Showing posts with label mining index. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mining index. Show all posts

Sunday, February 01, 2026

The PSEi’s January Mirage: GDP Slumps as Liquidity, Curve Control, and Index Engineering Mask the Stress

 

The reality is, if we tell the truth, we only have to tell the truth once. If you lie, you have to keep lying forever—Rabbi Wayne Dosick 

In this issue

The PSEi’s January Mirage: GDP Slumps as Liquidity, Curve Control, and Index Engineering Mask the Stress

I. GDP Shock, the PSEi 30 Barely Blinks

II. Liquidity-Led Asian Bull Run—The Philippines Tags Along

III. What the PSEi 30 Shows—and What It Conceals

IV. The Five-Minute Market: January 30

V. Index Output vs. Concentrated Reality

VI. ICTSI: The PSEi 30’s Silent Underwriter

VII. Concentration Risk Is Not Easing—It’s Shifting

VIII. Liquidity Concentration Remains Entrenched

IX. Manufactured Gains, Accumulating Fragility

XI. Mining–Oil Resurrection: Performance at the Margins, Volume Tells the Real Story

X. Expect a Pullback from the Overbought Mining-Oil Index

XI. When GDP Breaks, the PSEi 30 Follows

XII. Easy Money Fails—Again and Again!

XIII. The Pro-Cyclical Politics of Market Participation; Lessons from the 1994 GSIS–SSS Stock Loan Programs

XIV. PERA: Risk Transferred, Not Eliminated; When Loss Absorption Becomes a Policy Fault Line

XV. Philippine Peso Stress Is the Signal, Not the Noise

XVI. Trump’s Weak Dollar Policy: A Temporary Reprieve—Not a Resolution

XVII. From Gaming the Index to Gaming the Curve

XVIII. Macro Stability as Policy Objectives of Yield Curve Interventions

XIX. The PSEi 30 as Collateral Infrastructure

XX. Conclusion: January’s PSEi 30’s Performance: Not A Vote Of Confidence—But A Managed Outcome 

The PSEi’s January Mirage: GDP Slumps as Liquidity, Curve Control, and Index Engineering Mask the Stress 

Why Philippine equities rose as GDP, the peso, and credibility deteriorates

I. GDP Shock, the PSEi 30 Barely Blinks 


Figure 1

In a week when Philippine authorities announced yet another growth shock—GDP slowing further from a revised 3.9% in Q3 to just 3.0% in Q4 2025—the domestic headline equity index closed the week down a negligible 0.07%. (Figure 1, upper table) 

For full-year 2025, GDP growth decelerated sharply to 4.4%, from 5.7% in 2024—a material slowdown that we will examine in detail in a separate post. 

Yet markets barely reacted. 

Despite deteriorating macro fundamentals, January’s performance pushed the PSEi 30 up 4.56% month-on-month (MoM) and 7.96% year-on-year (YoY), its strongest combined MoM and YoY showing since September 2024. 

On the surface, the Philippine equity market appeared resilient—almost indifferent—to worsening growth data. 

II. Liquidity-Led Asian Bull Run—The Philippines Tags Along 

This performance placed the PSEi 30 alongside most easy-money-driven Asian equity markets, many of which extended their 2025 bull runs into the first month of 2026. 

According to Bloomberg data, 16 of 19 major Asian indices ended January higher, with an average gain of 4.7%. South Korea’s tech-heavy KOSPI led the surge, climbing nearly 24% in January and touching successive record levels. Other markets—including Singapore, Taiwan, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka—also carved out new highs. (Figure 1, lower graph) 

In this context, Philippine equities benefited from the regional liquidity tide. But the PSEi 30’s gains tell only part of the story. 

III. What the PSEi 30 Shows—and What It Conceals 

Media commentary has largely attributed January’s index strength to optimistic domestic narratives, while blaming external forces and corruption for lingering weaknesses (self-attribution bias). 

What has been almost entirely ignored is how index construction, free-float weighting, and trading mechanics materially shape reported performance. 

The public remains largely uninformed about how a small cluster of heavyweight constituents—rather than broad-based participation—drives index outcomes. 

January 30 offers a textbook example. 

IV. The Five-Minute Market: January 30  


Figure 2

On January 30, the PSEi 30 jumped 1.7% in a single session. But roughly 87% of that gain occurred during the five-minute pre-closing (floating) period, not during continuous trading!  (Figure 2, topmost window) 

Banks—particularly BPI—were central to this move. 

BPI was down 0.27% heading into the pre-closing phase. During the runoff, however, the stock reopened nearly 9.73% higher—effectively a 10% spike!! (Figure 2, middle image) 

This unusually large end-of-session repricing almost single-handedly altered the index outcome. 

Other major beneficiaries:

  • BDO (+1.96%)
  • Metrobank (+2.82%)
  • SM Investments (+0.96%)
  • Ayala Land (+1.43%) 

All were among the top 10 stocks by free-float market capitalization. 

In a wink of an eye, January’s "outstanding" index performance was successfully locked in. 

V. Index Output vs. Concentrated Reality 

This divergence becomes clearer when decomposing returns. 

The average month-on-month return of PSEi 30 component stocks was only 2.86%, and 2.85% on a full market-cap basis—well below the index’s 4.56% headline gain. (Figure 2, lowest diagram) 

Why the gap? 

Because the most significant contributions came from free-float-weighted gains concentrated in a handful of names—led principally by ICTSI, and reinforced by BPI, Ayala Corp, Metrobank, and Meralco. As of January 29, these five stocks accounted for 39.7% of the index’s free-float market capitalization. 

VI. ICTSI: The PSEi 30’s Silent Underwriter


Figure 3

The PSE’s largest constituent, ICTSI, has been racing toward successive record highs throughout January. This performance is magnified by its free-float weight of 17.82%, an all-time high as of January 29th. (Figure 3, topmost pane) 

In practical terms, ICTSI has bankrolled the PSEi 30’s returns since 2024

With approximately 55% of the Services sector’s full market capitalization, ICTSI has been primarily responsible for the sector’s 8.7% MoM and 33% YoY gains. 

Sectoral strength, in this case, is less a reflection of broad economic vitality than of single-firm dominance amplified by index mechanics. 

VII. Concentration Risk Is Not Easing—It’s Shifting 

Interestingly, despite ICTSI’s outsized role, the combined weight of the top five index constituents appears to have peaked. After reaching a record 53.02% in mid-December, their share eased slightly to 51.64% by January 29th. (Figure 3, middle chart) 

This can be read in two ways: 

One. A welcome broadening of gains beyond the largest names, or

Two. A growing vulnerability stemming from the index’s continued dependence on a narrow elite—increasingly dependent on tactical flows rather than structural diversification. 

At this stage, trading behavior suggests the latter interpretation is more consistent with reality. 

VIII. Liquidity Concentration Remains Entrenched 

January trading data reinforces this conclusion. 

The top 10 brokers accounted for an average of 61.5% of daily main board volume, down marginally from 63.5% in December. (Figure 3, lowest visual) 

On a weekly basis, however, this concentration trend has been rising steadily since the second half of 2025. 

Meanwhile, the top 10 traded issues represented 58.8% of daily volume, down from 65% in December. 

These are modest improvements—but they do not alter the core reality: trading activity remains heavily concentrated among a small group of players and stocks, who, in turn, shape index outcomes. 

IX. Manufactured Gains, Accumulating Fragility 

Taken together, January’s performance was not the product of broad-based confidence or improving fundamentals. It was manufactured through index construction, free-float concentration, and strategically timed flows—particularly during thin post lunch trading, pre-closing and runoff windows. 

While the gains appear orderly on the surface, the risk concentration embedded within the PSEi 30 is reticently intensifying. This fragility is neither well understood nor adequately discussed—yet it defines the true state of the market far more than the headline index level ever could. 

X. Breadth Confirms Concentration, Not Strength 

There is more evidence that January’s headline gains masked a deeply concentrated market.


Figure 4 

Despite the PSEi’s strong January performance, market breadth barely improved

The advance–decline spread widened by only 30 issues, a stark contrast to 2023’s spread of 184, when the PSEi posted a more modest 3.45% YoY gain—yet still ended that year down 1.77%. (Figure 4 topmost window) 

In other words, stronger index performance today is being achieved with far weaker participation. 

XI. Mining–Oil Resurrection: Performance at the Margins, Volume Tells the Real Story 

A significant contributor to January’s gains came from the Mining and Oil sector, riding the surge in global metal prices. 

The sector’s 10-component index jumped 25.8% MoM and an extraordinary 175% YoY, off a deeply depressed base. Unlike 2006–2012, miners are not just outperforming but decisively diverging from the PSEi 30. (Figure 4, middle image) 

Volume followed performance. Mining turnover surpassed that of the once-favored (PLUS and BLOOM) gaming stocks—higher by 18% in January. Yet, PLUS fell 19.01% MoM, BLOOM rose 12.6%, and Philweb surged 56.3%—a clear signal of institutional preference for high-volatility, high-beta trades. (Figure 4, lowest diagram)

This divergence highlights an uncomfortable reality: capital is rotating not toward fundamentals, but toward popular narratives, leverage and momentum.

The Mining sector’s share of main board volume surged to 7% in January, contributing materially to the 33.6% YoY increase in the PSE’s main board volume and the 36.5% rise in total/gross market turnover. Cross transactions accounted for 17.3% of MBV. 

Meanwhile, the Property sector’s share of gross turnover rose to 21.7% from 18.74%, while Holdings increased to 15.26% from 14.21%. Property had negative returns (-3.43% MoM, -.26 YoY) while holdings were buoyed (+4.86 MoM, +2.25% YoY) 

Together, these shifts reinforce a widening divergence between mainstream index performance and the previously shunned, cyclical, or politically unpopular sectors, particularly mining and oil. 

We have long anticipated the sector’s revival, and recent performance has clearly validated our call. 

But wait… 

X. Expect a Pullback from the Overbought Mining-Oil Index 

Though we expect the mining index to endure a sizeable pullback from their overextended, overbought levels—no trend moves in a straight line—this does not negate the broader regime backdrop supporting the sector. 

A growing set of global structural risks consistent with a potential regime transformation—manifested in a deepening war economy, the weaponization of the dollar, sanctions, protectionism, fiscal dominance, persistent central bank easing, and widening geopolitical tensions—should place a cap on any sustained decline

In this context, we should also expect partial rotation within the complex, particularly from metals toward oil-gas, rather than a wholesale reversal of the trade. 

XI. When GDP Breaks, the PSEi 30 Follows 

Despite the apparent regularity of post–lunch recess rallies—what I have previously labeled "afternoon delight"—and the repeated appearance of coordinated large-cap based "pre-closing" pumps (and dumps), the PSEi 30 has historically tracked GDP trends, albeit with a lag.


Figure 5

The most recent upside cycle began in mid-November 2025 and appears to have peaked by mid-January 2026. Notably, the index remained conspicuously indifferent to the Q4 GDP collapse, as if the slowdown had already been discounted—or managed. (Figure 5, topmost window) 

History suggests otherwise. 

At the onset of BSP rate cuts in August 2024, the PSEi surged nearly 15%, as easing was sold as a growth elixir. That optimism proved short-lived. (Figure 5, middle graph) 

GDP slowed sharply from 6.5% in Q2 2024 to 5.2% in Q3, barely stabilized in Q4, and was followed by a 10.5% PSEi plunge in Q1 2025. 

By Q3 2025, GDP had deteriorated further to 3.9%, and the PSEi collapsed another 18%. 

This pattern is not accidental

XII. Easy Money Fails—Again and Again! 

It bears repeating: RRR cuts, policy rate easing, expanded deposit insurance, and persistent fiscal stimulus—including pandemic-era deficits—have NOT revived growth. (Figure 5, lowest chart) 

As history has shown, they have accompanied or worsened economic deceleration

Yet the mainstream narrative insists these tools are the only solution.


Figure 6

The same logic is now being applied to equities: more liquidity, more intervention, more management of outcomes. (Figure 6, topmost diagram) 

Ironically, rather than igniting a genuine bull market, the PSEi increasingly requires non-market interventions to manufacture the appearance of macro stability

XIII. The Pro-Cyclical Politics of Market Participation; Lessons from the 1994 GSIS–SSS Stock Loan Programs 

Aside from direct market interventions, the politics of engineering a bull market have evolved.

Beyond the Capital Markets Efficiency Promotion Act (CMEPA)—which we have repeatedly criticized—the mainstream has revived proposals reminiscent of the defunct GSIS–SSS stock loan programs to further stimulate retail participation. 

These initiatives, however, reflect fundamentally pro-cyclical policymaking. 

The GSIS and SSS stock loan programs—most notably the GSIS Stock Purchase Financing Program (SPFP) launched in 1994—coincided with the peak of the PHISIX (now the PSEi). 

The 1997 Asian Financial Crisis inflicted severe losses, exposing the program’s structural flaw: embedding leverage and mark-to-market risk into institutions designed for capital preservation. 

The crisis did not create this fragility; it merely revealed the contradiction

XIV. PERA: Risk Transferred, Not Eliminated; When Loss Absorption Becomes a Policy Fault Line 

Current discussions on deepening participation now extend to PERA (Personal Equity and Retirement Account), where savings are managed by accredited administrators and invested in qualified instruments such as mutual funds, UITFs, insurance products, and government securities. 

While PERA removes explicit leverage, it introduces principal–agent problems and asymmetric information risks, with outcomes largely driven by professional managers rather than individual contributors—with fee structures, asset allocation, career advancement and herding behavior playing a decisive role in their decision process

Losses being absorbed at the individual level is systemically healthy. But the moment the state attempts to cushion or prevent those losses, it recreates the SPFP problem—only more slowly and diffusely. 

In short, policies framed as "enhancing participation" amplify bubble cycles and effect a tacit redistribution from savers to institutional intermediaries, ultimately eroding—rather than strengthening—the foundations of the capital market

XV. Philippine Peso Stress Is the Signal, Not the Noise 

The accelerating GDP slowdown validates our long-held view that the USDPHP breach of the 59 “soft peg” was a signal of mounting structural stress. (Figure 6, middle image) 

It also casts the BSP’s gold sales in a different light—not merely as FX defense, but as an indication of latent stress across government, central bank, and bank balance sheets

As we wrote last November: 

The peso’s breach of 59 isn’t just a technical move. It’s the culmination of structural stress that monetary theater can no longer hide.

XVI. Trump’s Weak Dollar Policy: A Temporary Reprieve—Not a Resolution 

The peso’s recent recovery owes less to domestic strength than to global easing dynamics. US dollar weakness—driven by policy stance and market expectations under President Donald Trump—pushed the DXY down roughly 0.8% MoM and 9.8% YoY

As a result, USDPHP ended January at 58.86, temporarily slipping below the 59 threshold (+0.85% YoY, +0.12% MoM). 

This reprieve is unlikely to last. Once balance-sheet stress becomes more visible, a test of the 60-level appears increasingly inevitable.

XVII. From Gaming the Index to Gaming the Curve 

At January’s close, the Philippine BVAL yield curve revealed yet another layer of policy response. (Figure 6, lowest chart)


Figure 7

The curve reflects a deliberate, policy-induced bearish steepening. As Q4 GDP slowed to 3%, the BSP eased the front end and belly to support bank funding conditions and preserve financial stability. Simultaneously, 20–25 year yields rose month-on-month, exceeding November 2025 levels, as markets imposed a fiscal and inflation credibility premium amid global term-premium repricing. (Figure 7 topmost image) 

The contradiction is stark: domestic accommodation is deployed to stabilize balance sheets, while long-duration yields signal rising skepticism over fiscal sustainability and inflation containment

XVIII. Macro Stability as Policy Objectives of Yield Curve Interventions 

This curve management feeds directly into the gaming of the PSEi 30

Historically, widening 10Y–3M and 10Y–6M spreads have coincided with CPI pressure, as accommodation persists and inflation risk migrates through FX and expectations channels. (Figure 7 middle chart) 

Meanwhile, the PSE’s Financial Index has risen across both steepening (2020–22) and flattening (2023) regimes—not because of curve “health,” but because of curve control. (Figure 7, lowest graph) 

Through coordinated yield-curve signaling, peso stabilization, and institutional balance-sheet absorption, authorities project macro stability despite slowing growthredistributing stress away from markets and toward households, future inflation, and shrinking policy space.

XIX. The PSEi 30 as Collateral Infrastructure 

Beyond boosting expectations and managing optics, the theatrics surrounding the PSEi 30 serve a more practical and underappreciated function: inflating and stabilizing collateral values across the financial system. 

For banks, insurers, trust entities, and large institutions, equity holdings—particularly index-heavy, highly liquid names—are not merely investments. They function as collateral, balance-sheet buffers, and capital-supporting assets used in repo transactions, interbank funding, structured products, and internal risk models. 

In an environment of slowing GDP, rising long-end yields, and latent balance-sheet stress, mark-to-market declines in these assets would immediately tighten financial conditions. Holding the PSEi 30 together—especially its largest constituents—helps preserve collateral valuations precisely when funding pressures are building elsewhere. 

This helps explain why support is selective rather than broad-based. Propping up the largest free-float names delivers the greatest collateral impact per peso deployed, even as market breadth deteriorates. The objective is not market health, but balance-sheet continuity. 

In this light, the PSEi 30 becomes less a reflection of economic confidence and more a policy-adjacent tool—a stabilizing surface that allows banks and institutions to extend accommodation, delay recognition of stress, and avoid procyclical tightening in credit and funding markets. 

But this stability is conditional. Should equity collateral values falter, or when cash flow/liquidity problems intensify, the feedback loop would reverse—forcing deleveraging, tightening credit, and accelerating the very slowdown policymakers are trying to defer.

XX. Conclusion: January’s PSEi 30’s Performance: Not A Vote Of Confidence—But A Managed Outcome 

Index gains were manufactured through concentration, liquidity choreography, curve control, peso management, and the tacit inflation of collateral values. 

What appears as market resilience is, in reality, the financial system preserving its own scaffolding amid deteriorating growth—a classic symptom of a late-cycle phase rather than a genuine expansion. 

In such phases, markets are stabilized not to signal strength, but to delay adjustment. Stress is redistributed away from asset prices and toward households, future inflation, fiscal credibility, and shrinking policy space. 

The longer stability is engineered rather than earned, the more abrupt the eventual repricing becomes—when collateral support weakens and policy capacity is finally exhausted. 

___

Select References (quote and validations) 

Prudent Investor Newsletter, The USD-PHP Breaks 59: BSP’s Soft Peg Unravels, Exposing Economic Fragility, Substack, November 02, 2025 

Prudent Investor Newsletter, The CMEPA Delusion: How Fallacious Arguments Conceal the Risk of Systemic Blowback, Substack, July 27, 2025 

Prudent Investor Newsletter, How Surging Gold Prices Could Impact the Philippine Mining Industry (3rd of 3 Series), Substack, April 02, 2025


Monday, April 19, 2021

The War On Mining Has Utterly Failed! The Mining Industry’s 9-Year Moratorium Lifted! Will a Bull Market in Mining Emerge?

 

With the exception only of the 200-year period of the gold standard, practically all governments of history have used their exclusive power to issue money in order to defraud and plunder the people. ... money is certainly too dangerous an instrument to leave to the fortuitous expediency of politicians – or, it seems, economists –Friedrich August von Hayek 

 

In this issue 


The War On Mining Has Utterly Failed! The Mining Industry’s 9-Year Moratorium Lifted! Will a Bull Market in Mining Emerge? 

I. The War On Mining Has Utterly Failed! The Mining Industry’s 9-Year Moratorium Lifted! 

II. Short-Term Political Risks, Longer Term Economic Divergence Favoring the Mines 

III. As Global Central Banks Increase Balance Sheets, the Uptrend in Anti-Bubble Gold Remains Intact 

IV. Copper and Nickel Uptrends as Potential Inflation Hedges 

V. Price Changes of Gold (in Peso) Resonates with the BSP’s Assets 

VI. With Gold Reserves Down, BSP’s GIR Increasingly Depends on ‘Borrowed Reserves’ 

VII. How Liberalization Should Affect the PSE’s Mining Index 

VIII. Will a Secular Bull Market in the Mining Sector Emerge? Will the Mining Index Diverge with the PSYei 30? 


The War On Mining Has Utterly Failed! The Mining Industry’s 9-Year Moratorium Lifted! Will a Bull Market in Mining Emerge? 

 

I. The War On Mining Has Utterly Failed! The Mining Industry’s 9-Year Moratorium Lifted! 

 

THE WAR ON MINING HAS FAILED ABSOLUTELY!  

 

From the Inquirer (April 16): President Duterte lifted on Wednesday the nine-year moratorium on new mining agreements to boost government revenue, create more jobs and prop up the pandemic-battered economy. 

 

When the war was declared to appease the environmental left, back in June 2016, I predicted: (bold original, underline added) 

 

“Once the bubble economy begins to corrode and where prices of metals soar, such industry bullying will come to an end. Ban on mining will transform to welcome back mining!” 

 

“Of course, another reason why mining won’t likely be totally banned is because the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas not only buys gold from the miners (even illegal miners), they get revenues from sales to them! 

 

“So I expect the BSP to oppose a total ban. 

 

Why the War on Mining Will Fail! June 26, 2016 

 

And  

 

“The critical moment here will be when the government revenues fizzle out, or will come under increased pressure to match expenditures. The exigency to finance the wanton growth in public spending will likely spur the government to close their eyes on environmental politics.” 

 

War on Mining: Flip Flopping Exposes the Underbelly of Environmental Politics February 12, 2017 

 

Got that?  

 

To justify the liberalization or the welcoming of the mining investments, the National Government used our premises!  

 

The late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in a 1976 TV interview said that "The problem with socialism is that eventually, you run out of other people's money". She was on the spot. 

 

Our validation also exhibits that the economy is a process. Even before the pandemic, the political economy flowed in this direction ever since the prohibition. 

 

The passage of the BSP’s Gold Bill in May 2019 already provided this clue.  

 

As I explained then… 

 

First, the domestic mining industry IS the primary source of gold for the BSP, which it uses to manage its balance sheet. 

 

Second, the massive backlash of excise taxes on the industry, and thus its UTTER failure! 

 

This excerpt signifies an awesome confessional: “R.A. No. 11256 seeks to remedy the 99% drop in BSP’s domestic gold purchases…result of the taxation of the sale of gold to the BSP beginning July 2011.”  

 

 

 

Lastly, the political institutions (war on mining) have failed to control or suppress the black market, which has been the primary channel for small-scale mining activities, and subsequently, the conduit for smuggling! 

 

Bullseye! NG-BSP Admits that the War on Mining Has Failed, the BSP’s Gold Bill is Now a Law! May 26, 2019 

 

Finally, this validation. 

 

The great Nobel Prize Austrian Economist, Friedrich von Hayek, presciently wrote, 

 

The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design. 

 

To the naive mind that can conceive of order only as the product of deliberate arrangement, it may seem absurd that in complex conditions order, and adaptation to the unknown, can be achieved more effectively by decentralising decisions, and that a division of authority will actually extend the possibility of overall order. 

 

Von Hayek, Friedrich August, The Fatal Conceit, p 76-77 Mises.at 

 

All other aspects covered by central planning are due to follow. 

 

Socialism. Utterly. Failed. 

 

II. Short-Term Political Risks, Longer Term Economic Divergence Favoring the Mines 

 

Given the emergence of the “Woke” (social justice warriors) political economy, popularly represented by the Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) standard, the triumph of free markets may be fleeting since the national election is around the corner. The BSP has even embarked on Green Financing! 

  

Nonetheless, because there won’t be any meaningful and sustained recovery, instead the economy will transition from a recession to a crisis of insolvencies, dependence by the National Government on the mining sector for financing will only increase. 

 

According to this 2017 Inquirer editorial (February 28, 2017): The Philippines is the fifth most mineral-rich country in the world for its combined deposits of gold, nickel, copper, aluminum and chromite resources with an estimated value of $1.4 trillion. 

 

Any source of revenues will count. 

 

Besides, global and domestic inflationary pressures are likely to drag the economy down, accentuating the role of the much belittled and besmirched sector as an inflationary hedge. 

 

In sum, yes, the political risks from the coming elections may hamper or impede the mining sector’s liberalization 

 

But no, this free-market trend will likely continue in the face of surging prices of metals as the economy continues to keel over from the various embedded risks. 

 

III. As Global Central Banks Increase Balance Sheets, the Uptrend in Anti-Bubble Gold Remains Intact 

 

With central banks in a frenzied mode to expand their respective balance sheets, gold prices appear to represent the anti-bubble asset class. 

 

 

Figure 1 

 

 

As noted early last year, for the first time in history, gold prices soared to record highs against ALL Fiat currencies in early 2020. You read it, right…ALL. 

 

The US financial media broadcasted the USD price of gold. But it did not cover the prices of the gold in OTHER currencies, where the action truly mattered.  

 

What you are about to see is a defining monumental process in financial history!  

 

Lo and Behold, Gold’s phenomenal rise against central banking’s Fiat Money standard! 

 

See Oh, Gold!!!! February 23, 2020 

 

When global central banks, accelerated their balance sheet expansion, gold prices refused to join the bandwagon of liquidity-fueled speculative mania that spread from stocks to real estate, to junk bonds, to cryptocurrencies, to commodities, to NFTs (non-fungible tokens), and other asset classes.  

 

Signs of economic green shoots have stemmed from the tsunami of liquidity from global central banks.  Since the GDP measures spending, the sheer degree of fiscal and monetary bailouts have likewise temporarily amplified demand, creating the illusions of growth. Nevertheless, such politically aided spending adds pressure on the supply shocks, which had been hobbled principally by mobility restrictions, giving rise to higher CPI. 

 

In any case, gold prices pulled back from its milestone highs to exhibit its anti-bubble properties.  

 

Nonetheless, the uptrends in the 44-year and 20-year charts of the USD prices of gold remain solidly intact.  

 

At the moment, the 2-year trend line appears to be holding. 

 

IV. Copper and Nickel Uptrends as Potential Inflation Hedges 

 

Figure 2 

 

Prices of copper have likewise benefited from the stagflation of the 70s, and currently from supply drought and the global central bank’s liquidity boom. 

 

Like gold, the 60-year price trend of copper remains sturdy. Copper prices appear in the process of testing the support of the 20-year uptrend, which now functions as resistance. A breakout would translate to an epic high.  

 

And while we are supposed to be dazzled by the impact of surging demand for electric vehicles on nickel prices, given the current scale of imbalances, this outlook is uncertain.  

 

Nonetheless, somehow like copper, supply issues and the recent tidal wave of liquidity from global central banks have bolstered the surging prices of nickel.  

  

Prices of nickel have been rangebound in the last 10-years that has been supported by two massive rounding bottoms, as shown by the 32-year chart. An upside breakout of both can translate to a test of the May 2007 all-time high.  

 

From my perspective, like gold, reservation demand could support prices of metals behind the domestic mining industry. Or, these metals could benefit as inflation hedges than by unsustainable central bank “reflation”.  

 

However, while gold is likely to climb, copper and nickel prices may fall, should deflationary forces prevail. 

 

Gold should function as insurance against either credit deflation (wave of insolvencies) or money printing by central banks (runaway inflation). 

 

V. Price Changes of Gold (in Peso) Resonates with the BSP’s Assets 

 

Figure 3 

 

Mimicking its global peers, the BSP has expanded its balance sheet by a record 39.09% to Php 1.988 trillion amounting to a historic 40.35% share of the 2020 real GDP!  

  

The BSP's unprecedented scale of liquidity infusions spiked domestic money supply growth. In 2020, M3 to nominal GDP, as previously shown, accounted for a landmark high of 79.04%! 

  

Rather than expanding the division of labor, the GDP is now a product of BSP monetary operations! 

 

Further, gold prices in PHP appear to manifest the conditions of the BSP’s assets. 

 

Gold prices soared to a fresh record ahead in February 2020 of the unparalleled growth of the BSP’s asset-to-GDP last year. 

 

In 2011, both gold prices in PHP and BSP assets-to-GDP simultaneously set the previous records.  

 

It appears that this time has not been different.  

  

As of last week, from their ALL time highs, the recent pullback in gold prices in PHP translated to a mere 9% decline.  

 

VI. With Gold Reserves Down, BSP’s GIR Increasingly Depends on ‘Borrowed Reserves’ 

 

Gold reserves of the BSP has declined partly due to liquidations. 

 

From Philstar (April 16) Foreign reserves dropped for the third straight month in March after the government paid up foreign obligations using some of its dollars while gold values dropped, the central bank said on Friday. Gross international reserves totaled as $104.82 billion as of end-March, down 0.34% from the previous month’s level, preliminary data showed. Reserves stood at their lowest in 5 months or since accumulating to $103.8 billion in October 2020. 

 

Figure 4 

 

The BSP’s gold holdings in March dropped by .62% or USD 56.9 million, month-on-month, fundamentally reflecting price changes.   

 

But following their announcement to sell last September, the BSP embarked on gold liquidations to finance their financial obligations. 

 

The reduced gold exposure, based on IMF’s International Reserves and Foreign Currency Liquidity data, further reinforced the increasing share of other FX reserve assets (derivatives) and external borrowings of the BSP’s GIR (as of January). The latter two represents “borrowed reserves” or “USD shorts” that carry financing costs and require repayment in foreign currencies. 

 

From the Businessworld (April 12, 2021), “FOREIGN LOANS availed of by the government to finance its pandemic containment rose to $15.493 billion as of April 8, mainly due to external debt taken on for the mass vaccination program, the Finance department said.” 

 

The aggregate FX loans on the pretext of the pandemic signify 51% of the USD 30.11 billion of accrued gains from the BSP's GIR trough of USD 74.11 billion in October 2018. 

 

To simplify, the growth of the BSP’s GIR increasingly dependent, not on economic sources of FX receipts (from merchandise trade, OFWs, and BPO remittances, tourism receipts, and foreign direct investments) but financial operations backed by derivatives and multilateral and bilateral borrowings. 

  

Artificially low rates from global central bank policies have enabled and facilitated such a macroeconomic façade. 

 

The reversal of the accommodations from the easy money environment is where the problem arises. Higher financing costs will either compel the BSP to draw down on its reserves and reduce exposure on leverage, thereby limiting its ability to defend the peso. 

 

Have recent events been a partial squeeze to the BSP ‘borrowed reserves’? 

 

On this note, the BSP's path dependency is to likely deepen its espousal of inflationary policies, by magnifying its asset base with more large-scale asset purchases (LSAP or QE), coming at the expense of the peso and benefiting gold priced in the PHP. 

 

VII. How Liberalization Should Affect the PSE’s Mining Index 

 

But here’s the good news. 

 

The partial liberalization essentially clears the political obstacles on investments in the Philippine mining industry. 

  

It should lead to improvements of the fundamentals of the industry, from small-scale miners to the listed mining firms, representing the largest in the country. Theoretically, the latter’s gain should also get reflected in their share prices. 

 

The Philippine mining index currently consists of 8 firms, namely, Apex Mining, Century Peak Holdings, Lepanto Consolidated, Nickel Asia, Philex Mining, PXP Energy, and Semirara Mining. 

  

The share-weight of the full market capitalization of the subsectors has been skewed towards Nickel (45%), then Coal (25%), Gold (22%), and Oil (8%) as of April 16. 

  

Since non-institutional accounts or retail participants are likely to dominate trade in this sphere (I am guessing here), compared to issues of the main benchmark, the degree of market price distortions could be lower. 

 

The stock market cycles also include the local mining index. 

  

The mining index commenced on a boom from 2004, hit its top in 2012. The bull market lasted 8 years. Then the bears ruled from 2012 through 2020 for a total of another 8 years. 

  

In all, the latest complete market cycle, from 2004-2020, covered 16 years. 

 

With the first complete cycle from 1950 to 2003, this cycle could significantly be less than its prior. 

 

Of course, international prices of metals determined the flows and ebbs of the mining cycle. And it will continue to lay the groundwork for the industry and its participants, as well as their share prices. 

 

VIII. Will a Secular Bull Market in the Mining Sector Emerge? Will the Mining Index Diverge with the PSYei 30? 

 

Figure 5 

 

We now move to chart the “four-leaf clovers”. 

 

The rally from the depths of 2020 lifted the Mining index to reclaim its 17-year trend line. It earlier moved out of the 8-year bear market by breaking out of the downtrend also last year. 

 

For the index to reinforce the fledging mark-up/advance phase, it must stay within the context of the 17-year trend. Otherwise, a decline from here would mark the continued aging of the accumulation or bottom phase. 

 

Importantly, should the index barge through the critical resistance levels of 2007, 2019, and January 2021 and climb from there, a nascent bull market may have begun. 

 

Throughout history, accounts of divergences between the PSEi (PSYEi) and the mining index have been few and limited. But since 2012, while the PSEi traded partly up and mostly sideways, the mining index ground downhill, agonizingly.  

 

Such divergence spotlighted the underinvestments in the mines (also in agriculture) and overinvestments in the bubble sectors (real estate, malls, tourism, construction and banks) showcasing malinvestments from monetary policies in action 

  

Will the mining index diverge anew with the managed headline index, this time in the opposite directions? If so, which of the metal sectors will lead it? Will a bullrun in the mining sector morph into a bubble as institutional accounts pile in? 

 

And should deflationary forces from the banking system gain an upper hand, how does this affect the various sectors of the mining industry? 

 

The lack of probabilities set limits on the charting predictive accuracy, although it provides a useful roadmap based on visual heuristics.  

 

Ultimately, the business and credit cycle is what matters. 

 

To be clear, this discussion of the industry is about cycles and barely about short-term momentum. Reacting to the news, this week the mining index surged 5.6%. Opportunities should emerge over time. 

 

As a disclosure, this analyst holds some position on gold mining issues.


Yours in liberty,


The Prudent Investor