Sunday, August 02, 2015

Phisix 7,550: The Many Myths of the Falling Peso

To sum up, we are left with a paradox. Markets are liquid when they work both ways. Market participants, though, find themselves increasingly needing to move the same way. This is not only because of procyclical regulation; it is also because central banks have become a far larger driver of markets than was true in the past. The more liquidity the central banks add, the more they disrupt the natural heterogeneity of the market. On the way in, it has mostly proved possible to accommodate this, as investors have moved gradually, and their purchases have been offset by new issuance. The way out may not prove so easy; indeed, we are not sure there is any way out at all. –Matt King, Managing Director and Global Head of Credit Products Strategy, Citigroup Inc, Research Division

In this issue

Phisix 7,550: The Many Myths of the Falling Peso

-Sugarcoating the Falling Peso: The US Federal Reserve Scapegoat
 -Sugarcoating the Falling Peso: Ignoring the Regional Dynamics
-Sugarcoating the Falling Peso: Ignoring the Growing Risks of an Asian Crisis 2.0
-Falling Peso Equals Slower Economy and Vice Versa
- The OFW as Embodiment of Policy Failure
-Philippine April PMIs: Media Says G-R-O-W-T-H, Regardless of Retail-Wholesale Crash!
-No Bubble? BSP 1Q 2015 Data Reveals Makati CBD Property Prices Skyrocketed by a Staggering 25%!!!
-China’s Stock Market Crashes 10% as Xi Jinping Put Mutates into the Frankenstein Stock Market
-PSEi 7,550: Market Internals Erode Again, Death Cross, and Seasonality (The Ghost Month Superstition)

Phisix 7,550: The Many Myths of the Falling Peso

The mainstream’s agitprop campaign on the weak peso has begun.

As I wrote last June[1],
I predict that there will be imbecilic rationalizations where the weak peso will associated with more purchasing power from USD based OFW and BPO remittances. The coming rationalizations will omit the insight of the transmission mechanism of import prices into the system. It’s the kind of same nonsensical popular imputations that says low oil prices equals stronger consumption spending.


The peso, which fell by .54% to 45.74 to a US dollar, was a toast this week and so the spin. 

From the Inquirer[2]: “The weak peso will provide a welcome boost to the Philippine economy, which grew by 5.2 percent in January to March, the slowest pace in three years. Last year, the economy expanded by 6.1 percent. Several of the Philippine economy’s major drivers are dollar-earning industries such as tourism and business process outsourcing (BPO). Remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFW)—the biggest source of dollar income for the economy—accounted for nearly a tenth of domestic output.”

Sugarcoating the Falling Peso: The US Federal Reserve Scapegoat


If media really believe in what they are saying, then why not appeal to the authorities to make the peso a permanently weak currency as it has been in 45 years or from 1960 to 2005 (see left)?

Yet what has the devalued peso delivered then? Has prosperity from the boiling frog crash from Php 2 to a US dollar in 1960 to 2014’s Php 44.395 (left window) been achieved? 

Since a weak peso supposedly should “boost” the economy then why not even push this to the extremes? Why not ask authorities to destroy the peso through hyperinflation ala Zimbabwe or presently Venezuela (right from Cato’s Troubled Currencies Project)! Perhaps these nations have found nirvana (or a nightmare as Venezuela)!

The swooning peso has been popularly imputed to expectations of an interest rate liftoff by the US Federal Reserve. But if the economy has truly been “sound” as popularly held, then the peso wouldn’t even fall. If the Fed tightens, then the BSP can match it. The BSP can even preempt the FED! So why the dilly dallying by the BSP? 

Could it be because of too much credit issuance by the domestic banking system, or entrenched dependence on credit by the formal economy’s “too big to fail” institutions, have made the system’s balance sheets vulnerable to rate increases? 

And could it also be because such actions would imply the end to the implicit subsidy to the Philippine government and to firms owned by politically connected elites?

And could it likewise be that all the previous FDIs and portfolio flows have mostly emerged from leveraged carry trades anchored on the Fed’s policies and the BSP’s (negative real rates) financial repression policies such that a tightening may send them stampeding out?

Or how about all of the above?

Media and their favored experts bloviate as if tourism, OFW remittance, BPOs or exports have been a standalone thing. They don’t seem to realize of the consequences from the actions by the Fed.

If the Fed tightens, then how will the global economy respond? 

Yet it has not been the first time.

The Fed floated a trial balloon of withdrawing stimulus in May 2013. The consequence? Global financial markets went into turmoil. This episode has been known as the “taper tantrum”. 

While the sustained easing by many central banks kicked the proverbial can down the road, continued balance sheet leveraging has been prompting for a shrinking liquidity dynamic on a global scale. The declining growth rate of global forex reserves has been a testament to this.

And liquidity strains have been compounded by monetary policies (QE) and bank regulations (Dodd Frank and Basel Accord).

The progressive reduction of liquidity can be seen unfolding through several phases and through feedback loops. Today they are seen as crashing commodity prices, floundering emerging markets, diminishing global trade, and finally, slowing advanced economies.

Let us take US economy. The US government announced last week, that the 2Q GDP grew by only 2.3% which was a tad below consensus estimates of 2.5%-2.6%. 2Q GDP was essentially weighed by a pull back on investments (-.6%) by businesses.

And to take the 2Q GDP in the context of two year performance, the Wall Street Journal exuded disappointment[3] (bold mine): “The economic expansion—already the worst on record since World War II—is weaker than previously thought, according to newly revised data. From 2012 through 2014, the economy grew at an all-too-familiar rate of 2% annually, according to three years of revised figures the Commerce Department released Thursday. That’s a 0.3 percentage point downgrade from prior estimates. The revisions were released concurrently with the government’s first estimate of second-quarter output. Since the recession ended in June 2009, the economy has advanced at a 2.2% annual pace through the end of last year. That’s more than a half-percentage point worse than the next-weakest expansion of the past 70 years, the one from 2001 through 2007. While there have been highs and lows in individual quarters, overall the economy has failed to break out of its roughly 2% pattern for six years.”

The following day, labor data was even more dismal. Wages and salaries reportedly grew by only .2% in 2Q, the slowest pace on record since Labor Department began tabulating them in 1982, according to Bloomberg. This followed a .7% increase in the first quarter.

The dampened labor outlook, which markets momentarily saw as a possible reason for another deferral by the FED to increase rates, sent the US dollar plummeting on Friday.

And in conjunction, along with currencies of ASEAN neighbors, on the news breakout, the peso sharply recovered to the Php 45.40+ levels. Unfortunately, the gains had been short lived as the US dollar scaled back to reclaim most of the day’s early losses.

So there could be some recovery by Asian currencies early next week. But I doubt if the rebound will last.

Yet two insights from the above.

One. The FED seems reluctant to pull the trigger.

The US FED is in a bind. Current string of economic data has not been as vigorous as expected. But the Fed will be left with limited traditional interest rate “tools” when signs of a significant downturn reemerge. So if the FED will increase rates, then it will likely do so conservatively. This will mostly be symbolical rather than intended as policy tightening.

Besides, last week’s FOMC statement exhibited indications that the Fed may be moving goalposts anew. The broader coverage of variables for policy assessment makes them look increasingly tentative.

Nonetheless, Friday’s wage and salaries data pulled back the probability of a rate hike in September, from 100% in Thursday to 88% on Friday as seen in the CME Groups’ Fed Futures. Perhaps this coming Friday’s non farm payroll may determine their actions.

Moreover, during the 2013 taper tantrum, yields of 10 year treasuries soared to almost 3% as against last Friday where the same notes yielded at 2.2%. The treasury markets hardly seem convinced that the Fed will meaningfully tighten.

To consider, all these has been happening even when the FED balance sheet still drifts at record highs ($4.5 trillion). Additionally, the total assets of major central banks (FED, ECB, BOJ, PBOC) has been estimated at a record $14.4 trillion. This account for a stunning 18.5% of global GDP (2014)!

In short, fantastic amounts of central bank stimulus have repeatedly been injected into the system, yet the global economy has been foundering.

Besides, a 25 bps hike seems all so problematic for the FED. Why?

Sugarcoating the Falling Peso: Ignoring the Regional Dynamics

This leads as to the second insight.

USD based revenues of tourism, exports, OFW remittances and BPOs all DEPEND on global economic conditions. Should the FED’s actions worsen global economic conditions, then NO amount of devaluation will boost these industries. 



Remember, tumbling currencies have not been exclusive for the Philippines. With the exception of China, the entire region has almost been afflicted. 

While pressures on regional currencies have emerged in 2013, this has become conspicuous over the last month or so.

The silent run on the rupiah, as well as the ringgit, remains unflinching. While the Taiwan dollar was last week’s biggest loser, the rupiah and ringgit continues to hemorrhage profusely. Apparently the strengthening of the US dollar continues to spread and intensify throughout the region.

In Thailand, growth in non-performing loans (+15.5%) in the nation’s top four banks continues vastly outpace and surpass bank profits (+1.6) and lending growth (1.6%) last June according to Nikkei Asian Review.

Now the question is how much more losses on domestic currencies can be tolerated before a financial blowup occurs?

But any risks (or costs), according to the mainstream, should be ignored. Just focus on the (superficial) benefits.

Forget about how currencies affect real economy prices and therefore the production process, investments and consumption, interest rates or debt.

This means that the frail currencies are good news for the entire region. Based on the economic shaman’s logic, except for China, because the region’s currencies have been weak, then all of them should economically flourish!

Yet, the more anemic the currency, the stronger the economy!

Sugarcoating the Falling Peso: Ignoring the Growing Risks of an Asian Crisis 2.0

Forget too that tanking currencies could be symptoms of an emerging financial crisis.

A currency crash is technically defined as an annual depreciation (devaluation) greater than or equal to 15 percent per annum[4]. So the rupiah and the ringgit, as of Friday, have been more than halfway there. Large exposure by domestic banks on debts outstanding denominated in foreign currency may “lead to a banking cum currency crisis” (Reinhart Rogoff)

Besides, the leading indicators of a currency crisis, according to the ECB[5], include rising money market rates, worsening government balances, and falling central bank reserves.


Not only has the trend of the growth rate foreign exchange reserves by central banks of emerging markets been on a decline since the apex in 2009, they have been in contraction in 2015.

The IIF observed last week[6] (bold added): One reflection of these strains can be seen in the very sharp and unusual decline in EM FX reserves in recent quarters (Chart 1.2). While China accounts for about 50% of the total, reserves in other EM countries have also been under pressure:  Malaysia, for example, which has been intervening to support the ringgit amid political strains, has seen FX reserves drop close to levels last seen during the 2008-09 financial crisis.  Russia’s reserves, at just over $360 billion, are at levels last seen in 2007. 

So the run in Malaysia’s ringgit could have been deeper. The Malaysian government has depleted a little over 30% of her forex currency reserve (as of June) to defend the ringgit. Yet the plummeting currency has been adding strains to Malaysia’s burgeoning external debt, which presently accounts for 53.11% of her GDP according to National Debt Clock. Should a slowdown in Malaysia’s annual GDP persist, then the debt and interest rate ratios will soar! Curiously this has been happening even as Malaysia’s trade balance and current account has been positive.

The popular wisdom of the strengths “macro” statistics is being tested. And my bet is that popular wisdom will fail.

Interestingly it is not just Malaysia. While Philippine media sells platitude that everything remains copacetic, elsewhere in the Emerging Market world, central bankers have become increasingly nervous. The Bloomberg notes that “the selloff” in currencies of emerging markets “has become so swift and so deep that officials are abandoning hands-off policies on concern the drop will fuel inflation, deter investment from foreigners and act as a drag on their economies at a time when global growth is already decelerating. To counter the declines, policy makers from Mexico to South Africa and Turkey have either stepped up intervention, increased interest rates or signaled an end to monetary easing”[7]

You see, the problem has not just been about falling currencies, but also about the scale of volatility from the recent declines.

The emerging market forex reserves chart and current developments reminds me of the “deficit without tears” from the US dollar standard.

Since the Nixon Shock in August 15, 1971, the US has been exporting inflationism via paper dollars and dollar denominated debt and other financial instruments to the world in exchange for goods and services.

Emerging markets, on the other hand, who wanted to keep their currency from rising, to benefit from global financialization, stacked up on those dollars (forex reserves) in exchange for the printing of domestic currencies. This became pronounced when Fed Chairman Greenspan unleashed his string of bailouts, most notably during the dotcom crash.

Nonetheless such policies has led to bubbles everywhere.

And such bubbles have been epitomized by excess capacity that had been financed by cheap credit. Now excess capacity has translated into crashing prices. Along with the increasing onus of debt, excess capacity has served to restrain on economic activities.

French economist Jacques Rueff[8] once warned of the US dollar standard’s “deficit without tears” in stating that this “allowed the countries in possession of a currency benefiting from international prestige to give without taking, to lend without borrowing, and to acquire without paying. The discovery of this secret profoundly modified the psychology of nations. It allowed countries lucky enough to have a boomerang currency to disregard the internal consequences that would have resulted from a balance-of-payments deficit under the gold standard”

Well that “internal consequences that would have resulted from a balance-of-payments deficit” have now come home to roost. Chronic maladjustments has surfaced as collapsing prices of commodities, soaring US dollar, strained emerging market economies, slowing global trade, declining forex reserves, signs of a slowdown in advanced economies and innate strains in financial market (as China).

It’s the periphery to the core phenomenon dynamic in progress and accelerating.

The phase of this cycle will flow from economic slowdown to financial losses to cash flow problems to debt servicing problems to constrictions on access to credit, to insolvency and finally to liquidations.

And what more if the US Federal Reserve does tighten.

Yet no amount of brainwashing will change this.

Falling Peso Equals Slower Economy and Vice Versa

Devaluations hardly perform as famously advertised.

The peso as represents a price that has real economy effects. As I noted last week[9],
A falling peso isn’t legislated. A falling peso also doesn’t emerge out of metaphysical or supernatural causes. Instead, a falling peso is a product of human action. A basic explanation: demand for the USD is GREATER than the demand for the peso.

A greater demand for the USD means that there will be LESS incentive to HOLD onto Philippine peso assets (whether bonds, currency, stocks or property). There will also be LESS incentive to invest in peso. This applies to whether demand emanates from resident, nonresident or currency speculators…

Furthermore, given the sharp volatility in the currency, how will this impact the entrepreneur’s economic calculation? Falling peso means more pesos required to buy foreign goods or higher local prices of foreign goods.

If the pesos’ fall has been gradual or can be anticipated, then importers may have some leeway to assess if they can pass the price increases to consumers, or if they will merely shoulder the profit squeeze.

But what of the sharp volatility in the exchange rate? How will importers determine the profit and losses and the market’s ability to absorb imported supply? So what does the importer do? Here’s a guess. They will likely try to secure currency forwards from banks to hedge their imports or they could REDUCE imports
The peso’s impact to the statistical economy can be seen below

The peso-annual GDP growth shows of meaningful correlations.

One can divide the chart above into two epochs: the post Asian crisis and the post Great Financial crisis (GFC).

In the wake of the Asian crisis, the peso (upper window) continued to decline in the face of post crisis adjustment…and that’s until 2005.

However, in between there had been countervailing trends.

For instance, the peso rallied in 2002 to mid-2003, Philippine GDP picked up over the same period.

The peso resumed its decline by mid 2003, but the rate of decline has sharply decelerated until its inflection point in 2005. From then, the peso rallied strongly.

Over the same period, except for the odd 2004 spike which apparently had been smoothened out by an equally steep decline in economic growth in the next quarters, the pesos’ turnaround essentially coincided with an acceleration of the GDP from 2005 to 2007.

Then GFC appeared which caused the GDP to collapse from 2007 to 2009. The peso appreciated at the onset of the GDP slowdown. It was only by early 2008 when the peso commenced to deteriorate as the statistical economy sustained its downtrend.

However, the USD peaked or the peso hit a trough ahead of the GDP.

From 2009 to 2013, the peso confirmed on the GDP’s ascent.

Since 2013, the gradual weakening of the peso coincided with the slowing tempo of the statistical economy.

Post GFC, the correlation between the USD peso (USDphp) and GDP has been more pronounced than during post Asian crisis.

As pointed above, losses of Asian currencies have been intensifying. And so with the peso.

Theory and empirics on tells us that mainstream projections (or propaganda) will badly miss on their estimates.

The OFW as Embodiment of Policy Failure

Curiously, the OFW leftist group Migrante International downplayed the Philippine president’s latest SONA in stating that OFW growth hallmarked a policy failure. That’s because OFW growth has been prompted by “prevailing high unemployment rate and low wages in the Philippines”

The group cited data from Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), where average daily deployment of Filipino workers rose from 4,018 in 2010 to 4,624 in 2011 and to 4,937 in 2012. Likewise, in 2013, the POEA posted an average of 5,031 daily deployment and the figure went up to 5,054 a year ago.

On the other hand, the group noted that employment data based on the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed that the number of locally employed Filipinos was only 1.02 million in 2014, or an average of 2,805 additional employed in the country daily.

Thus the group declared, “the Aquino administration breached the two million mark in overseas Filipino worker (OFW) deployment processing in 2013, the highest in history of Philippine migration”[10]

In 2014, despite the festering civil war, I showed that OFWs in Libya would rather choose “to die as heroes than in hunger” if repatriated. I have also shown the BSP labor data on 2014 where job growth was a miniscule 2.5% and where real wages in NCR home to one third of the labor force has been NEGATIVE. Yet those have been conservative estimates from the government. Simmering price inflation in the 1H of 2014 essentially gobbled away the income of people in the labor force. How much more of those unemployed or those in the informal economy?

Thus, whatever boom that has been published has been a boom in the economic interests of politically connected elites and of the government.

Headline booms have hardly been about the general economy but of the feel good justifications of invisible redistributive policies.

As I have been saying here, OFWs are symptomatic of the severe LACK of economic opportunities. Most of such opportunities have been corralled by these elites.

Yet the more the peso falls, the greater the inclination for the unprivileged sectors to look for ‘green pasture’ opportunities abroad.

From 1960s to the present, the boiling frog collapse of the peso has only produced “people” exports.

So much for the façade of headline credit fueled booms.

Philippine April PMIs: Media Says G-R-O-W-T-H, Regardless of Retail-Wholesale Crash!

As always, the spin has been about G-R-O-W-T-H, but media admits to a much reduced levels

The BSP provides a fascinating data on April PMIs.

The consolidated April PMI of services, manufacturing, and retail and wholesale trade came at an estimated at 57.1 points in April, down from March’s 58.6 points.

The breakdown includes Manufacturing at 52.2 from March’s 54.9. Wow. Manufacturing seems headed for a contraction.

The service sector was the strongest at 59.9.

But here’s the zinger. From the inquirer (bold mine), “The weakest performers in April were retailers and wholesalers. The sub-sector’s PMI significantly declined to 53.7 in April 2015 from 60.5 the month before. All the tracking variables—purchases, sales revenues, employment, supplier deliveries, and inventories—expanded at a slower rate from their month-ago levels. “Both the retail and wholesale sub-sectors slowed down in April, which could be attributed to sluggish activities during the Holy Week,” the BSP said.”[11]

More Wow! That’s a whopping 11.23% crash in retail-wholesale activities! Yet the crash in the said sector has been broad based!

The BSP claims that the slowdown in retail activities must be due to the Holy Week. Really now??? Going to church makes people spend less? Or has it been that there has been less income to spend even during holidays??? The BSP should have cited if this has been seasonal (every Holy Week of each year) or a deviation. Instead, they came up with a bumbling alibi.


Even more, perhaps the BSP failed to look at the NSCB’s retail growth trends. The NSCB’s 1Q GDP 2015 shows of a general decreasing trend on retail activities since 2Q 2013. While 1Q 2015 supposedly showed a bounce, this comes a considerable number of store vacancies at shopping malls surfaced.

Yet if the April PMI gets included on 2Q GDP, then this could imply that the 1Q rebound has faded anew.

Another irony, part of the service sector should reflect on retail activities, then why the glaring disparity?

Given the “significant decline” in retail and wholesale, what happens now to the race to build major malls, strip malls, and other retail spaces? Perhaps ghost buyers will emerge?

Oh by the way, since PMIs are surveys, considering that supposedly a third of the population sees the Philippines as having been transformed into a “developed economy”, then perhaps much of the conventional surveys, including the PMIs, can be extrapolated as having been puffed up.

No Bubble? BSP 1Q 2015 Data Reveals Makati CBD Property Prices Skyrocketed by a Staggering 25%!!!

The mainstream has repeatedly been in massive denial over the existence of bubbles. Yet here’s a stunner from the Inquirer[12]:
The price of land at Makati’s central business district (CBD) rose by more than a quarter over the past year to match in nominal terms the record-highs reached before the 1997 crash, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said. In a report, the BSP said land values in Makati City, the country’s economic center, rose by 25.4 percent year-on-year to reach P443,750 per square meter at the end of March 2015. Quarter-on-quarter, implied prices were up 0.9 percent. Similarly, implied values in the Ortigas Center rose by 1.9 percent quarter-on-quarter and 10.3 percent year-on-year to P161,500 per sqm of land, the BSP said, citing data from consulting firm Colliers International.
Let us put into perspective what a 25.4% surge in property prices for the Makati CBD means. 

If the Philippines grew by 6.5% a year then Makati CBD’s property growth rates implies 3.91 years of growth compressed into in a year in the 1Q 2015! 

Population growth rates have been at LESS than 2% a year.

Yet ironically, 1Q statistical GDP was only at 5.2%!

Moreover, over the same period, the consolidated revenues of publicly listed firms in the PSE, which accounted for 52% of the GDP, grew by only 1.6%! In short, the spending by the public on goods and services provided by the PSE companies grew by a slight 1.6%, which more or less reflects actual spending activities than the GDP which are only estimates!

At the same time, prices of retail, construction and manufacturing sectors have been on a skid. Jobs have been sparse. Online jobs peaked in 3Q 2014 that has been followed by plunges through May 2015. Exports and imports have been sluggish in 2015.

Meanwhile banking loan growth to the economy has been on a downtrend since July 2013, yet the growth rates have been above 10%. 1Q 2015 hardly posted any recovery.

In June 2015, bank loans to the general economy eked higher to 14.5% from 14.2% in May according to the BSP.

Domestic liquidity in the 1Q 2015 recoiled off from a crash following 10 consecutive months of 30%+++ money supply growth.

In June, domestic liquidity sputtered again. M3 growth rates slipped to 9% from 9.3% in May. But here is the kicker: month on month M3 decreased by 0.3 percent (seasonally-adjusted basis) according to the BSP

June CPI sagged further to 1.2% also based on BSP data. (right window)

Bank loan growth, money supply growth and CPI have been in a chorus. They seem to be confirming the Philippine economy’s ongoing contraction of systemic liquidity. Add to this the flattening of the yield curve.

Even worse, they highlight on incipient indications of monetary deflation!

But in the 1Q, concomitantly with 1q real estate, the PSEi was pushed to a string of record highs.

In other words, while the statistical economy, and most likely, the real economy have materially been slowing, the toys for the big boys have become the object of intense speculative actions.

It is perhaps a reason why prices on the general economy have been on a downfall as rampant speculations on asset markets have substituted real economy investments and consumption activities in 1Q 1015.

Interesting, because the data above emanates from the BSP’s own report, as indicated by the Inquirer. Yet the BSP seems utterly blind on how all these manic speculations have been funded.

And bizarrely, the BSP continues to dish out NPL ratios (Universal Commercial banks and thrift banks) which because of still soaring prices conceals on the widespread malinvestments.

NPLs will become an issue once real estate and stock prices slump.

China’s Stock Market Crashes 10% as Xi Jinping Put Mutates into the Frankenstein Stock Market

All that PBoC backed mind blowing $800 billion firepower, forced buying by state owned companies, capital controls (prohibition of selling by major investors), interest rate easing, PBoC injections, censorship, demonization of short sellers and of foreigners have gone to naught as the Shanghai Index crashed 10% anew over the week.

But again this won’t stop the Chinese version of tainted version of the legendary King Canute.

The Chinese government’s war against sellers has only intensified.

Nikkei Asia reports of the suspension of trading at 24 brokerage accounts, including that of a subsidiary of U.S. hedge fund and high frequency trader Citadel. Part of the suspension of the said accounts has been due to the Chinese government’s expanded list of targets to include spoofing, according to Bloomberg.

The CNBC reports that the Chinese futures regulator will tighten rules governing trading that it regards as "irregular" to tackle what it sees as excessive speculation in the markets

Apparently any speculation that sees rising overvalued stocks are ok, but not dropping stocks.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission will also tighten censorship of mostly local media. The CSRC said that “Speculative reports…must first be confirmed by the CSRC in order to prevent the spread of false information and market disturbance.” (FT)

The Chinese government has extended their investigation on sellers overseas. They are pressing “foreign and Chinese-owned brokerages in Hong Kong and Singapore to hand over stock trading records, sources said, extending its pursuit of "malicious" short sellers of Chinese stocks to overseas jurisdictions” according to Reuters.

Chinese insurers have been asked to refrain from selling equities, according to Zero Hedge. Chinese insurers have bought stocks and stock mutual funds worth 110 billion rmb according to SCMP’s George Chen.

Since markets are about exchanges or buying and selling, if one of the main function is banned, or severely regulated or impaired through the arbitrary interferences by politicians, who determine and impose on the price levels, then markets do not exist at all. Liquidity will practically shrink, if not evaporate. People’s resources will get stuck into assets that have no exit mechanism. So Xi Jinping Put will mutate into a Frankenstein market.

Capital controls not only inhibits movements or confiscates people’s properties, they reduce the economy’s access to capital.

Yet if the ‘war against sellers’ fails, which will be manifested through sustained downfall of Chinese stocks, then the Chinese government may likely declare a stock market holiday.

It’s pretty odd for the “stability obsessed” Chinese government to panic. I know that there are lots possible nasty economic and social consequences for a continuing crash which risks leading to a financial crisis. But the Chinese government’s own actions have been another major source of the uncertainty, which consequently could a cause for panic.

Worst, unintended consequences have appeared. Pork prices have been soaring (Nikkei Asia). Perhaps this may partly be a stock market related supply side factor constraint. Farmers who gambled and lost in the stock market through margin debt may have lost all resources to replenish stocks of pigs. Reduced supply of pigs may have led to shortages thus, rising prices. Add to these all those PBoC pumps on the system which may have increased demand pressures on pork.

Yet if Chinese inflation starts to surge, then all those stock market-property and real economy rescues will most likely grind to a halt.

PSEi 7,550: Market Internals Erode Again, Death Cross, and Seasonality (The Ghost Month Superstition)

The PSEi lost 1.51% over the week.

The losses would have been larger save for Friday’s last minute marking the close pump which delivered a stupendous 100% of the day’s gains!

With an incredible four days of session end weakness, perhaps index managers wanted recognition of their presence.

Over the month, the Philippine benchmark has been hardly changed (down by .19%)

This week’s selloff only affirmed my suspicions that the broad based rebound two weeks ago was nothing more than a severe oversold bounce. 

Losing issues regained dominance with a substantial 158 margin. Losing issues gained the upper hand in 4 out of the 5 trading days even when the PSEi closed up in 3 days.

Of the 30 issues within the PSEi basket, 6 posted gains as against 24 decliners.


Bears seem as closing in for supremacy even in the PSEi basket which has been a bastion of the index managers.

Except for record high SMPH which has become the main issue to keep the PSEi from falling apart, 5 among top 15 biggest market cap issues seem as clinging for dear life. One is already part of the bears.

Yet any sustained selling will likely bring them to the fatal embrace of the bears.

Index managers would have to muster more volume to stave off the bear’s coming onslaught.

Moreover, sustained low volume and lethargic total number of trades evinces of the Philippine equity market’s shrinking liquidity.

Curiously, banking issue have become sudden candidates to bear’s membership role. BDO’s weekly 4.29% rout was prompted by market’s frustration over the 6% earnings growth during the 1H of 2015.

Here is a notable segment from BDO’s earnings news. From the ABS-CBN (bold mine)[13]: “BDO also said it sustained momentum in its core lending, and its deposit-taking businesses yielded a net interest income growth of 10 percent, which was tempered by the prevailing liquidity in the system.”

Gotcha!

The transmission effects of the flattening yield curve have now become apparent in the banking system’s loan portfolio, and subsequently, to earnings!

While BSP credit to the banking system continues to grow at above 10%, they have been declining. The 10+% growth still provides the income to the banking system’s core lending operations. But this room has been narrowing. BDO admits to this.

With economic G-R-O-W-T-H pulling back, growth in the banking system’s loan portfolio should slowdown. Even more, decelerating economic G-R-O-W-T-H and/or a downshift in the growth of the banking system’s loan portfolio will INCREASE NPLs. (Pls see Thailand experience above)

The banking system is the heart of the Philippine financial system. And bank credit serves as the lifeblood to the current economic G-R-O-W-T-H paradigm. Hence, a slowdown in the banking system will percolate to the rest of the economy.

So funding for index managers could likely be in peril. No funding, no manipulation.

Let me add that I believe there are a lot of skeletons in many of the banking and financial system’s accounting closet. The recent DBP market manipulation exposé, which had been intended to hide financial losses, shows the way.

Furthermore, Japan’s Toshiba’s accounting scandal also exhibits the likelihood that many books of non-financial have likely been cooked—perhaps in a variant from the Toshiba way.

Soaring US dollar (faltering peso) have in the past been a drag on the stock market. That’s unless we are going to see hyperinflation ala Venezuela or Argentina.

The logic is once again simple: greater demand for US dollar means less demand for Philippine assets. Philippine assets include stocks. So lesser demand at extremely overvalued pricing levels translates to greater risks for a downside move.

That’s aside from the price function of a falling currency to the economy and to earnings as noted above.

It’s why stocks of our ASEAN peers have all been struggling.

I’m not a believer in charts as charts can be engineered as recently demonstrated by the index managers.

Nonetheless with so many followers spanning institutions and retail, I have to keep an eye on them.

What does the present PSEi chart say?

Well, momentum suggests that a DEATH CROSS is imminent. That’s why index managers have to work doubly hard next week. They have to produce massive upside moves to whiplash this seminal bearish sentiment.

Otherwise, the death cross may spark an avalanche of selling by practitioners of charts.

The last time the death cross appeared was in the heat of the selling spree sparked by the taper tantrum in August 2013. It took about 7 months to reverse the bearish sentiment.

A death cross may mean the closure of the bull market.

Finally we are entering a season considered as hostile to stocks.


Some locals call August the “Ghost Month. The “Ghost Month” is part of the Chinese Taoist folk belief. Yet it’s a bizarre paradox to see many non-Chinese residents espouse on such superstition when applied to stocks. 

The BSP incredibly incorporated the Ghost Month in their ‘economic’ data and analysis as I pointed out here.

Yet through 30 years of August, 19 or 63.33% posted losses while 11 or 36.67% registered gains (see left-red are bear markets, green are bull markets and blue are market top). August losses have no trend specificity, they appear just about everywhere.

But again it doesn’t mean that the historical probability of in favor of losses implies losses are certain. That would be a gambler’s fallacy.

Instead, current deterioration in economic fundamentals, diminishing systemic liquidity, dropping peso, corrosion of stock market internals to even chart ‘death cross’ momentum suggest that losses will likely happen if the markets see these factors as unsupportive of prices at current levels.

Of course, this also depends on how index managers will fare.

The right chart exhibits the seasonal probability slant in favor of losses for S&P 500 in August to October. No ghost month or quarter for the S&P, just plain seasonality. But seasonality isn’t written on the stone.

In closing, the preeminence of hidden bear market has not been restricted to Philippine stocks.

Most of the world stocks based on the MSCI World Index seem to bear the cross of spreading bear markets.

The perceptive Gavekal Team enumerates the numbers: US 21%, Canada 68%, Hong Kong 30%, Singapore 29%, Brazil 82% China 82%, Indonesia 77% and Russia 81%




[2] Inquirer.net Peso weakness seen to boost economy August 1, 2015

[3] Wall Street Journal Real Time Economics Blog, The Worst Expansion Since World War II Was Even Weaker July 30, 2015

[4] Carmen M. Reinhart Kenneth S. Rogoff FROM FINANCIAL CRASH TO DEBT CRISIS NBER March 2010

[5] Jan Babecký, Tomáš Havránek, Jakub Matějů, Marek Rusnák, Kateřina Šmídková and Bořek Vašíček BANKING, DEBT, AND CURRENCY CRISES EARLY WARNING INDICATORS FOR DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, p .3 ECB Working Paper October 2012

[6] Institute of International Finance, Weekly Insight: Inching Towards a Hike July 30, 2015


[8] Jacques Rueff The Monetary Sin of the West p.23 Mises Institute



[11] Inquirer.net Economy poised for sure, but slow growth August 1, 2015

[12] Inquirer.net Land prices at CBDs continue to rise July 9, 2015

[13] ABS-CBNNews.com BDO H1 income up 6 pct July 27, 2015

Friday, July 31, 2015

Vanguard's John Bogle: 99% of trading is pointless

Founder and retired CEO of largest mutual fund and second largest ETF provider the Vanguard Group, John Bogle says that 99% of trading is pointless.

The Marketwatch explains Mr. Bogle's reasons: (bold mine)
An astonishing $32 trillion in securities changes hands every year with no net positive impact for investors, charges Vanguard Group Founder John Bogle.

Meanwhile, corporate finance — the reason Wall Street exists — is just a tiny slice of the total business. The nation's big investment banks probably could work for less than a week and take the rest of the year off with no real effect on the economy.

"The job of finance is to provide capital to companies. We do it to the tune of $250 billion a year in IPOs and secondary offerings," Bogle told Time in an interview.

"What else do we do? We encourage investors to trade about $32 trillion a year. So the way I calculate it, 99% of what we do in this industry is people trading with one another, with a gain only to the middleman. It's a waste of resources."

Rent seekers

It's a lot of money, $32 trillion. Nearly double the entire U.S. economy moving from one pocket to another, with a toll-taker in the middle. Most people refer to them as "stock brokers," but let's call them what they are — toll-takers and rent-seekers.

Rent-seeking as an occupation is as old as the hills. In exchange for working to build up credentials and relative fluency in the arcane rules of an industry, one gets to stand back from actual work and just collect money.

Ostensibly, the job of a financial adviser is to provide advice. Do you actually get that from your broker? It is worth anything?

Research shows, over and over, that stock brokers can't do much of anything demonstrably valuable. They don't know which stocks will go up or down and when. They don't know which asset classes will outperform this year or next.

Nobody knows. That's the point. If you're among that small cadre of extremely high-level traders who can throw loads of cash at a short-term fluke, fantastic. If you have a mind for numbers like Warren Buffett that allows you to buy companies on the cheap and hold them forever, excellent.

If you're a normal retirement investor trying to get from A to B and retire on time, well, you have a really big problem to face: The toll-taker wants your money.

Dead weight

So he needs you to trade — a lot. Because that's how stock brokers make money. Not by doling out retirement advice, but by ensuring that your account is active and churning commissions on behalf of them and their employers.
Mr. Bogles' diatribe on the the supply side's agency problem reminds me of the pep talk by Mark Hanna to his protege the Wolf of Wall Street, Jordan Belfort, as posted here.


Thursday, July 30, 2015

Infographics: How Big Data Will Change the World

Big Data should be major trend that will underpin the Information Age.


HARNESSING THE EXPONENTIAL SURGE IN DATA CREATES BIG OPPORTUNITIES.

Thanks to Purefunds Big Data ETF (BDAT) for helping us put this together. 

IBM estimates that each day, 2.5 quintillion bytes of data are created or replicated. That’s the equivalent of a million hard drives filling up with data every hour.

The current volume of data created is substantial: it is so much that 90% of the world’s data has been created in the last two years. However, the amount of information today pales in comparison to what our future holds, as the rate at which data is created is accelerating exponentially.

It’s for this reason that The Economist estimates that there will be roughly 7x more data in 2020 than there was in 2014.

WHERE DOES BIG DATA COME FROM?

Big data comes from both internal and external sources. Internally, millions of old documents and records are scanned and archived by businesses. Most of the time, no detailed analytics have ever been run on this information. Externally, the public web offers millions of data sets published for public consumption by government, economic, census, and other sources.

There’s also a broad spectrum of data that exists that can be a part of both of these categories: social media posts, documents, emails, business applications, machine log data, media, and sensor data can all be collected, processed, and analyzed. To get a sense of the extent of this information, here’s what is created every hour just from social media and email: 72 hours of video uploaded to Youtube, 4 million search inquiries on Google, 200 million emails sent, 2.5 million shares on Facebook, and 300,000 tweets made.

BIG DATA = BIG OPPORTUNITIES FOR BUSINESS

With proper analysis, Big Data can lead to new understandings of consumer behaviour, better management decisions, new innovations, and improved risk management. However, there are big challenges in making use of so much information.

Too much data creates an information overload.

Organizing and storing all of this data can be problematic.

Companies don’t know how to use all of this data to create insight.

To organize and make sense of it all, data scientists use the three V’s to describe Big Data.

Volume is the scale at which data is created, and includes the massive amounts of information derived from phones, internet users, machine logs, and internet of things.

Velocity is the analysis of streaming data: for example, modern cars have 100 sensors that monitor different systems in real-time.

Variety is the different forms of data, and it reflects the fact that data comes in all shapes and forms. Finding a way to harmonize multiple types of data can be quite a challenge. Research finds that organizations spend up to 80% of their time modelling and preparing data, rather than actually gaining insight.

Let’s see how companies have been able to use Big Data to create opportunity.

CASE STUDIES OF BIG DATA

Macy’s adjusts pricing in near-real time for 73 million items based on demand and inventory.

American Express developed predictive models that analyze historical transactions and 115 variables to forecast the loyalty of customers. Using this data, they can see if customers may be potentially closing their accounts in the near future. Launching a pilot program in Australia, the company can now identify 24% of accounts in the country that will close in the next four months.

Walmart built a new search engine for their website that includes semantic data relying on text analysis, machine learning, and even synonym mining to create better search results. Online shoppers have been more likely to complete purchases as a result by 10% to 15%, increasing revenue by billions.

Los Angeles and Santa Cruz police departments have used an algorithm that is typically used to predict earthquakes, now using it to look at crime data. The software can predict where crimes are likely to occur down to 500 square feet. In areas the software is being used, there has been a 33% reduction in burglaries and a 21% reduction in violent crimes.

BIG MARKET

Today’s data centers occupy the land to equivalent to almost 6,000 football fields. By 2020, the amount of digital information is expected to increase exponentially to more than 7x of what it is today.

In healthcare alone, Big Data is expected to eventually save $300 billion per year in healthcare analytics. Retailers may increase margins up to 60% through Big Data analytics.

“Information is the oil of the 21st century, and analytics is the combusion engine.” – Peter Sondergaard, Gartner Research.

Courtesy of: Visual Capitalist

FOMC Policies: Why the US Federal Reserve Waffles

Sometimes media presents a different context than the indicated headline.

A noteworthy example has been today’s breaking news from Philippine business news provider, the Businessworld


The expert quote in the terse article “bar is low for the Fed to raise rates” patently diverges from “Fed moves closer to raising interest rates.

This isn’t pettifogging. To consider that much of the public’s actions can be traced to what has been fed by mainstream (for instance the weak peso); the contrasting message may confound readers. Or readers may just ignore the quote and stick with the headlines.

Nonetheless this Wall Street Journal Blog also sees a dovish tendency by the FOMC’s statement: Many bond investors are skeptical that the Federal Reserve will clearly signal a September rate increase at the conclusion of the central bank’s policy meeting on Wednesday. 

And so has this Reuters report which attributes the yesterday's buoyancy on US stocks to low interest rate expectations on Fed actions.

However, here is the actual FOMC statement: (bold mine)
To support continued progress toward maximum employment and price stability, the Committee today reaffirmed its view that the current 0 to 1/4 percent target range for the federal funds rate remains appropriate. In determining how long to maintain this target range, the Committee will assess progress--both realized and expected--toward its objectives of maximum employment and 2 percent inflation. This assessment will take into account a wide range of information, including measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial and international developments. The Committee anticipates that it will be appropriate to raise the target range for the federal funds rate when it has seen some further improvement in the labor market and is reasonably confident that inflation will move back to its 2 percent objective over the medium term.
As usual, the Fed's assessment has been data-dependent, meaning based on ex-post (past performance) analysis, but whose policy decisions will be predicated on ex-ante (anticipated changes). In short, for the FOMC, the immediate past will be projected into the future as basis of decisions. They have barely provide room for alternative response-reaction paths.

So given the above litany of factors for consideration, the FOMC seem as moving goalposts. They have been looking for various excuses or alibis to justify the postponement of raising rates.

Why so? Sovereign Man's Simon Black describes the Fed's addiction to zero bound:
In the US, market manipulation has taken on a much more sophisticated approach.

It caught my attention last week that the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet is still within 0.3% of its all-time high.

All the fanfare about Quantitative Easing coming to an end, and the Fed cleaning up its balance sheet, turned out to be a load of bull.

When the Fed entered the financial crisis in 2008, its balance sheet was roughly $900 billion.

At its peak, its balance sheet totaled $4.5 trillion. Today, it’s still at $4.5 trillion.

So much for a new era of responsibility.

But to give you a sense of how closely tied the Federal Reserve is to financial markets in the US, this morning I pulled the data and plotted the two together.

This chart shows the relationship between the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet and the Dow Jones Industrial Average since the start of the crisis in late 2008:

You can see that the market stays within a tight range, and as Quantitative Easing played out over the years, that range became even tighter.

Even now that Quantitative Easing has supposedly ended, the ratio between the Fed’s balance sheet and the Dow Jones Industrial Average remains nearly constant at 253x, with a standard deviation of just 1.5%.

That’s a fancy way of saying that, whether intentional or not, the Fed is completely dominating the US stock market.

It’s the same story with mortgages. Treasury bonds. And just about every other major asset class in the US.

Which means that any shrinkage of the Fed’s balance sheet will drag down markets with it.

The Fed may not be as brash as China, but their unsustainable support for financial markets is just as precarious.

This is a time for extreme caution; there’s simply been too much pressure built up in the system, and there’s no way of knowing when or where it’s going to be released.
The Fed's dependence on bubble blowing have become so deeply rooted. With the prospects of painful adjustments, this makes withdrawal hardly an option. This applies not only to the Fed, but almost to the entire spectrum of central banking operations worldwide.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Quote of the Day: China’s Stock Market Manipulation Exposes on the Perils of Outsized Global Asset Bubbles

…just as in Japan, the US, and Europe, there can be no mistaking what prompted China’s manipulation: the perils of outsize asset bubbles. Time and again, regulators and policymakers – to say nothing of political leaders – have been asleep at the switch in condoning market excesses. In a globalized world where labor income is under constant pressure, the siren song of asset markets as a growth elixir is far too tempting for the body politic to resist.

Speculative bubbles are the visible manifestation of that temptation. As the bubbles burst – and they always do – false prosperity is exposed and the defensive tactics of market manipulation become both urgent and seemingly logical.

Therein lies the great irony of manipulation: The more we depend on markets, the less we trust them. Needless to say, that is a far cry from the “invisible hand” on which the efficacy of markets rests. We claim, as Adam Smith did, that impersonal markets ensure the most efficient allocation of scarce capital; but what we really want are markets that operate only on our terms.
This excerpt is from Stephen S. Roach's Market Manipulation Goes Global published at the Project Syndicate. Mr Roach is former Chairman and chief economist of Morgan Stanley Asia and the firm's chief economist, a senior fellow at Yale University's Jackson Institute of Global Affairs, a senior lecturer at Yale's School of Management and author.

Age of Robotics: Japanese Hotel Staffed by Robots

This is revolutionary. The service industry will most likely see a widespread adaption of robots.

In Japan, a small hotel opened with a service staff manned by robots.

From the CBS:
The world's first hotel staffed almost entirely by robots is opening its doors full-time to guests this month, but CBS News correspondent Seth Doane has already been able to spend a night in the futuristic facility near the city of Nagasaki.

Doane reports that the opening of a small, low-cost hotel doesn't usually warrant international attention -- even with gimmicks like drones, or the boss arriving via robotic platform.

But the "Henn'na Hotel," which translates to "strange hotel" in Japanese, lives up to its name.

"Please ask me your request, but don't ask me a difficult question because I am a robot," says the dinosaur behind the check-in desk.

The English-speaking dinosaur robot is designed to appeal to kids. Also at reception, an almost creepy humanoid, programmed to speak Japanese, and of course, to bow in respect.

There's a robotic bag-check, even a robot concierge.

Hideo Sawada is the man in charge. Doane asked him if robots, which rely on a set of multiple choice responses to any question asked, could really replace staff like the hotel concierge, who has actually tasted food.
The Kicker… (bold mine)
Sawada says having robots fill jobs can help reduce labor costs by about 70 percent. At the Henn'na, rooms start at only about $80 per night -- a pretty good deal in one of the most expensive countries in the world for travellers.

The hotel boss admitted that the robotic staff "don't come cheap," but said that compared to an annual payroll for human personnel, "they are quite cost-effective... and as (technology) improves I think they will become quite price-competitive."

In technology-crazed Japan, robots are becoming part of everyday life; from commercials, to appearances on TV as modern-day samurai. They're in stores greeting customers, and titillating tourists at Tokyo's famed "robot restaurant."

Hotels were merely the next logical progression.
Investors/entrepreneurs have always been on a lookout for ways around minimizing labor costs. Part of such costs may be from policy based interventions like the minimum wage. Thus proliferation of robots will likely on occur areas with high labor costs.

Watch video here. (hat tip EPJ)

Monday, July 27, 2015

China Stock Market Crisis: Quasi Nationalization Sputters, Shanghai Index Plummets 8.5%!

Last night I showed this…


And asked
the Chinese government has been fighting domestic financial-economic battles on multiple fronts: the stock market, the property market, capital flight and the yuan.

Up to what extent can the Chinese government maintain the façade of normality? Up to what extent before the unravelling?
Today’s incredible 8.5% stock market rout may have provided part of the answer.



From Bloomberg
China’s stocks tumbled, with the benchmark index falling the most since February 2007, amid concern a three-week rally sparked by unprecedented government intervention is unsustainable.

The Shanghai Composite Index plunged 8.5 percent to 3,725.56 at the close, with 75 stocks dropping for each one that rose. PetroChina Co., long considered a target of state-linked market support funds, tumbled by a record 9.6 percent. The rout dented investor confidence from Hong Kong to Taiwan and Indonesia, helping send the MSCI Emerging Markets Index to a two-year low.

Monday’s retreat shattered the sense of calm that had fallen over mainland markets last week and raised questions over the viability of government efforts to prop up share prices as the economy slows. China’s industrial profits fell 0.3 percent in June from a year earlier, the statistics bureau reported on Monday. The International Monetary Fund has urged China to eventually unwind its support measures, according to a person familiar with the matter…

The Shanghai gauge had rebounded 16 percent from its July 8 low through Friday as officials went to extreme lengths to halt a rout that erased $4 trillion from the nation’s equities. Officials allowed more than 1,400 companies to halt trading, banned major shareholders from selling stakes and armed a state-run financing vehicle with more than $480 billion to support the market.


The above exhibits today’s broad based meltdown on Chinese stocks based on sectoral indices.


SCMP’s George Chen tweeted earlier that over 1,600 issues were down 10%  led by listed brokerages.

Today’s crash essentially wipes out a little over half the 16% recovery engineered by the Chinese government through the quasi nationalization that has been backed by an estimated $800 billion pump. This is aside from the implementation of draconian capital controls and the intimidation of 'malicious' (short) sellers.

So what will the Chinese government do next? Double down on the $800 billion support? Or will they implement Deng Xiaoping’s advice…(bold mine)
… some people insist stock is the product of capitalism. We conducted some experiments on stocks in Shanghai and Shenzhen, and the result has proven a success. Therefore, certain aspects of capitalism can be adopted by socialism. We should not be worried about making mistakes. We can close it [the stock exchange] and re-open it later. Nothing is 100% perfect
…which means a stock market holiday next?

Yet more signs why crashing stocks will impact the real economy, from the same Bloomberg article… (bold mine)
A gauge of industrial companies plunged by a record 9 percent, the most among the 10 groups on China’s large-cap CSI 300 Index, which sank 8.6 percent. The slump in industrial profits last month compared with a 0.6 percent gain in May, according to data from the statistics bureau. For the first six months, earnings slid 0.7 percent.

June’s equity market slump was very likely a contributor to the fall in industrial profits, according to Bloomberg Intelligence economists Tom Orlik and Fielding Chen. Chinese firms are major investors in the stock market. Back in May, when the National Bureau of Statistics was reporting rebounding profits, they acknowledged that investment gains were a big contributor.
Instead of investing in the real economy, many companies funneled their cash into the race to bid up stocks. So a sustained stock market crash will likely eviscerate liquid assets of balance sheets of many companies that will further expose on the fragility of excessive leverage of the Chinese political economy.

Will crashing Chinese stock markets compound on the silent run on the Indonesian rupiah- Malaysian ringgit to trigger the Asian Crisis 2.0, the 2015 edition?

Very interesting developments.