Sunday, May 25, 2014

Phisix: Watch Out, Money Supply Growth Will Fall Sharply by July!

Overconfidence is a dangerous card to play.  And arrogance is as close as one can come to playing a fatal card.  It’s a good idea to operate your life on the assumption that unforeseen obstacles are lurking in the shadows, just around the next bend.  No matter how well things are going for you, always keep in mind that that fickle trickster known as Fortune refuses to carry anyone on her shoulders indefinitely. –Robert Ringer, self-development author

In this issue

Phisix: Watch Out, Money Supply Growth Will Fall Sharply by July!
-Has Rule Breaking Been the Essence of “Good Governance”?
-BSP’s Statistical Numbers on Property Banking Cap Exposure Does NOT Square
-BSP’s Communication Strategy: Another Bait and Switch?
-“Good Governance” Boom Means Invisible Transfers or Greater Inequality
-TWO “Marking the Close” Sessions at the Philippine Stock Exchange This Week!
-Watch Out, Money Supply Growth Will Likely Plummet in the Second Half!
-Peak Complacency: Ignoring Risks from Thailand Economic and Political Mess

Phisix: Watch Out, Money Supply Growth Will Fall Sharply by July!

Two weeks back I wrote[1]:
The real reason why the BSP refrains from either enforcing her own self-imposed rule of banking cap on real estate loans and or raising rates, is that financial repression conducted mainly through bubble blowing paradigm—that supports the government’s lifeblood through inflated taxes and repressed debt servicing rates that has been subsidized by peso holders—will be jeopardized by a bubble bust.
Has Rule Breaking Been the Essence of “Good Governance”?

In 2013, the Philippine central bank, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ 20% threshold for banking loans to the real estate sector had been effectively breached. 

Let us read it from the BSP[2]: (bold mine)
The real estate exposure (REE) of universal, commercial (U/KBs) and thrift banks (TBs) stood at Php 1.006 trillion at end-2013, 7.1 percent higher than the Php 939.8 billion posted at the end of third quarter last year.

The rise in REE was mainly driven by real estate loans (RELs) which grew by 7.0 percent to Php 843 billion at end-2013 from Php 788 billion a quarter earlier. RELs accounted for 83.8 percent of the banks’ REE in December last year.

Sixty percent of the RELs was granted to commercial entities such as land developers and construction companies while the rest of the RELs was extended to borrowers acquiring residential properties.

On the other hand, investments in real estate securities grew by 7.8 percent to Php 163.6 billion at end-2013 from Php 151.8 billion during the third quarter last year. Investments in RE securities comprised the remaining 16.2 percent of the REE.

The end-2013 REE represented 21.8 percent of the banks’ total loan portfolio.
Curiously the 21.8% banking sector’s real estate portfolio exposure in 2013 represents only a paltry 4.5% in increase from the 20.86% exposure in 2012[3].

But first let us go back to the core of BSP’s self-imposed restriction on real estate exposure—the covering regulation: Circular 600 dated February 2008[4] (bold mine)
Section 1. Section 1397 on Limits on Real Estate Loans of Universal Banks/Commercial Banks is hereby amended to read, as follows: “Total real estate loans of UBs/KBs, excluding: a)     Loans extended to individual households for purposes of financing the acquisition, construction, and/or improvement of housing units and acquisition of any associated land that is or will be occupied by the borrower, regardless of amount; b)    Loans extended to land developers/construction companies for the purpose of development and/or construction of socialized and low-cost residential properties as defined under existing guidelines of the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC) for the implementation of government housing programs, which are intended for sale to individual households; c)    Loans to the extent guaranteed by the Home Guaranty Corporation (HGC); and d)    Loans to the extent collateralized by non-risk assets under existing regulations…shall not exceed twenty percent (20%) of the total loan portfolio, net of interbank loans.
These are very disturbing signs.

At the World Economic Forum, Philippine president Benigno Aquino recently crowed about a “new paradigm” in the Philippine economy stating that[5] “The transformation of the Philippines is a collective achievement, built on the shoulders of a people prepared to undertake the difficult task of reform together”

All the visible sprawling construction activities, the statistical numbers, and the massive publicity campaign employed by the establishment has obviously been the basis for this claim which the he public has been mesmerized with. 

As Northern Trust chief economist Carl Tannenbaum rightly observed[6] “Policy-makers love housing. Construction is a very tangible sign of economic activity”

This is what politics is made of: symbolism

But quantity isn’t the same as quality. In the context of ethics, this means the public has been remiss to see and discern of the process and the manner by which the course of policy actions has been implemented.

The BSP’s approach in policymaking and its enforcement represents arbitrary rather than rule-based actions. Yet such activities further reflect on governance by convenience and by the whim of the authorities. It’s simply a case of the rulemakers believing that they are above the rule which they create. This essentially is a symptom of what the great Austrian economist F.A. Hayek called as the “Fatal Conceit”[7], (bold and italics mine)
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 guidance of production from the hands of a few individuals who, whatever they may pretend, have limited knowledge, to a process, the, extended order, that makes maximum use of the knowledge of all, thereby benefiting those who do not own property nearly as much as those who do.
Should systematic violation of rules be dignified as a key virtue to the current “transformation” paradigm? Or differently put, has this been representative of the actions governing domestic political institutions? Or in short, is rule breaking the essence of “good governance”?

If the negligence of applying rules has been today’s political paradigm, then why shouldn’t the average citizen do the same? After all, in the political process called democracy, hasn’t the power vested on those at the helm spring from the consent of the governed?

A consequentialist may object, “This has been working, so their actions are justified” But what happens when boom turns into bust. Will the commissars of the monetary politburo be held accountable for the ramifications of their actions once we segue into a post-boom depression? Or will they just retreat from the limelight and slink into the private sector and be paid princely sums for speeches and write books—all directed at pinning the blame at everyone else except on their actions?

English writer Aldous Huxley wrote “That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons that history has to teach.” The forgotten lesson is that debt based boom which signifies as a gigantic misallocation of resources, is unsustainable. Therefore, through history, all artificial booms eventually evolve into busts. And panics, crashes and crises are the simply derivatives of the boom-bust cycle.

BSP’s Statistical Numbers on Property Banking Cap Exposure Does NOT Square

A second even very troubling sign is that the BSP may have been massaging the numbers backing the banking sector’s real estate exposure.

Going back to the BSP’s disclosure, based on quarter (3rd) to quarter (4th) changes, real estate exposure (REE) was “7.1 percent higher”, “real estate loans (RELs) which grew by 7.0 percent” and real estate securities grew by 7.8 percent. Again the 7% represents ONLY changes covering ONE quarter.

But notice that the BSP declared that real estate exposure by the banking system is at 21.8% in 2013 from 20.86% in 2012—for a niggardly 4.5% increase for the ENTIRE year.

We can assume two factors here: lending to the real estate sector fell or at least grew at a substantially smaller rate in the other quarters or loans to the banking industry have vastly underperformed growth in loans to the other sectors in the other quarters thus a loss in share—to derive at the 4.5% figure.

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Well, the BSP claims and the BSP’s other numbers simply don’t square.

The BSP notes that the supply side, specifically land developers and construction companies, comprises 60% of total real estate loans. Seen in the prism of share of loans to the overall banking industry loans (left pane) the real estate sector grew from 18.82% in 2012 to 20.43% in 2013. As of March this has risen to 20.48% share. So in 2013, REL loans have GAINED in the share of the overall banking loan pie.

While year on year growth rates of REL have significantly been scaling down (right window) to presently 19-21%, from about the high of 28% in early 2013, growth rates in 2013 averaged 23.64%! Let me repeat TWENTY THREE percent.

As you can see, the growth in rate of 4.5% for 2013 for REE as a share of banks’ total loan portfolio at 21.8% severely undershoots the BSP’s figures.

Given the benefit of the doubt that some of these loans may have been excluded from the eligibility of the property banking cap rule, the point is that we still see a huge jump in the rate of loan growth. 4.5% against 20% are an ocean apart.

And here’s more, the BSP notes that 40% of real estate loans come from the demand side, particularly “borrowers acquiring residential properties”.

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The banking sector’s consumer real estate loans accounts for 44.44% as of December 2013. Meanwhile auto loans represent 25.82% share, credit cards 21.81% and others 8%.

Yet the consumer real estate sector loans ballooned by a whopping 21.34% in 2013!! Let me repeat TWENTY ONE percent.

For 2013 Supply Side growth (y-o-y) averaged at TWENTY THREE percent. ADD to this the Demand Side growth rate at TWENTY ONE percent. How the heck did the BSP arrive with a FOUR and a HALF percent growth for the banking sector’s real estate exposure???? From the mathematical perspective, all the above doesn’t add up. Something fishy is going on.

And the buck doesn’t stop here.

For the self-imposed property banking cap rule, the BSP excludes some sectors as noted above. Such includes owner occupied properties, socialized and low-cost residential properties and even loans to infrastructure. From the BSP’s circular 600: “It shall not include loans for construction of highways, streets, bridges, tunnels, railways, and other infrastructure for public use.”

Developers with exposure on both high end and socialized housing will have the incentive to use socialized housing as loophole to obtain loans that won’t be included in the BSP watch list. The same applies with companies that have exposures on both infrastructure and conventional properties. Small developers may claim that their projects are owner occupied too.

How many firms have gained access to credit via such loopholes, does the BSP know? Yet just because they are outside the radar screen of the BSP, does this imply that these sectors have little influence on “financial stability”?

In China, regulatory arbitrage or the use of legal loopholes to acquire debt has spawned a debt Godzilla presently known as the “Shadow Banking Industry” which has now been estimated at 80% of the GDP or US $5.9 trillion according to the Forbes[8]. The Philippines has been no stranger to this. I previously cited World Bank estimates that shadow banking here accounts for “more than one-third of total financial system assets”[9] These are not threats to financial stability?

As one would note, statistics will not accurately represent the underlying risks that has been repackaged as the new paradigm vernacular or sloganeering of “transformation”. 

The point is that the BSP’s numbers severely understates the risks from the current banking exposure. And a further point is that by keeping an eye closed, the BSP has been willing to absorb more risks.

BSP’s Communication Strategy: Another Bait and Switch?

So what has been the BSP’s response to the recent infringement of the banking loan cap?

To reassure the public of the relatively low debt conditions the BSP writes, “Moreover, the banks’ consumer credit exposure of 15.8 percent remained low compared to their ASEAN 5 peers. At end-2013, the CL exposure in Malaysia was at 60.9 percent followed by Indonesia, 28.8 percent; Thailand, 27 percent; and Singapore, 26 percent. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) monitors consumer and other types of bank lending to ensure the banks’ adherence to high credit standards. This is essential to the BSP’s key objective of fostering financial stability”

The BSP fails to be forthright with the flawed statistical reference which attempts to portray national debt levels as a one size fits all dynamic.

They should reveal the other data which says that only 22 households have exposure on the formal banking industry: “Eight in ten households are unbanked…In terms of financial assets, survey results showed that only 21.5 percent of households have deposit”[10].

And this lack of financial depth by residents has been the main reason why consumer loans have been low in contrast to relatively higher penetration levels to the banking system by our neighbors.

Funny but these are all BSP’s data. The difference is that the BSP has selectively used them to project on their interests rather than lay out the reality.

So essentially the framing of statistics has been used as a magic spell or as talisman by the BSP to ward off the evil spirits called “risks”. Shout statistics, expect the public to believe and risks goes away. Duh.

The BSP seems to employ communications sophistry to camouflage the public from real conditions.

I pointed out last week that the BSP has already declared “well capitalized against risk” citing vastly inflated Tier 1 capital. This means bank stress tests which the central bank claims “part of the central bank's larger goal of keeping asset prices in check to prevent the build-up of inflationary pressures[11]will just be a formality aimed at publicity effects. And bank stress test will be based on math models that will not capture reality.

For all the sideshows being drummed up to distract the public, the BSP staunchly refuses to address the growing risks in the system.

Yet here is another proof validating my assertion that the BSP’s reserve requirement tool has been nothing more than a travesty or the “BSP seems to have pulled one heck of bluff via the reserve requirement policy tool.[12]

From the Bank of England[13] (bold mine)
In reality, neither are reserves a binding constraint on lending, nor does the central bank fix the amount of reserves that are available. As with the relationship between deposits and loans, the relationship between reserves and loans typically operates in the reverse way to that described in some economics textbooks. Banks first decide how much to lend depending on the profitable lending opportunities available to them — which will, crucially, depend on the interest rate set by the Bank of England. It is these lending decisions that determine how many bank deposits are created by the banking system. The amount of bank deposits in turn influences how much central bank money banks want to hold in reserve (to meet withdrawals by the public, make payments to other banks, or meet regulatory liquidity requirements), which is then, in normal times, supplied on demand by the Bank of England.
Read my lips, under today’s modern central banking system, reserve requirements will not inhibit demand for loans because they are supplied by the central bank. This is unless the BSP hasn’t been part of the modern banking system. If they are, this shows that the BSP have increasingly been resorting to theatricals to show that they are “doing something” but in reality they have been concealing the ballooning systemic risks just to extend this farcical boom. 

Also one of the recent the communication maneuvers by the BSP has been to pin the blame on foreign “hot money” for domestic bubbles that has been LARGELY driven by domestic hot money.

Foreign capital has been used as a pretext as not to raise interest rates. Lately the BSP chief was quoted saying “Textbook would say if there are capital inflows, liquidity will tend to go up and, to limit the growth of liquidity, raise interest rates — you tighten…But if you do that what will happen is that you’ll attract more capital because of the interest-rate arbitrage given that capital markets are more integrated.[14]

In reality, “liquidity” has hardly been driven by foreign money but by the domestic banking system. Even the BSP’s latest liquidity data reveals how the concerns of the BSP chief have been at odds with reality.

Yet all bubbles are internally driven. Foreign hot money flows represent largely momentum or yield chasers from various carry trades. And when we talk of momentum or yield chasing, this implies that trends have already been in place from which foreign speculators pile on. Simply said, foreigners have only been piggybacking on an existing bubble trend. Foreign hot money, thus, signify the effects or an aggravating factor rather than the primary cause of financial instability.

Austrian economist Fritz Machlup affirms my observation[15] (bold mine)
If, however, we inquire into the causes of the inflow of speculative capital from abroad which is so much objected to, we shall often find that it was the boom tendencies that were already present on the stock exchange which attracted the foreign funds. La hausse amène la hausse. The beginnings of the speculative boom originated in a flow of money from domestic sources. And as it is extremely difficult to conceive of a sudden epidemic of saving, we are once again driven back to credit expansion by the banks. It is the “domestic” creation of credit which usually produces that sentiment on the stock exchange and that movement of stock prices, which act as an invitation to foreign funds.
The BSP raised the same concerns last week. Why has the BSP chief been repeatedly zeroing in on foreign money flows? Are they sensing or even perhaps signaling trouble ahead…perhaps a reversal of the carry trades? Has the BSP been conditioning or the public to see foreign money as THE culprit? Or will foreign money be used as convenient scapegoat by the BSP?

In reading between the lines, all these cumulative actions have been because the BSP has been BOXED into a corner. The BSP have been TRAPPED from their own demand management based policies. And BSP top officials KNOW it. That’s why all these publicity stunts. They have to—not only to keep inflating (expanding credit)—but accelerate the rate of inflationism (30+% money supply growth rate) to keep the system of invisible transfers that feeds on the financing requirements of the government deficit spending going. Otherwise the boom turns into a bust. The government will be starved of funds. Yet the greater and the longer the boom, the bigger and the longer the bust.

Nonetheless the BSP will most likely resort to more massaging of statistical data and the “managing” financial markets—the peso, stocks and bonds. They will be backed by the government who will “tighten monitoring” or institute controls of consumer prices in the real economy. But again controls leads to black markets.

Yet the real economy is not about politicians and their delusional grandiose desires or plans implemented through manipulative regulations and policies but about people spontaneously producing, exchanging, cooperating, saving, consuming and investing. And that’s why these policies are destined for comeuppance. Current market actions hardly reflect on people’s real choices. Malinvestments are consequences of people being misled by the distortions from suppressed interest rates which have been exacerbated by auxiliary policies of repression such as price controls, capital controls, investment restrictions and etc…

Political braggadocio such as this “The Philippines has consistently bucked the global trend, with economic growth remaining high, and even surpassing our targets…This is partly because … external volatility and subdued global demand has not affected the country, since we are neither resource-dependent nor export-oriented” from the highest official of the land are clear signs of “This Time is Different” or a new era paradigm signifying excessive overconfidence. Unfortunately such “fatal conceit” premised in the belief of a “new order” will disintegrate soon.

This isn’t a scare story. This is economic logic if not plain common sense. Take too much booze and hangover happens. Over building/producing means oversupply. Over borrowing (or borrowing beyond the ability to pay) means credit problems that could end up with default or bankruptcy. Are these hard to absorb mentally?

Yet again the reason why “we are neither resource-dependent nor export-oriented” has been because of bubble blowing—interest rate manipulation policies which can be seen in the GDP-BSP data for 2013. The latter serves as more confirmation or evidence of the monumental 2009 pivot to a bubble economy[16].

The BSP should just scrap their pretentious property banking cap rule since this has been unenforceable and useless anyway.

“Good Governance” Boom Means Invisible Transfers or Greater Inequality

Distressing signs seem to be compounding

The BSP doesn’t realize it but their disclosure[17] has been a treasure in the context of the revelation of the fantastic redistribution from currency holders to mostly the wealthy.
Comprising the bulk of CLs at end-2013 was residential real estate loans. Figures suggest a notable increase in the purchase or rent of residences near business districts by young professionals, of luxury homes (condominiums) by high-income expatriates, and of RE properties for the use or investment by Overseas Filipinos.
Yuppies benefiting from the current supply side inflationary boom and foreigners use resources from the system financed by debt to bid up on property prices which the supply side sees as sustainable.

They forget that this invisible resource transfer—that has been enabled and channeled through financial repression policies of negative real rates—comes at the expense of the real economy. Resources used by the yuppies and foreigners are resources that have been deprived to the informal economy. 

Ironically the BSP has been silent about loans by the domestic elites which I believe represents a substantial portion of “demand”.

If the supply side has been aggressively ramping up on capex which I estimate at a very conservative $250 billion largely on mid-to-high end projects for 2013[18], why shouldn’t the demand side respond in such a manner?

Such transfers are NOT value added. The elite (few) benefits through inflated assets that extrapolates to higher profits, income and earnings, while the real economy (most) suffers from high consumer prices (scarce resources). So small and medium scale enterprises hardly can expand as resources have been corralled by the bubble sectors. That’s the reason for the lingering predicament of high level of joblessness.

1 minus 1 DOES NOT equal to 2

This is how social policies drive a wedge on the class divide or the controversial inequality theme.

Yet once the bust surfaces the joblessness will balloon.

As for OFWs they represent a minority[19]. Nonetheless part of the OFW joining the bandwagon is another worrying sign of contagion

TWO “Marking the Close” Sessions at the Philippine Stock Exchange This Week!

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Even more unsettling signs

Speaking of financial market massaging, the Phisix posted two remarkable accounts of “marking the close” this week.

Marking the close, according to US Legal.com is “the practice of buying a security at the very end of the trading day at a significantly higher price than the current price of the security.”

The two session “marking the close” sessions emerged as the Phisix attempted to profit-take this week. Despite the sharp pendulum swings, the major Philippine benchmark ended the week almost surprisingly unchanged.

This is interesting because during the real boom of January-June 2013, there was only one major marking the close session which came at the month end of February.

In the current denial rally, last week’s marking the close marks the third and fourth incidents. The earlier two were in February and April.

In other words, the end-of-the-session massaging of the index seem to be increasing in frequency. Some entities must be getting so restless or so desperate to see the index higher immediately. Do they want to make the chart?

Four times can’t be a coincidence.

And this again not only is a sign of a manic ONE WAY trade, but importantly, this signifies worrying signs of attempts to prevent the stock markets from functioning normally.

As mentioned earlier, the much exhausted Phisix made another attempt to correct this week. Wednesday, the major local benchmark stumbled 1.75%. However the giant gains in US stocks influenced the trading session on Thursday. Following a strong opening, intraday gains by the benchmark eroded as the session matured. Near the close the session the Phisix even almost reversed the day’s gains. But at the closing bell, the operators ensured that the Phisix closed at the day’s high with a 1.01% gain. You can see the chart here. Simply amazing.

I estimate that about 40% of the day’s advances—based not from the low but from the afternoon’s high—came from the last minute pump[20]. If we consider the low, that would mean about all the gains of the day.

Basically three sectors participated in the last minute ramp, the biggest being the holding sector, next is the industrials and finally the service sector. Since I have no access to the intraday charts of the specific issues, I can only make a hunch where 6 companies which delivered extraordinary returns for the day from these sectors had been responsible for the push.

As you can see, all the stock market operator needs is to push a few companies comprising the heavyweights of different sectors for the Phisix to move higher.

Friday, the Phisix (upper right pane) spent most of the session looking for a reprieve from the recent unwavering charge by the bulls (chart from colfinancial.com). Approaching the close of the session, the benchmark was off by about .72%. But the stock operators would have none of this. So as the closing bell rang, 3 industries led by the financials (upper right pane), the service sector (lower left pane) and the industrials (lower right pane) contributed to the fantastic evaporation of 60% of the session’s losses.

Notice that Thursday’s interventions failed to lift up Friday’s profit taking, so stock market operators went into action again. But still the day ended at the red. The point here is interventions will likely have short term effects.

It seems inconceivable that profits are the objective for the index massaging operations.

First, if the operators want to create a bandwagon effect, such actions should have been done sometime within the day for the effect to find traction. Obviously this hasn’t been the purpose.

Second, given that the issues being pushed are the among the biggest market caps of the composite index, which means they are the most liquid, such operations command a lot of money. Yet money alone will not suffice. Again since they are dealing with the most liquid issues, if there will be parties at the opposite (selling) side that has equally sizeable shares to sell, then the latter may defeat the intended objective of the operator. This implies coordination, which means that the stock market operator is unlikely a lone wolf but may involve other parties.

If the objective is to just make money, then they could simply push lesser liquid issues or just trade at market prices. But again the objective seems directed at where the Phisix should stand at the end of the day or price fixing.

Third, these stock market operators are buying at a premium above market prices. That’s the reason it’s called “marking the close”. So for them to profit means stocks should significantly move higher from the purchase point. Given today’s outlandishly overvalued stocks (30,40,50,60 PERs, 4,5,6,7,8 PBVs), this means these stock market operators have been playing with fire.

Fourth, it’s always easier to gamble—not with one’s personal account—but with someone else’s money. So I suspect that the money used in the operations may have been third party resources, from taxpayers (if public companies) or depositors (if private companies whether resident or non-resident). If my guess is accurate, then this covert operations involves a massive transfer of risks from operators to the resource owners for whatever objectives designed for such actions. But when the going gets tough, the tough becomes a sissy and runs away. This is an example of Keynes’s sound banker approach: lead the crowd during the boom, hide under the skirt of the crowd during the bust. But WOE to the resource owners!

Yet could it be that part of the money involved has been from margin trade or bank loans? If yes then this amplifies the problem.

Fifth, if indeed this has been a healthy bullmarket, it’s a curiosity to see why the seeming desperate need to manage the index? Besides a bullmarket should be a long term trend, so what’s the rush?

Obviously managing the index runs to the contrary to the essence of a real bull market. Instead such are increasing evidences that the current rally has been artificial.

Watch Out, Money Supply Growth Will Likely Plummet in the Second Half!

Could it be that the “bring the curtain down” time for the phantasmagoric boom has arrived?

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The current boom has been pillared from the accelerating money supply growth that appears to have climaxed with the 30+% growth rate.

The grand BSP pivot of 2009 has shown money supply already accelerating. But as one would note from the lower pane of the chart from tradingeconomics.com, money supply virtually zoomed in July 2013, highlighted by the 30+% growth rate.

The mainstream hardly understands the role of money supply for them to patently disregard the risks from such dramatic increases. Remember banking loans represent 68% of the money supply.

Credit creation (money from thin air) from the banking system translates to additional nominal spending power. Borrowed money are largely spent or reallocated in the real economy. In other words, when money streams into the economy these affect prices, economic coordination and the production process.

Injected money represents new demand. If supply doesn’t grow at the rate to meet the new demand, we either would see higher prices (price inflation) or shortages. The latter is hardly relevant yet, because of the import option.

Yet importations to service the growth of new demand will affect the balance of trade. A wider trade deficit puts pressure on the local currency. Pressure on local currency will affect domestic prices. So domestic supply has either to grow in proportion to match demand or prices will rise.

If the rate of credit expansion expressed in money supply growth will be sustained eventually price inflation will grow in proportion to the rate of money supply growth. Rising price inflation will affect interest rates that will spillover to credit conditions.

No statistical smokescreens or manipulation of markets will undermine this basic economic theory.

The current “demand” that has fueled this boom has largely been due debt financed supply side dynamics underpinned by profit arbitrages from changes in relative prices over time, debt financed capital expansions anchored from such profit arbitrages, whose borrowings from the banking sector has been collateralized by inflated asset valuations.

Remittances from OFW and BPOs are just a side show.

The credit funded juiced up boom likewise inflated incomes (e.g. Yuppies shown above) and earnings of the bubble sectors (the ephemeral “earnings growth” story). All these have cumulatively inflated “demand”, which has likewise been transformed into consumption spending (mainly shopping mall, hotel) and speculation (residential and commercial real estate). The BSP GDP data for 2013 has been demonstrative of such phenomenon.

Yet this is the model that undergirds the bluster “not affected the country, since we are neither resource-dependent nor export-oriented”. This is really nothing but the Keynesian Philosopher stone of turning lead to gold “Thus the remedy for the boom is not a higher rate of interest but a lower rate of interest! For that may enable the so-called boom to last. The right remedy for the trade cycle is not to be found in abolishing booms and thus keeping us permanently in a semi-slump; but in abolishing slumps and thus keeping us permanently in a quasi-boom.”[21]

And the above dynamic has been lost on mainstream ‘experts’ whom largely thinks social activities “just happens”.

Thus participants in the bubble sectors continue to jump into the bandwagon by funneling more and more resources for projects aimed at catering to these demand in the belief that this will go on in perpetuity (permanently in a quasi-boom). The increasing concentration of use resources funded by debt translates to greater fragility for the formal economy.

This belief will now come under intense scrutiny soon.

And it’s about time to reveal of the seemingly developing slack in money supply growth.

Notice in the top pane that since January nominal money supply appears to have plateaued.

This is interesting because BSP banking loans continue to be robust. In other words, these new bank loans have hardly transformed into “new spending power” or “new demand”.

If the sluggish growth in money supply for the past 4 months hasn’t been an anomaly, then money supply growth during the first anniversary at July 2014 will slump to anywhere 20-25% (perhaps 22%) and will continue to fall!

I anticipate that the BSP will claim credit for this. But they have done practically nothing but to support this fictional boom. In fact, the BSP’s first reserve requirement actions[22] took effect in April 4, 2014. That’s three months well into the lackluster money supply growth.

And besides, as stated above, since in the modern banking system reserve requirements are “supplied” by the central bank, then this policy of raising the reserve requirements has all been a sham or a bluff unless the BSP operates in an archaic model

The question now is why the money supply slowdown? What’s happening?

Well, if banks create money through credit, then paying down credit destroys money.

Banks can also destroy money in two other ways. Banks can as agents sell government securities and or banks can issue and sell bonds or equity[23] to the public.

I doubt the latter two has played significantly. 

Data from Asian Bond Monitor indicate that out of the 33 domestic borrowers in the bond market, 10 banks issued local currency bonds worth Php 125.2 billion during the first quarter[24] . This represents 22.66% of the overall Php 552.4 billion issuance which is a drop in the P 3.46 trillion bucket of total banking loans for March.

There has been no major bank IPOs during the first quarter based on PSE’s IPO updates

The Philippine government issued $1.5 billion in foreign denominated bonds last January in the global market which has little significance to the latest slowdown in money supply growth as we are concerned of domestic banks money creation and destruction.

Philippine outstanding debt by Php 41.8 billion from January to March, outstanding debt has declined Php 71.1 billion from December to March.

By process of elimination, with government securities and bank bonds and equities out of the picture, this leaves the money supply dilemma a function of the relationship between the banking sector and the non-bank borrowers.

The pace of bank lending continues to blaze. The average growth in banking loans from January to March has been 17.46%, more than double the economy.

For bank borrowing not to find their way to the real economy as manifested through money supply conditions, this implies that a growing number of firms borrow to ONLY PAYBACK their existing loans.

If this analysis is on spot, then this possibly means three scenarios; First: debt loads have grown excessively for the firms and or Second, the recent increases in 10 year domestic treasuries have begun to impact on the balance sheets of the highly levered firms…or Third it could even be both.

Yet borrowing to ONLY PAYBACK their existing liabilities possibly means the increasing recourse to DEBT IN, DEBT OUT or Ponzi financing—where companies can hardly pay for both principal and interests and now increasingly rely on rolling over of debt by accelerated borrowing and or by sales of assets in order to settle liabilities.

Remember there have been a limited number of companies with liberal access to the formal banking system. And if the 1st quarter money supply stagnation hasn’t been an anomaly, this means credit expansion may have hit their natural “speed limits”, despite the BSP’s sustained accommodation.

So the idea that a sustained easy money environment will extrapolate to a “free pass” for the bubbles or the Keynesian paradigm of “lower rate of interest…may enable the so-called boom to last” will now be tested.

Based on the above assumptions we don’t have to rely on many statistics to tell us that systemic debt burden may already have reached a ‘saturation’ or ‘tipping’ point for debt absorption. And 2013’s diminishing returns for debt on bubble areas has already given us some clues[25]. For every one peso of growth delivered by the real estate, construction and hotel industries, they borrowed 2-3 pesos.

As I pointed out last week, HSBC call this dynamic “credit intensity” in implying Asia has been caught in an addiction to debt[26]. The same dynamic appears to plague the domestic bubble sector now.

And current developments will slam the local economy in two ways, money inflation percolates into the economy in a time lag, or it takes time for the increases of money supply to show up in relative prices. Price increases will not be equal as some will rise ahead and or faster than the rest.

This means the huge 30+%% money growth in the second half of 2013 will continue to exert pressure on prices. So companies will see an increase in input prices which may begin to strain profits.

Second, the recent slowing of money supply growth will mean lesser support for the bubble activities. If it is true that a growing segment of borrowing are being rechanneled just to payback existing loans then Debt in-debt out will mean added strains on balance sheets of firms as cost of servicing debt rises.

And slowing money supply will now put pressure on profits derived from the narrowing window of price arbitrages from previous money supply expansion. This will begin to negatively impact capital expansion, thereby slowing increases in income that will be reflected on reduced demand or consumer spending. As the supply side growth skids, malinvestments will begin surface in terms oversupply and debt burdens. This means that the process of diversion of resources—from productive to non-productive speculative capital consuming sectors—will slowdown. There will be a feedback loop between debt burden and growth. And once the problems become evident, the process of market clearing via liquidations and asset value mark downs will accelerate. Boom will morph into a horrific bust.

This doesn’t just happen. This is a process. January to April’s money supply brake, if sustained, will begin the process reversing this illusory boom.

I expect the Philippine government to use the same massaging of markets to force down Philippine treasury yields. Forcing down yields will buy sometime for those afflicted by debt.

Remember Philippine treasury markets are not only illiquid but have been controlled by the government and by the banking industry[27]. Yields of 10 year treasuries have declined by 18.3 basis points last week, last quoted at 4.146%

The Philippine government will try to keep the Potemkin Villages standing even when the foundations have been fraying fast.

Again the debt based “something for nothing” boom will not end well, as the late Austrian economist and international banker and editor of the “The Richebächer Letter”, Kurt Richebächer warned[28] (bold mine)
You can’t build lasting stock market gains or solid GDP growth on debt. Because debt cannot expand forever. Sooner or later it must stabilize and then it must contract. When that happens, all the positive features of debt become negative features. Instead of borrowing and spending more, people must spend less and pay off past debt. Instead of adding to corporate sales and profits, they subtract from them. Instead of driving up asset prices, they push them down.
Peak Complacency: Ignoring Risks from Thailand Economic and Political Mess

I find it very interesting to see how ASEAN markets have practically been ignoring the risks from neighboring Thailand.

Thailand’s military has initially declared martial law early last week[29], but holding on to the ring of power seems so tempting for the military to finally declare a coup about a day after.

The putsch has been the “second time in a decade” and the “12th military takeover since Thailand abandoned the absolute monarchy in 1932” has been supposed to favor the elite whom have “grown disillusioned with popular democracy” according to the New York Times[30].

Amidst the power struggle, Thailand’s economy continues to struggle and has posted a contraction of -.6% during the first quarter. Thailand’s economy have been in a declining trend through 2013 even prior to the escalation of the political crisis in November of 2013[31]

Thailand’s tourism, which accounts for 9% of the economy, the highest ratio in Asia after Hong Kong has plummeted by 5% from January to April, a most likely victim of the political impasse. Ironically Bangkok was ranked as the top tourist destination last year[32]. The sharp reversal in sentiment is showcase of how capricious confidence is.

image

As one would note from the World Bank chart, Thailand has a large exposure on debt. The Bank of Thailand (BOT) have sought to ward off credit risks by slashing interest rates even as consumer price inflation has been mounting. The BOT cut official rates last March[33]. Yields of Thai’s 10 year bonds have been on a decline along with central bank policies of reducing interest rates since 2012. The BOT policies essentially have bought time for Thailand’s debt problem.

I quote here one article which I believe highlights the ongoing bubble in Thailand.
Knight Frank Chartered (Thailand), a property consultancy firm, says there is a brisk demand for condos in Khon Kaen. The city and the surrounding province saw the market come alive five years ago, and it has accelerated over the past three years. Over 6,802 condo units were launched in 2011-13, and last year 3,284 units were launched, the highest number ever to enter the market. All this in a city of only 100,000 people. It’s hardly what you would expect from a quiet provincial town… but it’s happening all over Thailand. The cities are changing because the citizens are changing. Khon Kaen, for example, is home to a thriving university and in recent years, it has seen a massive surge in enrolment. Many of the buyers of these apartments are students or staff at Khon Kaen University (KKU). I have a friend whose nephew studies there. The young man has dreams of becoming a photographer with his own studio and although he comes from a simple background, he won a place at the university.
The article is from a stock market newsletter selling Thailand[34]. But what the author sees as a bullish theme is actually bearish if we apply economics to it.

For a city of 100,000 people and condo supplies at nearly 10,000 units, the economic balance would be about 1 unit for every 10 people. But a city of 100,000 would mean households rather than just people. If there are 5 people for every households, then there would be 20,000 households. This implies 1 condo unit for every 2 households. And most likely the much of the 20,000 households may have their existing abode. So unless there will substantial immigration from residents or foreigners much of this means massive oversupply.

But the author says it’s happening all over Thailand! Gosh. Then that would mean one heck of a gigantic oversupply!

And who’s buying but students. If parents are buying in behalf of them then this will be just fine. But what if students buy on margins paid by allowances?

If Thailand’s economy continues to slow or even contract for a prolonged period and if the plunge in tourism will mirror foreign investors in terms of FDI and portfolio flows, then debt concerns that has finance all these massive condo units will surface. And this will magnify on Thailand’s economic and financial risks. And Thailand’s political mess will just be an enhancer to what seems as a bubble bust already in progress.

During last week’s coup, the USD-Thai baht rose .67 and Thailand SET fell by only .6%

Complacency at its peak! Caveat emptor.





[2] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Banks Real Estate Exposure Rises at End-2013 May 20 2014


[4] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas CIRCULAR NO. 600 Series  of  2008 February 4, 2008

[5] Inquirer.net Aquino hosts PH debut at Asia’s Davos May 22, 2014

[6] Carl R. Tannenbaum Housing may be returning to a bad neighborhood Weekly Economic Commentary May 2, 2014 Northern Trust

[7] Friedrich August von Hayek, THE FATAL CONCEIT Chapter 5 p.76 The Errors of Socialism THE COLLECTED WORKS OF Friedrich August Hayek Volume 1 libertarianismo.org



[10] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Annual Report p.50 2012

[11] ABS-CBNnews.com BSP to banks Submit stress test reports May 21, 2014


[13] Michael McLeay, Amar Radia and Ryland Thomas of the Bank’s Monetary Analysis Directorate Money creation in the modern economy Bank of England

[14] Wall Street Journal Real Time Economics Blog, Philippines Banker Worries About Hot Money May 22, 2014

[15] Fritz Machlup Chapter X A Digression on International Speculation The Stock Market, Credit and Capital Formation, William Hodge and Company Mises.org


[17] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Banks' Consumer Credit Continues to Expand May 20, 2014




[21] John Maynard Keynes Chapter 22. Notes on the Trade Cycle The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Marxist.org


[23] Bank of England, Loc. cit

[24] Asian Development Bank ASIA BOND MONITOR March 2014 Adbbondsonline.org. Philippine National Bank 30.9, BDO Unibank 23.0, RCBC 19.0, Security Bank 13.0, Metrobank 10.0, United Coconut Planters Bank 9.5, Allied Banking 8.0, Union Bank of the Philippines 6.8, Bank of the Philippine Islands 5.0




[28] Kurt Richebacher Bonner A Bullish Consensus to Bet Against Bonner & Partners February 24, 2014






[34] MoneyWeek.com The boom in provincial Thailand May 13, 2014

Saturday, May 24, 2014

The speculative mania galore in full throttle: US Edition

Last week I noted that the intensity of speculation in the Philippines reached a new peak as “locals rotated into the more ‘speculative’ and illiquid issues that paved way for the spectacular record trade churning run supported by the record breaking broader market activities.”

I guess this phenomenon has not just been in the Philippines. A similar thrust towards yield chasing on illiquid stocks has also been heating up in the US

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From the Wall Street Journal (bold mine)
Investors are piling into the shares of small, risky companies at the fastest clip on record, in search of investments that promise a chance of outsize returns.

The investors are buying up so-called penny stocks—shares of mostly tiny companies that aren't listed on major U.S. exchanges—at a pace that far eclipses the tech boom of the late 1990s. Those include firms that focus on areas from medical marijuana and biotechnology to fuel-cell development and precious-metals mining—industries that are perceived by some investors as carrying strong growth potential.

Average monthly trading volume at OTC Markets Group Inc., which handles trading in shares that aren't listed on the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq Stock Market, has risen 40% this year in dollar terms from a year ago, to a record $23.5 billion.

The renewed interest in a market that used to be known as the pink sheets—because of the colored pieces of paper once used to record prices for unlisted stocks—shows investors are ramping up risk in a bid to boost returns as U.S. stock indexes are hovering near highs and stock valuations have risen above historical norms.
It’s not just pink sheets, retail investors have been pouring in
The rebound also comes as individual investors are showing signs of increased interest in stock trading in general. Discount brokers TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. and E*Trade Financial Corp. last month reported jumps in daily trading volume in the first quarter from the same period a year ago.

The rising volume in the tiniest of stocks is taking more investors into what is arguably the riskiest part of the stock market. These companies have less regulatory oversight than those traded on the exchanges, and their low prices mean that small price moves can quickly add up to big percentage moves.

In addition, penny stocks are often prime hunting grounds for scammers and "pump and dump" schemes. Stock promoters—often masquerading as regular investors on chat boards—tout a name, only to unload shares into a thinly traded market, taking profits for themselves but inflicting losses on other investors.
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As of the end of 2013, based on the latest update of the US equity flow of fund from Yardeni.com, retail investors has been stampeding into US stock via Mutual Funds and ETF as institutional investors exit.

I guess a wild speculative ramp has been going on in many places of the world.

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Implied volatility covering various global asset classes reveals extreme complacency levels echoing 2007! (chart from the IIF)

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And more interesting is that yields of riskiest bonds have even broken the 2007 lows. Mike Larson of moneyandmarket.com remarks “When you earn rock-bottom yields, you’re not getting the compensation you deserve for the risk of default you’re taking on. After all, the average cumulative default rate for corporate bonds rated CCC to C (at the bottom of the ratings scale) is north of 40 percent to 50 percent over a multi-year time horizon!”

Oh while Wall Street continues to party, subprime lending has also been ballooning.

From Bloomberg:
Doug Naidus made his fortune selling a mortgage company to Deutsche Bank AG months before the U.S. housing market collapsed. Now he’s found a way to profit from loans to business owners with bad credit.

From an office near New York’s Times Square, people trained by a veteran of Jordan Belfort’s boiler room call truckers, contractors and florists across the country pitching loans with annual interest rates as high as 125 percent, according to more than two dozen former employees and clients. When borrowers can’t pay, Naidus’s World Business Lenders LLC seizes their vehicles and assets, sometimes sending them into bankruptcy…

Subprime business lending -- the industry prefers to be called “alternative” -- has swelled to more than $3 billion a year, estimates Marc Glazer, who has researched his competitors as head of Business Financial Services Inc., a lender in Coral Springs, Florida. That’s twice the volume of small loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration.
All the above suggest the deepening of the GREED environment: extreme overconfidence and over complacency, insatiable hunger for yield and reckless and rampant speculative activities.

Behold the speculative mania galore in full throttle!

Quote of the Day: 42.4% increase in the price of being poor

Perhaps the most striking example is the World Bank, which is now considering a massive revision to how they define ‘poverty’.

The global poverty line used to be defined as living on $1/day or less. Then they had to increase that to $1.25 in 2008, since, even for the world’s most impoverished, one dollar wasn’t such a big sum anymore.

Now the World Bank is looking at increasing that poverty line even further, to $1.78. That’s a 42.4% increase.

All of this is because new economic data from Centre for Global Development and the Brookings Institution showed that the number of people living on less than $1.25 has halved.

It’s not because there are that many fewer poor people in the world. It’s that you can’t even be poor anymore on $1.25/day.

Thanks to all the money printing that has taken place around the world, it takes a much greater sum these days… just to be impoverished.

Not that there’s any inflation.
This is from Simon Black at the Sovereign Man.

Oh with increasing risks of protectionism as world powers square off over territorial borders which has now spilled over to the economic front (so far with limited scope of sanctions), more regulations and mandates, higher taxes and the deepening global bubbles, which will result to a combo of stagflation and bubble busts, global poverty levels will rise again.

PBOC’s Zhou Admits China May Have Housing Bubble in ‘Some Cities’

Last Sunday I wrote (bold original)
As you can see, bubbles have risen to levels where authorities can’t hide them anymore. Instead of denying them, what they are doing today has been to downplay their risks.
China’s central bank governor has just affirmed my observation.

From the Bloomberg:
China may have a housing bubble only in “some cities,” a issue that’s difficult to resolve with a single nationwide policy, the nation’s central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said.

China is a big country with multiple housing markets, many of which are still drawing new inhabitants from the countryside, Zhou said yesterday in an interview in Kigali, Rwanda, where he was attending the African Development Bank’s annual meeting.

“China is still in the process of urbanization, so there may be some kind of volatility in the supply-demand relationship,” Zhou said. “But if you look at the medium-term of urbanization, I think we still have a very good market for home sectors.”
The downscaling of risks by suggesting that bubbles are local rather than national have been an institutional or conventional response of authorities.

The US experience. 

The Washington Post on outgoing US Fed Chair Alan Greenspan in 2005…
Greenspan has said recently that he sees no national bubble in home prices, but rather "froth" in some local markets. Prices may fall in some areas, he indicated. And he warned in a speech last month that some borrowers and lenders may suffer "significant losses" if cooling house prices make it difficult to repay new types of riskier home loans -- such as interest-only adjustable-rate mortgages.


some fantastic quotes from Ben Bernanke the above video (bold mine)

In 2005
INTERVIEWER: Tell me, what is the worst-case scenario? Sir, we have so many economists coming on our air and saying, "Oh, this is a bubble, and it's going to burst, and this is going to be a real issue for the economy." Some say it could even cause a recession at some point. What is the worst-case scenario, if in fact we were to see prices come down substantially across the country?

(1:05)  BERNANKE: Well, I guess I don't buy your premise. It's a pretty unlikely possibility. We've never had a decline in house prices on a nationwide basis. So what I think is more likely is that house prices will slow, maybe stabilize: might slow consumption spending a bit. I don't think it's going to drive the economy too far from its full employment path, though.
More:
INTERVIEWER: So would you agree with Alan Greenspan's comments recently that we've got some areas of that country that are seeing froth, not necessarily a national situation, but certainly froth in some areas?

(1:34) BERNANKE: You can see some types of speculation: investors turning over condos quickly. Those sorts of things you see in some local areas. I'm hopeful — I'm confident, in fact, that the bank regulators will pay close attention to the kinds of loans that are being made, and make sure that underwriting is done right. But I do think this is mostly a localized problem, and not something that's going to affect the national economy.
When the real estate bubble bust became apparent July 2007
(4:0) BERNANKE: The pace of home sales seems likely to remain sluggish for a time, partly as a result of some tightening in lending standards, and the recent increase in mortgage interest rates. Sales should ultimately be supported by growth in income and employment, as well as by mortgage rates that, despite the recent increase, remain fairly low relative to historical norms. However, even if demand stabilizes as we expect, the pace of construction will probably fall somewhat further, as builders work down the stocks of unsold new homes. Thus, declines in residential construction will likely continue to weigh on economic growth in coming quarters, although the magnitude of the drag on growth should diminish over time. The global economy continues to be strong, supported by solid economic growth abroad. U.S. exports should expand further in coming quarters. Overall, the U.S. economy seems likely to expand at a moderate pace over the second half of 2007, with growth then strengthening a bit in 2008 to a rate close to the economy's underlying trend.
Déjà vu?

The PBoC, the US Federal Reserve, or even the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas all speak of the same language. It’s the language of statistical smokescreens, blanket deniability, blindness, the defense of the status quo, and most importantly, the implied worship of bubbles.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Phisix: Third major ‘marking the close’ for the year

This should be the third major "mark the close' for the year after February and April. 

Charts below from Colfinancial.com
 
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Amazingly, 40% of today’s 68.2 or 1.01% gains had been due to a last minute bid, although today’s push comes with tepid volume.
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The industry standout for this ticker tape management has been the index for the holding company
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This has been supported by the industrials 
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And partly the service index. Although the service index has been climbing even before the close.
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In a way, the property sector participated but not as much as the above.
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I am not sure which particular issues has been used to manage the index. Perhaps the performances of the major issues from each of the above indices can give us a clue.  See from the above table using this guide Service (red), holding (green) and industrials (blue) Table from PSE. 

The main point is that contra the bull market of 2013, today’s market activities continues to reveal of signs of a deepening (climaxing) speculative orgy from an entrenched belief of a one way trade. 

I only noted of one major mark the close in 2013, whereas for this year, there has already been 3.

Today’s activities doesn’t even permit a correction or profit taking. Yesterdays correction of 1.75%—if today’s momentum continues—may be wiped out by tomorrow or by early next week. If so, then there will hardly be any correction at all.

It’s strange but why the need to “manage” the index if we are in a healthy bull market? Second, what’s all the rush given the outrageously excessive valuations? Afraid to be left out? Left out of what? Nirvana? Does the mainstream really expect that the current 30,40,50,60++ PERs will soar to 100 soon???

China Politics: Explosions Hit City of Xinjiang, Claims 31 Lives and 90 Injured

Although I think China’s seeming provocations with her neighbors in the territorial disputes has partly been in response to the US foreign policy strategy of encirclement, it would seem that most of these has been grounded on the attempt to divert the public’s attention from her imploding economy that has been aggravating the brewing accounts of local unrest.

Today’s blast at the city of Xinjang claimed 31 lives looks like an example.

From Reuters: (bold mine)
A blast in the capital of China's western region of Xinjiang killed 31 people, with around 90 others injured, state broadcaster China Central Television reported on Thursday.

The blast took place when two vehicles rammed into a crowd at a morning market in Urumqi. Explosives were hurled from the vehicles and one of the vehicles exploded.

China's domestic security chief has labeled the incident an act of violent terrorism. China has blamed a string of violent attacks in recent months on militant separatists from Xinjiang.
More on the swelling social strife, from Sydney Morning Herald. (hat tip zero hedge, bold mine)
Unlike most of the rest of China which is predominantly Han Chinese, many parts of Xinjiang -- an expansive region which shares borders with eight countries including Russia, Afghanistan and Pakistan -- remain largely home to the native Uighurs, a predominantly Muslim, Turkic-speaking ethnic group. According to a 2010 census, Xinjiang's 22 million population comprises of 43 per cent Uighur, 40 per cent Han Chinese, with the rest made up of other minority groups.

But fast-paced development and an associated influx of Han Chinese economic migrants has seen larger cities in Xinjiang, including Urumqi, transform almost unrecognisably, sparking tensions among Uighurs who chafe at government policies they say discriminate against them and restrict their religious freedoms.

Xinjiang has been plagued by ethnic unrest, with China attributing a series of escalating knife and bomb attacks in recent months to separatist Uighur militants from Xinjiang.

Last month an explosion killed three and injured at least 79 at a central train station in Urumqi, in an attack that coincided with the high-profile visit of President Xi Jinping to the region.

On March 1, knife-wielding attackers slashed indiscriminately at passengers at a train station in Kunming, in south-western Yunnan province, killing 29 and wounding more than 130. 
Unfortunately it seems that the Chinese government fails to understand that picking a fight with neighbors will hardly solve domestic social problems caused by discriminatory government policies. In short, "two wrongs don't make a right". 

Quote of the Day: ROIC and the growth rate of corporate profits

The extraordinary thing is that Piketty’s analysis is based on a massive logical error. His thesis runs as follows: if R is the rate of return on invested capital and if G is the growth rate of the economy, since R>G, profits will grow faster than GDP, and the rich will get richer and the poor poorer. This is GIGO (garbage in, garbage out) at its most egregious. Piketty confuses the return on invested capital, or ROIC, with the growth rate of corporate profits, a mistake so basic it is scarcely believable.

Let me explain with an example. I happen to be a shareholder in an industrial bakery in the south west of France. It has a return on invested capital of 20%, but we cannot reinvest the profits in the company at 20%. If we were to reinvest the profits by putting more capital to work, the profits would not change at all, because nobody in the region is going to buy more bread and productivity gains there are non-existent. In other words, the marginal return of one more unit of capital put to work is zero. So instead of reinvesting in the bakery, we distribute the profits among the shareholders and they invest them elsewhere as they see fit. In short, our bakery has a high ROIC but no profit growth.

At the other extreme, a company expanding rapidly according to a “stack ’em high, sell ’em cheap” model might well show a low ROIC but very fast profit growth. Every company in the world can be “mapped” according to these two criteria: ROIC, and the growth rate of corporate profits.

Over the long term, the growth rate of corporate profits cannot be higher than the growth rate of GDP. That’s simply because if it was, after a while corporate profits would rise to reach 100% of GDP, which we all know is silly. Historically, the ratio of domestic profit to GDP has been a mean-reverting variable.
(bold original, italics mine)

This is from fund manager Charles Gave of the Hong Kong based Gavekal Research via Mauldin Outside the Box as published at the Valuewalk.com

Aside from addressing Picketty’s silly “inequality” issues, the above quote represents another demonstration of the natural limits of profit growth as I previously discussed. So be leery of people who peddle the supposed constancy of profit growth.

This also shows the dangers of "blackboard economics" in the context of policymaking and in investing.

Central Planning Failure: French state owned railway firm orders 2,000 trains “too wide” for platforms

Incredible moments of government failure. 

From Reuters
France's national rail company SNCF said on Tuesday it had ordered 2,000 trains for an expanded regional network that are too wide for many station platforms, entailing costly repairs.

A spokesman for the RFF national rail operator confirmed the error, first reported by satirical weekly Canard Enchaine in its Wednesday edition.

"We discovered the problem a bit late, we recognise that and we accept responsibility on that score," Christophe Piednoel told France Info radio.
This “broad modernisation effort” has been part of the French socialist government’s measure to boost statistical GDP. Instead, such flagrant costly error translates to a combination of bigger deficits, more debts, higher taxes, loss of purchasing power and greater risks to financial stability which ultimately entails a lower standard of living. This is a showcase of the government’s knowledge problem

And importantly this also exposes on the myth of the populist glamorization of centralized “infrastructure spending” elixir.

Video: Ludwig von Mises on "Are Workers In Conflict with Employers?"

When asked to respond on the issue “Are the interests of the American wage earners in conflict with those of their employers, or are the two in agreement?" 

Here is the reply of the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises (via Mises Blog)

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Quote of the Day: Good advice...

is priceless. Not what you want to hear, but what you need to hear. Not imaginary, but practical. Not based on fear, but on possibility. Not designed to make you feel better, designed to make you better.

Seek it out and embrace the true friends that care enough to risk sharing it.

I'm not sure what takes more guts—giving it or getting it.
Take it from marketing guru Seth Godin.

To go against the crowd just “to make you better” by “sharing” the “practical” “possibility” of risks from the current environment—shouldn’t this qualify me as your “true friend”?

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Quote of the Day: The Chinese miracle is officially labeled a “big burden”

But the massive construction site within China’s borders defied the laws of economics and plain old rationality.  It is literally impossible for an economy to record double-digit GDP growth year-upon-year in which 50% of the gain is due to “fixed asset” investment in public infrastructure and private real estate and industrial capacity. The reason is that no society could sustain the level of consumption forbearance and mass austerity that would be required to fund such massive investment out of honest savings.

Instead, the party overlords got lured into a dangerous economic Ponzi. They sent more and more freshly minted credit—-20-35% more in some years—down the state controlled banking system where it was parceled out to state controlled enterprises, local party rulers and independent entrepreneurs.

These recipients turned it into cement, rebar, fabrications, office towers, coal mines, power plants and port facilities—-without regard for sustainable rates of return. And when returns disappointed or failed to materialize at all—such as in the empty new cities, malls and luxury apartment buildings— more credit was advanced to keep these “investments” solvent. That is, new debt was issued to pay interest on the old.

So parallel to the downward cascade of credit was an equal and opposite upward back haul of fixed asset GDP.  In short, Beijing could hit its national GDP target nearly to the decimal point year after year because its was printing GDP through the machinery of a credit driven command-and-control economy, not presiding over anything that resembles a sustainable capitalist economy.

In a sense, after the disastrous failure of Maoism, the party dictatorship has maintained its lease on life only be synching-up with the global central banking swindle that has been underway for four decades now—but especially since 1994 when Greenspan panicked after that year’s bond market route. 

The giant issue facing China, however, is that it is at the end of the money-printing chorus line. It has now absorbed so much excess debt from the West and thereby inflated its credit Ponzi to such an insensible extent, that even its current rulers can see the hand-writing  on the wall.

In a recent speech, in fact, Premier Li let the cat out of the bag, calling China’s massive hoard of foreign exchange for what it is—-a vendor loan to foreign customers who buy but do not sell; who consume but do not produce. Suddenly, what has been ballyhooed for two decades as evidence of the Chinese miracle is officially labeled a “big burden”.

Actually, it has been a burden all along. The comrades have presided over the erection of a Ponzi of such immense and convoluted magnitude that they have no hope of unwinding it without a thunderous “hard landing”
(italics original, bold mine)

This is from David Stockman at his Contra Corner website in reaction to Premier Li Keqiang’s recent speech at Kenya where the latter said “Frankly speaking, foreign exchange reserves have become a big burden for us, because such reserves translate into the base money, which could affect inflation.”

As I have been saying here and here, in contrast to the mainstream faith on forex reserves which they see as a "talisman" against the risks of a crisis, forex reserves are NOT free passes to bubbles. Even Premier Li understands this. Instead they are manifestations of massive imbalances or bubbles.

HOT: Thailand Military Declares Martial Law

This is getting to be very interesting. Thailand has a credit bubble and has been now suffering from an economic slowdown in the face of an escalating political crisis from contending parties aiming for complete control over Thai politics. And now the Thai army intervenes and imposes a nationwide martial law while saying “Martial law is not a coup,”

From Bloomberg:
Thailand’s army imposed martial law nationwide after months of political turmoil that brought down an elected government and tipped the economy into a contraction.

“The military wants to keep order in the country and asks people not to panic and lead normal lives,” according to a ticker running on Channel 5, which is owned by the Thai army. “Martial law is not a coup,” it said.

The latest move is the army’s most direct involvement in the Southeast Asian nation’s politics since 2006, when then-premier Thaksin Shinawatra was removed in a coup. Martial law already is in place in parts of southern Thailand, and then-Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva briefly declared it over Bangkok in 2010 to quell anti-government protests.

Political polarization has escalated in the past decade and a half over the role of Thaksin and his allies in a nation that’s seen 11 coups since the end of direct rule by kings in 1932. Thailand has been without a fully functioning government since December, when then-premier Yingluck Shinawatra, Thaksin’s sister, called snap elections in a bid to ease the unrest.

The February poll was disrupted by anti-government protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban’s followers and the government and election officials were unable to schedule a new one before Yingluck was removed on May 7 after a court ruled she abused her power in office. Anti-government protesters have derailed plans for a July 20 election and the army had said previously it may use force to counter any escalation of violence.

imageFor the don’t worry be happy crowd, military takeover via a martial law or a veiled putsch will signify as a nonevent or even a positive development. Never mind if the Thai military may impose a dictatorship who might lay property rights at the altar of sacrifice in the name of stability. 

And funny but wasn't the recent lowering of interest rates by the Bank of Thailand suppose to support the economy (by helping solve the political crisis)? What happened? 

Nonetheless, for the hunky dory crowd, stocks has been preordained to go up.