Nomura: PH back on global investment radar screens
‘Strong economic momentum to continue’
By Doris C. DumlaoPhilippine Daily Inquirer
The Philippines is back on global radar
screens for the first time since the mid-1990s due to its “compelling structural
story” but the stock market is now “overpriced” relative to regional peers,
Japanese investment banking group Nomura said.
“The economy is certainly in a sweet spot.
Reform momentum in terms of improving competitiveness and reducing corruption
has radically altered the macro-outlook. In addition, the Philippines has
recently been utilizing new-found room for fiscal and monetary easing, further
boosting activity,” said a Nomura equity research issued on Dec. 3.
The Asia-Pacific equity strategy report
titled “A break in the overcast: Firmer demand, rising liquidity” said a number
of clouds were lifting for the region, with US and Chinese political transitions
complete, growth in both economies finally picking up (and in Asia more
broadly), and Europe getting its ‘tail risks’ sorted.
Overall, the report said capital inflows
to Asia have significant scope to accelerate in the months ahead, enticed by the
demand recovery and expected appreciation of most Asian currencies—and fueled by
both US Federal Reserves’ third phase of quantitative easing (QE3) and a
sizeable shift out of low-yielding US treasury bonds.
But for the Philippines, the report said
the valuation premium assumed a worsening environment in the rest of the region.
Nomura said Philippine stock valuations were among the highest in the region, as
market capitalization-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio was over 100 percent
and credit spreads even lower than those in Thailand and Malaysia).
Given Nomura’s “generally opportunistic”
medium-term view on equities, the Japanese firm recommended “underweight”
positions (a suggestion to reduce exposure relative to the benchmark index) for
emerging Southeast Asian markets in general, citing comparatively pricey
valuations and the “defensive” characteristics inherent in these markets’
smaller size, low operating leverage and what it saw as a “typically more
visible government propping-up of share prices.”
For 2013, the strong economic momentum is
likely to continue, with Nomura economists looking for GDP growth at an
above-potential 6 percent, driven by more progress in infrastructure projects
under the public-private partnership (PPP) scheme and higher fiscal spending
ahead of the mid-term elections in May 2013. Private consumption is also seen to
remain robust, with resilient remittances and buoyant consumer sentiment.
Similar to several countries in the
region, Nomura expects Philippine inflation to rise in the second half of 2013
to average at 4.4 percent for the whole of next year from 3.2 percent this year
as demand-side pressures strengthen.
“While this is still within the Bangko
Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) 3-5 percent target, risks are to the upside, in our
view, with above-trend growth and measures pending such as legislation to
increase taxes on ‘sin’ products (such as alcohol and tobacco),” the report
said.
A likely slowdown in momentum by the
second half of next year was seen making the Philippine market relatively
unattractive, Nomura said. “Already large capital inflows are also a risk, with
macro-prudential measures currently under consideration to curtail the rapid
pace of foreign buying,” the research said.
But overall, Nomura said the Philippines
scored well on each of what it saw as important drivers of medium-term emerging
market equity performance—strong reform momentum, reducing cost of capital,
strong foreign exchange fundamentals, structural productivity gains and positive
foreign investor sentiment.
“After two years in office, President
Aquino’s reform agenda continues to remain popular,” the report said, citing
high satisfaction ratings on the government.
Nomura also favorably noted that the cost
of capital had come down rapidly in the Philippines as rating agencies and
foreign investors came to appreciate reduced risks and higher potential growth.
“Space on the foreign exchange front is
also helpful. Moderately higher and stable inflation is probably one of the
biggest sources of emerging market stock performance. Given the Philippine peso
is still undervalued (by more than 25 percent as per IMF’s latest purchasing
power parity calculations), we think it can likely withstand an extended period
of relatively higher inflation without depreciating significantly. With a small
funding gap in terms of balance of payments and external borrowing, the peso is
also less vulnerable to external shocks,” the report said
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