Monday, January 15, 2018

Four Reasons Why R.A. 10963 or the TRAIN (Tax Reform) Legislation Will Be Derailed

“I believe it’s because people love to be deluded.  After all, it feels so warm and fuzzy compared to the harshness of reality.  Just as people get the governments they deserve, they also get the charades they deserve — and want.” Robert Ringer

In this issue

Four Reasons Why R.A. 10963 or the TRAIN (Tax Reform) Legislation Will Be Derailed
-Personal Anecdotes: Price Spikes From the Tax Reform Legislation
-Debunking the DOF’s Debunking of Tax Myths
-Learning from Japan’s Catastrophic Consumption Tax Hike
-Four Reasons Why TRAIN Will Be Derailed
-Phisix: Mounting Volatility is Symptom of Speculative Excess or Instability

Four Reasons Why R.A. 10963 or the TRAIN (Tax Reform) Legislation Will Be Derailed

The Department of Finance on debunking Tax Myths (bold original)

Myth #3: Fares and commodity prices will skyrocket because of the proposed increase in oil excise.

DOF: No, prices of basic goods and public transportation will not skyrocket. In fact, inflation will be additional 1.5% at most. Our estimate shows that food prices may increase by additional 1% in the first year of implementation while transport price may increase by additional 2%

But we are not taking chances. If Dubai crude oil price exceeds 100 USD per barrel, we will stop increasing excise tax to provide relief to everyone.

Myth #5. The tax reform bill is regressive and anti-poor.

DOF: Our proposed tax reform program is pro-poor are progressive. It simplifies the system and makes it fairer and more equitable by restructuring the personal income tax, removing unnecessary VAT exemptions and adjusting the excise tax rates on petroleum products and automobiles

In our proposal, 83% of individual taxpayers including minimum wage earners (P250k and below) will be exempted from paying income tax. The revenues generated from this reform will fund infrastructure, health, education, and social services.

Implemented together with proposed social protection mechanisms, the overall impact benefits the poor and the vulnerable sectors.

Personal Anecdotes: Price Spikes From the Tax Reform Legislation

Our neighborhood probiotic health drink Yakult sales agent told me that their selling price of a pack (5 units) would increase from Php 40 to Php 45 or by 12.5% next week.

I was startled to know that selling prices of a 1.5 liter of Coca-Cola spiked from Php 50 to Php 65 per bottle or whopping 30% increase! I also learned from my neighborhood sari-sari store that the biggest price increased were in cigarettes. Cigarette increases were imposed in December 2017.

For instance, a ream of Philip Morris, which previously sold at Php 77, had now been priced at Php 110 for a remarkable 42.8% surge!

The sari-sari store owner told me that recent price increases involved a broad range of goods, but the scales of price changes were variable. Many had incremental or modest increases. Nonetheless, the owner confided their concerns over the effects of price increases on the consumers which may affect their sales.

That should be the initial impact from the recently enacted Republic Act No. 10963 or the “Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN)”.

Nota Bene: The above account involves one store only, which scale may or may not be representative of NCR dynamics. Although, I am quite sure this has been widespread. Why? It has been in the news!


In politics, definition matters. What goods should comprise basic goods? How would these be measured? How will prices be classified as skyrocketing?

The use of the internet for me is a basic good. But that doesn’t seem to be the case in the context of the government or for statistical collectors.

Since my values and preferences differ from the rest, how can a statistical aggregation be representative of every individual?

Nevertheless, in the BSP’s basket of consumer goods CPI, tobacco carries a .99% weight and non-alcoholic beverages 2.69%. Food items constitute the biggest weight with 36.29%.

If the price increases percolate into the Food, then the CPI will spike beyond the DoF’s estimates. The present price increases come mostly from the impact of the tax aspect alone.  There is yet the BSP’s free money to the banking system to account for.

Debunking the DOF’s Debunking of Tax Myths

Allow me to skip the prices for the meantime and focus on the supposed pro-poor benefits from the exemption from paying income tax of the 83% of individual taxpayers.
 
Based on the BIR’s 2016 Annual Report, there had been 15,176,959 compensation income earners in 2016 which had been up 8.2% from 14,026,929 in 2015. To suppose the same rate of increase in compensation income earners in 2017, this would amount to 16,421,469.

Thus, the 83% whom would exempt from paying income taxes would total 13,629,820 people. Let us call this the “income tax stimulus”.

The general idea is here is to shift the tax burden from income to consumption.

The other implicit precept here is to generate populist approval through smoke and mirrors policies: the mirage of handing more money to the people but at the same time taxing them away through indirect means

But here is one unstated problem. The labor force is way much larger than the coverage of the BIR. According to the Philippine Statistics Authority’s 2017 Annual Labor and Employment Status” (bold mine)

The preliminary results of the Annual Labor and Employment Estimates for 2017 based on the average of the four (4) LFS rounds (January, April, July and October) reported an annual labor force participation rate of 61.2 percent out of 69.9 million population 15 years old and over.  This is equivalent to about 42.8 million economically active population comprising of either employed or unemployed persons.  The annual employment rate in 2017 was estimated at 94.3 percent; annual unemployment rate was 5.7 percent; and annual underemployment rate was 16.1 percent.

The total employed persons was approximately 40.3 million in 2017.  Employed persons were grouped into three broad sectors, namely, agriculture, industry and services sector. 

Only about FORTY percent of the labor force has bankrolled the BIR through individual income taxes. Even if we assume compensation income earners to be 100% exempted, that brings about 60% of non-income tax paying employed people. Thus, the TRAIN’s “income tax stimulus” would partially offset price increases for the 40%, but the 60% will suffer from reduced purchasing power through higher prices.

News headlines fixate on the taxpayers and nary on the consumers.

Since increased tax collections pay, not only for touted populist political programs, but also for the sustenance of the political institutions, the claim that TRAIN is “pro-poor and progressive” stands on very flimsy or tenuous ground. 

Reducing the citizenry’s purchasing power to the benefit of the government hardly constitutes “pro-poor”.

The current conditional cash transfers would most possibly be insufficient to cover the spate of price increases brought about by the distortions from the tax reform. Thus, there would be populist clamors to increase such welfare redistribution.

The ramification of which would be a vicious feedback loop of prices increases, bigger welfare and higher taxes!

Moreover, such tax program strengthens the political power of the National Government as against the Local Governments. Well, action speaks louder than words. Or, the nature of tax program, being a centralized framework, hardly supports the political platform being pushed to justify a constitutional amendment: “Federalism”.

I would leave politics behind and instead focus on the economic effects of TRAIN

Learning from Japan’s Catastrophic Consumption Tax Hike

I would use Japan’s 2014’s increase in consumption/sales taxes as an example.


 
To save money, the Japanese consumers frontloaded demand ahead of the consumption/sales tax increase. This frantic buying ahead of price increases spiked retail sales and household spending which also boosted statistical inflation.

The imposition of the consumption tax immediately aggravated inflation. However, the ensuing collapse in retail sales and household spendingbasically counteracted the price increase!

As a result, PM Shinzo Abe deferred imposing the second batch of tax hikes to October 2019.

From the Guardian (May 30, 2016)

Abe is desperate not to introduce another drag on consumer spending as doubts rise over his economic programme – a combination of monetary easing, fiscal stimulus and structural reform known as Abenomics.

“We have no other options but to postpone the sales tax increase,” Hakubun Shimomura, an Abe aide, said in a TV interview. “If the increase means a decline in tax revenue for the government, that would threaten our ability to achieve the goals of Abenomics.”

The above provides us a blueprint of what could happen.

Four Reasons Why TRAIN Will Be Derailed

Let me cite reasons why Duterte’s TRAIN will derail.

First, the government thinks in the context of statistics. The new tax regime has been calculated based on such static figures. Numbers are just substituted or replaced in the assumption that markets will operate under the same setting but with a new tax regime in place.

As such, they will fail to meet their sanguine revenue goals (Php 4 trillion by 2022)

As Professor Donald J. Boudreaux explained*

Economics shows that higher excise taxes will practically always yield less revenue than the revenue figures you get by merely multiplying the dollar value of the taxes by the quantity of the good or service regularly bought and sold before the taxes are implemented or raised.  Economics also shows that the price of the taxed good or service will indeed rise because of the tax, but practically never by the full amount of the tax

Donald J. Boudreaux, It’s Not Really a Taxingly Difficult Subject September 9, 2013, Café Hayek

Second, fundamental economic laws are given little importance. The government seems to have ignored the pricing system’s sine qua nonfunction as coordinating mechanism of economic allocation in the marketplace.

For instance, the view is that price increases will readily be offset by ‘economic growth’. Hence, prices changes from the new tax regime will have neutral effects on consumers.

For them, statistical G-R-O-W-T-H would dominate the ‘law of demand’!

That is to say, people’s preferences, value scale and economic calculation won’t impact prices.

Third, there seems to be sparse understanding of the changing profile of the Philippine economy.

The current economic backdrop has been pillared by credit growth rather than by productivity growth
 
The incumbent easy money policy regime has worked wonderfully as an invisible transfer mechanism to the National Government (NG) and to politically favored groups. But easy money’s sweet spot in 2013 and 2014 has long been gone.

Even under the current record emergency policies of BSP’s subsidies to the NG and record low-interest rates, the task of achieving significant negative real rates appears to be elusive.

Last year, negative real rates had been a specter of its 2013 and 2014 appearance. (upper window)

Even more, the evolution of the economic structure has been profound. Increasing amounts of resources have been channeled into the consumer market even as the consumer’s role has been diminishing. The retail and real estate industry continues to expand at a rapid pace to acquire a significant share of the GDP pie. On the other hand, consumer share of the GDP continues to fall. (middle window)

The contrasting directions of economic activities highlight the intensifying risks of concentration, and most importantly, overcapacity issues

Consumption taxes, which penalize consumption, will likely aggravate the current conditions.

That’s not all. The BIR’s tax collection has increasingly become dependent on BSP’s policies. Changes in credit growth have dovetailed with changes in government tax revenues. (lower window) Or, credit growth has driven the BIR’s tax revenues.

This fragile relationship could likely be the unstated principal reason behind the TRAIN: To shift credit-based economic dependence away from the private sector into the government.

Haven’t you been noticing? The National Government has rapidly been expanding its presence in the economy.

This week public school teachers were the receiving end of the President Duterte generosity. Public school teachers had been promised of substantial increases in wages. Considering the institution of the free college education, increased demand for free lunches would entail massive additions to public school teachers.

This week the DICT also announced that it is targeting to install 250,000 WIFI spots in the public by 2022.

There will be massive costs for all these free lunches.
 
The NG’s spending binge has brought upon thundering twin deficits: 11-month fiscal deficit and trade deficit. The latter, having been a result of stagnant export growth (1.6%) in the phase of booming import growth (18.5%), partly from the build, build and build.

Fourth, the tax reform legislation operates on the supply side premise of having to tax consumption only; thereby the massive increases in excise taxes (auto, oil, energy and extractive minerals, sugar-sweetened beverages), reduction in the exemptions in the coverage of expanded VAT and the income tax cuts and exemptions.

There seems to be scant understanding of how such policies would spawn material distortions and dislocations in the economic system

The great dean of Austrian school of economics Murray N. Rothbard** elaborated, (italics original, bold mine)

A partial excise, on the other hand, penalizes certain lines of production. The general sales tax, of course, distorts market allocations insofar as government expenditures from the proceeds differ in structure from private demands in the absence of the tax. The excise tax has this effect, too, and, in addition, penalizes the particular industry taxed. The tax cannot be shifted forward, but tends to be shifted backward to the factors working in the industry. Now, however, the tax exerts pressure on nonspecific factors and entrepreneurs to leave the taxed industry and enter other, non-taxed industriesDuring the transition period, the tax may well be added to cost. As the price, however, cannot be directly increased, the marginal firms in this industry will be driven out of business and will seek better opportunities elsewhere. The exodus of nonspecific factors, and perhaps firms, from the taxed industry reduces the stock of the good that will be produced. This reduction in stock, or supply, will raise the market price of the good, given the consumers’ demand schedule. Thus, there is a sort of “indirect shifting” in the sense that the price of the good to consumers will ultimately increase. However, as we have stated, it is not appropriate to call this “shifting,” a term better reserved for an effortless, direct passing on of a tax in the price.

Everyone in the market suffers as a result of an excise tax. Nonspecific factors must shift to fields of lower income; since the discounted marginal value product is lower there, specific factors are hit particularly hard, and consumers suffer as the allocations of factors and the price structure are distorted in comparison with what would have satisfied their desires. The supply of factors in the taxed industries becomes excessively low, and the selling price in these industries too high; while the supply of factors in other industries becomes excessively large, and their product prices too low.

In addition to those specific effects, the excise tax also has the same general effect as all other taxes, viz., that the pattern of market demands is distorted from private to government or government-subsidized wants by the amount of the tax intake…

In sum, an excise tax (a) injures consumers in the same way that all taxes do, by shifting resources and demands from private consumers to the State; and (b) injures consumers and producers in its own particular way by distorting market allocations, prices, and factor revenues; but (c) cannot be considered a tax on consumption in the sense that the tax is shifted to consumers. The excise tax is also a tax on incomes, except that in this case the effect is not general because the impact falls most heavily on the factors specific to the taxed industry.

Murray N Rothbard, B. Partial Excise Taxes: Other Production Taxes, 4. Binary Intervention: Taxation > 3. The Incidence and Effects of Taxation Part...Power and Market: Government and the Economy Mises.org

Applied to the current setting, the excise tax on oil and energy will likely increase business operating costs. With little room for a pass-through to the consuming public, profits will shrink thus, reducing output.  The diminishment in output will lead to increases in prices if demand remains constant. However, if demand falls, prices will likewise follow.

The substantial increases in excise taxes on oil and energy will also affect consumption significantly. While the income tax stimulus will ease part of the burden of the taxpaying minority, in general, the reduction of purchasing power will translate to diminished disposable incomes. With spending power atrophied, the race to build supply industries catering to consumption spending is bound to get hit.

The tax regime provides an interesting feature. Since excise taxes will drive out the marginal players from the affected industries, such tax regime would virtually entrench existing players. The other way to say this is that the tax reform legislation serves as a protective moat for the big players against the competition.

My bet is that the smoke-mirror policies will barely work. Duterte’s TRAIN will be derailed.

And if I am right, where the NG miscalculates from its overestimations, the peso will suffer a meltdown.  Aside from debt, devaluation will be used to finance the propensity to overspend.

And in a not so distant future, taxes will rise even more. Perhaps, exemptions in personal income tax will be reversed or reinstituted.

After all, there is no such thing as a free lunch.

Use periods of the US Dollar-Philippine peso (USD-Php) weakness to accumulate.

Phisix: Mounting Volatility is Symptom of Speculative Excess or Instability

A short note on the Phisix

 
While global stocks have run amuck, the Phisix has been partying wildly with them.

The difference between global stocks and the Phisix have been on how prices are determined.

For the week the PSEi was up by 44.62 points or by .51%. On the other hand, the end session pumps accounted for 75.98 points or .86% which means the entire gains of the week had been derived from marking the close!

The degree of end session price fixing has become more blatant as time goes by.

On Thursday, when the Phisix was down by about 1.8%, GTCAP was stunningly pumped by a staggering 4.99% in the market intervention interval phase! Helped by pumps on the majors as SM, AC, BPI and JGS to suddenly pare down the deficit to 1.2%! GTCAP closed the week up 4.6%, mainly from the Thursday’s push.

Remember, what can’t be priced in the regular session is being forced on the close. That’s not how markets are supposed to work.

Furthermore, price volatility has only been intensifying. We are not talking about 2 to 4% price movements. The biggest gainers for the week had gains ABOVE 5%! In particular, LTG +12.46%, Puregold +8.08%, Robinsons Retail +6.27% and San Miguel +7.5%! The banks which drove the index higher were eclipsed: SECB +3.82% BDO +3.06% BPI +2.64% and MBT +2.72%. The average gain of the 30 issues was at .96%!

The buildup of volatility can’t be seen as a sign of a healthy uptrend but one of speculative excess.

Here’s another tip: With gold prices surging past $1,320, depressed domestic mines could be ripe for the picking. Old entrenched mines should benefit from the Tax reform moat. Buy the gold mines!

Monday, January 08, 2018

New Year Fireworks! Global Stocks and the Phisix Storm to Record Heights as Central Banks Tighten

But financial gravity can’t be resisted indefinitely. Although the exact timing and sequence of events are unknown, it will end, as always, in a Torschlusspanik moment — a German word for last minute or literally door-shut-panic — as investors try desperately to exit when they fear that stable instability is tipping over into simple instability.  To paraphrase Trotsky, the impossible will then become inevitable—Satyajit Das, Markets are Less Stable than They Seem

In this issue

New Year Fireworks! Global Stocks and the Phisix Storm to Record Heights as Central Banks Tighten
-Global Stock Markets Sprints to Record Heights
-Global Mania: How We Got Here
-The Global Central Bank Dilemma: To Tighten or Not
-Phisix 8770: Big New Year Week No Guarantee of Big Annual Return
-Risks From BSP’s Winner-Take-All Policies

New Year Fireworks! Global Stocks and the Phisix Storm to Record Heights as Central Banks Tighten

Global Stock Markets Sprints to Record Heights

Wow. Stock markets around the world have virtually been rocketing! They took flight in 2016. The ascent accelerated in 2017. And stock markets have virtually gone parabolic or vertical at the onset of 2018!
 
Price momentum has become of utmost significance. And momentum, brought about by the greater fool and the fear of missing out, has only been rationalized as “fundamentals”

Led by the US, the FTSE All-World Index jumped 2.34%! US major equity benchmarks were euphoric: the Dow Jones Industrials, S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite and the Russell 2000 vaulted by an amazing 2.33%, 2.6%, 3.38% and 1.6% respectively.

Asia was equally ecstatic. The MSCI AC Pacific Index zoomed by 3.2%. Fourteen of Asia’s 17 national benchmarks were up. The average return for the region was a spectacular 1.78%!

Benchmarks of Pakistan (+4.45%), Japan (+4.17%), Hong Kong (+2.99%), Mongolia (+2.96%), Vietnam (+2.89%), the Philippines (+2.47%), Singapore (+2.54%) and China (+2.56%) were the week’s most significant gainers.

The Thailand’s SET’s January 1994 pre-Asian crisis zenith of 1,789 was finally taken out last Friday. The SET closed at 1,795.45 up by 2.38%.

Asian currencies resonated with the epic stock market mania. The JP Morgan Bloomberg Asian dollar index (ADXY) climbed .6%. The ASEAN majors - Malaysian ringgit (+1.21%), the Thai baht (+1.15%) and the Indonesian rupiah (+1.03%) – were the biggest winners.

The Philippine peso also firmed by .13% as the USD fell to Php 49.865 from Php 49.93 at the close of 2017.

Global Mania: How We Got Here

A short backdrop.

The Chinese stock market bubble peaked in July 2015 was followed by a crash.

The Chinese government responded by erecting a firewall through the Xi Jinping Put to prevent an economic contagion. The put comprised of various stock market interventions to cushion or put a floor on the collapse.  The Chinese government likewise implemented huge fiscal support measures and loosened its credit spigot.

Despite blathers of ‘deleveraging’, in 2017 the Chinese government has inundated its economy with more than USD $ 4 TRILLION in Total Social Financing and local government debt!

After the February 2016 G-20 meeting in Shanghai, several central banks announced the imposition of negative interest rates. The G-20 meeting was thus dubbed the “Shanghai Accord”.  Because the Shanghai Accord implicitly and explicitly provided support to risk assets, global stocks advanced.

Through 8 months of 2017, central banks (ex-US Federal Reserve) bought $1.96 trillion, according to Bank of America. Assets of the Swiss National Bank expanded 12% for the year as of November 2017. Part of such expansion included direct purchases of US equities ($90 billion according to Quartz).

In 2016, Brexit and the US presidential elections occurred with the unexpected or unpopular outcomes. Nevertheless, global stocks simply bid off each correction.

Paradoxically, what previously was deemed as potential sources of turbulence became fodder for a meltup. Thus, price declines narrowed in time frame and shallowed in scale. With limited incidences of declines, prices only had one direction: up, up and away!

And since markets were perceived as operating in a singular direction, the bidding wars have only intensified!

Central bank policies have become “too asset-oriented” because of economic ideology (Phillips curve and the wealth effect) and the implicit protection of the banking and financial institutions. Economic pain, as a consequence of asset declines, would not be tolerated. Naturally, central bank’s implicit support has only escalated the public’s moral hazard.

And conditioned to believe that central banks have eviscerated the business cycle, the credit cycle, and the stock market cycle, markets have become bolder and more aggressive.

On the other hand, rising markets have only entrenched central bank dependence to accommodate these. Or, central banks have becomehostaged to the markets.

Even when expectations from economic ideology haven’t materialized, the US Federal Reserve has started to tighten. It has upped the tempo of its interest rate hike (3x in 2017). More importantly, it announced a progressive rollback of its assets. It will first desist from reinvesting the maturing assets.

Then it would commence on the tapering lift-off. From Investopedia.com: (bold mine)

At the Federal Reserve June meeting, committee members stated that once tapering begins they will start by letting $6 billion a month in maturing Treasuries run off, which will slowly increase to $30 billion over the coming months. With regards to its agency debt and Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS), the Fed laid out a similar plan where it will begin tapering $4 billion a month until it reaches $20 billion.  Additionally, the Fed said the long-run plan is to keep the balance sheet "appreciably below that seen in recent years but larger than before the financial crisis."

And finally, confirmation. On September 20, 2017, the Fed officially announced lift-off. The unwinding of the balance sheet was underway.The $50 billion per month taper would begin in October, and at this rate, the balance sheet would drop below $3 trillion in 2020 at which point the next discussion will be how big should the Fed's balance sheet remain once tapering is over.

The Fed must be taking this stand to build upon ammunition once a downturn reappears. [Updated to add: Reuters Fed official says rates are last resort against financial risks January 6]. They are doing this in spite of unfulfilled expectations from the implanted policies. Outgoing Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen recently admitted that the Fed’s view on inflation and employment could be a mistake. Yet, the acknowledgment has been perceived by the marketplace as an assurance of the perpetuation of the easy money regime.

Baby steps tightening have only cemented the public’s perception that the central bank put will remain in place.

That said, aggressive punts and speculative excesses have been spreading to other spheres such as cryptocurrencies and commodities. Gold posted its eight best runs since 1968.

Mainstream perception of the recent global synchronized recovery represents the ramifications of central bank actions in early 2017.

 
The backpedaling on stimulus has been more than just the FED. The ECB has likewise commenced on halving of its asset purchasing program.  Despite the Bank of Japan’s pronouncement of maintaining its ultra-easy monetary policy, the BOJ has embarked on stealth quantitative tightening (QT).

Interestingly, China’s interbank loan SHIBOR rates suddenly plunged across the curve last week which has most likely been from unannounced liquidity injections by the PBOC. Such interest rate “magic” fueled a rally in the yuan (+.28%) and in Chinese stocks (Shanghai Composite up 2.56%). And the rebound Chinese assets reinforced the levitation of global stocks.

So 2018 should be very interesting.

The Global Central Bank Dilemma: To Tighten or Not

It is my view that central banks have been boxed into a corner. Maintain the current environment, economic maladjustments will be magnified by the escalation of the blowoff phase. Tighten beyond the market’s expectations, the market crashes.

Though central banks are unlikely to extricate themselves from spoon feeding global markets, the current and projected phase of incremental tightening/normalizing would most likely take the wind away from the current parabolic momentum.

Bear in mind, once volatility remerges, it is no guarantee that central banks can control them. If central banks cannot control the upside, then downside actions could hold a similar sway.

Proof?

The CNBC on the FOMC December minutes: “In light of elevated asset valuations and low financial market volatility, a couple of participants expressed concern that the persistence of highly accommodative financial conditions could, over time, pose risks to financial stability," the minutes said.”

Remember that the central bank put has been programmed or hardwired into the market’s psychology such that cumulative marginal changes in expectations can morph into an accident. Greed can transmogrify into fear.

Additionally, markets have become totally anesthetized to any form of risk.

Even more, I see an escalation of geopolitical risks in 2018.

Here are some clues:

“Speaking in front of thousands of troops and over 300 perfectly organised military vehicles, Xi – the Communist Party's General Secretary – ordered his forces to prepare for the event of war.” (Daily Star, Chinese President Xi Jinping orders army to prepare for WAR in chilling footage, January 4,2018)

“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has scheduled a briefing for later this month to outline how the public can prepare for nuclear war."While a nuclear detonation is unlikely, it would have devastating results and there would be limited time to take critical protection steps. Despite the fear surrounding such an event, planning and preparation can lessen deaths and illness," the notice about the Jan. 16briefing says on the CDC's website, which features a photo of a mushroom cloud.” The notice went on to say that most people don't know that sheltering in place for at least 24 hours is "crucial to saving lives and reducing exposure to radiation." (CBS CDC to hold briefing on how public can prepare for nuclear war January 5, 2018)

Last December, “VLADIMIR Putin has hit out at the “aggressive”new US national security strategy and warned Moscow will react. The Russian president said the US missile defence sites in Romania containing interceptor missiles could also house ground-to-ground intermediate-range cruise missiles, which would be in violation of the 1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. He told the military officials that both the US and NATO have been "accelerating build-up of infrastructure in Europe" and emphasised that the deployment of NATO forces near Russia's borders had threatened its security. (Express.co.uk, Russia's Putin blasts 'AGGRESSIVE' US national security strategy as relations PLUMMET December 22, 2017)

Last November, “Vladimir Putin has warned Russian businesses they should be ready to switch to military production in preparation for war. The Russian President told defence ministry officials on Wednesday that the arms production industry - both private and state owned - needed to be prepared to step up manufacturing at a moment's notice.” (Sky News Vladimir Putin tells Russian arms firms to be ready for war, November 23, 2017)

I do hope that Putin’s war preparation is about puppies, “THE Russian military has unveiled its latest puppy recruits, showing off Vladimir Putin’s forces softer side in its New Year’s message.” Express.co.uk Dogs of war! Putin’s military unveils latest puppy recruits in adorable New Year's video January 3, 2018

Though the good news, “President Donald Trump told reporters Saturday at Camp David that he's open to talking with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. "Sure, I always believe in talking," he said. "But we have a very firm stance. Look, our stance, you know what it is. We're very firm. But I would be, absolutely I would do that. I don't have a problem with that at all." (CNN Trump on North Korea: 'I always believe in talking' January 6, 2018)

Besides, there are many potential geopolitical risk channels, like protectionism, Middle East war, escalation of cyber war, accidents and more…

Lastly, economic downturns will likely increase incumbent frictions and bring to the surface hidden ones.

Phisix 8770: Big New Year Week No Guarantee of Big Annual Return

Essentially, domestic events have resonated with global developments.

The Phisix surged 2.47% in the first week of 2018. Though it would be facile to point out that such a feat would account for the fifth biggest return since 2017, returns don’t appear out of the vacuum.

The Phisix seemed to have been ‘forced up’ especially on Friday January 5th. However, some forces looked as if they have resisted closing the week with a huge advance similar to 2017. So aside from engineered pumps, there was a pump and dump.

 
Returns have been a function of index levels too.

The huge 5.98% New Year week return of 2009 was an offspring to the 2008’s annual (-48.29%) collapse.

In contrast, 2017’s big move 5.96% came after successive two years of marginal declines: -3.85% in 2015, and -1.6% in 2016. Or, the Phisix closed below 7,000 for two years and was materially down from the April 2015 record of 8,127.48.

The Phisix started 2018 at record 8,558.

That’s not all. With the entrenched gaming of the system, returns have been foisted upon the pseudo-market. In fact, 2017’s magnificent New Year week 5.96% advance was preceded by 2016's end of the year trading week’s awesome gains of 4.22%! That is to say, in two holiday abbreviated trading weeks, the Phisix soared by a stunning 10.18%! These essentially pillared 2017’s 25.11% returns.

Fast forward today.

The Phisix would have closed above 8,820 to 8,850 had some cabal of shysters not dumped a boatload of SM shares last Friday. SM plunged a shocking -4.23% in a flash! SM, which was up by 1.37% before the market intervention phase, found itself suddenly down by -2.86% at the closing bell. Nevertheless, end session pumps on Ayala Corp +.95% and JG Summit 1.2% alleviated the last minute retracement of gains in the headline index from SM.

New Year week’s gain of 2.47% plus end December 2017 advance of 1.5% adds up to 3.97%, still a considerable markup.

As one can see from the above, such has not been evidence of a healthy functioning market.  

Also, New Year week performance does not guarantee a robust annual return for 2018 (lowest pane)
 
The meat of this week’s phenomenal gains accrued from the performance of the second quintile group

Risks From BSP’s Winner-Take-All Policies

While major central banks have been gradually pulling back on the liquidity stimulus, mostly to build upon policies as insurance against financial risk and to reduce financial instability manifested in the euphoric marketplace, the BSP remains wedded to a winner-take-all policy.

If the Philippine economy has been as robust as popularly depicted, why has it been that the BSP’s emergency measures (historically low-interest rates and expanded BSP balance sheets from subsidies to the National Government) remain in place?

Why has the BSP adamantly been resisting normalization of financial conditions? How are emergency measures consistent with a healthy entity?

Most of all, with an “ALL-IN” policy, what ammunition or insurance toolkit does the BSP hold in reserve once financial risk emerges?  Realization of financial risks may be triggered exogenously or endogenously.

If the answer is little or none, what would happen to the Philippine economy under such circumstances? Or has the Philippine economy attained a status where it has become totally immune to risks?

Convincing me is very easy once the above questions are satisfactorily answered or addressed

Yet, let me offer two reasons for the BSP’s recalcitrance.

One. Massive Fiscal Deficits. The huge debt-financed government spending would drain the system’s liquidity. The BSP hopes that through the banking system’s continued credit expansion would offset the liquidity “crowding out” dilemma. The BSP and the DoF have forgotten about prices (interest rates and inflation).

Two. Tax reform. A miscalculation by the DoF on the implementation of the tax reform program would not only be reflected in fiscal balance but also on the affected sectors of the economy. And part of the likely contingent required to address dislocations would entail easy access to money. Therefore, easy money conditions must prevail…

...except that the reason the economy is called as such is that it operates under the premise of “scarcity”. 

And ROP yields of the 10, 20 and 25-year maturities exhibit scarcities in motion! The entire curve has been rising.

So they can pump PSEi at will. But as history has shown, vertical (SSO-BW) prices eventually return to their roots.

Thursday, January 04, 2018

Auto Industry: Which will Prevail: The DoF on HB 5636 (Tax Reform) or the Law of Demand?


In a section of their website, the Department of Finance published an infographic attempting to debunk supposed “tax myths”
 

A brief purview of the prevailing conditions of the domestic auto industry prior to the enactment of HB 5636:


First fact. Since culminating in July 2016, the growth of unit auto sales has substantially been slowing in conjunction with auto loans. The financing of car sales has mostly been through credit.

Second fact. Based on the Philippine Statistics Authority’s October manufacturing data, auto production grew at double-digit rates in 2016 until the 1H 2017 but suddenly contracted by -.6% and -4.7% in September and October, respectively.

So how will the DOF’s claim measure with the law of demand?

The law of demand as defined by investopedia.com is “a microeconomic law that states, all other factors being equal, as the price of a good or service increases, consumer demand for the good or service will decrease, and vice versa. The law of demand says that the higher the price, the lower the quantity demanded, because consumers’ opportunity cost to acquire that good or service increases, and they must make more tradeoffs to acquire the more expensive product.” (bold added)

So…

Will politics successfully suspend the fundamental laws of economics (law of demand)? Or, will the DOF get shocked by the emergence of unintended consequences to the economy from the practice of the populist notion of “statistics equals economics”?