Showing posts with label stock market bubble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stock market bubble. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Q1 2025 5.4% GDP: The Consensus Forecast Miss and the Overton Window’s Statistical Delusion

 

The vulgar Keynesian focus on consumption unfortunately tempts politicians to approve “stimulus” measures aimed at pumping up this part of total spending…Such arguments, however, fail to grasp the true nature of the boom-bust cycle, especially the central role of investment spending in driving it—and, more important, in driving the long-run growth of real output that translates into a rising standard of living for the general public. Politicians, if they truly wish to promote genuine, sustainable recovery and long-run economic growth, need to focus on actions that will contribute to a revival of private investment, not on pumping up consumption—Robert Higgs 

In this issue

Q1 2025 5.4% GDP: The Consensus Forecast Miss and the Overton Window’s Statistical Delusion

I. BSP’s Easing Cycle and Mainstream’s GDP Expectations

II. The Big Consensus Miss Versus a Contrarian View of the GDP

III. On GDP: Methodological Skepticism and Political Incentives

IV. The Financialization of the Economy and the Raging Bank Stock Market Bubble!

V. Slowing Liquidity and Money Supply Trends

VI. Fiscal Surge Confirmed: Government Spending as the Main Growth Driver: A Shift in GDP Composition

VII. The Fiscal Cost of Stimulus Driven GDP: Record Public Debt

VIII. Employment Paradox: Full Employment, Slower GDP—What’s Going On?

IX. Labor Force Shrinking Amid Population Growth, why? Low-Skilled Workforce = Vulnerable to Inflation

X. Liquidity as a Mirror of the GDP; Phase Two of BSP’s Easing Cycle

XI. Salary Loans: A Proxy for Financial Distress?

XII. CPI Distortions and Price Controls; CPI Spread Headline versus the Bottom 30%: Hunger vs. Hope

XIII. Conclusion: The Politics of Numbers: GDP and the CPI, Faith in the Overton Window 

Q1 2025 5.4% GDP: The Consensus Forecast Miss and the Overton Window’s Statistical Delusion 

A crucial Q1 2025 GDP forecast miss by the consensus, and why embracing mainstream ideas can be perilous for investors. 

I. BSP’s Easing Cycle and Mainstream’s GDP Expectations 

Q1 2025 GDP should fully reflect the initial phase of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) easing cycle, launched in the second half of 2024 with three interest rate cuts and a reduction in the reserve requirement ratio (RRR). 

While this policy shift may be touted as stimulating credit growth and investment, its actual goal may be to inject liquidity into the system while simultaneously lowering debt servicing costs. 

The combined effects of the 2024 and 2025 easing phases are expected to influence the performance of Q2 and first-half 2025 GDP 

II. The Big Consensus Miss Versus a Contrarian View of the GDP


Figure 1

Two days before the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released its Q1 2025 GDP estimates, consensus forecasts predicted a robust 5.9% growth rate. We challenged this optimism, arguing (in x.com) that it likely overestimated actual performance. (Figure 1, upper image) 

Three critical indicators provide essential clues to the economy’s trajectory: 

1. Bank Revenues Signal Weakening Demand 

First, the combined Q1 2025 gross revenues of two of the Philippines’ largest banks, BDO Unibank [PSE: BDO] and Metropolitan Bank & Trust [PSE:MBT], recorded a fourth consecutive quarterly decline since Q1 2024, with Q1 2025 marking the sharpest deceleration. 

Given that their revenues accounted for approximately 1.72% of 2024 nominal GDP (NGDP), this slowdown signals broader economic weakness. 

Despite aggressive lending, banks appear to be yielding diminishing returns. That said, while banks may be aggressively lending, they may not be "getting a bang for their buck," as an old saw goes. 

This trend underscores inefficiencies in credit allocation, potentially dampening economic activity. 

And yes, Financial GDP slowed in Q1 (Figure 1, lower window) 

2. Declining Headline CPI Reflects Softening Demand 

Headline CPI has now posted three consecutive quarters of decline. We interpret this not merely as a result of supply-side adjustments but primarily as a reflection of weakening aggregate demand—a point we have consistently emphasized. 

3. Fiscal Stimulus: Record Q1 Deficit-Financed Spending


Figure 2 

Third, public spending surged in Q1 2025, resulting in a record fiscal deficit for the period. This aggressive expenditure, designed to bolster GDP, was highlighted in last week’s analysis. (Figure 2, upper graph) 

However, this strategy carries risks, including crowding out private sector activity and exacerbating public debt. 

4. Trendlines and Economic Realities: The Shift to a Slower Growth Path 

Using the PSA’s peso-denominated figures, nominal GDP (NGDP) and real GDP (rGDP) reveal a secondary trendline that has guided economic performance since the pandemic recession. (Figure 2, lower visual) 

Seen from this perspective, this second trendline essentially extrapolates to a slowing GDP trajectory. 

With that said, unless the economy regains its primary growth path, this downward trend will persist, operating under the shadow of significant downside risks

We are both amused and amazed by the pervasive optimism—or mass delusion—among establishment analysts, who consistently, or rather perpetually, echo official predictions rather than scrutinizing actual data. 

This tendency, aimed at shaping the Overton Window—the range of ideas deemed acceptable in public discourse—reflects a patent disconnect from economic realities. 

III. On GDP: Methodological Skepticism and Political Incentives 

We are not staunch believers in GDP, which we believe is determined and calculated for political purposes. It relies on structural mismatches between the subjectivism of human actions and the objectivism of the empirical analysis underlying it. Consequently, its calculation is based on numerous flawed assumptions. 

In any case, although authorities can manipulate figures to promote their agenda (as neither the CPI nor GDP is subject to audit), economic reality will ultimately prevail 

Despite this, true enough, the Q1 2025 GDP growth rate of 5.4% fell significantly below consensus estimates, validating our cautious outlook

IV. The Financialization of the Economy and the Raging Bank Stock Market Bubble! 

The bank-finance sector’s real GDP growth slowed from 8.3% in Q1 2024 to 7.2% in Q1 2025. (Figure 1, upper chart, again) 

Despite this deceleration, its outperformance relative to other sectors boosted its GDP share to a record 11.7%, signaling the deepening "financialization" of the Philippine economy. 

Strikingly, despite this, bank GDP growth substantially slowed over the last five quarters, from Q1 2024 to Q1 2025 (13.1%, 10.2%, 8.7%, 6.5%, and 5%), affirming my analysis. 

The Raging Financial Stock Market Bubble


Figure 3 

Despite this, the PSE’s bank-dominated financial index continues to hit all-time highs (including this Friday or May 9)—more evidence of the disconnect between share prices and fundamentals or a growing sign of a stock market bubble. (Figure 3, topmost diagram) 

Instead of widespread public participation, its less apparent nature stems from rising share prices being driven mainly by the "national team" or the BSP's cartel- network of banks and financial institutions. 

Bear in mind, the free float market cap share of the top three banks has been instrumental in supporting and currently driving the PSEi 30 to its present levels. 

BDO, BPI, and MBT account for 24.2%—up from a low of 12.76% in August 2020—while including CBC, this rises to 25.9% of the PSEi 30 (as of May 9). These four listed banks rank among the top 10 by free float market cap. (Figure 3, middle chart)

The banks’ outperformance coincides with, or bluntly put, stems from, the BSP’s historic rescue efforts and massive subsidies during the pandemic, which have been carried over to this day.

The percentage share of turnover of the top five banks in the financial index has averaged 23% of the main board volume Year-to-date—indicating a heavy buildup of concentration activities or risk

In any case, while banks constitute 60% of the sector’s GDP, the outperformance of non-banks and insurance companies buoyed the sector’s GDP. 

V. Slowing Liquidity and Money Supply Trends 

Liquidity conditions eased further in Q1 2025, with the money supply-to-GDP ratio (M2 and M3) continuing its downward trajectory. (Figure 3, lowest image) 

This trend, which accelerated from 2013 to 2018 and spiked during the 2019–2020 pandemic recession with the BSP’s Php 2.3 trillion injection, has significantly influenced CPI through what the mainstream calls "aggregate demand." 

In the current phase of this cycle, since peaking in 2021, this key measure of credit-driven demand has slowed, contributing significantly to the recent CPI slowdown.

VI. Fiscal Surge Confirmed: Government Spending as the Main Growth Driver: A Shift in GDP Composition 

The third indicator reinforcing our analysis is public spending.


Figure 4

Q1 2025 expenditures surged by 22.43%, outpacing revenue growth and resulting in a record Q1 fiscal deficit of Php 478 billion. 

This nominal spending boom translated into a significant GDP contribution, with government spending GDP spiking by 18.7%—the highest since Q2 2020—excluding government construction spending! (Figure 4, topmost graph) 

However, consumer spending GDP, while rising from 4.7% in Q4 2024 to 5.3% in Q1 2025, saw its share of national GDP decline from 74.7% to 74.3%. (Figure 4, second to the highest window) 

In contrast, government GDP’s share rose from 12.3% to 15.9%, reflecting a structural shift. 

These numbers reflect an ongoing trend: they reveal the peak of consumer spending at 80.6% in Q3 2002, which steadily declined to the 2020 range (67–75%), while conversely, since its 8% low in Q4 2005, government GDP has nearly doubled, with its trend accelerating since 2020. 

All these are evidence that there is no such thing as a free lunch, as whatever the government takes from the private sector for its expenditures or consumption comes at the latter’s expense—the crowding-out syndrome in motion. 

VII. The Fiscal Cost of Stimulus Driven GDP: Record Public Debt 

This shift comes at a cost—record Q1 2025 public debt. Public debt soared from Php 16.05 trillion in Q4 2024 to a historic Php 16.68 trillion, a net increase of Php 633 billion, financing the period’s Php 478.8 billion fiscal deficit! 

This quarterly debt increase, the highest since Q3 2022, reflects an upward trend! (Figure 4, second to the lowest chart) 

Furthermore, a weaker US dollar in March tempered debt growth, reducing the foreign exchange (FX) debt share to 31.8%. However, the FX debt share has been rising since its March 2021 trough. (Figure 4, lowest graph) 

Consequently, Q1 2025’s deficit-to-GDP ratio surged to 7.27%, far exceeding the government’s 5.3% target

Looking at all this, both macro (CPI, deficit spending) and micro (bank revenues, bank GDP) factors have converged to highlight a significant economic slowdown, yet despite the establishment’s cheerleading, the diminishing returns of artificial growth driven by implicit backstops—BSP easing and fiscal stimulus—will gradually take their toll and heighten risks. 

As it stands, this marks another round for this contrarian analyst. 

VIII. Employment Paradox: Full Employment, Slower GDP—What’s Going On? 

Let us now examine the other critical forces shaping the statistical economy—GDP.


Figure 5 

Not one among the establishment punditry seems to ask: While the Philippine economy nears full employment, instead of a boost, GDP has been declining—what the heck is going on? 

Employment reached 96.1% in March 2025, averaging 96.02% in Q1 2025 and 95.9% over the 25 months since January 2023, according to Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) data. (Figure 5, topmost visual) 

However, this near-full employment masks structural weaknesses

Consumer per capita GDP, which peaked at 8.98% year-on-year in Q2 2021, has decelerated, with Q1 2025’s 4.4% growth—up slightly from 3.84% in Q4 2024—marking the second-slowest pace since the pandemic. 

IX. Labor Force Shrinking Amid Population Growth, why? Low-Skilled Workforce = Vulnerable to Inflation

While the workforce population continues to grow, the labor force participation rate has formed a "rounding top" pattern, indicating a gradual peak and a potential decline. In simpler terms, more people are being counted outside the labor force. (Figure 5, middle diagram) 

Why is this happening? 

A recent Congressional report on functional illiteracy in the education sector provides a critical clue. 

The Manila Times, May 7, 2025: "BETWEEN 2019 and 2024, 18 million students graduated from the country's basic education system despite being functionally illiterate. This was found by the Senate Committee on Basic Education during its April 30, 2025 hearing on the initial results of the 2024 Functional Literacy, Education, and Mass Media Survey (Flemms)." 

Assuming 16.2 million of these graduates remain in the labor force or are employed, while 10% (1.8 million) have joined the "not in the labor force" category (due to migration, mortality, or disengagement), approximately 32% of the labor force or 33% of the employed population is engaged in low-skilled work 

That’s right. Despite near full-employment data from the PSA, a large segment of the workforce is likely in low-skill, low-wage jobs, possibly concentrated in MSMEs or previously informal sectors, often earning at or below the minimum wage. 

This dovetails with Social Weather Stations (SWS) sentiment surveys, which continue to show elevated self-rated poverty (April 2025) and milestone hunger rates in Q1 2025.

In a nutshell, the most vulnerable population segments—those in low-wage, low-skilled jobs—are also the most exposed to inflation

These dynamics explain why poverty perceptions remain high despite supposedly strong employment numbers. 

The shrinking labor force could also be a symptom of “grade inflation,” producing a flood of graduates ill-equipped for skilled work. 

A closer look at PSA employment classifications reveals more. From January 2023 to March 2025, full-time employment averaged 67.3%, while part-time work averaged 31.9%. 

This implies a substantial portion of the workforce is underemployed or working in precarious conditions. The near-full employment figures may therefore overstate the true health of the labor market. 

In effect, the PSA’s employment data provides a façade—masking the fragility of both the labor market and broader economy. 

This explains the sluggish per capita consumption and, by extension, the national GDP. 

X. Liquidity as a Mirror of the GDP; Phase Two of BSP’s Easing Cycle 

Following the BSP’s historic rescue of the banking system during the pandemic, money supply metrics—particularly M1—have closely tracked GDP trends. (Figure 5, lowest chart) 

GDP peaked in Q1 2021, following the M1-to-GDP spike from Q3 2019 to Q3 2023. This spike reflected the pre-pandemic bank credit expansion, intensified by the BSP’s Php 2.3 trillion liquidity injection and other pandemic-related rescue measures. 

Since then, both GDP and M1 have slowed in tandem, though M1 has decelerated at a faster rate. 

This matters, because M1—comprising cash in circulation and demand deposits—underpins the transactions that generate GDP. 

Despite the BSP’s initial easing cycle in 2H 2024, liquidity growth continues to decelerate, even as Universal-Commercial bank credit expansion reaches record highs in peso terms (Q1, 2025) 

The lack of liquidity response to the first easing cycle prompted the BSP to implement a second phase: a deeper RRR cut, the doubling of deposit insurance coverage, and a fourth policy rate cut in April. 

However, monetary policy can only do so much in the face of structural issues. 

XI. Salary Loans: A Proxy for Financial Distress?


Figure 6

Wage earners are increasingly relying on salary loans to bridge the gap to offset reduced purchasing power 

While total salary loans (in pesos) have reached all-time highs, the growth rate of these loans has been slowing since Q1 2022—(strikingly) mirroring the trend in headline CPI. (Figure 6, topmost chart) 

However, slowing growth raises questions: Has the banking system reached peak salary loans? 

Has the pool of eligible borrowers maxed out? Are employees hitting credit limits for salary loans? Or are rising non-performing loans (NPLs) forcing lenders to tighten? (Figure 6, middle graph) 

Either way, the data signals distress among middle-income and lower-income workers, who are increasingly stretched and vulnerable.         

XII. CPI Distortions and Price Controls; CPI Spread Headline versus the Bottom 30%: Hunger vs. Hope

Headline CPI fell to just 1.4% in April (for 2Q GDP)—driven mainly by sharp food price declines. 

Yet little is said about the regulatory basis for this fall. Both rice and pork prices are subject to quasi-price controls via Maximum Suggested Retail Prices (MSRPs). And even here, compliance—particularly for pork—has been reportedly low. (Figure 6, lowest image)


Figure 7

Core CPI stabilized at 2.2% in April 2025, outperforming headline CPI since the MRSP. This reinforces the headline CPI’s decline due to regulatory maneuvers. The core index’s downtrend since Q2 2023 signals persistent demand weakness. 

However, rising month-on-month (MoM) rates suggest a potential bottom. This pattern mirrors previous episodes (2015, 2019), where food prices fell below Core CPI, acting as a staging point for the next inflation cycle. (Figure 7, topmost and middle charts) 

Regulatory and statistical distortions raise doubts about whether CPI distortions accurately reflect real market conditions. 

Another revealing metric is the spread between the national CPI and the Bottom 30% CPI, where food deflation for the Bottom 30% in April drove the spread sharply negative—reaching its lowest level since 2022—yet, while these numbers suggest that falling food prices for the poor should reduce hunger, the latest SWS survey indicates persistently high hunger rates. (Figure 7, lowest graph) 

Once again, the statistical data points diverge from lived experience

XIII. Conclusion: The Politics of Numbers: GDP and the CPI, Faith in the Overton Window 

The government’s CPI reveals numerous distortions, clearly being manipulated downward through regulation and statistical adjustments "benchmark-ism" to justify the BSP’s continued easing cycle, aimed at addressing debt and liquidity dynamics, as well as boosting GDP—which the establishment promotes as a stimulus. 

Yet behind the curated optimism—such as "upper-middle-income status"—lies a more disturbing truth: government statistics increasingly defy both economic logic and market signals. 

Market prices—USD Philippine peso exchange rate and Philippine Treasury yields—offer little support for these narratives. 

And yet, the Overton Window shaped by official optimism persists. 

Analysts, pundits, and policymakers alike remain obsessed with the hope it offers—ignoring hard realities staring them in the face

Until these contradictions are resolved, the statistical economy and the real economy will continue to drift further apart

Or, confronting these realities is essential to understanding the Philippine economy’s true trajectory.

Sunday, February 09, 2025

Maharlika's NGCP Investment: Economic Nationalism or a Bailout?

 

Don’t you need some ‘wealth’ to create a ‘wealth fund?’ Norway did it with the money it got from North Sea oil. China’s trillion-dollar wealth fund comes from its trade surpluses. Where will the US wealth come from? The government runs deficits—Bill Bonner 

In this issue 

Maharlika's NGCP Investment: Economic Nationalism or a Bailout?

I. Introduction: Maharlika's First Test: Can Conflicting Objectives Deliver Optimal Returns?

II. The Legacy of NAPOCOR: A Historical Overview and its Cautionary Lessons

III. Geopolitical Tensions Permeate the Power Sector

IV. MIC’s Investment in NGCP: A Revival of Economic Nationalism? Shades of Napocor?

A. Advance National Security by Strengthening Oversight of NGCP Management?

B. Economic Benefits: Lowering Electricity Costs by Enhancing Grid Efficiency?

V. Maharlika's NGCP Investment: A Bailout in Disguise? Potentially Inflating an SGP Stock Bubble?"

VI. Maharlika’s Risks and Potential Consequences

VII. Conclusion 

Maharlika's NGCP Investment: Economic Nationalism or a Bailout? 

Is Maharlika’s exposure to the National Grid Corp. about investments, economic nationalism, or a bailout of SGP? Or could hitting all three birds with one stone be feasible? 

__

Nota Bene: This post does not constitute investment advice; rather, it explores the potential risks associated with the recent acquisition of the National Grid Corp. (NGCP) of the Philippines by the Maharlika Investment Corporation, through its controlling shareholder, Synergy Grid and Development Philippines Inc. (SGP).

I. Introduction: Maharlika's First Test: Can Conflicting Objectives Deliver Optimal Returns?

First some news quotes. (all bold mine)

Philippine News Agency, January 27, 2025: Under the deal, MIC will purchase preferred shares in SGP, granting the government a 20 percent stake in the company, which holds a significant 40.2 percent effective ownership in NGCP, the operator of the country’s power grid. Consing noted that the deal will also provide the government with board seats in both SGP and NGCP. “Once the acquisition is completed, we shall be entitled to two out of nine seats in the SGP board, after the total seats are increased from seven to nine. At NGCP, the government gains representation through two out of 15 board seats, following an increase in the total seats from 10 to 15,” he explained. The investment is seen as a crucial step for the government to regain control over the nation’s vital power infrastructure.

Inquirer.net, January 29, 2025: The country’s sovereign wealth fund is investing in the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) to allow the government to monitor the possible emergence of external threats, the head of Maharlika Investment Corp. (MIC) said on Tuesday. MIC president and chief executive officer Rafael Consing Jr. said they would also be interested in buying the 40-percent NGCP stake owned by a Chinese state-owned company once the opportunity arises. 

Inquirer.net, January 28, 2025: The way NGCP can contribute to lower electricity is by ensuring that that rollout indeed happens. Because once you have that transmission grid infrastructure being rolled out successfully, then you would have more power players that can in fact get onto the grid and provide supply to the grid. And, obviously, just like any commodity, as you’ve got more supply coming in, the present power will, at some point in time, come down

The Philippines' sovereign wealth fund (SWF), the Maharlika Investment Corporation (MIC), has made its first investment by acquiring a 20% stake in Synergy Grid and Development Philippines Inc. (SGP), the majority holder of the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), a firm listed on the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) 

Is this move primarily about economic interests, or does it also serve geopolitical objectives? 

Is the MIC being used to facilitate the re-nationalization of NGCP by phasing out or displacing China’s state-owned State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC), which holds a 40% stake? 

Or has this, in effect, been an implicit bailout of SGP? 

If so, how can achieving domestic and geopolitical objectives align with the goal of attaining desired financial returns?  

Or how could competing objectives be reconciled to achieve optimal returns? 

II. The Legacy of NAPOCOR: A Historical Overview and its Cautionary Lessons

To better understand the current situation, let's first examine the origins of NGCP, tracing its roots back to its predecessor, the National Power Corporation (NPC). 

The NAPOCOR (NPC), was once the behemoth of the Philippine power industry, centralizing control over both the generation and transmission of electricity. 

Established in 1936 as a non-stock, public corporation under Commonwealth Act No. 120, nationalizing the hydroelectric industry. It was later converted into a government-owned stock corporation by Republic Act 2641 in 1960. Its charter was revised under Republic Act 6395 in 1971. 

While consolidating significant influence over the Philippine electricity market, this monolithic structure came with its pitfalls. 

NAPOCOR accumulated substantial debt due to a combination of over-expansion, mismanagement, political interference, and corruption

The corporation's financial stability was further undermined by subsidies, price controls—both contributing to market imbalances—and costly contracts with Independent Power Producers (IPPs), which led to a cycle of financial losses

In response, the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) of 2001 was enacted, marking the beginning of the sector's restructuring through privatization

The Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corporation (PSALM) was created to manage the sale and privatization of NPC's assets, also assuming NPC's liabilities and obligations.


Figure 1

At its peak, NAPOCOR’s debt, as reported by PSALM, had reached 1.24 trillion pesos by 2003. (Figure 1) 

The National Transmission Corporation (TRANSCO) was established to manage the transmission facilities and assets previously under NAPOCOR.

This restructuring ultimately led to the formation of the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) in 2009, a consortium that included local business tycoons Henry Sy Jr. and Robert Coyiuto Jr., along with China’s state-owned enterprise, the State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC). NGCP assumed operational control of the country’s power grid. 

The key takeaway from NAPOCOR’s experience is that its monopolistic structure created and fostered inefficiencies, corruption, and imbalances, which culminated in massive debt. 

Despite the privatization, NGCP remains a legal monopoly

Once again, NGCP operates and maintains the transmission infrastructure, such as power lines and substations, that connects power generation plants—including those owned by NAPOCOR and private generators—to distribution utilities. 

III. Geopolitical Tensions Permeate the Power Sector 

The current Philippine administration's foreign policy can be viewed through the lens of U.S. influence. 

Evidenced by hosting four additional bases for access to the U.S. military in 2023 amidst ongoing maritime disputes in the South China Sea, this stance marks a contrast with the previous Duterte administration's more China-friendly policies. 

This foreign policy shift has also been manifested in actions such as the banning of Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs) and the legal actions against Ms. Alice Guo, a former provincial (Tarlac) mayor accused of espionage and involvement in illegal gambling. 

These tensions extend to the NGCP, where the Chinese stake has been cited by media and officials as a national security risk.  

According to a US politically influential think tank, "Fears in both Manila and Washington that Beijing could disable the grid in a time of crisis have lent urgency to efforts to reform its ownership and operational structure". (CSIS, 2024) 

Therefore, heightened scrutiny of China’ government involvement in sectors like NGCP, justified on the ‘kill switch’ or national security risk, combined with increasing military cooperation with the U.S., suggests a Philippine foreign policy trajectory heavily influenced by Washington's strategic objectives. 

IV. MIC’s Investment in NGCP: A Revival of Economic Nationalism? Shades of Napocor?

The stated objectives of MIC’s entry into NGCP through a 20% stake in SGP are twofold: 

A. Advance National Security by Strengthening Oversight of NGCP Management? 

MIC contends that this investment allows for governmental oversight of NGCP management, potentially counterbalancing foreign influence, particularly from China. They have also expressed interest in acquiring the entire SGCC’s stake. 

However, this approach risks "political interference," one of the critical factors that historically plagued the National Power Corporation's (NPC) financial stability. 

Furthermore, a move towards re-nationalization could represent a regressive step, potentially leading to deep financial losses reminiscent of NPC’s past.

B. Economic Benefits: Lowering Electricity Costs by Enhancing Grid Efficiency?

MIC has promoted the investment as a means to improve grid infrastructure, with the expectation that efficiency gains would eventually translate into lower electricity rates for consumers.

First, the latter objective appears secondary to the former. Since all government actions must be publicly justified, MIC’s interventions are presented as beneficial to the consumer.


Figure 2

The Philippines is often cited as having one of the highest electricity rates in Asia. (Figure 2, upper chart) 

However, subsidies on power firms have distorted this metric. The NPC’s subsidy program significantly contributed to its debt accumulation.

Similarly, the government’s attempt to regulate fuel prices via the Oil Price Stabilization Fund (OPSF) ended up as a net subsidy, requiring large bailouts, as noted by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD, 2014). 

In short, Philippine experiences with subsidies have historically been unsuccessful

It is also questionable whether dependency on energy imports directly equates to high electricity prices. (Figure 2, lower image)

This simplistic logic would lead to the conclusion that nations that are most dependent on oil and energy imports would have the highest electricity rates, which is not necessarily true—because of many other factors. 

Second, MIC argues that "investing in NGCP could improve the rollout of transmission grid infrastructure, allowing more power players to supply energy to the grid."  

While this proposal is ideal in theory, its practical implementation faces significant challenges

One of the primary drivers behind high energy costs is the oligopolistic market structure, characterized by a concentration of power among a few large conglomerates.

Figure 3 

The most prominent players include San Miguel Corporation (PSE: SMC), Aboitiz Power Corporation (PSE: AP), First Gen Corporation (PSE: FGEN), and Manila Electric Company (PSE: MER). In Luzon, for example, seven generation companies hold an estimated 50% of the total installed capacity. (ADMU, 2022) (Figure 3) 

Despite partial deregulation, the concentration of market power among these firms potentially reduces competitive pressures and limits market alternatives, leading to price-setting behaviors that do not reflect true supply and demand dynamics. 

The Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) was introduced in 2006 to foster competition, yet allegations of anti-competitive behavior emerged soon after its inception. 

Moreover, while EPIRA led to privatization in segments of the industry, the slow pace of implementing reforms, such as open access provisions and retail competition, has maintained high electricity prices, as highlighted in a World Bank study

Furthermore, the incumbent regulatory framework, despite its intent to limit market power, has not fully mitigated oligopolistic tendencies, resulting in persistently high prices for consumers. Examples: Bureaucracy and red tape, cross ownership, system losses, conflicting laws, over-taxation and more. 

As a result, the oligopolistic market structure and high energy costs deter foreign direct investment (FDI), as investors seek markets with lower operational costs. 

The likely substantial influence of these oligopolists on the political sphere, which protects their interests through legal frameworks, raises the risks of collusion, cartel-like behavior, and barriers to entry, thereby constraining competition.

Therefore, while MIC’s argument for infrastructure rollout benefiting consumers through competition is necessary, it is crucially insufficient

Market concentration among large firms may have significant influence on regulations and their implementation, particularly in the upstream and midstream segments (generation, transmission, and distribution). 

The slow pace of reforms aimed at fostering a competitive environment has severely limited efficiency gains, and consequently, the reduction of electricity rates. 

Third, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) low interest rates regime has enabled these firms to accumulate substantial or large amounts of debt to finance their commercial operations, which implicitly creates obstacles for competitors unable to access cheap credit. 

Alternatively, this debt accumulation poses systemic financial and economic risks. 

In essence, despite EPIRA and its privatization efforts, monopolistic inefficiencies coupled with readily available cheap credit have effectively transferred NPC’s debt dilemma to the oligopoly

Lastly, decades of easy money policies from the BSP have driven a demand boom, resulting in a significant mismatch in the sector’s economic balance. This is evident in overinvestment in areas like real estate, construction, and retail, potentially diverting resources from necessary energy infrastructure and even potentially leading to overinvestment in renewable energy sources at the expense of reliable baseload power from coal, oil, natural gas, and nuclear energy. 

In sum, prioritizing the expansion of a competitive environment where the sector’s pricing reflects actual demand and supply dynamics is essential. 

Liberalization, which should lower the hurdle rate, would intrinsically encourage infrastructure investment without the need for political interventions. 

MIC’s promotion of economic gains from its interventions appears more as a "smoke and mirror" justification for politically colored actions. 

V. Maharlika's NGCP Investment: A Bailout in Disguise? Potentially Inflating an SGP Stock Bubble?" 

An even more fascinating perspective is SGP's financial health

Certainly, as a legal monopoly, the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) holds a significant economic advantage—an economic moat. 

Grosso modo, SGP, as the majority shareholder of NGCP, seemingly operates within a rent-seeking paradigm, where wealth is accumulated not through value creation but through leveraging of economic or political environments to secure favorable positions. 

OR, for monopolists, the focus shifts from open market competition, innovation, or improvement, to maintaining their monopoly status by currying favor with political stewards. Subsequently, they leverage this privilege to extract economic rents, often at the expense of consumers or other market participants. 

SGP’s financials and recent developments appear to support this narrative.


Figure 4

Revenue Stagnation: Since Q3 2022, SGP's quarterly revenue has grown by an average of 5.9% over 13 quarters through Q3 2024, with a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of only 0.52% since Q3 2020. 

Slowing Profit Trends: During the same periods, quarterly profits expanded by 2.67%, but shrank by 2.25% based on CAGR. 

Notably, a spike in net income in Q2 2022 was attributed to "higher iMAR as approved by ERC effective January 1, 2020 and the recording of Accrued revenue for incremental iMAR 2020 for CY 2020 and 2021." 

iMAR Explanation: As per Businessworld, "iMAR stands for "Interim Maximum Annual Revenue," which refers to the maximum amount of money a power transmission company like the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) is allowed to earn annually from its operations, as approved by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) during a specific regulatory period; essentially setting a cap on how much revenue they can collect from electricity transmission services"

Figure 5

Mounting Liquidity Issues: SGP's cash reserves have been contracting, with an average decrease of 3.9% over 13 quarters through Q3 2024 and a -6.7% CAGR since Q3 2020. 

Surging Debt Accumulation: Conversely, debt and financing charges have escalated. Debt has grown by an average of 12.1% over 13 quarters, with a 2.1% CAGR, while financing charges increased by an average of 5.7% with a 1.9% CAGR. 

SGP’s finances are not exactly healthy. 

Yet NGCP’s recent activities gives further clues. (bold mine) 

ABS-CBN, May 23, 2023: "The National Grid Corporation of the Philippines on Thursday said it was not to blame for delayed projects, and fended off criticism that it was making consumers pay even for delayed projects. The country’s power grid operator also insisted that power transmission improved since it took over operations from the government. A recent Senate hearing found that 66 projects, of which 33 were in Luzon, 19 in the Visayas, and 14 in Mindanao, remained unfinished. " 

ABS-CBN, December 23, 2024: "The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has imposed a total of P15.8 million worth of fines on the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) over "unjustified delays" in 34 out of 37 projects. "

SGP’s tight finances, mainly evidenced by stagnant revenues, declining profits, and deteriorating liquidity, could reflect the challenges faced by NGCP. 

Further, despite the complex political nature of the operations of the grid monopoly, the ERC caps the revenue that NGCP is allowed to generate (Php 36.7 billion annually). 

This limits NGCP’s financial health, potentially leading to liquidity strains and increased borrowings by SGP to finance their projects. 

Fundamentally, his dynamic might resemble a high-stakes path towards Napocor 2.0

Besides, the Department of Energy (DoE) sets the plans and policies, while NGCP, as the exclusive franchise holder, is in charge of the operation, maintenance, development, and implementation of projects for the country's power transmission system. 

The ERC regulates and approves rates, monitors performance, and can impose penalties for delays or inefficiencies. 

In short, since NGCP prioritizes fulfilling the administration's political agenda, it seemingly does so with little concern for consumersdoes this reflect the rent-seeking paradigm? 

This raises two crucial questions: aside from economic nationalism, could MIC’s entry into NGCP amount to an implicit BAILOUT of SGP? 

And could this package include a deal for China’s SGCC to exit? 

While we are not privy to the legal technicalities leading to MIC’s initial investment in NGCP via a 20% stake in SGP, SGP’s share prices have experienced a resurgence, or spike, since hints of MIC’s entry began to emerge late last year. 

Year-to-date (YTD) returns of SGP shares totaled 17.6% as of February 7th. 

Once again, this raises additional questions:


Figure 6

-Is a stock market bubble being inflated for SGP shares, benefiting not only corporate insiders and their networks, but also political figures and their allies behind the scenes? 

-Considering the price plunge of SGP shares from over 700 in 2017 to the present, resulting in substantial losses for its shareholders, could this potential bailout include efforts to pump up SGP shares to recoup at least a significant portion of these deficits? 

VI. Maharlika’s Risks and Potential Consequences 

The paramount concern revolves around what might happen if MIC's investment, re-nationalization, or its policy of economic nationalism regarding NGCP goes awry. 

What if NGCP replicates the pitfalls of its predecessor, the National Power Corporation (NPC)? How would the resulting losses or deficits be managed? 

Maharlika's investment capital is derived from public funds. If MIC incurs losses, would additional taxpayer money be on the line? Would there be a necessity for a bailout of MIC itself? 

How would potential deficits from MIC affect the country's fiscal health? Could this lead to higher interest rates and a weaker peso, exacerbating economic pressures? 

VII. Conclusion 

Ultimately, Maharlika's NGCP investment, executed through SGP, reflects a tension between seemingly conflicting objectives: securing national security interests and generating optimal returns. 

While proponents tout the deal as a means to lower electricity costs and improve grid efficiency, our concern—given SGP's financial weaknesses—is that MIC’s infusion could, in effect, function as a bailout. 

That is to say, the potential exposure of public funds through the SWF for political goals may conflict with, or potentially override, the Maharlika Investment Corporation’s stated goals: "to ensure economic growth by generating consistent and stable investment returns with appropriate risk limits to preserve and enhance long-term value of the fund; obtaining the best absolute return and achievable financial gains on its investments; and satisfying the requirements of liquidity, safety/security, and yield in order to ensure profitability of the GFIs’ respective funds." 

____

references 

Harrison Prétat, Yasir Atalan, Gregory B. Poling, and Benjamin Jensen, Energy Security and the U.S.-Philippine Alliance, Center for Strategic and International Studies, October 21, 2024 

Maria Nimfa Mendoza Lessons Learned: Fossil Fuel Subsidies and Energy Sector Reform in the Philippines, March 2014, IISD.org p. iv 

Majah-Leah V. Ravago, The Nature and Causes of High Philippine Electricity Price and Potential Remedies, January 19, 2022 Ateneo de Manila University

Monday, July 08, 2024

The PSEi 30 6,500 Enigma: A Closer Look at the Widening Gap Between PSEi 30 and Market Internals

 The house of delusions is cheap to build but drafty to live in, and ready at any instant to fall—A. E. Housman

The PSEi 30 6,500 Enigma:  A Closer Look at the Widening Gap Between PSEi 30 and Market Internals

Along with the rise in global risk appetite, the Philippine PSEi reached 6,500 but its market internals told a different tale. 

The prospect of easy money has whetted the speculative appetite of the global financial markets.

With the US dollar index down by 0.92% this week, it spurred a rally in the currencies and stock markets of the Asia-Pacific region.

Figure 1

Five of the nine ex-Japan Asian currencies rose, led by the Thai baht (THB), Indonesian rupiah (IDR), and the Singapore dollar (SGD). The Philippine peso  (PHP) increased by 0.14%. The heightened speculative fervor was apparent in the region's stock markets. (Figure 1, upper window)

Seventeen of the 19 national bourses in the Asia-Pacific region jumped by an average of 1.43%. China's SSEC and Sri Lanka's Colombo were the only laggards. (Figure 1, lower chart)

Meanwhile, five of the national bourses set fresh all-time highs for the week: Japan, India, Taiwan, Mongolia, and Pakistan.

Simultaneously, the Philippine PSEi 30 marked a second straight weekly gain. 

However, there is an idiosyncratic story behind the PSEi 30’s surge.

Figure 2

This week's advance brought the PSEi 30 back into positive territory year-to-date (+0.66%). 

But gainers were in the minority, with 14 of the 30 members closing higher. Four of the five biggest market cap issues were the focal point of this week's advance. (Figure 2, topmost pane)

Ironically, the average weekly return was only 0.12%, indicating that on an equal-weighted basis, the overall performance was subdued due to balanced upside and downside returns from its members. 

Market breadth in the PSE was slightly negative, with decliners leading advancers for the second consecutive week. (Figure 2, second to the highest image)

Though mainboard volume fell by 23.1% to Php 3.69 billion, the top 10 brokers still controlled a significant majority, averaging 57% of it. (Figure 2, second to the lowest diagram) 

Further, the top 20 traded issues represented 86.1% of the mainboard transactions. (Figure 2, lowest chart) 

All this illustrates the skewed nature of trading activities where institutional players have been propping up the headline index. 

Figure 3

This week’s pump led by ICTSI (+2.92%) has elevated its free float market cap to its highest level. (Figure 3, topmost chart) 

Pumps in BDO (+8.3%) and SM (+2.35%) have also boosted the top 5's free float cap to 50.5%.  BDO ranked third after SM and ICT in terms of free float market cap. 

The share of the top 5’s free float market cap jumped to 50.5%. 

Incidentally, end-session pumps and dumps were comparatively insignificant compared to previous weeks.

Figure 4

In any case, however one slice or dice it, the slack in volume remains the principal factor behind the nearly decade-long drought in returns.

June's gross volume reached a low not seen since 2010, while the first semester's gross volume plummeted to 2011 levels. (Figure 4, topmost and middle charts) 

It is no coincidence that the declining PSE volume has coincided with the banking system's liquidity metric: cash-to-deposit ratio. (Figure 4, lowest graph)

Despite all the constant yelling by the mainstream of statistical hypes, which have been labeled as G-R-O-W-T-H, the PSEi 30 remains one of the region's laggards, which are likely symptoms of capital and savings consumption.

And notwithstanding the perpetual cheerleading, the echo chamber has still been silent about the mounting risks from debt, leveraging, inflation, and various forms of misallocations and malinvestments. They’ve been reticent about the mounting risks of war too! 

Aside from the distortion from the BSP's policies, institutional pumping remains a significant factor behind this bear market. 

Or, the result of such organized pumps is to magnify pricing imbalance by inflating their share prices relative to their natural income streams and distorting capital prices, resulting in the amplification of the misallocation of resources in the real economy.

Figure 5

In the end, besides political objectives (e.g. rising stocks = resilient economy = good governance), another reason could be to prevent the PSEi 30 from sliding into a death cross, potentially prompting further and deeper scale of foreign selling (as in the past). Figure 5

It's worth noting that despite the obvious shift to a wartime economy, which comes at the expense of the market economy, authorities and the mainstream prefers the general public to remain complacent, assuming that everything will remain hunky dory or stable. 

In doing so, authorities can continue accessing public savings to fund their militant political projects (boondoggle) and exercise centralized control over the economy, with institutional cronies acting as their facilitators.  

Bubbles eventually burst.