Monday, November 06, 2017

The Shifting Role of the Phisix; Escalating Share of the Top-5 issues Extrapolate to Enhanced Concentration Risks!

The Shifting Role of the Phisix; Escalating Share of the Top-5 issues Extrapolate to Enhanced Concentration Risks!

Famed Austrian Public Relations personality Edward L. Bernays wrote in his classic Propaganda

No serious sociologist any longer believes that the voice of the people expresses any divine or specially wise and lofty idea. The voice of the people expresses the mind of the people, and that mind is made up for it by the group leaders in whom it believes and by those persons who understand the manipulation of public opinion. It is composed of inherited prejudices and symbols and clichés and verbal formulas supplied to them by the leaders.

Let me apply Mr. Bernays logic to the domestic stock exchange.

Exactly what does the Phisix stand for? What should it represent?

The Philippine Stock Exchange Composite Index (PSEi), formerly called Phisix, according to the Philippine Stock Exchange’s PSE academy, is a fixed basket of thirty (30) common stocks of listed companies, carefully selected to represent the general movement of the stock market. In other words, it is the benchmark measuring the performance of the Philippine stock market.(bold mine)

To repeat, the PSEi 30 should embody “the general movement of the stock market” or should serve as benchmark to measure the performance of the Philippine stock market

Such essence dominates mainstream conversations or narratives of the developments of the PSEi 30

Again, the Phisix is supposed to represent the general movements of the stock market. But how accurate has this popular perception been?


 
As of November 3, the top 5 accounted for 43.7% of the market share, the top 10 66.34% and the top 15 80.65%.

The difference between the top 5 and next 6-10 is 21.02%. Or the share weight of the top 5 represents almost twice the next quintile class!

For the 11 to 15 category, the top 5 share accounted for 3x its share weight!

 


And this lopsided share in favor of the top 5 has not been an anomaly but has signified a consistent trend since 2015. However, the deepening share of the top 5 has only accelerated in 2017! Year-to-date, the top 5’s share has increased by 13.5%!

Even more, when the PSEi broke the 8,127 barrier, the broader market has consistently sold off. Declining issues have dominated the trading environment.

With the top 5 usurping the market share of the other issues, just how does the PSEi 30 supposedly dispense the function of representing the general market?

The PSE should just change the definition of the Phisix.

And the share divide goes beyond the top 5 versus the rest.

Even within the top 5 issues, a fantastic gap has been developing.
  
 
From the top 5 perspective, the share of the Ayala Group (AC and ALI) continues to dwindle relative to the SM group.

As of November 3, the share of Ayala was at 34.48% while the SM group was at 65.11%. The Ayalas and the SM group have switched places

For the SM group alone, their cumulative share weight has accounted for almost a third of the PSEi.

Again, hasn’t the index been supposed to represent the general market? Then why the extremely skewed balance towards the SM?

Because of earnings? Such perception would be unfounded.

For over the past 4 years and a half, Ayala Corp has consistently outperformed its rival the SMIC. But still, the SM has managed to grab the larger share of the market cap

SM can’t even beat JFC. (It has done so in one out of 4 years - I know this is apples to oranges)

The point here is what justifies the relentless capture of the market cap share weight by the SM Group at the expense of the rest?

Because SMPH used Php 4.9 billion in the 1H to push up their stocks?

Because the major beneficiaries of end-session pumps have been the SM group?

Here’s the thing.

With the SM led capture of a significant share weight of the PSEi, the PSEi now represents NOT the general stock market but the SM GROUP.

It would not be useful to make a discussion on the Phisix when it is truly about SM. Perhaps the all share index could serve as a more appropriate indicator.

Since the PSEI embodies mostly SM, discussions predicated on the assumption of the general movement of the markets would only mislead.

Given the political-economic environment, the blindness of the officials the PSE, SEC and BSP would seem understandable. The protection of the interests of certain special powerful and wealthy group/s have been more important for them.

Yet such political related myopia would come at a steep cost. SM’s 29% share or even 43.7% share of the combined SM and Ayala has accounted for the broadening of CONCENTRATION risks

The law dictionary defines concentration risk as “the RISK of loss arising from a large position in a single ASSET or market exposure”. (all caps original)

The point is a prospective revulsion of any of the two largest market caps, based on any reason at all, will likely trigger a chain effect in the stock market.

The common assumption is that nothing can go wrong with SM Group or the Ayala Group. Yet The same assumption guided Enron and Lehman to their downfall.

Such asymmetry exhibits the mounting scale of distortion attained from the constant manipulations of the index.



And a final thing, Friday’s pump and dump had been amazingly seismic. The usual concerted pump via the afternoon delight pushed the Phisix to a new intraday record at 8,605. However, the new record was met with a sudden meltdown in about less than 30 minutes (excluding the market intervention and runoff phases).

And the marking the close went to the opposite direction another 99 points was chopped. Perhaps the largest ever mark-the-close on the downside.

At the end the day the Phisix gyrated by a whopping 3.74%!

But do observe that the SM Group had been less affected by the selloff.

Bernay’s wisdom applies to the current setting.

Sunday, November 05, 2017

The Crowding-Out Effect: Why the BSP’s Thrust to Attain Negative Real Rates Been Elusive? Bond Yields Surge, Flattening Dynamic Heralds Tightening!

In this issue

The Crowding-Out Effect: Why the BSP’s Thrust to Attain Negative Real Rates Been Elusive? Bond Yields Surge, Flattening Dynamic Heralds Tightening!
-The BSP’s Inflation Targeting: The Invisible Subsidies from Negative Real Rates  
-The BSP’s Paradigm: The Mouth-Watering Negative Real Rates of 2012-2014
-Why Has Broad Negative Real Rates Have Become Elusive? Will September’s Splendid Tax Revenue Growth Be Sustained?
-What Will Drive 3Q GDP, CPI or M3?
-Crowding-Out? Bond Yields Have Been Surging, Yield Curve Points to a Financial Tightening!

The Crowding-Out Effect: Why the BSP’s Thrust to Attain Negative Real Rates Been Elusive? Bond Yields Surge, Flattening Dynamic Heralds Tightening!

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas published the banking system’s loan portfolio and domestic liquidity conditions for September at the close of October.

These figures have been wonderfully useful in the appraisal or evaluation of the current political-economic conditions particularly when incorporated with other relevant government statistics.

Such statistics include the Bureau of Treasury (BoTr) report on the National Government’s (NG) cash operation or the fiscal condition, which provides an overview of government’s immediate and past financial positions through collection versus spending, the financing of spending deficits through changes in the NG’s debt profile, the impact of banking system’s credit expansion and these public sector activities through BSP’sCPI and other real economy price data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

The BSP’s Inflation Targeting: The Invisible Subsidies from Negative Real Rates  

Of course, market prices of select securities also provide insights when compared to these.
 
Unknown to the public, the BSP’s easy money policies, which was embraced and implemented since 2009 involved “inflation targeting”*, or in particular, had been designed to generate negative real rates by the driving down market rates below price inflation through zero bound rates.Negative rates provided invisible transfers to the government through two main channels: it lowered the government’s interest rate payments when compared to the free market, and by stimulating the expansion of the economy’s credit absorption, it expanded tax revenues.

A third channel for such subsidy transmission is the “Cantillon Effect” or the uneven proportion of spending distribution which favors the government and bank borrowers.  The recipients of newly issued money from the banking system and from the government are able to purchase goods and services at relatively lower prices compared to those at the farther chain from the source of money. Hence, consumers at the furthermost chain of the spending process transfer their purchasing power to the consumers closest to the source of money (banking system and the government).

*The BSP has a manual of inflation targeting which it implemented on January 24, 2000 (The BSP and Price Stability, June 2017). Of course, none of the above is discussed in it.

The negative real rate dynamic has been illustrated above.

The BSP’s Paradigm: The Mouth-Watering Negative Real Rates of 2012-2014

Here is the back story.

Because of easy money policies, the banking system’s growth rate in commercial and industrial loans sizzled to record highs in 2011 at over 22% for a few months. The consequence of such credit boom had been to elevate real economy prices. And yet, the perceived economic BOOM, which was highlighted by credit upgrades in 2012 and 2013, incited a panic bid on Philippine debt securities. As such, real interest rates turned deeply negative (the difference between BSP’s CPI and 1-year treasury bills).

So even when the banking system’s credit growth rate and CPI significantly decelerated from 2011 to mid-2013, because of the great demand for Philippine debt, the negative rates remained.

However, the slowdown in credit growth likewise began to affect real economy prices. Thus, the BSP responded by aggressively cutting interest rates several times from 4.5% to 3.5% in 2011-2012

The decline in credit growth reversed course and reaccelerated upwards. The startling 10 successive months of 30% money supply growth rates signified a product of the revival in credit expansion.

Again, this incited price pressures on the real economy. But this time part of the increase in price pressures became a political issue. The BSP reacted thru a series of partial tightening in 2014: it raised reserve requirements (2x), policy rates (2x) and SDA rates (3x).

In 2015, prices, earnings, and the GDP slowed. Shopping mall vacancies emerged for the first time. Negative real rates morphed into positive rates. (upper window) The BSP chief hinted about deflation risks.

And by the end of 2015, the strained BSP turbocharged the economy with measures it had only used during an economic/financial shock. It monetized the NG’s debt.

And to ensure its optimum effect, the BSP chopped interest rates to the lowest level ever in June 2016.  Such action was rationalized or justified upon the “interest rate corridor”.

Why Has Broad Negative Real Rates Have Become Elusive? Will September’s Splendid Tax Revenue Growth Be Sustained?

Fast forward the present.

Today, we are witnessing the consequences of the instituted emergency measures (BSP’s lowest interest rates PLUS debt monetization backed by the NG’s fiscal ‘infrastructure’ stimulus) conducted in response to the previous measures, which it had been compelled to abridge.

The exemplary tax revenue performance from 2012-2014 has represented the consequence from the BSP’s implicit 2009-2014 subsidies or transfers (below window).

The latest ICU stimulus has only succeeded to keep those revenues afloat but below the 2012-2014 growth rates.

A critical part of that reason has been the inability by the BSP to generate deep negative real rates.

The growth rate of tax revenues did spike in September (24.1%).

However, from where did such boost emanated? Was it from an economic rebound, or from more efficient collections or from a one-time tax windfall from penalties/settlements?

Mighty Tobacco was reported to have settled with the administration in June. Updated reports indicate that the unfortunate politically harassed firm has fully paid its obligations as of the first week of October (most likely paid in September).

With the current pace of public spending, it would be unlikely that the government would generate sustainable increases in tax & non-tax revenues. That would be because the government will be “crowding out” the private sector in both resources and finances. Yes, bond yields have risen across the board (see below). So the next option for the administration would be to impose more seizures of properties from the private sector, which eventually would entail nationalizations.

Hasn’t it been obvious WHY the Department of Finance has been desperate to pass its TRAIN (Tax reform for acceleration and inclusion act)?

Nevertheless, why the BSP’s painstaking ordeal in attaining negative real rates?

The answer: Divergence versus convergence. In 2012-2014, yields of 1-year bills and the CPI diverged to produce the broad negative real rates. The bond market perceived inflation risks as a fleeting episode. Or the inflation risks had been discounted. In the current milieu, yields and the CPI rates have moved in tandem or have converged. Reality has been seeping in.

So the instituted emergency measures haven’t been delivering the desired subsidies for the government.

Moreover, there has been little accommodation for error from the incumbent policies.

And hasn’t been evident too why the BSP stubbornly has resisted tightening?

And of course, it was a THANK GOD for the revenue spike in September otherwise, the government’s deficit would have run wild.


 
Most of the deficit financing for September has been channeled through domestic debt which was up 7.27% for the month. The NG must have paid down foreign debt for it to grow by only 3.36% even when the USD was up 7.17% over the same period. The underperformance of foreign debt aggravated the deceleration of domestic debt, thus total debt growth diminished to 5.87%.

Meanwhile, the BSP’s direct subsidies to the NG grew by 9.9% yoy.

The 9-month NG fiscal deficit of Php 213 billion had mostly been financed by domestic borrowing, which over the same period recorded Php 254 billion.

On the other hand, the BSP’s monetization of NG’s debt has totaled Php 36.31 billion. When the BSP’s ICU turned negative in April and May, money supply accompanied this downturn. Seeing this, the BSP immediately turned the corner and began to finance the NG anew but at a more moderate pace compared to last year.

Since the government’s debt issuance tends to drain liquidity from the system, the BSP has used debt monetization and incredibly low-interest rates as countermeasures.

The prevailing expectations have been that the banking system’s credit expansion will be more than sufficient to counteract the reductions in liquidity from government borrowing

So far that has held. The banking system (production and consumer loans) has issued Php 668 billion in loans during the last 9 months.

What Will Drive 3Q GDP, CPI or M3?

The government produces incredibly contradictory statistics.

First, growth in production loans has exploded. It registered 20.68% last September to hit a 2012 high.  Credit expansion had been widespread to include possibly parts of the public sector (community and social services up 175%, administrative and support services 80.25%).

As a side note. Surprise! Loans to the mining sector have been ramping up since March (+53.62% in September). That would be even prior to the Commission on Appointment’s rejection of DENR’s honcho Gina Lopez last May. Have miners gotten the foreknowledge of what has transpired? Have revenues been pressed such that the administration has sidelined its politically correct stance on the environment? Interesting, no?

Next, growth in consumer loans has strikingly ebbed. As I previously mentioned, auto and payroll loans registered substantial growth drawdowns in September as credit card growth soared. Nonetheless, loan growth declines of the former two had been more powerful than the additions from the latter. Have declining loans been a factor of rising income? Or has the rising leverage been the case for those with access to formal credit?

Curiously, while M3 marginally slowed (14.5% in September, 15.4% in August), the rate of growth of consumer prices substantially increased (3.45% in September, 3.12% in August) even as general retail prices (3.2% in September, 3.28% in August) have reportedly gone in the opposite direction. Or, consumers told the government that they bought at higher prices while retailers said that they sold at lower prices. Huh?

So what will drive the 3Q GDP? The government will be reporting 3Q GDP on November 16. The present wild pumps and dumps at the PSE appear to be heralding the speculative and insider trades.

The growth in nominal numbers would be significant, M3 points to this. However, will it be large enough to grow sufficient distance from the consumer price deflator? If so, GDP will improve. If not, we will likely see growth rates of the 2Q and 1H levels with + or – 10 basis points.

Crowding-Out? Bond Yields Have Been Surging, Yield Curve Points to a Financial Tightening!


Finally, embedded in popular psyche is the bizarre notion that free lunches tend to last forever

As far back in 2014, I have been saying that the culmination of such free lunch will appear first in the bond markets.

The bond markets have presaged a tightening anew!

Such developments have emerged in the face of a very accommodative BSP. Current market signals run in contrast to the flattening dynamic in 2014 to 2015. The BSP’s actual tightening then led to the flattening curve dynamic.

And such flattening comes in the face of a broad base yield increases. Or yields have risen across the board.

Yet, the 10-year yield appears to have been ‘managed’ by some unidentified entities who have been attempting to suppress it at the close of almost every trading session. In doing so, flattening dynamic has emerged.

In fact, the yield curve’s belly (5-10 year) has regressed to repeated inversions until last week’s emancipation of the 10-year yield which spiked! The narrowing of spreads have become evident even the standard yield curve (2-10 year)

To reemphasize, the significant narrowing of the yield curve has taken place even as monetary policies have remained loose.

The domestic bond market appears to be pressuring the BSP to tighten!

These are likely manifestations of the “crowding out effects” in a relatively closed and less liquid financial sector.

Fascinatingly, just what will happen to the credit-dependent industries if the BSP obliges?