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Privacy lapses could be part of tech antitrust cases

Josh Hawley — WIKIPEDIA.ORG

ANTITRUST authorities probing Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google have struggled with scrutinizing companies whose products are popular and free. Now they may have a solution: Use privacy as a test.

As the US Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission, Congress and the states investigate whether internet companies are flouting antitrust laws, academics and even some regulators are pushing to go beyond the traditional focus on price as a determinant of harm. Enforcers, they say, should also consider privacy lapses as a proxy for anti-competitive behavior.

Their legal reasoning goes like this: Monopolists generally stop innovating, let product quality slip and treat customers poorly, knowing no competitor has the ability to grab market share. Repeated privacy lapses can be a sign that a company — Facebook is often cited as a prime example — has let product quality and customer service slip, knowing its social-media dominance is unassailable.

Senator Josh Hawley, the Republican senator from Missouri, buys this argument. Facebook, he said, has suffered few real consequences despite its shoddy record on protecting users’ privacy. Consumers have nowhere else to go to get the totality of what Facebook offers — a classic antitrust problem of degrading quality.

“One of the reasons data privacy concerns are so pressing is because these companies are monopoly size,” Hawley, a big-tech antagonist who sued Google when he was his state’s attorney general, told Bloomberg last week. “If we had a viable alternative to Facebook that wasn’t scooping up someone’s data, that wasn’t selling our information without telling us, then I would be less concerned.”

Hawley echoed a view that is gaining traction with federal and state antitrust enforcers, as well as the leaders of a congressional probe into big internet platforms. One advantage of the privacy-erosion-is-antitrust theory is that no new laws are needed to enforce it.

Days after the Justice Department’s Google probe was revealed in June, for instance, its antitrust chief, Makan Delrahim, linked the two issues, noting that quality can figure in antitrust analysis in addition to price and that “privacy can be an important dimension of quality.”

Delrahim noted that the 1998 case against Microsoft Corp. didn’t revolve around higher prices. Instead, the US alleged that the software company illegally maintained a monopoly over personal-computer operating systems by blocking manufacturers from installing a browser that competed with its own. Both browsers were free to consumers.

Including privacy in the investigations would expand the range of issues enforcers are known to be looking at, including Facebook’s past acquisitions and Google’s conduct in the digital advertising market. Facebook and Google declined to comment.

US Representative David Cicilline, the Rhode Island Democrat leading the House probe of the tech sector, referred in a hearing earlier in November to “the obvious cost to personal privacy that has resulted from consolidation in the digital marketplace.”

Privacy and competition have long been treated as distinct areas of the law. Google and Facebook have agreed to pay fines for privacy violations under consumer-protection statutes, but they have faced little antitrust action.

One reason is that federal courts have clung to the consumer-welfare standard and often demand evidence of higher prices before deciding cases in favor of enforcers. Just last year, the US Supreme Court ruled 5-4 for American Express Co. and against the US and 11 states alleging that cardholders were harmed when American Express prohibited merchants from steering customers to cards with lower fees. The majority’s rationale? There was no evidence that American Express’s policy harmed consumers by pushing up the price of credit-card transactions.

Now, Hawley, Delrahim and Cicilline are signaling a shift in the way the government thinks about antitrust enforcement, particularly in technology. State attorneys general are exploring similar ideas.

New York Attorney General Letitia James, who is leading the states’ Facebook probe, said the coalition will “use every investigative tool at our disposal to determine whether Facebook’s actions may have endangered consumer data, reduced the quality of consumers’ choices, or increased the price of advertising.”

The public interest in the overlap is relatively new, said Dina Srinivasan, a former digital ad executive who has written that Facebook’s data practices could form the basis of an antitrust case.

“We’ve seen this momentum in many of those circles since the beginning of the year,” she said.

Srinivasan argued in a February article in the Berkeley Business Law Journal that consumers were able to rebuff Facebook’s tracking of users on third-party websites when the social media market was competitive. After the demise of rivals such as MySpace, Facebook expanded tracking to millions of websites to further its advertising business despite consumer pushback, she noted. A truly competitive market would swiftly punish such practices, Srinivasan wrote.

Not all legal experts agree that privacy violations could be part of any antitrust suit. A case that’s “based on a data privacy theory of harm is not in the cards,” said Jim Tierney, who oversaw tech-sector antitrust enforcement at the Justice Department from 2006 to 2016 and is now a partner at Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP, a law firm that counts Facebook as a client. Tierney said he doesn’t do any work for the company.

Others see a different problem. “Consumers seem just willing to give up the data,” said Sam Weinstein, a professor at Cardozo Law School. “If that’s what’s happening, it’s hard to see antitrust interceding.”

Some non-US jurisdictions have sought to twin privacy and antitrust, with mixed results. Germany’s competition authority, the Federal Cartel Office, in February ordered Facebook to overhaul how it tracks users off its site over allegations that the company used its dominance to force consumers to accept unfair terms. Facebook responded that the agency misapplied German law because the company faces “fierce competition.”

In August, however, a German court suspended the ruling, expressing “serious doubts about the legality” of the order. The agency is appealing. — Bloomberg

Businessman Yu increases stake in Pacifica

By Denise A. Valdez, Reporter

THE Cebu-based holding firm of businessman Lowell L. Yu has increased its stake in Pacifica, Inc. to become the majority owner of the listed shell company.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange Wednesday, Pacifica said Mr. Yu’s Unido Capital Holdings, Inc. subscribed to an additional 125,000,000 common shares in the listed firm.

The deal effectively raises Unido Capital’s stake in Pacifica to 60.94% from 36.53% previously.

This follows the approval of the Securities and Exchange Commission on Nov. 26 of the company’s application to increase its authorized capital stock to P700 million from P200 million.

“Out of the P500 million increase, Unido Capital Holdings, Inc. subscribed to 125,000,000 common shares of Pacifica Holdings, Inc. (with new par value of P1.00 per share),” it said.

“As a result of the additional subscription of 125,000,000 shares, Unido Capital Holdings, Inc. now directly owns a total of 60.94% of the current aggregate outstanding capital stock of Pacifica Holdings, Inc.,” it added.

In separate disclosures on Wednesday, Pacifica announced it is changing its corporate name to Pacifica Holdings, Inc. and is increasing the par value of its shares to P1 each from P0.005 previously.

It said the changes are meant to “facilitate the conversion of the company into a holding company and to enable (it) to carry out further equity fund raising and strengthen its capital base.”

The disclosures once again sparked speculation that Pacifica would be used as a backdoor listing vehicle for Mr. Yu’s businesses, which include restaurant chain Kuya J.

Asked about the potential backdoor listing, Diversified Securities, Inc. Equity Trader Aniceto K. Pangan in a text message: “Not sure yet as their disclosure is not complete. Unido’s acquisition is only P125 million from the total of P700 million. There is a possible backdoor listing but disclosure is still raw.”

Mr. Yu started the takeover of Pacifica in 2016 when Unido Capital acquired the shares of 9th Kingdom Investments Corp. and Mikro-Tech Capital, Inc. in the company. He currently sits as the chairman of Pacifica.

Aside from his roles in Unido Capital and Pacifica, Mr. Yu also sits as director in listed property developer 8990 Holdings, Inc.

He is also president of iHoldings, Inc. and chairman at 77 Living Spaces, Inc.; Grand Majestic Convention City Corp.; 101 Restaurant City, Inc.; MyMarket, Inc.; Govago, Inc. and iKitchen, Inc., which operates restaurant chain Kuya J.

Shares in Pacifica at the stock exchange recorded a 22.22% uptick to P0.044 each at the close of Wednesday’s trading.

Dining Out (11/28/19)

Cucina introduces new additions

MARCO POLO ORTIGAS Manila’s all-day restaurant, Cucina recently introduced new featured dishes. These include Thai Hot and Sour Beef Salad, and the Green Chicken Curry, plus the new Mushroom, Truffle Cream, Thyme and Mozzarella pizza and the Spaghetti with Shrimp Bottarga and Dill. Guests may also enjoy the US Angus Beef Burger during their stay, or a healthy serving of Pan-Roasted Chilean Sea Bass, Garden Peas, Pancetta Herb and Lemon Butter Sauce. And among its new desserts are Milk Chocolate Mousse with Candied Maple Bacon Brownie, and the Mango Passionfruit Tart with Almond Nougatine and Lime Meringue. These new dishes are now available on Cucina’s a la carte menu. For details call 7720-7720 or e-mail restaurant.mnl@marcopolohotels.com.

Yellow Cab’s Black Friday deal

TOMORROW, on Nov. 29, buy one 10-inch or 14-inch pizza and get a second pizza for free. Choose from the selection of edge-to-edge Classic and Signature pizzas such as the New York Classic, Hawaiian, BBQ Chicken, Manhattan Meatlovers, and Roasted Garlic and Shrimp. Available starting at midnight to 11:59 p.m. on November 29. This promo is available for dine-in, take-out, delivery, and curbside pick-up. Customers can go the restaurants or order online at delivery.yellowcabpizza.com.

Buttered Bundt from Andrew Café

ANDREW CAFÉ’s featured Christmas Cake is the Heavenly Holiday Buttered Bundt. The butter cake is given a festive twist through an additional red velvet layer. The cake is drizzled with white chocolate ganache and topped with Swiss meringue butter cream in shape of the classic green holly leaf, glazed cherries, and red and silver dragées. The Heavenly Holiday Buttered Bundt is freshly baked by Andrew Café’s student-apprentices of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde, under the guidance of resident pastry chef-mentor Erna Canatoy. Visit the restaurant at the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde Taft Campus, corner of Estrada and Leon Guinto St., Malate, Manila. It is open Mondays to Fridays from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. and on Saturdays from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Contact Andrew Café at 230-5100 local 1888 for pre-orders of the cake two days in advance.

George Town’s Super Steak opens in BGC

TENDER, moist, and flavorful steaks with a smoky finish are the result of cooking with the Mibrasa oven, a new method and equipment from Spain brought to the Philippines by George Town’s Super Steak. The new restaurant opened just in time for the holidays, was brought in by George Pua, the man behind KPub BBQ, Ogawa traditional Japanese restaurant, Oppa Chicken, Rico’s Lechon and Thai BBQ. The Mibrasa oven uses charcoal to cook food, simultaneously grilling and roasting meat, seafood, and even vegetables. Mibrasa ovens are quick and efficient, distributing heat evenly and keeping it consistent. For its opening promo, George Town Super Steak has dining deals such as Buy Wagyu Flank Steak and Get Half Slab of Ribs for P1,488, Buy 1 Get 1 on Full Spareribs for P1,245, and Buy 1 Get 1 Super Steak Signature Burger for P455. The restaurant is located at the 3rd level One Bonifacio High Street, 5th Ave. BGC, Taguig. It is open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays to Thursdays, and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. For reservations, call 8363-1447, 8361-3937, 8293-5562, or 0917-532-0000.

Parties at Dencio’s

BOOK REUNIONS, Christmas parties, or New Year salubong at Dencio’s which has flexible set menu packages starting at P300 per person. On offer are a wide array of classic and reimagined Pinoy favorites, from appetizers such as calamares (squid rings), to bestselling meals like Krispy Sisig. One can also have a unique mess hall experience with grilled, fried, or combination Boodle Feasts. Dencio’s has 13 locations nationwide that offer private function rooms. For inquiries, drop by a Dencio’s restaurant or visit facebook.com/denciosph/.

MOS Burger to pop-up in Robinsons Galleria

MOS Burger, the second largest burger chain in Japan, will open a pop-store in Robinsons Galleria in January prior to opening its first branch in the Philippines. The pop-up will sell two items from its standard menu: The Signature MOS Burger and the Yakiniku Rice Burger. The first MOS Burger restaurant in the Philippines is slated to open in the first quarter next year in Robinsons Galleria, Ortigas. More store openings are scheduled in 2020 in different commercial malls and business districts. MOS stands for “Mountain, Ocean, Sun.”

Christmas at New World Makati

ON ITS silver anniversary, the New World Makati Hotel heralds the festive season with a raffle of getaways and giveaways, holiday stays, dining offers, gift-worthy sweets and treats, mocktails and cocktails, and Christmas party packages. The hotel starts off the Yuletide with a raffle of 25 experiences and prizes including two-night stays at New World hotels in Saigon, Hong Kong, Petaling Jaya (Kuala Lumpur) complete with airfare and breakfast for two; a trip to Tokyo for two; an iPhone 11 128 GB; an Apple Watch Series 5 GPS 40mm; a pair of Apple Airpods with charging case; a Sony Smart KDL 40 inch full HD television; and five Belo Skin Treatment gift cards worth P5,000 each, to name a few. Stays for two, as well as dining experiences for two and four guests, respectively, at the hotel’s premium Cantonese restaurant, Jasmine, and all-day dining and buffet outlet, Café 1228, will also be given away. At the Marahai Spa, two 60-minute massages and treatments are up for grabs. Five holiday hampers for sharing or gift-giving are also included in the raffle. Guests who stay or dine throughout December for a minimum single-receipt of P5,000 nett will be given one raffle ticket. Tickets must be accomplished and dropped in the box designated at the hotel’s lobby on or before Jan. 1. Winners will be drawn on Jan. 6. For a full list of prizes and mechanics, visit https://manila.newworldhotels.com/en/promotions/promotions-dining/25th-anniversary-giveaway/. Meanwhile, the hotel will be giving back to homeless children in Barangay Palanan cared for by SOLV Foundation by donating proceeds from promotions offered for all of December. Guests who stay, hold an event, or order a festive cocktail or mocktail will be helping these children. Savor a hearty Yuletide-themed buffet at Café 1228 from Dec. 1-30 December (except Christmas Eve and Christmas Day) with honey-glazed ham, prime rib, and much more at P2,300 and P2,800 for lunch on weekdays and weekends, respectively, and P2,500 for dinner daily. Guests may upgrade with a free-flowing beverage package at P599 with juices, soda, local beers, and wines. From Dec. 1-30 December, sip on festive drinks — Santa’s Sparkling Sleigh and Christmas Chamomile Fizz — at Bar Rouge for P400 and P280 nett, respectively. The first is a mix of vodka, sparkling wine, Red Bull, apple juice, sprite, and lemon bitters, garnished with grape and apple slices while the later is an alcohol-free treat which combines calamansi, chamomile tea, apple juice, ginger ale, and simple syrup, topped with sour candy and an apple slice. Gifts giving in worry-free with the hotel’s holiday hampers which come in deluxe and grand sizes for P4,288 and P6,888 nett, respectively. Guests can customize their hampers with pralines, mendiant, cookies, chocolates macadamia nuts, bourbon cake, cupcakes, nougat, Old English fruit cake, stollen bread, and more. For inquiries, reservations, and orders, guests can call 8811-6888 or e-mail reservations.manila@newworldhotels.com or FandBreservations.manila@newworldhotels.com.

Pancake House’s holiday specials

THIS holiday season, Pancake House offers its customers a unique twist on its well-loved pancakes featuring classic Filipino flavors. There are the Bibingka Pancakes, mini pancakes with slices of quezo de bola and salted egg topped with butter, served with sweet muscovado sugar and grated coconut on the side. There is also the Holiday Sampler — three sets of petite Pancakes in three different flavors, Chocolate Marble, Blueberry, and Classic. These limited offers are available for P150 each in all Pancake House stores nationwide until Jan. 15.

Christmas comes to M Bakery

M BAKERY releases its Christmas offers meant to lift holiday spirits. Choose from the Christmas-inspired versions of the hit bakeshop’s classic treats, which can be ordered in advance to enjoy in family gatherings and office parties. when it comes to cupcakes, M Bakery has a line of freshly baked confections, including Winter cupcakes, classic vanilla and chocolate cupcakes with vanilla buttercream and snowflakes design; Christmas cupcakes, classic cupcakes with vanilla buttercream and festive Christmas decorations; Holiday Piped cupcakes, classic cupcakes decorated with vintage holiday designs; and the Ornament Box consisting of one dozen assorted vanilla and chocolate mini cupcakes topped with vanilla buttercream and edible seasonal decorations. Other handmade desserts meant to get one in the holiday mood include Chocolate Crinkle cookies; Jammy Thumbprints, a twist on its classic pecan thumbprints cookies finished with raspberry jam; and Sno-Balls, buttery pecan cookies rolled in powdered sugar. For something more citrusy, M Bakery offers Iced Molasses, classic molasses cookies with orange or lemon glaze. There are also Gingersnaps, a combination of sweetness and spice, and one of the most sought-after Christmas cookies. Finally, there is also a series of Christmas-themed cakes. Available for advance orders are the Snowman cake, classic vanilla or chocolate cake with a snowman design; a Red Velvet cake, designed with white vanilla buttercream and decorated with a green border and festive holly confetti sprinkles; and a Yule Log cake, available in red velvet, vanilla or chocolate with buttercream icing and finished with festive seasonal decoration. M Bakery is also opening a two-hour cupcake icing class on Dec. 21, with five to 10 participants for each class. It will tackle different cupcake decorating techniques, including flat top icing, inscription making, and piped flower designs. M Bakery is at the Lower Ground, Unit #23 5th Ave. corner 28th St., One Bonifacio High Street Mall, Bonifacio Global City, Taguig. For details call 847-9829 or 0917-633-1718 to join a class or to place your advance orders.

US-based chip-tech group moving to Switzerland over trade curb fears

SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON — A US-based foundation overseeing promising semiconductor technology developed with Pentagon support will soon move to Switzerland after several of the group’s foreign members raised concerns about potential US trade curbs.

The nonprofit RISC-V Foundation (pronounced risk-five) wants to ensure that universities, governments and companies outside the United States can help develop its open-source technology, its Chief Executive Calista Redmond said in an interview with Reuters.

She said the foundation’s global collaboration has faced no restrictions to date but members are “concerned about possible geopolitical disruption.”

“From around the world, we’ve heard that ‘If the incorporation was not in the US, we would be a lot more comfortable,’” she said. Redmond said the foundation’s board of directors approved the move unanimously but declined to disclose which members prompted it.

Created in 2015, the RISC-V Foundation sets standards for the core chip architecture and controls who can use the RISC-V trademark on products, as other organizations do for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth chips. It does not own or control the technology.

More than 325 companies or other entities pay to be members, including US and European chip suppliers such as Qualcomm Inc. and NXP Semiconductors, as well as China’s Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd.

The foundation’s move from Delaware to Switzerland may foreshadow further technology flight because of US restrictions on dealing with some Chinese technology companies, said William Reinsch, who was undersecretary of commerce for export administration in the Clinton administration.

“There is a message for the government. The message is, if you clamp down on things too tightly this is what is going to happen. In a global supply chain world, companies have choices, and one choice is to go overseas,” he said.

In a statement to Reuters, the US Department of Commerce said its controls were designed to safeguard US national security and to “ensure bad actors cannot acquire technology that harms US citizens or interests, while promoting innovation to fuel continued American technological leadership.” The department said it meets regularly with private industry to gauge market conditions and the effects of its regulations.

Some Republican US lawmakers said they are concerned the United States will lose influence over RISC-V chip architecture, which can be used to make microprocessors for almost every type of electronic device, making it a crucial building block of a modern economy. The technology came from labs at the University of California, Berkeley, and later benefited from funding by the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

The lawmakers warn that the foundation’s Chinese members could influence the technology’s development to help China’s semiconductor industry.

“The Chinese Communist Party is trying to circumvent our export control system to support national security threats like Huawei — we cannot let it succeed,” Representative Mike Gallagher, a Republican from Wisconsin, told Reuters.

Arkansas Republican Senator Tom Cotton said moving the foundation to ensure it could retain Chinese members was “short-sighted at best.” He added that “if American public funds were used to develop the technology, it’s also completely outrageous.”

Redmond said in follow-up emails after speaking to Reuters that given the technology is open source and available to anyone, she does not see how the move could be against the US national interest.

A DARPA spokesman told Reuters the agency intended for RISC-V work it funded to be publicly available to companies and academics around the world.

Morgan Reed, president of The App Association, which receives funding from major US technology firms such as Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. in Washington, likened the RISC-V Foundation’s work to efforts between US and Chinese companies to jointly develop Wi-Fi chip standards.

“The notion that China can be barred from participating in standards alongside the US and the EU is simply not viable,” Reed said. “China is too important as a manufacturer and an end-market to ignore.”

INSURANCE POLICY
The RISC-V Foundation announced at a meeting last December it would seek a “neutral” country before making a formal decision to go to Switzerland earlier this year, a decision that got little public attention. Final approvals in Switzerland for the move are expected as soon as the end of November, Redmond said.

Chinese companies have had access to the RISC-V architecture, which is publicly available, since its creation, Redmond said.

Alibaba claimed in July it had developed the fastest RISC-V processor to date. The company declined to comment for this story.

The RISC-V Foundation’s move shows how US-China trade tensions could make the United States a harder place to host technology standards groups, according to two attorneys who represent such groups.

The lawyers said it is unclear whether standards groups are allowed to work with Huawei. These groups are concerned US authorities may decide that some closed-door technical discussions involve the transfer of sensitive technology to the Chinese or others on banned lists, said one of the attorneys, Brad Biddle, who works for several standards groups.

In June, more than two dozen standards groups — including those overseeing SD memory cards and Ethernet and HDMI cables — wrote a letter to US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross asking for clarification of the rules on working with Huawei.

The groups warned Ross that the Huawei restrictions posed a “serious risk” that standards work could move out of the United States, which could end a long-held trend where US-based groups set de facto standards for the rest of the world, they wrote.

The Commerce Department published an advisory opinion seeking to clarify the issue in August, but standards lawyers said the rules remain confusing.

The RISC-V Foundation’s Redmond does not yet see a “credible threat” to international collaboration. “But we’re taking out an insurance policy against that type of action by moving our incorporation,” she told Reuters.

HUAWEI SUPPORTS MOVE
The board’s seven current members are all based in North America. After the move, the foundation’s board will be expanded and European and Asian members will be added, said Redmond. Reuters could not confirm whether any Chinese companies planned to join the board.

Andrew Updegrove, an attorney who does work for standards groups, said that US restrictions on transferring US-origin technology to Chinese companies will still apply regardless of where the RISC-V Foundation is headquartered.

At Netherlands-based NXP Semiconductors, which is a member of the foundation, customers have asked the company to detail where the technology in its chips comes from, said Lars Reger, its chief technology officer. The customers do not want to be cut off in future trade disputes, he said.

US officials and some lawmakers have alleged Huawei’s telecom equipment may enable surveillance by China. The resulting backlash has prevented it from making inroads into the US market. Huawei has denied the claims.

In response to Reuters questions, a Huawei spokesman said: “We support RISC-V Foundation identifying Switzerland as a neutral venue for open source development. Making open source as open as possible is important for the industry.”

He said that RISC-V “might fit well into Huawei’s vision of this heterogeneous, open world.” — Reuters

BoJ’s Sakurai sets high bar for more easing

KOBE, Japan — Japan’s central bank can hold off expanding stimulus for now as robust domestic demand offsets the hit to exports from overseas risks, its board member Makoto Sakurai said, suggesting no additional easing was likely in the near term.

Mr. Sakurai, known for his more conservative views on aggressive monetary easing, instead called for the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to pay more attention to the negative impact of prolonged easing.

The former academic said the imminency of additional easing has subsided compared with around September, when fears of a bigger-than-expected slowdown in China’s economy clouded the outlook.

“Looking at the current state of Japan’s economy, things aren’t deteriorating further,” Mr. Sakurai told a briefing after meeting business leaders in Kobe, western Japan, on Wednesday.

“I don’t see a need now to move proactively now. Now is the time to closely watch economic developments,” he said, suggesting that the central bank was likely to keep policy steady at its rate review next month.

The BoJ kept policy steady last month but gave the strongest signal to date that it may cut interest rates in the near future, underscoring its concern that overseas risks could derail a fragile economic recovery.

Many analysts, however, believe the threshold for more rate cuts is high due to the rising side-effects of prolonged easing, such as the strain years of ultra-low interest rates are inflicting on financial institutions.

Mr. Sakurai, among the BoJ’s nine board members, said the central bank may need to deploy all available tools if Japan is hit by a severe shock that disrupts its banking system.

However, he saw no immediate need for the central bank to match government’s plans for fiscal stimulus with even looser monetary policy, as current BoJ settings were already extremely accommodative.

That leaves maintaining the BoJ’s current stimulus program as the best approach for now along with closely monitoring how commercial banks cope with prolonged ultra-low rates.

“In guiding monetary policy, there’s an increasing need to be mindful of the side-effect of continuing our low-rate policy such as that on Japan’s banking system,” Mr. Sakurai said.

Under a policy dubbed yield curve control (YCC), the BoJ pledges to guide short-term rates at -0.1% and the 10-year bond yield around 0%.

While the policy has helped keep corporate borrowing costs low, it has flattened the yield curve and crushed the margin commercial banks earn from lending.

The International Monetary Fund urged the BoJ to consider steps to ease the strains on financial institutions, such as shortening the maturity of bond yields it targets.

“It’s true the yield curve has flattened quite a bit. We need to take this into account in guiding policy,” Mr. Sakurai said, when asked about the IMF’s proposal.

Mr. Sakurai is seen by market participants and analysts as belonging to a broad camp on the central bank board that is more concerned about the side-effects of prolonged easing, while other board members see more room for stimulus.

Japan’s economic growth slumped to its weakest in a year in the third quarter as soft global demand knocked exports. Analysts fret that a sales tax hike from October could also weigh on the economy.

“The next half-year is when we need to carefully scrutinize economic developments,” he said, noting the risks that an October sales tax hike could cool consumption and that global growth was unlikely to pick up until around mid-2020. — Reuters

How PSEi member stocks performed — November 27, 2019

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Wednesday, November 27, 2019.

 

How does the Philippines compare with its ASEAN neighbors in terms of investments made in the region?

How does the Philippines compare with its ASEAN neighbors in terms of investments made in the region?

NGCP says no instance of remote access to grid

THE National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) said Wednesday that there was no cause for alarm over Chinese involvement in the power distribution system, noting that the grid’s controls have never been accessed remotely since the company’s founding.

“There is nothing to be alarmed about the stake by the State Grid Corp. of China (SGCC) in NGCP as its investment is limited only to being a technical adviser,” Anthony L. Almeda, NGCP president and chief executive officer, said in a statement.

Legislators have raised concerns that China has the ability to shut down the Philippines’ power grid, and have called for an investigation into the ownership of NGCP.

In its statement, NGCP said State Grid has a 40% stake in NGCP, but the controlling 60% belongs to Filipino companies Monte Oro Grid Resources Corp. and Calaca High Power Corp. with 30% shares each.

As such, State Grid has only three nominees to the NGCP board, in proportion to its ownership level, it added.

“State Grid serves only as the technical adviser of the consortium, but the management and the control of NGCP, including its Systems Operation, are exclusively exercised by Filipinos,” Mr. Almeda said.

He said the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA), the system that controls the grid, is operated only by authorized Filipino technical experts of NGCP.

“By default, SCADA is disconnected from the Virtual Private Network (VPN); thus, remote users cannot connect to SCADA,” he said, adding that “VPN access may only be granted to the Filipino CEO in an emergency situation and only after undergoing a secure and confidential approval process.”

NGCP said since its operations started in 2009, the approval process for VPN access has not been invoked and no remote access has been granted.

Mr. Almeda said NGCP’s systems operation data center has biometric access controls that allow only its authorized personnel to enter. He also said the SCADA workstations and servers are secured by firewalls and layers of authentication systems to block unauthorized access.

He invited legislators to visit NGCP’s facilities to see how the power grid is managed and operated.

“We are happy to welcome our senators and congressmen as well as an independent third party to visit our facilities in order to dispel any security concerns that had been raised these past few days,” Mr. Almeda said.

He said Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi inspected the NGCP facilities in August 2017. He added legislators during the previous administration had visited the same facilities.

Mr. Almeda said NGCP has not entered into other businesses, other than those permitted under its concession agreement.

Telecommunication companies use NGCP facilities through co-location agreements, the company said. These deals allow a third party to “piggy-back” on its right-of-way or existing facilities but this does not involve tapping into or using the transmission service provider’s fiber optic cables, it said.

“NGCP declares all earnings from related businesses and uses the same to lower transmission rates in full compliance with the provisions of EPIRA and Concession Agreement,” Mr. Almeda said. — Victor V. Saulon

BoC cites weak imports, fuel marking delay for missed targets

THE Bureau of Customs (BoC) told a Congressional panel that major ports failed to meet their revenue targets because of a slowdown in imports, adding that some targets have been set too high and do not account for delays in the fuel marking program.

Customs officials were appearing before the House Ways and Means Committee Wednesday.

The committee heard from district collectors that almost all ports posted a “negative deviation from the target” in each month of 2019 up to October.

The BoC added that fuel marking, an anti-smuggling measure, was supposed to result in P10 billion more collections this year, though the program’s full implementation has been moved back to March.

The BoC also noted weaker imports of oil, sugar, and automobiles.

ACT-CIS Party list Representative, Eric Go Yap also queried the BIR about cash being brought in through airports.

Customs Commissioner Rey Leonardo B. Guerrero said the largest single instance of cash being brought in through the airports involved up to $2 million.

“Based on records… (there were) a total of 20 persons who brought in almost P6 billion (in September and October).” Mr. Guerrero added.

Individuals bringing in large amounts of cash are only queried for the intended use of the funds, according to Mr. Guerrero.

Mr. Yap noted the possibility the funds could be used to finance terrorism, and drew a contrast to Overseas Filipino Workers who are taxed for bringing in appliances like televisions.

Pero yung P6 billion… for two months walang tax, walang investigation. (In those two months when the P6 billion was brought in, no one was taxed or investigated).” Mr. Yap said.

In the 10 months to October, the BoC had collected P528.036 billion against the target for the period of P544.540 billion.

Asked if the bureau will hit its target this year, Assistant Commissioner in charge of Post Clearance Audit Vincent Philip C. Maronilla told reporters in a chance interview, “No choice but to be optimistic.” — Genshen L. Espedido

PHL, S. Korea sign fisheries, aquaculture agreement

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with South Korea’s Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries (MOF) to collaborate in fisheries management and trade.

In a statement, the DA said that the collaboration covers scientific and technical, economic and trade cooperation in fisheries and aquaculture.

“The Philippine-Korea bilateral on fisheries is expected to boost the collaboration between the two countries for the mutual benefit of its fishery sectors by enhancing cooperation in aquaculture and fisheries, and promoting fisheries trade and fishery-business investment,” it said.

The agreement was signed by Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar and MOF Minister Moon Seong-hyeok on Nov. 26 in Busan. The signing took place on the sidelines of is one of the 2019 commemorative summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) with South Korea, which took place on Nov. 25-26.

The agreement follows the 2018 agriculture cooperation deal signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte with the Ministry of Agriculture, Food, and Rural Affairs (MAFRA) during his official visit to Seoul.

Mr. Dar said the department has been seeking to improve market access of Philippine agricultural products to South Korea.

“DA is serious in its commitment to engage and strengthen bilateral relations with South Korea being one of the leading food importers in the world, requiring almost $30 billion food imports. South Korea is one of the most lucrative markets for Philippine agri-fisheries products,” Mr. Dar said.

According to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), exports to South Korea hit $275.20 million in August. In the eight months to August, exports totaled $2.033 billion, up 22%, year-on-year.

The country’s major fishery exports to South Korea include tuna, abalone, sea cucumber, octopus, shrimp, prawn, seaweed, and carrageenan. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Gov’t union seeks uniform P16,000 starting salary for public sector

A GOVERNMENT workers’ union said it is pushing for a uniform P16,000 entry-level wage for public-sector workers.

The Confederation for Unity, Recognition and Advancement of Government Employees (COURAGE) urged the Senate Wednesday to implement such a wage, which will “reduce the gap (between the) current salary (and) the family living wage. This will bring immediate relief to families of government employees suffering from economic hardship,” according to COURAGE National President Santiago Dasmariñas, Jr.

The “demand” was contained in a statement issued by the organization.

Based on the Department of Budget Management’s (DBM) Local Budget Circular 118, Salary Grade 1 wages for government workers vary by city, province and municipality. Special cities and first class provinces and cities pay P11,068 while 6th Class Municipalities pay P7,194 for starting positions.

COURAGE said such wages are well below the monthly family living wage (FLW) of P32,000. — Gillian M. Cortez

Brownout-free power seen requiring diversified sources, latest coal tech

THE Philippines should diversify and modernize its sources of electricity to achieve the kind of uninterrupted power supply Taiwan has attained, according to officials of power generation companies from the Philippines and Taiwan.

“Here we don’t usually experience brownouts, blackouts or whatever because if ever we encounter some unusual natural disaster like earthquakes we don’t restrict usage of electricity,” Ru-Chin Chou, deputy plant general manager of Taiwan Power Co.’s Lin Kou thermal power plant, told reporters when asked about how his industry deals with power interruptions.

He was briefing reporters from the Philippines in New Taipei City this week. He said unscheduled shutdowns are a rarity in Taiwan.

He added power interruptions are an occasion for “all politicians (to) step down.”

Taiwan Power, like all of the country’s power generators, is state-owned. It has 11 power plants in Taiwan, including three in remote islands.

The power plants in Lin Kou in northern Taiwan and Talin in the south use an ultra-supercritical boiler, the most advanced technology that significantly reduces carbon emissions.

Some of the other plants using high-emitting boilers are either up for upgrade or to be expanded using combined-cycle technology or one that is not limited to just coal as fuel.

“I just hope that the Philippines will follow the example of Taiwan in terms of modernizing power generation,” Litz M. Santana, Meralco PowerGen Corp. (MGen) vice-president for external affairs, said.

MGen has plans to build the country’s first ultra-supercritical plant in Atimonan, Quezon although it has yet to close a power supply agreement with a distribution utility.

“We need energy security by providing stable, reliable power supply, and how do we do it? By having a balanced mix of power supply coming from coal… you have to combat questions of carbon emission, you have to improve the technology like ultra-supercritical, which is already being used in most countries in Asia,” Ms. Santana said.

MGen also has aspirations to complete a solar farm, a wind power facility and is looking into a gas project.

“If you only rely on one technology or one fuel like gas, how will you have secure energy,” she said. — Victor V. Saulon

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