Monday, October 12, 2015

Phisix 7,100: Risk of Global Recession Sends Global Risk Assets to a Frenzied Frothy Pump!

..the fiscal gap is all of the unfunded liabilities that the government owes. Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, all the departmental programs, all the agency and sub-agency programs extending into the future, which is a lot of money, versus the amount of revenue that we expect to collect from taxes and other revenue sources. Now if we're being fiscally responsible, those numbers should be fairly close together. If we're not, a gap begins to occur. We bring that forward to modern day today's dollars, and that's the fiscal gap, which sits at over $200 trillion and is continuing to grow. Now the only reason that we can sustain that kind of debt is because of our artificial ability to print money, to create what we think is wealth, but it is not wealth, because it's based upon our faith and credit. You know, we decoupled it from the domestic gold standard in 1933, and from the international gold standard in 1971, and since that time, it's not based on anything. Why would we be continuing to do that? Ben Carson, GOP Presidential Candidate in an interview at the
In this issue
Phisix 7,100: Risk of Global Recession Sends Global Risk Assets to a Frenzied Frothy Pump!
-IMF Slashes 2015 GDP for the 2ND Time! World Bank and Fitch Joins Downgrade Bandwagon!
-After ALI, ICTSI Chops 2015 CAPEX by HALF!
-Rabid Denial Phase: Panicky Media Resorts to Celebrity Endorsement of Stocks!
-Growing Risks of Global Recession Sends US Dollar Crashing, Risk Assets Melt-UP!
-Phisix Underperforms Region; Volume Sputters at 7,100
-Quote and Images of the Week: Brazil’s Boom and Bust
Phisix 7,100: Risk of Global Recession Sends Global Risk Assets to a Frenzied Frothy Pump!
Note on the headline quote. To be clear, I am not supporting any US presidential candidate. The reason for the above excerpt is to show of the increasing recognition by the public on the relationship of debt accumulation with unfettered fiat money standard. (tip of the hat: Mises Blog)
IMF Slashes 2015 GDP for the 2ND Time! World Bank and Fitch Joins Downgrade Bandwagon!
The string of downgrades I predicted last August in response to the 2Q and 1H GDP appear to be snowballing
Here is what I wrote then[1],
Simple math tells us that at 5.3% for 1H, it would NEED the next two quarters to attain an average of 6.7% just to reach an annual 6%, which has been the floor of most of mainstream expectations.
The next question is can an average of 6.7% be reached? How?
With 6.7% seemingly seen as a Herculean task, it would be natural for the consensus to go about downscaling G-R-O-W-T-H expectations.
Here are the 2015 forecasts by some of the major international institutions: Moody’s 6.6% (2Q GDP at 6.88!), ADB 6.4%, and the IMF 6.2%.
So if these entities downgrade G-R-O-W-T-H, how will this affect headline bullishness?
Well, the World Bank joined the bandwagon to slash the Philippines’ 2015 GDP forecast[2], notes the Business World,
the Washington-based lender said it now sees the Philippine economy growing by 5.8% this year from the 6.5% forecast given in June, 6.4% in 2016 from 6.5% and 6.2% in 2017 from 6.3%.
Of course, media sterilizes or cushions this downgrade as still “among Asia’s best”. They fail to realize or acknowledge the implications of such actions.
Adding to this week’s G-R-O-W-T-H downside revision has been credit rating Fitch. From the Business World[3]
Fitch sees the Philippine economy growing by 5.6% this year and 6.1% in 2016, slower than previous projections of 6.3% and 6.2%, respectively. In 2017, economic growth could slow to 5.9% before picking up to 6% in 2018
My guess is that the annual G-R-O-W-T-H for the coming 2-3 years will be repeatedly revised significantly lower!
As possible clue, the IMF amended G-R-O-W-T-H forecasts for the Philippines LOWER for the SECOND time this year! From another Business World report[4],
In the October 2015 edition of its World Economic Outlook titled “Adjusting to Lower Commodity Prices,” the Washington-based lender now expects the Philippine economy to grow by 6% in 2015 from 6.2% previously, and 6.3% next year from 6.5% initially. GDP growth was logged at 6.1% last year.
The IMF first downgraded G-R-O-W-T-H outlook last July.
At the year’s start, the multilateral agency’s target was at 6.7%. So while the second adjustment may not signify much from the July revised outlook, the second revision translates to a 10.44% cut in G-R-O-W-T-H expectations from the initial target for 2015.
Though the IMF expects government spending to help the GDP numbers, these are statistical illusions that would only drag down real growth overtime.
What has popular been sold as ‘fiscal discipline’ will soon mutate into fiscal extravagance. This will be magnified by the coming fall in tax revenues relative to public spending which should perk up debt levels.
Nonetheless the above continues to reveal not only of the big misses on overly optimistic projections, but also why establishment forecasts will fail to predict important inflection points of an economic downturn. That’s because past performance projected into the future looks like the main basis of the establishment models.
I am not here to nitpick on the statistical data. I am here to point out of its implications.
You see, the entire spectrum of domestic asset market pricing (stocks, real estate, bonds and currency and even credit ratings) have almost entirely been predicated on expectations that there can be NO obstacles or NO hindrances to the credit fueled GDP G-R-O-W-T-H juggernaut.
And since asset prices has been underpinned by real (formal) economy developments manifested by the race to build supply side that had been fueled by a credit boom which have really been about borrowing demand from the future to spend today (as the basis of mainstream’s aggregate demand economic G-R-O-W-T-H model), these have been seen as moving in a perpetually linear motion that comes with hardy any costs.

This only means that the credit G-R-O-W-T-H illusions have incited a monumental mispricing or preposterous valuations of asset markets. As shown above, based on mostly March 15 PSE reported book value, the PBV (as of Friday’s close) reveals of a stunning valuation excesses.
Of course, mispricing doesn’t occur in random (or fall like manna from heaven) they are instead symptoms of accumulated imbalances in response to government policies.
Hence, such downgrades makes these “misalignment in prices” and economic maladjustments vulnerable to radical shifts in expectations. And such significant shifts in expectations exposes on the heightened sensitivity of asset prices to crashes (mainstream euphemism “volatility”).
And we are talking just of a scaling down of expectations from 7-8% to 5-6%. How much more if the GDP G-R-O-W-T-H ends up lower?
After ALI, ICTSI Chops 2015 CAPEX by HALF!
Of course, changes in expectations don’t just affect asset prices; there will be real economy ramifications too.
In response to deteriorating real economic events, headlines have now been incorporating these sanitized downgrades. And since headlines impact people’s thought and actions, these means that such lowered expectations will prompt for a reflexive feedback loop between expectations (incentives) and pricing (human action).
And such feedback loop will be expressed as real economic developments (investments, savings and consumption) that should eventually get manifested as GDP G-R-O-W-T-H.
Markets signify a process. They represent spontaneous actions of all economic agents. Thus economic entropy occurs in stages.
Last September, following ALI’s capex cuts I asked[5]
Will capex cut backs be limited to the real estate sector or will this spread into the other industries too?
Well developments appear to be confirming my hunch. Maritime terminal giant (quasi monopoly) ICTSI’s Big Boss says that the firm’s capex cuts will likely be cut in half, not next year, but this year!!!
From the Businessworld (bold mine)[6]:  INTERNATIONAL Container Terminal Services, Inc. expects to spend only half of the $530 million it budgeted for this year as the Philippine port operator limits its expansion amid slowing global growth, Chairman and President Enrique Razon said. “The growth picture of the global economy is not looking too great,” Mr. Razon, 55, said in an interview Oct. 2 in Manila. Profit at the company has mainly been driven by acquiring new terminals rather than by organic growth, he said…Capital spending in the first half of the year was $136.7 million, accounting for 26% of its $530 million annual budget, the company said in August.
A read between the lines of “Profit at the company has mainly been driven by acquiring new terminals rather than by organic growth” signifies a TRENCHANT revelation!
The more direct way of saying this: ICTSI’s ‘inorganic’ earnings have been fueled by cheap money through low interest rates subsidies as manifested by a weak US dollar regime (strong peso and emerging market currencies).
So the ICTSI chief tacitly admits that his company’s profits have been artificially inflated or “mainly been driven by acquiring new terminals rather than by organic growth’ that has been boosted by the FED and the BSP’s easy money regime.
Now that a strong dollar has impelled for a substantial change in his outlook, which prompted him to make this downshift, “global economy is not looking too great”. Said differently, the cheap money landscape is being threatened, thereby the capex cuts!  Capex cuts, again, for THIS year! Capex cuts with just a quarter to go! How much more for next year???!!!
Now as I pointed out before, lesser investments should translate to diminished earnings G-R-O-W-T-H (all things equal)!
Has ICTSI’s recent crash been factoring this? As of October 8, ICTSI sports a PE of 23.3 and a PBV of 2.58.
On ALI’s capex cuts, I also asked
What happens if cut backs on capex evolves or progresses into a national phenomenon? Will this not reinforce the ongoing slowdown in the statistical G-R-O-W-T-H or the GDP momentum?
And what would be the conditions of the built-in or accumulated leverage in the system when the G-R-O-W-T-H materially recedes? Will Non Performing Loans soar further?
Where will the much ballyhooed consumer spending growth model get its financing once the tapering of capex will result to lesser investments and therefore reduced jobs? And how will the few resident consumers continue with their spending binge once banking system tightens as consequence to a G-R-O-W-T-H downturn?
Of course, if the ICTSI’s head honcho is right that where the global economy slows, then what happens to the company’s recently raised $450 billion in perpetual bonds?
Moreover, what happens to the popularly held one directional G-R-O-W-T-H?
Rabid Denial Phase: Panicky Media Resorts to Celebrity Endorsement of Stocks!
Declining peso volume trade? Or faltering interests on the stock market? No problem. Media rides to the rescue! They have now involved or invoked star or celebrity power in their advertisement campaign to boost the stock market!
The Inquirer headline screamed “Stock market lures smart celebrities, REAL-LIFE GAMBLE PAYS OFF FOR MONEY-WISE STARS”[7] (all caps original)
The article opens with “But these celebrities are smart enough not to splurge on material things that could later represent a fragile—and to some extent—broken career.”
Aside from the anecdotes, the article goes on to pitch the virtues of “blue chips”!
Put in simple terms: money in stock market equals smart actions!
Wow!  Don’t you see how spectacularly vapid such reasoning has been?
Several insights from the above.
First, such assertion looks like a stirring indictment of the celebrities whom have NOT dabbled with stocks.
Let me frame the headline and the starting paragraph from a different angle: Celebrities who do NOT invest in the stock market are NOT only bereft of smartness but risks a broken career!  Or, if you do not invest in stocks, you are most likely damned!
To save face, the article likewise quotes an expert whose clients are allegedly celebrities but has opted to remain anonymous.
Second, stock markets have been projected as a one way street….up up up and away!
Third, stock markets have equally been portrayed as act of intellectual and financial brilliance. Unfortunately, the article provides no theory but questionable anecdotes on such premises.
Fourth, media confuses investments with gambling.
Intriguingly and ironically, the article goes to cite the payoff from “gambling” as financial security!
Well some basics.
Gambling, as defined by dictionary.com, is the act or practice of risking the loss of something important by taking a chance or acting recklessly.
So when has “risking the loss of something important by taking a chance or acting recklessly” been akin to the path of attaining financial comfort?  
The late financial historian and economist Peter L. Bernstein wrote to differentiate gambling from investing[8],  (bold mine)
Games of chance must be distinguished from games in which skill makes a difference. The principles that work in roulette, dice, and slot machines are identical, but they explain only part of what is involved in poker, betting on the horses, and backgammon. With one group of games the outcome is determined by fate; with the other group, choice comes into play. The odds — the probability of winning — are all you need to know for betting in a game of chance, but you need far more information to predict who will win and who will lose when the outcome depends on skill as well as luck. There are cardplayers and racetrack bettors who are genuine professionals, but no one makes a successful profession out of Craps.
Meanwhile, value guru, Warren Buffett’s mentor Benjamin Graham demarcates investing from speculation[9] (bold  mine)
“An investment operation is one which, upon thorough analysis promises safety of principal and an adequate return. Operations not meeting these requirements are speculative.”
On the other hand Warren Buffett in a 2010 testimony at the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) contrasts investments, speculations and gambling[10]. (bold mine)
Investments: “an investment operation in my view is one where you look to the asset itself to determine your decision to lay out some money now to get some more money back later on”
Speculation: “more focused on the price action of the stock, particularly that you buy or the indexed future or something of the sort. Because you are not really, you are counting on, for whatever factors, could be quarterly earnings, could be up or it’s going to split or whatever it may be or increase the dividend, but you are not looking to the asset itself.”
Gambling: engaging in a transaction which doesn’t need to be part of the system. I mean, if I want to bet on a football game, you know, the football game’s operation is not dependent on whether I bet or not. Now, if I want to bet on October wheat or something of the sort people have to raise wheat and when they plant it they don’t know what the price is going be later on. So you need activity on the other side of that and who may be speculating on it but it is not an artificial transaction that has no necessity for existing in an economic framework.
Meanwhile for Bodie, Kane and Marcus[11], the demarcation between gambling and speculation:
To gamble is “to bet or wager on an uncertain outcome.” If you compare this definition to that of speculation, you will see that the central difference is the lack of “good profit.” Economically speaking, a gamble is the assumption of risk for no purpose but enjoyment of the risk itself, whereas speculation is undertaken because one perceives a favourable risk-return tradeoff. To turn a gamble into a speculative prospect requires an adequate risk premium for compensation to risk-averse investors for the risks that they bear. Hence risk aversion and speculation are not inconsistent
So how can “gambling” be limned as “smart" when gambling signifies the “assumption of risk for no purpose but enjoyment of the risk itself”, “the outcome is determined by fate”, when the odds — the probability of winning relative to losing is brazenly ignored, or when “promises safety of principal and an adequate return” are nothing but presupposed?
In short, my major beef with the article would be the blatant misrepresentation of gambling as key to financial security. Gambling does NOT equal investment!
Fifth, why the star power?
Are celebrities supposed to be “smarter” when they are into ‘gambling’ in stocks?  Does owning stocks mechanically make one smart or even more financially disciplined? How? Or what’s the relationship between stock ownership and financial discipline or a positive payoff? The article doesn’t give an effort to explain.
Have celebrities been immune to stock market loses? Not from what I know of. For instance, the recent stock market crash in China stung several celebrities with big amount of losses.
To be fair to the article, one of the featured celebrities covers an experience with losses from 2008 crash. But this has been offset by accounts of recent gains with “blue chips”
More so, what guarantees that stocks would be a better option than “to splurge on material things”? Would it be better to lose money on the stock market than to have just spent it for personal satisfaction? What’s the theory and logic behind this? Again the article blindly assumes this dynamic.
To expand this thought, are celebrities been limited to the choice of spending on material things and stocks? Hasn’t this been a false choice, given that there are other options for  allocating money such as holding cash, commodities, bonds, US dollar or foreign currencies and or more importantly real business investments?
Sixth, why “blue chips”?
Does “blue chips” guarantee positive payoffs or provide larger probabilities of gains in the stock market “gamble”?  Are “blue chips” immune to valuation excesses, or to economic reversals and or to stock market cycles? In short, are blue chips invulnerable to losses?
What is the probability that “blue chips” at current valuations will deliver positive returns? The author should answer this.
Has history been supportive of such assertion? Why did Philippine blue chips crash by more than half in 2007-8 bear market?  What about the blue chip experiences of Enron, Bear Stearns and Lehman Bros? Does this not matter at all?
Why promote blue chips? Because these corporations are the major advertisers of media?
Because Philippine elites failed to make the prestigious top 10 ranking of the 2016 Forbes richest in Asia? Therefore, the need to pump up on their blue chips conglomerates in order to bolster the wealth standings of these elites? As previously discussed, stocks serve as major criteria in the calculation of Forbes net assets.
Should the public’s resources be transferred or redistributed in support of the vanities of the media’s clients?
Moreover, should soaring blue chips translate to G-R-O-W-H? How?
Seventh, the use of star power to promote stocks represents the logical fallacy called appeal to popularity.
Are celebrities supposed to ensure a positive payoff from “real life gambling” on stocks?
Why should Filipinos be inspired by their “idols”? What justifies the enticement of the lower wealth segment of society to join the bandwagon to bid up severely overpriced “blue chips”? In doing so, won’t the public unduly be assuming needless risks, while at the same time, transferring their wealth to the elite owners of “blue chips”?  Won’t this be Robin Hood in reverse?
Celebrities are not in the same financial position as their fans. Celebrities earn a lot of money relative to their fans where gambling losses could either be offset or just ignored or forgotten. But how about the average day toilers?
Additionally while celebrities frequently hail from the entertainment industry, stocks are for personal finances. In short, personal finance should NOT mixed up with entertainment!
Lastly, individuals (either for personal account or as commercial entities) treat stocks differently. Of those invested, which among the celebrities treat stocks “for the purpose of enjoyment” or for social status than for “favorable risk-reward tradeoff”?  Has media been privy to the celebrities’ account ledger?
In gist, what is the key to stock market success? Has owning stocks blindly or has owning stocks in order to follow their idols…automatically transform into financial nirvana? On what theory does this assumption stand on? Because media says X, therefore X? Or proof by assertion?


Such kinds of derring-do presumptions not only take all for granted risks associated with owning stocks whether blue chips or not, importantly it glorifies GAMBLING (which ironically the article admits to and which the article confuses with investments)! And the romantization of gambling through star power!
Has media become so so so so very desperate as to resort to cheap advertisement tricks? And has such desperation, or signs of denial, become so intense, such that they would allure even the least economically privileged segment of society such has household help to part ways with their hard earned money for nothing but to promote the interests of the media’s sponsors?
Growing Risks of Global Recession Sends US Dollar Crashing, Risk Assets Melt-UP!
One of the ironic developments of the contemporary stock market has been its devotion to central bank responses rather than the traditional focus on the fundamental function of reflecting on claims on expected stream of future cash flows.


Last week’s headlines from Reuters and from Wall Street Journal Asia embodied the global risk asset meltUP!
Yet the greater the bad economic news, the more piercing the stock market rally in response to the ferocious US dollar reversal.
Expectations of STIMULUS from the US Federal Reserves, Bank of Japan, European Central Bank and the People’s Bank of China splashed the headlines of international business outfits last Monday.
As shown above, the USD crashed against all Asian currencies except China. The collapse of the USD sent Asian stocks to the moon!
In my outlook last Sunday, I suspected that a rally would happen[12]; “Friday’s dismal US jobs reports fueled speculation that FED may once again defer from a “liftoff” this October. Steroid addicted stock market bulls, who sensed blood from the FED’s extended provision of monetary cocaine, went for the kill. So from a massive selloff at the opening bell, the realization of the provision of more monetary narcotics, prompted for an astounding reversal. US stocks closed significantly up Friday while Asian currencies rallied strongly too. The peso was unofficially quoted at 46.60-46.65. This may just juice up a relief rally in Asian stocks, as well as, the PSEi next week.
But the US dollar crash in the face of sustained weakening of the global economy had been nothing short of stunning.
This quote from an article[13] that depicted the gigantic rally in the ringgit-rupiah last Friday resonated on my hunch (bold mine): Disappointing U.S. jobs data that pushed back expectations for when the world’s largest economy would raise borrowing costs spurred gains in emerging-market stocks and currencies this week and that was reinforced by the overnight release of minutes from the Fed’s September meeting. Resurgent oil and commodity prices have also benefited Malaysia and Indonesia, and traders have been unwinding bets that the nations’ currencies would keep falling through the end of the year.“What we’re seeing is that people are continuing to cover their short positions in the two currencies,” said Divya Devesh, Standard Chartered Plc’s Asian foreign-exchange-strategist in Singapore. “It’s going to be critical to watch China data because that could be the turning point” and the rally isn’t supported by fundamentals, he said.
The FED September minutes revealed that authorities were concerned that “domestic financial conditions tightened modestly” and that “recent global economic and financial developments may have increased the downside risks to economic activity somewhat”[14]
This week’s response reveals of the following, global financial markets
-have become totally broken or have seen its price discovery function massively impaired,
-have signified as the modern day Pavlov dogs that have almost entirely been addicted to central banking’s monetary narcotics,
-have been frontrunning central banks or
-have been pressuring central banks to appease them or have held central banks hostage.
Since central banks have used stocks as a political economic tool this implies a no exit for them and for global financial markets hooked on stimulus.
Yet such deformation of the markets essentially underwrites market volatility, financial instability, violent unwinds or market crashes or crises, and economic contractions

Given the remarkable crashes in some of the emerging market currencies such as the ringgit –rupiah, volatile downside has transposed into volatile upside.
But the difference underpinning last week’s rally has mostly been a short covering. The same applies to US stocks which rally the Bank of America/Zero Hedge says constituted “The Biggest Short Squeeze In Years” (right)
Aside from the ‘biggest short squeeze’, US stocks as represented by the S&P 500 has largely been headed nowhere in 2015. Based on chart formation, the S&P even had a ‘rounding top’ formation prior to the August meltdown. So even if the S&P should rally back to the 2,050 level+, the overhead resistance that had been shaped from last February to July would likely serve as a critical sizeable barrier to overcome.
In addition, US stocks have been rallying in the face of soaring high yield credit spreads, surging corporate bond yields and faltering profit margins. The T-Bill-Eurodolllar spread (TED Spread) has been in an upsurge which continues to reveal signs of US dollar shortages.
And the current US dollar shortages have been aggravated by falling forex reserves as described by this Bloomberg report[15]: From Oslo to Doha, Riyadh to Moscow, governments that rode crude’s historic rise to unprecedented wealth are now being forced to start repatriating their rainy-day funds just to make ends meet.
Add to these, China’s September foreign reserves fell by $43.3 billion to $3.51 trillion reports the CNBC
In SEVEN years, political subsidies or redistribution had been channeled from more than a HUNDRED monetary policies around the world. According to Bank of America/Zero Hedge, global central banks have cut interest rates 697 times and bought $15 trillion during the last 110 months. These have been implemented to prevent economic decline and market collapses, yet the global economy seems once again at the brink of a recession.
So it would be interesting to see how the real effects of the trudging economies (earnings, valuations, credit conditions, capex, consumption, inventories and etc…) will sustain the one week melt-UP.
More example of bad news is good news, German August exports suffers biggest collapse since 2009 according to the Telegraph (-5.2%) as imports skidded too (-3.1%). This comes amidst report that August German industrial output sunk too. Yet the German DAX soared by a whopping 5.69!!!
Even the Philippines reported a SHARP CONTRACTION of exports (-6.3%) August. Philippine exports have been down in 8 out of 9 months! August decline covered all economic bloc or major trading partners, East Asia, US, ASEAN, Eurozone and others.
Since the accounting treatment of GDP in terms of external trade is (X-M) or exports minus imports this simply means that given the recent surge in imports (July), the GDP will be hobbled by the contradictory performance in external trade activities.
As side note, since voluntary trades are mutually beneficial thus enhance economic welfare of individuals, this means that imports shouldn’t be considered as deductible to economic activities.
Furthermore, from last semester of 2014 until the 1H of 2015 import activities has largely been listless. So given that manufacturing or industrial production has been down again in August or has been contracting in 7 out of 8 months based on value, this means that the Philippine economy has been drawing from inventories in order to provide supply to the economy. Hence the surge in July imports (which follows a big jump in June) represents most likely a restocking to cover formative inventory gaps, also an inventory buildup for Christmas holidays, partly foreign exchange effect and possible frontloading of inventory in anticipation of a weaker peso. I find it curious for media to become silent when imports reported declines, but suddenly engage in shrill cheerleading when imports soar! This was reported as “increase in demand”. Yes ‘demand is increasing’ even when government measures of September CPI and August retail price index continues to fall as bank credit growth in August continues to grow by double digits! So purchasing power generated from thin air (aggregate demand) doesn’t put upside pressure on prices even as inventories (from imports and manufacturing) dwindle. Yet the clarion chorus of G-R-O-W-T-H! Only in the economics of Sadako!
So this week’s trading activities has once again widened divergences or the conflicting actions of the stock market versus real economic activities. Distortions all predicated on central banking interventions.
Phisix Underperforms Region; Volume Sputters at 7,100
Back to Phisix 7,100.
The USD crash benefited mainly Indonesia’s JCI which was this week’s biggest Asian winner. The JCI posted an astounding 9.07% run!
And with a 7.35% jump, Singapore’s STI came in at far second place.
The next spot had been shared by a tight pack of other Asian national equity benchmarks that posted 4+% gains, namely Thailand’s SET +4.83%, Malaysian KLCI +4.77%, Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh Index +4.57%, Australia’s S&P 200 +4.51%, Hong Kong’s HIS +4.43%, China’s Shanghai index +4.27%, the Philippines’ PSEi +4.21% and Japan’s Nikkei +4.03%.
In a probability distribution parlance, 4% advances, for last week, represented the normal distribution in a Gaussian curve, while the rest accounted for as “tailed” standard deviations.

With this week’s substantial 4.21% gain, the PSEi performed within the ‘normal curve’ in the ambit of Asian equities. This means that all the gloating about how this implies of national superiority had all been misplaced. Through the pecking order of weekly performance, the PSEi was a mediocre performer in the region.
Yet this week’s advance has sent the Phisix to test its resistance at 7,130. Though the benchmark did close higher than the said level, which implies of a technical breach, it has yet to do so in a convincing manner. If successful, the next stop would be at 7,300, which means a gap filling move. Otherwise, support remains at 6,790.
Meanwhile, the PSEi’s advance had been broad based.
Of the 30 composite members, 28 gained while the remainder was shared by a loser and by an unchanged issue.

With a spectacular weekly 8% advance, property sector commanded a significant share of the distribution of this week’s gains.
Yet most of the gains of the property sector had largely been due to the ferocious recoil from the near bear market levels by largest property and second largest PSEi market cap, Ayala Land which posted an remarkable jump of 11.57% this week.
Megaworld was next with a fantastic 7.95% boost while SMPH and Robinsons Land likewise scored considerable advances, 5.61% and 2.11%, respectively.  The four issues accounted for 18% of the PSEi’s market cap as of Friday.
Aside from ALI and MEG, the biggest gainers for the PSEi were Bloomberry +22.18%, Alliance Global +14.09% and LTG +13.98%.


The broad based rally was shared by the PSEi constellation. Advancers thrashed decliners on a clean slate or in all sessions for the week. On an aggregate basis, advancers led decliners with a score of 533 to 355 to highlight a gaping 178 margin.
Yet the sharp volatility in market breadth hardly suggests any long term improvement but one of emotional spurts from internal market dynamics.
Also, peso volume from the last week’s spike was at a lean Php 8.8 billion (see below top). This was even padded by the P 4 billion cross trade on FGEN F (preferred shares) last Tuesday. Outside the FGENF cross, daily peso volume would have averaged about only Php 8 billion which is very unimpressive considering the 4.21% spike by the PSEi.

Curiously, aside from uninspiring actions, daily peso volume shrivels significantly every time the PSEi enters the 7,100 area.
The bottom chart represents last week’s daily volume and the corresponding PSEi index close of the day. The general improvement in sentiment from the region has so far kept the index profit taking.
It would be interesting to see how all the recent downgrades and the likely escalation of capex cuts will lead to MORE valuation excesses that would subject the market to even more confidence tests as global and domestic liquidity diminishes.
More importantly what happens when the global risk ON tryst fades? Will reality regain its dominance?
Quote and Images of the Week: Brazil’s Boom and Bust
I have always been emphasizing how those artificial credit booms eventually morphs into a economic bust.
Brazil, one of the BRICs, that boomed earlier than the Philippines should be a wonderful example.
Brazil based Austrian economist Antony P Mueller on the nation’s predicament[16]
At first, the Brazilian government ignored the coming of the crisis and when it arrived, the government ignored its existence. Imagine Brazil like a family with a lot of inherited wealth that spends as if there were no tomorrow. Yet someday this family wakes up to the fact that its wealth has been squandered and its financial accounts are in the red. The government did not recognize that the boom would be temporary. The Brazilian economy began to sputter as commodity prices fell and the demand from China decreased. Yet in order to adapt to the new situation and cut expenditures, the Brazilian government spent even more.
Incumbent President Dilma Rousseff from the Workers Party, which has been in power since 2003, won a second term in 2014 with a campaign that deceived the population about the true state of the economy. The government implemented a series of cheap financial tricks such as delaying the rise of the prices for fuel and electricity and of other items in the large list of administered prices.
After the election, hell broke loose and the true state of the economy became visible for the broad public. The popularity of the president began to fall to single-digit approval ratings. The crisis is serious in itself, yet its psychological impact becomes more severe because of the shock of disillusion. In part, this shock also applies to foreign observers and investors who bought into government propaganda or based their outlook on the projections of the International Monetary Fund whose prognosis in 2013 said that Brazil would maintain economic growth rates of at least over 4 percent for each of the years to come up to 2018.
Pictures are worth a thousand words…

The Brazil boom bust cycle as splendidly captured by the Economist magazine cover in 2009 and in 2013. The bursting bubble process remain in progress.


[3] Business World Fitch cites PHL growth prospects, risks October 9, 2015
[4] Business World Philippine forecast cut, but state spending to help October 7, 2015
[6] Businessworld ICTSI cuts spending as global growth slows October 6, 2015
[7] Inquirer.net Stock market lures smart celebrities October 7, 2015
[8] Peter L. Bernstein, Chapter 1 The Winds of the Greeks and the Role of the Dice, Against the Gods, The Remarkable Story of Risk p.14 Wiley and Sons Matrix Training Files Wordpress.com
[9]  Benjamin Graham, The Intelligent Investor, 4th ed., 2003, chapter 1, page 18. (financial.am)
[10] Warren Buffett, Santagel’s Review Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Staff Audiotape of Interview with Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway May 26, 2010 dericbownds.net
[11]  Zvi Bodie (Author), Alex Kane (Author), Alan J. Marcus (Author) Chapter 6 Risk Aversion and Capital Allocation to Risky Assets  Investments, 7th Edition (McGraw-Hill / Irwin Series in Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate)
[14] US Federal Reserve Minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee September 16-17
[16] Antony P Mueller In Brazil, Free-Market Ideas Rise as the Economy Falls October 5, 2015 Mises Institute

Friday, October 09, 2015

Recommended Reads: The Paper Wealth Bezzle and Frebezzle, The Human Cost of Socialism and the Menace of Egalitarianism

The first link deals with paper stock market wealth as 'Bezzle' and 'Frebezzle'. 

Professor London School of Economics John Kay at the Project Syndicate explains: (hat tip Zero Hedge) [bold mine]
More than a half-century ago, John Kenneth Galbraith presented a definitive depiction of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 in a slim, elegantly written volume. Embezzlement, Galbraith observed, has the property that “weeks, months, or years elapse between the commission of the crime and its discovery. This is the period, incidentally, when the embezzler has his gain and the man who has been embezzled feels no loss. There is a net increase in psychic wealth.” Galbraith described that increase in wealth as “the bezzle.”

In a delightful essay, Warren Buffett’s business partner, Charlie Munger, pointed out that the concept can be extended much more widely. This psychic wealth can be created without illegality: mistake or self-delusion is enough. Munger coined the term “febezzle,” or “functionally equivalent bezzle,” to describe the wealth that exists in the interval between the creation and the destruction of the illusion.
Applying Bezzle and Frebezzle
There are numerous routes to bezzle and febezzle. In a Ponzi scheme, early investors are handsomely rewarded at the expense of latecomers until the supply of participants is exhausted. Such practices, illegal as practiced by Bernard Madoff, are functionally equivalent to what happens during an asset-price bubble.

Tailgating, or picking up dimes in front of a steamroller, is another source of febezzle. Investors search for regular small gains punctuated by occasional large losses, an approach exemplified by the carry trade by which investors borrowed euros in Germany and France to lend in Greece and Portugal.

The “martingale” doubles up on losing bets until the trader wins – or the money runs out. The “rogue traders” escorted from their desks by security guards are typically unsuccessful exponents of the martingale. And the opportunity to switch between the trading book and the banking book creates ready opportunities for financial institutions to realize gains and park losses.
Rings a bell? 


Next link, Austrian economist Dr. Richard Ebeling on the death, terror and destruction from applied socialism: The Human Cost of Socialism in Power

From the concluding section (Epic Times): [bold mine, italics original]
The significance of these accounts is not their uniqueness but, rather, their monotonous repetition in every country in which socialism was imposed upon a society. In country after country, death, destruction, and privation followed in the wake of socialism’s triumph. Socialism’s history is an unending story of crushing tyranny and oceans of blood.

Socialism as the Ideology of Death and Destruction

As the Soviet mathematician and dissident, Igor Shafarevich, who spent many years in the GULAG slave labor camps for his opposition to the communist regime, said in his book, The Socialist Phenomenon (1980):

“Most socialist doctrines and movements are literally saturated with the mood of death, catastrophe, and destruction . . . One could regard the death of mankind as the final result to which the development of socialism leads.”

That twentieth century socialism would lead to nothing but this outcome was understood at the time of the Bolshevik victory in Russia. It was clearly expressed by the greatest intellectual opponent of socialism during the last one hundred years, the Austrian economist, Ludwig von Mises.

Near the end of his famous 1922 treatise, Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis, Mises warned that:

“Socialism is not in the least what is pretends to be. It is not the pioneer of a better and finer world, but the spoiler of what thousands of years of civilization have created. It does not build, it destroys. For destruction is the essence of it. It produces nothing, it only consumes what the social order based on private ownership in the means of production has created . . . Each step leading towards Socialism must exhaust itself in the destruction of what already exists.”

Last, the path to towards socialism via egalitarian policies. 

Here is a slice of Ludwig von Mises Institute Llewellyn H. Rockwell’s The Menace of Egalitarianism speech. (bold mine) 
What are we to understand by the word equality? The answer is, we don’t really know. Its proponents make precious little effort to disclose to us precisely what they have in mind. All we know is that we’d better believe it.

It is precisely this lack of clarity that makes the idea of equality so advantageous for the state. No one is entirely sure what the principle of equality commits him to. And keeping up with its ever-changing demands is more difficult still. What were two obviously different things yesterday can become precisely equal today, and you’d better believe they are equal if you don’t want your reputation destroyed and your career ruined.

This was the heart of the celebrated dispute between the neoconservative Harry Jaffa and the paleoconservative M.E. Bradford, carried out in the pages of Modern Age in the 1970s. Equality is a concept that cannot and will not be kept restrained or nailed down. Bradford tried in vain to make Jaffa understand that Equality with a capital E was a recipe for permanent revolution….

Now, do egalitarians mean we are committed to the proposition that anyone is potentially an astrophysicist, as long as he is raised in the proper environment? Maybe, maybe not. Some of them certainly do believe such a thing, though. In 1930, the Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences claimed that “at birth human infants, regardless of their heredity, are as equal as Fords.” Ludwig von Mises, by contrast, held that “the fact that men are born unequal in regard to physical and mental capabilities cannot be argued away. Some surpass their fellow men in health and vigor, in brain and aptitudes, in energy and resolution and are therefore better fitted for the pursuit of earthly affairs than the rest of mankind.” Did Mises commit a hate crime there, by the standards of the egalitarians? Again, we don’t really know.

Then there’s “equality of opportunity,” but even this common conservative slogan is fraught with problems. The obvious retort is that in order to have true equality of opportunity, sweeping government intervention is necessary. For how can someone in a poor household with indifferent parents seriously be said to have “equality of opportunity” with the children of wealthy parents who are deeply engaged in their lives?

Then there is equality in a cultural sense, whereby everyone is expected to ratify everyone else’s personal choices. The cultural egalitarians don’t really mean that, of course: none of them demand that people who dislike Christians sit down and learn Scholastic theology in order to understand them better. And here we discover something important about the whole egalitarian program: it’s not really about equality. It’s about some people exercising power over others.

Quote of the Day: The Illusion Called 'Change'

Humans have always lived under the illusion that: 1) they can change their spouse, 2) they can change markets, and 3) they can change human nature.
This incisive quote is from Nassim Nicolas Taleb posted at this Facebook page.

This behavioral blemish reminds me of the popular "change" rhetoric sold in the political arena.

Sunday, October 04, 2015

PSEi 6,850: Crashing PSEi Behemoths: Signs of Skeletons Emerging from the Closet?

Markets and the global economy are moving closer to an inflection point: Either the growing global economic malaise, accentuated by a structural increase in financial market volatility, will be a wake-up call to policy makers, or the global economy will slip deeper into a self-reinforcing malaise, making it very hard for the central bank to contain financial volatility.—Mohamed A. El-Erian

In this Issue:

PSEi 6,850: Crashing PSEi Behemoths: Signs of Skeletons Emerging from the Closet?
-Has the Stock Market Boom Effaced History’s Relevance?
-Phisix 6.850: A Product of Marking the Close
-PSEi 6,850 Leaves The 6,790 Support Open For A Bear Assault
-Why are the PSE Behemoths PLDT, ICT and AGI Crashing?
-Philippine Casino Bubble Represents Only The Tip Of The Iceberg
-Domestic Liquidity Jumps as Benchmark Yield Curve Dramatically Flattens

PSEi 6,850: Crashing PSEi Behemoths: Signs of Skeletons Emerging from the Closet?

Has the Stock Market Boom Effaced History’s Relevance?

Deeply held misperceptions about reality are especially magnified at the critical juncture of markets or at market inflection points.

To show some examples based on market tops[1]:
"We will not have any more crashes in our time." - John Maynard Keynes in 1927

"There will be no interruption of our permanent prosperity." - Myron E. Forbes, President, Pierce Arrow Motor Car Co., January 12, 1928

"There may be a recession in stock prices, but not anything in the nature of a crash." -Irving Fisher, leading U.S. economist, New York Times, Sept. 5, 1929

"Stock prices have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau. I do not feel there will be soon if ever a 50 or 60 point break from present levels, such as (bears) have predicted. I expect to see the stock market a good deal higher within a few months." - Irving Fisher, Ph.D. in economics, Oct. 17, 1929

Stocks were undervalued in the 1980s and early 1990s, and they are undervalued now. Stock prices could double, triple, or even quadruple tomorrow and still not be too high… Stocks are now, we believe, in the midst of a one-time-only rise to much higher ground—to the neighborhood of 36,000 for the Dow Jones Industrial Average. James K. Glassman and Kevin A. Hasset, Dow Jones 36,000 September 1999, The Atlantic
These were signs of overconfidence.

And they were signs of times.

But they were all wrong.

Of course, such extreme misimpressions apply not only to market tops but also to market bottoms.

But what I would like to emphasize here is that being wrong has not been without material and psychological consequence.

For iconic economist John Maynard Keynes’, “In the year of the 'terrific decline' which had started in the spring of 1937, notes Keynes biographer Robert Skidelski, “he lost nearly two-thirds of his money.”[2]

Meanwhile, for contemporary economist Irving Fisher, the Wikipedia notes that “The stock market crash of 1929 and the subsequent Great Depression cost Fisher much of his personal wealth and academic reputation.” Mr. Fisher did not just lose money, for his brazen cheerleading he was discredited.

Why do I bring this up? Well last week, I received a stunning feedback. In pushing back my counsel to use history as guide to investing, I had been told that since stock markets always comes back, therefore history has been rendered irrelevant!

This means that declines in the stock markets have been reckoned as fleeting events where recovery has been set on the stone. In short, stock markets can only go up up up and away!

Of course, such statement signifies a red herring.

But it’s not only that history has been denigrated and condemned as useless and impotent pointer for investing and of understanding reality, more importantly, factors such as time, valuations, and risk-reward tradeoffs have been made to exist in vacuum.

Neither financial nor economic substance has been incorporated into such purview, but instead financial markets have been seen as proclamations of faith through proof by assertions.

Yes, the stock market has become a religion!

Well, have stocks really been a one way street as so claimed? 


Let me use the US technology weighted Nasdaq as example. 

The Nasdaq was the epicenter of the US stock market dotcom bubble during the new millennium. On March 10, 2000, the Nasdaq posted an intra-day high of 5,132.52. The same day, the index closed at an all-time high of 5,048.62. 

Fast forward FIFTEEN YEARS…today.

In April 23 2015, the same index, according to the Wikipedia, broke through the record of 15 years earlier and set a new high for a daily close at 5,056, though it was still just short of the all-time intraday high set in 2000. At Friday’s 4,707, the tech weighted index has been off 6.9% from the April highs.

In gist, FIFTEEN YEARS after the 2000 highs, a successful (sustained) breakout has yet to be accomplished! Some comeback eh?

This means that anyone who bought into the index at the peak FIFTEEN YEARS ago and held it through to today would have suffered similarly FIFTEEN YEARS of nominal losses, inflation adjusted or real losses, opportunity costs and psychological angst.

Of course, the Nasdaq index today is alot different than the Nasdaq of yesterday in terms of composition.

For instance Cisco and Oracle (NYSE ORCL) were among the top 10 biggest Nasdaq issues in 2000. Today, it is only Cisco (Nasdaq CSCO) on the top 10. ORCL has left the Nasdaq in 2013. Yet both issues have remained significantly distant from their respective price highs in 2000. So anyone who bought ORCL or CSCO in 2000 have yet to recover their losses after FIFTEEN YEARS!

Yet some companies never made it back alive, post dotcom bubble bust. Issues like Pets.com, Boo.com and WebVan endured bankruptcy. Enron can be added to the list. And so with Lehman Bros and Bear Stearns for the posterior 2008 crisis version.

These bankrupt or ‘dead’ issues became equivalent to Wallpapers, like some of my father’s legacy to me.

Now if the current attempt to breakout from the previous high fails, then the current state of the NASDAQ’s chart formation, for technicians, would be equivalent to a DOUBLE top. If this should materialize, then more time consuming miseries await all those who bought at the top in 2000 and to the 2015 “greater fool” recruits!



There are no shortages of examples to disprove such absurd claims. 

After TWENTY FIVE years, Japan’s Nikkei 225 has even yet to reach HALF of the 1990 highs.

Thailand’s SET resembles the NASDAQ, it has almost reached the pre-Asian Crisis highs this year. Unfortunately, recent developments have sent the SET back down to touch bear market levels. The recent failed breakout could be portentous for the SET.

It’s no different for the French CAC 40 which remains afar from the highs attained FIFTEEN YEARs ago!

The Philippines experience has been no stranger to this.

The bubble during my father’s eon (1970-79) saw the Phisix culminate in 1979. Subsequently the same benchmark crashed 81% through 1985. The 1979 high was only recovered and surpassed in 1987 or eight year later.



The high of the pre-Asian crisis was redeemed and breached after TWENTY years.

A swift reinstatement and breakout of the previous 2007 highs occurred in 2010 or 3 years after. 

But again conditions from the three episodes were vastly different. The previous two episodes (1970-1979 and 1994-1997) were full-blown bubbles.

In late 2013, I cited a study by the international investment firm Vanguard Group to show that investments made in the Phisix during 1970 through 2012 produced negative real returns[3]:
From 1970-2012 real returns by the Phisix has been NEGATIVE despite the recent boom. I would add that considering suppression of inflation rates and constant changes in the Phisix components favouring the high flyers, real returns based on original construct must be even lower.
So two bubble cycles have effectively neutralized whatever nominal gains that occurred in FOUR DECADES!

Yet we see establishment experts sell the baloney that, at present exorbitant price levels, domestic stocks represent as “perfect time” for investments. It’s more about “perfect time” to line up their pockets from fees than comes at the cost of amplified risks taken by gullible depositors.

This only shows how the lessons of history have been tossed to the dustbin. 

All because of the worship of inflation (invisible redistribution).


The billionaire crony George Soros makes an important insight on the psychological character of the different stages of the boom bust cycle[4]:
1. The unrecognized trend
2. The beginning of a self-reinforcing process
3. The successful test
4. The growing conviction, resulting in a widening divergence between reality and expectations
5. The flaw in perceptions
6. The climax
7. A self-reinforcing process in the opposite direction
Apparently, when the establishment oozes or exudes with overconfidence they account for the transition from “The climax” that had been pillared from “The flaw in perceptions” to the “self-reinforcing process in the opposite direction”.

In the same way top intellects during the Great Depression feverishly raved in defense of bubble of their era, which meant that they had swilled too much of central banking Kool Aid, the lesson has been that misperceptions about reality can lead to financial devastation.

At the end of the day, American financier, stock investor, philanthropist, statesman, and political consultant Bernard Baruch was SPOT ON:
The main purpose of the stock market is to make fools of as many men as possible.
Phisix 6.850: A Product of Marking the Close

Related to this climax predicated on the massive flaw in perceptions have been the ongoing stock market manipulations at the Phisix.

Last week I said that actions of stock manipulators may be losing significance. That may have been too early.


The Phisix closed the week down by .97%. But the headline doesn’t tell the story to what lead to this weekly outcome. 

I regularly monitor intraday activities of the stock markets of Asia, and their major European and American contemporaries and I have not seen anything to closely proximate the actions at the Philippine Stock Exchange.

Even in stock markets where authorities have declared direct support (China, Japan and Malaysia), there has hardly had the same pattern or frequency in the trading dynamics as the PSE.

Last week’s outcome was essentially shaped by “marking the close”.

Marking the close was responsible for about 51% of the September 28 session’s 1.47% loss. Marking the close was responsible for 45.84 points of the September 30’s 34.69 points or .51% gains. So marking the close has not only been responsible for magically transforming the Phisix from loss to gain, but accounted for 100% of the day’s output in terms of gains! Marking the close was responsible for shaving 41% of the October 1’s losses.

As I have been documenting here, these manipulations have serious financial consequences.

These “marking the close” activities represent price fixing of the index close.
These contribute to the deformation of the pricing discovery mechanism which essentially impairs on the fundamental function of the stock market.

Moreover, manipulations designed to maintain the status quo is a sign of “self-reinforcing process in the opposite direction”

Manipulations may be ignored by establishment and by authorities, as some of them may be complicit to such dynamic. But in the future, I believe when people look back to study how today shaped tomorrow, market manipulations could be added to their insights. Put bluntly, history will not be complete without the role played by price fixing on the index in the shaping outcome.

And because market manipulations contribute to the serious “misalignment of prices”, they have real economic effects. The BSP’s zero bound induced credit powered artificial (borrowing from the future) boom has diverted much of the public’s valuable resources in support of malinvestments (unproductive speculative activities). Such has been abetted by the promotion of the farcical boom by media which has been bolstered by the price fixing of the PSEi index of the other markets (bonds and currency).

This means that since many have been seduced and or enchanted by pseudo boom to have committed much of their resources to the malinvestment formation process, many will suffer capital losses from the reversal of the boom.

And the reversal of the boom will be manifested by the surfacing of excess capacity, financial losses and balance sheet impairments that will be transmitted as liquidations, asset price deflation and cash and liquidity pressures which will feedback with the former.

And such action-response looping mechanism will extrapolate to reduced economic activities that will be reveal as reductions in capex and as job, wage and income losses or to an eventual GDP and real economy contraction that may even spread into material insolvencies in many firms within several industries.

And NO amount of manipulation and media’s yelling or recital of statistical talismans, on how allegedly sound the financial-banking system is, will prevent the unraveling of excesses. Many of those statistics have signified as accounting magic, and statistics that barely covers or touches on the many off-balance sheet credit activities in the system.

PSEi 6,850 Leaves The 6,790 Support Open For A Bear Assault

In spite of the manipulations, it’s interesting to see how the Phisix has been reacting to the low volume trading activities that seem to have tilted the playing field in favor of sellers.


As I have been repeatedly saying here, for as long as the bids remain thinly supported by peso volume, the balance of risks will favor the bears. That’s because volume will have to be found on the lower spectrum of the bids

In plain English, those who want to sell may find buyers at lower prices.

The average daily peso volume (weekly averaged) has been diminishing since June (lower window). The reduction in the support of the bids has made the Phisix vulnerable to a major move incited by a headline event, hence the August 24 meltdown.

The average daily peso volume for this week was at Php 6.7 billion.

If one notices, those previous wild afternoon delight pumps that usually ended with the “marking the close” while occasionally still happens, has vastly been reduced. Thus the attempts to price fix the index close have now mainly become dependent on “marking the close”.

This is a sign of how manipulators have most likely been running out of resources.

Perhaps a lot of their resources have been tied to prices at very high levels (PSEi 7k-8k). Consequently, this means that such deficits have been affecting their balance sheets too. And this balance sheet constrains may have already reduced their access on resources for the index pump.

So these entities would have to rely more on inducing deposits from the susceptible public—mainly through media brainwashing or advertising or from hard selling on clients (if private), or more tax revenues (if public) or an improved external environment to attract foreign money.

Yet last week, the .97% deficit, brings the PSEi closer to test the August 24 closing low at 6.790. (upper window)

And without any substantial improvements in peso volume, the PSEi will again be highly sensitive to a major downside move that may or may not be impelled by a headline event.

Curiously the repeated maneuver to pull the Phisix away from the support at 6,790 has only driven it closer.

The mini rectangular support of 6,890 has been broken last week. This makes the rectangular support at 6,790 the next in line.

Said differently, PSEi 6,850 leaves the 6,790 support open for an assault.

Of course, manipulators and the bulls may pullout another raid, but unless volume accompanies any rebound, they are likely to be interpreted as dead cat’s bounce rather than a recovery.

As a side note, external environment may indicate of an interim bounce on PSEi and global stocks.

Friday’s dismal US jobs reports fueled speculation that FED may once again defer from a “liftoff” this October. Steroid addicted stock market bulls, who sensed blood from the FED’s extended provision of monetary cocaine, went for the kill. So from a massive selloff at the opening bell, the realization of the provision of more monetary narcotics, prompted for an astounding reversal. US stocks closed significantly up Friday while Asian currencies rallied strongly too. The peso was unofficially quoted at 46.60-46.65. This may just juice up a relief rally in Asian stocks, as well as, the PSEi next week.

But as reminder, bad news doesn’t just involve the September jobs report which included major downside revisions during the past two months, but also burgeoning job cuts that, aside from energy, has spread to include other industries such as retail, technology and industrial goods!

This is aside from a CONTRACTION in all 6 of the US FEDERAL RESERVE’s regional manufacturing survey! Add to this, Friday’s decline factory orders. And along with this, the 3Q GDP estimates from the US Atlanta FED’s real time GDPnow has abruptly been chopped by half to .9% from 1.8% based on deterioration in external trade. All these I covered here[5]

The point is, if the US economy stalls or even falls into a recession, where the FED may NOT hike but instead even EASE (via renewal of QE or adaption of negative rates), the issue will shift to magnify extant USD dollar liquidity strains, which are symptom of hidden insolvencies within the system. Given today’s heavy reliance on money supply growth as driver for GDP, recessions are inherently deflationary (marked by contraction of credit activities), thus, the US dollar relative to Asia and other emerging markets should soar!!! This will be accompanied by a risk OFF volatility around the world.

What do you think all these central bank measures of zero, negative bound and QEs have been about??? Yet despite all the media pronouncement of G-R-O-W-T-H, why can’t they give up on all these debt subsidies???

Back to the Phisix, it’s likewise been interesting that all measures employed to buoy the Phisix has only led to divergences.


The selective index pumps during the week have been underscoring these.

Based on the weekly sectoral performance (left), the property sector was up, while the rest was down. But the decline in the service sector was the fundamental reason why the PSEi was down by .97%.

Be reminded that sectoral indices include non-PSEi issues. So their output may not be similar to that of the PSEi.

Let us tackle the headline index.

On a weekly basis, of the 30 composite issues, 11 were up, 17 were down while two were unchanged.

Yet of the 11 that were up for the week, 6 came from the top 15 with all 6 posting significant gains: namely AC +2.16% (fourth ranked, index weight 6.06%), SMPH +3.3%, (fifth, index weight 5.94%), JGS 1.75% (seventh, 5.83%), BDO 1.94% (eight, 5.45%) GTCAP 5.16% (twelfth, 3.29%) and JFC 3.1% (thirteenth, 2.8%).

With a combined market cap of 29.37%, these 6 issues have mainly kept the PSEi from a larger rout. Some of them were the objects of the end minute pumps.

Yet a glimpse of the market breadth or the advance decline spread that for the week shows us that the bears ruled the week with an aggregate margin of 92.

Bears dominated 4 of the 5 trading days. This includes the 2 days, particularly September 29 (adv 72-dec 109) and 30 (adv 80- dec 96) where the PSEi posted gains. In short, the two days where the index rose had barely been supported by the broadmarket.

Again selective pumps only have caused divergences to exist and imbalance to accrue.

Why are the PSE Behemoths PLDT, ICT and AGI Crashing?

And where it gets interesting has been in the selloff at the service sector. The Phisix was down this week largely because the third largest issue, PLDT, which tanked by 5.9%.

Could this be due to the combination of weakening G-R-O-W-T-H in the face of the firm’s considerable US dollar based liabilities? A report on the US dollar liability headaches of Anthoni Salim, the Indonesian billionaire who controls First Pacific, parent of PLDT, includes “$1.8 billion of dollar-denominated borrowings as of June 30”. Of the $1.8 billion, “PLDT, had revenues that were either denominated in, or linked to, dollars of more than $700 million last year”[6]


Charts of both First Pacific and PLDT seem to share the same dynamic: They have been in a freefall! 

It’s not just for only this week but for several weeks. First Pacific reached its zenith in May 17 at 11.48 while PLDT’s acme was on September 5 at 3,422. This means that in just over FOUR months First Pac has more than HALVED or lost 57.75% while PLDT has lost nearly two fifth or 37.6% in just over a MONTH! Truly awesome illustration of a crash!

Yet why the crash? Has the USD debt of these companies been larger than publicly known?

Another more intriguing development has been the ongoing crash by the Philippines’ largest maritime terminal operator, (the fifth largest in the world according to ADB), the International Container Terminal Services Inc. (PSE:ICT)

ICT’s share prices got smoked by 3.9% this week. This week’s loss marks the sixth consecutive weeks of decline (below right). 


ICT peaked last January 23 2015 at 117.7. As of Friday, ICT has lost 37.13% from its peak. ICT’s collapse have actually commenced only last August 4. So the gist of ICT’s collapse occurred only in just TWO months!

Why the crash? Has this been due to ICT’s US dollar debt (I wrote in August that ICT raised $450 million from perpetual bond issuance)? Or could ICT’s dilemma been mainly about casino Bloomberry? Or could this have been both?

Well, Philippine casino bubble has been rapidly deflating. This is something which I had been expecting since 2013.

This week’s stunning price actions reveals that BLOOMBERRY [PSE BLOOM] hemorrhaged by a shocking 18.56% (year to date -60.73%), Melco Crown [PSE MCP] bled by a ghastly 24.18% (year to date -74.37%) while Travellers International Group operator of Resorts World Manila (RWM) sunk by an ugly 7.25% (y-t-d -61.21%). [see left]

Bloomberry climaxed last November 3 2014 at 15.58, which means as of Friday, or less than a year, the stock has lost 68.7% [see right].

Except for the owner and his managers, the annual report of the ICT and BLOOM shows of no direct equity or debt connection. If ICT’s price collapse had been related to Bloom, could it be due to debt linkages through off-balance sheets? Or could the stock markets be pricing in ICT’s potential rescue of BLOOM, which means the depletion of ICT’s reserves (retained earnings)? And could it also have been that a possible draining of reserves from the Bloom rescue may expose ICT’s vulnerability to her US dollar based debts?


Meanwhile Alliance Global [PSE: AGI] parent of RWM also crashed by -10.28% this week. Year to date, AGI has been down by only 28.25% but AGI equity has already halved if based on April 30, 2014 crest at 31.15. Last week’s crash accounted 36.4% of the 28.25% year to date losses.

These fantastic collapses signify as interesting developments as they seem to signal the surfacing of the many skeletons in the closet.

It’s also fascinating to see how internal crashes or crashes within the PSE constellation have been spreading to infect even so-called blue chip stocks.

How much more time will the façade of the credit boom be exposed for what they truly are?

Philippine Casino Bubble Represents Only The Tip Of The Iceberg

Bear markets are frequently accompanied by frenzied rallies.

Macau’s casinos zoomed last week, reportedly on marginal improvements on September losses. Losses from 35% to 33% have been made by media as excuse to explain events post hoc (see left).

Meanwhile, other reports say the rally has been due to the promise by the Chinese government to support Macau’s economy.

Early this year, Macau’s casinos also had big rallies which eventually faltered. As proof, last week’s rebound emanated from recent lows.

So given Macau’s rally and the one week crash, a bounce seems likely for the embattled Philippine casino stocks.

But the deflating Philippine casino bubble represents only the tip of the iceberg.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas reported last week that production loans which constituted about 80% of all banking loans grew by 13.8 percent in August from 13.4 percent in July.[7]


Where was the gist of the growth rate? Well the hotel (+50.35%), construction (+32.5%) and education (42.46%). Meanwhile loans to the manufacturing sector tanked to single digits (+5.93%)[8].

Loans continue to swell even as losses on the casino-hotel industry mounts! If the big guys have been hurting those smaller players (even non casino hotels) may be hurting as well.

As I have previously written[9],
First, the industry’s debt problems, which eventually should be manifested in the banking system, will likely spillover to the other industries. When losses are recognized through growing bad loans, access to credit will tighten and interest rates rise. The risk of bankruptcies increases along with these.

Second, casinos have been emblematic of the race to build capacity in hotel and other retail sectors. So I expect the casinos woes to eventually get transmitted to the hotel industry first then to the other retail related industries.

The difference has been that these casinos have been new players in a saturated regional market whereas the other major listed retail players have been old players in a maturing domestic industry. Given the lack of market following, the former has been more vulnerable than the latter. Nonetheless it still should be a ‘periphery-to-the-core’ phenomenon…

And once those topline numbers turn negative, that’s when the alarm bells will be sounded in the credit markets.

Third, I suspect that perhaps some of them may not survive at its current form. 2016 should be very interesting.
The rubber is about to meet the road.

Domestic Liquidity Jumps as Benchmark Yield Curve Dramatically Flattens

Finally, the BSP also reported that domestic liquidity growth rate jumped by 9% year on year faster than the July 8.4% (revised). On a month-on-month seasonally-adjusted basis, M3 increased by 0.9 percent[10]

It’s a curiosity because after all the dogged manipulation of the yield curve from last May-August, production loans only eked up higher to 13.8% in August from 13.4 last July (see right).

And over the past few weeks, the benchmark yield curve (ADB’s favorite) continues to dramatically flatten despite attempts to steepen it last week.

If the flattening momentum persists then we may see an inversion of the key benchmark soon! And an inversion by this benchmark will likely attract attention of international observers. Will the observers say that this time is different a yield curve inversion won’t affect G-R-O-W-T-H?

Of course, I expect interventions to prevent this from happening. But until how long can they keep this up? Authorities will only be playing the whack a mole game, since other parts of the markets will reveal the concealed imbalances.

Nonetheless, the pick-up in August domestic liquidity growth has been significant. If this momentum will be sustained, then we will likewise see the CPI bounce back. And this will be read by the mainstream as growth n demand to justify GDP G-R-O-W-T-H, when in reality we are seeing the seeds of stagflation.

However, again the flattening yield curve should serve as a cap on credit growth. Add to this, signs of potential strains on the balance sheets of key institutions in the formal economy. Like the casinos, those balance sheet pressures are now being vented on equity prices.

Therefore, August domestic liquidity could signify an outlier more than a sustained dynamic.



[1] Into the Grey Zone, Famous Economic Quotes From The First Great Depression, January 5, 2011

[2] John P Hussman Misquoting Keynes, Hussman Funds, February 7, 2011


[4] George Soros, The Alchemy of Finance p .19 John Wiley & Sons p. 58



[7] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Bank Lending Sustains Growth in August September 30, 2015

[8] Note: The BSP has shifted its statistical classification from the Philippine Standard Industrial Classification (PSIC) 1994 to 2009, effective June 2014. They ended the update on the PSIC 1994 classification last June 2015.

On the production side only 5 sectors retained their numbers: construction, financial intermediation, education, mining and accommodation and food services. Others had been reclassified. So my data now has become limited.


[10] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Domestic Liquidity Growth Rises in August September 30, 2015