Sunday, April 08, 2018

Trade Walls Will NOT Fix the US Trade Deficits Forged By the US Dollar Standard; The Philippines is Not Most at Risk

“The real issue should be monetary inflation: back in the day of the gold-exchange standard, a trade deficit usually meant that gold was seeping out of a country because of domestic monetary inflation. But in the current monetary system, as domestic inflation is masked through dirty floating exchange rates, trade deficits no longer fully reflect reckless domestic monetary policies. Thus, trying to fix them won’t fix the unsound monetary system.”—Carmen Elena Dorobăt

In this issue

Trade Walls Will NOT Fix the US Trade Deficits Forged By the US Dollar Standard; The Philippines is Not Most at Risk
-Was Friday’s Selloff Prompted by a Bloomberg article on the Philippines? Incredible Pumps to Save the Phisix
-The Battle For the Control of Trade Flows Between US and China Worsens; a Misleading Report on the Philippines
-Protectionism is About Politics Over Economics
-Fixation on China; Trade Control Standoff: The Philippines Is Not the Most at Risk
-Since US Trade Deficits are Products of the US Dollar Standard’s Deficits Without Tears, Trade Walls Won’t Fix it

Trade Walls Will NOT Fix the US Trade Deficits Forged By the US Dollar Standard; The Philippines is Not Most at Risk

Was Friday’s Selloff Prompted by a Bloomberg article on the Philippines? Incredible Pumps to Save the Phisix

If I am not mistaken, a Bloomberg article triggered the souring of sentiment at the Philippine Stock Exchange and incited Friday’s selloff in the PSEi 30.

While the headline index drifted mostly at neutral levels from the opening bell through the early afternoon, the publication of the article which came about right after the resumption of the trading session, coincided with the sharp downturn in the PSEi 30.

The headline index plunged to a low of 1.5% with only a few minutes left to the close. Nevertheless, the index managers came into rescue to deliver a magical reduction of Friday deficit to only -.95% at the close.


 
While the PSEi 30 closed down by only 34.17 points or by .43% this week, such outcome was a result of the cosmetic adornment from the incredible end session pumps, which tallied to a net additional 89.67 points or 1.12%. Yes, absent these manipulations the headline index would have been vastly below 7,900!

And about forty percent of SM’s fantastic 6.43% weekly gain and a staggering 476% of SMPH’s weekly returns were from such egregious maneuvers!

Even in the days where the Phisix closed higher, bulls were hardly in command as trading sessions were mostly adrift flat.

These notorious mark-the-close pumps wonderfully depict on the proverbial “putting a lipstick on a pig”. Such represents evidence of the massive distortions brought about by the systematic falsification of the PSE’s pricing system.

The likely role or influence of the Bloomberg article was to alter the dominant noncommittal position to a marginal sell. Put differently, a dithering market looked for an excuse to undertake an action and found one.

The Battle For the Control of Trade Flows Between US and China Worsens; a Misleading Report on the Philippines

The Bloomberg article entitled “Philippines Most at Risk in Asean From China-U.S. Trade War” suggested since the Philippines had been most exposed to China’s supply chain through exports, she was the most vulnerable in the region.


 
Here is an excerpt: “The Philippines could be the most at risk in Southeast Asia from the worsening trade conflict between China and the U.S. About 16.9 percent of the Philippines’ shipments abroad are part of China’s value chain; goods that serve as inputs to China’s exports, according to RHB Bank Bhd. That compares with 11.4 percent for Malaysia and just 2.2 percent for Vietnam.”

First the back story.

The pushback on globalization has intensified with 2 of the biggest economies attempting to control trade.

US President Donald Trump unveiled $50 billion worth of tariffs against many Chinese goods on Tuesday. The following day the Chinese government retaliated by announcing that it would impose levies on a myriad of US exports worth $50 billion.

Ostensibly irked by the tenacity of the Chinese government, the next day Mr. Trump escalated on the protectionist rhetoric by doubling down; an additional array of Chinese goods worth $100 billion would be subject to tariffs

On Friday, the Chinese government steadfastly responded that they “will follow suit to the end and at any cost, and will firmly attack, using new comprehensive countermeasures, to firmly defend the interest of the nation and its people”.


Back to the article’s patently misleading premises.

Protectionism Isn’t About Statistics

The first fatal flaw of the article is the misunderstanding of how protectionism works.

It fixates exclusively on statistics and disregards the international markets functioning as a process.

A full-blown oxymoronic “trade war” wouldn’t be confined to China. That’s because exemptions to tariffs would lead to substantial leakages.

By the way, it is Mr. Trump who launched such populist political offensive against trade and not China.

For instance, through the diversion of exports to tariff exempt countries which re-exports to the US, tariffs against Chinese goods may be circumvented. America’s trade deficits would merely move from China to other nations.

Thus, to strictly control Chinese goods from entry, this would likewise entail restraining indirect channels of trade flows to the US.

And unless the favored trade partners of the US government equally imposes similar trade barriers against Chinese goods, such measures will fail.

Will the US be forging trade blocs to control China’s potential trade channels? Recently appointed Head of National Economic Council Larry Kudlow said that they are recruiting other major economies to support the U.S. position: “I call it a trade coalition of the willing. I think everybody in the world knows that China has not played by the rules for many years.”

The other option would be for Mr. Trump to impose trade barriers on all.

Since America maintains a trade deficit with 102 nations (as noted by Yale’s Stephen Roach), will Mr. Trump put a wall against them all?

And if other countries will reciprocate, global trade will plunge!

The other outcome is that the US will become isolated.

By this account, not only will exports matter but imports too. In the modern global supply chain, imports serve as vital inputs to exports. Therefore, countries with the most significant share of merchandise trade to GDP would be the most fragile. Here, the Philippines ranked 115th based on 2016 data.  Singapore (2nd), Vietnam (3rd) and Malaysia (12th) would be the most vulnerable in the Asean region.

Protectionism is About Politics Over Economics

The second fatal flaw of the article is for it to insulate economics from politics.

Imposing tariffs or taxing trade is a political act against commerce.

Since America maintains a trade deficit with 102 nations, why focus on China? Because China is the poster child of US trade deficit? Or could Mr. Trump’s action have been more than just about merchandise trade?

Could the assault on the economic front have been about China’s rise as a rival superpower?

Could it have been part of a comprehensive defense strategy, known as the Wolfowitz Doctrine, designed to “prevent the re-emergence of a new rival” from dominating a region whose resources would be under consolidated control which would be sufficient to generate a global power?

Are we thus witnessing the unfolding of what American political scientist and Harvard Professor Graham T. Allison coined the “Thucydides Trap”? Named after the Athenian General and Historian Thucydides, the theory is anchored on the perceived threat to the established power by the emergence of competition as to escalate the risks of war

Carried to its logical conclusion, Mr. Trump’s tariffs which are supposedly part of the “art of the deal” will most likely incorporate geopolitical concerns such as territorial disputes, North Korea, the grand Belt and Road project, ties with Russia, the introduction of China’s petroyuan trade and others.

Fixation on China; Trade Control Standoff: The Philippines Is Not the Most at Risk

The third fatal flaw of the article is to fixate on China.

Since protectionism works to include many national economic agents, the fixation on a single factor would account for a grave error.

The economic sensitivity of ASEAN nations manifested through the data of export share to China may instead apply to the analysis covering the likelihood of a material slowdown of the Chinese economy, to possible changes in preferences of Chinese consumers, a makeover of China’s production structure and to other political-economic factors. 

And if a China economic slowdown would be in the cards, the impact on the Philippines won’t be just through the export and import nexus but would include investments, credit flows, and business confidence.

For instance, the marginal demand for projects of major property developers has emanated from the mainland Chinese. Yes, China’s bubble is being exported here. I will deal with this soon.

Hence, the entrenchment the geopolitics of protectionism, which should cause material dislocations from drastic changes in the structure of production and distribution, would affect the global economy.

And though external linkages may incite downside changes in economic performance, it is the underlying structure of the domestic political economy that will matter most.

How resilient will the country be when faced with such shocks? Has the country been exposed to too much leverage? Or, has there been significant amounts of malinvestments which may surface when such disruption occur?

In that context, though the degree of impact from a prospective China economic downturn won’t be the same for Asean nations, the Philippines will not be the most sensitive.

The same premise should apply to the present thrust of deglobalization through the imposition of trade walls.



But such analysis doesn’t say that the Philippines will be immune from shocks.

To the contrary, even outside the risks of protectionism or a China slowdown, economic and financial risks have been accreting internally. 

Only Philippine treasuries (ROPs) have experienced a significant in selloffs (rising yields).

The current generation has been ingrained to see interest rate fall in perpetuity. That’s about to change.

Since US Trade Deficits are Products of the US Dollar Standard’s Deficits Without Tears, Trade Walls Won’t Fix it

What most people dismiss is that US trade and current account imbalances have been a product of the shift in the monetary system from the Bretton Woods to present US dollar standard.

The late Mr. Jacques Rueff, a French economist and adviser to French President Charles de Gaulle famously called the US dollar seignorage privilege “deficits without tears” where the “possession of a currency benefiting from international prestige” allows its issuer “to give without taking, to lend without borrowing, and to acquire without paying.” (Rueff, Jacques; Monetary Sins of the West)

American investment banker and politician Lewis E. Lehrman in an address to the French Parliament on the centennial birth anniversary of Jacques Rueff presciently noted the US dollar as reserve currency “almost automatically financed by the Federal Reserve and the reserve-currency system -- through the voluntary (or coerced) buildup of dollar balances in the official reserves of foreign governments”.  

The point of which is that the US government issued its currency and credit in exchange for products and services from the world. The US economy transformed into a financial economy (financialization) while it hollowed out its production which it sent overseas.

With such transformation, the Fed serially inflated domestic bubbles, which have also been exported to the world.

And those massive stashes of reserve currencies by US trading partners have not been signs of ‘safety’, but rather, are manifestations of excess money creation by the US, as well as by its trade partners, such as the China and the Philippines.

On the other hand, in return for exports, countries bought US Treasuries, thus financing the US government’s spending. Being the largest holder of US Treasuries, the Chinese government essentially helped finance the US military.

The US dollar standard signified free money for the US politicians…until now

Ironically, partly financed by Chinese money, the US government embraced an encirclement strategy against the Chinese government by surrounding her with military bases.

Now the Chinese government has used US free money, as well, to appropriate for herself islands in South China seas for her defense from US encirclement.

And for insurance purposes, the Chinese government has been strategically rebuilding a land-based trade ‘silk road’ route through the grand One Belt and One Road project to bypass and reduce risks from a naval economic blockade on her trade routes by the more superior US navy.

Globalization helped amplified the transmission of credit, investment and financial flows. And the swelling global debt to a whopping $233 trillion as of 3Q 2017 equivalent to 315% of the US$ 74 trillion global economy is a manifestation of the “deficit without tears” or US dollar seignorage privilege.

Because the root of the problem has been disregarded, which is the US dollar standard, the Trump’s antagonistic mercantilist solutions of building walls against trade will only backfire. 

The effects of such policies will reduce trade. And the reduction of trade will resonate on global liquidity conditions as credit, investment and financial flows should reflect on the decline of trading activities. Tighter liquidity conditions should induce liquidations to service existing debt.

The mounting friction from dealing with the US government will likely induce more countries to explore the adaption of commerce and a monetary system outside the present system. The recent proliferation of bitcoin is a symptom of the latter. 

Whatever “art of the deal” Mr. Trump hopes to accomplish by forcing a “managed (fair) trade” with China will likewise entail a substantial rearrangement of economic activities.

The proposed changes in commercial rules entail a shift in entrepreneurial activities. Because there will be costs from such changes, the transition won’t be seamless. There will be dislocations.

Should Mr. Trump push through with his derring-do activities, the second half of 2018 should be very interesting. Trump’s tariffs will have to undergo public consultation and would take effect on June.

I am reminded of 1997. A fresh record high in stocks in late January. Faltering stocks until the third week of May. A sharp rally until its peak in the third week of June. Then a collapse. The surfacing of Asian Crisis in July.

Will history repeat?

Nevertheless, the current episode of trade frictions reveals how the US dollar standard is a train wreck in the making.

Sunday, April 01, 2018

The National Government Goes on a Borrowing Spree as the BSP Re-engages Quantitative Easing; Why?

“Jesus—the revolutionary, the political dissident, and the nonviolent activist—lived and died in a police state. Any reflection on Jesus’ life and death within a police state must take into account several factors: Jesus spoke out strongly against such things as empires, controlling people, state violence and power politics. Jesus challenged the political and religious belief systems of his day. And worldly powers feared Jesus, not because he challenged them for control of thrones or government but because he undercut their claims of supremacy, and he dared to speak truth to power in a time when doing so could—and often did—cost a person his life.”—John W. Whitehead

In this issue

The National Government Goes on a Borrowing Spree as the BSP Re-engages Quantitative Easing; Why?
-From Goodhart’s to Muller’s Law
-With 2017’s Deficit Below Target, What Happened to the Excess Funding?
-Despite January Surplus, National Government Went On a USD Borrowing Spree!
-BSP Balance Sheet: Replacing Dwindling International Reserves with Bank Credit Expansion
-BSP’s Debt Monetization Concealed National Government’s Domestic Debt Raising in February
-Should the BSP Push Forward with the Press, The Risk of a Peso Free Fall Amplifies


The National Government Goes on a Borrowing Spree as the BSP Re-engages Quantitative Easing; Why?

From Goodhart’s to Muller’s Law

Goodhart’s law states that “When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.” The general idea, as formulated by economist Charles Goodhart, is that when individuals try to anticipate the effects of a given policy, their cumulative actions tend to alter the outcome thereby diminishing the policy’s efficacy.

In his book “The Tyranny of Metrics”, former econometrician Jerry Muller improved on this insight by introducing “anything that can be measured and rewarded will be gamed”.

Instead of spontaneous actions directed at anticipating the effects of a specific policy, some actors work to manipulate policy metrics to their advantage, thus skewing outcomes.     

To broaden this perspective; a socio-economic system becomes more prone or vulnerable to manipulation when it becomes heavily dependent on political interventions by bestowing favors to one interest group over the rest. 

Let us see how this applies to the Philippines

With 2017’s Deficit Below Target, What Happened to the Excess Funding?

The Philippine National Government’s (NG) fiscal deficit for 2017 was at Php 350.64 billion or 2.2% of the Nominal GDP (NGDP). This number was slightly lower than 2016’s Php 353.4 billion and sharply down from the projected Php 482.1 billion or about 3% of the NGDP.

The lower than expected deficit mainly came about supposedly from the avalanche of revenues across the board in December, which pulled 4Q topline performance significantly higher.

Such 4Q (mainly from December) outperformance had been INCONSISTENT when seen from four angles*: real GDP dropped to 6.6% in the 4Q from the 7% in the 3Q, Government spending has been instrumental in shaping GDP throughout 2017 and growth in bank credit growth had likewise moderated quarter on quarter (4Q’s 18.85% from 3Q’s 19.86%)


Finally and most importantly, the NG’s domestic debt ballooned by a staggering Php 233.06 billion which accounted for 41% of 2017’s Php 562 billion increase of government arrears!

In total: 2017’s fiscal deficit of Php 350.64 billion was financed by net debt (which expanded by Php 562 billion) and by BSP’s debt monetization (which grew by Php 31.941 billion). Whatever happened to the excess funding raised by the government? Where have the surpluses been channeled to?

As I previously noted, “was the NG unprepared for the avalanche of revenues for them to borrow massively? If true, given the humungous two-month debt surplus of about Php 156 billion, the NG should refrain from tapping the debt market for at least a quarter. But the NG raised Php 74 billion mostly in foreign loans last January! However, if revenues were inflated, then the annual budget deficit had been understated. Because the Philippines can’t show signs of weakness, boosting the top-line which undervalues the budget deficit may have been designed to prevent the peso from a freefall.”

Despite January Surplus, National Government Went On a USD Borrowing Spree!

January’s fiscal conditions 2018 had been a shade of December 2017’s performance. Revenues vastly outperformed expenditures to register a minor surplus.

In details, because revenues surged 19.26% — which  emanated from all categories: BIR +19.5%, BOC +13.6% and non-tax revenues +35.08% — to outpace spending growth 15.45%, fiscal balance tallied a Php 10.191 billion surplus!

By this account, the government should start pruning its surpluses.
 
Yet, the total NG debt expanded materially by 9.9% or Php 73.7 billion in January.  Domestic debt shrank by Php 10.5 billion. Much of the Treasury’s foreign debt growth of Php 84.136 billion accounted for the NG’s issuance $2 billion in US dollar bonds last January. And a parcel of such foreign loans had been channeled to the BSP’s GIR.

The Philippine government even raised 1.46 billion renminbi or Php 12 billion in “Panda Bonds” from China’s Bond Markets last March.

The Bureau of Treasury (BoTr) updated its February debt conditions last week.

What’s striking has been the sustained surge in NG’s debt.

2018’s January-February debt issuance of Php 168.23 billion was the largest since 2013 (upper pane). Foreign debt which grew by Php 179.63 billion comprised all of the net gains in government debt. Domestic debt registered a reduction of Php 11.396 billion mainly from the downsizing of January’s Php 10.5 billion debt.

Considering that the USD-Peso rose 4.22% over this period, based on the BoTR data, about half foreign debt growth came from the weak peso or from the currency effect.

Including December 2017, total public debt swelled by a monumental Php 383.3 billion broken into Php 221.7 billion in peso debt and Php 161.63 in foreign denominated liabilities. (mid window)

To put a long story short; had there been a robust influx of revenues, such immense degree of fundraising from the domestic debt markets shouldn’t be happening. That would be unless these excess funds have been maintained as reserves for contingency purposes. 

But I highly doubt that this has been the motive. (see below)

The other factor is that the NG’s top-line has been vastly inflated.

BSP Balance Sheet: Replacing Dwindling International Reserves with Bank Credit Expansion

 
Yet, it would not be surprising to see the NG and the BSP resort to increased acquisition of foreign denominated loans.

While some of these were designed to service the domestic economy, the requirements of the government have signified the other important factor.     

The growth rate of international reserves, which constitute about 87% of the BSP’s assets (as of November 2017), has been rapidly dwindling. (highest pane in the chart above)

In fact, changes in international reserves from September to November has either stagnated or even contracted (September -1.49%, October +.7% and November -.24%). Thus, the BSP’s balance sheet appears to have peaked.

And to embellish its GIRs, the BSP’s US dollar reserves have been partly inflated by borrowing, partly from derivatives. For instance, the sustained massive pileup in forex holdings has mitigated the drop in February’s GIRs.(mid upper window)

Even more interesting, the waning growth in international reserves has been partially substituted by the sustained increases in reserve deposits of other depository corporations, which accounted for about 38% of the BSP’s liabilities in November 2017.

And such increase is being supported by a persistent upsurge in currency issuance, which has grown by double digits since the 1st quarter of 2013, and which has attained a 28.62% share of the BSP’s liabilities over the same period.

Such asymmetric growth rates reveal why the peso has been falling. It exhibits the creation of more pesos in the face of lessening or diminishing stocks of US dollar reserves!

Since more pesos are required to pay for existing US dollar liabilities, the acquisition of more US dollar-denominated liabilities to spruce up ‘statistics’ would only translate to a vicious feedback loop that would aggravate the sinking of the peso.

The unbalanced growth in its balance sheet also explains the BSP’s morbid fear of raising policy rates: With foundering international reserves, the BSP has increasingly become dependent on domestic credit creation to manage its balance sheet.

And stripped of the façade of an inflationary growth, the current cascading US dollar reserves of the BSP would imply the surfacing of credit risks.  Hence, the BSP would rather sacrifice the peso than risks the implosion of the burgeoning credit bubble.

BSP’s Debt Monetization Concealed National Government’s Domestic Debt Raising in February

This leads us to the third most unrecognized source of government financing: debt monetization.
 
Following a humongous surge in December’s domestic debt, the Bureau of Treasury reported a paltry Php 11.4 billion reduction for the first two months.

But the interesting part has been the bait and switch conducted by the government.

The BSP injected Php 43.14 billion into the financial system last February by acquiring NG’s debts. Yes, it lifted its nominal holdings of NG’s liabilities to breakout from the 2017 consolidation to a record high! (see lower window)

The BSP’s February operation was the second highest since July 2017. (upper pane from the chart above)

For the first two months, the BSP added a net Php 40.04 billion to its holdings. Obviously, the USD php tracked such developments. The USD Php rose by 4.35% over the same period.

So while major central banks have been pulling back or even reversing the use of their balance sheets to manipulate policy rates, here, in the Philippines, the BSP has been accelerating its emergency operations!

To repeat, this government (NG and the BSP) has only entrenched its “All or Nothing” policy!

And as it turns out, there has been NO reduction of NG’s debt. Holdings of NG liabilities merely shifted from the private sector and non-BSP government agencies to the BSP. 

The difference in the operation between the BSP (+Php 40.04 billion) and the NG (-Php 11.396 billion) meant that the latter’s liabilities expanded by Php 28.645 billion.

So much for the alleged surge in taxes.
 
Though the rate of growth from the BSP’s net claims of NG has been tapering, that’s because nominal levels have been at record highs. (upper window)

As stated above, the BSP’s February operations bumped its NG debt holdings to a fresh record

From the BSP: “net claims on the central government remained generally steady at 3.7 percent from 3.6 percent (revised), in part due to continued borrowings by the National Government.”

See? No debt reductions! 

Why should the BSP conduct liquidity injection operations when credit expansion has been raging? Why inundate the system with liquidity?

Have there been dislocations in the system caused by marginal credit impairments to require the flooding of money into the system? 

Should the BSP Push Forward with the Press, The Risk of a Peso Free Fall Amplifies

For February, production and household loans have been up by a staggering 18.57% and 19.95% respectively. Total bank credit expanded by a gargantuan 18.68%.

Although this fiery growth rate has moderated from the more torrid record 19-21% pace, it appears that the BSP has sought for more for it to have kicked off the Philippine version of QE.

Beyond the government statistics, the most likely answers have been that the banking system’s credit growth has hardly achieved the targeted inflation levels required to boost taxes and implicit subsidies to the government.


To put bluntly, despite the amplification of emergency policies, deep real negative rates have been elusive or had been hard to come by.

It took a non-monetary political factor, the DoF’s TRAIN or RA 10963, to spur a spike in the CPI.

My guess is that growing balance sheet problems of leveraged institutions have signified a key factor behind the inability of bank credit expansion to deliver the BSP’s ‘real’ inflation targets.

Yet, the Philippine Treasury markets have tracked such developments, hence, the significant rise in ROP yields across the curve.

The upside spike in yields incorporates expectations of higher inflation and more debt supply, as well as, possibly a deterioration in credit quality of the domestic credit markets.

My conjecture resonates with what happened in 2015; the BSP’s current operations have involved the managing or manipulation of the ROP yield levels and curve.

Nonetheless, if the BSP should revitalize and accelerate the use of this emergency tool to attain its policy targets, then money supply growth should soar further.

The outgrowth in money supply should be reflected in real economy prices, and subsequently, in ROP yields. Because the BSP should likely attempt at containing the bond yields and curve through the printing press, a feedback loop would ensue.

The distortive effects of accelerated money printing operations would be on prices of the real economy.  And the subsequent higher prices in the real economy would require the BSP’s accommodation through a greater growth of money supply.

This feedback loop has already been in motion. The transition process will likely test the BSP’s resolve.

Should the BSP fall for the temptation to use its printing presses to the hilt, domestic currency risks would magnify.

External influences such as a tightening of liquidity would likely escalate the current domestic conditions.

The takeaway: the all or nothing policies embraced by the Philippine government (most especially by the BSP) have been heightening the risk of a peso freefall or meltdown.

And manipulating markets or statistics intended to erect a Potemkin Village will only exacerbate imbalances thereby reinforcing a disorderly market clearing outcome.

As a final note, total government debt has reached Php 6.822 trillion as of February while the Banking system’s total loans (production and household) have reached Php 6.969 trillion. The combined loans have reached a record Php 13.79 trillion or 87.3% of the Php 15.798 trillion 2017 Nominal GDP!

People have come to believe that free lunches are entitlements without consequences!

I should be adding the graphs of Phisix tail spikes of last week, but I ran out of spaces.