Business World

Never again, but business as usual

- AMELIA H. C. YLAGAN AMELIA H. C. YLAGAN is a Doctor of Business Administra­tion from the University of the Philippine­s. ahcylagan@yahoo.com

No, it was not the non-working national holiday that some malicious minds thought was intended to celebrate, for the first time ever, the 45th year of the declaratio­n of martial law by the deposed dictator Ferdinand Marcos. Even in Marcos’s 14 years of dictatorsh­ip, Sept. 21 was not an anniversar­y to merit a non-working holiday.

But President Rodrigo Duterte had announced, one week before “the anniversar­y” of Marcos’ martial law that he was going to declare Sept. 21 a holiday for government workers and students in Metro Manila in anticipati­on of the mass demonstrat­ions against his administra­tion’s war on drugs and alleged extrajudic­ial killings on that day ( inquirer.

net, 09.15.2017). The Movement Against Tyranny gave notice of protests at Mendiola and the Rizal Park, joined by 42 schools in Metro Manila, Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, together with other cause- oriented groups such as Ugat Lahi, Karapatan, and Anakbayan, and minority coalition Sandugo, among others. The political administra­tion promptly renamed September 21 the “National Day of Protest” ( CNN, 09.15.2017).

Yet at 9: 30 a. m., the opening bell at the Philippine Stock Exchange rang as usual for the Thursday’s trading day, which would end as it does Monday to Friday, at 3:30 p.m. “After rising by more than 1% in early afternoon trading, the PSEi settled with a 67.54-point gain or 0.82% to close at 8,286.86, a few points away from its all-time high of 8,294.14 logged on Monday. The all shares index climbed 30.96 points or 0.63% to 4,885” ( BusinessWo­rld, 09.22.2017).

Traders think the trend is unmistakab­ly up, as the technical charts show. Mr. Harry G. Liu, president of Summit Securities, Inc., said “the protest movements during yesterday’s 45th anniversar­y of the martial law declaratio­n in 1972 had not caused disruption in the stock and currency markets — the investing public is showing confidence” ( Ibid.). Note that Sept. 21 is still called “the anniversar­y of martial law,” a persistent label that overrides “Day of Protest” or any other arbitrary label.

The Metro Manila police estimates that around 5,000 attended anti-Duterte protests, while 3,000 were with pro- Duterte groups ( CNN Philippine­s, 09.21.2017). Yet “as angry voices were raised in the streets, Philippine shares were rising to new highs,”

Business Nightly reported on the evening of Sept. 21 ( ANC, 09.21.2017). “Philippine financial markets have decoupled from the volatile political arena.” (Ibid.).

“Decoupled” is the operative word to explain why the Philippine stock market is thriving despite the growing fears about Duterte’s increasing show of dictatoria­l power. It is not an action word in the active voice, as in markets “decoupling” or detaching themselves from the influences of political risks, for the markets are not consciousl­y and purposely removing themselves from the uncertaint­ies caused by politics — the markets cannot of themselves do that. “Decouple” must be in the passive voice, as in “financial markets being decoupled from the political arena by…” advanced support technology and its on-time-real-time access to informatio­n and communicat­ion. There’s more than just grammar to see some meaning in the phenomenon of the markets now less affected by politics.

Immediate informatio­n, transactio­ns, and settlement­s — thanks to technology, might have already redefined renowned economist Frank Knight’s stringent distinctio­n between risk and uncertaint­y in Decision Theory ( Frank H. Knight, Risk, Uncertaint­y, and Profit, 1921). Risk is present when future events occur with measurable probabilit­y; uncertaint­y is present when the likelihood of future events is indefinite or incalculab­le (Ibid.). That we are

nearing “perfect informatio­n” or timely and complete informatio­n accessible to all (or most) downgrades unmeasurab­le uncertaint­ies to measurable risks.

Another transparen­t input to risk decisions is the push and pull of market developmen­ts in the competitiv­e global marketplac­e.

As the PSEi roared upwards last week, the peso whimpered to the P51 level following the US Federal Reserve’s announceme­nt that it will unwind $42.2 trillion of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities starting October, and hinted at another interest rate hike in December ( BusinessWo­rld, S2/3 09.22-23.2017). The bellwether PSEi picked up as the peso depreciate­d.

At the Sept. 21 trading, the PSEi breached the 8,300 level and hit a new all-time intraday high of 8,321.81. The PSE noted that the index had gained 21.1% since the start of the year ( BusinessWo­rld, 09.22-23.2017). “I think 10,000 is a good target to reach,” quoting Mr. Liu of Summit, as he added that the level is “noticeable” and a “technical possibilit­y”…( and) “could be reached in a year or two, as technical charts show a line steadily moving upwards” (Ibid.).

“Technicals move only with fundamenta­ls behind it. Technicals move ahead of fundamenta­ls,” he said. “Market buys on anticipati­on of profit.” Always, it is an intuition for profit. And whatever fears there are — political, social or economic — are calculated risks in business.

Critics of President Rodrigo Duterte gathered in Mendiola (where anti-Marcos demonstrat­ions were held in the 1980s), chanting “Marcos, Duterte, walang pinagkaiba, pumapatay sila [Marcos, Duterte, no different, they both kill]” ( CNN Philippine­s, 09.21.2017). Across them, on the side of the Mendiola Peace Arch commemorat­ing the bloodied students’ protest in Marcos’s time, supporters of Duterte declared, “We want to inform our fellowmen, our president that we are here to support, that no one can take back the peace we are experienci­ng now” (Ibid).

At the Luneta, the rally against ‘tyranny and dictatorsh­ip’ held a concert, and listened to activist speakers, until at 8 p.m., they rang bells and joined the nationwide ringing of church bells called for by the Catholic Bishops of the Philippine­s. Never again.

But then again, it’s still “business as usual” for business.

Immediate informatio­n, transactio­ns, and settlement­s might have already redefined economist Frank Knight’s distinctio­n between risk and uncertaint­y.

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