (Figure 5, middle and lowest graphs)
Figure 6
Second, it is important to note that institutional traders dominate the Philippine treasury markets. This dynamic creates a distinction between the public statements of their respective "experts" and the actual trading behavior of market participants—"demonstrated preferences."
The apparent divergence between the CPI and Philippine 10-year bond yields—despite their previous seven-year correlation—reveals disruptions caused by other influencing factors. (Figure 6, upper chart)
Or, while analysts often serve as institutional cheerleaders for the traditional market response to an easing cycle, traders seem to be reacting differently.
Finally, further cementing this case for decoupling, the Philippine yield curve steepened (bearish steeper) during the week of the CPI announcement—suggesting that treasury markets are pricing in future inflation risks or tighter policy, potentially discounting the recent CPI decline as temporary. (Figure 6, lowest graph)
All in all, while the government and the BSP claim to have successfully contained inflation, treasury markets remain highly skeptical—whether about the integrity of the data, the sustainability of current policies, or both.
Our bet is on the latter.
___
References
Prudent Investor, January 2025 2.9% CPI: Food Security Emergency andthe Vicious Cycle of Interventionism February 10, 2025
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