Monday, November 10, 2014

Phisix: Weakening Asian Currencies to Weigh on Region’s Risk Assets

A principle, then, is the essence of reality.  To try to create our own reality is both futile and destructive.  You certainly have the right to go on believing whatever you want to believe, but reality doesn’t care about your wants or beliefs. –Robert Ringer

In this issue:

Phisix: Weakening Asian Currencies to Weigh on Region’s Risk Assets
-As Asian Currencies Tumble; Asian Equities Diverge from Risk ON
-Macau’s Casinos: Crashing Revenues Reinforces Bear Markets: PBoC’s Quasi QE
-The Firming US Dollar Pressures Oil Producing Nations
-Has ECB Draghi’s Magic Faded? Will Catalonia Dismember the EU?
-Storm Forming in South Korean Financial Assets?
-Will the Malaysian Ringgit Pop the Credit Bubble?
-Phisix: More Index Massaging; The Peso Should Weaken

Phisix: Weakening Asian Currencies to Weigh on Region’s Risk Assets

Last week, I propounded that the Bank of Japan’s shock and awe will imply for weak Asian currencies, where I asked[1]: Will Friday’s collapse of the yen percolate into ASEAN currencies overtime?

As Asian Currencies Tumble; Asian Equities Diverge from Risk ON

Interestingly, the market’s response seems to affirm my thesis sooner rather than later. Asian currencies crumbled in the wake of the firming US dollar across the region.

And as the Japanese yen took another week of shellacking to plunge by 2%, many Asian currencies took it to the chin, the South Korean won crashed 2.3%, the Malaysian ringgit dived 1.72%, the Indonesian rupiah plummeted .77%, Taiwan dollar tumbled .63% and the Thailand baht foundered by .57%. Even the Australian dollar collapsed 1.8% this week, now seemingly fast approaching the June 2010 lows. Meanwhile the Philippine peso lost only .33%.

Unlike Australian stocks which glossed over the cascading regional currencies where the S&P ASX 500 posted a modest .41% gains this week, Asian stocks have largely been shaky.

The pressure in Asian currencies seems to have been reflected on their respective equity markets (see orange rectangles): the Indonesian JCI fumbled 2.01%, the Malaysian KLCI floundered 1.67%, the South Korea’s KOSPI skidded 1.25%, Taiwan’s TWSE dropped .69%, Thailand’s SET fell .37 while the Philippine Phisix having earlier boosted by almost daily massaging of the index lost .14%.

So record US stocks and soaring Japanese equities have hardly been shared by most of Asia with the exception of New Zealand’s NZ50 and India’s Sensex both at record highs while Australia’s S&P ASX 500 just 1.9% off the record highs.

Despite intermittent rallies, Asian currencies should be expected to weaken further.

First of all, BoJ’s and the ECB’s recent quantitative easing programs are likely to attenuate their respective currencies over the interim. Given the substantial weighting by the euro (57.6%) and the Japanese yen (13.6%) alone, in the basket of the US dollar index (DXY), the euro and the yen combined at 71.2% share would signify as enough force to lift the US dollar index.

I failed to add last week that the Swedish central bank, the Riksbank, added to the atmosphere of central banks flooding the world with stimulus by pushing official interest rates to ZERO[2]. The Swedish Krone (SEK) was down by about 2% this week, the SEK constitutes 4.2% share of the US dollar index.

Why does it seem that the world is in a crisis with global central banks seemingly in a state of panic to flush the system with money?

Macau’s Casinos: Crashing Revenues Reinforces Bear Markets: PBoC’s Quasi QE



In the midst of October, I noted that crashes have become a real-time real dynamic. Well the above chart hasn’t been about a stock market crash, instead the above manifests of Macau’s gambling revenues which have been steeply falling since the highs of February 2014 (red arrow) and where in October, gambling revenues has virtually collapsed!!!

Data from Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau (DICJ) reveals of last October’s year on year revenue changes has crashed by 23.2%!

Let us hear it from mainstream news how Macau’s casino stocks responded to the news of the earnings collapse, from Marketwatch[3]: Gambling revenue in the Chinese territory fell 23% in October from the same month last year to 28 billion patacas ($3.51 billion), government data showed Tuesday. It was the worst monthly decline ever recorded, eclipsing a 17% year-over-year drop in January 2009. The sharp fall was no surprise. Analysts had expected revenue to fall by at least 20%, and industry executives have been blunt about the grim state of affairs. Still, stocks didn't react well to the news. Shares of Las Vegas Sands Corp. unit Sands China Ltd., trading higher before the data was released, fell into negative territory to close with a 3.3% loss. Galaxy Entertainment Group Ltd. slumped 2.8%, and Wynn Macau Ltd. fell 3.4% compared with the benchmark Hang Seng Index's 0.3% drop.

It’s not just the monthly earnings, but accumulated gross earnings have also been rapidly deteriorating.

The charts of Macau’s premier casinos can be seen by pressing on their respective links: MGM China Holdings (HK:2282), Galaxy Entertainment Group (HK:27), Melco Crown Entertainment (HK: 6883), Sands China Ltd. (HK: 1928), Wynn Macau Ltd. (HK: 1128) and SJM Holdings Ltd. (HK:880) owner of Grand Lisboa.

While I have pointed out[4] in the past of the reasons to Macau’s casino dilemma—1) Chinese government crackdown on illegal fund transfers and potential restrictions on the mobility of Chinese gamblers 2) Overcapacity 3) Chinese government clampdown on corruption 4) Overvalued stocks. 5) Slowing Chinese economic growth—I believe that the next focal point will be credit risks from the earnings collapse.

Again from May 2014[5]:
The focus will swing to how these expansions have been financed. If they have been financed by debt then falling revenues in the wake of large debt burden will amplify the profit margin squeeze. Such would likely to raise their respective credit risks.
Stocks of Singapore’s Casino Genting (G.13 SI) have hardly improved since I wrote about the Macau contagion[6]. Meanwhile stocks of US gambling industry, as benchmarked by the Dow Jones Gambling Index, have been in consolidation and seem to have entirely missed the record run of her peers.

Meanwhile, Philippine equity markets have been euphoric about the outperformance of Macau’s domestic competitor for having to register a “massive” earnings “turnaround” during the 9 months this year[7]

Yet should the domestic banking system’s credit growth materially slow, which should reflect on G-R-O-W-T-H that should be compounded by the “massive” slowdown in demand for casinos in Asia, then the supposed massive earnings turnaround will most likely experience a volte face.

After all, there is such a thing called as “beginner’s luck” in gambling.

As one can see from Macau’s recent experience—40% growth can morph into a 23.2% crash in a flash or in just EIGHT months!

As I warned back in 2013 of the credit fueled supply side expansion of domestic casino industry[8]:
At the end of the day, basic economic logic says that all these yield chasing activities (whether the shopping mall, casino, housing and vertical projects) will end badly.
Aside from overcapacity, the writing on the wall for plunging Macau revenues has been the sharply slowing Chinese economy, despite what the Chinese government statistics suggests.

Car sales have also been notably weakening which has led to downgrades on sales forecasts by several auto manufacturers. From the Economist[9]: Several major auto manufacturers, including Honda and Nissan, are downgrading their Chinese sales growth forecasts for this year, while General Motors (GM) recently posted its slowest monthly pace of sales growth in China for over a year and a half…During 2014, growth rates have slowed again, however. During the first nine months of this year, China's total vehicle sales rose by just 7% year on year, with September's growth at just 2.5%. With the commercial vehicle market already in decline, passenger car sales were slightly stronger, with nine-month growth at 10.4%. But September's growth in car sales was just 6.4%, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM).

The deepening property slump in China has been spilling over to the broader economy.

Thus a significant economic slowdown in China would transmit into a meaningful downturn in external trade and investments given Asia’s deep economic and financial linkages with China[10].

Subsequently this implies that an Asian economic decline would hardly be favorable for Asian currencies.

It is interesting to note that China’s central bank the People’s bank of China (PBoC) has announced last week that they have embarked on selective easing measures by injecting 769.5 billion yuan (US $126 billion) to the banking system over the last two months: 500 billion yuan in September and 269.5 billion in October

Notes the Taipei Times[11]: The facility is the latest unconventional liquidity tool as the Chinese central bank joins the European Central Bank on a path of easing, even as the US begins the shift to a more normal monetary policy.

Again in the face of record stocks, why does it seem that the world is in a crisis with global central banks seemingly in a state of panic to inundate the system with money?

The Firming US Dollar Pressures Oil Producing Nations


The downturn in Chinese-emerging market growth story has likewise been manifested in the collapse of commodity prices.

Apparently we are witnessing what I have postulated as the periphery to the core dynamics where EM growth should impact developed market growth from which will develop a feedback loop, thereby both EM and DM having to drag each other until the world enters a recession.

As I wrote last February[12],
Even when the exposure would seem negligible, if the adverse impact of emerging markets to the US and developed economies won’t be offset by growth (exports, bank assets and corporate profits) in developed nations or in frontier nations, then there will be a drag on the growth of developed economies, which would hardly be inconsequential. Why? Because the feedback loop from the sizeable developed economies will magnify on the downside trajectory of emerging market growth which again will ricochet back to developed economies and so forth. Such feedback mechanism is the essence of periphery-to-core dynamics which shows how economic and financial pathologies, like biological contemporaries, operate at the margins or by stages.
The reason for this contagion dynamic has been based on the unraveling of similar bubble policies.

Well crashing stock markets appear to be back into limelight.

The soaring US dollar in the face of crashing oil prices has apparently incited Nigeria’s stock market to tailspin as the nation’s central bank reportedly[13] intervened frantically to cushion the currency, the naira, from a meltdown. The Nigerian Stock Exchange swiftly entered into a bear market following last week’s harrowing 11.03% crash (left window)!!!

The meltdown in Nigerian currency and stocks has reportedly diffused into Kenya, where both currency, the shilling, and equity markets (Nairobi-20) came under selling strain. The Nigerian naira has been under pressure concomitant to rallying US dollar index last July, whereas the Kenyan shilling has been on a decline from the start of the year. The strengthening US dollar appears to be gnawing at the foundations of the real economy.

It’s also interesting to observe of the fantastic volatility being encountered by stock markets of the major OPEC oil producers, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). 

Financial tremors in the DM violently shook the equity markets of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Oman and Qatar in mid-October. But the ECB’s intervention sparked a rally to reduce the early stock market carnage.

With the ECB QE’s being two weeks old, it appears that the soothing effect may have faded, so RISK OFF seems to have reappeared in GCC stocks. Saudi’s Tadawul plunged 3.84% this week. Misery loves company, the UAEs DFM general sank 3.06% while Kuwait’s SE dropped 3.08%.

During the selloff I questioned[14] on the reported underpricing ‘predatory’ strategy adapted by the political leadership Saudi Arabia designed to gain market share or suppress competitors:
Saudi Arabia has lately stated that they will protect their oil market share. What if those affected oil welfare deficit governments resist? What if Russia or any of Saudi’s chief adversaries, say Iran, for instance finance rogue groups within Saudi to sabotage the latter’s pipelines?
Media reported last week that an oil pipeline in Saudi Arabia caught fire, where Saudi Aramco authorities denied of the involvement of terrorist. Curiously Saudi Authorities swooped down on militants based on “security raids across the Kingdom”[15]. Yesterday Saudi authorities nabbed 26. This has reportedly expanded to 33 as of this writing.

Has ECB Draghi’s Magic Faded? Will Catalonia Dismember the EU?

Also interestingly, ECB’s President Mario Draghi has been ostensibly jawboning EU’s financial markets in the face of a string of astonishingly negative data. I gave some example last Wednesday[16]: German Services PMI are down, Eurozone’s composite PMI are likewise negative, Europe’s PMI services also in red aside from a collapse in retail sales (Y-o-Y, M-o-M).

Let me add; French consumer spending (m-o-m) -.8% versus forecast -.3%, Italian Manufacturing PMI 49 versus forecast 50.6, Spanish unemployment change 79.2K versus 23.4k (!), German industrial production 1.4% versus 2.1%

So Mr. Draghi publicly announced that “We will also soon start to purchase asset-backed securities. The programs will last for at least two years”[17]. Mr. Draghi also squashed rumors of a division among the ECB’s governing council stating that he has “secured unanimous support” for ECBs programs[18]. Mr. Draghi assurances fired up the markets.

But despite the verbal support, European stocks as indicated above eventually succumbed to a quasi-Risk OFF to close the week mostly in the red.

While Greece’s Athens Index posted only .58% decline over the week, Friday’s shocking one day 5.38% crash more than erased early gains from the Draghi incited rallies. And even more, yields of Greece 10 year bonds resumed their ascent.

What makes this interesting is that ECB’s QE and verbal stimulus’ appears to be fading after only two weeks.

Has Draghi’s magic may been losing ground?

And to add to Mr. Draghi’s woes is that Catalonians, as of this writing, are voting to determine if they will secede from Spain. The independence referendum is being held outside the approval of the Spanish authorities[19].

Unlike the failed Scottish vote for independence where Scotland has mostly been a tax consumption economy[20], so in the fear of the loss of the welfare privileges, the elderly stampeded to cast a NO vote to independence[21], Catalonia has been the main contributor to the Spanish economy with nearly 19% of Spain’s GDP where her GDP per capita is higher than the European Union average (EU-27) according to the OECD[22].

In short Catalonians may be fighting to keep their share of production rather than satisfy Madrid’s political interests by redistributing the former’s resources to the latter’s welfare dependent supporters.

Thus should Catalonia’s independence become a reality, this will likely signify a big setback to the already struggling Spanish political economy.

I am not aware of the political agenda of the leaders of Catalonia, whether they will elect to join the EU and adapt the euro or join the EU and decide to have their own currency or operate independently from the EU.

Moreover an independence victory by Catalonia can set in motion or inspire a string of existing and active secession movements around Europe to ask for political recognition. Should this happen this would serve as the death knell for the centralization plans for the Brussels based bureaucracy.

So should the independence vote prevail, there will likely be huge political uncertainties that will dangle over the political economic domain of EU and of Mr. Draghi’s ECB.

Having said so, ECB’s magic will hardly work when political forces are becoming increasingly fragmented.

As one would note either from Africa-GCC to the Eurozone, there are not only substantial economic problems that has been surfacing, but political uncertainties and risks too.

The same political and economic uncertainties in the oil producing Emerging Markets and the EU will likely be transmitted to the world. And with greater prospects of uncertainty, King Dollar will likely attain temporary supremacy.

Storm Forming in South Korean Financial Assets?

With the global economy looking gloomier, Asian markets will become dependent on domestic developments. Unfortunately, external weakness will only magnify the vulnerabilities from Asia’s credit fueled economic growth model.

Take the meltdown in South Korea’s won.

The plight of the won began only in the first week of September. Based on Google Finance’s chart, the won has declined by a whopping 7.3% as of Friday’s close since early September.

Koreans have been heavily encumbered by debt. South Korea’s total debt to GDP based on 2011 has been at 314%. This is broken down 81% households, 107% non-financial corporations, 93% financial corporations and 33% government based on McKinsey Global Institute. As of Q4 2013 household debt has ballooned to 85.63% of GDP based on St. Louis Federal Reserve. Latest Bloomberg data shows household debt (excluding mortgage loans) at 501.3 won or a 4.3% increase from December 2013. Given the 3 quarter economic growth average at 3.53% this would imply household debt at now over 86% of GDP.

South Korea’s central bank, the Bank of Korea (BoK), cut interest rates twice in a span of three months this year. In July accompanied by the first interest rate cut, the South Korean government eased property rules in the face of record debt[23].

In apparent recognition of the risks from greater incidence of default, the South Korea government hopes to accommodate the very risky debt levels by easing property rules and by lowering debt to lower debt servicing burdens.

And when October’s global stock market convulsion occurred, this prompted the BoK for the second rate cut to 2%, the same record low rate when the BoK slashed rates as the global financial crisis unraveled in 2008. The second rate cut in the face of an asset turmoil simply exposes how South Korean authorities have become so sensitive to price changes of financial assets.

The actions of South Korean government reaffirm my theory of the politics of monetary easing policies: I recognize the problem of addiction but a withdrawal syndrome would even be more cataclysmic.

From the highs of late July, South Korea’s equity benchmark the KOSPI tumbled to lose 8.74% to the mid October lows, and since the Risk ON moment, the Korean benchmark has rallied by only 1.89% to reduce the October loss to a still 6.85%. This implies that should the next wave of downside volatility occur, Korean stocks may be headed for ‘lower lows’.

And since the BoK’s action has been ahead of the BoJ, this means that the South Korean government has not been after ‘export share’ of the global markets but about preventing an outburst of internal credit woes.

Unfortunately, the falling won exposes Korea’s externally based leverage. At an estimated $430.9 billion (2013) this would be about only 33% of the statistical GDP. But numbers can be deceiving. Any externally based debt problems may be transmitted internally through the chain links of debt especially today when South Korean finances looks highly fragile. One can simply read through the BoK’s action.

Additionally, the falling won should eventually extrapolate to higher inflation rates which may be reflected on higher rates. And won’s weakening last September appears to reflect on the two month reduction of South Korea’s record foreign exchange reserves.

Will the Malaysian Ringgit Pop the Credit Bubble?

The same dynamic can be said of the pronounced weakness of Malaysian currency the ringgit.

Curiously as noted before, Malaysia’s stocks has been one of outlier for having to escape the May-June 2013 Taper Tantrum unscathed, but not so with the ringgit.

Meanwhile, the ringgit has lost 6.34% from the late August lows.

As previously noted, Malaysia a credit bubble[24]. Malaysian overall debt comprises about 200% of her GDP with the largest share being household debt. Household debt has soared to 86% in 2013 from 80% in 2012. This should be larger today given the acceleration of loans to the private sector.

As a side note, I am no fan of debt to GDP ratio. Relying on such ratio can mislead. That’s because in the era of zero bound, statistical GDP has become dependent on debt. So in effect, the denominator (GDP), which depends on the numerator (numerator), may sterilize whatever risks there are from acquiring too much for as long as the cumulative debt produces G-R-O-W-T-H. Debt in statistics is seen in the quantitative aspect, but risks are qualitative.

Because households have been indulging in speculative buying of properties, the Malaysian government instituted curbs in November 2013[25]. I believe that Malaysia’s central bank, the Bank Negara Malaysia increased interest rates last July to compliment the property credit reins.

Recent reports suggest that Malaysia’s housing prices has begun to materially slow. There have also been reports of supply gluts which can be seen as half empty apartments. Aside from slowing sales, developers have been paring down sales forecasts[26].

So the once sizzling hot Malaysian housing has been cooling off. Since 2008, Malaysia’s housing prices has been rising at steadily until the Q3 2013. The slowdown in the housing market should eventually reflect on her statistical GDP. Additionally the decelerating sales and subsequently economic growth should extrapolate to higher credit risks especially for the marginal leveraged developers and households whose livelihoods have been dependent on Malaysia’s bubble industries.

With the housing downshift threatening ‘domestic demand’, the once hawkish BNM has seems to have gotten a cold feet by turning into a dove. The BNM reportedly dropped warnings of further rate hikes[27] (I expect the same reaction by the Philippine BSP)

Yet a sustained weakening of the ringgit is likely to expose on Malaysia’s external debt fragility which is likely to be transmitted to domestic financial system. I have no updated data now for the private sector exposure overseas. But even from Malaysian government external debt position, there has been a notable ballooning of liabilities.

In addition, entities like the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) which is a hybrid of a sovereign wealth fund and a private investment vehicle has acquired leveraged from which their operations can hardly cover interest payments. And as I noted last June[28], the Malaysian government has been borrowing based on contingent liabilities and off balance sheet budget, like the (1MDB), in order to circumvent or skirt government imposed debt cap. In short, overleveraging by both the private and public sectors renders Malaysia vulnerable to both external and internal triggers that could implode the system.

Meanwhile Malaysia’s equity bellwether the KLCI has reached a peak last July. From the record highs the KLSE fell by 6.6% during the October turmoil. The latest risk ON has reduced KLSE’s losses to only 3.6% which means more than half of the losses has been erased. The KLCI has been the first to hit record highs. Will the KLCI lead the ASEAN majors?

It’s interesting to see the developing interplay between external developments and internal structural frailties.

Nonetheless internal or domestic fragilities renders Asia vulnerable to capital flight which may either trigger or aggravate on the unwinding of domestic bubbles.

Phisix: More Index Massaging; The Peso Should Weaken

Despite closing with week with losses, the Phisix and the Peso has so far outperformed her peers.

The strength of the Phisix continues to derive from what I call the massaging of the index.

I defined the working mechanism previously as[29]
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.
Well Monday November 3 proceeded exactly as defined: afternoon delight which climaxed with a marking the close with relatively low volume.

On Tuesday the attempt towards the 7,400 faltered. There seems a resemblance when one looks at the 25 of September’s 7,400 with Tuesday’s botched maneuver: both opened the day strong but weakness ensued until the session end prevailed. In addition, volume was heavier during the selloff rather than the pump.

Wednesday’s November 7 marking the close came without momentum. The entire day saw the Phisix in the red, however by the close, 65% of the losses had been erased during the last minute. This is a shining example of index massaging via marking the close.

Thursday initially shared the same pattern with major afternoon delight push. Except that the scheme of stock market operators seems to have been frustrated by some parties who sold with volume. The Phisix still managed close higher but failed to achieve the 50 or 100 points target. 

On Friday, Thursday’s end session selling momentum carried over. Stock market operators were largely silent during the day.

Thanks to the stock operators, the Phisix closed marginally lower for the week and thus outperformed the region.

The latest selloff was largely due to the disappointing performance by the biggest market cap: PLDT.

Reporting lower than expected earnings growth, PLDT got severely punished and was hammered 5.83% for the week.


The reaction has been understandable. Too much expectations have been built in to the company’s overvalued shares. As I recently wrote
The public has been buying into the promise for more “g-r-o-w-t-h”. Yet history suggests that PLDT’s EPS growth rate has been consistently within less than 5% rate (or less than statistical GDP). Over the past 3 years (2011-13), PLDTs EPS CAGR has been at 3.77%. If 2010 will be included, the 4 year CAGR drops to a negative (-9.83%)!

PLDT’s prices have become disconnected with reality.
Yet the punishment has hardly been a scratch on its scale of overvaluations.

Looking at the sectoral performance gives an idea that this has been a single issue drag on the index for the week. But this wouldn’t be right: advancing issues led declining issues in only 1 of the five trading days. In addition, declining issues dominated advancing issues in nominal term at 123 this week. 

What the apparent discrepancy reveals is that while the broader market had been sold, stock operators had been pushing up select heavyweight issues, thus buoying the sectoral performance and cushioning the fall in the Phisix.

Additionally operators were also making sure that they momentum will be on their side in spite of the reappearance of sellers. How? By selectively pumping key heavyweights to ‘new’ highs.

As I noted last week[30],
I would guess that given BDO’s ‘breakout’ the strategy for the stock operators  now may shift to focus on a one-by-one push for a breakout for major caps for them to succeed a crossover beyond the 7,400. This banks on no bad news that will impede their desperate actions.
Essentially by engineering breakouts of severely mispriced securities, they are hoping that by crafting charts, chart followers acting as greater fools will push the markets higher and buy from them.

I have been saying that the obverse side of every mania (and market manipulation) is a crash.

Historian Charles Kindleberger observed of the same thing in his classic Manias, Panics and Crashes[31]: (bold mine)
What matters to us is the revelation of the swindle, fraud, or defalcation. This makes known to the world that things have not been as they should have been, that it is time to stop and see how they truly are. The making known of malfeasance, whether by the arrest or surrender of the miscreant, or by one of those other forms of confession, flight or suicide, is important as a signal that the euphoria has been overdone. The stage of overtrading may well come to an end. The curtain rises on revulsion, and perhaps discredit.
As for the Peso, the BSP reported[32] forex reserves at the lowest level since 2012 at the end of October. Of course the BSP didn’t say the “lowest”, but you can this on their table, so the basis for my claim.

Gains in foreign investments offset loss in foreign exchange. However it is the gold valuations that marked the difference. The BSP attributes this to “revaluation adjustments”. While gold fell 2.94% month on month, the BSP’s gold holdings was down 3.4%. 

So the difference may have been about accounting numbers or perhaps the BSP may have liquidated some gold. Nonetheless, forex inflows (from remittances by OFWs, BPOs, dividends, loans) that didn’t make into “stocks” that should have increased forex reserve, means that the BSP may have used these to support the peso.

Since I expect that the peso should continue to weaken, the BSP will likely use expend more of their forex reserves to massage the peso level.




[2] Wall Street Journal Sweden Cuts Interest Rate to Zero October 28, 2014

[3] Marketwatch.com Macau gambling revenue falls sharply November 4, 2014





[8] See The Philippine Casino Bubble April 11, 2013

[9] The Economist End of the road for Chinese growth Businessinsider.com November 7, 2014


[11] Bloomberg.com Chinese central bank unveils its latest liquidity tool Taipei Times November 7, 2014






[17] Bloomberg.com European Central Bank President Draghi News Conference (Text) Businessweek.com November 6, 2014




[21] Martin Armstrong Scotland Sells out to the Dole September 19, 2014 Armstrongeconomics.com

[22] OECD.org Catalonia, Spain OECD Review of Higher Education in Regional and City Development



[25] Wall Street Journal Investors Shift Focus as Malaysia Property Curbs Hurt November 24, 2014


[27] Central Bank News Info Malaysia holds rate, drops warning of further rate rises November 6,2014




[31] Charles P. Kindleberger Manias, Panics, and Crashes A History of Financial Crisis Third Edition Wiley & Sons p.82

[32] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas BSP End-October 2014 GIR Level Reaches US$79.3 Billion November 7, 2014

Saturday, November 08, 2014

Alan Greenspan: Gold is a Premier Currency. No Fiat Money including the Dollar can Match it


From Zero Hedge (bold, italics and underline original)
For some reason, the Council of Foreign Relations, where ex-Fed-Chief Alan Greenspan spoke last week, decided the following discussion should be left out of the official transcript. We can perhaps understand why... as Gillian Tett concludes, "comments like that will be turning you into a rock star amongst the gold bug community."

Greenspan (Uncut):


TETT: Do you think that gold is currently a good investment? 

GREENSPAN: Yes... Remember what we're looking at. Gold is a currency. It is still, by all evidence, a premier currency. No fiat currency, including the dollar, can match it. 

Which is missing from the official CFR transcript... 

GREENSPAN: ...remember, we had that first tapering discussion, we got a very strong market response. And then we reassured everybody to have no -- remember, tapering is still (audio gap) of an agreement that the central banks have made -- European central banks, I believe -- about allocating their gold sales which occurred when gold prices were falling down (audio gap) has been renewed this year with a statement that gold serves a very important place in monetary reserves. 

And the question is, why do central banks put money into an asset which has no rate of return, but cost of storage and insurance and everything else like that, why are they doing that? If you look at the data with a very few exceptions, all of the developed countries have gold reserves. Why? 

TETT: I imagine right now, it's because of a question mark hanging over the value of fiat currency, the credibility going forward.

GREENSPAN: Well, that's what I'm getting at. Every time you get some really serious questions, the 50 percent of the gold price determination begins to move.

TETT: Right.

GREENSPAN: And I think it is fascinating and -- I don't know, is Benn Steil in the audience?

TETT: Yes.

GREENSPAN: There he is, OK. Before you read my book, go read Benn's book. The reason is, you'll find it fascinating on exactly this issue, because here you have the ultimate test at the Mount Washington Hotel in 1944 of the real intellectual debate between the -- those who wanted to an international fiat currency which was embodied in John Maynard Keynes' construct of a banker, and he was there in 1944, holding forth with all of his prestige, but couldn't counter the fact that the United States dollar was convertible into gold and that was the major draw. Everyone wanted America's gold. And I think that Benn really described that in extraordinarily useful terms, as far as I can see. Anyway, thank you.

TETT: Right. Well, I'm sure with comments like that, that will be turning you into a rock star amongst the gold bug community.

Geopolitical Risk Theater Links: More US Boots on the Ground, NeoCons versus Putin, Saudi Aramco Oil Fire, Proposed Russian Ban on US Dollar

1 Can’t get enough of Iraq.  Air warfare hasn’t worked, so the POTUS orders more boots on the ground: U.S. to Send 1,500 More Troops to Iraq New York Times November 8, 2014

2 There are no permanent friends only permanent interests: Obama sent 'secret letter' to Iran Daily Star November 8, 2014 (an expose by Israel to forestall sleeping with the enemy?)

3 The  POTUS panders to the opposition, the war lusting neoconservatives: Obama Call to Authorize Islamic State War Tests Congress Bloomberg/Businessweek.com November 6, 2014

4  War is a racket. Throw money at every problem charged to taxpayers for the benefit of the military industrial complex: Problems of U.S. nuclear forces must be addressed Washington Times November 5, 2014

Here is a quote:
U.S. strategic nuclear forces, both weapons and personnel, are experiencing serious problems that must be addressed urgently.

That is a central conclusion of a new study called the “Nuclear Enterprise Review” that the Pentagon is expected to release next week, according to defense officials familiar with the study.

Fixing nuclear forces’ problems will require the investment of billions of defense dollars in modernizing systems and greater leadership attention to training and readiness for the thousands of military personnel who operate and maintain the world’s most powerful arsenal.
5 Neocons are back on the seat of power. One of their likely goal will be to challenge Russia's Putin: Michael Rozeff: McCain versus Putin November 6, 2014
A confrontation is at hand between McCain and Putin. McCain will be the new chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. He wants to arm Ukraine. He’s anti-Putin and anti-Russia. Obama is in the middle, trying not to go as far as McCain while still coming out with his own anti-Putin and anti-Russia policies such as sanctions. Putin regards those as blackmail.
6  The easiest thing to do has been to spend or waste other people’s money: US Army Slow to Investigate Losses of Key Encryption Gear in Afghanistan; $420 Million in Gear Unaccounted For Anti-War.com November 5, 2014
An internal report by the Pentagon’s Inspector General found the US Army “lost” some $420 million worth of equipment in Afghanistan, including weapons, sensitive encryption devices, and even some vehicles. 

To make matters worse, the IG found that the Army brigade responsible for managing the gear failed to report the losses in a timely fashion, meaning there were no great efforts to recover it
7 Simmering Iraq battlefront: The Battle for Baiji Heating Up; 345 Killed, 48 Wounded Across Iraq Anti-war.com November 6, 2014

8 Developing brinkmanship across multi-fronts: Finland warns Europe is 'at the gates of a new cold war' in wake of Russian military activity Independent.co.uk November 5, 2014

9 Chinese government’s thrust towards modern warfare: This Video Of A Chinese 5th-Generation Fighter Prototype Shows The Plane Could Have One Huge Weakness Business Insider November 6, 2014

10 Developing geopolitical factional rivalry; the NATO versus SCO: Martin Katusa Putin Signs Secret Pact to Crush NATO Casey Research November 6, 2014 (bold mine)
But you can bet your last ruble that Vladimir Putin knows exactly where Tajikistan is. Because the group that met there is the Russian president’s baby. It’s the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), consisting of six member states: Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.

The SCO was founded in 2001, ostensibly to collectively oppose extremism and enhance border security.But its real reason for being is larger. Putin sees it in a broad context, as a counterweight to NATO (a position that the SCO doesn’t deny, by the way). Its official stance may be to pledge nonalignment, nonconfrontation, and noninterference in other countries’ affairs, but—pointedly—the members do conduct joint military exercises…

As always, Putin is not thinking small or short term here. Among the priorities he’s laid out for the Russian chairmanship are: beefing up the role of the SCO in providing regional security; launching major multilateral economic projects; enhancing cultural and humanitarian ties between member nations; and designing comprehensive approaches to current global problems. He is also preparing an SCO development strategy for the 2015-2025 period and believes it will be ready by the time of the next summit.

We should care what’s going on inside the SCO. Once India and Pakistan get in (and they will) and Iran follows shortly thereafter, it’ll be a geopolitical game changer.
11 The right hand doesn’t know what the left hand (see number 2 Obama sends letter to Iran--under the table deal?) has been doing: Pentagon: Iran Giving ‘Lethal Aid to the Taliban’ to Fight U.S. Freebeacon November 6, 2014

12 On Oil politics, I recently wrote (bold mine): 
Saudi Arabia has lately stated that they will protect their oil market share. What if those affected oil welfare deficit governments resist? What if Russia or any of Saudi’s chief adversaries, say Iran, for instance finance rogue groups within Saudi to sabotage the latter’s pipelines?
The source said that the fire was "not the work of terrorists".
Not the work of terrorist? Perhaps. But the Saudi government goes on an abrupt manhunt for terrorists where 26 suspected militants has been arrested “following security raids across the kingdom” aawsanet.com November 7, 2014 

Some coincidence eh? Hmmm.

13 American linguist and philosopher warns on the risk of US imperialism: Chomsky to RT: US and its NATO intervention force may spark nuclear war November 7, 2014 (italics original)
How dangerous is the current confrontation between Russia and the West? Noam Chomsky believes that NATO expansion and US quest for hegemony has put the world in a situation so unstable where any accidental interaction could result in a nuclear war.

The “new NATO” that emerged after the Soviet Union collapsed is basically a US-run intervention force, with a completely different mission as compared to the original, Chomsky tells RT’s Sophie&Co.

“In fact, one might ask why NATO even continued to exist,” he said. “The official justification for NATO was that its purpose was to defend Western Europe from Russian hordes who might attack Western Europe.”

With no more “Russian threat”, the natural conclusion in the 90s would be to disband the alliance, but instead the opposite happened – against all agreements NATO expanded all the way towards the Russian borders.

“Its mission changed. The official mission of NATO became to control the international, the global energy system, pipelines. That means, to control the world.”
14 Looking for a catalyst for World War III? Russia may ban circulation of US dollar APA.com November 5, 2014
If the bill is approved, Russian citizens will have to close their dollar accounts in Russian banks within a year and exchange their dollars in cash to Russian ruble or other countries’ currencies.

Otherwise their accounts will be frozen and cash dollars levied by police, customs, tax, border, and migration services confiscated.
Have a nice day.

Friday, November 07, 2014

CPI Massaging: How Hedonic Quality Adjustments Transforms 400% Price Increase to –7.5% Decline

The consensus hardly ever questions how statistics are arrived at. The fundamental assumption is that government numbers are accurate representation of reality (a gospel truth) from which the mainstream have likewise moored their "analysis" on. They never question the underlying motives behind those numbers.

Yet some people can feel or notice of the real world difference between what money can buy at current terms and how governments indicate the growth level of inflation rates.

The following article below by The Consumer Price Illusion (hat tip zero hedge) reveals how US government’s CPI inflation have been smothered. (bold original)
Have you heard the one about CPI?

Suppose that a TV manufacturer retires a product and replaces it with a newer, better, and much more expensive one. If the new TV costs 5 times more than the old one, how can we manipulate the hell out of massage the price of the old TV to make it look like the price fell? By using the dark arts of econometrics, my son!

If you believe the public comments made by the world’s central bankers, the prices that consumers pay for items are not rising fast enough; in some places like Europe they worry that prices might actually fall (a tragedy for the possessing classes, as their manic one-way long bets might not work then).Central bankers are terrified of this outcome. Setting aside for a second the apparent insanity of this logic for your average consumer, who experiences price rises on a near continuous basis, let’s examine in detail one of the jokes gauges economists use for measuring prices: the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

Ostensibly, the CPI is a linear combination of the “prices” of things/stuff consumers could actually purchase weighted by a percentage that the “ideal consumer” spends on any particular stuff/thing in his “ideal” basket. The main problem here is that the “prices” used are not the prices a consumer would actually pay; instead the real price for an item is scaled by what the BLS calls a “Hedonic Quality Adjustment (HQA)”. The HQA was designed to solve a real world problem economists face: the market keeps pumping out new and better devices. In practice the HQA is used to artificially depress the prices used in the calculation of the CPI.

Intuitively, the HQA scales prices by their “perceived” quality. We’re not talking about human perception here, but that of a kitchen sink regression model created by BLS economists. Essentially it throws every quality an item might possess into a linear model and performs a regression of these qualities against the prices found in the market for a given product. The prices that feed into the CPI can be intuitively modeled as:
eq1
This means that as far as the CPI is concerned, prices can “decrease” for three reasons:
  • The price actually decreases, holding quality constant
  • The “quality” as measured by the Hedonic Quality Regression (HQR) could go up, holding price constant
  • The “quality” goes up by more than prices go up (<<<<<< WE’RE HERE RIGHT NOW)
In a time of rapid technological development, the quality as measured by HQR will increase by orders of magnitude more than prices. Consider Moore’s Law, which correctly postulated that the number of transistors on computer chips would double every two years; prices can’t possibly keep up with that kind of quality increase (save for hyperinflation, more on that later).

The BLS neatly illustrates this effect with an example from their website (emphasis is mine):
regression2
Item A is a television that is no longer available and it has been replaced by a new television, Item B. The characteristics in bold differ between the two TVs. There is a large degree of quality change and there is a very large (400%) difference in the prices of these TVs. Rather than use the 400 percent increase in price between Item A and Item B, the quality adjusted rate of price change is measuredby the ratio of the price of Item B in the current period ($1,250.00) over an estimated price of Item B in the previous period – Item B’.
Here is an example of a hedonic regression model (including coefficients) for televisions.
cpihqa5form1
This is just an OLS linear regression model. The dependent variable is the natural log of prices for televisions, the explanatory variables and their coefficients are listed in the table below (most are dummy variables)
Where PB,t+s-1 is the quality adjusted price, PA,t+s-1 is the price of Item A in the previous period, and is the constant e [SIC], the inverse of the natural logarithm, exponentiated by the difference of the summations of the ßs for the set of characteristics that differ between items A and B. The exponentiation step is done to transform the coefficients from the semi log form to a linear form before adjusting the price.
To put it another way, the HQR extrapolates a price for the new TV using the Hedonic Quality model estimated from the population of old TV’s
To derive the estimated price of Item B’, we use the following equation:
For our television example, [the equation above] looks like this:
cpihqa6form4
When this quality adjustment is applied, the ratio of price change looks like this:
regression3
The resulting price change is -7.1 percent after the quality adjustment is applied.
Oh good! You see, my neighbor, John Q., thought that prices were going up and was about to riot in the streets because he couldn’t buy anything now. How relieved he was to live next to an economist and mathematician; I merely explained that even though he couldn’t afford the new TV (or anything else) it was actually less expensive once quality was taken into account. Boy was his face red. He went home and explained it to his wife and kids and they laughed and laughed about their mistake.
Read the rest here
Next time one hears media or experts utter "low" inflation keep in mind Mark Twain's warnings on statistics: Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics

Thursday, November 06, 2014

Phisix: Afternoon Delight Spoiled?! Why???

What happened to the almost ritualistic massaging of the index which I call as "afternoon delight"?

image

The modus of intraday pump on key index issues clearly got its momentum going. So I expected the session to end as with the previous episodes—with a last minute push at the close. Unfortunately, some party/-ies decided to spoil the fun. (chart from technistock.net and colfinancials)

Curiously all sectors shared nearly the same time for the day’s inflection point. 

Nonetheless the Phisix still closed up .39% after a high of around .65%.

This is an interesting break from almost a daily pattern. What may have prompted for the disruption of such trend? Has there been some miscommunication in the coordination process among the invisible stock market operators? Or perhaps a fissure? Or has some third parties with sufficient volume entered the picture to upset the scheme?

image

I said last night that there could be a shift in tactic in the way these operators have been administering the OPERATION 7,400 Breakout.
I would guess that given BDO’s ‘breakout’ the strategy for the stock operators  now may shift to focus on a one-by-one push for a breakout for major caps for them to succeed a crossover beyond the 7,400. This banks on no bad news that will impede their desperate actions.
Today’s most actives reveals not only how the Phisix ended up, but importantly it also shows which major index issues have been significantly pumped. Some of these issues are at near and/or at fresh record highs.

The objective of the game plan looks simple. It is to attract chartists to jump into the bandwagon or piggyback on momentum in order to further drive up prices of these ludicrously overvalued issues into levels of even more monstrous mispricing.

The plan seems all anchored on establishing the “greater fool” based on the tenuous rallying cry called G-R-O-W-T-H.