Tuesday, February 12, 2019

GDP: 6.1% 4Q and 6.2% 2018? Exports and Imports (Domestic Demand) Crashed in December! How was the Record USD 41.44 Billion Trade Deficit Financed?


GDP: 6.1% 4Q and 6.2% 2018? Exports and Imports (Domestic Demand) Crashed in December! How was the Record USD 41.44 Billion Trade Deficit Financed?

6.1% 4Q and 6.2% 2018 GDP? Where?

At the end of January, I propounded that the National Government INFLATED the GDP data significantly.


And yet the magnificent variance in growth numbers between the GDP and trade data! Such remarkable deviance emerged in Q2 and Q3! And I’d suspect that 4Q won’t be any different.

The PSA has yet to publish its December numbers.

To do away with the currency effect, using the monthly average USD to convert PSA’s trade data to peso, current export growth in peso exhibits minor difference with those in USD. Export growth in peso was up 3.21% in November and 10.99% in October.

For nominal peso exports to reach the GDP equivalent, December exports would require a growth rate spike of about 20%! Otherwise, the distance between the export GDP and trade numbers would signify an ocean!

International demand principally determines exports. The PSA’s October and November trade data dovetails with the world trade conditions based on CPM Netherlands Data. These numbers have pointed to a downturn in global trade. 

In contrast, the 4Q export GDP numbers have departed from these.

Finally, December’s trade numbers….

From the Philippine Statistics Authority: (bold mine)

1. TOTAL TRADE AMOUNTED TO $13.19 BILLION: The country’s total external trade in goods in December 2018 reached $13.19 billion, reflecting a decrement of 10.5 percent from the $14.74 billion recorded value during the same month of the previous year. Of the total external trade, $4.72 billion or 35.8 percent were exported goods and $8.47 billion or 64.2 percent were imported goods. Furthermore, the country’s balance of trade in goods (BoT-G) decreased to a $3.75 billion deficit in December 2018, from $3.97 billion deficit in December 2017
2. EXPORTS AND IMPORTS DECLINE BY 12.3 PERCENT AND 9.4 PERCENT: The country’s total export sales in December 2018 was valued at $4.72 billion, indicating a decrement of 12.3 percent, from $5.38 billion in December 2017. This was due to the decreases in export sales of the four of the top 10 commodities, namely, machinery and transport equipment (-53.1%); coconut oil (-24.8%); electronic products (-15.2%); and other manufactured goods (-9.0%).  (Table 2) On the other hand, total imported goods for the period of December 2018 slid by 9.4 percent, from a value of $9.36 billion in December 2017 to $8.47 billion total import in December 2018. The decrement was triggered by the negative growth in six of the top 10 major import commodities. These were: transport equipment (-33.3%); miscellaneous manufactured articles (-18.4%); mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials (-14.4%); telecommunication equipment and electrical machinery (-5.5%); other food and live animals (-3.5%); and electronic products (-1.6%).

Let me repeat: Imports (in USD) plummeted 9.4%, Exports crashed 12.3% for total merchandise trade to plunge 10.5%!!!!
Figure 1
As noted above, exports are a measure of international demand.  The plunge in Philippine exports has been consistent with the sharp fall in global trade volume in December. Figure 1
Figure 2

And instead of exports, the December collapse of IMPORTS was THE stunner!

Imports function as a gauge of the much-touted domestic demand. The 9.4% contraction doesn’t seem to be an anomaly. It was preceded by the plunge in import growth to 6.84% in November from October’s 21.44% growth.

Even when adjusted for the average USD Php exchange rate, December’s numbers were ugly: -5.17% imports, -8.18% exports and -6.27% total trade.

Nevertheless, shrinking liquidity as measured by the money supply growth, as well as the flat to partially inverted yield curve, foretold this. Figure 2

As noted last weekend, the crash in December industrial production and languid consumer credit conditions reinforced the stunning cascade of the real economy.

More Signs of the Year of the PIG: The Incredible PHA! PhiSYx: BLOOM in, PCOR out, US Primary Dealers Panic Hoarding of UST Continues (4Q GDP and 2018 GDP Inflated: December Industrial Production Crashed, Consumers Went Slow on Spending) February 10, 2019
Figure 3

Adjusted to reflect apple-to-apple comparison, in the nominal or current peso, the largest discrepancy, since at least 2017, between export data growth of 2.36% and export GDP growth of 13.43% occurred in 4Q18! 4Q18 export GDP is 4.69x the trade data in current peso!

How can there be 4Q 6.1% GDP (much less the 6.2% annual GDP) when consumers (consumer credit) and the private industry (manufacturing, exports and imports) withheld spending?
Figure 4

Despite the crash in exports and imports, December registered a trade deficit of USD 3.75 billion, the third largest in at least six years! The 2018 annual deficit of USD 41.44 billion was the largest ever!  And with BPOs and OFW remittances underperforming, where did the government get the resources to fund the gap?

Well, the answer is from debt. Foreign exchange borrowing by the National Government, from external and internal sources, swelled by 13.77% or by Php 304.5 billion to Php 2.806 trillion, a record! And that’s from the official sources. Banks may serve as indirect conduits for the NG.

So nation’s USD shorts will continue to mount, thereby exerting pressure on the peso. Here we are talking about the USD supply. The peso’s temporary recent strength has foremost been about liquidity strains in the financial system (partly about the FED and the PBOC). And such strains have begun to surface in economic statistics. The latest surge in GIRs has been mostly about the USD 1.5 bonds raised by the NG last January.

It would be interesting to see how signs of weak domestic demand will be manifested on tax (BIR and Boc) collections in December and for the year 2018. The Bureau of Treasury have procrastinated from publishing the data, why?

Bottom line: 6.1% GDP in 4Q and 2018’s GDP of 6.2% appears nothing more than statistical legerdemain.

As predicted back in May…

5) The last option would be for the NG and BSP to manipulate markets and statistics in the hope that the markets will conform and comply with their political targets.


Economic statistics are supposed to provide an empirical groundwork to theory.
Figure 5

What the 4.4% January CPI says has been that consumers have so much money to spend for them to withhold spending directly on food (household). Instead, since consumers preferred to spend on higher prices, they stampeded to the restaurants! Figure 5.

As a result, Food CPI plunged to 5.59% in January from 6.69% in December. (Demand from restaurants were not able to help.) In the meantime, Restaurant CPI barely budged at 4.33% in January from 4.35% a month back.

But because Food CPI has a 38.34% weight as against Restaurant CPI which has only 12.6%, the headline CPI plunged to 4.4% from 5.1% in Decembers.

So not only are consumers price inelastic (price has no bearing on supply or demand), but consumers are unaffected by the race-to-build supply! Domestic consumers must be eating machines.

If partly true, restaurants would have hit an earnings jackpot in December because margins would have swelled! 

And a final note, to justify the relentless bidding, many mainstream experts have been enchanting “LOW CPI EQUALS HIGH stocks”. Figure 5.

Some even use equity risk premium analysis to justify this. These experts seem to forget that the demand for hard asset bubbles (real estate, hotel-casino and malls) and the CPI are related to the demand for stocks. As such, the CPI has climbed and declined along with the PSYei 30 since 2013.

So will this time be different?

Or when CPI makes a volte-face, will they change their tunes?

Sunday, February 10, 2019

More Signs of the Year of the PIG: The Incredible PHA! PhiSYx: BLOOM in, PCOR out, US Primary Dealers Panic Hoarding of UST Continues



In this issue

More Signs of the Year of the PIG: The Incredible PHA! PhiSYx: BLOOM in, PCOR out, US Primary Dealers Panic Hoarding of UST Continues
-More Signs of the Year of the Pig? Second-Third Tier Stocks Signal Late-Stage Rally, The Incredible PHA
-PhiSYex: Bubble Stock BLOOM Returns to the Index, PCOR out!
-4Q GDP and 2018 GDP Inflated: December Industrial Production Crashed, Consumers Went Slow on Spending
-Primary Dealers Still Panic Hoarding US Treasuries! 3M LIBOR Rates Crashed!

More Signs of the Year of the PIG: The Incredible PHA! PhiSYx: BLOOM in, PCOR out, US Primary Dealers Panic Hoarding of UST Continues

More Signs of the Year of the Pig? Second-Third Tier Stocks Signal Late-Stage Rally, The Incredible PHA
Figure 1

The PSE opened trading on the Chinese New Year of the Earth Pig with a fantastic surge! Panic buying prompted intraday gains to reach a high of 1.8% just before lunch break. When trading resumed, gains were sustained until the last hour when the PSYei 30 began to crumble. By the last 15 minutes before the market intervention phase, panic selling rule. The day ended with marking the close dump which forced the index lower.

The Phisix roundtripped by a stunning 3.74% on the post-New Year’s Day trade!

Has this been signs of the things to come in the Year of the Pig?

The manic performance of second-and-third tier issues has been amazing.
Figure 2

Particularly fascinating is how the market has been riveted by a Php 2-3 billion market cap issue, the Premiere Horizon Alliance (PHA). Though PHA plummeted by 22% this week, it remains in the top 15 in terms of peso traded volume. A Php 2-3 billion company in the league of the market cap heavyweights for 13 straight sessions! What a feat!

At its recent peak on January 28 and 29, PHA corralled 10.6% and 12.22% of the total board volume. As PHA plunged last week, its share of daily board volume dwindled to 7.85%, 3.15%, 3.23% and 1.98% on February 4, 6, 7 and 8 – yet still ranked within the top 15 most traded issues. (see figure 2)

That the market’s attention shifts to the second-third tier issues as the PhiSYex enters its late-stage rally is hardly appreciated. After the Phisix culminated at 9,058 in January 2018; the previous darlings, TBGI and MRC, climaxed. Both issues fumbled along with the PSEi and rallied alongside it.

PHA appears to be the cynosure de rigueur.

And for good measure, the furious rallies in select second-third tier issues have prompted the average daily traded issues to hit its third highest level.  

The average number of issues traded daily raced to the third highest level this week to 255.25, only marginally different from the July 21, 2017 peak at 256.8. The milestone high was at 269.6 set on January 19, 2018.

Though last week’s numbers haven’t reached the crest of January 2018, the common denominator appears to be the ardent belief that there is no way to go but up as highlighted by the excessive speculations!

PhiSYex: Bubble Stock BLOOM Returns to the Index, PCOR out!

And even more. The Philippine Stock Exchange announced changes on the major indices effective February 18.
Figure 3

The Phisix would bring about changes in its composite members. Enrique Razon owned casino firm Bloomberry Resorts (BLOOM) will replace oil refiner Petron (PCOR) in the index. 

Curiously, it would be the second return of gaming behemoth Bloomberry Resorts (BLOOM) to the Phisix. Its inaugural was onMarch 11, 2013. Three years later, or on September 12, 2016, it was substituted by Security Bank [PSE: SECB].

BLOOM's entry into the elite benchmark in 2013 must have been an outcome of its strong share price performance. Its 2016 exit also reflected on its share price decline. With BLOOM up 8.65%, this week for a 2019 return of 28.16%, the same pattern in the PSE’s selection process seems to be unfolding.

In an attempt to boost the index, the PSE selects big ticket winners and weeds out the underperformers. So these can be aligned with the blatant mark-the-close pumps.

With BLOOM’s entry, the service sector would have the second biggest representation (6) after holding firms (10) in the composite index.

The headline index becomes an abode for winning issues only. Forget the representation of industries which should reflect the economy.

The PSE also introduced a new index, last week, which would incorporate dividends, reinvested dividends aside from capital gains through its Total Return Index (TRI)

4Q GDP and 2018 GDP Inflated: December Industrial Production Crashed, Consumers Went Slow on Spending

I argued that the 4Q and 2018 GDP had been padded.

Figure 4

Industrial production by 9.3% collapsed in December (PSA).

From the Inquirer: The Philippine Statistics Authority’s (PSA) Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries for December 2018 showed that the Volume of Production Index (VoPI) declined 10.1 percent that month. The drop in the December 2018 VoPI, a proxy for manufacturing output, was steeper than the 6.1-percent decline in December 2017. “Ten out of the 20 industry groups registered annual declines [in VoPI], with two-digit decreases noted in the following: printing (-79.4 percent), chemical products (-28.9 percent), tobacco products (-22.1 percent), food manufacturing (-17.8 percent), basic metals (-16.7 percent) and machinery except electrical (-12.6 percent),” the PSA said. In the meantime, the Value of Production Index (VaPI) slid 9.3 percent, also faster than December 2017’s 7.1-percent drop. The PSA said the following sectors led the decline of the VaPI in December last year: printing (-78.5 percent), chemical products (-28.2 percent), basic metals (-16.5 percent), food manufacturing (-15.8 percent) and tobacco products (-11.1 percent). (bold added)

Consumer credit and cash (M1) also stagnated in December. Credit card growth was marginally up 20.93% in December from 20.2% a month ago. Auto loans growth plunged to 11.96% from 13.13%. Salary loans contracted -2.66% against -1.71%. M1 was little changed to 9.48% from 9.47% over the same period.

Consumers didn’t go wild last Christmas. 4Q GDP and 2018 GDP had been inflated.

Primary Dealers Still Panic Hoarding US Treasuries! 3M LIBOR Rates Crashed!

As global stocks went into bidding orgy, I wrote about the panic bidding of USTs by Primary Dealers in the US.  

Instead of going away, the hoarding only accelerated.

Figure 5

Panic hoarding by primary dealers are increasingly signs of collateral-liquidity hedging-issues by third parties served by the primary dealers. They maybe central banks (PBOC?) or European banks.

Next the astounding collapse of the 3-Month LIBOR.

From Marketwatch: Three-month Libor sees biggest drop since 2009 (February 7): “The three-month rate at which banks on average charge each other to borrow funds fell around 4.1 basis points to 2.697% on Thursday, its biggest one-day drop since May 2009, according to ICE Benchmark Administration. Trillions of debt and loans are benchmarked to Libor , or the London Interbank Offered rate. Some analysts speculated that the Federal Reserve's hints that it would keep rates on hold for the foreseeable future at its January meeting contributed to the fall in money market rates”

Based on the inversion of the Eurodollar futures curve, this could be a sign that the US Federal Reserve will be cutting rates soon.

Beware the Year of the PIG!