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Pryce board approves P500-M share buyback

PRYCE Corp. said its board of directors approved on Friday a buy-back program of the company’s common shares for a worth of up to P500 million.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange, the Mindanao-focused importer and distributor of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) said the buy-back program is for a term of 24 months starting on Nov. 20, 2018 and ending on Nov. 19, 2020.
Before the program, the capital structure of the company was at P2.098 billion authorized capital stock, all of which were common shares, and P2.0245 billion issued and outstanding. It does not hold treasury shares.
“The buy-back program shall be executed in the open market through the trading facility of the Philippine Stock Exchange,” it said. “Repurchased shares shall be booked as treasury shares.”
Pryce said the buy-back program will be implemented in an orderly manner and should not adversely affect the company’s and its subsidiaries’ prospective and existing projects.
Shares in the company were up 6.65% at P5.45 after it disclosed the program.
Aside from its LPG business, Pryce owns and operates memorial parks in Mindanao cities such as Cagayan de Oro, Iligan City, Ozamiz, Polanco near Dipolog City, Zamboanga City and Davao City.
Its scope includes smaller-sized memorial parks suited for the southern island’s secondary cities or major municipalities.
Pryce subsidiary Pryce Gases, Inc. is engaged in the importation and distribution of LPG under the “PryceGas” brand. It also produces and sells industrial gases.
Another unit. Pryce Pharmaceuticals, Inc. is a wholesaler and distributor of private branded multi-vitamins and some over-the-counter generic durgs. — Victor V. Saulon

A Brown Q3 net profit falls 5.8%

A BROWN Co., Inc. reported a 5.8% drop in third-quarter net profit to P82.85 million despite double-digit growth in its revenue for the period.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange, the Cagayan de Oro City-based real estate developer and dealer in agricultural products said revenue during the quarter hit P333.07 million, up 33.6% from a year earlier.
In a review of its quarterly operations, the company said it had sold 11 socialized, 20 economic and 78 high-end units or a total of 109 lots, and house and lot units.
A Brown also said crude palm oil sales were up 91% or P7.9 million during the quarter and 486% or P49.1 million at the end of September “due to the increase in quantity processed and sold.”
The company said sales by its water services business rose by 20%, while those of palm olein fell 77%. Also down were sales of kernel nuts and fertilizer, palm acid oil, palm stearin, and palm fatty acid distillate.
Costs and expenses during the period grew at around the same pace at P32.7% to P227.60 million from P171.56 million.
In the nine months to September, net profit fell 7.3% to P256.91 million.
Revenue during the nine months rose 34.4% to P913.33 million. This was widely outpaced by the 49.3% rise in cost and expenses to P631.51 million.
A Brown’s real estate development projects are in Cagayan de Oro City and Initao in Misamis Oriental; Cainta, Rizal; and Valencia City, Bukidnon; and Butuan City, Agusan del Norte.
The company also has ventures in oil palm nursery and seedlings distribution, palm oil milling, operation of hotels, real estate brokerage, power generation, and investment in gold mining assets.
On Friday, A Brown rose 2.67% to P0.77. — Victor V. Saulon

IP E-Game partly divests from non-core business DPI

IP E-Game Ventures, Inc. said on Friday that its executive committee decided to partly divest from non-core business Digital Paradise, Inc. (DPI), which has not contributed income to the listed company.
The committee derives its authority board decision on Oct. 25, 2012 to authorize and direct the executive committee to evaluate the potential sale or divestment of its non-core assets.
“DPI has been considered a non-core asset of the Issuer. It has not contributed income to the Issuer. The business of DPI is not in the core business of the Issuer,” IP E-Game Ventures said.
It said at the time of the divestment, the divested shares worth nearly P63 million represented 1.86% of the company’s total assets of about P3.17 billion.
The listed company said the decision to divest comes after the rationalization of its operations.
It said a deed of assignment was executed in favor of Y-Fi Business Solutions, Inc., covering 62,928,454 DPI shares at the par value of P1.00 per share. — Victor V. Saulon

BPI board approves expanded first bond tranche of P25 billion

BANK of the Philippine Islands (BPI) is planning to issue the first tranche of its P50-billion peso bond and commercial paper program amounting to P25 billion.
In a regulatory filing Friday, the Ayala-led bank said its board increased the approved maximum size of the initial bond issuance to P25 billion from the P15 billion announced last Oct. 17.
In a Sept. 20 disclosure, the bank announced it is establishing a peso-denominated bond and commercial paper program of up to P50 billion as approved by its board.
Lenders can now raise fresh funds through corporate bonds with greater ease as new rules do away with having to secure approval from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.
Last week, Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. (Metrobank) raised P10 billion via fixed-rate bonds, part of its P100-billion bond and commercial paper program announced last month.
This was the first ever bond issue by a bank since the central bank liberalized rules on their fundraising activities.
BDO Unibank, Inc., Philippine National Bank as well as UnionBank of the Philippines have also set up their own peso bond programs of up to P100 billion, P20 billion and P20 billion, respectively.
A number of banks have been conducting various fund-raising activities ahead of tighter risk management requirement by the central bank which will take effect next year under the international Basel 3 standards.
In May, BPI completed a P50-billion rights offer, with the proveeds funding its business operations and expansion.
The bank also raised $600 million in August through a drawdown from its $2-billion medium-term note program, the largest issuance by a bank in the offshore debt market.
BPI reported a P5.98-billion net profit in the third quarter on the back of the double-digit expansion in net interest income.
BPI shares were up 5.21% at P88.90 on Thursday. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

AEON PHL raises P1-B from fixed-rate note issue

AEON Credit Service (Philippines), Inc. said it raised P1 billion from an issue of fixed-rate notes, with the proceeds intended to support the company’s operations.
At the listing ceremony on Friday at the Philippine Dealing and Exchange Corp. (PDEx) in Makati City on Friday, the consumer finance firm enrolled P1 billion worth of peso-denominated paper with tenors of three and five years.
AEON Philippines listed P900 million in notes, which carry an interest rate of 7.299% to be paid semi-annually until 2021.
The remaining P100 million in notes was priced at 7.695%, paid out twice a year until 2023.
The fixed-rate paper carry guarantees from the Credit Guarantee and Investment Facility, a trust fund of the Asian Development Bank.
The lending company’s notes are the first in the country under the ASEAN+3 Multi-Currency Bond Issuance Framework, which allows companies to issue local-currency bonds in multiple countries within the region.
In an interview, AEON Philippines President and Chief Executive Officer Takayuki Araki said the additional capital raised will be used to match the duration of its liabilities and receivables and fund its loan programs.
“The tenor of our receivables is getting longer and longer. We have been actually seeking for the longer tenor to avoid the mismatching of the duration of our liabilities and receivables,” Mr. Araki told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of the listing ceremony.
“That’s why this time we have [issued] this type of note which tenors are three and five years, which exactly matches our receivables.”
In his speech, Mr. Araki added that funds raised will be used to “primarily fund the operations of its tricycle and four-wheeler loans.”
Established in the Philippines in 2013, AEON Philippines, a subsidiary of AEON Financial Service Co., Ltd. in Japan, started offering installment loans for the purchase of consumer products such as home appliances, furniture and electronic goods, focusing on unbanked and underserved clients.
The firm then ventured into tricycle and four-wheel vehicle loans “in support of the Philippine government’s goal of financial inclusion.”
AEON Philippines tapped Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. as the market maker for its notes program, while First Meto Investment Corp. served as arranger and underwriter.
Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd. acted as the firm’s financial adviser.
The notes listing brings the total volume of outstanding securities at the PDEx to P977.27 billion, floated by 50 companies. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Peso continues higher after central bank raises rates

THE peso continued its ascent against the dollar on Friday as market participants reacted to further monetary tightening by the central bank.
The peso ended the week at P52.715 against the dollar on Friday, up from the P52.805 finish yesterday.
The peso was stronger the whole day, opening the session at P52.65. It hit a high of P52.625, while the low was P52.74.
Trading volume slipped to $756.6 million from $799.3 million the previous day.
“The peso continued to improve as a reaction to the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) action yesterday,” a foreign exchange trader said in a phone interview Friday.
The Monetary Board raised policy rates by 25 basis points (bp) yesterday, marking the fifth consecutive tightening move this year, as it saw the need for preemptive action amid global uncertainty.
Benchmark rates now range from 4.25-5.25%, with the key policy rate now at 4.75%, the highest since March 2009.
“Probably they still expect higher inflation in the coming months, and probably that is the reason why they hiked once again,” the trader said.
He added that some analysts are still expecting the monetary authority to raise rates again by the first quarter of the year.
Meanwhile, another trader said the 25bp rate hike helped boost sentiment in the peso.
“The proactive nature of the decision yesterday boosted market sentiment in the peso,” the trader said in an e-mail. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Bourse rises for third straight day back above 7,000

By Janina C. Lim, Reporter
PHILIPPINE SHARES rose overall for the third straight day back above the 7,000 line on Friday, a day after the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) raised policy rates further — though by a smaller magnitude — to temper inflation expectations.
The Philippine Stock Exchange index rose by 1.88% or 130.75 points to 7,083.34, while the broader all-shares index climbed 1.31% or 55.65 points to 4,310.52.
“Most of the momentum today has been due to the Monetary Board of the BSP deciding to tighten policy anew Thursday,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan said in a mobile message on Friday.
The central bank increased policy rates by another 25 basis points — though smaller than the back-to-back 50 bps hike in August and September and matching May and June’s increase. Policy rates are now up by 175 bps since May to 4.25-5.25%.
And as the third-quarter earnings season draws to a close, investors will be looking to economic data to sustain momentum, Justino B. Calaycay, Jr., Philstocks Financial, Inc.’s senior research analyst, said in a note on Friday, adding the the year’s closing months are usually marked by rallies. Macroeconomic data scheduled to be reported by the Philippine Statistics Authority are November inflation as well as October factory output and employment data on Dec. 5, as well as October merchandise trade data on Dec. 11.
Most sectoral indices were up on Friday except for mining and oil which dropped 0.41% or 37.43 points to 8,948,12 after the Department of Environment and Natural Resources announced on Friday results of a review of the appeal by miners who were ordered sanctioned in February last year largely for operating in watersheds and for allegedly polluting nearby waters.
Financials surged 3.27% or 52.65 points to 1,661.84, property went up 1.79% or 60.49 points to 3,426.47, holding firms increased 1.53% or 104.69 points to 6,914.29, industrial edged up 0.98% or 103.13 points to 10,672.85 while services rose 0.61% or 8.30 points to 1381.18.
Advancers trumped decliners at 115 to 65 while 47 shares were unchanged.
Foreigners continued to dump shares with net selling of P148.538 million, nearly seven times Thursday’s P21.499 million.
About 699. 675 million shares worth P9.913 billion were traded on Friday, compared to Thursday’s 779.116 million worth P6.51 billion.

Championing ethical and professional excellence

By Mark Louis F. FerrolinoSpecial Features Writer

For more than two decades now, CFA Society Philippines serves as a catalyst for improving the quality and standards of the financial profession in the country. Its unwavering efforts on promoting highest ethical standards and professional excellence within the local investment community take part in achieving a more developed capital market that creates new opportunities, thus fueling economic growth.

As part of its mission of improving the highest standards of ethics, education, and professional excellence for the ultimate benefit of the country, the society partakes in supporting higher levels of competence in the investment industry by advocating industry-wide principles like the Asset Manager Professional Code of Conduct, and the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS).

According to CFA Society Philippines’ Board of Trustee Dr. Robert B. Ramos, who is also heading the organization’s Industry Relations Committee, the society has achieved a lot of benchmarks this year on pushing local firms to adopt the said standards.

He shared in an interview with BusinessWorld that there are now four asset management companies in the country who comply with the Asset Manager Professional Code of Conduct, a voluntary code of conduct that helps asset managers practice ethical principles and puts clients’ interests first.

These are the Union Bank of the Philippines-Trust and Investment Services Group, the Security Bank Corp. Trust and Asset Management Group, the EastWest Bank Trust Division, and the Bank of the Philippine Islands Asset Management and Trust Corp.

By adopting the Code, asset management firms signal their commitment to commonly held ethical principles and allow plan sponsors and other investors to easily identify which asset managers uphold the principles that resolve conflicts of interest in favor of investors.

“When you say you adhere to fund management standards, it’s good to have a global benchmark, so at least you can say: Okay, this is my reference and we practice that,” Mr. Ramos said.

Meanwhile, there is finally one local investment firm who claimed of compliance with the GIPS Standards, a set of voluntary standards based on the fundamental principles of full disclosure and fair representation of investment performance results, the EastWest Bank Trust Division.

The GIPS Standards guide investment firms on how to appropriately calculate and present their investment results to prospective clients. Becoming GIPS compliant means that the firm computes returns according to certain standards, Mr. Ramos said.

“There are regulations in place that you have to show them (clients), but, being compliant to the GIPS Standards highlights higher standards of reporting,” he added.

To encourage other firms to comply with the Asset Manager Professional Code of Conduct and the GIPS Standards, CFA Society Philippines continuously spreads knowledge on how the standards are done and how firms will benefit from it.

“The first step that we usually do, and we’ve been doing this for several years, is education, education and education. We’ve been reaching out to other firms, we’ve been reaching out to other asset managers, we’ve been reaching out to the regulators to highlight the benefits,” Mr. Ramos said.

Aside from pushing for the adoption of the aforementioned standards, the society is also working relentlessly in making significant contributions to the Asia-Pacific Research Exchange (ARX), a research exchange project initiated and developed by CFA Institute to promote and foster the effective and efficient sourcing and distribution of Asia Pacific-oriented finance and investment management research.

ARX accepts contributions from CFA charterholders and even from non-charterholders, including finance and investment management industry professionals, the government, regulators and the academe.

“This year, we are very happy because, finally, we submitted some studies to the ARX, and they acknowledged it. We also uploaded some videos to ARX. So, that was a big starting point,” Mr. Ramos said.

“For me, if I’m sharing something to ARX, my other neighbors across Asia-Pacific can learn from our best practices. In the same way, if I see some studies that I could learn from or [I could] implement here, I would love too. Of course, students can also use that as data and information [resource] for their own studies if they want to create papers on fund management,” Mr. Ramos said when asked on the significance of such research exchange initiative.

In the years ahead, CFA Society Philippines will still fulfill its mandate by continuously offering educational programs that help members remain experts on key topics that impact global markets, creating awareness of the significance of the CFA designation among various constituent groups, being an advocate on behalf of industry issues, and encouraging ethical behavior.

“The major objective of the society is to promote higher standards in finance or investment. But, that’s also the biggest hurdle because you have to reach out a lot, you have to coordinate a lot, then we have to make sure that those words resound with the people. The nice thing with the society and with the exam is it really focuses on ethics. We do seminars on ethics and the exam has an ethics portion. People who take the CFA exam are taught how to put the clients’ interest first,” Mr. Ramos said.

Mark Jasson C. Ilao, CFA: A teacher at heart

When Mark Jasson C. Ilao was younger, he delighted in teaching. Whether it’s with his friends and acquaintances from back when he was earning his degree in Management Engineering in Ateneo, or with public school students when he volunteered to teach on weekends, the act of sharing knowledge had been his passion from the beginning.

Even now, as he works as securities brokerage firm COL Financial Group, Inc.’s Business Development Officer, with a number of achievements under his belt, this passion never left him. He is a member of CFA Society Philippines and was named as the group’s “Most Promising Charterholder of the Year” last August. He also holds the right to use the Certificate in Investment Performance Measurement (CIPM) designation, another program under CFA Institute focusing on investment performance analysis.

CFA Institute is the global association of investment professionals that sets the standard for professional excellence, credentials, and ethical behavior. Mr. Ilao joined the ranks of CFA Charterholders, embodying their expertise and principles, all to drive his mission of educating Filipinos on the value of investing for their future.

“Here in COL, it’s an advocacy of ours to educate more people and personally, it’s what led me to this company,” he said in an interview with BusinessWorld.

“I also share that kind of vision to be able to educate investors and guide them properly. When I realized the importance of financial markets in investing, there was a question within me: how do I share this with more people? Thankfully, I was able to find a company that precisely shares that kind of value,” he added.

It had not always been easy though. Earlier in his career, Mr. Ilao worked as an investment analyst under BDO’s Trust and Investments Group, where many of his colleagues and clients shared his technical knowledge of the financial markets. Moving from a position where high-level discourse was commonplace to a more public-facing one, he had to learn how to translate his investment knowledge to something that retail clients could easily digest.

“In the case of retail clients, it’s different in a sense that you should go back to their objectives. That’s how I was able to adjust. Instead of giving them big terms or concepts that may be alien to them, we start with them, what their objectives are, what they want to achieve for their investment journey, and that’s how I establish dialogue with them,” Mr. Ilao said.

Mr. Ilao believes this is the key to making a lasting impact in the current state of the investment industry. According to recent data released by the Philippine Stock Exchange, less than one percent of Filipinos engage in the stock market. If more people were educated in the workings of the financial markets, Mr. Ilao said, the more favorable it would be for the industry and the society as a whole.

Teaching the public the significance of investing, debunking the myth that the stock market is only for the rich, and offering them the opportunity to learn and access various investments, he said, are the keys to financial inclusion.

“Once you have an educated population of investors, the level of discussion and discourse in the industry will hopefully become more mature, deeper, and I think that would lead to better investment decisions in general for the retail investors, the intermediaries, the institutions, and the financial professionals,” he said.

“Financial literacy, that’s something that we should still improve on going forward,” he ended. — Bjorn Biel M. Beltran

Mark L. Yu, CFA: A financial and oil industry maven

Early in his career, Mark L. Yu made a drastic move: quit a high-paying job at a Silicon Valley-headquartered semiconductor company called PMC-Sierra because he felt something was missing. “I wanted to be exposed to an industry that directly interacted with the consumers,” he said.

His resignation came as a shock to his boss, who, in a vain attempt to coax him into staying, offered to give Mr. Yu a raise and the chance to spend his time volunteering once a week (Mr. Yu once took a year off to do volunteer work).

He decided to come home to the Philippines in 2002 to help with their family business — SEAOIL Philippines, Inc., a leading independent oil company, which his father, Francis C. Yu, established in 1978.

At first, it didn’t seem like a good idea. “When I came back, we were insolvent. We were restructuring our obligations as a result of the ’97 Asian Financial Crisis,” Mr. Yu said.

“It took several years to be able to get us out of insolvency and up to a point wherein we had an ample amount of bank lines to support the growth of the business,” said Mr. Yu, president for retail and chief financial officer of SEAOIL.

The financial expertise of Mr. Yu certainly played an enormous role in the revival of the company. But it’s interesting that his experience in finance — he majored in Engineering Physics at the University of British Columbia in Canada — began fortuitously.

While he was still at PMC-Sierra, he said, “I was given stock options and the value of those stock options was worth quite a significant amount, enough to sort of intrigue me in the field of finance.”

He then took and passed the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) exams administered by the US-based CFA Institute, a global association of investment professionals.

According to CFA Institute, over 150,000 professionals all over the world — including Mr. Yu — hold a CFA credential. “The charter gives a strong understanding of advanced investment analysis and real-world portfolio management skills,” the association says on its Web site.

Last August, Mr. Yu was named the “Outstanding Charterholder of the Year” by CFA Society Philippines, a member society of CFA Institute.

Mr. Yu was once the president of the CFA Society Philippines. (He now sits on its board of advisers). He spent a lot of his time promoting the association’s programs and attracting more finance professionals to become members.

But he considers his efforts to improve the organization’s corporate governance to be his greatest contribution. It was during his term, he said, that a secretariat was formed, which serves to provide institutional stability, among other important things.

Mr. Yu has also worked — and continues to work — toward improving the corporate governance of SEAOIL. And his efforts have borne fruit.

“Growing the retail network and improving our credit standing with the banks significantly are results of a good corporate governance,” he said.

To date, SEAOIL has more than 400 retail stations in high-growth areas — a far cry from the 28 that it had when Mr. Yu started working for the company.

Though he has helped the family company get back on its feet and grow, which are no easy feats, Mr. Yu still has a big goal to achieve. He aspires to further grow the SEAOIL — and by grow he means capturing a larger market share — by promoting innovation to lower costs and spearheading the developments of products that create value for its customers.

Mr. Yu is now concerned with not only one, but two sets of customers: the franchisees of SEAOIL gas stations and the end-users of the fuels the company sells. “We want to grow our retail network to a point where everyone can access our fuel,” he said.

Vehicles to boost your business

At the heart of the most successful businesses is an efficient and orderly system of operations. A business is a well-oiled machine, with different parts fulfilling different functions at the right time, at the right frequency.

For small enterprises, a smoothly running model is a must to drive growth and future expansion. To create an effective system, one must consider which people to hire, what skillsets are needed, the logistics and the supply chain necessary to sustain the business, and most importantly, the capital outlay and running costs of the whole venture. Essentially, one should first have all the right parts.

Finding a vehicle appropriate to one’s business is one of the biggest challenges to this. The benefits of commercial vehicles are self-evident: they serve as the backbone of a company’s supply chain, delivering products and people where they need to be.

But before they can serve this purpose, there is a long list of factors to consider. Should you buy? Should you rent? For years, small and medium enterprise (SME) owners have argued over whether buying a fleet of commercial vehicles outright or simply leasing them makes the most business sense.

On one hand, traditionalists argue that ownership over your commercial vehicles could grant you the flexibility that committing to paying a lease will not. The vehicles would become an asset, could be used as collateral when applying for loans, and would be available for use in case of a personal emergency.

On the other hand, leasing your vehicles will free up significant capital that you can reinvest in other areas of your business, and it will be less of a hurdle to overcome for businesses that are starting out.

“Cash is the lifeblood of a business, and buying a vehicle ties up capital in a depreciating asset when it could be invested elsewhere in the business. Many business owners prefer the idea of paying for their transport needs in smaller, fixed, regular installments rather than one large, upfront sum,” British Vehicle Rental and Leasing Association chief executive Gerry Keaney wrote for The Telegraph.

Whichever side a business owner agrees with, what remains is the need for a considerably large chunk of capital to acquire a commercial vehicle. If not careful, an enterprise can run itself dry simply from the inefficient use of them.

“A poorly performing delivery fleet is a challenge for any company. But to a small business, it can cause a devastating trickle-down effect,” RAM Commercial, subsidiary of the Italian-American corporation Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, wrote for Forbes.

“Poor vehicle maintenance, erratic fuel costs and frustrated drivers leaving for other companies only scratch the surface of what could become a long run of escalating costs and other problems. But there are plenty of ways small businesses can rein in costs and improve fleet management systems.”

For commercial vehicles to become effective tools to grow a business, SMEs should learn how they can minimize such risks. RAM Commercial suggested to get a feel of the total operating costs, and closely analyze data such as maintenance cost figures, insurance expenses, driver wage figures and fuel costs.

For those starting out, such costs include vehicle registration and licensing, commercial automotive insurance, vehicle maintenance and repair, mileage, toll fees, as well as parking fees or garage rent.

“Managers should look closely at all expenses, and then break them down to a per-mile cost. This practice will allow a company to compare its costs to carriers-for-hire in the area. Some business owners quickly learn it can be more cost effective to hire out for some deliveries,” the company wrote.

Once all the operating costs are on the table, SMEs can then make optimal decisions that can improve their operations, and ditch redundant or ineffective methods.

Then, one can learn the best, most efficient routes for one’s delivery fleet. This can be trial-and-error, but experience and familiarity with relevant data can help identify the profit-making routes from the profit-breaking ones.

Citing Phoenix Zhang, a senior analyst with Forrester Research, RAM Commercial wrote that it’s important to find a “sweet spot” of efficient routes — ones that are multi-pickup, multi-drop, nonstop and highly repeatable. Such desirable routes tend to be short hauls.

“Avoid the long-distance, one-way, multi-day trips,” Ms. Zhang had said. “Those are going to lose you money and not be cost effective.”

There’s also the consideration of matching the appropriate vehicle with each delivery. Whether it’s a fuel-efficient cargo van, a car, or a truck, the type and size of the vehicle should be determined by the details of the delivery being made.

Lastly, technology can greatly aid in managing logistics for businesses. Optimization software can identify efficient routes, and even create “continuous move opportunities” for vehicles so they don’t sit idle for long periods or otherwise decrease the amount of time they run without cargo.

“Better-run fleets see only between 20 and 30% of their total fleet miles driven as empty miles. A lot of fleets will run 40 to 50%; those are way too many empty miles,” Ms. Zhang was quoted.

Fleet management software can also track fuel-efficiency concerns such as inefficient driver behavior, traffic data, and other variables that can drain resources. Such tools are available for SMEs looking to make the most out of their logistics, helping them in the pursuit of creating the perfect efficient system for their business. — Bjorn Biel M. Beltran

The way to cleaner, economical commercial rides

The level of innovation in commercial vehicles continues to accelerate. Unusual-looking trucks, vans or buses with advanced technologies, purposely designed for business or commercial operations, are already racing their way to today’s road surfaces. In the years to come, as surface transportation presumed to remain as the lifeblood of commerce, more groundbreaking developments in this segment of vehicles are expected to take place.

According to a report titled Commercial Vehicles — Driving the Future by the German Association of the Automotive Industry, commercial vehicles will remain as the backbone of freight transport system and the engine of future for many decades.

“All forecasts assume that freight transport will increase significantly in coming decades and that the share of commercial vehicles will be just the same as today at approximately 70%,” the report said.

One of the major developments which will continue to drive the future of commercial vehicles is the push for a cleaner and more economical engine.

Firms are now mindful to not cause pollution to the environment, and commercial vehicle manufacturers have also taken this awareness development into account.

Even in the past years, manufacturers were already aiming for emission avoidance. The German Association of the Automotive Industry report said that in spite of the increasing traffic volumes, the emissions of commercial vehicles have decreased in absolute terms in almost all categories. It noted that emissions per ton-kilometer have decreased between 30% and 80% since 1995, and environmental experts expect that this will continue to improve in the future.

“The work of commercial vehicle manufacturers concerning the reduction of pollutants is completed today. After 20 years of continuous development work, they bring engines onto the market today which fulfill the limit value stage according to Euro VI, and with that emit only 3% of the pollutants which their predecessors emitted 20 years ago. With the increasing propagation of Euro VI vehicles within the vehicle fleet in the coming years, the emissions of the fleet will continue to sink,” the report said.

Aside from concentrating on developing a cleaner engine in the future, manufacturers will also focus to further reduce fuel consumption.

“The commercial vehicle manufacturers continue to develop new ideas with this objective in mind. On the one hand, these efforts concentrate on the further optimization of the diesel engine, however also the secondary aggregates and the drive chain. Through these measures alone, further savings are to be expected of approximately 6% in total on a long-term basis,” the report said.

As part of the efforts to minimize costs, manufacturers will likely give more attention in engineering improved aerodynamics. By this, fuel consumption can be reduced by up to 15%.

“Three to four percentage points of that can be achieved alone by the attachment of so-called ‘boat tails’ at the rear of the semi-trailer, which are trailing-edge flaps about 40 centimeters long,” the report said.

Other technical possibilities for improving aerodynamics of truck-trailer combinations, for instance, include an aerodynamically shaped roof without superstructure such as lights or horns, a spoiler between tractor and trailer, and a rear spoiler.

There is also a possibility for commercial vehicle manufacturers to develop low-resistance-running tires that can decrease rolling resistance. This can lower fuel consumption by another 2%. Moreover, lightweight construction measures with the utilization of aluminum and composite materials can additionally reduce consumption by approximately 5%.

“The commercial vehicle will therefore long remain our engine for an economically secure, resource-saving and clean future,” the report concluded. — Mark Louis F. Ferrolino