THE biggest companies in the Philippines need to repay the most debt ever next year, and they’re lining up for fresh funds while interest rates are still low.

Three corporate groups — Ayala Corp., JG Summit Holdings, Inc. and San Miguel Corp. — are looking to raise a total of $2.5 billion with bonds, based on regulatory filings. They are among the first firms to return to the debt market after a lockdown caused issuance to plunge to a four-year low of $540 million in the second quarter, Bloomberg-compiled data show.

Philippine firms are set to join the global rush to borrow funds as they prepare for a massive debt bill: about $8.3 billion in corporate bonds and loans will mature in the second half of the year, before that pile climbs to a record $16.4 billion in 2021, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

They are keen to borrow while rates are still low, amid signs the central bank is moving to absorb excess funds as the economy gradually reopens this month.

“We expect to have a very busy next couple of months, and hopefully the second half of the year will retain the momentum,” said Ryan Martin Tapia, president of China Bank Capital Corp., one of the country’s most active bond arrangers. Still, lingering pandemic uncertainty is making tenors shorter and credit spreads wider, he said.

In the latest possible Philippine debt deal, PLDT, Inc. hired Credit Suisse Group AG and UBS Group AG for a series of investor calls starting June 15. They may be followed by an offering of 10- and 30-year dollar bonds, the telecommunications company told the stock exchange on Monday.

Port operator International Container Terminal Services, Inc. priced $400 million of 10-year bonds on June 10, one of only two Philippine debt issuers in the second quarter along with a peso deal by Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., Bloomberg-compiled data show. Developer Robinsons Land Corp. also has notes in the pipeline.

Falling interest rates may spur increased demand for Philippine corporate securities.

Peso-denominated five-year government bond yields dropped to a seven-year low this month after policy makers pumped cash into the market. The virus outbreak caused the nation’s economy to shrink for the first time since 1998 and its unemployment rate to rise to a record.

“With interest rates moving down, some investors will be thinking of locking in their yields,” said Robert Ramos, chief investment officer at East West Banking Corp. “Of course, this will be dependent on investors being satisfied with the credit spreads over the government benchmark.”

The easy money won’t be around forever.

In a move to mop up extra funds in the market, the Philippine central bank said on June 8 it would gradually resume offering term deposits to financial firms and increase the volumes in its reverse repurchase facility. An estimated P1.1 trillion ($22 billion) were released into the financial system, equivalent to about 25% of the first quarter’s gross domestic product, through a series of steps including cuts in the benchmark interest rate and the reserve requirement ratio. — Bloomberg