Sunday, October 08, 2017

Money Printing: BSP vis-à-vis the Central Bank of Nigeria. BSP’s Forex Holdings Rockets to Uncharted Zone!

In this issue:

Money Printing: BSP vis-à-vis the Central Bank of Nigeria. BSP’s Forex Holdings Rockets to Uncharted Zone!
-Learning from The Central Bank of Nigeria’s QE
-The Bangko Sentral’s Nigerian Approach
-Why Inflation Will Soar and the Peso will Plunge (Because the BSP Persists to Inflate the System!)
-Debunking the Weak Peso Equals G-R-O-W-T-H Myths
-More Record Highs: BSP’s Forex Holdings Rockets to Uncharted Zone!

Money Printing: BSP vis-à-vis the Central Bank of Nigeria. BSP’s Forex Holdings Rockets to Uncharted Zone!

Learning from The Central Bank of Nigeria’s QE

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has resorted to the printing press, pointed out one international media, to finance the government’s expenditures which raised “low-intensity alarm” to some economists and financial practitioners


Between December 2013 and April 2017 for instance, the CBN’s “claims on the federal government” went from 678 billion naira to 6.5 trillion naira ($1.8 billion to $17.3 billion)—an almost 10-fold rise. These “claims” are made up of overdrafts, treasury bills, converted bonds and other such lending. For the most part, the issue has remained an obscure one that receives hardly any attention from local media.

But then, a couple of weeks ago, the CBN finally published the personal statements of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members from the July meeting [PDF] and suddenly the alarm bells started ringing. The personal statement of Dr. Doyin Salami, a well-regarded member of the MPC noted for his straight talking, said the CBN was providing a “piggy-bank” service to the federal government. Specifically, he said [page 38]:

“Perhaps the most challenging of the present characteristics of the economy in Nigeria is the adoption of a quantitative easing stance by the management of the Central Bank. Monetary data shows a sharp rise in the extent of CBN financing of the government deficit.

“He quoted statistics that showed much of the rise in the CBN’s financing of the federal government have come since last December with its purchases of government bonds being the worst culprit with a 20-fold rise in 2017 alone. In effect, the CBN has been printing money to fund the government’s spending. The reason for this is, of course, clear—Nigeria’s government has not been able to recover in any meaningful way from the collapse in oil prices that has now entered its fourth year.



The depiction of CBN’s money printing episode captured in the above charts. 

The CBN’s stock of Federal Government Securities (FGS) rocketed by 12.5x from November 2015 to May 2017. The CBN data can be seen here. CBN’s claims on FGS collapsed by 26% in August compared to May.

Because printing press money circulated into the economy, growth in domestic liquidity exploded upwards. Money supply growth, as measured by M2, (CEIC) rocketed to 22% in January 2017 from less than 5% in January 2016. Or, money supply expanded by about 4 times in one year! (see middle right) In April, M2 growth collapsed to just 4.8%.

The discharge of the waves of printing press money diffused into the real economy. The government’s measure of inflation (CPI) DOUBLED from a trough of about 9.2% in July 2015 to a high of 18.73% in January 2017! (see middle left) August CPI was lower at 16.01%.

The price pressures in the real economy forced the USD-naira peg to unravel in June 2016, where the Nigerian currency plummeted 30%. The second batch of devaluation occurred in August of this year where the naira plunged by another 13% against the USD. From June through last week, the USD naira has risen by about 78%!

To offset price pressures in the real economy, the CBN restricted bank lending by raising the cash reserve ratio (CRR) of banks. The article suggests that the CBN’s move was self-defeating since “starving it [the economy] of the credit” meant insufficient taxes to fund the government’s spending. Oil revenues contribute about 2/3 to state revenues, although the oil sector’s share of the economy has only been about 9%. The article assumes erroneously that credit automatically translates into economic growth.

Instead, the Nigerian government intends to issue $5.5 billion of Eurobonds by the yearend to take advantage of the cheap financing available, courtesy of the prevailing risk ON environment.

Apparently, the Central Bank of Nigeria has not only restricted credit expansion but likewise immensely reduced its subsidies to the Federal Government (as of this writing). The ramification of which has been the recent collapse in money supply growth which has percolated into the real economy through the lagged easing of price pressures. In response, devaluation pressures on the naira have subsided, where the spread between the official and black market rates has materially narrowed.

And it would seem that the “weak” dollar abroad has provided the Nigerian government an alternative avenue to obtain financing, hence, the proposed recourse of borrowing, instead of relying on central bank funding.

A discourse of the Nigerian economy has hardly been my purpose here. Instead, I used Nigeria as an example of a political economy that uses debt monetization (quantitative easing) as an implicit transfer mechanism to finance the government’s spending habits which repercussion has been to DEVALUE the currency.

The Bangko Sentral’s Nigerian Approach


Nigeria’s monetary policy experience reverberates with the Philippines.

Nigeria’s four charts, in the Philippine context, have been compacted into just two. But the cause and effects or the transmission sequences from such policies to their respective economies, as well as, to their currencies have essentially been the same.

Some differences and similarities of the BSP and CBN

Both governments have resorted to debt monetization or money printing to fund the central government’s deficit spending. Both governments embarked on QE coincidentally almost at the same time - end of 2015.

The difference has been in the DEGREE of monetization. Nigeria’s QE expanded 12x in 1.5 years as against 50% in 2.58 years for the BSP. In short, the BSP hasn’t been as aggressive as the CBN

Another difference has been Nigeria’s efforts to offset its QE by tightening relative to the Philippine experience where the BSP has been recalcitrant to minimize price instability.

The BSP refuses to wean away from its uncharted emergency measures. The BSP kept its policy rate as is in September, even while the US Fed announced that it would commence an incremental rollback of its bloated balance sheets this October.

The Philippine NG tried increasing its access to debt early this year. But this financing route has only reduced M3 growth, which filtered into the real economy as reduced topline or gross revenues and a downturn in consumer spending, particularly in the 1H. Such slowdown severely affected tax revenue collections. Thus, the BSP opted to reactivate its perceived free lunch nuclear option through invisible transfers to the NG.

The August money supply breakout (15.4%) has not only incited a breakthrough in the Phisix; it pushed September’s CPI back to the highs of March and April of this year at 3.4%.

The BSP reported September CPI increased by 3.4%, with price increases affecting a broad range of goods in the statistical basket.

Because the CPI is the most widely used in the calculation of the inflation rate and purchasing power of the peso, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority, it is a major statistical series used for economic analysis and as a monitoring indicator of government economic policy. Said differently, since the CPI represents a politically sensitive statistics, underreporting of price pressures should be expected. The PSA will soon release General Retail Price index which should provide clues to a less politically sensitive statistics.

I expect the CPI for the coming months to be a lot higher.

My anecdotal account: My neighborhood sari-sari store raised San Miguel Pale Pilsen by 7.4% this week while my favorite Bulaluhan increased its takeout packaged food products by 12%.

Why Inflation Will Soar and the Peso will Plunge (Because the BSP Persists to Inflate the System!)

Money has been awash everywhere.

During a recent saunter to a nearby mall, I noticed that a striking number of stores have recently closed. However, amazingly most of them have found immediate replacements.

That, for me, is what the BSP’s inflation targeting has been about; by enticing the banking system to throw money freely into the system, it puts faith that such actions would fire up GDP through the system’s escalating absorption of leverage.

It also exudes confidence that its current actions would cover up or rectify the previous errors by throwing money at them.

The BSP likewise wishes that through its direct financing of the NG’s spending such will have only magical effects on the economy.

Moreover, the BSP staunchly desires that by raising general price level it can wangle additional taxes for the government. Remember, taxes are all based on the NOMINAL peso value of incomes or sales or costs.

Yet the BSP can hardly anticipate or know where the newly issued money will flow, how the money will be used or spent, and most importantly, how dramatic increases in the leveraging affect the balance sheets of both lenders and borrowers as seen through the prism of the multitude of enterprises. All it does is to assume outcomes from its econometric models.

The interim increases in mall occupancy would temporarily boost revenues of these operators. But again, if new occupants largely financed their investments with credit, demand arising from the supply and demand chain of these enterprises will likewise be anchored on leverage. When system liquidity dries up, enterprises dependent on such leverage will be the first casualties.

Thus, the BSP has been unremitting with its push to inundate money into the system through the incumbent the emergency policies. Like in Nigeria, these factors “receives hardly any attention from local media” or from establishment experts. Does the BSP know something which it refuses to disclose in public?  Demonstrated preference (actions) says YES!

And since free money creates an ephemeral upsurge in demand, which will barely be met by existing supply, prices, as a consequence, will rise. And surging prices adversely impact the purchasing power of the citizenry. Yes, disposable income will shrivel.

And the most sensitive groups to suffer from lesser disposable income will be the lower middle to lower income strata. Based on the DoF’s tax profile, these would account for the largest group of taxpayers! [See Tax Data: 92% of Taxpayers Earn 33K and Below! Tax Reform Equals Tax Increase! June 11, 2017]

Rising prices will not just unsettle consumers; it will amplify price volatility and elevate business costs, thereby upsetting the entrepreneurs’ economic calculation. The manufacturing sector should be a noteworthy example which I will discuss once I get the full data.

Moreover, surging real estate prices will increase business and household rents too! Booming property represents a transfer of income from renters to property owners or managers. Nevertheless, rising rents would not only put a squeeze in the renter’s household income; it would stifle the entrepreneur’s or business income.

So even while free money abounds, the growing mismatch between consumer spending power and supply acquisitions will translate to saturation, gluts, oversupply or excess capacity. Hence, thespending from the limited growth in income, appended by credit finance spending, will be diffused among the faster-growing numbers of good suppliers or service providers. The outcome of which is to diminish company’s topline or gross revenues or in consumer spending.  We have already seen this in the 1H [See Wow. Revenues of Listed Retail Firms Validate Slowdown of Consumer Spending GDP in 1H! August 28, 2017]

And in the context of the PSEi, because of the earnings constriction*, companies instead imbued significantly more debt* in the expectations to generate growth!


Nevertheless, the BSP seems to be doubling down. It has restarted the Nigerian route of NG subsidies.

I don’t have to repeat BSP’s Dr. Dante Canlas quote in noting of how money supply growth from debt financing of NG’s spending will result to a sharp depreciation in currency. [See BSP Has Been Right: No Foreign Exchange Crisis…For Now; But Devaluation Policies Amplify Risks!]

However, I would part ways with Dr. Canlas in his suggestion that the vulnerability of such currency stems from speculative attacks than from the fundamental vantage point.

The point is since ALL actions have consequences, the chain effects in the pricing system of an economy from a policy of inflationary finance ultimately result to the depreciation of the currency which indulges in it. Speculative attacks are mainly manifestations of the adjustment process to the perceived mispricing and maladjustments from such policies. If there has been no imbalance to arbitrage on then “speculative attacks” won’t succeed or prosper.

The real time experience of Nigeria sets the template for such adjustment process.

The same template will apply to the Philippine peso.

Debunking the Weak Peso Equals G-R-O-W-T-H Myths

And here’s more.

The establishment will put a spin on the weak peso as having positive effects for the exports, investments, remittances and etc.

 
Let us go by the facts.

The USD peso has been on a LONG TERM annual uptrend since the 1960s. The CAGR of the USD peso from 1960 to 2016 has been 5.23%.

The current USD peso uptrend seems as making up for the recent cyclical reversal and could likely restore the over 50-year old trend.

Since the post-Asian crisis, exports as % share of GDP have FALLEN, regardless whether the USD peso firmed (1998-2005 and 2013-2016) or when the peso strengthened (2006-2012). The reason for this is beyond the peso.

In the meantime, the upside trend in remittance growth has coincided with a STRONG peso (2009-2013), while the downside trend has lately been accompanied by a FRAIL peso (2014-2017). 

Though it is tempting to make causal deduction or inferences, such correlations must not be construed simplistically. They require a treatise.

Nevertheless, any rationalization predicated on assumed positivity from the weak peso as redounding to so, so & so growth for certain areas would most likely signify bunkum!

More Record Highs: BSP’s Forex Holdings Rockets to Uncharted Zone!

The mainstream has been so obsessed with records highs. Curiously, many economic and financial activities, which set recent milestones, have been ignored.


 
There has been the RECORD QE, which the BSP has used to finance UNPARALLED budget deficits. UNPRECEDENTED low-interest rates have likewise fueled the HISTORIC corporate and household debt levels. Add to the string of UNCHARTED emergency measures used by the BSP has been the Forex holdings of the Gross International Reserves (GIR) which posted a RECORD-MELTUP in September!

To create the impression of the abundance of international reserves, the BSP has increasingly tapped wholesale financing, e.g. swaps, forwards and repos, which I have been repeatedly noting here


September’s forex holdings, which accounted for the LARGEST monthly infusions, reached the HIGHEST level ever!

The BSP has used a stunning number of forex holdings to offset the remarkable decline in foreign investments!

In percentages, September GIRs have been down by 5.56% the largest since November 2014. While US Treasury data reveals a slight increase in US Treasury holdings by the Philippines last July, year on year % continues to show a contraction.

Although the BSP can tamper with statistics and with market prices for a while, its policy actions will only persist to distort the system and exacerbate the existing imbalances. And the more the imbalance mounts, the greater the risks of a disorderly unwind.

Hope is not a strategy.

Sunday, October 01, 2017

Fiscal Report Card: Seasonal August Surplus; The BSP’s Emergency Measures Have Been Losing Their Traction; 85% Debt to GDP!

The Philippine government’s Bureau of Treasury released its fiscal balance (national cash operations) report the other week and debt report last week.
 
The good news was that the NG’s August report card posted a Php 28.8 billion surplus.

But such surplus had likely been influenced by seasonal factors. With the exception of 2009, August was a month of surpluses since 2008.

Although the surplus of this year was the third largest, it did little to diminish the eight-month deficit, which at Php 176.2 billion represented the third largest since 2008.
 
The next propitious news was that government revenues had been up 9.94% which comprised BIR’s 9.01%, Bureau of Custom’s 15.74% and non-tax revenues at 2.91%. For two consecutive months, the average growth rate had been (in the same pecking order), 12.13%, 13.29%, 14.36% and +.99%, respectively.

Tax revenues in the first two months of the 3Q performed generally better compared to the 2Q. However, seen in the context from eight months (January to August), has substantially underperformed the previous years. (upper window)

To consider, present subsidies provided by the BSP’s emergency measures through historic low rates and through unprecedented QE have hardly transformed into BETTER tax revenues. Moreover, the enormous fiscal deficits appear to have delivered LESS for the government than expected.

The August breakout of M3 (15.4%) and of total banking loans (+19.75%) from their previous highs have only produced a downshift in monthly growth rate in revenues from July’s 14.31% to August 9.94%. The BSP’s emergency measures have been losing their traction.

As pointed out earlier, the product of the BSP’s emergency measures has been to dramatically increase systemic leverage as indications of overcapacity mounts.
 
And it has not just been private sector debt. Since the constant use of QE would expose the charade, the NG has complimented the BSP by been revving up its debt engine. 

While domestic debt grew by Php 5.345 billion, the falling peso pushed up foreign debt by 8.76% to Php 41.035 billion in August.

But there will be more debt-financed public spending ahead. The NG was recently provided by China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and by the World Bank loans worth $207.6-million each for a $500 million flood management project.  Such grand flood project means additional “US dollar shorts”.

The banking system’s total debt portfolio (production + consumer) was at Php 6.374 trillion as of August. The national government’s outstanding debt (local and foreign) was at 6.432 trillion. Add the two figures we get Php 12.806 trillion. Yet that number excludes debt from the corporate bond market, from FDIs, from shadow banking in various forms or from other unreported sources. Nominal GDP during the 1H was Php 7.522 trillion. Annualized, we get something like Php 15.044 trillion NGDP for 2017.

As of August, debt to GDP stood at approximately at 85%!

Now that would be a WOW!

Wow. Money Supply Breakout Powered Record Phisix! S&P warns of Deteriorating Credit Quality!

Let me guess, because the Phisix broke into new territory, August-September M3 may have likely surged past the highs of May 2016 and July 2017 at 13.5%


Well, that conjecture turned out to be pretty much accurate.

The BSP’s data demonstrates that August M3’s 15.4% broke past highs of May 2016, which has exactly been less than a month before the Phisix breakout in mid-September. When M3 soared to its peak in May 2016, the Phisix hit a high of 8,100 two months after or in July.


 
What is the relationship between the Phisix and the peso? Well, the answer to that is “what medium is used to transact stocks?” Wouldn’t that be the peso? This means stocks are likewise subject to the conditions of the supply and demand of the peso.

For instance, under current conditions, when an excessive amount of money has been infused into the financial system, demand for money decreases as demand for other economic goods or financial assets increases.

To quote again BSP’s Dr. Dante Canlas**:

[**Dr. Dante Canlas, BSP Sterling Professor of Monetary and Banking Economics, Business Fluctuations and Monetary Policy Rules in the Philippines: Lessons from the 1984­1985 Contraction April 30, 2012 p 14-17 BSP.org.]

"A prior issue is this: is inflation a monetary phenomenon Friedman had said “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.” With a quantity theory of money in mind, if the central bank increases the money supply from a position of balance, then the real money stock exceeds the demand for it. To restore balance, the general price level must rise, which means inflation rate, defined as the percentage change in the general price level must rise.

And the BSP’s negative real rates policies have signified its source.

Thus, monetary inflation feeds into asset prices, expressed as record Phisix (as well as property prices), and likewise into the general price level, as measured by the CPI.

In response to the BSP’s twin action, real economy inflation, not just the CPI, should be expected to substantially rise. And increased price pressures would translate to compounded difficulties for the marginal earners. To put bluntly, disposable income will shrink! [As an aside, my neighborhood sari-sari store informed that prices of San Miguel beer products is expected to increase in the coming days]

And even when taxes of the marginal earners will be removed, their purchasing power will remain suppressed due to the government’s inflation tax.

The BSP’s emergency measures, viz. lowest interest rates in history (ZIRP) and record NG debt monetization (QE), has fathered the resurgent M3.


Both the private sector and the government have used money creation to propel GDP.

As I wrote back in August,

Today, both the BSP and the banking system have been working overtime to expand the money supply. Monetary inflation has been aimed at generating revenues for the NG through direct taxes and through the inflation tax.


On a month to month basis, the BSP’s net claim on the National Government (NG) was reduced by Php 12.6 billion in August. However, the year-on-year rate of change jumped 16.74%.

On the other hand, the growth of the banking system’s total production and consumer loan portfolio has rocketed past 2014 highs!

In the recent past, the fiery bank loan growth, which peaked in 2011, spurred a 10 month 30+++% in 2H 2013 to 1H 2014. That was all about the banking system’s credit inflation.

Today, with the twin-engine of credit inflation in full throttle, a repeat performance of the previous 30++%%% money supply growth looks likely a viable immediate target!

Such explosion in bank loans or the sustained massive expansion of systemic leverage operates even as net income has been stagnant in the 1H 2017***, the perpetual race to build supply and intensifying economy-ide price pressures.


The S&P Global Ratings appears to have captured in their radar system the massive increases in systemic leveraging. Hence they issue a subtle warning, perhaps tacitly addressed to the very accommodative BSP

From S&P’s Xavier Jean and Bertrand Jabouley (ASEAN Inc’s debt dilemma, Finance Asia September 28)

The median leverage of the largest domestic companies appears to be stabilizing in most countries, with the exception of the Philippines and Thailand.

Philippine and Singaporean companies had about 2x more leverage on aggregate than those in Indonesia. They also had nearly 50% more leverage than those in Malaysia and Thailand. These numbers remain consistent year-on-year. Singapore stands as the “champion” of indebtedness, due to still-modest operating conditions for real estate and oil- and gas-related sectors, combined with persisting spending and sticky dividends (about 35% of EBITDA for the largest 100 listed companies in the country, compared to 25% on average across Southeast Asia). In the Philippines, the dominant diversified groups continue to spend aggressively on expansion and acquisitions, so leverage has continued its upward trend.

We believe ease of access to funding remains a key factor in leverage. Singapore, Philippines, Malaysia, and Thailand all have active and liquid local banking and capital markets. We also see that leverage tends to be above average among the most active issuers in these markets…

Based on their sectoral exposure, we believe that countries likeliest to see credit quality deteriorating in the next 12 months are the Philippines and Thailand, with Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore being potentially more stable.

The S&P essentially validates my observation that PSEi 30 firms have been gorging in debt with reckless abandon. [Biggest Wow, as 1H Net Income Stagnated, Ex-Bank PSEi 30 Debt Swelled by a Staggering 19% (Php 433 Billion)! September 3, 2017] Debt has become the foundation of G-R-O-W-T-H!

And the massive pump-fest at the Phisix comes in the light of the “credit quality deteriorating in the next 12 months”! Interesting, no?

Of course, BSP policies account for as a major factor.
 
There is another related dynamic: Market manipulation. During the first three days of the week, the PSEi’s correction had been severely mitigated by coordinated and synchronized end-session pumps. [Signs of Market Top: Financial Felony, Swindles and Fraud: Filinvest-Megawide Collection Troubles? Three Unprecedented Days of PSEi Magic! September 28, 2017]

In the next days, it had been dumping! But Thursday’s dump came after another attempt at an afternoon delight pump! (upper right window)

In all five days of the week, end-of-session pumps and dumps became the determinant of the Phisix. The halcyon days of pricing dictated by the markets are over. Price discovery and the economic coordination process from pricing signals have given way to the brazen gaming of the system.

With SM consistently being inflated along with its other subsidiaries (SM Prime and BDO) to keep the Phisix at records, the Sy group now commands an astounding 26.81% share of the index’s market weight! The Phisix is now about SM! Remember, in the 1H SMPH declared that it bought Php 4.9 billion of shares of related party firms. [SM Prime’s Growth Model: In 1H 2017, Every Peso of Growth Was Funded By SIX Pesos of DEBT! SMPH Bought Php 4.9 Billion of Related Party Shares! August 13, 2017] Pump one’s own stocks by borrowing heavily! Truly signs of times!

Aside from the government, some vested interest groups have come to believe that markets can be tampered or controlled with impunity or with no attendant harmful consequences.

We shall soon see.