Last week, the Indonesian rupiah, which collapsed to 1997 Asian Crisis levels and imploded to new lows suddenly reversed. The rupiah gained 7.8 percent against the dollar for the week and as much as 9.4 percent since hitting last month’s lows of 14,753.20.
USD/IDR Daily Chart
Source: Investing.com
Dramatic reversal for EM currencies
Other emerging market currencies also made dramatic reversals similar to the rupiah’s move. In fact, the Malaysian ringgit gained 7.7 percent while the Korean won was up 4.7 percent from their respective lows last September. Other EM currencies like the Brazilian real and South African rand appreciated 12.2 percent and 6.1 percent, respectively, from their lows last month.
Philippine peso strong again
The peso which was on the brink of breaking above 47.0 has reversed and is now back at 45.87 against the dollar. Like the rupiah, the peso has erased all the losses from the yuan devaluation spike two months ago.
USD/PHP Daily Chart
Source: Investing.com
Rate hike delayed
One of the reasons for the dramatic reversal of emerging currencies was the disappointing US jobs report number released last Oct. 2. Non-farm payrolls came in at 142,000 in September, well below the expected 203,000, while the August and July figures were revised downwards. This strengthened the argument the long-awaited interest rate hike may be delayed further into 2016.
Worst of commodity crunch may be over
Commodity market sentiment also appears to be bottoming out as the Commodity CRB Index rose more than 4 percent last week, its biggest weekly gain since June 2012. The move was led by crude oil which surged 8.4 percent week-on-week. Note crude oil has rallied more than 30 percent since hitting multi-decade support levels at $40 per barrel last Aug. 24.
The past two weeks also saw private equity funds and billionaires such as Carl Icahn and KKR buying huge stakes on beaten down copper stocks after it hit five year lows.
Equities markets rebound as EM currencies recover
Emerging markets gained 6.6 percent week-on-week as emerging market currencies rallied strongly against the dollar. The rally in EM equities was led by Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore which posted double-digit returns in their respective equity ETFs.
Commodity-producers such as Australia and Canada led developed markets with gains of 7.6 percent and 6.7 percent for the week. Meanwhile, US equities rebounded on the back of the energy and materials sectors which increased eight percent and 6.75 percent week-on-week, respectively.
Source: Bloomberg, Wealth Securities Research
Experts speak: the bottom is past
With the successful retest of the August lows two weeks ago, several prominent fund managers and well-respected analysts have declared the bottom may be at hand.
“The fund is predominantly buying and there’s a possibility we will bottom out, maybe in the next couple of weeks.” –Robert “Bernie” Vergara, GSIS president
“The bottom is past already. Foreign investors will come again.” – Elvyn Masassya, president of Indonesian State Pension Fund BPJS Ketenagakerjaan
“Many emerging market currencies are now in many cases 15 percent – 30 percent undervalued. We saw specific valuations reach levels that are not only once-in-a-decade opportunity, but what we believe to be rare multi-decade opportunities to capture extraordinary longer-term investment potential.” – Dr. Michael Hasenstab, Chief Investment Officer of Templeton Global Macro
“Maybe the worst is behind us. August was the primary low. This (last week) was the secondary low.” – Bob Doll, Chief Equity Strategist of Nuveen Asset Management
Philequity Corner made a similar call three weeks ago, and we quote:
“Volatility has somewhat subsided since the ghost month ended. Barring any black swans or unexpected negative events, we may have seen the low of our stock market this year.” – see The Ghost Vanishes, Philequity Corner, Sept. 21.
Are we out of the woods?
Nothing is certain in life, but what we know is we have the central banks and the governments behind our back. What they want is to stabilize their economies and prevent deflation by stimulating economies worldwide. We also know the Fed is making sure their actions will be more data dependent and they are careful not to hike interest rates prematurely. If the central banks and governments play their cards right and China stabilizes, it is highly likely we have already seen a major low in global equities markets.
Philippine peso going back to 45
The sharp reversal in commodity prices, stock markets and emerging market currencies show things have indeed stabilized. Moreover, the dramatic recoveries in the rupiah and the ringgit, which were imploding to new lows just a couple of weeks ago, indicate that the contagion has been arrested (see Contagion, Aug. 24). Hence, the 6,600 levels may have been the low for Philippine stocks. With regard to the peso, EM currency strength will bring it back to the 45 - 45.50 range.
Philequity Management is the fund manager of the leading mutual funds in the Philippines. Visit www.philequity.net to learn more about Philequity’s managed funds or to view previous articles. For inquiries or to send feedback, please call (02) 689-8080 or email ask@philequity.net.