The Philippine Star

Phl peso - the long and short of it

- WILSON SY Peso – best performer last week

The Philippine peso’s underperfo­rmance vis-à-vis regional and major currencies during the past year has caused concern to many investors. Many fear the peso’s breach of the psychologi­cal level of P50 to a dollar and the 11-year low it reached last month may endanger the economy and the current bull market in Philippine stocks.

While the peso has underperfo­rmed the past year, it has been resilient in recent weeks. During the past week, the peso is up 1.4 percent, the best performer compared to major and ASEAN currencies. It was flat the past month while major currencies declined an average of 1.4 percent against the US dollar (see US dollar and Philippine peso both recover, Oct. 2, ). Over a threemonth period, the peso is down 1.7 percent while the major currencies were down an average of two percent. ASEAN currencies were up an average 0.4 percent over the past month and 0.1 percent over the past three months.

One-year performanc­e

Over a one-year period, the Philippine peso has underperfo­rmed against other currencies. It is the worst performing ASEAN currency year-on-year depreciati­ng by 5.4 percent. In our table below, the peso’s decline is next only to the Japanese yen which weakened by 9.4 percent

Long-term performanc­e

Longer-term, the Philippine peso’s performanc­e is back in parallel with the movement of other currencies. Over a five-year period, the peso has depreciate­d 19.5 percent against the US dollar which is better than the performanc­e of ASEAN currencies such as the Indonesian rupiah and the Malaysian ringgit. The peso, likewise, performed better than major currencies such as the Japanese yen, the Aussie dollar and the Canadian dollar over the same period.

Over a 10-year period, the peso has weakened 15.3 percent which is still better than both the rupiah and the ringgit. Compared to major currencies, the peso was ahead of the euro, the British pound, the Aussie dollar and the Canadian dollar in terms of performanc­e over 10 years.

The long and short of it

The long and short of it, the peso may have been weak over a year or so, but over the longer term, it has just reverted back to the mean. People don’t realize that despite its short-term weakness in the past 1 ½ years, the move was just a reversion to its long-term mean.

In addition, there appears to be a “paradigm shift” on how investors view the current weakening of the peso and the country’s programmed fiscal deficit (see last week’s article, Paradigm Shift, Oct. 30). Previously seen as negative, many now realize the positive impact of a weak peso (see Peso weakness – good

or bad?, July 17). This is one of the reasons why the Philippine stock market has been surprising­ly strong despite the currency weakness.

Milestones in Phl, global stocks

The PSE index reached an intraday historic high of 8,605.2 last Friday before succumbing to profit taking at the close. Global stock markets have also been very strong, reaching new milestones in the US, Germany and UK, and multi-year highs in Europe, Japan and other markets.

On Nov. 8, Wednesday, Xavier School Batch ’93 will hold its first fundraisin­g event. In support of Xavier School’s charitable causes, I have agreed to give a talk and discuss the bull market in Philippine and global stocks: how it started, what are the reasons and the catalysts that propelled it, and why it continues to be one of the longest and strongest bull markets in history. I will discuss my investment strategies, my personal experience­s and how investors can learn and profit from them.

The event will be held at UNO Seafood Restaurant on Annapolis Street, Greenhills and will start at 6 p.m. Tickets are pegged at P3,000 – dinner, wine and drinks included. Proceeds from the event will benefit the charities of the Alumni-Associatio­n of Xavier School. For tickets, please contact: (+63) 917555-2297 or (+632) 727-3329, aaxs.secretaria­t1@gmail.com or purchase online at http://ushare.unionbankp­h.com/aaxs/. 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.

 ?? Source: Wealth Securities, Inc. ?? Performanc­e of major and ASEAN currencies against the US dollar
Source: Wealth Securities, Inc. Performanc­e of major and ASEAN currencies against the US dollar
 ?? Source: Wealth Securities, Inc. ?? Performanc­e of major and ASEAN currencies against the US dollar
Source: Wealth Securities, Inc. Performanc­e of major and ASEAN currencies against the US dollar
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