Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Phisix 10,000:Clues From Philippine Bond Offering

When we talk about investing, it is universally about the expectations of the shifting balances of demand and supply in specific markets.

And the recent issuance of the Philippine bonds should give us a clue.


Here is an excerpt (bold emphasis mine)


``At the time of pricing, the yield resulted in a spread of 332.6bp over the 10-year US Treasury maturing in May 2019. This marked a sharp tightening versus the 599.9bp spread that was required when the Republic of thePhilippines sold $1.5 billion of 10-year bonds due in June 2019 in January this year and shows how much the market has improved since then. The yield on the 2019 bonds has dropped to about 6.4% now from 8.5% at the time they were issued.


``Even more impressively though, sources said the new bonds priced right in line with the implied Philippines curve as interpolated from the yield levels of the Philippines 2019s and 2024s. In other words, investors received no new issue premium at all.


``Not that this seemed to worry them. The offering attracted $4.4 billion worth of demand split on 202 orders, even though the term sheet clearly stated that the $750 million deal size would not be increased. As usual for Philippine issues (this is after all the country that "gave a name to the Asian bid", as noted by one analyst), a large chunk of that demand came from domestic investors, and in the end, 40% of the deal was allocated to Philippine accounts. Investors based in the rest of Asia took another 20%, while 25% went to the US and 15% toEurope.


``In terms of investor type, funds took 50%, banks 39% and retail investors 6%. The remaining 5% went to insurance companies and "others".


Some notes:


-Tightening spreads means greater demand for local debt over US treasuries.


-Investors received no premium yet the offering had been oversubscribed.


-Locals commanded the bulk 40% of the financing, which demonstrates of the immense liquidity (source of financing) of the system.


In a world of Zero Bound Policy, where yields (Peso and US dollar) on fixed income has been going down and the US dollar-Philippine Peso trades in a tight range-essentially narrows the choices for local institutions and investors as to where they should allocate savings.


And the above conditions which is an unambiguous manifestation of the loose monetary landscape is essentially shaping an environment for greater yield searching dynamics backed by a prospective expansion of credit from a system that has been largely underleveraged.


This shifts the risk premium from financial markets to real business investing.


All said, you are looking at a prospective boom (bubble) in the local equity market!


Phisix 10,000, anyone?

Monday, July 13, 2009

Has Lack Of Regulation Caused This Crisis? Evidence Says No

We find it odd when experts argue of the lack of regulation as the cause of this crisis.

Evidence simply don't support such claims...

Chart From Casey Research

According to Casey Research, ``The Federal Register is a daily publication of all the proposed and final rules and regulations of the U.S. government. The size of the register is often used to gauge the scope of regulation, and it’s been on steroids for decades.

``According to the Washington, DC-based Competitive Enterprise Institute’s 2009 edition of “Ten Thousand Commandments” by Clyde Crews, the cost of abiding federal regulations is estimated at $1.172 trillion in 2008 – 8% of the year’s GDP. This “regulation without representation,” says Crews, enables the funding of new federal initiatives through the compliance costs of expanded regulations, rather than hiking taxes or expanding the deficit."

Imagine, compliance costs at an estimated 8% of the GDP and growing!!! This represents as tremendous burden, since it reduces the productive capacity of the US economy. Money that would have gone into capital investments have been lost due to sheer compliance on the massive regulatory structure.

To add, the Federal Tax Code (see below) which is also incorporated in the Federal Register has also seen a ballooning of pages-67,506.

The tax code had only 400 pages in its inception in 1913!

More from George Reisman [The Myth That Laissez Faire Is Responsible For Our Crisis] (bold highlights mine)
  1. Government spending in the United States currently equals more than forty percent of national income, i.e., the sum of all wages and salaries and profits and interest earned in the country. This is without counting any of the massive off-budget spending such as that on account of the government enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Nor does it count any of the recent spending on assorted "bailouts." What this means is that substantially more than forty dollars of every one hundred dollars of output are appropriated by the government against the will of the individual citizens who produce that output. The money and the goods involved are turned over to the government only because the individual citizens wish to stay out of jail. Their freedom to dispose of their own incomes and output is thus violated on a colossal scale. In contrast, under laissez-faire capitalism, government spending would be on such a modest scale that a mere revenue tariff might be sufficient to support it. The corporate and individual income taxes, inheritance and capital gains taxes, and social security and Medicare taxes would not exist.

  2. There are presently fifteen federal cabinet departments, nine of which exist for the very purpose of respectively interfering with housing, transportation, healthcare, education, energy, mining, agriculture, labor, and commerce, and virtually all of which nowadays routinely ride roughshod over one or more important aspects of the economic freedom of the individual. Under laissez-faire capitalism, eleven of the fifteen cabinet departments would cease to exist and only the departments of justice, defense, state, and treasury would remain. Within those departments, moreover, further reductions would be made, such as the abolition of the IRS in the Treasury Department and the Antitrust Division in the Department of Justice.

  3. The economic interference of today's cabinet departments is reinforced and amplified by more than one hundred federal agencies and commissions, the most well known of which include, besides the IRS, the FRB and FDIC, the FBI and CIA, the EPA, FDA, SEC, CFTC, NLRB, FTC, FCC, FERC, FEMA, FAA, CAA, INS, OHSA, CPSC, NHTSA, EEOC, BATF, DEA, NIH, and NASA. Under laissez-faire capitalism, all such agencies and commissions would be done away with, with the exception of the FBI, which would be reduced to the legitimate functions of counterespionage and combating crimes against person or property that take place across state lines.

  4. To complete this catalog of government interference and its trampling of any vestige of laissez faire, as of the end of 2007, the last full year for which data are available, the Federal Register contained fully seventy-three thousand pages of detailed government regulations. This is an increase of more than ten thousand pages since 1978, the very years during which our system, according to one of The New York Times articles quoted above, has been "tilted in favor of business deregulation and against new rules." Under laissez-faire capitalism, there would be no Federal Register. The activities of the remaining government departments and their subdivisions would be controlled exclusively by duly enacted legislation, not the rule-making of unelected government officials.

  5. And, of course, to all of this must be added the further massive apparatus of laws, departments, agencies, and regulations at the state and local level. Under laissez-faire capitalism, these too for the most part would be completely abolished and what remained would reflect the same kind of radical reductions in the size and scope of government activity as those carried out on the federal level.

It's incredible to discover how the gullible public falls for such deceptions.

Emerging Markets Stocks Outperform: Signs Of A Top Or Of A New Dynamic?

Bloomberg's chart of the day shows how emerging markets have recently been outperforming the US S&P 500 in terms of weekly PE ratio.

Some notes from the article (all bold emphasis mine) including my comments in captions

-The MSCI emerging-market index had 13 bull-market rallies of at least 20 percent and 12 bear-market declines of the same magnitude since its inception in December 1987, according to data compiled by Birinyi Associates Inc., the Westport, Connecticut-based research and money management firm founded by Laszlo Birinyi. That compares with five bull markets and four bear markets for the S&P 500 during the same period.

(This implies that Emerging Markets stocks are more volatile than the developed market peers)

-The increase cut the dividend yield of the emerging-market gauge to 3 percent, compared with 3.5 percent for developed countries. MSCI’s emerging-market index fetches 1 times sales and 6.6 times cash flow, compared with 0.8 and 4.3 in the advanced gauge, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

(based financial ratios EM stocks seem more expensive, but financials don't tell the entire story)

-Developing nations’ share of global equity value climbed to an all-time high this month as investors poured in a record $26.5 billion last quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and EPFR.

-The Washington-based IMF estimates developing economies will grow 1.5 percent as a group this year and 4.7 percent in 2010, while advanced economies will contract 3.8 percent in 2009 and expand 0.6 percent next year.

(And it won't be entirely a story of economic growth too)

-Developing nations traded at a discount to American equities from 2001 to 2006 even after their economies expanded at almost three times the pace, according to Bloomberg and IMF data. They moved to a premium in October 2007, the peak of a five-year advance that sent the MSCI gauge up fivefold. The index’s drop in 2008 was almost 16 percentage points steeper than the S&P 500’s 38 percent slide, the worst since 1937.

(the article suggests that when EM stocks outperform, a reversal looms)

-When emerging-market valuations climbed above the U.S. in 1999 and 2000, it foreshadowed the end of a seven-year global rally. The MSCI developing-nation index sank 37 percent in the 12 months after March 2000, compared with a 23 percent slide in the S&P 500.

(same argument here)

-Companies in the MSCI emerging-markets index that reported results since the end of the first quarter posted an average earnings drop of 92 percent, trailing analysts’ estimates by 14 percent, according to Bloomberg data. That compares with a 46 percent profit slide for Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index and a 31 percent fall for the S&P 500, Bloomberg data show.

Additional comments:

The general disposition of the article is one of negativity. It implies that EM stocks outperforming developed economy stocks seems like an anomaly and isn't destined to happen for long.

Not only that, such aberration in the past has signaled a reversal of global stock markets.

Looking at history to make comparisons, when present dynamics aren't the same seems either like anchoring or reductionism (oversimplification of causality).

While it is true that we seem to be seeing some weaknesses in global markets of late, it isn't certain that all global markets will behave similarly like in 2008 or in 2000. The article discounts the possibility of divergences, a phenomenon we think will manifest itself overtime.

Growth or financial ratios won't be the only issues that needs to be reckoned with, but more importantly for us, is the impact from concerted and coordinated policies by global governments on national markets and economy.

This is because every country has a distinct political economic structure that we assume would respond differently to such policies. And the diverse responses will likely be manifested on the asset market pricing.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Worth Doing: Inflation Analytics Over Traditional Fundamentalism!

``Economics is not about goods and services; it is about the actions of living men. Its goal is not to dwell upon imaginary constructions such as equilibrium. These constructions are only tools of reasoning. The sole task of economics is analysis of the actions of men, is the analysis of processes.”- Ludwig von Mises Logical Catallactics Versus Mathematical Catallactics, Chapter 16 of Human Action

Marketing guru Seth Godin has this fantastic advice on quality,

``When we talk about quality, it's easy to get confused.

``That's because there are two kinds of quality being discussed. The most common way it's talked about in business is "meeting specifications." An item has quality if it's built the way it was designed to be built.

``There's another sort of quality, though. This is the quality of, "is it worth doing?". The quality of specialness and humanity, of passion and remarkability.

``Hence the conflict. The first sort of quality is easy to mandate, reasonably easy to scale and it fits into a spreadsheet very nicely. I wonder if we're getting past that.

In essence, everything we do accounts for a tradeoff. When we make choices it’s always a measure of acting on values.

For instance, the “quality” of providing investment advisory is likewise a tradeoff. It’s a compromise between the interests of investors relative to the writer and or the publisher. It’s a choice on the analytical processes utilized to prove or disprove a subject. It’s a preference over the time horizon on the account of the investment theme/s covered. And it’s also a partiality on the recommendations derived from such investigations.

So “meeting specifications” which is the conventional sell side paradigm has mainly the following characteristics, it is:

-short term oriented (emphasis on momentum or technical approaches),

-frames studies based on “spreadsheet variety” (reduces financial analysis to historical performance than to address forward dynamics),

-serves to entertain more than to advance strategic thinking,

- promotes heuristics or cognitive biases

-upholds the reductionist perspective or the oversimplified depiction of how capital markets work and

-benefits the publisher more than the client (Agency Problem)

Yet many don’t realize this simply because this has been deeply ingrained into our mental faculties by self serving institutions that dominate the industry.

And instead of merely meeting the specifications which is the norm, here we offer the alternative-the “is it worth doing?” perspective.

Why?

-Because we realize that successful investing comes with the application of the series of "right" actions based on the “right” wisdom and rigorous discipline.

And with “right” wisdom comes the broader understanding of the seen and unseen effects of government policies that IMPACT asset markets or the economy more than just the simplistic observation that markets operate like an ordinary machine with quantified variables.

-Because government policies shape bubble cycles which underpins the performance of asset prices.

Think of it, if markets operate unambiguously on the platform of “valuations” or the assumption of the prevalence of rational based markets, then bubble cycles won’t exist.

Hence, the failure to understand policy directions or policy implications would be the Achilles Heels of any market participant aspiring success in this endeavor.

For instance, with nearly 90% of oil reserves or supplies under government or state owned institutions, any analysis of oil pricing dynamics predicated on sheer demand and supply without the inclusion of policy and political trends would be a serious folly or a severe misdiagnosis.

Of course, money printing by global central banks adds to the demand side of the oil equation. Moreover, price control policies can be an interim variable. The recent attempt to curb speculative trading in oil can be construed as a significant factor for the recent oil collapse in oil prices.

-And also because I try to keep in mind and heart Frederic Bastiat’s operating principle, ``Between a good and a bad economist this constitutes the whole difference - the one takes account of the visible effect; the other takes account both of the effects which are seen, and also of those which it is necessary to foresee. Now this difference is enormous, for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favourable, the ultimate consequences are fatal, and the converse. Hence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good, which will be followed by a great evil to come, while the true economist pursues a great good to come, - at the risk of a small present evil.”

In short, the seen and unseen effects of policy actions and political trends are the operating dynamics from which underlines our “is it worth doing?” perspective.

Financial Markets As Fingerprints

We have repeatedly argued against the mainstream and conventional view that micro fundamentals drives the markets [see Are Stock Market Prices Driven By Earnings or Inflation?].

Stock markets, for us, have been driven by principally monetary inflation, and secondarily from sentiment induced by such inflation dynamics. All the rest of the attendant stories (mergers, buyouts, fundamentals such as financial ratio, etc…) function merely as rationalizations that feeds on the public’s predominant dependence on heuristics as basis of decisions in a loose money landscape.

In an environment where liquidity is constrained, no stories or financial strength have escaped the wrath of the downside reratings pressure.

The disconnect between market price actions over the performance of corporate financials or the domestic economy have been conspicuous enough during the last bull (2003-2007) and bear cycles (2007-2008) to prove our assertion.

Moreover, up to this point our skeptics haven’t produced any strong evidence to refute our arguments. Instead we had been given a runaround, alluding to some regional securities as possible proof of exemptions.

Here we discovered that inflation and inflation driven sentiment seem to apply significantly even in the more sophisticated markets of Asia as well.

So, instead of weakening our arguments, the wider perspective has even reinforced it.

Moreover, financial markets shouldn’t be seen as operating in uniform conditions. Such reductionist view risks glossing over the genuine internal mechanisms driving the markets. The underlying structure of every national financial markets appear like fingerprints-they are unique.

For instance, they have different degrees of depth relative to the national economy as seen in Figure 1.


Figure 1: McKinsey Quarterly Mapping Global Capital Markets Fifth Annual

The McKinsey Quarterly map reveals of the extent of distinction of financial market depth across the world. Yet growth dynamics are underpinned by idiosyncratic national traits.

So it would be an “apples to oranges” fallacy to take the Philippines as an example to compare with the US markets or other markets in trying to ascertain the degree of “fundamentals” affecting price actions versus the inflation perspective.

Finding scant evidence that the Philippine market is driven by fundamentals, we’ll move to ascertain the impact of inflation to US markets-the bedrock of the capital markets.

The US has deeper and more sophisticated markets, where [as we pointed out in PSE: The Handicaps Of A One Directional Reward Based Platform] investors can be exposed to profit from opportunities in all market directions- up, down and consolidation, given the wide array of instruments to choose from, such as the Exchange Traded Funds, Options, Derivatives and other forms of securitization vehicles.

This leads to more pricing efficiency in relative and absolute terms.

This also implies that deeper and more efficient markets tend to be more complicated. Nonetheless this doesn't discount policy induced liquidity as a significant variable affecting asset pricing.

In lesser efficient markets as the Philippines or in many emerging markets, the lesser the sophistication and the insufficient depth accentuates the liquidity issue.

The fact that the broad based global meltdown in 2008 converged with almost all asset markets except the US dollar, had been a reflection of liquidity constraints as a pivotal factor among other variables.

S&P 500 Total Nominal Return Highlights Rapid Inflation Growth!

Since we don’t indulge in Ipse Dixitism, the proof in the pudding, for us, is always in the eating.


Figure 2: Investment Postcards: Components of Equity Returns

This excellent chart from Prieur Du Plessis’ Investment Postcards (see figure 2) showcases the categorized return of equity capital since 1871. That’s 138 years of history!

Says Mr. Plessis, ``Let’s go back to the total nominal return of 8.7% per annum and analyze its components. We already know that 2.2% per annum came from inflation. Real capital growth (i.e. price movements net of inflation) added another 1.8% per annum. Where did the rest of the return come from? Wait for it, dividends - yes, boring dividends, slavishly reinvested year after year, contributed 4.7% per annum. This represents more than half the total return over time!”

While it is true that dividends accounted for as the biggest growth factor in equity returns in the S&P 500 benchmark yet, where inflation so far has constituted about 25.3% (2.2%/8.7%) of total returns, what has been neglected is that rate of growth of inflation has far outpaced the growth clip of both capital and dividend growth.

Notice that inflation had been a factor only since the US Federal Reserve was born in 1913. Prior to 1913, equity returns had been purely dividends and capital growth.

And further notice that the share of inflation relative to total returns has rapidly accelerated since President Nixon ended the Bretton Woods standard by closing the gold window in August 1971 otherwise known as the Nixon Shock.

To add, the share of inflation has virtually eclipsed the growth in real capital!!!

In other words, investing paradigms predicated on the pre-inflation to moderate inflation era will unlikely work in an environment where inflation grows faster than dividends or capital.

Hence it is a folly to latch on to the beliefs of “fundamental driven” prices without the inclusion of policy induced inflation in the context of asset pricing.

This is a solid case where past performances don’t guarantee future outcomes!

To further add, if inflation has a growing material impact to the pricing of US equity securities, then the degree of correlation with the rest of the global markets must be significantly greater under the premise of market pricing efficiency.

Policy Induced Volatilities Against Mainstream Fundamentalism

Here is more feasting on the pudding (this should make me obese).


Figure 3: Hussman Funds Secular Bear Markets And The Volatility Of Inflation

Another outstanding chart, see figure 3, this time from William Hester of Hussman Funds.

Mr. Hester uses the volatility of inflation as a proxy for economic volatility.

In the chart, low inflation volatility extrapolates to higher price P/E multiples and vice versa.

Here it is clearly evident that when volatility is low, bubble valuations emerge (left window), whereas the regression to the mean from excessive valuations occurs when volatility of inflation or economic volatility is high (right window).

Mr. Hester adds, ``It's not only the level of volatility and uncertainty in the economy that matters to investors, but also the trend and the persistence in this uncertainty. Shrinking amounts of volatility in the economy creates an environment where investors are willing to pay higher and higher multiples for stocks, while growing uncertainty brings lower and lower multiples.” (bold highlight mine)

So, it isn’t just economic volatility (as signified by inflation) but uncertainty as a major contributory factor to the gyrations of price earning multiples.

And where does “uncertainty” emanate from?

It is rooted mostly from government intervention or political policies instituted by governments, such as protectionism, subsidies, higher taxes et. al.. or any policies that fosters “regime uncertainty” or ``pervasive uncertainty about the property-rights regime -- about what private owners can reliably expect the government to do in its actions that affect private owners' ability to control the use of their property, to reap the income it yields, and to transfer it to others on voluntarily acceptable terms” as defined by Professor Robert Higgs.

In actuality, Mr. Hester’s technical observations of the proximate correlations of inflation and price/earnings multiples is a reflection or a symptom of the operational phases of the business cycles.

As depicted by Hans F. Sennholz in the The Great Depression, ``Like the business cycles that had plagued the American economy in 1819–1820, 1839–1843, 1857–1860, 1873–1878, 1893–1897, and 1920–1921. In each case, government had generated a boom through easy money and credit, which was soon followed by the inevitable bust. The spectacular crash of 1929 followed five years of reckless credit expansion by the Federal Reserve System under the Coolidge administration.” (bold highlights mine)

So it would be plain shortsightedness for any serious market participants to blindly read historical “fundamental” performances and project these into future prices while discounting political or policy dimensions into asset pricing.

As we noted in last week’s Inflation Is The Global Political Choice, the financial and economic milieu has been hastily evolving post crash and is likely being dynamically reconfigured from where asset pricing will likewise reflect on such unfolding dynamics, ``the unfolding accounts of deglobalization amidst a reconfiguration of global trade, labor and capital flow dynamics, which used to be engineered around the US consumer, will likely be reinforced by an increasing trend of reregulations which may lead to creeping protectionism and reduced competition and where higher taxes may reduce productivity and effectively raise national cost structures, as discussed in Will Deglobalization Lead To Decoupling?

Hence, any purported objectives to attain ALPHA without the context of the measurable impact from policy or political dimensions over the long term are inconsistent with the intended goals.

Instead, these signify as lamentable and plaintive quest for short term HOLY Grail pursuits which is not attributable to investing but to speculative punts.

Hence, traditional “fundamentalism” serves as nothing more than the search for rationalizations or excuses that would conform to cognitive biased based risk taking decisions.

It’s not objectivity, but heuristics (mental shortcuts or cognitive biases) which demands for traditional fundamentalism metrics since evolving market and economic realities and expectations don’t match.

Under A New Normal, Old Habits Die Hard

London School of Economics Professor Willem Buiter [in Can the US economy afford a Keynesian stimulus?] makes the same policy based analysis when he predicts that the US will prospectively underperform the global markets due to the political direction,

``There is no chance that a nation as reputationally scarred and maimed as the US is today could extract any true “alpha” from foreign investors for the next 25 years or so. So the US will have to start to pay a normal market price for the net resources it borrows from abroad. It will therefore have to start to generate primary surpluses, on average, for the indefinite future. A nation with credibility as regards its commitment to meeting its obligations could afford to delay the onset of the period of pain. It could borrow more from abroad today, because foreign creditors and investors are confident that, in due course, the country would be willing and able to generate the (correspondingly larger) future primary external surpluses required to service its external obligations. I don’t believe the US has either the external credibility or the goodwill capital any longer to ask, Oliver Twist-like, for a little more leeway, a little more latitude. I believe that markets - both the private players and the large public players managing the foreign exchange reserves of the PRC, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, the Gulf states, Japan and other nations - will make this clear. There will, before long (my best guess is between two and five years from now) be a global dumping of US dollar assets, including US government assets. Old habits die hard.” (bold highlights mine)

Indeed, old habits, mainstream but antiquated beliefs are even more difficult to eliminate.


Figure 4: John Maudlin/Safehaven.com: Buddy, Can You Spare $5 Trillion?

In an environment where the dearth of capital will be overwhelmed by the expansive liabilities of global governments deficit spending policies [see figure 4], the underlying policy trends will determine, to a large extent, the dimensions of asset pricing dynamics.

And as we noted last week, deficits won’t be the key issue but the financing. Here a myriad of variables will likely come into play, ``the crux of the matter is that the financing aspect of the deficits is more important than the deficit itself. And here savings rate, foreign exchange reserves, economic growth, tax revenues, financial intermediation, regulatory framework, economic freedom, cost of doing business, inflation rates, demographic trends and portfolio flows will all come into play. So any experts making projections based on the issue of deficits alone, without the context of scale and source of financing, is likely misreading the entire picture.”

Yet, like us, PIMCO’s Bill Gross in his June Outlook sees a “New Normal” environment where investing strategies will have to be reshaped.

``It is probable that trillion-dollar deficits are here to stay because any recovery is likely to reflect “new normal” GDP growth rates of 1%-2% not 3%+ as we used to have. Staying rich in this future world will require strategies that reflect this altered vision of global economic growth and delevered financial markets. Bond investors should therefore confine maturities to the front end of yield curves where continuing low yields and downside price protection is more probable. Holders of dollars should diversify their own baskets before central banks and sovereign wealth funds ultimately do the same. All investors should expect considerably lower rates of return than what they grew accustomed to only a few years ago. Staying rich in the “new normal” may not require investors to resemble Balzac as much as Will Rogers, who opined in the early 30s that he wasn’t as much concerned about the return on his money as the return of his money.” (bold highlights mine)

So yes, ALPHA can only be achieved with respect to the understanding of the scope and scale of policy and political trends and its implication to the sundry financial assets and to the global and local economy as well as to industries. For instance, industries that have endured or will see expanded presence of the visible hand of governments will have systemic distortions that may nurture bubble like features of expanded volatility or could see underperformance over the long run.

And any models or assumptions built around traditional metrics are likely to be rendered less effective than one which incorporates political and policy based analysis.

In short, like it or not, in the environment of the New Normal, government inflation dynamics will function as the zeitgeist which determines financial asset pricing trends.

This brings us back to the issue of quality. For us, in almost every sense, it appears that the "is it worth doing?" perspective is the more profitable approach than simply abiding by the conventional “meeting specifications”.

Nonetheless for those who can’t rid themselves of such archaic habits, we suggest for them to enroll in local stock market forums where traditional fundamental information from diverse sellside sources or even rumor based information can possibly be obtained for free! Forums are recommended sources of information for short term players seeking market adrenalin and excitement.


Meralco’s Run Reflects On The Philippine Political Economy

``When the government, along with the pay-for-favors thieves in Congress and special interest power players, nationalizes and runs a business, decisions will always be made with political considerations/favors being first up on the agenda. Decisions will never be made on the basis of profit-and-loss and winning and retaining satisfied customers… Governments are not in the business of profit-and-loss; they are in the business of steal-and-spend.” Karen De Coster Politicians Act Surprised by Lack of "Business Criteria" for Decisions at New Government Motors

For those fixated with “prices driven by fundamentals”, they ought to explain to us in fundamental lingo why the sudden outperformance of Meralco, a Philippine electric utility company whose legislated monopoly covers the franchise of the national capital region of Metro Manila.

Meralco surged 23.45% over the week and is up by about 200% year to date. Of course, I’d like to congratulate those whom have been presently profiting from the recent activities.

To consider, given Friday’s close at Php 179 per share, this puts Meralco’s Price Earnings Multiple to high 68 (based on PSE calculations) or 32 (based on technistock). Price to Book is now 3.74 (technistock) and 3.73 (PSE) while dividend yield is .56% (technistock) and .3% (PSE). [Yes, as you probably noticed, financial fundamentals also come in diverse interpretation depending on the institution.]

Meralco hasn’t been driven by foreign investors as modest foreign selling has been accounted for during the past 4 weeks.

Has Meralco stuck gold as to merit its present price levels? Or has Metro Manila consumers suddenly been bequeathed with a windfall as to boost its electric consumption, thereby translating to bigger top line and also fatter bottom line?

The obvious answer is no.

If there has been a precipitate boom in electricity consumption then activities that underpin electricity usage such as TV programming could likewise be booming too and should be reflected in share prices of TV stations as GMA-7 or ABS CBN . Unfortunately both TV stations have been consolidating alongside the major indices [see figure 5]


Figure 5: PSE: Meralco and Sectoral Indices

Meralco (light green) which falls under the category of Commercial industrial (pink) both of which has seen outperformances relative to other sectoral indices [in pecking order] such as the Mining (green), All Index (Maroon), Holding (red), Properties (Blue) market laggards in Service (gray) and Bank (Black candle) index.

The reason I highlighted Meralco movements in March is to show that Meralco and the energy sector has led the general market’s rebound. Today’s sizzling performance could portent for a replay sometime in the near future.

Going back to the issue of fundamentals, the electric utility company projects a flat growth for 2009! So the present market activity is hardly about positive change in the traditional fundamental aspect.

And the only “fundamental” driver appears to be the transitioning of the ownership structure of the prized utility company.

In a word…POLITICS!!!

Meralco’s Possible Role In The Presidential Elections

The formerly Lopez dominated Meralco, whom has been associated with the political opposition, has been subjected to political harassment by the incumbent administration since last year.

The corporate struggle has drawn in an apparent ally of the administration in Danding Cojuangco owned San Miguel Corporation [SMC], who in a dramatic fashion overhauled its business model almost overnight by selling its beer business and has swiftly bought into Petron and Meralco, as previously discussed in Has San Miguel's Shifting Business Model Been Linked To The Philippine Presidential Elections? Lessons and San Miguel’s Shifting Business Model: Risks and Opportunity Costs.

The struggle over the company’s leadership seems to have diminished when a white knight in the Manny V. Pangilinan controlled Philippine Long Distance Telephone , the largest publicly listed company in the Philippines, came to the rescue of the Lopezes as discussed in King Kong Versus Godzilla at the PSE; Where Politics Trumps Markets and in Has Meralco’s Takeover Been A Good Sign?

Today, the acquisition process has apparently been unfinished, as PLDT through subsidiaries Metro Pacific [MPI] and Pilipino Telephone [PLTL] are said to be adding to the its holdings by acquiring through the open markets (Reuters).

Of course, we can’t discount that the other party SMC could also be behind the same activities in order to improve on their shareholdings for a potential showdown into next year’s annual stockholders meeting over management control.

In my view all of this is tied to the 2010 presidential elections.

The first scenario could be that the 2010 elections will possibly see an administration planted Trojan horse among the field of opposition candidates who will contend with the administration bet.

The winner of the 2010 elections will likely be covertly affiliated with either MVP’s TEL or Danding Cojuangco’s San Miguel Corp.

Here, depending on whose side the assuming President will be, the “opposing camps” will possibly sell their shares in blocks to the other party, where the Lopez camp could be eased out.

Or the other scenario could be that Meralco could be used as a vehicle to fund or finance an affiliate candidate of the new Meralco owners in next year’s election.

Joe Studwell in his book Asian Godfather: Money and Power in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia aptly describes how the ASEAN political economy operates,

``Centralized governments that under-regulate competition (in the sense of failing to ensure its presence) and over-regulate market access (through restrictive licensing and non-competitive tendering) guarantee that merchant capitalists-or asset trader, to use a more pejorative term-will rise to the top by arbitraging economic inefficiencies created by politicians. The trend is reinforced in South-east Asia by the widespread presence of what could be called as ‘manipulated democracy’, either in the guise of predetermined winner democracy (Singapore, Malaysia, Suharto’s Indonesia) or else in the scenario where business interest gain so close a control of the political system that they are unaffected by the changes of government that do occur (as in Thailand and the Philippines). In both instances politicians spend huge sums to maintain a grip on power that has some semblance of legitimacy. This can only be financed by through direct political ownership of big business or more usually, contributions from nominally independent big business that is beholden to politicians. Whichever, the mechanism creates a not entirely unhappy dependence of elites between politicians and tycoons.” (bold highlights mine)

At the end of the day Meralco will ultimately serve as a trophy for the winner of the political crony capitalist football.

As you can see, the nations’ political structure shapes the local economy. Hence, it would be a reductionist fallacy to presume markets operate evenly everywhere or that traditional fundamental metrics apply straightforwardly to disparately constructed political economy. Again operating reality and mainstream expectations don’t match.

Again Joe Studwell describes how wealth is generated in Southeast Asia and the function of the tycoon class to the economy,

``The tycoon class served its political purpose, and generated enormous personal wealth, but did little to promote overall economic growth. Instead growth came from a combination of small scale entrepreneurs, many concentrated in and around manufacturing, and a policy of renting out the local labour force to efficient multinational exporters.” (bold highlights mine)

In other words, it would be overly simplistic and imprudent to simply assess a security or a publicly listed company based on financial fundamentals without taking into consideration the security/company’s position in the nation’s political economic structure or even the political class behind the issue or the industry.

That’s because politicians and the domestic elite group have the laws and institutions behind their interests from where economic rent can be generated for the advancement of their personal wealth.

This means you can’t buy simply because of “cheap” PE ratios, because PE multiples won’t be enough to bring about economic windfall to the privileged class, it would take monopolies, laws that circumvent competition, political privileges (e.g. licensing), tariffs and other forms of implicit government support to attain these.

And it is of no question for me why some market participants’ position (including my mentor) have been based on “jockeys” or on “political affiliates” than from financial fundamentals.

At the end of the day, it seems hardly about markets but about political trends, networks and the underlying policies.

Nonetheless, inflationary policies still is the major force which drives the local equity market.


Friday, July 10, 2009

The Petabyte Illustrated

Great Stuff from Mozy.com... (HT: Paul Kedrosky) How Much is a Petabyte.

Here is an illustrated series of statistics that should help explain what a petabyte is...

To get a larger view click on this link to direct you to mozy.com

To me, all this appears evidence of accelerating change, which wikipedia.org defines as `` an increase in the rate of technological (and sometimes social and cultural) progress throughout history, which may suggest faster and more profound change in the future."


INO's Adam Hewison on Oil Price Decline: Key Support Levels Reached?

INO's Adam Hewison thinks that an important support level have almost been reached following the 8 consecutive days of rout in oil prices.

Press on the image to direct to link.

Disclosure: this blog is a member of INO's affiliate partner program

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Halili Kho Sex Video Scandal: Sensationalism Undeserving of Political Dimension

Fetish is defined by dictionary.com as ``Something, such as a material object or a nonsexual part of the body, that arouses sexual desire and may become necessary for sexual gratification" or ``An abnormally obsessive preoccupation or attachment; a fixation."

Since our genes have been essentially programmed for two missions- survival and procreation-some of our procreational stimulus comes in the form of fetishes. And capturing a consensual sexual act in video is just part of this fetish for some (orgies, dominatrice sex & etc.).

Scandals arise when such fetishes are leaked into the controversy hungry public. For instance in the account of the Halili-Kho scandal as discussed in Halili Kho Sex Video Scandal: A Case of Political Opportunism, it's seems hypocritical that many people have used the unfortunate incident to moralize on the alleged misbehavior of others but in themselves engage in consuming the scandal. Who among those moralizers haven't watched the "evil" video?

Furthermore, they are snared by politicians as opportunities to advertise themselves especially with the forthcoming elections (smacks of political opportunism) and or utilize such opportunities to promote the encroachment and restrictions of our civil liberties, by proposing meaningless and unenforceable laws which only promote systemic inefficiencies and corruption in the government system, in the name of farcical nobility.

The point of this blog is to demonstrate the exaggeration of such scandals as a public issue.

Why have Filipinos been so fixated with the Halili Kho scandal when there have been other local scandals which involved other media personalities?

In countries like the US, sex scandals, while indeed attracts public attention don't hold up to become governance or political issues.

This from manolith.com's: Celebrity Sex Tapes: A Laughing Stock or a Catapult to Fame

``It’s difficult to go 30 minutes in this 24-hour news cycle world without hearing about another alleged sex tape. Most recently, defamed politician John Edwards has been mentioned to have recorded a sex tape with his former mistress. This “credible” information came from a disgruntled former staffer who, according to reports, will soon be releasing a tell all book about the affair.

``It’s stories like this that has caused the once sensational sex tape, to become just another blip on the radar and an annoying sideshow for the cable news cycle to report. Today, after all, it has become very rare for a sex tape to become a big career booster, as it once was for such “celebrities” as Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian. Regardless of the public’s weaning voyeuristic appetite, managers and publicists continue to exhaust and exploit this medium for the career booster it was once hoped to be. But is this always the case? The following are 15 examples of peculiar celebrity sex tapes and their implications."

Read the 15 examples here.

Lesson: Celebrity scandals are a way of life, here, in Hong Kong, in the US or elsewhere. And you can't legislate morality. The unintended consequences could probably be that of the promotion of extortion.

``Our increased reliance on laws to regulate behavior is a measure of how uncivilized we've become" Walter Williams on Law versus Moral Value

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Weird and Amazing Currencies Of The World

The common impression is that currencies come only in the form of the paper money in your wallet or coins in your pocket. Or that gold, copper or silver once functioned as primitive form of currencies.

From today's modern society, that's true.

But from history's perspective, we realize currencies took in many forms...including the most bizarre ones.


This from CNBC's The Weirdest Currencies of the World

Just a few examples...


Edible Money!

``Salt is one of the world's oldest forms of payment. In fact, the word salary derives from the Latin "salarium," which was the money paid to Roman soldiers to buy salt. It was the main form of currency in the Sahara Desert during the Middle Ages, and was used extensively throughout East Africa. Typically, one would lick a salt block to make sure it was real and break off pieces to make change. Doty's block, seen here, is 1,500 years old.

``Other incredible, edible currencies include "reng," a yarn-ball of tumeric spice wrapped in coconut fibers that is used for trade in the Solomon Islands; cacao (or chocolate beans), widely used throughout Mexico and Central America; and Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, so highly regarded that it was used both as currency and bank collateral in Italy.

``One particularly inedible currency: the
poisonous money seeds of Burma. Which if nothing else proves that money does indeed grow on trees — or at least bushes."
Deposed president for a currency's design!

``The African nation of Zaire, known today as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, doesn't have money to burn. So when the totalitarian regime of Joseph Mobutu was overthrown in 1997, the new government found itself in a cash crunch until it could design and print new currency. It's thrifty solution? It took large stacks of 20,000-zaire notes and
simply punched out Mobutu's image."

Read more of the amazing but weird currencies and their stories here.


INO's Adam Hewison: Current Opportunities In The Euro-US Dollar Trade

INO's Adam Hewison gives an update on the whereabouts of the Euro-US Dollar Trade. Press on the image to direct to link.
Disclosure: this blog is a member of INO's affiliate partner program