Showing posts with label Asia bubble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asia bubble. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Singapore’s Central Bank Panics! Goes on an Easing Mode

Last November, Singapore’s central bank the Monetary Authority of Singapore, raised alarm bells by citing the financial system's record levels of corporate debt to gdp, aside from household debt to income ratio.

In the second week of this year, mainstream media has raised anew concerns over cracks in the city state’s debt financed housing bubble expressed in terms of declining property prices in the light of still ballooning debt, rising rates, falling currency, signs of capital flight and growing incidences of loan defaults.

Well I guess all these has led to today’s ‘emergency’ action.

From Bloomberg: (bold mine)
Singapore unexpectedly eased monetary policy, sending the currency to the weakest since 2010 against the U.S. dollar as the country joined global central banks in shoring up growth amid dwindling inflation.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore, which uses the exchange rate as its main policy tool, said in an unscheduled statement Wednesday it will seek a slower pace of appreciation against a basket of currencies. It cut the inflation forecast for 2015, predicting prices may fall as much as 0.5 percent.

The move was the first emergency policy change since one following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks for the MAS -- which only has two scheduled policy announcements a year -- reflecting how the plunge in oil has changed the outlook in recent months. Singapore becomes at least the ninth nation to ease policy this month, as officials from Europe to Canada and India contend with escalating disinflation and faltering global growth…

The European Central Bank announced quantitative easing plans this month while Canada, Denmark and India cut interest rates. More may come -- the Bank of Japan chief said the country may need to get creative in any further monetary stimulus and Thai policy makers face growing pressure to lower borrowing costs.
In view of the previous events, in Singapore’s case, the MAS’ emergency action today has hardly been about “shoring up growth amid dwindling inflation” but rather about the mitigation of the growing burden of debt to an increasingly debt constrained society.

But of course, while easing may lower rates, which temporarily may alleviate the debt onus, easing also allows levered companies heavily dependent on debt to rollover debt. In short, monetary easing entails solving debt problem through MORE debt buildup.

Thus the MAS’ actions have been intended to buy time from a painful reckoning from previous speculative excesses financed by debt. But the kick-the-can-down-the-road policies simply means accretion of more imbalances.

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The USD-Singapore dollar currently trades at 2010 highs. Yet Singapore’s stock market as measured by the STI nears record highs (stockcharts.com).


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Perhaps debt constrained entities have pumping up stocks (by using leverage too?) in order to generate a bandwagon effect. And because rising stocks may bring about trading profits, cash flows from speculative stock punts may allow debt constrained entities to rollover existing debt.

So Singapore’s bubble dynamics spreads from property to the stock market.

And once again we seem to be seeing a divergence between the real economy (increased signs of economic stress)-monetary policies (panicking central bank) and the stock market: Singapore edition

Finally, the article notes that 9 nations have undertaken easing measures. If everything has been salutary as manifested by record stocks, and as what media has been saying, then why the need to ease?

Or has these been symptoms of the inability to wean away from overdependence on debt?


Saturday, January 24, 2015

Phisix: Draghi’s Bazooka Sends Philippine, Indonesian, Indian and New Zealand Stocks to Record Highs!

Here is the Philippine Stock Exchange’s press release on Phisix 7,500+ (bold mine)
"With the moderate slowdown in China's economy, coupled with Japan's economic recession and Europe’s debt crisis, and notwithstanding the US economic resurgence, emerging markets such as the Philippines will stand out due to its strong macro-economic fundamentals and sustainable growth story. The positive sentiments by the market as regards the European Central Bank quantitative easing program further propelled our market to an all-time high," said PSE COO Roel A. Refran.

"I believe that our stock market will remain resilient amidst the global realities buoyed by investors’ continued confidence in our economy," Refran added.

Year-to-date, the PSEi is already up by 4.4 percent.
Let us put in to perspective this week’s record run.
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Asian stocks flew this week with the Philippine Phisix registering one of the (surprise!) underperformers ex-China on a weekly basis. The domestic benchmark rose by only .77% week on week.

With the exception of a few bourses, weekly gains of other Asian national benchmarks have been at a stunning 3% and above!!!

Yet the best performers year to date as of Friday posted over 6% returns. The topnotch position have been shared by Vietnam (+6.74%), Thailand (+6.72%), and India (+6.47%) (see green rectangles). 
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Yet despite the relative underpeformances, bourses of New Zealand, Indonesia and the Philippines set record highs (with stars, see also above).

India’s Sensex stole the limelight by outclassing the rest this week PLUS a record high. Or stated  differently, record high has been a product of a carryover from last week’s gains PLUS this week’s fiery performance
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Equity bellwethers of Pakistan, Singapore and Taiwan have now been just off record highs.

Meanwhile Thailand’s bellwether has completely recovered the steep December losses and seems as headed for a landmark high. 

Ironically, Thailand’s dazzling performance comes with a stagnating statistical economy whose GDP in 2014 has been less 1% as of 3Q. As I earlier pointed out, Thailand’s stocks reported record stock market trading volume in 2014 as abundant liquidity fueled a massive bidding spree on stocks and real estate than on investments on the real economy plagued by overleverage and political uncertainty.

The Malaysian KLCE, on the other hand, maybe far off the record levels, but has rallied strongly this week. This comes even as the Malaysia’s PM went on air this week to talk about and deny a crisis!!!

Underperformance of Chinese stocks hasn’t been what it seems. 

Apparently shaken by the market’s reaction, the Regulatory Commission backed off in the succeeding days. And helped by PBoC’s injection of funds to troubled companies, the Shanghai Index recovered almost entirely Monday’s crash through the weekend.
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And if one glimpses at the chart of the Shanghai index the Chinese bellwether currently drifts at a milestone 2009 high! So despite a  “moderate slow down in China’s economy”, Chinese stocks are at watermark highs. So how has the growth story been consistent with record stocks? 
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It’s been noted too that Japan has been in a recession. So what explains soaring stocks in a recession

And in the order of year-to-date performance of  Asian bourses, the Phisix ranks fifth in the region after 4th placer Hong Kong.

The bottom line is that there has been little to do about being a “stand out due to its strong macro-economic fundamentals and sustainable growth story” but about a massive and indiscriminate regional pump which characterizes a risk ON environment in expectations of abundance of liquidity from the ECB operations.

The recognition that there have been problems with China, Japan and Europe aside from oil and commodity producing emerging markets suggest that “strong macro-economic fundamentals and sustainable growth story” represents a fantasia unless the Philippines is a closed economy.

The fact that there are trade, capital and investment and remittance links means that a slowdown from these major economies will have relative impact depending on the transmission linkages to an economy with exposure to them. The impact will be (again) relative to the specifics of the industries involved. Writing off risks by stereotyping only begs the question.

Draghi’s Bazooka has pumped up European stocks to record levels even when corporate fundamentals have been sluggish or even collapsing in terms of estimates of annual and forward earnings (via MSCI ex-UK)

The Nikkei Asia quotes an expert on the record highs of Indonesia and the Philippines:  "The ECB decision will definitely ease liquidity pressure" on Association of Southeast Asian Nations markets, said Mixo Das, a Singapore-based equity strategist at Nomura.

And this has exactly been what the region’s stock market pump has been about: expectations of a plethora of liquidity from the ECB’s action. The ECB repeated pronouncements during the last quarter of 2014 has paved way for most of the region’s pump from the onset of 2015.

Feel good rationalization is the order of the day

Just take a look at the headlines from yesterday’s business section of the Inquirer: Market Seen to Hit 8,000 Mark, Corporate Earnings May Grow By 16% in 2015 from last year’s 6%

Corporate earnings grew by only 6% in 2014??? Huh? The market returned or paid 22.76% last year for only 6% growth??? Said differently, punters paid nearly THREE times more than the actual growth rates! 

And this has been why the Phisix has reached absurd valuation levels via multiple expansions.

Let us extend mainstream logic. 2014 performance translates to 3.79% gains for every 1% earnings growth. If the past should extend to the future, then at 16% growth, the Phisix should return 61% or be way past 10,000 (11,640)! So why stop at 8,000? Because the target looks more rational than the logical basis of its premises?

Now what happens if the 16% growth does NOT emerge? PERs will jump from the current 30,40,50 to 60,70,80? And this is sensible or normal?

As I have been saying here, G-R-O-W-T-H has served nothing more than to rationalize or justify outrageous bidding up of risk assets. It’s not  about G-R-O-W-T-H, it’s about GAMBLING. Gambling financed by bank credit and liquidity that has been rationalized by G-R-O-W-T-H!
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I wrote about Warren Buffett’s favorite stock market indicator the  market cap to gdp last September.

Given that the Phisix generated 22.76% in 2014 and has been up 4.4% as of Friday, while say, 2014 GDP will be as what mainstream expects at 6%, here is what I wrote last September which should be relevant today:
Total Market capitalization as % of GDP has reached 105.6 in 2012 as per the World Bank, chart from Tradingeconomics.com. In 2013 since the Phisix yielded only 1.33% as compared to a statistical 7.2% GDP, a back of the envelop calculation posits that the said ratio must have declined to possibly 99.73. However, considering the 1H GDP at 6%, coming amidst a 26.8% return at the end of June, this implies a market cap to GDP at a stunning record of 120.53 way way way past the pre-Asian Crisis!
Yet what happens when mainstream expectations of GDP will be unfulfilled like in 3Q? If the markets don’t make the necessary adjustments then at current price levels, the market cap to GDP will spike  to even more ridiculous levels! And if markets continue to rise we get the same outcome—patent mispricing!

And this has been about “strong macro-economic fundamentals”? Or has this been about flagrant misappreciation of risks that signifies as symptoms of financial destabilization in progress?

Every time the mania deepens this warning from Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff becomes increasingly relevant: 
The essence of the this-time-is-different syndrome is simple. It is rooted in the firmly held belief that financial crisis is something that happens to other people in other countries at other times; crises do not happen here and now to us. We are doing things better, we are smarter, we have learned from past mistakes. The old rules of valuation no longer apply. The current boom, unlike the many previous booms that preceded catastrophic collapses (even in our country), is built on sound fundamentals, structural reforms, technological innovation, and good policy. Or so the story goes …
Or how about the central bank of Central banks, Bank for international Settlement’s General Manager Jaime Carauna’s admonition last November
Credit booms can act as a smokescreen. They tend to mask the sectoral misallocations that I just described, making it difficult to detect and prevent these misallocations in time. Boom times also tend to hide other slow-moving forms of deterioration in real growth potential.
Asian currencies has been less indiscriminate relative to stocks.
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But still traces of the Asian Risk ON landscape has been evident. The peso rallied strongly this week, up 1.1%. Year to date the peso has been up 1.2% or about 90% of year to date gains came from last week.

On a year to date basis, aside from India’s rupee, the Thai baht, Taiwan dollar and the South Korean won has been up despite uneven performance this week. This means that the Philippine peso’s rally has been belated or a catch up move.

The Indonesian rupiah rebounded strongly too, but this only shaved off the year to date losses.

Ironically strong stock market performances failed to filter into the Singapore dollar and the Malaysian ringgit. So there has been signs of divergence between the stock market and the currency market.  Asymmetric performance suggests of ephemeral conditions—either the currencies of Singapore and Malaysia’s will strengthen or stocks will weaken.

And paradoxically too, Singapore’s near record stocks comes in the light of increasing alarmism by the mainstream over signs of growing cracks in the city state’s credit and housing bubbles.

And in the Philippine record stocks hasn’t been transmitted to the bond markets.

Despite the $2 billion of bonds raised from the international markets, and the supposed “seasonality” of the yield curve, Philippine bond markets hardly improved going into the end of January or after 3 weeks.
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While the yields of 3 months bills did markedly decline, it still remains at May 2013 levels, yet the (10-25 year) bonds have declined even more. Yields of one month, 6 months and one and 2 year had been marginally higher.

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The result has been to aggravate the flattening of the curve. The spread between the 10 and 20 years relative to the 6 months, 1 and 2 years continues to narrow. Some of last week’s seeming marginal improvement seems to have reversed.

And curiously the inversion of yields of the 5 year with 4 and 3 year counterparts has only deepened. Yields of one month bills at 2.379% has inverted with the 3 months at 2.136%. Though these are minor inversions they are symptoms that the tightly controlled bond markets  have not been as healthy as what the establishment  and media wants the public to believe.

So how can corporations grow at a rate of 16% when a flattening of the yield curve postulates to lesser credit activities for the economy and subsequently lesser profits for the banks?

At the end of the day, all these rationalizations have been no more than pat on the back or feel good self serving bias—attribute success to skills and failures to external factors.

Such rationalizations have been common traits during market tops similar to Japan’s Nikkei when it peaked at 39,000+ in December 29, 1989.

Finally, how has Friday's fresh record closing been attained?

Well by the methods considered as illegitimate but now has become regular: marking the close. About a third of Friday's gains have been etched by the last minute pump! 

Index managers have been panic buying and accumulating outrageously valued index issues in thinking that today's world risks has been expunged out of existence.  

Sometime soon reality will arrive in the form of a rude awakening.

Saturday, December 20, 2014

ASEAN Credit Default Swap (CDS) Spreads Spike!

Credit default Swaps (CDS) are the cost to insure debt from default risks.

It appears that ASEAN’s CDS spreads has spiked this week. In other words, market’s perception of ASEAN default risks has sharply risen (all charts below from Deutsche Bank—based on recovery rate of 40%).

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Philippine CDS fast approaches the October highs! Yields of 10 year peso government bonds climbed 17.6 bps week-on-week. More importantly, short term yields have been soaring for three successive weeks. Has the dramatically flattening yield curve been the reason behind the CDS ramp? Or has this been due to a EM contagion or a combo?

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Malaysian CDS passed October levels and now swiftly nears the January 2014 highs, or then, during the climax of the EM taper tantrum turmoil. Yields of Malaysian 10 ringgit bonds marginally slipped this week, but still drifts at the highs of the 2010 levels

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Indonesia CDS have reached October highs. Yields of 10 year rupiah bonds closed the week marginally changed but had a short bout of sharp intraweek volatility. 10 Year yields are just off the January taper tantrum highs. Has the CDS spike been perhaps due to the record low of the rupiah and or contagion?

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Thailand CDS has also passed October 2014 highs, but has partly backed off the past days. Yields of 10 year baht climbed by some 10 bps this week. However current yield levels remain at the lows equivalent to 2010 levels.

Aside from the baht drifting at January levels, Thai’s stock markets just suffered a stunning intraday crash last Monday which it had mostly recovered this week.

If debt markets continues to price in higher ASEAN default risks, will this be positive for stocks?  Those January 2014 CDS peaks coincided with the stock market lows during the EM taper tantrum that commenced in May 2013. Will this time be different?

We truly live in interesting times!

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Charts of Asian Stocks Reveal of Rising Risks

The risk environment can be assessed by looking at the region's stock market performance

A glimpse of the region’s stock market performance as of yesterday (excluding China, Japan and the Philippines), based on a one year perspective. [charts below from stockcharts.com, yahoo finance and Bloomberg]

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First the outperformers. 

New Zealand’s NZ 50 at record highs (+16.42% year to date, left window), while Singapore’s STI (+4.95%) has fully recovered from October lows (right window).
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The record high India’s Sensex got dumped 3.89% this week (!!!) to break from the one year trend line. Has this signaled the inflection point? We shall see.

Now to the laggards…

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Taiwan’s TWII (left) seems to have been left out of the massive rally of sibling China’s Shanghai Index. The TWII has rebounded only halfway from the low of October vis-à-vis highs of July and presently seems under pressure (-1.95% y-t-d). 

Meanwhile, Australia’s All Ordinaries (AORD) seems to be approaching the October lows!!! (-2.17% y-t-d). Deflating bubble mate?

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Like the AORD,  Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (left) has been creeping back to the October lows (-3.14% year to date). The HSI has diverged from the Shanghai bubble, despite the Shanghai-Hong Kong Connect

Meanwhile the record low currency, the dong, has translated to the clobbering of Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh index (-4.29% y-t-d; right)

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The Phisix look alike, the Thai SET has broken down from her support levels. This possibly indicates of the ‘double top’ formation in progress. 

The SET crashed 5.18% this week but remains 16.65% up y-t-d.

Crashes has become real time and spreading!

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The South Korean KOSPI looks like in danger from a massive head and shoulder pattern. Like the HSI and the AORD, the KOSPI seems to be testing the October lows!!! (-4.46% year to date)

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The 2008 low rupiah has so far failed to dent on the JKSE which continues to drift near record highs.

Nonetheless, the Indonesian bellwether appears to have formed a minor head and shoulders formation. (+20.73% y-t-d)

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Finally Malaysia’s KLSE has been in the process of fulfilling a head and shoulder bearish formation. The KLSE was down .94% this week and -7.18% year to date

The once sizzling hot Malaysian bellwether which have been the first to break to record highs appear to be playing the opposite role.

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The above represents the weekly performance of Asian bourses. Losses have been significant and dominant. Importantly, quasi crashes has emerged in Vietnam and Thailand. 

Remember these market pressures comes amidst easing by the BoJ, PBoC and the ECB.

The bottom line is that the region’s market breadth has evidently been deteriorating where deflationary forces has been gaining momentum in the face of weakening currencies, diminishing liquidity, collapsing commodity prices, high debt levels and slowing economic growth.

Eventually deflationary forces will overwhelm the region's entire risk asset spectrum.


Tuesday, September 02, 2014

As Indonesia’s Economy Weakens, Bubble Blowing Activities Intensifies

Mainstream media appears worried over the Indonesian economy. 

Indonesia squeezed out a narrow trade surplus in July but the Southeast Asian nation’s economy remains fragile and exposed to sudden shifts in capital flows.

The country trade balance is in deficit for the year, and the government also runs a budget deficit, a reflection of costly state subsidies on the price of fuel. These twin deficits mean the country is reliant on foreign funding to make up the difference, largely in the form of hot money flows into the nation’s stock and bond markets.

A year ago, a reversal of these flows caused by fears that U.S. yields would move higher, hurt Indonesian assets. The government has set about trying to readjust the economy, but as Monday’s figures show, there’s still a way to go.

The region’s largest economy posted a $124 million surplus on about $28 billion in trade in July. But the return to surplus in July masks weakness in the economy. Exports fell 6% on year, reflecting lower commodity export growth as China’s growth moderates. Imports fell 19.3%, keeping the trade balance positive.

Both figures were partly distorted by the Muslim holiday period. Still, the underlying trend is worrisome. The commodity-dependent economy’s main growth engine is stalling, and the contraction of imports shows low domestic investment and consumption.

Business activity in July also contracted in Indonesia for the first time this year, as measured by HSBC’s manufacturing purchasing managers’ index, although some analysts said it could be a temporary lull after robust readings in recent months.

After the data, ANZ said there are downside risks to its estimate Indonesia’s economy will grow 5.4% in 2014.

Indonesia’s trade balance remains about $1 billion in deficit for 2014, hard hit by low prices for commodities—which comprise more than half of all its exports—and new rules that have prevented miners from exporting billions of dollars in unrefined and semirefined minerals.
Does the financial markets share the same sentiment as with media?

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From the perspective of the stock market, where the Jakarta Stock Exchange Composite is about to test the 2013 highs, the answer is a NO

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But Indonesia’s currency the rupiah (US-IDR) hasn’t shared the same buoyancy as with the stock market, where the rupiah has remained weak.

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And so with Indonesia’s sovereign bond markets where the 10 year yield has been drifting near at 2013 highs.

Indonesia’s balance of trade as noted above popped to the surplus side last July, even as the current account balance continues to deteriorate. 1Q deficit 2014 signifies the second largest since 4Q 2012. This combines with the largest deficit on government budget since the new millennium.  

Aside from foreign fund flows, those deficits have been financed by soaring government external debt. The once revered fiscal discipline via low debt to gdp seems to have reversed.

But like the Philippines, government debt hasn’t been a stand alone story. While the economy has been shown as having increased downside risks, what media ignores is that private sector debt has been ballooning,albeit at a declining rate. This credit build up has been despite 5 interest rate hikes and pronounced in consumer credit. Curiously growth in retail sales has almost halved y-o-y as of June which came along with a miniscule m-o-m growth.

Indonesia’s money supply growth continues to skyrocket

And all these borrowing ramp implies that borrowed money may have most likely been diverted away from investments In the real economy (thus the unfolding slack) and instead has partly been channeled to wild stock market speculation. Of course much of it could have also been directed at inflating her domestic housing bubble as I pointed out here.

So rising stocks and properties financed by heavy debt accumulation only means that once the breaking point of the bubble have been reached, the unraveling of imbalances will be disorderly. 

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Thai Central Bank Hopes that More Bubble Blowing will Solve Political-Economic Woes

Thailand’s politics has been in a mess since the last semester of 2013

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But politics has only been an aggravating factor to what has been a slowing statistical economy for Thailand (annualized). 

Except for the anomalous one time spike, Thailand’s economy has been largely performing below the average at 3.77% (calculated by tradingeconomics.com based from 1994 until 2013) from 2012-2013. The World Bank says that Thailand economy grew by only 3% in 2013 

So given the growing slack in the economy worsened by a political crisis that has rendered the incumbent government paralyzed, what recourse has the Bank Thailand recently taken to provide cushion to her economy?


After holding policy steady for months as the country’s disintegrating political situation took its toll on the economy, the Bank of Thailand finally reached its breaking point Wednesday, cutting overnight rates by a quarter-percentage point in a close vote.

Wednesday’s decision takes the benchmark rate to 2.0% from 2.25%, and comes as the BOT said economic growth won’t even reach the central bank’s 3% target this year – after it was forecast at 4% as recently as November. Economic growth already has slowed from 6.5% in 2012 to 2.9% in 2013, bottoming out at just 0.6% in the final quarter of the year.

That illustrates the depths to which Thailand’s economy has sunk as massive demonstrations seeking the overthrow of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra enter their fifth month.

Price pressures were seen as one reason the BOT remained on hold in preceding months: While inflation wasn’t high enough to warrant a rate increase as in India or Indonesia, it wasn’t quite benign enough to allow the central bank to ease policy either.

As I pointed out in January 2013, Thailand has a credit bubble.

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And to give you an update on what Thailand’s low interest rates regime have engendered aside from a stagnating economy…

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Loans to the private sector continues to massive inflate. In my estimates, through 2013 until January 2014 credit growth ballooned by about 9%

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Such rate of growth has likewise been reflected on money supply growth. Thailand’s M3 jumped by an estimated 9.8% over the same period. 

Thailand credit and money growth has been thrice the rate of the economic rate of growth. So the question is where has all these money creation been spent or invested? 

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I have no updates on the Thailand’s housing statistics. But the World Bank figures gives some clues.  Growth in the construction growth sector remains positive but may be on a seminal downtrend. 

On the other hand, note that growth in real investment and equipment has been on a decline since the 4Q of 2012 and has turned negative during the 2nd Q of 2013. In other words, Thailand’s economy has been materially slowing even prior to the outbreak of the political crisis. 


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Additionally while growth in housing loans appear as slowing down, % of housing loans relative to the economy remains at near the record 80% level. 

And the more important factor has been the surge in Non-performing loans (NPL) from 2012-2013.

And Thailand’s slowing exports as I noted earlier, has only swelled her balance of trade deficit and shrank her current account surplus. And this implies that part of her trade deficit may have been financed by the growth in private sector debt.

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And it is not just the private sector, Thailand government’s external debt has ballooned by about 35% since January 2012 through the 3rd Q of 2013.

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The other possible channel for excess credit growth and money creation has been to balloon a massive denial rally in Thailand’s stock market as measured by the SET (stockcharts.com) since the post New Year crash of 2014.

In sum, Thailand’s central bank intends to prevent a surge in NPLs from becoming a systemic risk by keeping interest rates low. The Thai central bank may also be desiring to keep the construction boom (or even the stock market boom) afloat in order to maintain the picture of positive statistical growth.

The question is how feasible and lasting will this be? Without productive growth, there will be lesser resources generated to pay for existing liabilities. Worst, zero bound rates will induce more borrowing, which should add to Thailand’s debt burden.

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Thailand’s currency, the baht, vis-à-vis US dollar has recently been rallying and so as with her bonds whose yields have reached the lows of post-taper turbulence in June 2013. 

The rallying baht and sinking yields has given the impression of a relief in “inflation” pressures, thus justifying the trimming of official rates.

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But my guess is that Bank of Thailand (BoT) may have partly used her foreign currency reserves to attain such picture of calm. The BoT’s forex reserves has shrank from July 2013 which adds to the earlier decline.

In short, the BoT applied financial band aids to what has been a debt cancer.

Nonetheless with even more borrowing for households to speculate, which will be also manifested in her elevated money supply figures, the pressures on the baht will resurface in the near future, and so will such be reflected on the inflation data as well as in her bonds via rising yields.

And Thai’s debt problem will be further exposed by higher bond yields in the developed economies or even by a slowdown or a meltdown in China.


As one would note, like all the rest of her peers, the Thai central bank thinks that policies that promote and support debt will solve their nation's economic problems. The problem is these officials keep applying the same panacea without generating the desired results, so they keep on adding more. Either this or they are just kicking the proverbial can down the road.

Yet the problem with “kick the can” policies is that this only increase the imbalances in the system that magnifies the potential harm from a blowup. 

For central banks, one must provide more alcohol to solve the problem of alcoholism.


Monday, May 06, 2013

Phisix 7,200: Up, up and away! The Illusions of Comfort

I said quoted Superman last week on the Phisix: Up, up and away!

And so it seems. 

This week, the Phisix soared by a whopping 2.7%. Woot! This adds to the accrued year to date gains now at a mammoth 24%. Woot! This comes amidst a seeming return of the “Risk On” environment in the global equity markets. 

If the current rate of returns at 5-6% a month will be sustained, this means that Phisix 10,000 will be reached by this yearend. Woot!

The Phisix Ascendancy. Malaysia as Periphery to Core?

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The Philippine stock market has now assumed the role of the undisputed leader of Southeast Asia as three of our neighbors stumbled over the week.

In contrast to the Philippines, Indonesia’s downgrade by the S&P[1] has been attributed to this week’s modest decline. I am confident that such downgrade will unlikely to deter the Indonesia’s mania phase from unfolding.
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But developments in Malaysia seem interesting and may have diverged from other ASEAN economies.

Since the year’s start, Malaysia’s equity benchmark, the KLCI, has been zigzagging between positive and negative territory. This could partly be due to the pre-elections uncertainty which culminates today, or could be due to signs of puffing on her homegrown property bubble.

Charts from global property guide[2] indicate that based on year on year changes, Malaysia housing prices have begun to materially decelerate (left). Malaysia’s home price index has ramped up as the global central banks flushed the world with a tsunami of money in 2008. 

Malaysia has also cut policy interest rates[3] from about 3.5% in 2008 to 2% in 2010, but raised them back to the 3% level in 2011. Nonetheless the banking system’s average lending rates are at the lowest levels (chart not included).

Housing loans now have grown to account for 25% of the GDP. Part of the slowdown could be due to recent anti-speculation or anti-bubble policies. But the fastest growth segment of both commercial and Islamic banks has been from unsecured loans or loans based on borrowers creditworthiness rather than backed by collateral as previously discussed[4].

Yet these mostly represent the demand side of Malaysia’s housing market. Housing is just a segment of the property markets which also includes office and commercial properties. I also lack data on the supply side to make further comments.

Yet it would seem that should Malaysia’s economy substantially slow, this heightens the risk of a regional bubble bust.

Are developments in Malaysia’s housing signs of the periphery to core dynamics?

We will see.

Nonetheless major global equity benchmarks have been reenergized by more central bank actions, particularly the ECB’s interest rate cut aside from plans to adapt a negative deposit rate policy[5].

Notice that the announcements of easing policies from central banks of developed economies have become more bolder and more frequent.

The Reflexivity Theory Nearly in Full Circle

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The escalating vibrancy of the Phisix only continues to prove my point: we are in manic phase of a bubble cycle.

The 3-year chart (top) of the Phisix depicts of the 3 phased transition of the current uptrend which appears to be accelerating. A closer look via the six-month chart shows of renewed signs of parabola or the steepening of the price trend slope or what seems as a transition to a vertical ascent. Such price actions reveal of the rapidly expanding risk appetite and of the growing aggressiveness of market players to bid up equity prices.

So who says markets are about the conventional wisdom called “valuations”? Who says that there is such a thing called “expensive” in an environment where the public has decisively determined that there is no other way but up for Philippine assets?

The mainstream apparently doesn’t get it. Such dynamics has not been about statistics or about chart patterns. Instead all these have been about incentives and actions, where incentive drives people’s actions.

Why should the 5-6% statistical economic growth and supposed “fiscal discipline”, which are, in reality, masked by credit boom-embellished-growth data, justify a sustained upside trajectory of asset prices?

The domestic market has apparently lost its function as discounting mechanism and has transformed been into an object of speculative frenzy, underpinned by the prevailing bias of new paradigm, new order or “this time is different” mindset.

By prevailing bias, this means a self-reinforcing trend which tends to not only to influence market psychology channelled or expressed through prices but also through “fundamentals”[6]. 

Rising prices reinforce the belief of ‘good governance’ economics and “controlled deficits” meme. The deepening of public’s conviction has led bolder, more audacious and more adventurous moves from market players. Their actions raise the price levels of equity securities, most especially the popular ones.

Rising price levels has also prompted for the trifecta upgrades from the big three US credit rating agencies. This, in turn, boosts the craving for more equity market speculations. Thus, high prices will rationalize actions that will lead to even higher prices or the deepening of the price chasing or yield chasing dynamics: the mania phase.

Such two-way feedback loop mechanism between one, expectations, which are shaped by prices, and two, by the outcome, as signified by people’s responses and actions to the changes in prices, represent as the “reflexivity theory” as introduced by George Soros. The “reflexivity theory” essentially takes into account the sequential transformation of people’s psychology during the bubble cycle.

Yet the two way reflexive feedback loop that runs from expectations to outcome and from outcome to expectations “gives rise to initially self-fulfilling but eventual self-defeating prophesies and process”[7] and thus the boom bust cycles. 

The crucial psychological features[8] of boom bust sequence can identified as

-The Unrecognized trend
-The beginning of a self-reinforcing process
-The successful tests
-The growing conviction resulting in a widening divergence between reality and expectations
-The flaw in perception
-The climax
-A self-reinforcing process in the opposite direction

Today’s actions suggest that the Phisix operates anywhere between “the flaw in perception” to “the climax”

Credit markets are equally affected by the reflexive bubble behavior, again Mr. Soros, “when people are eager to borrow and when banks are willing to lend, the value of the collateral rises in a self-reinforcing manner and vice versa”[9]

In short, the reflexive feedback loop mechanism also works between markets and credit.

Phisix at 7,200 likewise means another month of significant expansion of credit growth.

The Philippine central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) correctly notes that overall credit growth moderated in March[10]
Loans for production activities—which comprised more than four-fifths of banks’ aggregate loan portfolio—grew at a slower pace of 14.2 percent in March from 15.1 percent (revised) in February. Similarly, the growth in consumer loans eased to 10.8 percent in March from 11.9 percent in February due mainly to the slowdown across all types of household loans.

The expansion in production loans was driven primarily by increased lending to the following sectors: real estate, renting, and business services (25.2 percent); financial intermediation (28.8 percent); transportation, storage and communication (26.2 percent); wholesale and retail trade (10.4 percent); and, electricity, gas and water (15.4 percent). Meanwhile, lending to agriculture, hunting, and forestry (-10.3 percent) continued to decline in March.
But looking at the average omits the specifics. I would call this as hiding beneath the statistical averages. 

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Financial intermediation and real estate loans, critical areas of the property stock-market bubble remains at same levels or even slightly higher. These sectors have been expanding by more than 25% even when statistical economic growth has only been 5-6%.

While growth in loans to the wholesale and retail trade shrunk in March, construction loans surged at still an astonishing rate of near 50%. I use wholesale and retail trade as gauge on the shopping mall bubble.

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A better picture can be seen in the changes in the sectoral share of loans by the banking system.

By the end of 2012, the construction, trade, financial intermediation and real estate loans constituted 45.97% of all the production loans issued.

By March, this figure has swelled to 47.79%. In short, the growth of loans of these bubble sectors has been outpacing the rate of growth of loans from the other non-bubble sectors. And if such rate of growth will be sustained, by the yearend, the share of loans by the banking system on these bubble sensitive sectors will easily become the dominant force and will expose the banking system to unnecessary credit risk.

This despite all the blarney about the banking system as having adequate “capital” ratios. Banks in Cyprus supposedly passed the banking stress test held in 2011. The Bank of Cyprus also received many awards in 2011-2012[11]. Today, bank depositors in Cyprus will see large haircuts on their money.

Easy money from bank lending has also been reflected on liquidity conditions. Again the BSP on March activities[12].
Domestic liquidity (M3) increased by 11.4 percent year-on-year (y-o-y) in March to reach  P5.1 trillion. This growth was faster than the 9.4 percent (revised) expansion recorded in the previous month. On a monthly basis, seasonally-adjusted M3 also expanded at a faster pace of   1.5 percent compared to the 0.2 percent (revised) month-on-month growth in February.

The growth in money supply was driven largely by the sustained expansion in net domestic assets (NDA). NDA increased by 20.4 percent y-o-y in March from 16.5 percent (revised) in the previous month due largely to the continued increase in credits to the private sector, reflecting the robust lending activity of commercial banks. Claims on the private sector increased by 12.7 percent in March. Similarly, claims on the public sector increased by 12.3 percent in March, reversing the 6.5 percent decline (revised) in the previous month, a result of the increase in credits to the National Government (NG) and the decline in NG deposits.
Yield chasing tends to gravitate on the most popular sectors. Foreign money via portfolio investments has also participated in them. Again from the BSP[13]
Capital inflows went to PSE-listed securities (US$2.0 billion or 84.2 percent), Peso GS (US$351 million or 15.0 percent) and Peso time deposits (US$18 million or 0.8 percent). For PSE-listed securities, the main beneficiaries were holding firms (US$510 million), property companies (US$454 million), banks (US$333 million), telecommunication firms (US$185 million), and food, beverage and tobacco companies (US$183 million).
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The biggest beneficiaries from the combined credit growth, portfolio flows and yield chasing activities can be seen mainly in the property, holding and financial sectors.

So we have the reflexivity theory running nearly in full circle.

The Concentrated Economy: Economic Boom and Booming Joblessness

When the S&P’s upgrade of the Philippines hit the headlines on Thursday, ironically, at the lower section of the same front page, I saw an article saying that domestic unemployment continues to swell.

From the Inquirer.net[14]
Joblessness in the country worsened in the first quarter of the year, the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey found, with an economist tracing the rise in unemployment rate to fresh graduates joining the labor pool.

Filipino adults without jobs numbered 11.1 million, up 10 percent from the 10.1 million recorded at the end of 2012, results of the survey that SWS conducted from March 19 to 22 showed.
Wow a “boom” in joblessness.

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Looking at the statistical unemployment figures[15], one would note that the biggest improvement came during 2005 where jobless rate fell from 14% to current levels, which paradoxically was prior to this booming regime.

Yet from 2006-2012, unemployment seems to have fluctuated in a range of 6.9 to 8%.

I do not trust surveys and unemployment data for the simple reason that significantly more than 40% of the Philippine economy has been informal or shadow or underground[16]. So if informal economies can hardly be measured, then the likelihood of substantial errors from statistical estimates.

Nonetheless what arouses my curiosity is that the much ballyhooed economic boom tagged as the “Rising Star of Asia”[17] seems to have been “concentrated” on few sectors of the economy. And this is most likely the reason behind the supposed “boom” in joblessness, as pointed out by the survey.

Even the government’s statistics has not shown any material improvement in joblessness, despite Phisix at 7,200, the Peso at 40s or 6.6% GDP growth in 2012.

Of course, such adverse information has been and will be ignored by the brainwashed gullible public. Hardly any of domestic media seems to have carried the recent warnings of ASEAN asset bubbles by the IMF[18] or from a report by the CNBC[19]

Apparently real world developments have been vacuumed into a vortex. People with rose colored glasses will think that all these signify as mere political rant, or that such systemic threats will not be enough to undermine today’s blissful nirvana, or political authorities will ride like the knight to save the damsel in distress in time, or that bad events will hardly befall on them (denigration of history).

Yet all these suggest that people openly embrace illusions in order to escape reality. As Nobel laureate psychologist and author Daniel Kahneman explains[20],
The illusion that one understands the past feeds further illusion that one can predict and control the future. These illusions are comforting. They reduce the anxiety that would experience if we allowed ourselves to fully acknowledge the uncertainties of existence. We all need for the reassuring message that actions have appropriate consequences, and that success will reward wisdom and courage. Many business books are tailor-made to satisfy this need.
Ironically despite the credit upgrade, which has been anchored mostly on strong external position and on the supposed improvement of debt burden, the credit rating agency S&P underscored what seems as the same theme of “concentrated growth”

From the Inquirer[21]:
S&P estimated that the country’s per capita income (the total value of the economy’s output divided by the population) would settle at $2,850 this year, a level lower than those of most countries with the same credit rating.

“The Philippine economy’s low income level remains a key rating constraint. The concentrated nature of the economy, infrastructure shortfalls and restrictions on foreign ownership, which deter foreign investment, are factors that hamper growth,” S&P said.
The good part is that in order to attract investments, the S&P recommended liberalization of the “regulatory environment in a manner that allows easier entry of foreign investors, according to S&P.” The S&P also recommends more infrastructure spending.

The S&P likewise acknowledges of the fundamental shortcomings of the Philippine political economy but bizarrely rewards or subsidizes such via a credit upgrade. By doing so, there will be lesser incentives for the incumbent officials to embrace real economic reform via liberalization.

Think Europe. Central bank’s backstopping (or subsidies) of the banking system which has led to lofty financial markets have prompted politicians and the mainstream to rationalize the jettisoning of reforms based on phony “austerity”[22], thereby resuscitating the risks of prolonged depression as well as the risks of a breakup of the euro.

Perhaps the S&P thinks that by putting their stamp of approval on the Philippine government they will heroically be able to convince investors.

Or perhaps, the S&P’s sees the need to be a part of the bandwagon because these have been the chic. 

The trenchant iconoclast and Black Swan author Nassim Nicolas Taleb warned of folly from the groupthink[23]
Alas, one cannot assert authority by accepting one’s own fallibility. Simply people need to be blinded by knowledge—we are made to follow leaders who can gather people together because the advantages of being in groups trump the disadvantages of being alone. It has been more profitable for us to bind together in the wrong direction than to be alone in the right one. Those who have followed the assertive idiot rather than the introspective wise person have passed us some of their genes
Ivory Tower Prescription: Solve Investment Problems with More Interventions

So if investments have been the problem, how does the BSP governor, Amando Tetangco Jr. propose to solve them? The following article gives a clue.

From the Inquirer[24]:
To avoid the middle-income trap, one must increase investments and expand the economy’s absorptive capacity. Now is a very good time to do that given the low interest rates and sufficient liquidity that can be tapped for investment activities

Government spending has gone up over the last three years, and it has significantly contributed to the country’s growth. The private sector should now invest more and serve as the main growth driver of the economy
Some important nuggets of wisdom from such comments:

One, as pointed out last week, aside from sectors driven by massive credit expansion, government spending has been artificially bolstering the statistical economy. This is the reason the why the Philippine government has been tightening the noose on taxes and why the government has launched a shame “class warfare” campaign against wealthy Chinese and members of the Forbes billionaires list.

Does it not seem odd or a logical self-contradiction to think that taxes increases have been thought as being compatible with investments?

Raising taxes increases a firm or an enterprise’s cost of doing business which also means the reduction of the rate of profitability or increases the hurdle rate required for a business to survive, all these extrapolates to penalizing investments. So how will raising taxes lead to more investments?

Yet there are also other political aspects serving as obstacles to promoting businesses, such as more regulations, mandates, inflation, bureaucracy, welfare and other political interventions.

Does the good governor also not realize that by the government’s engagement of class warfare rhetoric translates to the heightening risks of political instability? Will companies invest in economies where property rights are not secured and whose assets are at the risks of arbitrary confiscation from populist policies?

The sad part is that ivory tower based experts have little idea of what goes on in the real world and have been blinded by math based models.

Two, the good governor appears to be saying join the bubble! Interest rates will forever be low. The laws of economics do not exist in the Philippines.

But an economy operating in bubbles would translate to relative price instability. And price instability will impact economic calculation. Price instability will be pronounced especially in the input costs of sectors experiencing bubbles. Economic calculation problems will reduce the investor’s motivation to invest. People will be induced to speculate more in financial markets than to invest in productive activities. 

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And this could be why the seeming preference by foreigners on portfolio flows (US $3.911 billion; 2012) rather than to foreign direct investments[25] (US$1.053 billion; 2012) as shown above.

In short, price instability and distortion in the capital structures leads to a shrinking of the markets or real economy and capital losses. How then will these attract investments?

Third, the middle income trap is a macroeconomic hooey. Just take a look at the Phisix. Do the punters and speculators stop buying the Phisix after hitting certain income or price level? Or are they “trapped” at certain income or price levels? Apparently not.

On the contrary, the yield chasing phenomenon into voguish themes based on flawed perception of reality that has been enabled and facilitated by credit expansions has been dramatically escalating. This signifies of the deepening of the mania phase. Such mania has been frequently characterized as “greed”.

While people operate within their own “comfort zones” or limits on the activities they engage in, these are subjectively and individually determined. These cannot be captured by aggregates or by statistics as they are constantly changing.

Yet when people’s income rises or when the middle class grows, they don’t really get “trapped” or get caught in a stasis which is a very foolish way to see the world.

Instead, political officials see and use such as opportunities to impose expansions on myriad political programs. Such diversion of productive resources to non-productive use essentially becomes the “trap”.

As I previously pointed out[26],
the more intervention, the lesser the capital accumulation or reduced economic growth. When politicians become greedy enough to divert much wealth into policy driven consumption activities then productivity diminishes. And that's where the so-called statistical 'trap' comes in.
The fallacious middle income trap theory does not even see people as human beings but as some statistical abstract, who are incapable of thinking.

The problem of investments will not be solved by interventionist policies, but by the promotion economic freedom through the dismantling of anti-competitive laws that benefits the concentrated few.

Philippines Government Balks at ASEAN Integration: Delays Joining ASEAN Trading Link

But real reforms haven’t really been on the cards.

Just take a look at the latest ASEAN integration talks. The Philippine president threw cold water on the possibility of a free trade zone in 2015

From the Rappler[27]:
Southeast Asia's efforts to create a single market by 2015 are in their hardest phase owing to protectionist reflexes on sensitive sectors, Philippine President Benigno Aquino said.

Despite the challenges, however, leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations are working hard to meet the target, Aquino told reporters on Wednesday night, April 24, in Brunei where he is attending ASEAN's annual summit.

"They have finished with the easy parts but the accomplishments will not be as fast as in discussing the hard parts. When you reach that point, there can be some protectionist measures taken by each economy," Aquino said.

"But since we are focused on reaching the target, everyone who believes that one community is beneficial to everybody concerned will really try hard (to reach the goal)."
“Protectionist reflexes on sensitive sectors” represents as the “concentrated” segments of the economy that are controlled by the unholy alliance of political elites and their cronies. They are the key beneficiaries of today’s central bank asset market friendly policies. Many of them are into the yield chasing bubbles in the real economy. And so the unevenness of the much touted economic boom.

Yet like typical politicians, promises have been made but fulfilment will be pushed into the future.

Proof?

Take the ASEAN Trading Link[28]. This is milestone pan-Asian financial platform project aimed at linking 7 stock exchanges from 6 countries that would allow more than 3,600 companies to be traded within the ASEAN region.
Think of trading Thai, Malaysian, Singaporean, Vietnam, Indonesian stocks under the PSE platform. Integrating these exchanges would mean vastly expanded supply of equities (more choice), greater access to capital and investors (bigger markets), lower transaction costs, trading efficiency, promote competition and transparency, more integrated economies which should promote REAL economic growth, and many other multiplier effects as cross cultural relations and more. Think about communicating with more ASEAN people due to cross border trading (e.g. stock market forums, or annual meetings)

As of 2012, Thailand has joined Singapore and Malaysia[29]. Vietnam has conducted a roadshow on INVEST ASEAN 2013 and will join sometime within the year[30].

But the Philippines for two years or from 2011[31] has resorted to dilatory manoeuvres to defer on participating in the trading link. In 2012 the PSE, a monopoly regulated by the SEC, will be delayed due to flimsy reasons; supposedly for getting the system into place and for updating regulations[32].
Let me guess, should there emerge a crisis from anywhere that will affect the region, this will again be used as pretext for postponement.

Yet the refusal to integrate with the region can be seen as parallel to the absence of spot or commodity futures markets. Reason: vested interests. We are the only major ASEAN country without commodity markets. That’s because commodity markets will displace the highly connected middlemen.

Such refusal to equitably distribute economic opportunities via marketplace particularly through economic freedom is simply a sign of protecting economic interest of the politically connected or cronyism.

Good governance? Duh!

This also means that the statistical growth based on government spending, concentrated “crony” based economy and credit driven expansion all adds up illusions from a credit driven asset bubble.

George Magnus: Asia’s Vulnerabilities

The prominent economist George Magnus, who coined the Minsky Moment, recently wrote that Asia needs to rely on real reforms than from “miracles”. He states that one of the six major vulnerabilities of Asia as[33]:
Asia's 'financial' indicators are flashing warning signs, even if there does not appear any immediate threat of instability, and many financial regulation lessons from the Asia crisis have remained 'learned'.

But excluding China, the ratio of credit to GDP has risen to over 100% — higher than it was in 1997. Also, land loan to deposit ratios in Asian banking systems are rising significantly again.
Those who refuse to learn the lessons of history are bound to repeat them.

Yet the other vulnerabilities cited by Mr. Magnus are China’s economic performance, the export centric models of ASEAN and East Asian giants, more complex Asian economies, India’s demographic dividends, and income inequality.

Except for China, I am not so concerned for the others as these problems that are mostly products of interventions which economic liberalization should be able to address. For instance, wealth or income inequality, as shown above, has been products of cronyism and corporate protectionism or corporatism.

While the public is being deceived by an artificial boom masked by credit expansion, the real beneficiaries are the financial asset holders, since central bank policies essentially provide subsidies to these assets at the expense of the real economy whether in the US, or Philippines or elsewhere.

As analyst Doug Noland enunciates of the nature of inflationism[34]
Once its takes root, monetary expansion enjoys powerful momentum and powerful constituents. The bias is always to get bigger, with system deficiencies amply available for justification and rationalization.
Record US Stocks, Near Record Net Margin Debt

Finally as the US stock markets soar to unprecedented heights this chart is a must look
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US Stock markets has likewise been driven by a credit bubble, as margin debt nearly hits record highs[35]. Margin debt is just one of the many symptoms of blossoming credit bubble in the US. But such would be a subject for another day.

For now, the mania phase seems as gaining more momentum.

Up, Up and Away!

Trade cautiously.






[3] Tradingeconomics.com MALAYSIA INTEREST RATE




[7] George Soros The Alchemy of Finance John Wiley $ Sons 2003 p.5

[8] Soros ibid p. 58

[9] Soros ibid p .23

[10] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Bank Lending Growth Sustained in March April 30, 2013


[12] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Domestic Liquidity Growth Higher in March April 30, 2013

[13] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Foreign Portfolio Investments Grow in March April 11, 2013

[14] Inquirer.net 1M join ranks of jobless Filipinos, May 3, 2013

[15] Tradingeconomics.com PHILIPPINES UNEMPLOYMENT RATE





[20] Daniel Kahneman Thinking, Fast and Slow p.204-205

[21] Inquirer.net S&P gives PH second credit ratings upgrade May 03, 2013


[23] Nassim Nicolas Taleb, The Black Swan The Impact of the Highly Improbable, Allen Lane p.192






[29] Wikipedia.org ASEAN Exchanges

[30] Thetradenews.com ASEAN Trading Link extends to Vietnam April 3, 2013

[31] ABS-CBN PSE delays joining ASEAN trading link November 18, 2011


[33] George Magnus Is Asia's Miracle Over? May 02, 2013

[34] Doug Noland Too Much Asset Inflation Credit Bubble Bulletin Prudent Bear May 3, 2013