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China vows to ‘win’ battle against financial risks

CHINA PLEDGED to step up measures to shore up its troubled banks and small businesses while continuing a crackdown on shadow banking and property speculation, in a difficult balancing act that risks exacerbating a build up in bad debt at its traditional lenders.

As concerns mount over the state of China’s $45-trillion financial system, the nation’s central bank and its top financial regulator used the year’s first weekend to unveil fresh details on how to combat risks amid the slowest economic expansion in three decades.

The People’s Bank of China, which has been reluctant to prime the stimulus pumps too much, said on Sunday that it would “resolutely win the battle” against increasing financial risks, underscoring its role as a lender of last resort while directing local governments to step up front-line support.

That followed a statement from the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) outlining a series of measures including carving out bad loans, setting up a resolution fund, as well as promoting mergers, capital injections and the restructuring of high risk institutions.

“Risk control has always been on the agenda of the authority, but compared with the previous general guidelines regulators have used strong wording in laying out very specific, drastic measures,” said Zhao Jian, head of the Atlantis Financial Research Institute in Beijing. “That’s a signal policy makers are beefing up efforts to contain financial risks this year.”

With the economy also weighed down by a trade dispute with the US, Chinese authorities are taking a more coordinated approach to tackling the problems at the more than 3,000 regional and rural lenders, many of which are struggling with a pileup of soured loans, eroding capital and poor internal controls.

Confidence in these institutions has waned since May, when regulators seized control of a lender in Inner Mongolia —the first such move in two decades — and imposed losses on some creditors. Authorities have since orchestrated bailouts of two other banks and intervened to quell at least two bank runs by jittery depositors.

The CBIRC on Monday approved the rescue plan of one of those lenders, Hengfeng Bank Co. The Shandong-based bank is raising 100 billion yuan ($14 billion) in new equity from investors including Central Huijin Investment Ltd., a unit of China’s sovereign wealth fund.

The regulator over weekend also said it will continue to press on with its two-year campaign against shadowing banking by reducing financial institutions’ non-compliant investments in non-standard assets, which are mostly loans disguised as investments. Insurers should clean up investments that can flow through several products and leveraged transactions between related parties, it said.

It said it would improve risk management in areas such as real estate by preventing speculative housing deals and blocking illegal flows of funds into properties. The central bank, meanwhile, announced it would build a long-term regulatory mechanism to more closely monitor financing to the sector.

China financial market faces a pivotal year as it opens to full foreign ownership. The regulator, which reiterated its commitment to overseeing the opening, is in part counting on the sharpened competition to instill more discipline in its domestic firms. Starting with its futures and insurance markets this month, the nation is enacting the most sweeping changes in decades to allow the likes of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. and BlackRock, Inc. to expand their footprint in China.

The CBIRC also encouraged the conversion of household savings to more long-term capital investments and a greater development of corporate annuity and endowment insurance businesses. The regulator wants wealth management, insurance and trust products to be directly involved in financing and cultivating long-term investments. — Bloomberg

Quality breeds allegiance

Tom Clancy’s The Division 2
Sony PlayStation 4

THE LAUNCH of Tom Clancy’s The Division in 2016 was met with great expectations. As an online role-playing game, it bore the expertise of developer Massive Entertainment, whose previous work in seeing Assassin’s Creed: Revelations and Far Cry 3 through gave it the confidence to pledge the setting of new standards in multiplayer engagement. Needless to say, the assistance that it received from other Ubisoft subsidiaries, particularly Red Storm Entertainment, Ubisoft Reflections, and Ubisoft Annecy enabled it to meet its objectives, albeit not without growing pains.

The cutting-edge visuals, outstanding combat mechanics, and immersive setting of Tom Clancy’s The Division shone from the outset, but Massive Entertainment still needed to scramble after it hit store shelves in order to address the glaring lack of content, frustrating capacity of enemies to absorb damage, paper-thin storyline, and significant technical glitches that all detracted from the overall experience. That said, it bore such promise, and met said promise soon enough, that it went on to become Ubisoft’s best-selling title of all time, generating revenues north of $300 million worldwide and, in the process, ensuring the release of a sequel.

Parenthetically, Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 picks up from where its predecessor left off, following the narrative seven months after events showing the devastation the release of Green Poison, a reengineered strain of smallpox, wreaked upon New York. This time, however, Washington serves as the backdrop for its progression, with the White House used by the Joint Task Force as base of operations. Gamers assume the role of an agent of the Strategic Homeland Division and help keep as much order as possible within the chaos created by a de facto civil war.

Outside of the plot, which remains paper thin, Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 proves superior to its predecessor in all aspects. It certainly hits the ground running, presenting the District of Columbia as a near-perfect facsimile of its real-life representation and providing gamers with open-world choices within rewarding mission structures. Combat is straightforward, if challenging; stealth and precision marked by care are keys to survival, whether going solo or as part of groups, and regardless of the type of factions to which enemies of the moment belong. And, yes, the degrees of difficulty fluctuate, but, unlike the first offering, stay eminently fair. Thusly, a commitment to persevere prevails; failure is inevitable, but frustration does not set in because insight borne of experience does pay dividends.

In this regard, Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 encourages the proper planning of skill upgrades, and in the context of group excursions. Meanwhile, skirmishes yield loot drops that expand equipment and weaponry. Side activities are offered in abundance, but invariably within the context of enriching story perspectives and stakes. For the more adventurous, there is the Dark Zone, where other gamers can and will be enemies — sometimes under the guise of collaboration. Within this area, a separate leveling regime is in place, and going rogue offers the opportunity to appreciate the challenges from the other side. In any case, the interactions underscore the sharpness with which player-versus-player scenarios are laid out.

Significantly, Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 continues to receive programming support. A recent patch, for instance, enables loot targeting; map updates occur every day and show specific locations for specific gear. Moreover, it gives relevance to brand loyalty; in-game equipment makers now have items for all customizable slots, thus enabling access to bonuses. If nothing else, Ubisoft’s commitment to keep tweaking the title long after release signifies sensitivity to feedback and dedication to process improvement. Future content updates promise map expansions, talent customization, and further understanding of the overarching narrative.

All told, Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 keeps gamers going for more. If there’s one thing developers have known to be harder than generating interest in their products, it’s keeping said interest over time. Clearly, Massive Entertainment is bent on continually cultivating the interest, a decided boon in this day and age of infinite entertainment choices. Consumers are intrinsically fickle, and the sheer number of options available to them taps into this nature. Ubisoft is betting that quality breeds allegiance — and winning.

THE GOOD:

• Superior to predecessor in all aspects

• Combat is challenging but fair

• Continued support encourages long-term commitment

• Near-perfect representation of Washington, D.C.

THE BAD:

• Paper-thin plot

• Absence of a narrative hook

• Still subject to loot fatigue

RATING: 8.5/10

POSTSCRIPT: Silent Hill series creature designer Masahiro Ito over the weekend teased new information on a new title, the development of which he tweeted he is a “core member.” Whether he is referring to the latest release of the immensely popular franchise or to another intellectual property remains to be seen. He has been working on the story and design of Acid Bufferzone, a science-fiction offering of a post-war Earth, since 2014.

How PSEi member stocks performed — January 6, 2020

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, January 6, 2020.

 

P4.1-trillion budget expected to sustain infrastructure push

THE P4.1-trillion national budget for 2020 missed its targeted enactment date by a few days but is expected to sustain the government’s flagship infrastructure projects, the chairman of the Senate finance committee said Monday.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte was due to sign the 2020 spending plan Monday afternoon.

“We were off by a few days but this should have no impact on the operation of the government,” Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara said in a statement. Malacañang has said that the delay is to allow more scrutiny of the spending plan.

This is the second year the government has failed to sign the budget on time.

Mr. Duterte signed the 2019 spending plan on April 15 and vetoed some P95.3 billion in provisions which he found unconstitutional, which reduced it to P3.662 trillion.

“Our experience with the 2019 General Appropriations Act was regrettable. The delays faced in the approval of the measure proved to be very costly for the people, who were expecting the timely delivery of key services, and on the economy, which grew at a slower pace,” Mr. Angara said.

To prevent a repeat of the budget delay, the House approved its version on Sept. 20; the Senate approved its spending bill on Nov. 27. The reconciled version of the budget was ratified on Dec. 11.

The final version of the 2020 General Appropriations Act allocated P580.8 billion to the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), which is a P51.139 billion net increase from a year earlier.

“The idea is to complete as many projects as possible by the time President Duterte ends his term in 2022. For the more complex projects, the plan is to get the ball rolling so that the next administration will just continue these and complete them during its term,” he said.

The biggest portion of the budget went to the education sector with P654.6 billion for the Department of Education, State Universities and Colleges, the Commission on Higher Education, and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority.

The DPWH budget was second-largest while the Department of Interior and Local Government was given P239.8 billion; the Department of National Defense P191.7 billion; and the Department of Social Welfare and Development P163.8 billion.

Other agencies with the highest appropriations are: the Department of Health, P101 billion; Department of Transportation, P99.3 billion; the Department of Agriculture, P62.2 billion; the Judiciary branch, P40.1 billion and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, P25.5 billion. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Investment priority eyed for nickel processing plants

DAVAO CITY — The Philippine Nickel Industry Association (PNIA) is undertaking preparations to gain investment priority status for domestic processing plants, which will allow miners to capture more value-added than the current practice of exporting ore.

PNIA Executive Director Charmaine Olea-Capili, speaking to media Friday, said the process is underway with stakeholders working on setting up a technical working group to finalize the Nickel Industry Road Map, a stepping stone in making processing plants eligible for priority status, with attendant incentives for parties establishing such facilities.

The TWG which will be led by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Environmental and Natural Resources (DENR), with participation from the business sector, non-government organizations, and universities, she said.

“We have spoken to (Trade) Undersecretary (for Competitiveness and Innovation) Rafaelita (M.) Aldaba, and she is very happy that the nickel industry is coming up with a road map because, she said, it will enable her to put the nickel industry… in the national investment priority plan,” Ms. Capili said.

The Philippines is the world’s second-biggest nickel producer with an output of 340,000 tons or ore in 2018, after Indonesia with 560,000 tons, according to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB).

In the first three quarters of 2019, nickel accounted for 48% of the country’s P99.58 billion metallic production value. These are mainly exported, with China as the main market.

“Despite the 1.24% slip in the average nickel price, nickel direct shipping ore with the aid of its other products (mixed nickel-cobalt sulfide and scandium oxalate) again took the spotlight accounting for 48% or P47.36 billion of the total value during the period,” MGB said in its third quarter mines report released Dec. 18, 2019.

The PNIA estimates that about two million jobs could be generated, mostly in Mindanao where the majority of the nickel mining operations are located, once plants that will process raw minerals into finished product are established.

“If you talk about regional economic growth, we are projecting right now… two million jobs. Imagine if you talk about velocity of money and how the ripple effect of coming up with jobs. You don’t just create jobs, you create businesses, create more global competitive advantage, and put the Philippines in the global sphere,” Ms. Capili said.

She said electric vehicles are one of the most promising potential customers for processed nickel.

In Mindanao, most of the nickel mines are in provinces within the Caraga Region, as well as the island province of Tawi-Tawi.

The PNIA members operating in these areas are: Agata Mining Ventures, Inc. in Agusan del Norte; Platinum Group Metals Corp. in Surigao de Norte; and CTP Construction and Mining Corp., Marcventures Mining and Development Corp., and Carascal Nickel Corp. in Surigao del Sur. — Maya M. Padillo

Gov’t monitoring oil prices as new round of fuel excise taxes take effect

THE economic team is monitoring possible consequences of higher oil prices due to the Iran crisis, which broke at a time when the government is due to impose new fuel excise taxes, presenting a threat to inflation and growth assumptions.

The crisis could also dent overseas employment, a major source of foreign exchange for the economy, with the air force placed on standby Sunday to mount evacuation flights to Iran and Iraq.

The President’s spokesman, Salvador S. Panelo, said at a briefing that Socioeconomic Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia and the rest of the economic team are on alert for the possible impact of higher crude oil prices after the US launched an air stroke that killed a senior Iranian general in Iraq Friday.

The air strike killed Iranian Quds Force Commander Qasem Soleimani and Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. The Iranian government said it will take revenge against the US.

“I’m sure our economic bodies, ginagawa lahat lahat ipagtugunan ng anuman krisis na darating (I’m sure our economic bodies are doing all they can to address whatever crisis emerges),” Mr. Panelo said.

Leody Q. De Guzman, president of labor group Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino (BMP) on Sunday called on the government to suspend the third tranche of excise taxes on petroleum products under the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law.

The President on Sunday ordered the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) to plan for potential evacuations from Iran and Iraq. — Gillian M. Cortez

DoF expects double-taxation deal with Cambodia soon

NEGOTIATIONS for a double-taxation agreement (DTA) are expected to conclude soon with both sides in substantial agreement on many points, the Department of Finance (DoF) said.

Undersecretary Antonette C. Tionko said Cambodia has agreed to “the majority of the proposals of the Philippines” on the provisions of their proposed DTA during the second round of negotiations in December.

“The negotiation was held in a friendly, cooperative and constructive atmosphere of mutual understanding, with a frank exchange of information and ideas,” according to the DoF-led delegation’s report.

A DTA is a tax treaty that seeks to prevent a scenario where individuals and organizations residing or operating in other countries are taxed by both jurisdictions for the same income.

Currently, the Philippines has DTAs with the US, Switzerland, the UK, the United Arab Emirates, Thailand, Australia and Germany.

A possible DTA is also now being discussed with Ireland.

The Philippine delegation, led by Ms. Tionko, met with its counterparts in Cambodia on Dec. 11 to 13. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Farmers ask DTI to help boost their attractiveness to banks

THE Philippine Chamber of Agriculture and Food, Inc. (PCAFI) is urging the trade department to assist farmers in developing business plans to make them more attractive loan clients for banks.

“I would like (Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez) to help us set up a special team of financial advisors (for) farmers,” PCAFI President Danilo V. Fausto said in an interview before the association was due to conduct a general meeting Saturday.

He said that assistance from the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) should extend beyond micro-businesses and also cover larger agribusiness associations, noting that the United Broilers and Raisers Association (UBRA) poultry association is interested in putting up a pre-production plant.

“We cannot allow or require Landbank to prepare this for us because that will be a conflict of interest… so we need a third party and we’re asking assistance from DTI perhaps for financial advisory groups that can help our people to get that very elusive credit access,” he added.

Mr. Fausto also said that the industry needs a mobile phone-based centralized system of data on supply, demand, and prices of all commodities nationwide “so that producers know what to produce and where to sell these products.”

UBRA President Elias Jose M. Inciong told reporters at the same event that there is a gap in providing data access to business investors.

“‘Yung investment decisions, they base it on retail (prices),” he said, instead of farmgate prices. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Government looking to offer Premyo bonds yearly

THE government is looking to offer its Premyo bonds annually following the strong reception seen for its first issuance last year, where the Treasury raised nearly P5 billion via the one-year securities.

Asked on future plans for the Premyo bonds, National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon told reporters on Monday following the auction for Treasury bills: “Baka (Maybe) we’ll start with an annual issuance.”

Ms. De Leon said Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III is “inclined” to offer the Premyo bonds every year, noting the Finance chief has expressed optimism in a statement over the weekend.

Mr. Dominguez said in a statement on Sunday that this bond issue “will now be a “part of the government’s proactive financing strategy.”

Ms. De Leon however said they have yet to establish partnerships with possible donors for the non-cash reward pool if they will offer the papers yearly.

“It’s not only the cash reward, we also have to be able to get some of the other non-cash reward components, so (there is a) partnership with FINEX (Financial Executives of the Philippines) to discuss how we’re going to have other donations for the non-cash component,” Ms. De Leon added.

The government raised P4.961 billion via the one-year Premyo bonds during the three-week offer period last December, oversubscribed by around 65% from the initial offer of P3 billion.

With the higher volume, Ms. De Leon said they were able to expand the total cash prize pool to as much as P4.5 million from just P3 million previously.

“We are really appreciative of the reception, particularly ’yung sa mga (those from) individuals because we saw a lot of interest, particularly those who went online. So we are urging our market makers to develop their online facility para (so) we’ll be able to reach a far and wide [investor pool], to capture more individuals to join the Premyo bonds,” she said.

Ms. De Leon said the first of four quarterly draws will be held on March 18. It will be done in the presence of representatives from the Commission on Audit and the Treasury’s rewards committee for the Premyo bonds.

Premyo bonds allow small investors to invest for as little as P500 with an interest rate of three percent per annum, while the principal amount will be paid back after one year or on the maturity date.

Every P500 worth of investment translates to one raffle coupon where bondholders can win cash prizes up to P1 million and non-cash rewards such as condominium units during quarterly draws.

Sought for comment, Robinsons Bank Corp. peso debt trader Kevin S. Palma said this type of financial instrument will help promote financial inclusion and aid the government in reaching untapped small investors.

“I think the Premyo bond is a tremendous product to have should the government decide to issue those annually. It promotes financial inclusion where it could potentially reach untapped retail investors at a reasonable cost,” Mr. Palma said in a Viber message Monday.

The Department of Finance earlier said 44% of total investments in the bond sale were P5,000 and below, “indicating that the Premyo Bonds successfully reached retail investors.” — Beatrice M. Laforga

M&A scene vibrant amid confidence in economic momentum — ING Bank

GOOGLE PLAY

THE business sector is bullish on mergers and acquisitions (M&A) across a range of sectors because it is confident in continued growth, making transport, utilities and telecoms particularly attractive, ING Bank N.V. said.

ING Bank Manila’s Managing Director Hans B. Sicat, the Dutch group’s country head in the Philippines, said: “What we see among the conglomerates is really the attempt to expand (in) certain other operations… in other sectors. So that goes from everything from the power sector to the telecom… all these little activities from data providers to cable operators,” he said in an interview with BusinessWorld.

Mr. Sicat added that “everyone is betting on” infrastructure due to the government’s Build, Build, Build program.

“That goes into trying to be involved in (transport)… the road projects, of course, and we are seeing interest now in airports.”

He also noted that the bank has observed more interest in logistics businesses.

“That industry, by the way, is highly fragmented. Some are trying to buy and consolidate different parts… and some are trying to build higher-level, more integrated logistics centers,” he said.

ING entered the Philippine market in 1990 as a wholesale lender.

In 2019, the group unveiled its retail offering in the form of an all-online digital bank. Mr. Sicat said the online bank’s depositors are currently in the six digits.

ING Bank-Manila’s assets at the end of 2018 amounted to P24.15 billion, making it the 30th biggest commercial bank in the Philippines. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Senate bill seeking to make overtime pay tax-exempt

SENATE President Pro Tempore Ralph G. Recto has filed a measure amending the tax code to shield overtime pay from taxation.

Under Senate Bill No. 601, Mr. Recto proposed to include overtime pay among the tax-exempt items in the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997. Mr. Recto first introduced the measure in the 15th Congress.

He said any revenue foregone in the proposed exemption will be offset by increased consumer spending. He noted the measure will benefit around 26.7 million workers in both the private and public sectors.

“This, in turn, would trigger demand for more goods and services thereby stimulating activity in the industrial and service sectors and eventually generating more taxes,” Mr. Recto said in a statement Monday.

Taxable income currently includes overtime pay components.

The tax code defines “overtime pay” as “compensation due to hours worked in excess of the required normal working hours.”

The Labor Code of the Philippines, under Presidential Decree No. 442, provides that the normal hours of work for all employees does not exceed eight hours per day, five days a week.

Overtime work may be performed provided the employee is given compensation, which the Labor Code specifies as 25% above the worker’s regular wage.

“Instead of being able to rest early and spend more time with the family, the employee is forced to extend working hours to achieve the organization’s goals,” he said.

“Thus, it is only fitting that the employee is properly compensated for additional work hours rendered.” — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Calabarzon towns seek JV partner for bulk water project

THE water districts of Dolores, Quezon and San Pablo City, Laguna are seeking a joint venture (JV) partner to implement the Lumbo Spring Bulk Water Supply Project, the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Center said Monday.

The project will improve service delivery and augment the existing water supply of both water districts, the PPP Center said in a statement.

The project, which has an estimated cost of P103.43 million, covers the funding, construction, operation, and maintenance of the bulk water facility.

Among the components of the project are: source development, pipe-gap installation, provision for 6.9 kilometers of transmission lines from the Balanga spring source to the San Pablo expansion area. The project will supply 10,000 cubic meters per day to San Pablo City Water District and 2,000 cubic meters per day to Dolores Water District over a 20-year concession period.

The PPP Center said interested parties have until Jan. 10 to buy the bid documents.

Both water districts, which are government-owned and controlled corporations (GOCCs), conducted the prequalification conference in San Pablo City on Dec. 27.

According to the project information memorandum issued on Dec. 13, both implementing agencies executed a water supply development assistance agreement in April 2008.

“The agreement states that SPCWD (San Pablo City Water District) shall provide the necessary engineering, technical and financial assistance to rehabilitate DWD’s (Dolores Water District) water transmission and distribution pipe network while DWD shall grant SPCWD the exclusive right and authority to build, operate and maintain the infrastructure facilities for the development of Lumbo Spring in Brgy. Putol, Dolores, Quezon for a period of 20 years,” according to the memorandum.

It also noted that the development of Lumbo Spring, which lies in southern San Pablo City and western Dolores, was put on hold because of a court case filed by a private entity to stop the project.

In 2016, the Office of the Ombudsman and the Supreme Court ruled in favor of both water districts. — Arjay L. Balinbin