After
outperforming China and India which both had losses through end-April, East
Asian stock markets have been shaken by election and leadership surprises that
may stall momentum through mid-year amid flat economic growth forecasts.
The runaway presidential victory of Davao City mayor Rodrigo “Dirty
Harry” Duterte in the Philippines was the latest investor confidence blow and
was preceded by the ruling party’s parliamentary majority surrender in Korea
and the resignation of the 1MDB fund board headed by Malaysian Prime Minister
Najib Razak after payment default.
ADB
growth projections
The Asian Development Bank, on its 50th anniversary, also
sounded downbeat about ASEAN in particular as it kept this year’s growth
projection constant at 4.5%. It cited demographic, education, labor and
productivity challenges shaving two points from potential expansion since 2010,
alongside the fallout from China’s commodity and manufacturing import slowdown
and increased domestic public and private sector debt. The bank added that
institutional governance and policy vision have been lacking the past decade,
and these shortfalls may be magnified in the near-term with the country muddles
now in the way of continued share gains.
Manila was up just 2% in dollar terms on the MSCI Index before the May
presidential poll, and $40 million in foreign investor outflows were registered
by data trackers in April. The peso slid to 46/dollar and sovereign credit
default spreads rose to 100 basis points, as the flagship exchange-traded fund
in New York was down 7 % in the new quarter.
Duterte
stock rebound
The stock exchange recovered in the immediate aftermath of the results
with Duterte’s decisive margin over opponents. The losers included two closely
aligned with outgoing President Aquino’s economic approach — former Senator
Grace Poe and his favored successor Mar Roxas, another son of a previous
incumbent. The mayor ran Davao on southern Mindanao island for over twenty
years under a tough law and order regime during a rebel insurgency, and
promoted national and regional trade and investment. But unlike rivals, he had
no detailed business platform during the campaign other than to create “the
proper atmosphere.”
Duterte promised to clean up crime and infrastructure in the overcrowded
capital and across the country, and railed against the family industrial and
political elite traditionally in charge without calling for outright income
redistribution. His speeches offered muted praise for technocrats at the
planning and finance ministries and central bank, and embraced the
public-private partnership concept while pressing project tender changes that
uphold transparency. His core voting bloc was the rural poor, living on less
than three dollars/day, who have not felt the effects of consecutive years of
6% growth and resent the wide wealth gap compared with neighbors and emerging
economies in other regions.
Duterte will take office as both an economic and foreign policy unknown.
He has proposed to confront China in the South China Sea in offhand comments.
He may also turn confrontational toward the exiting administration’s
macro-stabilization and anti-corruption strides which have waned over the past
year.
Graft and intrusive bureaucracy remain endemic in the Philippines as
reflected in the 103 out of 189 country ranking in the World Bank’s Doing
Business, and exports, one-third of GDP, have fallen for twelve months
straight. The chronic trade deficit has historically been offset by booming
remittances, but they have peaked to almost eliminate the current account
surplus. International capital flows have long been volatile, but domestic
demand softened during the election period with the central bank at a crossroads
over its future monetary stance.
Malaysia
Malaysia’s MSCI component showed a high single-digit advance through
April, a slip from over 10% the previous month as IMDB failed to honor a $50
million bond payment to an Abu Dhabi holder. Multiple jurisdictions continue to
probe missing accounts, with the Swiss suggesting $5 billion diverted.
The advisory board was dismantled and PM Razak was stripped of final
signatory authority although he has quashed resignation demands. However his
brother, chief executive of leading Islamic bank CIMB, was forced out by the
controversy. At the same time a new central bank chief was named likely to cut
interest rates to boost 3.5% growth, and clamp additional controls on 90% of
GDP household debt while political houses stay unsettled.
Gary N.
Kleiman is an emerging markets specialist who runs Kleiman International in
Washington, D.C.
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