Showing posts with label Credit rating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Credit rating. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

The Great Wars of the American Empire: The Philippine Mamasapano ‘Operation Exodus’ Debacle

This post by retired Professor Michael Rozeff at the Lew Rockwell looks very relevant applied to the Philippines today: (bold mine)
Looking at a map of current American military engagements overseas, one cannot help but notice their wide geographical spread and their seemingly interminable nature. Battles have raged in Europe (Yugoslavia and Ukraine), in Africa, in the Middle East, and in central Asia. The American Empire has launched this country into a series of battles that have no end in sight and no location that may not become a focal point of military force. These battles, each a war in its own right, have drawn in forces and resources from U.S. allies in Europe through NATO and even drawn in Japan. The scope of this war is global. In fact, one part of this war has been called the Global War on Terror. To understand this war and grasp its meaning, in the hope of bringing it to an end, a descriptive name is needed that tells us what this war is about. The name suggested here is the “Great War of the American Empire”. Since World War I, another disastrous war that American joined, is called the Great War, we can refer to the Great War of the American Empire also as Great War II.

Great War II comprises a number of sub-wars. The American Empire is the common element and the most important driver in all the sub-wars mentioned below. American involvement has never been necessary in these sub-wars, but the decisions to make them America’s business have come from the Empire’s leaders. The name “Great War of the American Empire” emphasizes the continuity of all the sub-wars to produce one Great War, and the responsibility of the American Empire in choosing to participate in and create this Great War. Had America’s leaders chosen the radically different path of non-intervention and true defense of this continent, rather than overseas interventions, Great War II would not have occurred and not still be occurring.

The Great War of the American Empire began 25 years ago. It began on August 2, 1990 with the Gulf War against Iraq and continues to the present. Earlier wars involving Israel and America sowed the seeds of this Great War. So did American involvements in Iran, the 1977-1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, and the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988). Even earlier American actions also set the stage, such as the recognition of Israel, the protection of Saudi Arabia as an oil supplier, the 1949 CIA involvement in the coup in Syria, and the American involvement in Lebanon in 1958. Poor (hostile) relations between the U.S. and Libya (1979-1986) also contributed to a major sub-war in what has turned out to be the Great War of the American Empire.

The inception of Great War II may, if one likes, be moved back to 1988 and 1989 without objection because those years also saw the American Empire coming into its own in the invasion of Panama to dislodge Noriega, operations in South America associated with the war on drugs, and an operation in the Philippines to protect the Aquino government. Turmoil in the Soviet Union was already being reflected in a more military-oriented foreign policy of the U.S.

Following the Gulf War, the U.S. government engages America and Americans non-stop in one substantial military operation or war after another. In the 1990s, these include Iraq no-fly zones, Somalia, Bosnia, Macedonia, Haiti, Zaire, Sierra Leone, Central African Republic, Liberia, Albania, Afghanistan, Sudan, and Serbia. In the 2000s, the Empire begins wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya, and gets into serious military engagements in Yemen, Pakistan, and Syria. It has numerous other smaller military missions in Uganda, Jordan, Turkey, Chad, Mali, and Somalia. Some of these sub-wars and situations of involvement wax and wane and wax again. The latest occasion of American Empire intervention is Ukraine where, among other things, the U.S. military is slated to be training Ukrainian soldiers.

Terror and terrorism are invoked to rationalize some operations. Vague threats to national security are mentioned for others. Protection of Americans and American interests sometimes is made into a rationale. Terrorism and drugs are sometimes linked, and sometimes drug interdiction alone is used to justify an action that becomes part of the Great War of the American Empire. On several occasions, war has been justified because of purported ethnic cleansing or supposed mass killings directed by or threatened by a government.

Upon close inspection, all of these rationales fall apart. None is satisfactory. The interventions are too widespread, too long-lasting and too unsuccessful at what they supposedly accomplish to lend support to any of the common justifications. Is “good” being done when it involves endless killing, frequently of innocent bystanders, that elicits more and more anti-American sentiment from those on the receiving end who see Americans as invaders? Has the Great War II accomplished even one of its supposed objectives?

The Great War of the American Empire encompasses several sub-wars, continual warfare, continual excuses for continual warfare, and continual military engagements that promise Americans more of the same indefinitely. There is a web site called “The Long War Journal”that catalogs events all over the globe that are part of the Great War II, what the site calls the Long War. This site is a project of the “Foundation for Defense of Democracies”, which is a neocon organization that is promoting the Great War of the American Empire.

What they see, and accurately see, as a Long War is a portion of what is here called the Great War of the American Empire. The difference is that all the interventions and sub-wars of the past 25 years and all the military outposts of the U.S. government that provide the seeds of future wars and interventions are included in the Great War II. They all spring from the same source, even though each one has a different specific character.
"Several sub-wars, continual warfare, continual excuses for continual warfare, and continual military engagements…" For “the latest occasion of American Empire intervention” Professor Rozeff should now include the Philippines.

In 2012 I posted here of a US drone strike against supposed domestic  terrorists that cost many civilian lives. The event had been sparsely covered by international media and appears to have existed in a vacuum in domestic media.

Apparently that has been an appetizer for things to come…

The latest fiasco from the anti terrorism operations conducted  by the Philippine government at Mamasapano Maguindanao last January 25, which claimed lives of 44 government SAF (Special Action Force) at least 18 from the Moro International Liberation Front (MILF), 5 from the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters  and several civilians, appears to have the US government’s imperial fingerprints all over it.

And many of these accounts have been been covered by both domestic and international media.

Drones had reportedly been active during the pre-operations surveillance “Drones ‘twinkled at night’” (Inquirer) and during the operations: “US drone watched Mamasapano debacle” (Inquirer). 

Malaysian bomb expert Zulkifli Abdhir or nicknamed “Marwan”, one of the targets of the operations, reportedly wrote to his brother via email, just prior to his death, to detail on the US involvement in the campaign against Muslim rebels by the use of Orion spy planes and Predator drones (Philstar/MSN)

There was even reports that an American had been killed during the operations but has been (naturally) denied by the US embassy (Rappler). 

Low intensity operations-conflicts (LICs) are frequently considered “classified information”, thus will be denied…until exposed or declassified after several years.

Curiously, headlines over the past few days has been buzzing with accounts of direct US government involvement in Philippine affairs. 

A Philippine politician reported of ‘secret embassy cables’ that was exposed by Wikileaks in 2010 of how the US government had funded and planned counterterrorism measures in the south that may have led to the clash (Philstar)

Yesterday’s headlines showed that based on testimony of an insider or an anonymous SAF officer, who reportedly said “Americans dictated every move”, the US was behind Oplan Exodus (Inquirer).

Today’s headlines shows that there have been ‘8 Americans sighted monitoring Oplan Exodus’ (Inquirer) where American officials monitored the execution of plan that went awry.

This reminds me of the infamous Bay of Pigs. The Bay of Pigs operations according to wikipedia.org was “a failed military invasion of Cuba undertaken by the CIA-sponsored paramilitary group Brigade 2506 on 17 April 1961.  A counter-revolutionary military, trained and funded by the United States government's Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Brigade 2506 fronted the armed wing of the Democratic Revolutionary Front (DRF) and intended to overthrow the Communist government of Fidel Castro. Launched from Guatemala, the invading force was defeated within three days by the Cuban armed forces, under the direct command of Prime Minister of Cuba Fidel Castro.”

The modern day equivalent of the CIA-sponsored paramilitary group then has been the Philippine SAF. Instead of an invasion in the name of anti-communism then, today has been about assassinations in the name of war on terror. 

The Bay of Pigs was initially denied by officials (History Channel) but later admitted to by the late US President John F Kennedy (JFK). Eventually chain of events from the Bay of Pigs led to the assassination of JFK

Back to the Mamasapano blunder.

Has this been the quid pro quo from all the credit rating upgrades the Philippine government has received from the US credit ratings?  For the Philippine government to fight the American empire's ‘Great Wars’ here, as a vassal state and or as proxy?

You see credit ratings has embedded political colors too.

For instance, the US government’s economic sanctions against Russia (due to their Ukraine standoff) has indirectly incited downgrades on Russia’s debt by the major western credit ratings. Reasons for downgrades seems founded on infirm grounds according to Sprott Money analysis. So having interpreted political dimension for such actions, in response, the governments of China and Russia have been working to establish their own credit rating agencies to rival or to counter the western peers (Reuters, RT.com)

In other words, in today's financialization of the global economy, credit ratings can serve as instruments of political control (carrot and stick) or even psychological warfare

What seems as, hasn’t been what really is. 

These are just examples of possible asymmetric non-linear linkages in a complex world.

Very interesting developments.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Fitch downgrades France: how credit rating changes impacts the markets

France will celebrate Bastille day with a bad news, Fitch Ratings joined S&P and Moody’s in stripping France of its AAA credit rating.

Ratings agency Fitch downgraded France from the top AAA credit rating on Friday, citing a heavier government debt load and poor prospects for growth.

In slashing France's rating to 'AA +', Fitch became the last of the big three credit raters to knock France off the top perch. Last year Standard & Poor's and Moody's already downgraded France from the AAA club.

Fitch, which is part French owned, had warned in its previous appraisal that France had reached the very limit of being able to hold on to its top grade grail.

But with Fitch now expecting public debt to peak next year at 96 percent of gross domestic product, the agency said it had no choice but to lower the mark, though with a stable outlook.
I think that France deserves more, or that the present downgrades may just be the start of the string of downgrades that France will be faced with.

But the actions of the credit rating agencies gives some very important insights, particularly on the effects of re-ratings on the marketplace.

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Contra to the mainstream intuition that downside re-ratings of debt should translate to higher interest rates as default risk premium should rise, the S&P and Moody’s actions in 2012, particularly in January and November, respectively, came in backdrop of the opposite direction:a colossal rally 10 year bonds expressed via sharply lower yields. 

So the French government can easily issue a rejoinder to these credit rating agencies saying “you fools, the market says you are wrong!”

But of course, this has not been simple. 

Part of that rally has been due to the series of credit easing policies by the ECB since the financial crisis of 2007, and, more importantly, the  ECB’s implicit backstop. ECB’s Mario Draghi unveiled the details of the bond buying scheme via outright monetary transactions, or OMTs last September.

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The US Federal Reserve has also reportedly injected over $1 trillion in cash to European banks with US operations. Such funds may have also been used to buy government European debt too.

Other factors as such as changes in reserve requirement could have also contributed to bond boom. Fund manager Charles Gave of Gavekal Research recently wrote: (bold original)
Knowing this, why then are French rates so low? The usual explanations (purchases by the Swiss National Bank and Mrs. Watanabe buying) have some merit, but other factors may also be at play. France has a large financial sector, with huge international positions. Some entities may be selling international holdings which demand large reserve requirements. The proceeds are then brought back in France to buy French government bonds—against which there are no reserve requirements.

The economic impact of such a trend would indeed be benign for interest rates. But ultimately, it raises the risk on the French financial balance sheet: less diversity, and more vulnerability to a problem with the local sovereign.
In short, there has been a lot of moving parts, mostly political interventions, that has led to the bond rally.

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The popular wisdom is that upgrades and downgrades impact the equity markets where upgrades lifts the markets while downgrades should do the opposite.

Well in the French case, this simply has not been true.

And as I previously pointed out, French markets and the economy has gone in antipodal directions and thus a parallel universe. Sporadic recessions through 2012 hasn’t stopped the French equity benchmark the CAC 40 from booming.

France has seen booming bond markets and stock markets amidst intermittent recession and credit rating downgrades—all contradictory to mainstream wisdom.

Of course, all these have operated on the backdrop of an easy money landscape which is about to change.  The developing “head and shoulders” formation in the CAC 40 could serve as clue.

The lesson here is that the credit rating upgrades or downgrades have little relationship with market actions. And for those in the mainstream who tout these to justify a bias, they are most likely to be misguided and wrong.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Implied Government Guarantees on BRIC Banking system

Even in the BRICS, there has been an implied guarantee by their respective governments on their banking system, as indicated on their credit ratings.

From Reuters:
The ability of Brazil, Russia, India and China to support their leading banks is tightly correlated to the credit rating on the banks, according to ratings agency Moody’s. The agency compares the ratings of four of the biggest BRIC banks which it says are likely to enjoy sovereign support if they run into trouble…

In a self-perpetuating cycle, ratings will be higher because governments are prepared to provide high levels of support to the banks, reflecting the lenders’ systemic importance and in some cases government ownership.
Bailouts on the politically privileged banking system have become a global standard. And this encourages the moral hazard behavior where banks take unnecessary risks because they know they will be supported once "they run into trouble". This adds to the yield chasing phenomenon that increases systemic fragility.

Moreover this implies that the public's savings, even in emerging markets, will continue to be under duress from indirect and direct confiscations in favor of the banking system.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Phisix 7,000: Why Asia’s Rising Star is a Symptom of Mania

7,000. The Phisix has finally breached the psychological 7,000 level. This represents an amazing 20.86% gain year to date. This accrues to an average of about 5.2% a month since the start of the year. At the rate at of such gains, 10,000 will be reached by the end of the year which should translate to over 40% nominal currency peso returns.

Up, Up and Away!

Financial markets are supposed to represent as discounting mechanisms. Considering the heavy expectation built on “credit rating” upgrades, after an earlier upgrade by Fitch Rating[1], last week’s upgrade by Moody’s should have been a yawner.

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But no, the local stock markets used such events instead to furiously bid up on the markets. The Phisix zoomed by 2.32% on Monday on rumors of the upgrade (left window, chart from technistock.com).

The following day, the local benchmark retrenched 80% of the Monday gains or fell by 1.94% day on day on supposedly on “valuation” issues.

Analysts, foreign and local, had been quoted as saying the local equities were “beyond the correct valuation” and therefore “expensive”[2]. But again no one explained or was quoted to elucidate on how and why local stocks “have gone up and become expensive”. 

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Contrary to such ‘expert’ rationalization, the public evidently liked “expensive”. They pushed the markets beyond the 7,000 levels. Whoever said market traded on valuations[3]?

The Phisix was up .98% over the week, along with ASEAN peers with the exception of Indonesia’s JCE. Suddenly there had been a marked rebound on global equity markets, in what appears to be a sign of the resumption of a “risk ON” environment.

US markets have also been exhibiting signs of a parallel universe where earnings expectations and stock prices have gone in opposite directions[4].

As one would note, the recycling of supposedly good news means that bulls have been steadfastly refusing for the need to correct or for normal cycles to prevail, and this only means that the mania phase has deepened.

There is no way but, to borrow from Superman, up, up and away!  

The Secret of Asia’s Rising Star: Credit Bubble

Moody’s upgrade has been justified as the Philippines representing “Asia’s Rising Star”. Glenn Levine Moody’s analyst responsible for the publication of the upgrade was quoted by FinanceAsia.com as “Investors are bullish on the Philippines, and so are we”[5].

So has “appeal to the popular” replaced economic analysis as basis for upgrades? Or is it that Moody’s simply wants to jump on the bandwagon like everyone else?

Another article says that the other reasons for Moody’s bullishness have been due to construction and business process outsourcing sectors and domestic demand[6].

However the upgrade on the Philippines didn’t come with enough scrutiny, again FinanceAsia quotes the Moody’s analyst
“A stock market bubble would affect relatively few, but the Philippines’ real estate market is a concern, since housing investment is more widespread,” says Levine. “The scant available data on the Philippines’ real estate, alongside anecdotal evidence, suggest that prices and construction may be rising ahead of fundamentals. This bears watching.”

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The above represents the changes of loans from the banking sector to the supply side and the demand side. Data from BSP.

Since 2010 financials, real estate and trade, which accounts for more than 40% of total banking loans, have been running past 20% and rapidly increasing. I didn’t include construction loans despite its monstrous jump 57% year on year jump last February due to time constraints.

Does the analyst from Moody’s know how much of the 20% increase year-to-date increase in the Phisix, aside from last year’s 32% returns, has been based on borrowed money from banks? From the above statement they are clueless.

Yet lending in financial intermediaries has jumped by over 30% in 2011-2012 and 27% this February (year on year).

So if a lot of money loaned from the banks has been channelled into the stock market, then despite the stock market’s small penetration level, a stock market hit will also extrapolate to a hit on loans and the banking system and other creditors. Thailand, may not be the Philippines, but the recent increase imposed by regulators in collateral requirements for margin trades jolted the SET[7], whom at the start of the year had been running neck to neck with the Phisix.

What’s the point? Thailand’s booming stock market has likewise been founded on a credit boom.

So, to conclude that the impact will be “relatively few” seems groundless and signifies a reckless conclusion.

On the demand side, household credit has risen to the mid-teen levels or more than double the statistical growth of the local economy.

This represents the robust domestic demand?

People have been confusing credit intoxication with productivity. Credit does not, in most occasions, translate to productive growth.

Yet ironically, the mainstream can’t seem to fathom the difference between statistical growth and real growth. Statistical GDP numbers has been computed based on the growth rate pumped up by such underlying credit growth.

This means that the statistical growth has been much puffed up. Without the credit boom statistical GDP will reflect on significantly lower numbers.

I have not enough data for BPOs to make any comments.

Are credit bubbles sustainable?

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Bank credit growth has been running amuck, close to 30% (year on year; blue line, left window) and nearly 20% (4 quarter rolling GDP, red line)! This is according to the chart from the latest IMF 2013 ARTICLE IV CONSULTATION[8].

Domestic credit to the private sector as percentage of the GDP has spiked to 50.4% by the end of 2012 according to the BSP chief (right window). I previously quoted his speech on my last comment on this[9], now the same figure has been splashed over at media[10]. In 2011 the data was only at 31.78%. This means that in 2012, debt as % to GDP rocketed by 18.62%!

And given the rate of acceleration, which will be compounded by all these upgrades, we can expect that, regardless of the price levels of the Phisix (10,000 or not) at the end of the year, domestic debt to the private sector in % will likely balloon to anywhere around 60-70% or even more!

The BSP chief has the public routine of comparing Philippine debt levels with that of our regional peers. According to him, local debt levels are “low” given the 100%+ levels of our neighbors.

But again this really represents the fallacious apples to oranges comparison. Political money authorities feel like having attained a state of celestial bliss. This time is different. This is the new order.

In their chronicles of global financial crises over the eight centuries, Harvard Professor’s Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff in their book points out, that debt intolerance or the “extreme duress” of debt levels which “involves a vicious cycle of loss of confidence, spiralling interest rates on external government debt and political resistance to paying foreign creditors”[11], have had “very different thresholds for various individual countries”.

Furthermore they state that “the worst the history, the less the capacity to tolerate debt”[12].

In the past, the Philippines fell into a recession or a crisis when debt levels reached 51.59% in 1983 and 62.2% in the pre-Asian crisis of 1997. While the level of debt intolerance may increase, expectations of 100% levels similar to our peers signifies as sheer fantasy.

A famous quote from Karl Marx in his book the Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon[13] "History repeats ... first as tragedy, then as farce" seems very applicable today.

And given the dramatic deluge of debt, confidence can evaporate with a snap of a finger, where “rising star” may became a wayward meteor, especially when creditors become increasingly sceptical of the debtor’s ability to settle on their liabilities

In short, while I expect the mania may go on through the year, anytime the Philippines reaches or even surpasses the 1997 debt levels then she will become increasingly fragile or vulnerable to a recession or a crisis that may be triggered internally or externally.

BSP Officials on Bubbles: Yes and No

This week other BSP officials have offered mixed signals.

Some reportedly acknowledged the existence of bubbles, but like Thai authorities, deny of their risks, since they presume to have the tools to rein them.

But Deputy Governor Nestor Espenilla issued the strongest statement on bubbles so far, as quoted by Bloomberg[14]
“Our source of concern is the rapid growth of credit,” Espenilla said in his office on April 24. “The central bank is very mindful of seeing the foundation of an asset bubble that can burst and create dislocations in the economy.
Now we are talking.

A major market participant mentioned in the same article seems in a state of denial
“Demand is still growing,” Henry Sy Jr., chief executive officer of SM Development Corp. (SMDC), said in an April 24 interview. “But there’s danger in some areas because good days don’t last forever.”
But the Bloomberg reports that the SM group plans to invest up to 71 billion pesos on expansion up until 2015. Such magnitude of spending doesn’t seem to suggest that “good days don’t last forever”, because these implies of an investment payoff from 2015 and beyond!

Yet demand continues to grow, because of the acceleration of the credit boom.

And it gets more interesting. From the same article
“There could be some surplus in the upper end of the market,” central bank Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo told reporters yesterday. “On the more significant parts of the market like the low-cost, socialized and medium-cost, there are no signs of a bubble formation.”
Some very noteworthy aspects from the comment.

The good Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo resorts to the fallacy of substitution and composition. The allusion to areas supposedly unaffected by bubbles or the absence of bubbles doesn’t validate or invalidate the presence of bubbles elsewhere. Such represents an ambiguous statement designed to evade the question or that the good governor has poor grasp of bubbles.

Bubbles are concentrated on capital intensive popular themes that reflect on the cluster of entrepreneurial errors as incentivized by policies.

As the great dean of the Austrian school of economics, Murray N. Rothbard explained[15].
But the regular, systematic distortion that invariably ends in a cluster of business errors and depression—characteristic phenomena of the "business cycle"—can only flow from intervention of the banking system in the market
Yet Mr. Guinigundo seems to echo US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who denied of a housing bubble and of the 2007 crisis until it blew up on the face of the US Federal Reserve

In a 2010 speech, Mr. Bernanke admitted to his failure to act on a national housing bubble[16].
Although the house price bubble appears obvious in retrospect--all bubbles appear obvious in retrospect--in its earlier stages, economists differed considerably about whether the increase in house prices was sustainable; or, if it was a bubble, whether the bubble was national or confined to a few local markets.
Also it would signify as an obvious mistake to presume bubbles as merely a “upper higher end of the market” phenomenon. 

Shopping malls[17] and the casino industry, whom are part of the property sector, have been acquiring substantial amounts of banking loans in support their rapid growth. The rate of which has gone far beyond the growth rates of their respective demand side of the markets, particularly domestic consumers and regional bettors, respectively.

In other words, property projects for different classes of customers that have not been limited to the upper scale.

Shopping malls have catered largely to the general local population depending on the malls, whereas the coming casino complex has likely been targeted at regional or foreign clienteles.

Casino Bubble Redux

One of the four grand casino projects by the incumbent regime has reportedly obtained 14 billion pesos of debt from 3 banks for expansion. Three more grand casinos have been slated to open within 3 years[18].

Melco Crown (Philippines) Resorts Corp has reportedly raised $377 billion from follow on IPO offering[19]. My guess is that the next phase of fund raising will be on debt, whether from bonds or banking loans, perhaps similar to the path of the newly opened Solaire Manila which is owned and controlled by Enrique Razon led Bloombery Resorts [PSE BLOOM].

These marquee casinos are essentially competing with the regional casinos for the regions bettors rather than dependent on local peers. So the fate of these companies are essentially anchored or leveraged on regional growth.

Mainstream observers also say that such elaborate projects should help the tourism industry seems largely misunderstood. Many foreign based high rollers hardly go around the country as regular tourists. Their itinerary consists of the sojourn between casino and the airports. So while the casino, select hotels, and allied services and the airports benefits, they are hardly considered tourism in the conventional context.

Nevertheless, as discussed before, the gaming industry is said to grow at 28% CAGR from 2012-2018, when the average regional growth will be about the growth rate of the Philippines.

Yet these casinos appear to be political “pet” projects. These companies will operate on the government owned 8 hectare property envisioned as a Las Vegas entertainment complex known Entertainment City[20] and under the auspices or supervision of the Philippine Gaming and Amusement Board (PAGCOR)[21].

This also means that to obtain such privileges one has to be considered favorably within the circles of the incumbent political elite. And this is why one of the four major license holder whom is a Japanese mogul had been accused of bribery because such license had been acquired during the previous administration[22].

But political “pet” projects are unlikely good bets. They barely exists to serve customers. Instead these politically privileged agents use government “licensing” as economic moats from competition in order to extract financial rent, which they share with government directly and indirectly.

If the successes of political pet projects are to be measured, US President Barack Obama green energy “pet” projects could be used as paradigm. Obama’s green energy embodies a roster of failures[23]. Recently another supposed hybrid electric car company that got $200 million from the US government has been on the verge of bankruptcy[24].

I know, green energy projects are not casinos and Philippine politics haven’t been the same as American politics. But the hoopla of supposed gains where according to a study quoted by Finance Asia[25] “gaming revenues to more than double to $3.2 billion in 2015 from an estimated $1.4 billion in 2012, and reach $4.1 billion by 2016 as the supply increases” conspicuously ignores the risks from a severe regional economic slowdown, or a bursting bubble.

Such studies, which the political class relies on, overlook why global central banks need to keep interest rates at zero bound, and why central banks of developed economies need to expand balance sheets.

Nonetheless these big 4 casino operators will likely get bailed out once financial conditions turn against their expectations, which seems as why such aggressive risk taking behavior. 
 
Early Signs of the Periphery to the Core?

Of course the most important kernel of wisdom from Mr. Guinigundo’s quip looks like a revelation of what I call “periphery to the core” dynamics developing in the property sector.
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He notes that there are “some surplus in the upper end of the market” without explaining the ramifications.

Well, allow me.

Surpluses may lead to cash flow problems for highly leveraged firms that may prompt for foreclosures.

If the incidences of surpluses multiply, then this could put to risk the entire bubble structure.

An overleveraged sector amplifies the risks of insolvencies that would undermine creditors, particularly the banking system which has been the source of much of the financing as shown above[26].

Bond creditors will also get hurt. And the impairment of assets of the banking industry would mean a general tightening of credit conditions.

Such contraction in bank assets would also translate to debt deflation or a bubble bust which also implies the race to liquidate or to raise cash, capital or margin calls at depressed price levels.

Thank you for the clues, Deputy Governor Mr. Guinigundo.

For shopping malls, the “periphery to the core” would start from the mall areas with the least traffic and from marginal malls or arcades.

Surpluses amidst a boom which implies high rents, high cost of operations such as wages, electricity and other inputs prices, would place pressure on profits of retail tenants competing for consumers with limited purchasing capacity.

Periphery to the core would mean initially fast turnover from retail tenants on stalls of lesser traffic areas and of marginal malls. Then the length of vacancy extends and the number of vacancy spreads.

Leveraged malls and arcades thus will suffer from the same vicious cycle of cash flow problems and eventual insolvencies that will impair creditors and will spread to many sectors of the economy.

Why has the Philippine Bond Yield Curve been Flattening?

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The slope of the Philippine yield curve has dramatically been flattening (red arrow) since the start of the year. This week (red line) the 10 year revealed of a strong move. This compares with the previous week (green) or end of March (blue). Also see table on the right from Asianbondsonline.com[27]

This has been in stark contrast with our neighbors whose curves have registered marginal changes.

Rates from the longer end of the curve, particularly the 10 year bonds, have materially declined, which has been down by 137.5 bps year-to-date as of Thursday.

Why are investors stampeding into the Peso based government 10 year bonds? Are they discounting price inflation amidst the so-called ‘Rising Star of Asia’ boom?

Has this been merely yield chasing? Particularly by foreigners? Or has this been an anomaly? Why lock into 2.775% for 10 years, if so-called boom could lead to the risks of inflation or “ overheating” pressures?

Yet if such slope flattening continues, where the short end begins to rise while the longer end continues to fall then we may segue into an inverted yield curve: a harbinger of recession as a liquidity squeeze from malinvestment gets reflected on diametric moves of coupon yields across the maturity curve.

Moreover, flattening of the slope will theoretically reduce the banking system’s net interest margins[28].

Although today’s banking system has been more sophisticated since they don’t rely on net interest income alone.

But the Philippine banking’s income statement shows that as of June 2012 net interest income is at 122.543 billion pesos relative to 73.876 billion pesos of non interest income according to BSP data[29]. So the banking system will have to rely on non-loan markets, otherwise there will be pressure on profits.

Developments in the Philippine bond markets appear to be a conundrum to the Rising Star of Asia meme. 
 
The “Controlled Deficits” Travesty

Another supposed bullish reason with Moody’s on the Philippines is the so-called “controlling fiscal deficits”.

One would wonder, if the Philippines has indeed been booming, why the tremendous pressure to raise taxes on the public?

Why does the Aquino regime resort to an implicit class warfare campaign of “ostracization” against the Chinese community[30] and on Forbes billionaires over taxes[31]?

Current fiscal conditions offers as some clues.

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Cash operation on National government continues to operate on deficits, where expenditures have been more than revenues, as shown by the 2012 BSP Annual Report[32], since the advent of the Aquino presidency.

The same changes in deficits can be seen in % year-on-year and as % of GDP changes from the IMF’s paper.

Since 2009, tax revenues has been blossoming alright, but this represents less than 10% y-o-y growth, which should reflect on economic performance, or that tax revenues fluctates from about 4-8% GDP. But the government’s spending at 20% y-o-y, 8-12% of GDP has ballooned by even more!

Some controlling deficits eh?

The reason statistical debt-to-gdp or deficit-to-gdp ratio continues to exhibit signs of resilience has been mainly because of accounting treatment. Statistical gdp, which has been bolstered by a credit boom, has reduced the increases of government liabilities.

Moreover, government expenditures have been growing in a straight line (green arrow). But taxes mainly depend on, and are entirely sensitive to economic performance. So the revenue side of the government’s accounting book are variable while the expenditure side are at a fixed trend growth. Such asymmetry is a recipe for instability.

Should an economic slowdown occur, or worst, if a recession happens, those deficits will balloon as tax revenues collapse. Thus “controlled deficits” are really a charade.

While one can argue about from collection efficiencies, taxes essentially crowds out productive investments, so I would counter that tax collection inefficiencies are a good thing or adds to economic efficiency. As the great Ludwig von Mises would say “Capitalism breathes through those loopholes.[33]

The US crisis of 2007-2008 was felt only in 2009, where a massive decline in tax revenue led to a jump in fiscal deficits. This transpired even when the Philippines didn’t fall into a recession.

Yet given that government spending continues to swell, now at far more than the 2009 levels, any regression of tax revenues to the 2009 levels would amplify deficits. The 2009 event is a clue to what will happen in the future…but magnified.

Moody’s will be exposed for another flawed call.

Moody’s and the false acclaim of political ascendancy along with all the rest are symptoms of the credit bubble in full motion.

As the great Ludwig von Mises warned[34],
All governments, however, are firmly resolved not to relinquish inflation and credit expansion. They have all sold their souls to the devil of easy money. It is a great comfort to every administra­tion to be able to make its citizens happy by spending. For public opinion will then attribute the resulting boom to its current rulers. The inevitable slump will occur later and burden their successors. It is the typical policy of après nous le déluge. Lord Keynes, the champion of this policy, says: "In the long run we are all dead." But unfortunately nearly all of us outlive the short run. We are destined to spend decades paying for the easy money orgy of a few years.







[5] FinanceAsia.com Bullish on the Philippines April 25, 2013



[8] IMF Country Report Philippines 2013 ARTICLE IV CONSULTATION p.25 IMF.org



[11] Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff, This Time is Different Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, Princeton University Press p.21

[12] Reinhart and Rogoff Op. cit p.25




[16] Ben S. Bernanke Monetary Policy and the Housing Bubble At the Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association, Atlanta, Georgia January 3, 2010




[20] Wikipedia.org Entertainment City






[26] IMF Country Report Philippines Op cit p.19

[27] Asian Bonds Online Philippines ADB

[28] Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation What the Yield Curve Does (and Doesn’t) Tell Us February 22,2006

[29] BSP.gov Income Statement and Key Ratios Philippine Banking System


[31] Editorial Inquirer.net BIR’s misleading list April 22, 2013


[33] Murray N. Rothbard Long Live the Loophole December 13 2012

[34] Ludwig von Mises Section 6 Monetary Planning Chapter 11 THE DELUSIONS OF WORLD PLANNING Omnipotent Government p 252