Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Asian Markets Jump on Rumors of US$106 Billion Railway Stimulus

Asian markets posted strong gains today led by Chinese Equities.

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It appears that steroid addicted markets has found another inspiration from rumored or unofficial plans for a railway stimulus by the Chinese government.

From Bloomberg:
The government may spend more than the originally planned 650 billion yuan ($106 billion) on railway construction this year, the China Business News reported today, citing an unidentified person close to senior government officials. New high-speed rail lines could help reduce over-capacity in industries such as steel and cement, the Shanghai Securities News reported today, citing railway officials.
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The Shanghai composite leapt by 1.95%. ASEAN markets spiked too.

The floated rumors are signs that the policies of the newly installed Chinese officials will hardly distinguish from the previous administration in terms of bailouts and rescues, except via the form of interventions. Policies to "reduce over-capacity" will extrapolate to short term gains that would lead to capital consumption and that will exacerbate on the current unsustainable imbalances.

But the good news is that the Chinese government has also liberalized caps on lending by the banking system last Friday. This should be positive over the long term growth. 

But this will hardly resolve on the current debt based malinvestments and the runaway property bubble brought about by the previous policies which has prompted a shift towards the huge $2.4 trillion shadow banking system.

One thing seems clear, there has to be promises for more inflationary interventions by global governments to guide the markets higher. And this collective jawboning-the-markets communications strategy appears to have become a daily activity.

Yet, my question is will these constant promises of easy money policies experience diminishing utility or diminishing returns? We will see.

Nonetheless, interesting developments.

Iceland’s Recovery Model: It’s a story of how to fool people

Sovereign Man’s impressive contrarian Simon Black argues against the Iceland Recovery Model which he sees as a “complete lie”. (bold mine)
Yet unlike the bankrupt countries of southern Europe, Iceland dealt with its economic emergency in a completely different way.

Politicians here are proud that they never resorted to austere budget cuts that are so prevalent in Europe.

They imposed capital controls. They let the banks fail. And, as is so commonly trumpeted in the press, they ‘jailed their bankers and bailed out their people.’

Today, Iceland is held up as the model of recovery. Famous economists like Paul Krugman praise the government for rapidly rebuilding the economy without having to resort to austerity.

This morning’s headline from The Telegraph newspaper sums it up: “Iceland has taken its medicine and is off the critical list”.

It turns out, most of these claims are dead wrong.

For example, they say in the Western press that Iceland bailed out its people and jailed the bankers.

Not exactly. A few bankers were investigated and charged with fraud. The CEO of one of Iceland’s biggest failed banks was even convicted, and sentenced.

Now, how long of a sentence does someone get for railroading his nation’s economy? Life? 30-years? 10-years?

Actually nine months. Six of which became probation.

Meanwhile, the government ended up taking on massive amounts of debt in order to bail out the biggest bank of all– Iceland’s CENTRAL BANK.

This was a bit different than the way things played out in the US and Europe.

In the US, the Fed conjures money out of thin air and funnels it to the government.

In Iceland, since the Kronor is not a global reserve currency, the government had to go into debt in order to funnel money to the Central Bank, all so that the currency wouldn’t collapse.

As a result, Iceland’s state debt tripled, almost overnight, in 2008. And from 2007 until now, it has increased nearly 5-fold.

Today, the government is spending a back-breaking 17.3% of its tax revenue just to pay interest on the debt.

And this is real interest, too. Iceland’s central bank owns very little of the government debt. The rest is owed to foreign creditors… putting the country in an extremely difficult financial position.

At the end of the day, the Icelandic people are responsible for this. They were never bailed out. They were stuck with the bill.

Meanwhile, although unemployment in Iceland is low, wages are even lower. And the weak currency has brought on double-digit inflation.

So while people do have jobs, they can hardly afford anything.

This is most prevalent in the housing market, most of which is underwater. Interest rates have jumped so much that many Icelanders are now on negative amortization schedules, i.e. their mortgage balances are actually INCREASING with each payment.

Meanwhile, home prices have been falling dramatically.

So each year, mortgage balances are going up, and home values are falling. Hardly the picture of recovery.

The freshly elected Prime Minister is now promising everyone relief from their mortgage debts via a special state ‘debt correction fund’.

The only problem is that the state doesn’t actually have any money to do this… and they’re running a budget deficit every year.

The only way this can happen is if Iceland defaults… which is becoming a much more likley scenario.

A few years ago, Iceland’s banking system was nearly 10 times the entire country’s GDP. And it collapsed. You don’t paper over a crisis of that magnitude with a few years of good PR.

Despite being so widely reported by the mainstream financial media, Iceland is not a story of model economic recovery. It’s a story of how to fool people. And for now, it’s working…

They’re not in the EU or on the euro, so they’re relatively isolated in their fiscal troubles. This implies that default is inevitable.

And when that happens, Iceland will be shut out of international debt markets and be FORCED to pull out all the stops to attract foreign investment.
Few charts to support Mr. Black’s claim

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Iceland’s debt to gdp has skyrocketed from less than 30% to nearly 100% of gdp over the past few years. 

This serves as another great and wonderful example of how rapid and dramatic changes on what previously seemed as a “sound fundamentals”, which in reality had been masked by credit inflation,  deteriorate in the face of a crisis.


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Iceland’s external debt tells of the same story: previously low debt levels spiked in the advent of a crisis. (charts from tradingeconomics.com)

“Low” external debt and “low” government debt to gdp has been the stereotyped justification for populist “sound” statistically based "fundamentals" which in reality has been propelled by unsustainable credit inflation…sounds familiar

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Nonetheless today’s ‘don’t worry,  be happy’ crowd can be seen in Iceland’s recovering 10 year bond yields

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Iceland’s stock market (chart form Bloomberg.com) has also shown signs of recovery, partly due to PR campaign and also from the global credit easing policies.

“Complete lie” have hardly just been an Iceland story but a conventional dynamic as revealed by the growing disconnect between global financial markets, which essentially stands on Ben Bernanke’s and central banker’s promises and the real economies.

It’s a falsehood which the financial and the political world gladly embrace as sustainable framework.

To paraphrase John 8:32 “…and you will know the truth, the truth (economic reality) will set the markets free.

Social Security Funds as Government Milking Cow: Spain Edition

I previously pointed out what seems as Ponzi financing scheme where the Spanish government has raided its pension reserve fund in order to boost Spanish bonds or to lower bonds yields, by buying up to government debt up to 97% share of its assets.

For the cash strapped Spanish government, this hasn’t been enough, as they squeeze money from the social security fund to finance state pension.

According to a report from Reuters
Spain tapped its social security reserve fund for the second time in a month on Monday, the Labour Ministry said, to help with extra summer pension payments as unemployment and retirement costs deplete government funds.

The government turned to the fund for 3.5 billion euros ($4.6 billion) on July 1 then for a further 1 billion euros on Monday. Spanish pensioners receive two cheques in summer and two over the Christmas holidays.

Spain was forced to tap the reserve for the first time last year to help pay pension costs, using some 7 billion euros.

Record high unemployment, which hit over 27 percent in the first quarter, and a growing number of retirees on a state pensions have put an unprecedented strain on Spanish social security funds.
Social security or pension funds have become a favorite tap for governments, especially for the cash strapped variety. These funds are not only subject to to government’s predation, they can also be used as instruments to effect political agenda. For instance, in the Philippines, government retirement fund the GSIS has been used as a tool to promote the popularity of the incumbent government via stock market purchases. Not only does the GSIS intervene directly via actual purchases, they also provide signaling mechanism to the marketplace by pledging to buy stocks at certain levels.

And like the Detroit saga, if the Spanish government defaults on their debt, pension fund beneficiaries will get cleaned out.

It’s sad to know how government tapping of or dabbling with people’s savings would eventually lead to hardships.

How the Detroit Syndrome will Affect Industrial era Urbanization

Finally someone in the mainstream partly shares my view on why the centralization “urbanization” paradigm of economic growth represents a passe model as the world transitions to the post industrial or information age.

From Deutsche Bank’s global strategist Sanjeev Sanyal writing at the Project Syndicate (bold mine) hat tip Zero Hedge
The problem with this post-industrial urban model is that it strongly favors generalist cities that can cluster different kinds of soft and hard amenities and human capital. Indeed, the growth dynamic can be so strong for some successful cities that they can hollow out smaller rivals (for example, London vis-à-vis the cities of northern England).

Some specialist cities could also do well in this world. But, as Detroit, with its long dependence on the automotive industry, demonstrates, cities that are dependent on a single industry or on a temporary location advantage may fare extremely poorly.

All of this has important implications for emerging economies. As it transformed itself into the “factory of the world,” the share of China’s urban population jumped from 26.4% in 1990 to around 53% today. The big, cosmopolitan cities of Beijing and Shanghai have grown dramatically, but the bulk of the urban migration has been to cookie-cutter small and medium-size industrial towns that have mushroomed over the last decade. By clustering industrial infrastructure and using the hukou system of city-specific residency permits, the authorities have been able to control the process surprisingly well.

This process of urban growth, however, is about to unravel. As China shifts its economic model away from heavy infrastructure investment and bulk manufacturing, many of these small industrial cities will lose their core industry. This will happen at a time when the country’s skewed demographics causes the workforce to shrink and the flow of migration from rural areas to cities to slow (the rural population now disproportionately comprises the elderly).

Meanwhile, the post-industrial attractions of cities like Shanghai and Beijing will attract the more talented and better-educated children of today’s industrial workers. Unlike rural migrants heading for industrial jobs, it will be much more difficult to guide educated and creative professionals using the hukou system. The boom in the successful cities, therefore, will hollow out human capital from less attractive industrial hubs, which will then fall into a vicious cycle of decay and falling productivity.

Stories like Detroit’s have played out several times in developed countries during the last half-century. And, as the fate of Mexico’s northern towns suggests, emerging economies are not immune from this process.
This shows of the evolving transition from the industrial centralized based economy towards knowledge based decentralized economy

This also means that central planning or government infrastructure spending based on the urbanization model will eventually translate to huge losses for society.

But again taxpayers will bear the burden for the miscalculations of presumptuous popularity and vote seeking policymakers
 

On “Staying away from people who bring you down”

Here is an advice to a beloved family member who had been told to “Stay away from people who bring you down”: (edited, expanded) 

There are reasons WHY people bring you down. You should ALWAYS examine the WHY. If people “bring you down” are based on conflict or competition on social status in whatever social relationships (school, work, clubs and etc…), particularly envy or anger or arrogance, then that principle is correct.

Second is opportunity cost. When you give attention to one person, you sacrifice your attention to the others. Example if you give attention to your best friend this minute, then you don’t give attention to your other friends or your family. As mortals, we operate on time, space and expectational constraints. We cannot give attention to everyone. And we can never please everyone.

This means that in generality, you should pick on the right people who will give you not only livelihood, but your life: the inspiration, counsel and companionship. This by no means is one person but a mixture of relationships which you need to constantly balance.

Lastly, avoid staying away from people who tell you the truth if told out of sincerity, even if it hurts.

In J.K Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone; The truth." Dumbledore sighed. "It is a beautiful and terrible thing, and should therefore be treated with great caution.”

They may likely be the people who really care for you.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Ron Paul: Bernanke’s Farewell Tour

Ron Paul at the Free Foundation.org (bold mine)
Last week Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke delivered what may well be his last Congressional testimony before leaving the Federal Reserve in 2014. Unfortunately, his farewell performance was full of contradictory comments about the state of the economy and the effects of Fed policies on the market. One thing Bernanke inadvertently made clear was that the needs of Wall Street trump Main street, the economy, and sound money.

Quantitative easing (QE) and effectively zero interest rates have created paper prosperity, but now the Fed must continuously assure Wall Street that the QE spigot will not be turned off. Otherwise even the illusion of recovery will disappear. So Bernanke made every effort to emphasize that the economy was not doing well enough to end QE, while lauding the success of Fed policies in improving the economy.

Bernanke was also intent on denying that Fed policies directly boost financial markets. However, the money the Fed creates out of nothing in order to buy mortgage-backed securities and government debt for the QE3 program, benefits first and foremost the big banks and the financial class — those people who are invited to the Fed auctions. This new money then fuels stock bubbles, bond bubbles, agricultural land bubbles, and others. The consequences of this are felt by ordinary savers, investors, and retirees whose savings lose value because of the Fed’s zero interest rate policy.

As if Wall Street favoritism and zero returns for savers isn’t bad enough, the Fed wants the rest of America to bear a greater inflation burden. The Fed thinks you should lose two percent of the value of your dollar this year. But Bernanke is not satisfied with having reduced purchasing power by ten percent since the 2008 recession. The inflation picture is actually much worse if we look at the old consumer price index —the one that did not assume that ground beef is a perfect substitute for steak.

Using the old CPI metric, as calculated by John Williams at Shadow Government Statistics, we’ve lost close to 50 percent of the purchasing power of our money in just the last five years. So what you were able to buy with the $20 in your pocket before the financial crisis costs more than $30 today. That might be peanuts to Wall Street, but that’s real money for working Americans. And it’s theft by the Fed. It is a direct consequence of the trillions of new dollars the Fed has “not literally” printed—as Bernanke put it.

Bernanke’s final testimony before Congress confirms that the Fed has blatant disregard for the extra costs and the new bubbles it is creating. The Fed only understands paper prosperity, not how middle class Americans and the poor suffer the consequences of higher prices, resources misallocations, and distortionary bubbles as well as insidious unemployment.

The only way out of this tailspin of monetary favoritism is to restore sound money, which would end the Fed’s ability to manipulate currency and put Wall Street first. The Fed has proven over and over again that it has no respect for the real money that preserves the value of people’s labor, their wealth, and their ability to live free and prosperous lives. It is beyond time for the Fed, Wall Street, and the federal government to stop manipulating money and stealing from the American people under the false guise of paper prosperity.
If indeed this is the farewell tour, then Dr. Bernanke will have done a great escape act.  Whoever his successor is, he/she would need to deal with the chaotic legacies created by Mr. Bernanke and Mr. Greenspan

US Government seizes $80 million gold coin inheritance

A family from Pennsylvania committed a grave blunder of having the US government to verify their inherited gold coins.

From RT.com (hat tip EPJ)
A federal judge has upheld a verdict that strips a Pennsylvania family of their grandfather’s gold coins — worth an estimated $80 million — and has ordered ownership transferred to the US government.

Judge Legrome Davis of the Eastern District Court of Pennsylvania affirmed a 2011 jury decision that a box of 1933 Saint-Gaudens double eagle coins discovered by the family of Israel Switt, a deceased dealer and collector, is the property of the United States.

In the midst of the Great Depression, then-President Franklin Roosevelt ordered that America’s supply of double eagles manufactured at the Philadelphia Mint be destroyed and melted into gold bars. Of the 445,500 or so coins created, though, some managed to escape the kiln and ended up into the hands of collectors. In 2003, Switt’s family opened a safe deposit back that their grandfather kept, revealing 10 coins among that turned out to be among the world’s most valuable collectables in the currency realm today.

Switt’s descendants, the Langbords, thought the coins had been gifted to their grandfather years earlier by Mint cashier George McCann and took the coins to the Mint to have their authenticity verified, but the government quickly took hold of the items and refused to relinquish the find to the family. The Langbords responded with a lawsuit that ended last year in a victory for the feds.

Because the government ordered the destruction of their entire supply of coins decades earlier, the court found that Switt’s family was illegally in possession of the stash. Even though they may had been presented to the dealer by a Philadelphia Mint staffer, Judge Davis agrees with last year’s ruling that Mr. McCann broke the law.
This reminds of a quote from American philosopher, writer, abolitionist and chief proponent of civil disobedience, Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) from his work On the Duty of Civil Disobedience [p. 12]
Unjust laws exist; shall we be content to obey them, or shall we endeavor to amend them, and obey them until we have succeeded, or shall we transgress them at once? Men generally, under such a government as this, think that they ought to wait until they have persuaded the majority to alter them. They think that, if they should resist, the remedy would be worse than the evil. But it is the fault of the government itself that the remedy is worse than the evil. It makes it worse. Why is it not more apt to anticipate and provide for reform? Why does it not cherish its wise minority? Why does it cry and resist before it is hurt? Why does it not encourage its citizens to be on the alert to point out its faults, and do better than it would have them?

Phisix: The Myth of the Consumer ‘Dream’ Economy

Life is not about self-satisfaction but the satisfaction of a sense of duty. It is all or nothing. Nassim Nicholas Taleb

The Bernanke Put: If we were to tighten policy, the economy would tank
I don't think the Fed can get interest rates up very much, because the economy is weak, inflation rates are low. If we were to tighten policy, the economy would tank.
That’s from Dr. Ben Bernanke, US Federal Reserve Chairman’s comment during this week’s Question and Answer session in the congressional House Financial Services Committee hearing[1].

This practically represents an admission of the entrenched addiction by the US and the world financial markets on the central bank’s sustained easy money policy. This has likewise partially been reflected on the US and global economies. I say “partially” because not every firms or enterprises use leverage or financial gearing from banks or capital markets as source of funding operations. Since I am not aware of the degree of actual leverage exposure of each sector, hence it would seem to use “safe” as fitting description to the aforementioned relationship.

The fundamental problem with easy money dynamics is that these have been based on the promotion of unsound or unsustainable debt financed asset speculation and debt financed consumption activities, in both by the private and in the government, in the hope of the trickle down multiplier from the “wealth effect”.

The reality is that such policies does the opposite, it skews the incentives of economic activities towards those subsidized by the government particularly financial markets, banks, and the government (via treasury bills, notes and bonds as low interest rates enables sustained financing of the expansion of government spending) which widens the chasm of inequality between these politically subsidized sectors at the expense of the main street. For these sectors, FED’s easy money policies signify as privatization of profits and socialization of losses.

Yet the massive increases in debt as consequence from such loose interest rate policies, magnifies not only credit risk, thus affecting credit ratings or creditworthiness, but importantly the diversion of wealth from productive to capital consuming activities, which ultimately means heightened interest rate and market risks.

Eventually no matter how much money will be injected by central banks, if the pool of real savings will get overwhelmed by such imbalances, then interest rates will reflect on the intensifying scarcity of capital.

Capital cannot simply be conjured by central bank money printing, as the great Ludwig von Mises warned[2] (bold mine)
The inevitable eventual failure of any attempt at credit expansion is not caused by the international intertwinement of the lending business. It is the outcome of the fact that it is impossible to substitute fiat money and a bank's circulation credit for capital goods. Credit expansion can initially produce a boom. But such a boom is bound to end in a slump, in a depression. What brings about the recurrence of periods of economic crises is precisely the reiterated attempts of governments and banks supervised by them, to expand credit in order to make business good by cheap interest rates.
From such premise, interpreting “low” interest rates as a function of “weak” economy and “low” inflation seems relatively inaccurate.

Such assessment has been based on the rear view mirror. As of Friday, Oil (WTIC) at US $108 per bbl and gasoline at $ 3.12 per gallon, as noted last week[3] US producer prices have also been rising, which reflects on an inflationary boom stoked by credit expansion. If energy and commodity prices persist to rise, then “low” price inflation will transform into “high” price inflation. Thus “price” inflation, as corollary to monetary inflation, will likely add pressure on bond yields and interest rates.

Moreover record levels of US stock markets imply of intensifying asset inflation. Prior to the bond market turmoil, US housing has also caught fire. “Low” levels of price inflation or what mainstream sees as “stable prices” doesn’t imply of the dearth of accruing imbalances, on the contrary, these are signs of the boom bust cycle in motion channeled through specific industries, similar to the “roaring twenties[4]” or the US 1920s bubble and the 1980s stock and property bubble in Japan.

As the great dean of the Austrian school of economics, Murray N. Rothbard explained of the inflating bubble of 1920s amidst low price inflation[5]:
The trouble did not lie with particular credit on particular markets (such as stock or real estate); the boom in the stock and real-estate markets reflected Mises's trade cycle: a disproportionate boom in the prices of titles to capital goods, caused by the increase in money supply attendant upon bank credit expansion
The same bubbles on “titles to capital goods”, via stocks and real estate, plagues from developed economies to emerging markets, whether in Brazil, China or ASEAN.

And “weak” economy in the backdrop of elevated levels of interest rates powered by price inflation had been a feature of the stagflation days of 1970s.

Finally, while price inflation, scarcity of capital and deterioration of credit quality are factors that may lead to higher interest rates as expressed via rising bond yields, another ignored factor has been the relationship between the growth of money supply and interest rates.

As Austrian economist Dr. Frank Shostak explains[6]
an increase in the growth momentum of money supply sets in motion a temporary fall in interest rates, while a fall in the growth momentum of money supply sets in motion a temporary increase in interest rates.

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Such momentum based relationship can be seen in the Fed’s M2 and the yield 10 year constant maturity or even with the Divisia money supply

On the top pane, in 2008-2010, as the Fed’s M2 (percent) simple sum aggregate (blue line) collapsed, the yields (percent change from a year ago) of 10 year constant maturity notes soared. Following the inflection points of 2010, the relationship reversed, particularly the M2 soared as the Fed’s 10 year yields fell.

The M2 commenced its decline on the 1st quarter of 2012 while the UST 10 year yield rose in July or with a time lag of over three months.

The Divisia money supply, instead of a simple sum index used by central banks, is a component weighted index which has been based on the ease of, and opportunity costs of the convertibility or “moneyness” of the component assets into money (Hanke 2012)[7].

The Divisia money supply has been invented by invented by François Divisia, 1889-1964 and has now been made available via the Center for Financial Stability (CFS) in New York, through Prof. William A. Barnett[8]

As of June[9], the varying indices of the Divisia money supply based on year on year changes have all trended downwards since late 2012.

The slowdown in the growth of momentum of money supply have presently been reflected on the upside actions of yields of the bond markets.

The momentum of changes of money supply will largely be determined by the rate of change of credit conditions of the banking system.

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Rising bond yields largely attributed to the FED’s “tapering” chatter has spurred a huge $66 billion in the past 5 weeks through July exodus on bond market funds according to Dr. Ed Yardeni[10].

The destabilizing rate of change in bond flows appear as evidence of “If we were to tighten policy, the economy would tank”

Bernanke PUT’s Effect: Parallel Universes

The Q&A statement along with the Dr. Bernanke’s earlier comments in the House Financial Services Committee where he said central bank’s asset purchases “are by no means on a preset course[11]” has energized a Risk ON environment.

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US stocks broke into record territories. Benchmarks of several key global stock markets rebounded. Global bond markets (yields) rallied along with commodity prices.

During the past two weeks, the financial markets have been guided higher by repeated assurances from Dr Bernanke aside from central bankers of other nations.

Given this cue, ASEAN stock and bond markets rallied substantially despite what seem as deteriorating fundamentals.

The sustained rout of the Indonesia’s rupiah appears to have been ignored by the stock and bond markets. Indonesia’s central bank, Bank Indonesia intervened in the currency market by injecting dollars into the system. Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves dropped by $7.1 billion in June, the most since 2011, and which brings total reserves to less than $100 billion, a first in two years, according to a report from Bloomberg[12].

Indonesia’s unstable financial markets mainly via the bond and currency have prompted the World Bank to cut her growth forecast early June. Thailand’s central bank have downshifted their economic growth estimates along with their Ministry of Finance and the IMF[13].

The IMF has also marked down global economic growth due to “longer economic growth slowdown”[14], from China and other emerging economies whom have been faced with “new risks”

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has also trimmed growth forecast for ASEAN at 5.2% where the Philippines has been expected to grow 5.4% in 2013 and 5.7% 2014[15].

In contrast to the ADB, the IMF, whom downgraded world economic growth, has upgraded economic growth projection of the Philippines to 7% in 2013[16]
In the world of central bank inflationism, “fundamentals” in the conventional wisdom hardly drives the markets. Stock and bond markets may substantially rise even as the economy has been mired in a prolonged period of negative growth or recession. This has been in the case of France in 2012-13[17].

An investor in Chinese equities would have only earned 1% per year during the last 20 years even as per capita has zoomed by 1,074 percent over the same period, according to a Bloomberg report[18].

This shows how the discounting mechanism of financial markets has been rendered broken, relative to reality, reinforced by the stultifying effects of central bank easing policies.

And amidst sinking stock markets and the recent spike in short term interbank interest rates due to supposed cash squeeze from attempts by the Chinese government to ferret out and curtail the shadow banks, China’s increasingly unstable and teetering property bubble continues to sizzle with home prices rising in 69 out of 70 cities. Guangzhou, Beijing and Shanghai reported their biggest gains since the government changed its methodology for the data in January 2011 according to another report from the Bloomberg[19].

Such dynamics reinforces China’s parallel universe

Never mind that Chinese rating agencies downgraded “the most bond issuer rankings on record in June” as brokerage houses have been preparing for “the onshore market’s first default as the world’s second-biggest economy slows” according to another Bloomberg article[20].

China’s rampaging property bubble appears to be in a manic blow-off top phase

The Myth of the Consumer ‘Dream’ Economy

Speaking of mania, a further manifestation of the “permanently high plateau”, new order, new paradigm, “this time is different” can be seen from the president of the Government Service Insurance System Robert Vergara, who proclaims that the Philippines has reached a political economic nirvana.

From a Bloomberg report[21]:
The country “is still experiencing a secular growth story,” Vergara said. “We have the kind of economy that every country dreams of.”
Being an appointee of the Philippine president[22] it would seem natural to for him to indoctrinate or propagandize the public on the supposed merits of the current boom as part of the PR campaign for the government.

The GSIS president says he expects a return of 9% or more for the Philippine equity benchmark, the Phisix, over the next 12 months, as earnings will increase by about 15% during the next two years. All these have been premised on the ‘dream’ Philippine economy which he projects as expanding by 6-7% during the next 2 years and whose growth will be anchored by record-low interest rates which allegedly will fuel consumer spending.

What has been noteworthy in the reported commentary has been that of the GSIS’s president implied market support for local equities, where “the fund would consider increasing equity holdings to as much as 20 percent of total assets if the gauge falls below the 5,500 level”. If a private sector investor will say this they will likely be charged with insider trading.

And if he is wrong, much the retirement benefits of public servants risks being substantially diminished. Otherwise, taxpayers will be compelled to shoulder such imprudent actions.

But has the Philippine economy been driven by consumer spending as popularly held?

According to the National Statistical Coordination Board’s 1st quarter GDP report[23]:
With the country’s projected population reaching 96.8 million in the first quarter of 2013, per capita GDP grew by 6.1 percent while per capita GNI grew by 5.3 percent and per capita Household Final Consumption Expenditure (HFCE) grew by 3.4 percent. – 

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The same Philippine economic agency notes that based on the 1st quarter expenditure share of statistical economic growth, household final expenditure grew by only 5.1% (left pane). This has been less than the 7.8% overall growth rate of the economy.

Merchandise trade had hardly been a factor as exports posted negative growth while imports had been little changed. Government final expenditure grew by more than double the rate of household final expenditure or by 13.2%, and capital formation had been mostly powered by construction up by 33.7%.

From the industrial origin calculation perspective (right pane) we see the same picture. Construction soared by an astounding 32.5%. This has fuelled the Industry sector’s outperformance, which had been seconded by manufacturing 9.7%. Financial intermediation has also registered a strong 13.9% which undergirded the service sector. Public administration ranked fourth with 8% growth, about the rate of the nationwide economic growth.

So data from the NSCB reveals that during the 1st quarter, statistical growth has hardly been about the household consumption spending driven growth, but about the massive supply side expansion as seen through construction, financial intermediation, and secondly by government expenditures.

Yet here is what the Philippine ‘dream’ economy has been made up of.

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Credit growth underpinning the fantastic expansion of the construction industry has been at a marvelous or breathtaking rate of 51.19% during the said period, this is according to the data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas as I previously presented[24].

How sustainable do you think is such rate of growth?

Meanwhile, bank lending to financial intermediation and real estate, renting and business services and hotel and restaurants grew by a whopping 31.6%, 26.24% and 19.18%, respectively. Wholesale and retail trade grew by 12.49%.

Banking loans to these four ‘bubble’ sectors which embodies the shopping mall, vertical (office and residential) properties, and state sponsored casinos accounts for 53.25% of the share of total banking loans.

Remember household final demand grew by a relative measly 5.1% and this partly has been backed by bank lending too. Bank lending to the household sector grew a modest 11.89% backed by credit card and auto loans 10.62% and 13.86%. Only 4% of households have access to credit card according to the BSP.

The explosive growth in bank credit can be seen both in the supply and demand side. But the supply side’s growth has virtually eclipsed the demand side.

So based on the 1st quarter NSCB data the Philippine consumer story (provided we are referring to household consumers) has been a myth.

Basic economic logic tells us that if the supply side continues to grow by twice the rate of the demand side, then eventually there will be a massive oversupply. And if such oversupply has been financed by credit, then the result will not be nirvana but a catastrophe—a recession if not a crisis.

Given the relentless growth in credit exactly to the same sectors during the two months of April-May, statistical GDP growth will likely remain ‘solid’ and will likely fall in the expectations of the mainstream. The results are likely to be announced in August.

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Prior to the Cyprus crisis of 2013, many Cypriots came to believe that this “time is different” from which many hardly saw the potential impact from a sudden explosion of public sector debt[25]

Unfortunately, a populist dream morphed into a terrifying nightmare.

BSP’s Wealth Effect: San Miguel as Virtual Hedge Fund

And for the moral side of the illusions of dream economy tale, given that only 21.5 of every 100 households have access to the banking sector, and as I previously explained[26], where domestic credit from the banking sector accounted for 51.54% of the GDP as of 2011, and also given that the wealthy elites control some 83% of the domestic stock market capitalization and where the residual distribution leaves 15-16% to foreigners while the rest to the retail participants, an asset boom prompted by BSP zero bound policy rates represents a transfer of wealth from the rest of society (most notably the informal sector) to the political class and their politically connected economic agents. 

This should be a good example.

Publicly listed San Miguel Corporation [PSE: SMC] recently sold their shareholdings at Meralco for $399 million[27] to an undisclosed buyer.

The BSP inspired Philippine asset boom has transformed San Miguel from an international food and beverage company into a virtual hedge fund which profits from trading financial securities of the highly regulated sectors of energy, mining, airlines and infrastructure.

The 32.8% sale of Manila Electric or Meralco [PSE: MER] and the prospective 49% sale of another SMC asset, the SMC Global Power Holdings, reportedly the country’s largest electricity generator with assets accounting for a fifth of the nation’s capacity, has been expected to raise at least $1.6 billion[28], according to a report from Bloomberg

SMC sales of its Meralco holdings extrapolate to a huge windfall. According to the same report, SMC has tripled return on equity from its conversion to heavy industries.

Moreover, SMC has acquired about 40 companies for about $8 billion which has been partly funded by leverage where “the company and its units have 272 billion pesos worth of debt due by 2018 and San Miguel has 152 billion pesos in cash and near-cash items, the data show.”

Asked by a reporter about the prospects of the sale, the SMC’s President Mr. Ramon Ang bragged “Does San Miguel need the money? No. We can always borrow to fund any opportunity.”

Obviously, a reply based on easy money conditions.

As explained in 2009, the radical makeover of San Miguel has been tinged by politics[29]. The energy, mining, airlines and infrastructure which the company has shifted into are industries encumbered by politics mostly via anti-competition edicts. Thus asset trading of securities from these sectors would not only mean profiting from loose money policies, but also from also arbitraging economic concessions with incumbent political authorities.

The viability of these sectors particularly in the energy and infrastructure (roads) are endowed or determined by political grants. For instance in the case of Meralco, the Office of the President indirectly determines the “earnings” of the company via the price setting and regulatory oversight functions of the Energy Regulatory Commission which is under the Office of the President[30]. The private sector operator of Meralco has to be in good terms, or has blessing of, or has been an ally of the President. These are operations which can’t be established by analysing financial metrics for the simple reason that politics, and not, the markets determine the company’s feasibility.

San Miguel’s new business model allows political outsiders to get into these economic concessions through Mr. Ang’s political intermediations which it legitimately conducts via “asset trading”. SMC’s competitive moat, thus, has been in the political connections sphere.

SMC has also been a major beneficiary from the BSP’s wealth effect and wealth transfer from zero bound rates and from the Philippine government’s highly regulated or politicized industries.

Nonetheless leverage build up for asset trading necessitates a low interest rate environment. Should interest rates surge, and asset markets fall, Mr. Ang’s $35 billion dream might turn into an unfortunate Eike Batista[31] story.

Mr. Batista, the Brazilian oil, energy, mining and logistics magnate was worth $34 billion and had been the 8th richest man in the world a year ago.

Mr. Batista’s highly leveraged or indebted companies crashed to earth when commodity prices collapsed, and exposed such vulnerabilities. Debt deleveraging likewise uncovered the artificial wealth grandeur which has been embellished by debt.

Mr. Batista’s debt fiasco reduced his fortune to only $2 billion. At least he remains a billionaire.

Yet given his political connections, Mr. Ang may expect a bailout from his political patrons.

Risks remain high. Do trade with caution



[2] Ludwig von Mises Theory of Money and Credit p.423


[4] Wikipedia.org Roaring Twenties

[5] Murray N. Rothbard, The Lure of a Stable Price Level, America’s Great Depression Mises.org September 13, 2011

[6] Frank Shostak, What Next for Treasury Bonds? May 03, 2010

[7] Steve H. Hanke, Rethinking Conventional Wisdom: A Monetary Tour d’Horizon for 2013, Energy Tribune January 23, 2013

[8] Wikipedia.org Divisia index

[9] Center for Financial Stability CFS DIVISIA MONETARY DATA FOR THE UNITED STATES, July 17, 2013

[10] Ed Yardeni Great Rotation? (excerpt) Yardeni.com July 16, 2013





[15] Business Mirror ADB cuts growth forecast for Asean July 17, 2013







[22] Wikipedia.org Government Service Insurance System Organizational Structure

[23] National Statistical Coordination Board, Highlights Philippine Economy posts 7.8 percent GDP growth May 30, 2013


[25] John Mauldin The Bang! Moment Shock Advisor Perspectives.com July 13, 2013


[27] Wall Street Journal Money Beat Blog San Miguel Raises $399.5 Million via Sale of Meralco Shares July 18, 2013