Monday, October 27, 2014

Phisix: More Panic? BSP Orders Banks to Raise Capital as 2Q Consumer Property NPLs Swells!

"But I don’t want to go among mad people," Alice remarked.
"Oh, you can’t help that," said the Cat: "we’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad."
"How do you know I’m mad?" said Alice.
"You must be," said the Cat, "or you wouldn’t have come here.”
― Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

In this issue

Phisix: More Panic? BSP Orders Banks to Raise Capital as 2Q Consumer Property NPLs Swells!
 -Asia’s Diverse Performance in the Face of Central Bank PUT
-Phisix Rebounds On Collapsing Peso Volume
-Stock Market Operators: Desperately Seeking 7,400
-Panic Again? BSP Orders A Broad Based Capital Increase for Philippine Banks!
-2Q Property Non Performing Loans Zoom!
-The Narrowing Window of ECB’s Risk ON Joy Ride

Phisix: More Panic? BSP Orders Banks to Raise Capital as 2Q Consumer Property NPLs Swells!

Asia’s Diverse Performance in the Face of Central Bank PUT

The US Federal Reserve (& Plunge Protection team?), the European Central Bank, Bank of England and reportedly Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) instigated a gigantic rally in risk assets last week which incited a virtual recovery in most, if not all, of last week’s return of downside volatility. Like Pavlov’s dogs or Zombies from World War Z all it took had been soothing words and easing actions from governments to ensure the steroid laced shindig goes on.



In Asia, the response to the developed world’s Central Bank-Government Put had been divergent.

Among the three national bourses which experienced a quasi-crash, only the Nikkei’s 5.02% collapse had been more than fully recovered with this week’s 5.22% melt-UP. The other major losers, Taiwan’s TWII and Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh index only regained 30.83% and 20.19% of their respective slump.

Among the outperformers, Australia and Indonesian bellwethers, having been untainted by the meltdown, added to last week’s gains. New Zealand’s benchmark erased last week’s dip with a fabulous run which led to fresh record highs. India’s Sensex gains tripled from last week’s decline as with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng.

As for the ASEAN majors, returns on Malaysia’s KLSE covered all of last week’s fall with a substantial premium. Singapore’s STI zeroed out the previous week’s negative return. Curiously, the ASEAN charting twins of Thailand’s SET and the Philippines Phisix offset only 47.1% and 62.44% of the previous week’s slide.

Phisix Rebounds On Collapsing Peso Volume


A closer view of the activities of Philippine Phisix reveals of an even prosaic performance.

One of the distinguishing characteristic of Phisix at record high 7,400 circa 2013 and 2014 has been in the Peso volume, where today’s fresh record high has been accompanied by 30-35% less volume as previously described[1].

Such phenomenon has even been magnified this week where this week’s rallying Phisix (left window) comes curiously with a collapsing Peso volume (right window).

The average daily volume peso for this week’s ‘pump’ has been at P 6.467 billion which accounts for only 49% from last week ‘dump’.

In the two days where the bulk of this week’s rally came from October 20 (+.78%) and October 22 (+1.22%) peso volume had been at Php 6 billion and Php 6.7 billion respectively.

Last week’s average Peso volume has been a rarity in the current manic phase.

Previous episodes with similar peso volumes from 2013 to-date reflect on consolidation phases, mostly as ramifications from a steep selloff, as in July 2013 and January 2014. In July 2014, this has been merely from consolidation which followed a sharp upside move.

While from the short term perspective, the upside momentum may have been partially impaired, say for instance 50 day moving average have been broken, this can’t be true for the medium term as current Phisix levels remains heftily above the 200 day moving averages (not shown in charts).

The Phisix hasn’t had a typical correction phase in 2014 (defined as 10% retracement).

And since in the past such languid volumes manifest range bound actions, price actions have hardly been volatile.

Considering the sharp price gyrations, last week’s activities hardly signal a consolidation phase in the Phisix. Instead they seem to reflect signs of a struggle—stock markets bulls have been laboring to recapture price levels which they believe are key to reviving momentum…and glory.

Current stock market bulls are territorial. They hardly bother about valuations or risks. They see price levels as ultimately determining the outcome “win” or “loss”, thus the implied emphasis on 7,000 or 7,400.

Yet market actions suggest that despite the recent gains, bulls may be losing ground in terms of market internals or in this case plummeting peso volume.

And it’s even extraordinary to see over 1% one day advance with less than P 7 billion of peso volume traded.

Stock Market Operators: Desperately Seeking 7,400

Moreover, the recent rebound amidst swooning volume comes in the visage of support from undefined or unidentified stock market operator/s. These faceless entities appear to have been responsible for most of the rallies over the past two consecutive weeks.

During the week of meltdown, on Thursday October 16[2], domestic panic buying from the opening bell until the session end, focused mainly on three major issues, weightlifted the Phisix to bizarrely outperform the region immersed in losses.

Such move may not only have been intended to generate a bandwagon effect but likewise seem to have been meant to broadcast persistent confidence over the stock market which is supposed to reflect on the system.

Yet a bulk of this week’s gains emanated with a major “marking the close”. An astounding 54.5% of Wednesday’s 1.22%[3] low volume surge came at the final minute. Again the price massaging has been centered on 3 major issues.

Marking the close attempts to manage price levels at the close of the trading day or could be engineered to craft the charts intended to influence the ‘chartists’, a popular tool used by market participants.

In my view, intraday massaging of the markets would have a better chance of attaining a herding or bandwagon effect, but it could be more costly. So the frequent recourse to “marking the close”, which ironically has become an almost regular feature in the denial rally of 2014.

Nonetheless, the common trait in the massaging the index, either via intraday “pump” or “marking the close” have been to massively push up prices of at least 3 issues with combined market cap weighting of 15-20%. In panic buying episodes, (September 24 and October 16), the kernel of these activities transpire after lunch break. 

The likely objective for massaging of the domestic index has been to convince the public in order to draw them in. 

Yet such has political, economic and ethical implications.

Since stocks have been popularly associated with G-R-O-W-T-H, higher stocks should imply sustained levitated G-R-O-W-T-H.

In politics, popular approval ratings would accrue to the political leadership from which G-R-O-W-T-H and soaring stocks have occurred. And for politicians to successfully push for their agenda, this depends on political capital from which approval ratings have been a key component of.

In the markets, since stocks have been popularly associated with G-R-O-W-T-H, pushing G-R-O-W-T-H to justify higher prices of already exceedingly overvalued securities extrapolates to the luring of “greater fools” from which vested interest groups can unload to or profit from a transfer of risks.

In addition, resources have been used in the price management of the index. It would be highly doubtful if such actions have been funded from personal accounts of the operator/s. The likelihood is that the risk money exposed in such schemes have been through third party account, whether from taxpayers (in case of public money) or from depositors (if private money).

Nevertheless an index ‘pump’ signifies reckless and negligent use of fiduciary money/resources. This may be part of the entrenched or unwavering belief of the infallibility and perpetuity of the populist G-R-O-W-T-H model. Or it could be part of political agenda.

Yet the easiest part is to gamble people’s money away. And when untoward time surfaces, these entities would most likely abscond responsibility and just seek safety with the crowd. As the chief proponent of the inflationism John Maynard Keynes wrote[4] “A sound banker, alas, is not one who foresees danger and avoids it, but one who, when he is ruined, is ruined in a conventional way along with his fellows, so that no one can really blame him.”

Yet of course, the crowd never questions the QUALITY of economic growth and or of the stock market boom. Such flagrant misperceptions embody a mania. And since manias are a self-reinforcing process, they take a life of its own. Reasoning alone will hardly convince many of the errors of their convictions. Perhaps not even authorities may persuade them.

Hardly would anyone dare ask; what would have been the outcome of today’s Phisix outside these operators?

And will the crowd will heed the admonitions aired by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Chief Amando M Tetangco Jr who in August said, as I previously quoted[5], “So in a period of low volatility such as what we have been experiencing, practice the discipline of setting limits. This discipline will not only help you to avoid the pitfalls of “chasing the market”… (bold mine)???

Despite coming off the recent record highs, current price levels still reflect on the salad days of the easy money regime, which accommodated the “chasing the market” via price multiple expansions. These easy money days are over.

Overvalued securities will even become more mispriced once the misallocation of capital will be exposed in the formal economy, where the earnings part of the PER ratio or book value of the PBV ratio will substantially shrivel. So even if the Phisix retrenches to 7,000 or 6,000 or 5,000 levels, the crowd hardly realizes that these will still reflect on the “pitfalls of chasing the market”.

And early this month, the BSP chief became more explicit, again as previously quoted[6] “While we have not seen broad-based asset mis-valuations, the BSP remains cognizant that keeping rates low for too long could result in mis-appreciation of risks in certain segments of the market, including the real estate sector and the stock market as markets search for yield.” (bold mine)

Let me improvise. Keeping rates low for too long could result in results to mis-appreciation of risks in certain considerable segments not only of the markets but of the real political economy. Free money from zero bound rates distorts the pricing system, economic calculation and economic coordination, thereby creating imbalances and amplifying financial instability risks. Such risks I have long warned about has now been part of the BSP’s chief speech.

Keeping rates low for too long has political repercussions too. It serves as free lunch for government spending, as well as free lunch to the political economic elite whom has a free hand access to banking and the capital markets at BSP’s subsidized rates which has ballooned asset prices which consequently inflated the elite’s asset based wealth.

All these have been financed by the currency holders (as seen by the 30%+ money supply growth, floundering peso, and government inflation numbers at the top end of the target), thereby ballooning inequality.

The bottom line is that there is no free lunch. What goes around comes around.

Panic Again? BSP Orders A Broad Based Capital Increase for Philippine Banks!

I have said that the BSP’s obfuscating statements on their policy actions has hardly been what they really are.

For instance when the BSP raised for the second time simultaneously official policy rates and Special Deposit Account (SDA) rates in September, I asked the following questions[7] on their official statement:
So why should a supposedly “sound” boom be accompanied by symptoms of overvaluations and consumer price pressures? Why the need to tighten if the predicament has been one of supply side pressures where liberalization of imports would be the simple and commonsensical answer to address price pressures? What is the relationship of tightening (money) with supply side (real economy) constraints? What is the relationship of tightening (money) with massive asset overvaluations (financial assets)?

Since the BSP’s message has become repeatedly been opaque, evasive, contradictory and non-transparent, I provide the answer: Credit.
For a terse background or chronicle on the BSP’s path to curb credit expansion; as baptism, bank reserve requirements had been raised twice—first in the last days of March and second in May. Then the BSP called for a banking stress test, as well as, increased the SDA rates for the first time in June. The first official rate hike was announced at the end of July. In September, the BSP lifted both SDA and official rates. So the BSP implemented SEVEN policy actions in SIX months.

The BSP’s recent panicking has hardly been over.

While it is true that the BSP has kept official and SDA rates at current levels this week, they merely shifted their thrust from monetary policies to regulating banking system’s balance sheets.

The alleged reason for the keeping rates steady has supposedly been due to “easing pressures on commodity prices. Inflation expectations have also remained broadly stable and aligned to the inflation target.”[8]

The slowdown consumer price inflation (4.4% in September[9]) can easily be spotted by the sharp retrenchment of money supply growth from its 9 month 30%++levels, as I previously projected[10], “While the slowing liquidity would be theoretically good for currency holders as the pressures from price inflation should eventually ease, this would mean bad news for asset speculators and the asset inflation based growth model which the statistical economy has been pillared on”.

This has been compounded by plummeting commodity prices abroad.

And I anticipated the substantial decline on the 30++% money supply growth as indications of systemic credit strains[11]
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.
The recent deceleration of money supply growth may have been forerunner to the second abrupt surge in real estate NPLs (as discussed below)

The shift in policy maneuver, however, as I noted above is that the BSP, using the Basel Rules as smokescreen, has ordered ALL banks to increase capital!

From the BSP (bold mine)[12]: The Monetary Board (MB) decided to increase the minimum capital requirement for all bank categories: universal, commercial, thrift, rural, and cooperative banks in line with efforts of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to further strengthen the banking system. The upward revision in minimum capital levels is a separate requirement from compliance with risk-based capital adequacy ratios in accordance with Basel 3 requirements as implemented by BSP Circular Nos. 781 and 822 dated 15 January 2013 and 13 December 2013, respectively…Under the new regulation, the minimum capital level of universal and commercial banks will be tiered based on network size as indicated by the number of branches. Minimum capitalization increases in tiers as the branch network gets bigger.  For thrift, rural and cooperative banks, both the location of the head office and size of the physical network are considered in tiering the minimum capital requirements

For banks which may not be able to immediately comply, they are given a five year transition period provided they “submit an acceptable capital build-up program”

We are talking here of about 700 banks (36 universal commercial, 70 thrift banks, 552 rural banks and about 83 quasi banking-savings loans associations ‘cooperative banks’ based on BSP’s directory)

Not only has the BSP ordered banks to raise capital, they have delineated the domestic version of “too big to fail”, particularly Deemed Systemically Important Banks (D-SIB) which firms would require higher capital buffer ratios.

Again the BSP (bold mine)[13]: The Monetary Board (MB) approved guidelines for determining so-called “D-SIBs” or those banks which are deemed systemically important within the domestic banking industry. This is in line with initiatives pursued under the Basel 3 reform agenda. Global reforms on the treatment of systemically important financial institutions (FIs) have been initiated in light of the socio-economic costs arising from the financial crisis. This includes the government bailout of failed FIs particularly in advanced economies. In an effort to strengthen financial markets and remove the moral hazard of publicly-funded bailouts, the Basel 3 reform agenda requires systemic FIs to set aside more funds as buffer for potential losses. D-SIBs are characterized as banks whose distress or disorderly failure would cause significant disruptions to the wider financial system and economy…Banks will be evaluated based on measures for (a) size (b) interconnectedness (c) substitutability/financial institution infrastructure and (d) complexity. Although these measures are largely quantitative, supervisory judgment may also be applied as warranted in determining a bank’s systemic importance. Based on their composite score, each bank will be slotted into one of three “buckets” of systemic importance. Systemically important banks will be required to increase their minimum Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio by 1.5 to 3.5 percentage points depending on which bucket they are classified. This will be on top of the existing CET1 minimum of 6 percent and the capital conservation buffer of 2.5 percent.  DSIBs whose capital ratio falls below their corresponding regulatory minimum will be subject to constraints in the distribution of their income.

So the bigger the bank, the greater the required capital and capital adequacy ratios. One can get a clue from BDO’s market share presentation of Philippine commercial banks here.

Not content with raising capital and instituting more regulations for Philippine version of Too Big To Fail (D-SIB), the BSP will add more regulations on banking system’s in order to enhance ‘credit management’

From the BSP[14] again (bold mine): The Monetary Board (MB) has approved major amendments to the regulations governing credit-risk taking activities of banks and quasi-banks (B/NBQBs) following a comprehensive policy review undertaken by the BSP.  The amendments seek to fundamentally strengthen credit risk management in these financial institutions in line with global best practices and Basel Core Principles for effective bank supervision. Under the enhanced regulations, the critical role of the Board of Directors and Senior Management in promoting a prudent and sound credit environment in their organization is emphasized.  The credit risk management framework should be comprehensive and cover the entire process end-to-end, from credit policy strategy to credit underwriting to credit administration to maintaining the appropriate control environment. On the back of strong credit risk management, banks stand to gain greater flexibility to extend credit, innovate credit products, and develop lending programs.  The new rules are also based on proportionality principles that allow BSP supervised FIs to adopt appropriate credit risk management practices commensurate to their size, scale, complexity.

So whatever happened to the recent bank stress tests? Has the BSP not secured sufficient confidence from the recent results? Or has the results increased their anxieties which instead has prompted them for a massive revision for capital requirements?

Why the sudden raft of mandates: from huge increases in capital requirements to a definition of D-SIBs and their attendant controls and to a torrent of bureaucratic regulations on credit management? Such would mark the EIGHT policy action in SEVEN months!

WHY???

The BSP thinks that more mandates on the banking system will wish away a crisis. They hardly realize that it has been the one-size-fits all aggregate policies (despite the numerous categorizations) of a complex and highly diversified system that creates imbalances.

This piggybacks on the much significant and more fundamental one-size-fits-all monetary “aggregate demand” policies which the BSP governor cautioned at “keeping rates low for too long could result in mis-appreciation of risks”.

Yet the more the concentration and the centralization, the greater the risks of imbalances.

It would seem that the BSP realizes that incremental increases in policy rates (official and SDA) would do little to forestall the current rate of credit growth. Yet to increase these sizably would send alarm bells to the public. I estimate that banking system’s September report due next week will see a still considerable increase in credit expansion rates.

So they resorted to an alternative “macroprudential approach”: attack the banking system’s balance sheets.

And here is what the BSP didn’t say.

Banks can raise capital through the stakeholders and or shareholders (sell shares) or by borrowing from the markets or from the government[15]. Unless the government would function as the source for capital, domestic banks will be forced compete with all other industries for resources during the capital raising period.

Since there are relatively a few participants in the Philippine real economy that have been involved or have stakes in the formal banking system, bank capital raising activities will likely drain resources from the system. This implies higher rates

However, part of the capital increases may be financed overseas or by foreign investments as the Philippines government has thankfully liberalized the Philippine banking system.

As a side note, money flows where it is treated best. Liberalization of ownership while necessary isn’t sufficient. A free flow or movement of capital precedes ownership in economic importance. Capital controls reduce incentives for foreign ownership. Having 100% foreign ownership with highly restrictive capital movements will function like a roach motel for foreigners—you can check in but you can’t check out. Whereas a free flow of capital will have the opposite effect, viz. increase the incentives for ownership. So to increase foreign ownership, the Philippine government will need to materially deregulate capital flows.

Going back to bank capital increase, in addition, when banks issues and sells equity which investors/shareholders/stakeholders buys with funds from a bank deposit, the reduction of deposit liabilities destroys money. The same applies with bank issuance of long-term debt which the private sector buys. As per the Bank of England[16] “Money can also be destroyed through the issuance of long-term debt and equity instruments by banks.”

And since such bank capital raising activities extrapolates to money destruction this means reduced lending activities in the banking system.

Thus BSP’s mandate of broad based capital increase for the Philippine banking system seems tantamount to tightening on the banking system’s balance sheets.

2Q Property Non Performing Loans Zoom!

I mentioned above that the recent deceleration of money supply growth may have been forerunner to the second abrupt surge in real estate NPLs.



Could this be the reason why the BSP seem to be in a state of desperation?

The data on the consumer loan report which is due out next week can be seen from the current BSP statistical page. 2Q Non performing loans jumped 5.4% quarter on quarter, although NPLs constitute only 5.04% share of consumer loans.

NPL growth of auto loans remains elevated at 6.01%. Nonetheless NPL share of outstanding car liabilities are only 4.26%.

Importantly NPL growth in real estate loans continues to bulge at 9.1%! NPLs represent a measly 3.2% share of total property loans.

Real estate loans accounts for 43.34% of total consumer loans over the same period

The 2Q jump in Property NPLs adds to the 7.78% growth rates during the 1Q.

Anent the 1Q NPLs I wrote then[17],
The more than doubling of the growth rates of the real estate consumer NPLs in the 1Q 2014 vis-à-vis the average of the last three quarters of 2013 can be juxtaposed to the breathtaking 8.95% 1Q 2014 spike in the prices of 3 bedroom condominium units in Makati, the cresting of money supply growth rates also in Q1 2014, the intensifying official inflation rates and the below consensus expectations of 5.7% 1Q 2014 GDP growth rates.

It is striking to observe that as speculators fervently bid up on Makati condos at an 8.95% inflation rate which became a world sensation (see below on IIF), other buyers of condos have become delinquent. In other words, the growth rates of real estate NPLs (bad debts) have nearly caught up with the Makati’s property inflation.

Also we can deduce that inflation’s substitution and income effect has begun to hamstring on consumers spending by diminishing disposable income, thereby most possibly contributing to the 1Q rise in bad debts.
And to expand the perspective of 2Q data on a Year on Year, Year to date and Quarter on Quarter using BSP’s current and previous figures…

Phil Banking System Consumer Loans Billions In Pesos Y-o-Y Y-t-d Q-o-Q
Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) June 2013 Dec 2013 Mar 2014 June 2014 % chg % chg % chg
Total consumer loans 41.459 38.508 38.414 40.482 -2.3 5.12 5.4
Auto loans 7.981 7.768 8.313 8.813 10.42 13.45 6.01
Real Estate loans 9.181 9.473 10.255 11.187 21.85 18.09 9.09

While auto loans have also been surging, property NPLs seem as accelerating. I’ll focus on property NPLs.

Year to date real estate NPLs zoomed 18.09%. The Y-T-D growth has nearly reached the Year on year the growth rate at 21.85%.

Last year I noted of the role of NPLs as statistical indicators[18]: Non Performing Loans (NPLs) are coincident if not lagging indicators. NPLs are low because the current boom continues. NPLs become reliable indicators, when asset quality deteriorates or when the credit boom is in the process of reversing itself into a bust. Again they are coincident if not lagging indicators.

Because economics and markets represent a process, things/events evolve at the margins. Rising consumer NPLs are likely symptoms of the developing deterioration in consumer finance.

While NPLs as a share of the overall loans remains small, they could rapidly surge. Since real estate loans are two fifths of overall loans, any dramatic rise in property NPLs could amplify the overall share of NPLs to overall loans.

I have been saying here that the current aggregate demand Philippine growth model has been anchored on supply side growth financed heavily by debt. At current conditions, where the growth rate of debt expansion remains robust, there have already been signs of credit strains. Yet the recent decline in the rate of money supply growth, as noted above, could be symptoms of the domestic credit system having reached its peak, where instead of people borrowing to finance expansion, borrowed money have been used liquidate existing liabilities.

Money supply growth rate seem to have popped to the upside again in July and August, but given the sustained pressures applied by the BSP on the banking system eventually these policies will most likely impact growth rates of credit, consequently money supply and subsequently G-R-O-W-T-H.

Remember the Philippine banking system has accounted for about 70% of money supply.

So how much more when credit expansion materially slows? Then all those inflated earnings, profits, income, and taxes will come under pressure.

Unlike ebola whose transmission mechanism is through body fluids, all it takes for credit risks to surprise the overconfidently blinded public will be a material slowdown in real economic growth. Built in imbalances will merely surface on the account of a downturn.

And any slowdown in economic growth will have a feedback loop of magnifying credit risks.

Given the relatively low penetration level by the Philippine populace on the banking system, which implies low exposure on loans by the average citizens, thus the relative low consumer debt compared to her neighbors.

So I doubt if NPLs in banking consumer loans alone would be a threat. But NPLs in consumer loans will never be a standalone variable. As said above, rising consumer NPLs implies developing strains on consumer finances.

Rising consumer NPLs will likely be transmitted to affect bank profits and add, if not incite, balance sheet problems. Generally speaking, developing strains on consumer finances will impact the heavily leveraged supply side, whom has been dependent on a geometric expansion in the growth rates of consumer finance. Thus the radical departure between supply side expectations and the real conditions of consumer finance will bring to the surface the unsustainable conditions that have underpinned the maturing inflationary boom: malinvestments.

Yet once the statistical economic G-R-O-W-T-H takes a hit, I expect the hawkish tones of the BSP chief to reverse. However this won’t save the bust in the stock market, the property sector and the delusional G-R-O-W-T-H.

The Narrowing Window of ECB’s Risk ON Joy Ride

From a massive Risk OFF to an even more colossal Risk ON.

The central bank put has been acknowledged by mainstream media.

This article from Bloomberg captures the zeitgeist of the return of the Risk ON[19]: The central-bank put lives on. Policy makers deny its existence, yet investors still reckon that whenever stocks and other risk assets take a tumble, the authorities will be there with calming words or economic stimulus to ensure the losses are limited.

The article goes on to suggest that it would require some $ 200 billion every quarter from central banks’ “nothing for something” to keep global risk markets from falling apart.

One of the analyst quoted in the report speculated that a 10% decline in US stocks will prompt the FED to a fourth round of Quantitative Easing.

This shows how mainstream experts and mainstream media has come to believe of the invincibility of central bankers to manipulate markets to ascend perpetually without consequences

Aside from the verbal support provided by several central bank personalities[20] as the Fed’s John Williams and James Bullard, ECB’s Benoit Coeure and Bank of England’s Andrew Haldrane at the end of last week.

It was the ECB which revived the QE last week with covered bonds. Unfortunately, the ECB’s actualization of the QE seems to have been insufficient as Europe’s markets exhibited signs of pressures anew[21].

So the following day rumors flew that the ECB would be considering corporate bonds as part of the easing program. Markets went into bacchanalia again[22].


Almost every day during the last week required some verbal interventions by monetary authorities. 


And like Pavlov’s dogs (or World War Z zombies), markets conditioned to stimulus went into a mindless panic buying spree

So the above actions confirm my theory of the politics of monetary easing policies: I recognize the problem of addiction but a withdrawal syndrome would even be more cataclysmic.

Yet the focus on withdrawal syndrome (short term fixes) will only aggravate the (long term) entropy from sustained substance abuse.

And perhaps in the realization that the results of the ECB bank stress may engender more market mayhem, the ECB confirms as of this writing of the 25 banks that failed in the stress tests for banks mostly in Cyprus Greece and Italy but has downplayed its impact noting that “banks' capital holes had since chiefly been plugged and that only 10 billion euros remained to be raised.”[23]

So this supposedly good news may reverse Europe’s Friday decline.

But the ECBs proposed buying programs has technical and legal hitches.



The chart above from Citi Research published by Zero Hedge reveals of the limitations of the potential purchases of covered bonds, Asset Back Securities (ABS) and even corporate bonds potential purchases by the ECB.

The Reuters quotes Rabobank estimates of ECB purchases of covered bonds at 100 billion euros and a tenth of ABS, whereas a Reuters’ survey shows that economists expect 250 billion of purchases. 

Excluding short maturities foreign currency issues and junk ratings only 700 billion to 1.1 trillion euros of corporate bonds could be considered as eligible for ECB purchases but many expect that the ECB’s prospective purchases “would be very much smaller”[24]

Even during the last covered bonds buying program in 2011-12, the ECB failed to meet its target according to the Wall Street Journal.

The point of the above is that unless the ECB decides to throw in sovereign bonds in the cauldron of asset purchases, the much hoped for expansion of ECB’s balance sheets by 1 trillion+ euros may unlikely be met.

But there are legal impediments for direct purchases by the ECB on sovereign bonds. 

Article 104 of The Maastricht Treaty, the treaty that created the euro states that
1. Overdraft facilities or any other type of credit facility with the ECB or with the central banks of the Member States (hereinafter referred to as ‘national central banks’) in favour of Community institutions or bodies, central governments, regional, local or other public authorities, other bodies governed by public law, or public undertakings of Member States shall be prohibited, as shall the purchase directly from them by the ECB or national central banks of debt instruments.
Yet the ECB has previously defied those rules, and as of 18 June 2012, according to the Wikipedia.org, the ECB in total had spent €212.1bn (equal to 2.2% of the Eurozone GDP) for bond purchases covering outright debt, as part of its SMP running since May 2010

The political roadblock lies from the resistance by many Germans to the ECB programs. This month Germans opponents to the ECB’s project which included a lawmaker charged before Europe’s highest court “that the ECB’s Outright Monetary Transactions program violates an EU treaty, which sets controlling inflation as the ECB’s primary goal”[25].

Last week, lawmaker members of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative party excoriated the ECB for floating hints to include corporate bonds in the recently revived QE reports the Reuters

The ECB has been swiftly losing its support with the German government notes another report from Reuters. Aside from the breakdown in the relationship with Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, a full-blown government bond buying by the ECB, may further ignite the already growing new anti-euro party, the Alternative for Germany (AfD).

There is no free lunch even for the ECB. Germany’s domestic politics will function as natural constraint to Merkel’s accommodation of ECB’s Draghi. That’s aside from the court case filed before the European Court of Justice. 

Should the ECB lose Germany’s total support, then perhaps all hell may break loose in the EU.

The tussle has not just between Germany and ECB. Even the UK has its own non central bank beef with the EU. The UK government refuses to increase its funding of EU institutions in Brussels. The current squabble over UK’s EU financing reports the Irish Times has the potential to shift UK public opinion toward quitting the 28-nation bloc.

Risk ON for asset markets from ECB’s myriad promises of other forms of easing may continue but current developments suggest that such joy ride may be for a short time only.






[4] John Maynard Keynes 7. The Consequences to the Banks of the Collapse of Money Values (Aug. 1931) ESSAYS IN PERSUASION Gutenberg.ca




[8] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Monetary Board Keeps Policy Rates Unchanged October 23, 2014

[9] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas September Inflation Slows Down to 4.4 Percent October 8, 2014



[12] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas MB Increases Minimum Capital Level Requirement for All Banks October 20, 2014

[13] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas MB Issues Framework for Systemic Domestic Banks October 21, 2014

[14] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas MB Approves Enhanced Regulations on Credit Risk Management October 20, 2014


[16] Michael McLeay, Amar Radia and Ryland Thomas of the Bank’s Monetary Analysis Directorate Money creation in the modern economy Quarterly Bulletin Q1 2014









[25] Wall Street Journal Europe’s Highest Court Hears Clash on ECB Policy October 14 2014

Friday, October 24, 2014

Dark Clouds for America’s Blue Chips? NO Worry, Stock Buybacks Saves the Day

Before last night’s third series of central banking inspired melt-UP in the US-European stock markets, the Wall Street Journal presented “Clouds Darken for America’s Blue-Chip Stocks” which noted that “A third of the companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average have posted shrinking or flat revenue over the past 12 months, according to data from S&P Capital IQ. Revenue growth for nearly half the industrials didn’t outpace the U.S. inflation rate of 1.7%.”

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But the Wall Street Journal forgot one very important dynamic in the present environment: today’s Fed inspired easing has led to debt financed corporate buybacks—thus the embellishing earnings!

ONE-thirds of the gains in the Dow Jones Industrials last night were supposedly led by Caterpillar and 3M. Notes the Marketwatch.com

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Caterpillar and 3M indeed soared by 4.97% and 4.39% respectively. 16 issues of the Dow Industrial components rose by over 1% while only 4 issues declined based on the quotes from netdania.com
 
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Reason? Because both issues supposedly exceeded analysts estimates, according to this Bloomberg report

For the consensus, quality of earnings don't seem to matter.

For instance, sluggish sales for Caterpillar? No problem. Buybacks has saved the day!

The Zero Hedge quotes Caterpillar (bold mine): “So far this year, we've returned value to our stockholders by repurchasing $4.2 billion of Caterpillar stock and raising our quarterly dividend by 17 percent

Buybacks has recently been instrumental in inflating the US stock market bubble.

The Bloomberg recently noted that 95% of profits from S&P companies have ended up on Buybacks and dividends: “Companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index really love their shareholders. Maybe too much. They’re poised to spend $914 billion on share buybacks and dividends this year, or about 95 percent of earnings, data compiled by Bloomberg and S&P Dow Jones Indices show. Money returned to stock owners exceeded profits in the first quarter and may again in the third. The proportion of cash flow used for repurchases has almost doubled over the last decade while it’s slipped for capital investments, according to Jonathan Glionna, head of U.S. equity strategy research at Barclays Plc.”

So instead of capital expenditures, profits or even debt has been used to pad up earnings. 

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The above table from Wall Street Journal Money Beat shows of S&P’s 20 biggest companies that have engaged in buybacks. 3M is in the top 20 (red rectangle)

So without capex how will growth in corporate earnings or even in the macroeconomic environment be attained?

Buybacks are nothing more than financial engineering that has vicious side effects on corporate balance sheets. As analyst David Stockman in his examination of the intense buyback resorted by IBM explains at his website
Those munificently rising stock prices and options cash-outs owe much to the Fed’s campaign to suppress interest rates and fuel stock market based “wealth effects”. Yet as the case of IBM so vividly demonstrates, the CEOs are doing their part, too. They have become full-time financial engineers who use the Fed’s flood of liquidity, cheap debt and soaring stock prices to perform a giant strip-mining operation on their own companies.  That is, through endless stock buybacks and M&A maneuvers they create the appearance of “growth” while actually liquidating the balance sheet equity and future asset base on which legitimate earnings growth depends.
Using much of retained earnings for buybacks essentially reduces opportunities to grow earnings generically when investment opportunities emerges. Even worse, debt financed buybacks frontloads payback to shareholders in current terms at the expense of the future. Aside from the opportunity cost of investments, debt servicing costs will be a future burden.


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In addition, rampant buybacks typically occur during market tops, as hedge fund manager John Hussman recently pointed out: (bold mine)
Buybacks are not a return of capital to shareholders – they are partly a leveraged speculation on shareholder’s behalf, partly a strategy to enhance per-share earnings by reducing share count, and partly a way to reduce the dilution from stock-based compensation to corporate insiders. Moreover, repurchases move in tandem with corporate debt issuance, which is another way of saying that the history of stock buybacks is one of companies using debt to buy their stock at overvalued prices.
Fed policies have transmogrified publicly listed US companies into casinos. Such diversion of resources to unproductive uses will have nasty unintended consequences for both corporate earnings and for the US economy.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Quote of the Day: U.S. government knew about the Ebola outbreak but didn’t warn the public

The U.S. government knew about the outbreak in advance, but didn’t warn the public

It’s now clear that the U.S. government has long known this outbreak was coming but did nothing to warn the public.

In early September, the government sought to purchase 160,000 Ebola hazmat suits from a U.S. supplier. Furthermore, according to this report on SHTFplan.com, “Disaster Assistance Response Teams were told to prepare to be activated in the month of October.”

Don’t you find it strange that while the government itself was gearing up for an October disaster, the public wasn’t told a thing about any of this?
(bold original) 

This is from former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal, Paul Craig Roberts at the lewrockwell.com

For those interested to read more on the politics of ebola here is an interesting article from Timothy Alexander Guzman at the Global Research: U.S. is Responsible for the Ebola Outbreak in West Africa: Liberian Scientist

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Phisix: Another Striking (Low Volume) Marking the Close Day!

Just awhile ago I wrote
"Ever since, "marking the close" has become a frequent, if not a regular occurrence…The incentives for such actions suggests of non-profit activities, which implies activities by non-profit symbol conscious participant/s."
Well it didn’t take so long for “marking the close" to reappear to prove this point.
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Today signifies another fantastic massaging of the Philippine equity benchmark, the Phisix.

Some entities has been so desperate as to manage the index price levels in order to attain certain target levels, as I recently wrote:  
"Bulls are by nature territorial. Having lost their grip on the 7,000 levels during the past few days which has apparently wounded the their ego may have prompted for today’s vicious and desperate thrust to retake the said threshold levels. Domestic bulls have essentially dismissed risks in order to attain a superficial goal."
The left intraday chart, from technistock.net, exhibits the amazingly low volume from which the supposed “bullishness” has been anchored from, while the right chart, from colfinancial.com, reveals of the degree of the “pump”—54.5% of today’s relatively low volume gains emanated the “marking the close” pump!

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Today’s end of the session massaging of the Phisix have been a mainly a three sector affair. The bulk of the activities are revealed by the gains from mainly the property and financial sector. The holding sector has been the third, but has been less conspicuous because the rally came from what seems as early losses (table from the PSE. intraday charts from colfinancials)

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Incidentally, the three sector “pump” has been concentrated to companies owned by the Ayalas, Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), Ayala Corp (AC) and Ayala Land (ALI), charts arranged from left to right.

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The 3 Ayala companies has a combined market cap weight of 19.17% as of today’s close. Yet only two of the three companies has been among the top 20 traded for the day. The gains of the 2 of the 3 has been remarkable; ALI +4.07%, AC +1.16% and BPI +6.14% (not in table).

While Ayala owned telecom Globe has been up 2.32%, today's advances hasn’t been anomalous as its peers.

Yet based on PE ratios from PSE’s quote BPI has a PE ratio of 19.33 as of October 21st, ALI 34.1 and AC 34.1. All three have been trading at absurdly expensive levels. 

Yet today’s actions seem to suggest these prices will soar to the firmament soon with again little appreciation of risks!

I would like to re-quote the BSP governor who in recent speeches has apparently exhibited heightened signs of anxiousness with the current marketplace actions. Yet the BSP governor hasn’t just saying they (the BSP) has been doing, the BSP moved seven times in the last 6 months! (This week the BSP acted again!!!) 

From last August(bold original from early post)
So in a period of low volatility such as what we have been experiencing, practice the discipline of setting limits. This discipline will not only help you to avoid the pitfalls of “chasing the market”.
Why the need to manage the index by session end pumps which represents “chasing the market”?

the BSP remains cognizant that keeping rates low for too long could result in mis-appreciation of risks in certain segments of the market, including the real estate sector and the stock market as markets search for yield.
Pumping up overpriced issues and managing price levels of overvalued securities signify as mis-appreciation of risks--to the said sectors.

The lesson being: The obverse side of every mania (aside from market manipulations) is a crash.

Quote of the Day: The unknown forces in the market these days—the Plunge Protection Team

From John Crudele of the New York Post:
But let me explain about the unknown forces in the market these days. Call it by a nickname — the Plunge Protection Team. Or call it the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets, the official name given to the group when it was formed by President Ronald Reagan after the market turbulence of 1989.

These forces may be working from a script in the “Doomsday Book,” which the US government recently fought to keep secret when it was brought up last week during the AIG trial in Washington.

Here’s the bottom line: Someone tried to rescue the market last Wednesday. And it’s becoming a regular occurrence.

The details of last Wednesday morning are these: At the same time the Dow was off 350 points, the S&P index was down 43.80 points, That was an enormous decline in just 11 minutes of trading and it was an indication that Wall Street was not having a good day.

Then, someone (or something) started buying S&P futures contracts en masse. Twenty-one minutes later, the S&P index had regained 30 of those lost points and was back at 1,861.

Maybe you’ll believe that there was some manipulation going on if you knew that a guy named Robert Heller, who was a member of the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors until 1989, proposed just such a rigging as soon as he left the Fed.

Look it up. Oct. 27, 1989, Wall Street Journal. Headline: “Have Fed Support Stock Market, Too.” By Robert Heller, who had just left the Fed to head up the credit card company Visa.

“It would be inappropriate for the government or the central bank to buy or sell IBM or General Motors shares,” Heller wrote. “Instead, the Fed could buy the broad market composites in the futures market.”

In case you don’t know the lingo, Heller is proposing that the Fed or government purchase stock futures contracts that track — and can influence — the major indices.

These contracts are cheap and a government could turn the whole stock market around quickly — but probably not permanently.

Wow! Doesn’t that seem a lot like what happened Wednesday at 9:41 a.m., when S&P futures contracts were suddenly and mysteriously scooped up?

Let me allow Heller to finish his thought because it’s important to anyone who believes in free and fair markets.

“The Fed’s stock-market role ought not to be very ambitious. It should seek only to maintain the functioning of the markets — not to prop the Dow Jones or the New York Stock Exchange averages at a particular level,” he continued.

But times change and so does thinking. In recent weeks, we’ve discovered that the CME Group, the exchange in Chicago, has an incentive program under which foreign central banks could buy stock market derivatives like the S&P contracts at a discount.

It’s not that these foreign banks need a break on the price of their trading. But it does show that there is a back-door way — through foreign emissaries — for the Fed and the US government to prop up stocks like Heller suggested, and — maybe — not get caught.
It's no secret that governments have been bolstering stock markets subtly or openly. 


As I have recently reported, a study by a central bank watchdog revealed that global central banks has had $29 trillion worth of equity exposures since 2009 which has contributed to "overheated asset prices", according to the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (Omfif) last June. 

At the height of the taper tantrum last year, the Philippine government via her government public pension fund talked of implicit support at the 5,500 level. Ever since, "marking the close" has become a frequent, if not a regular occurrence. During the global selloff a week ago, a bizarre event took hold, a one day panic buying on three issues catapulted the Philippine Phisix to outperform as the world stock markets shuddered. The incentives for such actions suggests of non-profit activities, which implies activities by a non-profit symbol conscious participant/s.

While there have been little direct evidence that the US government's plunge protection team has been indeed been part of the manipulation of stock markets, the facts--the sudden symphony by governments towards more interventions--Fed's Williams and Bullard, ECB's Couere utterance of 'S-T-I-M-U-L-U-S', the ECB's abrupt engagement of covered bonds and ABS, the supposed increased allocation of Japan's public pension funds in the stock markets--indicates of the desire by various governments to influence stock market prices.

As you will observe, stock markets have become propaganda tools for the governments

Rumors of ECB Expanded QE on Corporate Bonds Sends Global Stocks into a Buying Orgy

It’s been a spectacular rollercoaster ride!

Ever since the recent tremors, the FED and the ECB has been assiduously trying to “jawbone” the stock markets.

The ECB has made good their claim that they will “start buying assets within days”; they have unleashed their version of “covered bonds-asset backed security” based QE a day ago. But since their stock markets showed signs of renewed stress or may have signaled that this has not been enough, the ECB appears to accommodate the steroid yearning markets by feeding them with even more promises of elixir from an expanded QE.  

Such accommodation has been made through the floating of a trial balloon where the ECB’s QE may be expanded to include corporate bonds. 

The UK’s Reuters served as their conduit for massaging of the public’s expectations (bold mine)
The European Central Bank is considering buying corporate bonds on the secondary market and may decide on the matter as soon as December with a view to begin buying early next year, several sources familiar with the situation told Reuters.

The ECB has already carried out work on such purchases, which would widen out the private-sector asset-buying programme it began on Monday - stimulus it is deploying to try to foster lending to businesses and thereby support the euro zone economy.

"The pressure in this direction is high," said one person familiar with the work inside the ECB, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Asked about the possibility of making such purchases, an ECB spokesman said: "The Governing Council has taken no such decision."

The ECB's policymaking Governing Council could discuss the possibility of making such purchases at its December meeting, two of the four sources Reuters spoke to said. All four said such plans were being discussed.

The policymakers could decide at the December meeting to go ahead with the purchases, but such a step is not certain. Should the Council decide in December to proceed, the purchases on the secondary market could begin in the first quarter of 2015, one of the sources said.
From here the US and European stocks went into a manic bid…

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European stocks having another melt UP.

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So as with US benchmarks. (tables from Bloomberg.com)

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Here is the intraday chart of the S&P and Nasdaq (chart from Zero Hedge)

Stock markets of Europe and the US virtually ignored the response by the Financial Times in downplaying the rumors
The European Central Bank has not yet put the issue of buying corporate bonds on the agenda for its December policy meeting, according to two people familiar with the matter…

While corporate bond purchases are an option that policy makers have discussed in recent months, one of the people familiar with the matter said preparations for buying the debt have not intensified in recent weeks.

However, the person said corporate bond purchases are being considered, along with other ideas, as a possible means to extend the ECB's programme of private sector asset purchases - which at the moment are confined to asset-backed securities and covered bonds - should inflation and growth in the eurozone continue to disappoint.
Stock markets are about earnings and growth? Hardly. They have mutated to become heavily dependent on the political economy of easy money. They have been made as policy tools for political agenda for governments.

Nonetheless with corporate bond purchases “being considered” as part of the program, this would seem like the ringing of the stimulus bells for the Pavlovian steroid starved markets.

As a side note, I posted the other day of the fabulous recovery by Japan’s equity benchmark the Nikkei which regained four fifth of last week’s meltdown or losses in a day. This again has been partly because of promises by Japan's pension fund to reallocate more money to domestic stocks.

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Yesterday the Nikkei erased half of the startling one day gain. 

As of this writing the Nikkei’s up over 1.5%.  

Fantastic volatility everywhere

Be reminded, sharp volatility are symptoms of highly unstable markets.

It’s getting more interesting by the day…

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

ECB Embarks on QE, European Stocks Fall

The recent global stock market tremors has prompted the ECB to make good their declaration last week that they would “start buying assets within days

From the Bloomberg:
The European Central Bank bought covered bonds for the first time since President Mario Draghi unveiled an asset purchase program last month.

The ECB acquired short-dated French notes from Societe Generale SA (GLE) and BNP Paribas SA as well as Spanish securities from other lenders, according to two people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified because the information is private. Draghi said he intends to expand the bank’s balance sheet by as much as 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) to stave off deflation in the euro area…

The 250-year-old covered bond market helps fund Europe’s mortgage industry and the notes have historically been attractive to investors because they’re guaranteed by the issuer and backed by a pool of assets. Europe’s market for covered bonds shrank for the first time in at least a decade last year and will decline further in 2014 and 2015, according to the European Covered Bond Council.

Covered-bond purchases are the latest addition to the ECB’s medley of unconventional tools that also includes targeted long-term loans to banks and a negative deposit rate. The central bank will also start buying asset-backed securities before the end of the year.
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European stock markets apparently “sold on news” or has been disappointed or could be both. 

Nonetheless the region’s stock market response to the initiation of ECB’s QE has been to shave off a sizeable share of Friday’s pump.

This implies that last week’s collapse of the European stock markets remains a significant force which bulls and policymakers have yet to overcome.

Interesting.

Why US banks are Vulnerable

Explains Simon Black of the Sovereign Man (bold original)
What banks are stockpiling these days are US government bonds, and they’re not doing this casually, they’re going nuts for them.

In just the last month alone American banks increased their holdings of US treasuries by $54 billion, to a record $1.99 trillion.

Citigroup, for example, held $103.8 billion worth of bonds at the end of June, up 19% from the end of last year.

This is like preparing for an earthquake by running out and buying whole new sets of porcelain dishes and glass vases.

All it’s going to do is make things more dangerous, and even if you somehow make it through the disaster, you have a million more shards to clean up.

With government bonds you are guaranteed to lose both in the short-term and the long-term. Bonds keep you consistently behind inflation (even the deceptively named TIPS—Treasury Inflation Protected Securities), so the value of your savings is slowly being chipped away.

But that’s nothing compared to the long-term threats of the US government not being able to repay the loans.

Facing $127 trillion in unfunded liabilities – which is nearly double 2012’s total global output – and with no inclination to reduce those numbers at all, at this point disaster for the US is entirely unavoidable.

Never before in history has a government stretched itself so thin and accumulated anywhere close to this amount of debt.

So when the day comes, it won’t be a minor rumble. It will be completely off the Richter scale.

These facts about the US government are in no way secret. Every bank out there knows it, yet they keep piling in.

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Chart from Zero Hedge

Japan's Nikkei Flies 3.98% Yesterday as PM Abe’s Two Ministers Resigns

As expected, Friday’s US-Europe pump apparently did spill over to Asia. But the gains have been much unimpressive for the region except for Japan’s Nikkei. Japan's key equity bellwether recovered four fifth of last week’s losses in just one day!

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From collapse to melt up. Yet despite yesterday’s fabulous 3.98% surge, the Nikkei remains down by 7% from the recent highs.

The Japanese government made sure that the US-Europe pump had a domestic component.

Remember Japan’s government hasn’t been coy in lending support to her stock markets. Stock markets, as I have been saying here, have become propaganda tools for governments—where higher stock market are portrayed as G-R-O-W-T-H so as to gain popular (approval rating) support.

As for stock market support, Japanese traders have noted of the “1% rule” where the Bank of Japan (BOJ) intervenes each time the Nikkei falls 1% and below by buying the ETFs of the index and or individual stocks. 

The BOJ’s serial interventions has led to a record accumulation of 7 trillion yen in stocks and ETFs last August. Nonetheless record intervention appears to falter as the Nikkei has been on a decline with the exception of yesterday

And now for yesterday’s domestic icing on the cake pump; from Bloomberg:
Japanese shares surged, with the Topix (TPX) index climbing the most in more than a year, after a rebound in global equities and a report the nation’s pension fund will boost domestic stock holdings…

Japan’s $1.2 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund will increase its allocation target for local shares to about 25 percent from 12 percent, the Nikkei newspaper reported without attribution. GPIF will also boost its holdings of foreign bonds and stocks to about a combined 30 percent from 23 percent, while reducing domestic debt to the 40 percent level from 60 percent, the Nikkei said Oct. 18.
Ah once again pension fund to be used in support of stocks. Yet if the "pump" morphs into a "dump" then the "greater fool" would be the significant population of Japan’s elderly (centenarians at record highs) who will agonize from either pension shortfall or a collapse in purchasing power (as BoJ monetizes welfare deficits). 

Sad to see governments manipulate stocks which will only suffer the population (here welfare recipients) through boom bust cycles.

Oh, by the way, the don’t worry be happy pump comes as Abe’s two cabinet members resigned yesterday.

From the Washington Post: (bold mine)
Two female Japanese cabinet ministers, appointed last month as part of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s plan to let women “shine,” resigned their posts Monday amid allegations of financial impropriety.

Their departures undermine Abe’s efforts to lead by example when it comes to promoting working women, and they cast a dark cloud over his administration at a difficult time. The prime minister’s “Abenomics” plan to revive the economy looks to be fizzling out, and he must decide in the next few months whether to press ahead with a hugely unpopular rise in the consumption tax.

“I apologize to all citizens for what happened,” Abe told reporters outside his office Monday afternoon as Trade and Industry Minister Yuko Obuchi and Justice Minister Midori Matsushima resigned within hours of each other.
See “Difficult time” and the “economy looks to be fizzling out” are really good signs for a pump, right? Well no problem, regardless of "fundamentals", stocks are bound to rise forever.

And to see what has caused the resignation of the two ministers, again from the Wapo
The first minister to fall on Monday was Obuchi, a 40-year-old mother of two young children and daughter of a former prime minister, who was widely touted as potentially “Japan’s first female prime minister.” Abe last month promoted her to lead the powerful Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), making her one of five women in the newly reshuffled cabinet…

Only six weeks after she was promoted to the cabinet, reports surfaced that her political funds report for 2012, the year of the last general election, did not include revenue and spending on theater tickets for her backers, organized by her support group. There was a gap of about $424,000 in her accounts.

Another support group bought $35,000 worth of goods from businesses run by Obuchi’s sister and brother-in-law, the public broadcaster NHK reported, in violation of political funding laws…

Only a few hours later, Matsushima also submitted her resignation. Shehad been accused of breaking political campaign laws for distributing paper fans during summer festivals.
Hmmm using public office for personal gains...sounds very much like the public choice theory to me.