Monday, January 18, 2016

Phisix 6,450: Macro Stability: Peso, Government Bonds and Stocks Dumped! Bears Take Command!

And that’s how market downturns start: investors open their eyes – sometimes suddenly – and they don’t like what they’re seeing. So they poke around and peel away some of the covers, and they’re discovering risks that have been there all along, and they behold the ugliness and smell the putrefaction, and they get skittish, and some lose their appetite. –Wolf Richter

In this issue

Phisix 6,450: Macro Stability: Peso, Government Bonds and Stocks Dumped! Bears Take Command!
-Bond Yields Surge Across The Curve as Negative Spreads Reappear!
-Tumbling Peso is a Symptom of a Hissing Bubble, The Chinese Yuan Experience
-PSEi Crashes Right Into the Bear Market’s Lair!
-Property Sector Leads Sectoral Losses, Has the Philippine Property Bubble Imploded?
-Chart Patterns: Déjà vu 1994-1997?
-Domestic Bank Funds in Cash; An Enrique Razon Effect?

Phisix 6,450: Macro Stability: Peso, Government Bonds and Stocks Dumped! Bears Take Command!

The Philippines allegedly represents a paragon of macro stability. That’s what authorities and mainstream media, as mouthpieces for the interests for the establishment, keeps on impressing on us. This worked during boom. Each time mainstream media and their band of experts hollered G-R-O-W-T-H, like Pavlov’s dogs, domestic financial markets reverberated with a reflexive bid on financial assets, hence the asset price boom. This marked the era which the mainstream saw as ‘this time is different’—a permanent path to prosperity.

And so it was held.

Apparently the hypnotic effect of public expectations management seems to be fading. Today, while mainstream media and their coterie of ‘experts’ continue to screech ‘G-R-O-W-T-H’, financial markets have been pushing back—violently.

Last year I noted how the establishment has tediously worked to preserve the image of the boom, even when ‘fundamentals’ have been manifesting symptoms of deterioration or divergences1

The reason why the Philippine assets remain relatively sturdy has been because sellers have NOT yet been aggressive since the HEADLINES tell them so. The establishment believes that the boom can still be maintained even when the core has been eroding.  They are relying on HOPE. And this is the reason behind the headline management. They manage statistics and the markets to keep intact what they see as ‘animal spirits’.

If market actions during the first two weeks of 2016 should resonate on the dominant actions for the rest of the year, then 2016 won’t just be a year of the grizzly bears but a year where the establishment’s headline management will decisively fail to mask upcoming economic bust.

It’s NOT just stocks, but domestic bonds and the peso were all crushed over the week! Yes actions at the domestic financial markets belie assertions of macro stability!

Bond Yields Surge Across The Curve as Negative Spreads Reappear!


With the exception of the yields of 2 year notes, yields across the curve for Philippine government bonds surged over the week (topmost window). Stated in the context of prices, Philippine bonds were dumped last week!

Yields of 1 month bills and 5 year bonds spiked most (or were sold most). The resultant increases in yields have led to a regression for the belly of the curve (10yr-5yr) or the reversion to NEGATIVE spreads! The 10yr-3yr spread has also reverted close to zero (19 bps). Recall that the 10-3yr spread was inverted for four straight weeks during the last quarter of 2015. So despite attempts to forcibly improve the conditions of the curve during the previous two weeks possibly as part of the yearend window dressing, like stocks, bond markets have eventually foiled on such interventions.

Moreover, higher bond yields eventually translate to HIGHER interest rates! If the current trend will be sustained, then not only have the profits from the arbitrage windows of the yield curve been closing (bane for maturity transformation and NET INTEREST margin), interest rates are bound to move significantly higher! This implies for a double whammy for the financial system, specifically, first, the cost of debt servicing will go up, and second, higher lending rates will extrapolate to lesser demand for credit!

The statistical economy tells us that in 3Q 2015, Php 3 of bank credit were used to generate every peso of G-R-O-W-T-H. I believe that since statistical G-R-O-W-T-H have been inflated through the statistical artifice of price deflators, the ratio of credit to growth or credit intensity should be higher than Php 3 to 1. So a credit squeeze will essentially undermine capex, reduce profits, strain output and accentuate debt problems. And these will have secondary real economic repercussions on prices, jobs, capacity as well as to the many other factors in the economy.

Curiously, because the yields of 2 year bonds plunged (or were bid higher) as yields of 10 year counterpart increased (bonds sold), the spread of the 10yr-2yr fantastically widened! My guess, the half of the month may be time were institutions (like the ADB) makes an update on the numbers for their assessment of the Philippines. So manipulators ensured that the key benchmark spread would look good, even when all the rest have emitted signs of decay. Potemkin Village.

If bond yields continue to rise, as spreads compress, which means that the Philippine financial markets have been tightening, then I expect the BSP to counter this by easing. They will likely reduce reserve requirements or slash rates or a combination of both. Add stock market turbulence to the factors that may prompt the BSP to ease.

Yet like China’s 6 interest rate cuts plus all other forms of monetary financial or fiscal stimulus, whatever the BSP does will only have a short term effect.

Tumbling Peso is a Symptom of a Hissing Bubble, The Chinese Yuan Experience

The peso was hammered hard last week. Based on official rates, the USD PHP soared by a staggering 1.22%. 

 

For the week, among Asian nations, the USD claimed its biggest victims in Indian rupee (+1.46%), the South Korean won (+1.28%) and the Philippine peso. Among ASEAN majors, the USD rose most against the peso.

In two weeks or for 2016, the peso signified almost the median among Asian currencies where the USD PHP has been up 1.87%.

Meanwhile, the USD increased most against the Malaysian ringgit (+2.41%) where the peso ranked as the second largest loser among ASEAN majors.

The USDPHP has broken above a key resistance level (lower window). The momentum from this breakout combined by sustained market volatility could signal an acceleration of the USDPHP uptrend

So the USD’s surge against most Asian currencies from the start of the year merely spread to the peso this week. This is a manifestation of the worsening conditions of the Asian currencies relative to the USD. In short, this represents a USD dollar problem. Or the USD has become the main outlet valve for the ventilation of the accrued imbalances (bubbles) from within the region.



The mainstream has fixated on China for its woes.

But it pays to understand what actually has plagued the Chinese or how the USD has become the lightning rod on China’s deflating bubble.

In fear of a credit bubble bust, the Chinese government continues to inflate the system with credit. Albeit credit takeup has been down as state owned banks temper lending due to rising NPL concerns, the concentration of credit activities has apparently moved from banks to the bond markets2: Corporate bonds became a new financing source for Chinese companies that have difficulty in accessing bank loans as the state-dominant banking sector typically favors big state-owned companies. In 2015, companies raised a total of 2.94 trillion yuan by issuing corporate bonds, a 507 billion yuan increase from a year earlier. Corporate bonds also accounted for 19.1% of total social financing, outpacing entrusted loans as the No. 2 source of funds after bank loans for the Chinese economy.

What this tells us is that the Chinese economy seems increasingly being sucked into a deflationary vortex. Corporate bonds and entrusted loans have now become emergency oxygen or major sources for access to credit.

The irony is that as the economy slows, corporate bonds will be increasingly become vulnerable to credit risks. Given that the Chinese economy has an estimated $1.178 trillion in USD dollar debt (BIS as of Q2 2015), domestic deflationary pressures compounded by all the lifeline policies thrown by the government to rescue the economy, e.g. the stockmarket, have only increased demand for the USD. Given all things equal, domestic inflationary policies translates to lower domestic currency relative to foreign currency. So the pressure on the yuan.

With the yuan in decline, the Chinese economy needs to acquire USD just to pay off such massive USD liabilities, at the time when exports have been in a decline in 8 out of 9 months (as of December) while the economy falters.

And falling foreign exchange reserves simply implies that the stock of USD available in the Chinese financial system have been in a decline.

And it’s not just the financial institutions, the average citizens have begun to line up to buy USDs that has created episodes of USD ‘shortages’ in some banks. Such reinforces signs of capital flight.

So as to alleviate the USD imbalance, the Chinese government has not only resorted to banning select banks, as DBS and Standard Chartered, from transacting foreign exchange, this week they attempted to curb ‘speculations’ by burning the yuan ‘shorts’ through the spiking of Hong Kong interbank rates (HIBOR) to a mindboggling record high of 66%!

Like the stock market crash, the Chinese government blames currency speculative attacks as the cause behind the widening of spreads between the USD -offshore yuan (CNH) and USD onshore (CNY). They never seem to ask why the currency, or the yuan, has become the object of speculative ‘attacks’. Or why stocks markets crash. Or what incites people to sell domestic assets at a frenzied pace.

If there is nothing wrong with China, then markets will ensure that these shorts will get burned. Interventions won’t be required at all. To the contrary, interventions will only amplify existing imbalances and hasten its unraveling. And latter has become more evident by the day.

But because government are about force, everything is seen as docile, compliant or submissive to the control by force. To analogize, because the government holds the hammer, they see everything else as nails. Markets, economies and people are seen as subsidiary to the politics of force. Hence, the government’s focus has mostly been on the short term. And by training their eyes on the short term, they ignore or dismiss the longer term consequences behind their actions.

And the zeitgeist of China’s problems has signified an offspring of their political hubris.

So the vacuuming of liquidity in Hong Kong had a fleeting favorable outcome: the spreads narrowed for just one day! HIBOR rates backed down from the record highs, but have yet to normalize. By Friday, the spreads widened again (see above)

Importantly, the draining of liquidity took its toll on the stock market. The Shanghai index crashed by 8.96% this week. The major benchmark has breached the August 2015 ‘lows’ and has fallen to December 2014 levels. This week’s losses essentially negated the massive subsidies thrown by the Chinese government backed by political repression and draconian capital controls to support the stock market or the Xi Jinping Put.

The yuan predicament plus the Chinese stock market crash appears to have partly incited a global stock selloff that has brought many important global indices to bear market levels.

Now of course, subsidies are no free lunches, so stock market losses will translate to balance sheet deficits on China’s state owned companies which participated in the implementation of the Xi Jinping Put. If these companies don’t have sufficient cash flows or savings, then such deficits would have to be filled in by the government. But how will the government finance this, by more debt or by inflation? This again would compound on the pressures on the yuan.

Moreover, the Chinese government’s assault on Hong Kong based yuan speculative ‘shorts’ has spawned another nasty unintended consequence. The Hong Kong dollar posted its biggest 2 day decline against the USD since 1992 as speculators bet that the Hong Kong’s USD currency peg will soon break or end.

Now both Chinese and Hong Kong’s peg are under pressure.

It’s not just China’s soft peg or Hong Kong’s USD peg, Middle East currency pegs have also come under fire.

Economic maladjustments brought about by inflationary policies are being ventilated on currency pegs via the rising USD. Said differently, the problem has not been due to currency pegs, instead pressures on such pegs have been caused by domestic bubble policies.

This brings us back to the Philippines. China and Brazil, a few years back, were the economic darlings which media raved on. Today their economies are teetering to fall into an abyss.

Their economies highlight the transition from a credit fueled economic (phony) boom to an economic bust that have been signaled by pressures on the domestic currency, and subsequently, has percolated into other assets.

The falling peso (as with the ringgit, rupiah and the baht) signifies the same malaise that plagues these bigger emerging market peers. The difference has been in the stages of both the business and the credit cycle on these countries. Think of this as FIFO, first in first out, China and Brazil boomed first, now they are the first to feel the pressures from imbalances or malinvestments brought about by the previous boom. The rest will follow or converge with them.


And no statistical talismans will prevent an economic bust from occurring as consequence to the previous credit inflation boom. What has been borrowed will have to be paid back.

This week’s peso dilemma came even as the BSP celebrated OFW remittances in November which they say sustained G-R-O-W-T-H. Yes the BSP cheers on small bounces as if it were a major event.

The long term trend of OFW remittances growth rate has been falling (as shown by both cash and personal remittances—charts in upper window). This represents a structural dynamic: diminishing returns/marginal productivity given the scale of remittances.

Current applause will not change the coming stagnation of remittances, as well as the likelihood of CONTRACTION in response to a global recession or from major geopolitical crisis which may come in varying events as Middle East war, and or imposition of stringent social mobility controls in response to the refugee crisis in Europe and elsewhere or even the dissolution of the EU.

The BSP also positively noted that October FDIs showed marginal improvements. Since FDI flows are premised on global economic and financial conditions, any downturn or tightening abroad will lead to reduced FDIs. Additionally, once domestic economic headlines show of marked deteriorations, then this will reduce incentives for foreigners to invest, so FDI will fall too.

The BSP noted that net foreign portfolio flows were negative $600 million in 2015. While outflows nearly doubled in 2015 from 2014, it hasn’t been as large in the scale of those inflows in 2012-13.

Curiously, despite the sharp selloff at the PSE during the past two weeks in 2016, net outflows according PSE data remains moderate. This means don’t blame the foreigners, the locals have joined selling spree.

Have locals been buying USD too?

At the end of the day, the falling peso represents a symptom of the unwinding of domestic economic bubble. And mainstream’s rationalization, which has blamed the peso woes on external sources (China, the Fed rate hike), only exhibits the self–attribution bias error and denial. And there will be hefty a price to pay for denying reality.

Additionally, aside from signs of ‘shortages’, the USD has served as the traditional lightning rod during turbulent times.

For the USD today, tradition becomes a convention.

PSEi Crashes Right Into the Bear Market’s Lair!

With bonds guttered and the peso disgorged, stocks were similarly dumped this week.


Philippine stocks were among the biggest losers for the week and for 2016.

The PSEi posted a 1.92% decline this week. Losses by Singapore’s STI (-4.38%), Vietnam’s VN (-3.04%) and South Korea’s KOSPI (-2.02%) surpassed the Philippine equivalent. In two weeks, the PSEi ranked third (-7.23%) in order of losses which was led by Singapore (-8.74%) and Vietnam (-6.22%)

With all three assets fumbling, the so-called shining star of Asia seems to be losing its glitter fast.

2016 is supposed to be the year of the red monkey. However, based on how the domestic stock market behaved since the start of the year, 2016 increasingly looks like the year of the ferocious bears. [As a side note, Chinese New Year starts on February 4th, the red monkey is supposed to be bullish for metals]

Following the first week’s considerable 5.42% fall, the Phisix opened this week with a thud. On Monday, January 11, the Phisix stumbled by a petrifying 4.36%. So for the first six trading days of 2016, the PSEi bled by an astounding 9.78%!

What a way to start the year!

Monday’s 4.36% dive looked very much like a technical reaction: it signified a breakdown from three coincidental patterns: a major and a minor head and shoulders, and a major descending triangle. The resistance trends of two of the major patterns originated from April 2015 record.

I previously shown the said chart patterns here.

Yet last Monday’s debacle represented a continuing motion from the first week of the year’s sharp 5.42% decline.

Moreover, based from the record April 10 high of 8,127.48, Monday’s meltdown brought the PSEi, which then nursed a 22.63% deficit, into the bear market or a downturn of 20% or more…over at least a two month period, as defined by Investopedia.

From Monday’s panic selling, bulls fought fiercely back to recover the losses. Unfortunately, languid volume, partly compounded or aggravated by external events, doused cold water on the week’s rally. So by the end of the week, the bulls were able to pare losses down by just 56%. PSEi closed 1.92% lower.

Year to date or in two weeks through 2016, again losses have accrued to 7.23%.

Despite the reduction of this week’s loss, at 6,450, the PSEi remained a captive of the bears down 20.65% from the zenith.

Monday’s meltdown combined by the excessive volatility during the succeeding days of the week seems to replicate the August episode.

If Monday’s closing price of 6,288.56, which was at the session low, holds over the coming days, then the PSEi may likely go on a consolidation or rangebound phase. Here, 6,288.56 will serve as support while 6,600 the resistance. The PSEi may go on a gap filling phase, by testing the resistance. [I posted the charts below]

Again for the PSEi to push back against the bear market forces, it would need to, not only hold on to the present support levels, but importantly, build sufficient volume at current or at improved price levels. Only from here can a successful breakout of the resistance level occur.

Otherwise, with a dearth of volume, the PSEi may struggle to find support even at current price levels. This means that the recently carved support level may be tested, and possibly, may give way or relinquish to sellers where a new lower base would be established.


Volume has been the key as to why the Phisix continues to wither. (upper window)

It’s a bad sign to see volume rise when the indices have been dominated by sellers. Add to such troubling sign is when benchmarks rise on thin volumes. But this has been the character of the volume performance for the rest of 2015 through today. Even the path to etch April’s record high had been a showcase of conspicuous divergence.

Additionally broad market health needs to markedly improve. (lower window)

It’s the second straight week of intense selloffs for both PSEi and non PSEi isssues. The first week’s spread, which was lopsidedly in favor of sellers at 366, was a record margin. This week, sellers still dominated by a huge 223 margin, one of the largest five since 2015.

Two weeks of broadbased selloff suggest of oversold conditions. But in bearmarkets, oversold conditions may remain oversold for a lengthy time. This is converse to bullmarkets, where overbought conditions may remain overbought for an extended period.

It’s not just the broad market, among PSEi issues, 24 posted losses while only 5 closed up. One issue, Robinsons Land, was unchanged.

And based on sectoral performance, the mining sector endured the most selling. This was followed by the property and the service sector. Least affected was financials. Again this represents a curious development considering government bond yields soared across the curve (with the exception of the 2 year) as discussed above.

Property Sector Leads Sectoral Losses, Has the Philippine Property Bubble Imploded?


Fascinatingly, outside mining, the property sector now leads the losses among major industries for this year (-10.74%).

The property sector was second to the holding sector in 2015 as best performers. Both generated positive returns when all the other sectors bled. Early gains have provided sufficient cushion for these sectors to counter the spreading of losses going to the close of the year.

Now the story appears to have radically changed. If the property sector continues to hemorrhage and lead the losers, not only should the loses diffuse into banking stocks, (where property/ real estate sector remains the top client or borrower of the banking system with 19.63% share of production loans as of November 2015) and to equities of the top holding companies (whom are mostly heavily exposed to the real estate sector), this should highlight a real downturn in corporate fundamentals during the last quarter of 2015.

Recall that in late October there had been two week of synchronized media blitz on the property industry which I suspected was made to cover signs of weaknesses. Eventually my suspicions were validated.

Yet if current price actions have been manifesting of a magnified slowdown of Q4 fundamentals of the industry, then the mythical domestic demand G-R-O-W-T-H story will soon be in shambles!

Government statisticians will have little room to wiggle and employ their statistical tools to embellish the GDP.

And since the centerpiece of the Philippine G-R-O-W-T-H bubble has been in the property-shopping mall sectors, which alongside has been supported by bubble in hotel-casinos, and finance, the collapse of the property bubble will shatter the credit fueled house of cards underpinning the Philippine G-R-O-W-T-H bubble!

[As a side note, crashing casino stocks seem headed towards becoming centavo stocks!]

The one way trade from the ‘this time is different mentality’ will be exposed for what it truly is—a sham—brought about by redistributionist easy money policies.

And don’t forget some of the property majors have substantial exposure in China! Worsening conditions in China will only compound on their domestic predicament.

Chart Patterns: Déjà vu 1994-1997?

In early 2014 I presented a chart which showcased on the 1994-1997 topping phase.

Given the eerie resemblance of the three bear market strikes in 2013 with that of 1994-1995 bear markets, I then asked3, If the past should repeat then we should see a final blowoff phase rally prior to the capitulation.

Well here are the updated charts now


Mark Twain once said that history doesn’t repeat but it does rhyme.

The three bear markets of 1994-95 (upper window) showed that the Phisix wanted to meaningful correct but for some reasons this was postponed. The Phisix hit a bottom in November 1995. So instead of a correction the Phisix zoomed by 48% from November 1995 to February 1997. This marked the terminal blow off phase of the era’s bubble.

So when the fourth opportunity to sell arose in 1997, the bears never gave the bulls any leeway. 19 months after, the Phisix collapsed by a shocking 68.6%! And the story behind the crash emerged: the Asian crisis.

Instead of three bear markets, in 2013, the taper tantrum sent the Phisix to the bear market zone THRICE. The bulls tried to lift past from the bear market zone twice but they failed. So somewhat like 1997, there were three hits at the bear market levels. The last touch on the bearmarket was on December 2013. And like 1997, it took a fourth try to succeed. So instead of a correction, like 1997, the Phisix zoomed by 41% from December 2013 to April 2015. This seemingly marks the terminal blow off phase of today’s real time bubble.

Since things have been in state of flux, the title for the present events have yet to be established.

But unlike 1997 where the crash has been fast and furious, so far the Phisix decline has mostly been gradual. But the declines during the first two weeks of 2016 have picked up speed and intensity. Yet the jury is out whether the rate of declines will crescendo or will remain incremental or will mark the bottom phase.

The bear markets of 1994-95 were connected to the shaping of the 1997 climax. In the same manner, the procrastinated bear markets of 2013 helped produced today’s bear market.

But unlike 2013, today’s bear market have been accompanied by a steeper fall in the peso, higher bond yields, flatter yield curve and even signs of inversions, slowing credit growth, a recent slump in money supply growth, falling prices everywhere, a huge increase in debt levels, a contraction of PSE listed firms’ NGDP and a loss of earnings in 2Q, reduced statistical GDP, manufacturing and export slump and plunging job placements.

Yet if 1997 will rhyme, then the rate of declines will crescendo as the year deepens.

Bear markets have significant messages, I wrote about this in 2013. But just because it didn’t happen then, doesn’t mean it won’t or never happen. The lack of fulfillment of a full pledge bear market does not imply an evidence of absence. That would be the Loch Ness fallacy/ or appeal to ignorance

Will the chart patterns of the 1990s rhyme?

Domestic Bank Funds in Cash; An Enrique Razon Effect?

To paraphrase Jackie Chan as Karate Kid mentor most people think with their eyes so they are easily fooled.

In dimension of economics, theories hardly ever appeal to them because it requires extensive mental rigor and effort. So most people just outsource their thinking to what mainstream media says. They rely on ‘experts’ or popular talking heads, who are paid immensely, to merely echo on their biases (confirmation bias).

Also most people depend on opinions of institutional ‘experts’, which have been garbed with economic variables and statistical numbers and presented as economic outlook/s or paper/s, when in reality these represent nothing more than sales pitch/es, intended to generate fees or commissions by unloading the latter’s inventories on the public.

And since many people, including the above ‘experts’ think with their eyes, the same set of people will not be convinced by risk reward conditions as shaped by theories that have been backed by evidences. It’s only tangible developments or numbers that will convince them.

For instance, people think that those who call on market tops when the bull market is raging is a kook or a screwball naysayer. Now that markets have been crashing most of the same people have been scratching their head, if not drowning in sorrow.

And as I have been saying here no matter how the establishment tries to promote the boom in order to benefit from BSP trickle down policies, hissing bubbles will only force reality on them.

So upon stumbling on a Bloomberg article, I was surprised to read that some major bank funds particularly BPI and Union Bank preferred to stay out of the market and on the sidelines, in cash.

Now you know why volume has been drying up.

While the author of the article pressed that valuations have significantly dropped, the position of the quoted fund managers seemed a puzzle to the writer. The article cited mainly China, the bear market and investors ignoring fundamentals as factors determining the position of these fund managers.

The news essentially exposes on the growing fissure within the establishment of the once unanimous bullish outlook.

Serious doubts have begun to rear its ugly head. Yet positions that pins the source of mistakes as internally generated has been avoided. Denial remains strong as with the influence of political correctness on media’s framing of the bad news.

Yet most of the cited reasons are flimsy. This makes me suspect that there may be something more behind the decision to stay away from stocks. Perhaps these managers have said only what the writer of the article wanted to hear.

I could be wrong but perhaps these managers may have been ordered by their big bosses to stand down.

I call this supposition the Enrique Razon effect.

Recall that ICTSI honcho Enrique Razon said in a recent interview at the Nikkei Asia, which was censored or not aired by domestic media, that he expected another crisis to happen ‘just around the corner’.

While domestic media can ignore Mr Razon’s outlook, Mr. Razon has clout on his business and social peers.

Razons, the Aboitizes and the Ayalas are a clique of elites with Spanish ethnicity. The Aboitiz family in partnership with Insular Life and SSS controls Union Bank. An Aboitiz sits at the board of Razon’s ICTSI, while a director of ICTSI also sits at the board of Union Bank. A business grapevine says that a scion of Aboitiz is slated to marry or tie the knot with a scion of the Ayalas this February.

Of course, all these connections establish nothing but represents guess.

However, if I am right Mr. Razon has influenced the Aboitizes and the Ayalas to take a conservative stance. And that the batten down the hatch position may have filtered down to the organizational hierarchy of their companies.

So it might have been a memo from the top of the hierarchy for the bank fund managers to stay on the sidelines.

The only way to confirm or falsify my suspicions will be from the CAPEX announcements of Aboitiz’ AEV and Ayala’s AC. Should they announce CAPEX budget for 2016 SIGNIFICANTLY LOWER than the previous year, then these elites may have joined forces to conserve their resources in anticipation of a crisis.

This also means that the current position of bank managers were most likely at the behest of the big bosses.

Otherwise, my theory is falsified.

Regardless of who was responsible for cash on the sidelines by some the said bank funds, at the end of the day, the bullish headlines have been wearing off. And that’s what matters most.

____

2 Marketwatch.com China's December new bank loans miss expectations January 15, 2016



Saturday, January 16, 2016

Stock Market Charts: Grizzly Bears Go On A Rampage!



Following last night's rout, the German DAX reentered the bear market...


The French CAC, which eluded the bears in August 2015, joined the DAX this time....


Europe's Stoxx 600, which escaped the bears last August 2015, likewise fell into the grasp of the bears...


The US broad market (equal weighted index) have also been captured by the bears...




The MSCI (ex-US) benchmark have similarly been snared by bear markets


Finally, Bear markets have now seized control of the leadership in the context of global stocks.


Once again, decoupling anyone?

(charts of US equal weight and global stocks from zero hedge, all the rest from stockcharts.com)

Headline of the Day: US Stocks Post Worst 10 Day Start of the Year in History!!!




Yes indeed, this time is different!

Bonus headline

From Bloomberg


'2016 feels like the year of the Bear'. Yes indeed.

'Decoupling' anyone?

Friday, January 15, 2016

Headline of the Day: Media's Change of Tune: Cheap Oil Now a Bane to the Economy!


Interesting headline from today's Nikkei Asia (economy section)

Haven’t we (the average citizens) been inundated by media that cheap oil was supposed to be a boon for the economy? In particular, consumers should have engaged in a spending binge that would have boosted GDP or G-R-O-W-T-H?

So why the seeming (or reluctant) change of tune? Because things have been falling apart now? That denial through rationalizations by spin doctors or so-called 'experts' haven’t delivered what they were supposed to?

Or has it also been that previous denials were meant or designed to camouflage that the fundamental problem of tanking oil prices has been due to mainly government interventions? That easy money policies have enabled a massive debt financed buildup of oil supply? Also that easy money policies have hardly led to consumer income growth but instead to asset bubbles, part of which financed the energy sector’s supply side boom?

Or has it been that the pressures from the entitlement society of the welfare state along with hubris by the governments of oil producing nations prompted the said authorities to think that they were above the laws of economics for them to keep pumping regardless of prices (in the name of 'market share')?

Ideas have consequences. And it appears that we will distressingly pay a heavy price for applying the wrong ideas.

What Happened to the Xi Jinping Put? Chinese Stocks Fall into Second Bear Market as Offshore Yuan Declines!

Chinese stocks have hardly recovered from a bear market, yet today’s losses have brought the key benchmark to a secondary bear market from the December 2015 peak.

Yes, a bear market within a bear market.



The decline in the Shanghai index today, aggregated with all the losses from the December 22 high (green rectangle), has totalled 20.56%. Again this represents the second bear market. 

The major bear market trend (blue trend line) now tabulates to a hemorrhagic loss of 43.85% from the June 12, 2015 apogee. (images from Bloomberg and stockcharts.com)

Yet 20% down in three weeks represents a stunning collapse!

From Bloomberg,
Chinese stocks fell into a bear market for the second time in seven months, wiping out gains from an unprecedented state rescue campaign as investors lose confidence in government efforts to manage the country’s markets and economy

The Shanghai Composite Index sank 3.5 percent to 2,900.97 at the close, falling 21 percent from its December high and sinking below its nadir during a $5 trillion rout in August. Friday’s decline was attributed to persistent investor concerns over volatility in the yuan and a report that some banks in Shanghai have halted accepting shares of smaller listed companies as collateral for loans.

The market entered a disaster mode at the start of the year and it’s still in that pattern now,” said Wu Kan, a fund manager at JK Life Insurance Co. in Shanghai. “The market has completely no confidence and the basic reason is that stocks are expensive, particularly those small caps,” he said, adding that he plans to swap large-cap shares for small caps.

The selloff is a setback for Chinese authorities, who have been intervening to support both stocks and the yuan after the worst start to a year for mainland markets in at least two decades. As policy makers in Beijing fight to prevent a vicious cycle of capital outflows and a weakening currency, the resulting financial-market volatility has undermined confidence in their ability to manage the deepest economic slowdown since 1990.


While China’s high concentration of individual investors makes the nation’s stock market notoriously volatile, losses in the Shanghai Composite have become one of the most visible symbols of waning investor confidence in the world’s second-largest economy.

After cheerleading by state media helped fuel an unprecedented boom in mainland shares last summer, the market crashed as regulators failed to manage a surge in leveraged bets by individual investors. A state-sponsored market rescue campaign sparked a 25 percent rally in the Shanghai Composite through December, but those gains were wiped out on Friday as the index closed at its lowest level since late 2014. Losses this year were fueled by the controversial circuit-breaker system, which authorities scrapped in the first week of January after finding that it spurred investors to rush for the exits on big down days.
So where the heck has the massive Xi Jinping Put been?

What happened to all the collective repression—the ban on short selling, the intimidation and the arrests of ‘malicious’ short sellers, the disappearance of top industry officials, the censorship of media, postponement of IPOs, the prohibition of sales by majority holders—the subsidies, the mandate by state enterprises to bolster the stocks—and the coaxing of the public to mortgage their houses or any assets just to buy stocks?


And speaking of mandates on state enterprises by the government, Goldman Sachs estimated that the government bought stocks worth 1.8 trillion yuan (USD 273 billion) between June and November last year. This should be a lot larger considering government buying from December through yesterday. Original estimates of government support were at $483 billion when the Xi Jinping Put was put into motion. Some put it somewhere near a trillion.

Think of all the losses now state owned companies now suffer from. If they have insufficient working capital or cash reserves, then they would have to be funded by the central government.

And considering that tax revenues should be down given the rapidly slowing economy, then just where will government be getting these funds to support the companies that have been supporting stocks?


And part of that answer could be seen in the widening of the gap between the government controlled onshore yuan (USD CNY right) and the offshore yuan (USD CNH left).

It’s not that the Chinese government has been purposely devaluing, rather, previous actions to contain the internal bubbles has only found an exit or outlet via the currency. And compounded by the deflating property and industrial bubble, the backlash from recent interventions has only accelerated the unraveling of the Chinese soft peg. 

It's simply market forces prevailing over the government. Or bluntly said, the Chinese government has been losing control!

And the attempt this week to fight currency “speculators” by the draining of liquidity as manifested in the skyrocketing of the HIBOR only had a very short term or one day effect.

The moral is: There is no free lunch forever.  The cost of political actions will surface.

As I previously wrote
The point is that the Chinese government may have spread their resources thin, or has started run out of resources to mount further rescues, or simply that, all attempts by the Chinese version of King Canute has failed to stop the tsunami of selling.
The more the government intervenes, the nastier the side effects or the unintended consequences.

Now that with BOTH Chinese currency and stocks under pressure, what’s next? The spread and escalation of strains on the property sector, the banks and the bond markets? Will there be cascading defaults?

Perhaps kick the can down the road policies by the Chinese government has met a dead end?

Or how about a China triggered Asian crisis circa 2016 (as predicted in 2014)???!!!

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Charts of the Day: US Benchmarks in Bear Markets: Russell 2000 and the Dow Transportation


Last night's selloff in US stocks has brought the small cap index the Russell 2000 into the fold of the bear market 


The Russell 2000 now joins the Dow Transportation Index.

Have these been the proverbial writing on the wall? 

Will this be the year of the Grizzly bears?



Quote of the Day: How Fractional Reserve Banking System Causes Bank Runs

Economist Tim Worstall writing at the Forbes eloquently explains how the central bank- fractional reserve banking system causes bank runs and originated the 2008 crisis or the Great Financial Crisis
To explain this we need to take a step backwards: we can usefully, if not wholly accurately, divide investors into two types. Those who invest with their own money, those who are unleveraged, and those who invest with borrowed money, the leveraged investors. Further, among the leveraged investors we would want to distinguish between the banks who are doing this (at least, in a fractional reserve banking system we want to) and the others. And the danger comes when those banks, those people working with the deposits made into the banks, invest in either illiquid or volatile assets.

Liquidity is a problem because those depositors can come along at any time and ask for their money back. And banks borrow short and lend long: the things they invest in are notably more illiquid than the deposits they take to finance them. That’s how we get bank runs: people turn up for their money, the bank says that actually, they lent it to someone to buy a house, and then panic starts and everyone wants their money back right now.

Volatility is a problem because they’re using leverage: if prices move so much that the bank loses its capital then it still owes the same amount to depositors but it is also bust. Cue bank run again. What happened to Lehman Brothers was this second, what rocked the other Wall Street banks was the first.
Bottom line: liquidity and volatility problems are mainly symptoms of imbalances from highly leveraged systems brought about by the central bank fractional reserve banking. 

Monday, January 11, 2016

Phisix Crashes 4.37% To Head Straight Into The Bear’s Lair!!!

Wow that was quick.The Phisix crashed 4.37% today just when my ink has hardly dried.  I wrote last night that grizzly bears would be the story for 2016.

Beyond my expectations, sellers had apparently been in a frenzied rush out of the Philippine equities today. Sellers frantically smashed into the ramparts that bordered the bears and bulls to lead them straight into the bear’s lairs.


At least during the August 24 crash, price fixers had the temerity to mitigate the 7+% intraday losses to only 6.7% at the close, through end session pump.

While today’s crash was much less than August 24, price fixers had seemingly been absent or even perhaps joined the dumping session. There was even a mini “marking the closing” today. But instead of a pump it was a dump that amplified the losses for the day! (intraday chart and quote from Bloomberg) Karma?

Remember that the Phisix plummeted 5.42% last week. So today’s tailspin PLUS last week’s losses adds up to a shocking 9.79% loss in just SIX days of trade for the year 2016!!!


And instead of the best among ASEAN equities, the Phisix was the worst performer with last week’s 5.24% slump

What a foreboding start!!!

But why or what’s the hurry to sell? Has the domestic market suddenly unearthed something so distressing, which media and the establishment has concealed, as to incite such violent reaction?

Has the market come to realize that the PSEi 8,127.48 was a Potemkim Village?

I understand that the mainstream will pin the blame on external factors for today’s bloodbath.


While it may be true that most of Asia was in the red today, the Reuters quote above reveals that only the Shanghai index, with another 5.29% crash, topped the Phisix in scale. All the rest suffered losses below 3%. 

In short, there has been more than meets the eye. There must be a significant domestic influence for today's violent reaction.


Sellers were so fixated on exiting that all indices were bloodied.

Decliners trounced advancers by a stunning 8 to 1!!! (my guess is that this margin represents a record of sorts)


Most of the heavyweights, the headline index sensitive issues, had been massacred.


Today’s breakdown totaled 22.63% from the April 10 2015 high. Clearly a bear market. 
 


For those who may argue that this may look like 2013, pls note of the difference.

The 5,700+ levels served as a bottom which was hit thrice in 2013. It was a springboard for the 2014 run.

Today was a complete breakdown!

During the last August crash, I noted that crashes have not been an isolated event

Additionally, Monday’s crash hasn’t been an anomaly. Crashes are signs of the ventilation of embedded imbalances. There won’t be crashes without justification on them.

There have been many developing signs that hinted to this eventuality.

The market’s shrinking liquidity as expressed by the diminishing Peso volume, increased deterioration of market breadth and reduced stock market trading activities had all converge to presage this. I warned:

The lesson: In bullmarkets watch the “bid”, in bear markets watch the “ask”. The conditions underlying the bids or asks—which represents the investor risk preferences—will determine the direction of momentum. Remember, the long term represents the sum of short actions. As an old saw goes, the journey to a thousand miles begins with a single step (Laozi). Applied to Philippine stocks, once again, the intensifying decline in the trading volume highlights heightened clues of dissipating bids…. Said differently, buyers at current price levels have been erecting less and less barriers against mounting sellers.

And all it takes was for a big headline issue to function as trigger.

The reason why the Philippine assets remain relatively sturdy has been because sellers have NOT yet been aggressive since the HEADLINES tell them so.The establishment believes that the boom can still be maintained even when the core has been eroding.  They are relying on HOPE. And this is the reason behind the headline management.They manage statistics and the markets to keep intact what they see as ‘animal spirits’. The exposé on DBP’s wash sale should be a wonderful example.

Besides, headlines shows of no crunch time yet, here or overseas. But no one can guarantee how long this endures.

But when reality eventually filters into the headline; perhaps as in the form of economic numbers or a surprise missed interest payment by a major company, or the appearance of a major global event risk, then bids will evaporate.

Bullseye!

Bullseye Again!

Sure, there will be sharp rallies as characterized by a typical bear market.


But I suggest that given the escalating fear factor, any sucker's rallies should sold into.