Sunday, March 19, 2017

Yellen’s Most Dovish Rate Hike

The US Fed hiked interest rates for the second time in three months last week

But instead of a perceived tightening, the perception of a dovish rate hike prompted for a decline of the USD which combusted global risk assets.

Alhambra’s Joseph Calhoun handily wins the quote of the week: The market was starting to price in four (today’s plus two more) and that had to come out of the market after the meeting. This was the most dovish rate hike in the history of rate hikes. Greenspan’s old conundrum was that long term rates weren’t rising as the Fed hiked. The conundrum today is that even short term rates aren’t rising as the Fed hikes. Two year note yields are right back to where they were after the December rate hike. 

Ms. Yellen actually poured oil into the fire when she said: “Even after this increase, monetary policy remains accommodative, thus supporting some further strengthening in the job market and a sustained return to two percent inflation”

She also introduced the word “symmetric” in the FOMC statement which meant flexibility in their inflation targeting: “And it's a reminder, 2 percent is not a ceiling on inflation. It's a target. It's where we always want inflation to be heading. And there will be some times when inflation is above 2 percent, just like it's been below 2 percent. We're not shooting for inflation above 2 percent. But it's a reminder that there will be deviations above -- above and below when we're achieving our objective.”

I have recently opined that the likely reason for the rate hikes may hardly be due to the reading of statistical tea leaves like output gaps but rather that the Fed behind the curve. [Has the Fed “Fallen Behind the Curve”?(March 11, 2017)]

From the perspective above, it’s easy to see the likely factors or influences that may have altered the perspective of the majority officials of the US Federal Reserve.

If the FED has indeed been behind the curve, timid rate hikes will only further bolster the underlying risk appetites.

And Ms. Yellen’s observation that this may “potentially require us to raise rates rapidly sometime down the road” may become self-fulling prophecy.

This is what I meant by falling behind the curve.

Instead of impeding further ramps in asset prices, half-hearted rate increases serve only to accelerate a feedback loop.  In 2004-2006, the Fed raised rates by 17 times! Yet prices of property and the S&P escalated further. US housing prices topped a few months before the Fed’s last rate hike.

In sales, this would be equivalent to “selling a price increase”. In anticipation of a price increase, buyers would buy more quantity of items than they would under normal circumstances. By the same token, timid rate hikes, instead, whet the people’s appetite to load up on debt which they use to chase after asset bubbles. That’s what happened during the last credit cycle which ended with the Lehman bankruptcy.

Yet in the previous cycle, the FED raised rates about four years after (or in 2004) it began cutting rates in 2001 in response to the dotcom bust.

In the current cycle, the Fed hiked rates in late 2015, seven years after it began to slash rates in 2007 in response to the Great Recession.

Seen from the context of the S&P, the first time the Fed increased rates the bull market was only 1 and a half years old or at its first leg.

In the current setting, the Fed increased rates in December 2015 when the bullmarket was about 7 years old!

The point here is that modern day central banks are afraid to take the proverbial punch bowl away because of they are in mortal dread of debt deflation. Debt signifies a monster which they have created, which ironically, they have been afraid to confront.

Yet the question is if the aging US bullmarket would still have the stamina to carry through amidst the tremendous amount of malinvestments that have been acquired or accumulated through the years.

As I have been pointing out here, near vertical record US stocks has been founded from increasing questionable quality. It has been practically been pillared on hope backed by rationalizations and by the herding effect predicated on the fear of missing out.

In the 4Q US flow of funds, US stocks were driven secondarily by corporate buybacks and primarily by retail investors who chased after passive funds.

Here’s Mr. Ed Yardeni with the details:  (bold mine)

(1) Supply-side totals. Net issuance of equities last year totaled minus $229.7 billion, with nonfinancial corporate (NFC) issues at -$565.7 billion and financial issues at $269.7 billion. The increase in financials was led by a $283.9 billion increase in equity ETFs, the biggest annual increase on record. The decline in NFC issues reflected the impact of stock buybacks and M&A activity more than offsetting IPOs and secondary issues. 

(2)
 Demand-side total. To get a closer view of the demand for equities, let’s focus now on the quarterly data at an annual rate rather than at the four-quarter sum. This shows that equity mutual funds have been net sellers for the past five quarters, reducing their holdings by $151.3 billion over this period. Over the same period, equity ETFs purchased $266.4 billion, with their Q4-2016 purchases a record $485.4 billion, at a seasonally adjusted annual rate. Other institutional investors have been selling equities for the past 24 consecutive quarters, i.e., during most of the bull market! Foreign investors have also been net sellers over this same period. 

So smart money sold while retail investors piled in.

The normally bullish Mr. Yardeni concluded: “The bottom line is that the current bull market has been driven largely by corporations buying back their shares, as I have been observing for many years. More recently, we have been seeing individual investors increasingly moving out of equity mutual funds and into equity ETFs.Both kinds of buyers tend to be much less concerned about historically high valuation multiples than more traditional buyers are. We may be witnessing the beginning of an ETF-led melt-up, which may simply reflect individual investors pouring money into passive stock index funds. Lots of them seem to bemore interested in seeking out low-cost funds rather than cheap stocks. In this case, valuation multiples would lead the melt-up, until something happens to scare investors out of those passive funds, which could trigger either a correction or a nasty meltdown. It is obviously a bit late in the game to start only now to be a long-term investor given that stocks aren’t cheap no matter how valuation is sliced and diced.”

And there’s one thing I forgot to mention last week.

The US treasury injected hundreds of billions of funds into the system in anticipation of the expiration of the US debt ceiling last March 15 from the start of the year. Since this has almost been similar to a credit easing, this may have driven the record-breaking “Trump bump trade”. Unfortunately, this is a liquidity illusion. The first reason: the Fed’s hiking cycle would mean trimming of excess reserves in the system. The next reason is that when the debt ceiling will be lifted, the US treasury will likely sell huge amounts of debt into the system which means it would entail draining a lot of liquidity in the system.

 
And just how will a drain in liquidity impact the already pressured US retail industry led by the restaurant and the department stores? Retail sales grew at the weakest pace in 6 months last February.

Even worst, credit instruments to shopping malls seem as Wall Street’s next biggest shorts!

From Bloomberg (March 13, 2017):

Wall Street speculators are zeroing in on the next U.S. credit crisis: the mall.

It's no secret many mall complexes have been struggling for years as Americans do more of their shopping online. Now they're catching the eye of hedge-fund types who think some may soon buckle under their debts, much as many homeowners did nearly a decade ago.

Like the run-up to the housing debacle, a small but growing group of firms are positioning to profit from a collapse that could spur a wave of defaults. Their target: securities backed not by subprime mortgages, but by loans taken out by beleaguered mall and shopping center operators. With bad news piling up for anchor chains like Macy's and J.C. Penney, bearish bets against commercial mortgage-backed securities are growing.

Wow, if US shopping malls become the epicenter of a crisis, this will likely spread across the globe the world! Guess what would happen to Philippine malls???

As a final thought, it wasn’t just the FED that hiked rates. Countries which had their currencies pegged to the USD like Hong Kong, UAE and Kuwait raised interest rates. China’s PBOC raised rates on repos (open market operations) and medium lending facility 10 hours after the FED hiked. While the BOJ kept policy unchanged, rumors floated of a “stealth tapering” where the BoJ would miss hitting its annual LSAP targets.

With global stocks on a tear as liquidity is being withdrawn, just how sustainable can this environment be?

As a final note, the Geert Wilders, the far-right contender lost the Netherland’s national elections last week.

PSE’s Fairy Godmother, The Rampaging Financial-Banking Index, Why Newton’s Law Will Prevail

When you want to help people, you tell them the truth. When you want to help yourself, you tell them what they want to hear—Thomas Sowell

In this issue

PSE’s Fairy Godmother, The Rampaging Financial-Banking Index, Why Newton’s Law Will Prevail
-PSE’s Fairy Godmother in Action, Again
-Typical Weekly Pattern, Friday’s Amazing Pump and Dump
-More Evidence of the Price Fixing Dynamic
-Banking Index in Vertical Ramp, Nears Record
-Rampaging Bank Stocks in the Face of Growing Risks
-Why Newton’s Law Will Prevail


PSE’s Fairy Godmother, The Rampaging Financial-Banking Index, Why Newton’s Law Will Prevail

PSE’s Fairy Godmother in Action, Again


Does such represent a gambit to stir incensed bulls into action? Or has this signified a backfiring of the sustained pumps and dumps?

The coming days should give us an answer

So my suspicion was spot on.

The other Friday’s DUMP transposed into a massive weekly PUMP this week!

If you haven’t noticed, each time turbulence comes into play, the Phisix would see a violent meltup in response. The most conspicuous of them were the two major selldowns, both in 2016, or the two troughs of January 21 and December 23, which had been countered with astonishing vertical pumps.

It seems like the PSEi has an invisible fairy godmother, or might I say an equivalent of the US Plunge Protection Team (PPT), an unidentified group which provides implicit support to the PSE.

From this perspective, having replaced the fundamental functions of the capital market with politics, free lunch rules the PSE. Demand and supply be damned! The Phisix has been “mandated” to only go UP!

So after last week’s 1.39% plunge, which was spearheaded by SM’s 9.24% crash on Friday, increased usage with intensified dosages from magic spells by the fairy godmother, the PSEi generated a massive 2.78%, the second largest weekly increase for the year!

The fairy godmother turns a pumpkin into a magical coach!

Typical Weekly Pattern, Friday’s Amazing Pump and Dump

Yet it’s not the headline numbers that have really been important. Rather, it’s HOW these numbers have been attained or the MEANS to the END.

Nevertheless, it’s been a routine or a pattern for most of the year: a Monday PUMP, defense of the Monday’s gains in the intermediary, and a closing or a Friday PUMP or DUMP.

This is all “legal” anyway, regardless of what’s been stated in the BSP or the SEC’s regulations.

The PSEi posted increases in four of the five trading days last week. The bulk of these were accomplished in Monday (+1.21%) and Friday (+.91%). The two days accounted for 76% of the week’s gain

Figure 1: Same Pattern, Friday’s Pump and Dump

The only day where the Phisix corrected, was even met with a massive “mark the close”! (see upper middle pane) And that’s after another afternoon delight operation! The Phisix even almost closed in green had the price fixing pumps not been offset by a single dump on GTCAP.

For this Friday, to ensure that the Phisix would close in the green, a concerted enormous pumping operation went into action just right after lunch. Four major sectors participated in the synchronized operations (lower left window): property, services, financials and holding firms.

The Phisix raced to over 7,400 intraday, backed off from the near closing highs, and ended the regular session with a stunning surge of 108.91 points or +1.5%!

However, at the closing bell, mark on close orders rained down on the PSEi. These lopped off a staggering .58% of the day’s gains for the headline index to post only +.91%.

And significant price changes from mark-on-close orders virtually affected NINE of the top TEN issues! Seven issues were DUMPED, while two issues were PUMPED! Truly astounding.

Perhaps, those liquidations were made to finance Monday’s next bidding frenzy.

You see, the Philippines has accounted for as the only country whose bourse has been characterized by wild pumps or dumps at the closing bell!

But don’t worry, it’s the best stock market in Asia! Destruction of the elementary function of markets has been considered a virtue.

Well, that’s familiar. War is peace, freedom is slavery and ignorance is strength.

More Evidence of the Price Fixing Dynamic

Yet footprints of deliberately designed pumping can be seen in many places.

Figure 2: Weekly gains concentrated on Top 5 issues

For this week, the average increase by the top 5 biggest market cap was a shocking 5.332%! The closing numbers for this group has really been gigantic: SM +10.52%, JGS 9.53%, BDO +3.82% and ALI +2.96%!

The average gain by the top 15 was at 3.07%. That includes ICTSI’s striking 14.59% vertical nauseating climb!

In perspective, the market cap weight share of the top 5 as of Friday was at 39.58%. The market cap weight share of the top 15 as of Friday was at 79.75%. This shows that the concentration of pumping occurred mostly around the top 5 issues with diminishing pumps at the farther end!

See now how the 2.78% was derived?

Again this is no stock market. Instead, this is a price fixing mechanism.

In fact, the average gain by the benchwarmers, or the next 15, which holds a 20.24% share weight of the PSEi, was only a mere .56%! Though there were big rallies in the said group such as PCOR (+6.18%) and LTG (+5.34%), they were hardly contributors to the headline. Yet losers in the group largely offset such big gains.

And another astounding fact: outsized volatility has resurfaced to drive the index.

Among the PSEi 30, gainers dominated losers 18 to 11 with an unchanged issue. Yet, 16 of the 18 advancers saw increases of more than 1%! Even more, 12 of the 18 advancers had gains of 2% and above!

In the opposite end, 7 of the 11 decliners posted more than 1% loss!

Prior to the last two weeks, while volatility had been internally present, it was subdued in the context of the headline index. This went on for a month or in four consecutive weeks.

But time has apparently changed convictions. Bulls have become restless and impatient

The past two weeks has shown accelerations in price instability as revealed by violent price actions! This means that the current efforts to break 7,400 have been channeled through forcible pumping!

And here’s more. General market breadth went in the opposite direction of the Phisix. Decliners LED advancers by a modest margin of 42 from the weekly numbers of 486 to 444

Foreign money remained net sellers for the ninth consecutive week. Foreigners sold Php 1 billion worth of shares to locals. Interestingly, the share of foreign trade to total volume spiked to 62.01%, the highest for the year.

Meanwhile, peso volume turnover jumped 12.7% this week to an average of Php 8.4 billion. The improvement in volume was partly helped by special block sales which contributed to 9.45%. Special block sales for the week tallied at the highest since December 15th.

What’s the message here?

Despite the enormous gains in the headline index, market sentiment was in a state of paradox: a mix performance.

Here’s why. Local participants were mostly responsible for the aggressive bids that gravitated mostly towards PSEi 30 issues. Since locals were buying from foreigners, as marginal price setters, such forceful bids translated to larger volumes and magnified price volatility. Remember, MORE pesos are required to buy PSEi 30 issues at HIGHER prices.

And because of the concentration of activities, perhaps rotation provided the finance for such violent buying dynamic. In short, for locals, the tactic used was: buy PSEi 30, sell PSE.

This may partially explain the divergent activities of the broad market from the PSEi 30.

Banking Index in Vertical Ramp, Nears Record

The Phisix may be still below the May 15, 2013 high of 7,400, but the financial index as of Friday has now just been a hair away (-1.44%) from April 10, 2015 summit of 1,888.8 and (-1.2%) from September 15, 2016 zenith of 1,883.79.

Figure 3: Financial Index Close to Landmark Highs, Divergent PSEi Bank Performances

The bank-financial index has taken a startling vertical flight! (see figure 3)

It was up 3.17% this week and 12.45% year to date, the second best performer in terms of year to date; only eclipsed by the service sector (+14.82%).

BDO’s (red) string of record highs backed by BPI’s (green) ramp has significantly boosted both the PSEi and the financial-bank index.

Prices of both issues have virtually run amuck!

Interestingly, SECB (violet) and Metrobank (brown) appears to have lagged the leaders. Why?

Have these been signs of a strictly a BDO-BPI dynamic? Or will the BDO-BPI manic pumping spillover to MBT and SECB?

Figure 4: Little Signs of Rising Tide in Other Financial Index Members

When seen from the broader financial issues, there have been little signs of the rising tide lifting the other financial boats.

While most issues improved compared to last year, it’s only UBP (blue) that has made significant but gradual strides. Yet UBP’s actions depart from the BDO-BPI vertical rocket ships.

The rest, namely AUB (black), PBB (orange), EW (indigo), CHIB (red), RCB (dark green) and PNB (gray) have substantially underperformed.

Again, the 64 trillion peso question is why? Will BDO-BPI price rampage diffuse into the rest? Or will this signify an act strictly for the dynamic duo?

Present developments reverberate with the record run of 2015 which peaked on April 10, 2015.

In that cycle, about half of the PSE firms were in bear markets while only some of the PSEi’s top 15 were responsible for milestone PSEi at 8.127.48. Again, signs of an engineered pump.

Déjà vu?

Rampaging Bank Stocks in the Face of Growing Risks

Figure 5: Financial Portfolio, Trade versus Property and BSP’s Portfolio Exposure in Bubble Sectors

Yet why the frantic bidding of select financial-banking stocks?

Could recent money flows provide some clues?

What’s the relationship between growth rates of the banking system’s financial intermediary loan portfolio with the PSE’s near record sprint by the financial index? (upper window) A seemingly tight correlation can be seen above.

Perhaps it’s more than just correlation; there could be a causal nexus. Or to extrapolate, financial institutions could have borrowed so much money to speculate in the Philippine Stock Exchange. The performance of the PSEi, thus, has been coincident with the changes in the banking system’s financial intermediary’s portfolio.

If true, then such would serve as circumstantial evidence that point to the likely parties responsible for ‘mark on close orders’ which has resulted to the perpetual price system impairing, marking the close.

Also if true, this shows why financial institutions are vulnerable to a PSEi crash. And that’s why they will do a Mario Draghi’s “whatever it takes” to float the index.

No wonder why the regulators (BSP, SEC) have been asleep on the wheel.

Yet what happened to risks? Have banks been immune to risks?

I have previously noted that based on government’s statistics, the % share of the key bubble sectors—namely construction, real estate and trade—have swelled to 38.61% of the 2016 GDP.

Add the financial sector, the bubble sector’s share of GDP bulges to 46.7% over the same period! It’s almost like putting all eggs in one basket! With nearly 50% of GDP, a slowdown in these sectors would have a substantial detrimental effect on the economy and on the banking system! Such represents signs of growing concentration risks!

And even more fascinating has been the ratio of trade/gdp vis-à-vis the property sector/gdp. The ratio indicates which of the two sectors have grown faster. (middle window)

Since the BSP began its subsidy program through trickle down negative real rates in 2009, the property sector has almost consistently outgrown the trade sector.

Yet the cumulative share of loan portfolios of both sectors plus the construction vis-à-vis total banking loans has burgeoned to 38.92%. Or the share of loans of such bubble sectors comprises nearly two fifths of the total loan portfolio of the banking system! To include financial intermediary and hotels would spike the accrued sector’s share of loans to 51% or half of the banking system’s loan books!

And growing anecdotal accounts of saturation or oversupply in both retail and the property sector tell us that the banking system IS vulnerable to credit risks despite the much ballyhooed statistical but untested “capital reserve” base as declared by the government and the mainstream.

So banks shares have soared even in the face of mounting risks!
Figure 6: Construction and Wholesale Prices Soar Past 2014 Highs

To add spice to the paradox, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported last week their surveys of real economy prices via February’s construction material wholesale (upper right) and retail prices (upper left), as well as January general wholesale prices (bottom).

Prices of all three statistics have zoomed past 2014 highs!!!

And surging real economy prices will boost bank lending conditions????

I don’t have to repeat what I have been saying about the adverse impact of rising inflation on the economy. Here’s a clue on how inflation will hurt earnings, from McKinsey.com, How inflation can destroy shareholder value”

Why Newton’s Law Will Prevail

In so many words, quality (economic and financial foundations) will matter more than quantity (PSE’s price levels) overtime.

For the moment, the establishment PPT or the PSE’s fairy godmother may generate the momentum required to push the headline index higher. Part of which could be a breakout by the banking financial index to a milestone. But this, like its two predecessors, would be unsustainable.

And to repeat, manic bidding of domestic stocks have occurred even as endogenic systemic risks continue to escalate. These internal risks includes the massive leveraging of balance sheets, the sustained frantic race to build supply, deepening signs of overcapacity, rising concentration risks, surging real economy prices, the crowding out effect from a leftist government, increased government interventions in the marketplace, the falling peso and emergent interest rate pressures—which account for the most fundamental reasons.

Such risks are not isolated but are intertwined and interdependent.

And that’s aside from a multitude of external risks.

Even in the PSE, signs of entropy have been intensifying. Such includes the rampant and brazen (desperate) manipulations, the divergent performances of PSEi components which likewise have been manifested in the broader market, growing accounts of unstable prices manifested by vertical pumps (BW-SSO syndrome), the concentration of activities to a few issues and amplified price gyrations in the face of faltering volume.

At the end of the day, since vertical price trends are symptoms of mispricing founded on a maladjusted economy and (pseudo) markets operating on falsified prices, Newton’s Law (via mean reversion) will eventually rule.

Newton’s Law has governed solidly the past 50 years. What should make this time different?