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Major union calls on gov’t to revisit P500 worker subsidy

TRADE UNION Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) Party-list Representative Raymond C. Mendoza said the government needs to revisit the union’s proposal for a P500 monthly subsidy for minimum-wage workers as a temporary cushion for the rising prices of goods.
In a statement on Thursday, the legislator said the subsidy is needed since increase in minimum wages is inadequate.
“We insist that government revisit our proposal that government provide a P500 subsidy for 4 million minimum wage earners registered with the Social Security System. This can be made a temporary emergency measure until inflation is brought down to a manageable 4%,” he said.
The Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) proposed the P500 subsidy for minimum wage earners when the labor coalition met with President Rodrigo R. Duterte earlier this year.
In 2018, 16 regions issued daily minimum wage hikes of between P8 and P56. The most recent wage increases were from the National Capital Region (NCR) at P25; Cagayan Valley (Region II) at P10; and MIMAROPA (Region IV-B consisting of Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon, and Palawan) at P12 to P20.
Mr. Mendoza said the wage increases are not enough to secure workers amid rising inflation, which was at 6.7% in October.
“Regional minimum wages cannot even buy the daily food requirements for a family of five. It is apparent that the regional wage boards are insensitive to the real hardships of workers and their families as their approved increases in basic pay and allowance will not be enough even for the basic food requirements of workers and their families, “ said the TUCP representative.
Mr. Mendoza filed House Bill 7805 or the proposed “Living Wage Act of 2018” in June which called for a P320 across-the-board wage increase for all regions.
Mr. Mendoza said granting a subsidy for minimum wage earners is one of the ways that the government can help prevent “industrial unrest and instability” since wage increases in the regions are too meager.
The TUCP Representative said, “Workers (get) no adequate compensation for what their income lost in value and no increase recognizing their valuable contribution to economic productivity and GDP growth.”
He also cited data from the World Bank which states labor productivity in the Philippines “increased at 3.5% annually from 2004 to 2014.”
According to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), the 2017 rate for labor productivity was the highest in eight years at 8.4%.
Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello has said that he has recommended to the President a subsidy program for minimum wage earners which will span three years.
The subsidy proposal, which will be in partnership with the Department of Finance (DoF) and the Department of Social Welfare, has yet to be approved by the President. In the program, 4.1 million minimum wage earners will receive a P200/month subsidy from the government or P2,400 per year. — Gillian M. Cortez

Rental revenues drive GERI income 8% higher in Q3

GLOBAL-ESTATE Resorts, Inc. (GERI) grew its attributable profit by eight percent in the third quarter of 2018, as rental income more than tripled during the period.
In a regulatory filing, the leisure and tourism estate arm of Megaworld Corp. reported a net income attributable to equity holders of the parent of P479.95 million, higher than the P442.74 million it posted in the same period a year ago.
This followed a 12% uptick in revenues to P1.93 billion, as the 322% surge in rental income to P117.42 million offset the flat performance of its real estate sales at P1.25 billion.
On a nine-month basis, GERI’s attributable profit improved by 14% to P1.29 billion, on the back of a seven percent increase in revenues to P5.25 billion.
The residential unit accounted for bulk of GERI’s revenues at P4.43 billion, seven percent higher year-on-year. The company benefited from the renewed interest in Boracay Island following its six-month rehabilitation, as well as its development near Tagaytay.
“We have seen really good take-up in Boracay Newcoast in the last few months, especially after the announcement of the island’s rehabilitation and reopening. We have also seen very keen interest in our Twin Lakes development,” GERI President Monica T. Salomon said in a statement.
The company owns the 150-hectare Boracay Newcoast in the famous tourist destination. It recently opened Savoy Hotel in the area, with Belmont Hotel Boracay and Chancellor Hotel Boracay slated to open in the next two years.
Twin Lakes is GERI’s largest tourism estate, covering around 1,200 hectares of land near Tagaytay.
Meanwhile, the company’s rental income surged by 253% to P294 million, compared to the P83.43 million recorded in the same period a year ago.
“This is another banner year for our leasing operations… We look forward to new commercial spaces in Holland Park and in Southwoods Office Towers 1 & 2, as these will further sustain our momentum in our rental income next year,” Mr. Salomon said.
GERI currently has seven integrated tourism developments in the country. Aside from Boracay Newcoast, Twin Lakes, and Southwoods City in Laguna, Sta. Barbara Heights in Iloilo, Eastland Heights in Antipolo, Rizal, and Hamptons Caliraya in Cavinti, Laguna.
The company is part of the property business of tycoon Andrew L. Tan, who also has investments in liquor through Emperador, Inc., gaming through Travellers Hotel International Group, Inc., and quick service restaurants through Golden Arches Development Corp.
Shares in GERi rose 1.01% or one centavo to close at P1 each at the stock exchange on Thursday. — Arra B. Francia

GrabFood launched with Crave City

WHILE GrabFood, transport services app Grab’s food delivery system, has been operational for quite a while now — it has been in place since June in select cities, expanded operations in July to cover all of Metro Manila, and in October began beta testing in Cebu and Mandaue — it was launched officially on Nov. 10 in an event called Crave City. Crave City is open to the public until Nov. 10, with customers able to order food via the app (provided onsite) from establishments Mom & Tina’s, El Chupacabra, Señor Pollo, Bawai’s Vietnamese Kitchen, Charlie’s Grind and Grill, Gong Cha, Ersao, Aysee, Sunrise Buckets, Manila Creamery, and Stockpile, which have stalls in BGC’s Globe Amphitheatre.
“Grab is no longer just a transportation technology platform,” said Demi Yu, Regional Head for Philippines, Thailand, and Malaysia for GrabFood in a speech. “We’ve now evolved to become an everyday app for consumers in Southeast Asia.”
In six months, GrabFood, first launched in Indonesia, has spread to Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia, and the Philippines. According to Ms. Yu, the app — including its transport services — serves one in six Southeast Asians.
As for GrabFood in the Philippines, the app currently has 4,000 merchants in its platform (multiple branches of restaurants included). The system works by opening the Grab app and asking a rider to order food for you and have the food delivered to your doorstep, with a fee included in the bill. The system is only available until about 9 p.m., said Brian P. Cu, Grab Philippines country head, because “Right now, we’re still working under the hours of the restaurants. But as we add more riders and add more establishments which have extended hours, we [can] also extend the time.” Payment is still on a cash basis, but he said they are working on introducing GrabPay (cashless transactions on the app) as well as other cashless options.
While the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board, the regulatory body for transport network companies (TNCs) like Grab, has set a 65,000 cap for vehicles allowed to move around Metro Manila., according to Mr. Cu, this does not affect the status of GrabFood. “Right now, we don’t have a cap on [motorcycle] riders. The cap’s on four wheels. We’re adding more riders everyday.”
Mr. Cu said, “Because we are a bit behind on our transport due to the government regulations, then it’s up to us to find other avenues of growth. GrabFood’s one of them.”
Several other Grab services are available in other markets, which have not yet been rolled out in the Philippines including GrabFamily (cars with child-safe car seats) and GrabFresh (a system for grocery shopping). “It would take a bit of time for us to roll that out here as we have to still be able to manage the supply that we have,” said Mr. Cu.
While it serves as a boon for consumers, GrabFood also provides an avenue for entrepreneurs. During the launch of GrabFood, they awarded their top 10 restaurant partners, which included Gong Cha, Frankie’s, Wing Vibe, 24 Chicken, Uncle Moe’s, Mister Kebab, Rufo’s, Hot Star, Empanada Nation, and Yoshinoya. While most of these have brick and mortar stores, some of them, only have facilities for delivery. “What we enable entrepreneurs to do is to bring their top dishes out into the market without having to run a restaurant,” said Mr. Cu. — Joseph L. Garcia

US companies team up with hospitals to reduce maternity costs

NEW YORK — General Electric Co and other large companies are trying to chip away at rising childbirth costs for U.S. employees, working directly with hospitals to reduce cesarean sections and related complications.
The efforts are in very early stages, with few details on their impact outside of cost savings of a few million dollars so far. But they illustrate yet another path companies are taking to bring down U.S. medical costs by working with doctors and hospitals to set health goals.
GE’s maternity strategy is designed to steer its employees to hospitals that are believed to provide better care and less likely to recommend unnecessary and costly interventions, company officials told Reuters.
U.S. employer spending on maternity care rose 50 percent in the last decade, fueled by a jump in C-section rates despite years of efforts to curb the practice, according to research firm Truven Health Analytics.
“Maternity is one of the main drivers of high cost claims,” for employers, said Ellen Kelsay, chief strategy officer at the National Business Group on Health. Avoiding unnecessary C-sections and minimizing complications “decreases turnover in the workforce following the birth of a child,” she said.
General Motors Co said it has included maternity goals, including reducing C-sections, in a new contract with a Detroit-area hospital. Dow Chemical demanded explanations from hospitals that care for its employees when its C-section rate hit 44 percent several years ago. Now part of the merged company DowDuPont Inc, it is working on new payment agreements with doctors and administrators.
“We went to them and said how do you explain this?” said Steve Morgenstern, Dow Chemical’s North American Health and Insurance Plan Leader, who called the rate “unacceptable.”
GE launched its Maternity Care Select Program in Cincinnati, Ohio, home to its aviation business, where nearly 300 babies are born to employee families every year.
Local hospital system TriHealth agreed to a single “bundled” payment rate to care for low and moderate-risk mothers from the start of pregnancy until 90 days after the baby is born, rather than charge for each visit and delivery separately. That typically removes the financial upside for C-sections, which cost nearly 60 percent more, on average, than a regular delivery.
Adam Malinoski, GE’s manager of health services, said none of the company’s health insurers offered bundled payments on maternity care when it designed its program, so it decided to work directly with providers.
GE pays the out-of-pocket costs for women who enroll, saving them up to several thousand dollars. TriHealth and GE would not disclose the bundled payment rates or how they compare with other hospital rates.
New deliveries under GE’s program began in 2016, when only 78 pregnant women enrolled. In 2017, 136 women enrolled, TriHealth told Reuters. C-section rates for first-time, low-risk deliveries, which represent a small group within the program, dropped to about 6 percent in 2017 from 24 percent in 2016. That comes in well below the U.S. rate of 26 percent for low-risk births.
TriHealth would not disclose the C-section rate for the total group.
GE expanded the program to hospitals in Wisconsin, South Carolina and Massachusetts in 2017 and announced a fifth location in New York in August, but says it is too early to provide data for other locations.
GE executives said the program so far has saved the company nearly $2 million because of lower negotiated fees for maternity care. It represents a fraction of its spending on the 113,000 employees and family members enrolled in the GE health insurance plan, but a step in the right direction, they added.
The rise of C-sections has been fueled in part by fears about malpractice litigation, as well as expecting mothers with health issues or who are older, which raise the risk of complications.
Hospitals say that makes them reluctant to set maternity goals. The Stanford Health Care medical system works directly with employers on health targets, such as diabetes care, but has so far refused to set specific goals on C-sections.
In such higher risk cases, “it’s entirely appropriate and (there’s) no way to determine upfront” who will need a cesarean, said John Jackson, who handles corporate health partnerships at Stanford Health Care.
Suzanne Delbanco, executive director of the nonprofit Catalyst for Payment Reform, has worked with large employers seeking to reduce C-section rates. But some companies “are still leery about wading in too much,” she said. “They don’t want to alienate people, they don’t want to be accused of being Big Brother.”
GM is taking its own shot at lowering costs and improving care with a new health program, announced in August, that was created directly with Henry Ford Health System in Michigan . Three of the program’s 19 health metrics involve maternity care such as lowering C-section rates, the company told Reuters.
The automaker’s total C-section rates vary widely, from about 40 percent in the Dallas/Fort Worth area to 30 percent or lower in Detroit.
“We were shocked,” said Sheila Savageau, U.S. health care leader for GM. “We have to change the system.” — Reuters

China Bank posts lower income at end-Sept. as revenues drop

CHINA BANKING Corp. (China Bank) saw its net income slip as of end-September, bogged down by lower non-interest revenues despite higher loans booked during the period.
In a disclosure, the Sy-owned bank reported a P5.56-billion bottom line for the first nine months, 2.1% lower than the P5.68 billion net profit during the comparable period in 2017.
China Bank saw its consolidated operating income pick up to P20.72 billion, up by eight percent year-on-year as core businesses continued to grow.
This was driven by a 16% increase in loans, which reached P507.83 billion as of September. In particular, loans granted to the retail segment surged at a faster 19% climb.
Earnings from loans and investments also pushed China Bank’s net interest income by a fifth to hit P17.08 billion. Year-to-date net interest margin likewise improved to 3.17%, which came at a time of rising interest rates.
Despite brisker lending activity, the bank saw a lower share of problem loans at just 1.23% of its portfolio compared to a 1.76% share a year ago.
On the other hand, non-interest revenues dropped by 26% to settle at P3.64 billion. These cover service fees and commissions, as well as trading and one-off gains.
Gross profits were partly offset by operating costs, which amounted to P13.11 billion.
Still, bank assets expanded to P816.2 billion led by a 20% increase in deposits. More than half of China Bank’s P691.66 billion deposit base came from low-cost accounts, which grew at a faster 29% pace, the lender said in the disclosure.
China Bank said it has enough buffers against a funding crunch, with a total capital adequacy ratio of 13.02%, high-quality tier 1 capital at 12.29%, and loan loss coverage at 121%.
China Bank is the seventh-biggest lender in the Philippines as of June, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. The bank, together with its thrift banking unit China Bank Savings, runs 616 branches and 949 automated teller machines nationwide.
The lender recently teamed up with the International Finance Corp. to float up to $150 million worth of green bonds, which will fund environment-friendly projects.
Shares in China Bank closed at P28 each on Thursday, up 15 centavos or 0.54%. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Wilcon earnings jump 24% in 9 months

EARNINGS of Wilcon Depot, Inc. rose by 24% in the first nine months of 2018, lifted by its store expansion complemented by strong same-store sales.
In a statement issued Thursday, the listed firm booked a net income of P1.39 billion from January to September, following a 17.9% uptick in net sales to P15.36 billion.
Net income reached P475 million during the third quarter alone, after a 17.8% increase at the top line to P5.36 billion.
The company opened seven new Wilcon branches and two home essential stores in the first nine months of the year, contributing P521 million in net sales for the quarter. Meanwhile, same-store sales growth stood at 8.6% from July to September.
It plans to open four more depots in the fourth quarter, for a total of 51 stores this year.
“Because of the continued healthy sales growth in the third quarter and anticipating the continued contribution of newly opened stores in the fourth quarter, Wilcon is looking to exceed its mid-teens 2018 net income growth target despite the expected continuing inflationary cost pressures,” Wilcon Chief Finance Officer Mark Andrew Y. Belo said in a statement. — Arra B. Francia

MRC Allied to build solar PV system for milling plants

MRC ALLIED, Inc. said on Wednesday that it had executed a memorandum of agreement (MoA) to build a solar photovoltaic rooftop system for two rice milling plants with a capacity of at least 550 kilowatt-peak (kWp).
The company did not disclose the other parties to the deal except to say that the development, design, construction and installation of the solar energy systems are for milling plants in northern Luzon.
Under the MoA, the company will be the project developer and owner of the solar facility, while a “private entity” that owns and operates the milling plants will be the off-taker of the produced power.
MRC Allied said the total investment cost for the project is estimated at P34 million. It said the MoA would become effective upon the issuance of the acceptance certificate by the power off-taker to the listed company “after successful completion of actual performance testing and interconnection.”
The cooperation period of the parties under the MoA will be for 20 years from the issuance of the certificate.
MRC Allied described the signing of the memorandum as “a significant milestone” for the company, and will kick off its pilot project in its current solar photovoltaic pipeline. The company aims to develop at least 4 megawatts of solar energy projects within the pilot project area, it added.
The MoA comes after the company last month announced a reorganization that consolidates under MRC Allied all its assets and portfolio while its operating subsidiaries will be implementing the projects.
As part of the reorganization, it announced the appointment of Augusto M. Cosio, Jr. as president and chief executive officer and the resignation of Gladys N. Nalda in those positions. The moves were unanimously approved by the board.
Ms. Nalda also resigned from MRC Allied’s board of directors, while Mr. Cosio was named as a new member. Both actions will take effect on Oct. 16, 2018. The new composition of the board committees are also to take effect on that date.
“The Company will continue to pursue renewable energy projects thru Menlo Renewable Energy Corp. (MREN) and Ms. Nalda will be appointed as its new President & CEO,” MRC Allied had said. — Victor V. Saulon

Idris Elba named People’s ‘sexiest man alive’

LOS ANGELES — Actor Idris Elba, who James Bond fans are campaigning to be the next person to play 007, was named the sexiest man alive on Monday by People magazine.
The London-born actor, 46, said he didn’t believe it when the magazine told him.
“I was like, ‘Come on, no way. Really?’” Elba told the celebrity publication. “Looked in the mirror, I checked myself out. I was like, ‘Yeah, you are kind of sexy today.’ But to be honest, it was just a nice feeling. It was a nice surprise — an ego boost for sure.”
One of Britain’s best-known stars, Elba won a Golden Globe for his lead role in BBC television detective series Luther, played a Norse god in Thor, and appeared in US TV series The Wire.
Other actors and singers who have been given the title by the magazine’s editors in recent years include Blake Shelton, Chris Hemsworth, Adam Levine, George Clooney, and Channing Tatum.
Only two other non-white men — African-American star Denzel Washington in 1996 and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, whose mother is Samoan and whose father is black Canadian, in 2016 — have won the title since People started the feature in 1985.
Fans have been campaigning for Elba, the son of African immigrants to Britain, to take over from Daniel Craig as secret agent James Bond in the lucrative movie franchise after the next Bond film, due for release in 2020.
Elba in August stoked the rumors that he was set to become the first black actor to play Bond when he posted a cryptic message on Twitter using one of the character’s best-known lines — “My name’s Elba, Idris Elba.” Days later he flatly denied it was going to happen, however.
Elba appears on the cover of a special double issue of People that arrives on newsstands on Friday. — Reuters

Ahold ups stakes in US grocery war with mini-‘robot supermarkets’

GROCERY GROUP Ahold Delhaize will roll out small, automated warehouses to speed order picking and cut delivery times, Reuters has learned, as it revamps its ecommerce business in response to rising competition in a fast-growing sector.
At an investor event on Nov. 13, the world’s eighth biggest food retailer is set to showcase a partnership that will allow it to automate order collection at mini “robot supermarkets” attached to the stores of its U.S. chains like Stop & Shop.
That marks a departure from its previous strategy of relying more on manual labor at bigger warehouses, or on a mixture of man and machine, to meet online food orders.
Now Netherlands-based Ahold Delhaize is teaming up with Takeoff, a start-up which builds small warehouses that stack groceries to the ceiling to save space and use robot arms to assemble shoppers’ orders for items such as beer, milk, bread and fruit.
The warehouses serve as condensed supermarkets that can supply several stores with click-and-collect orders. They cost about $3 million to build, which Takeoff says is less than the cost of a typical store revamp.
“Ahold is preparing for a major push,” Curt Avallone, Takeoff’s chief development officer who led digital innovation at Stop & Shop until 2003, told Reuters.
“If it goes well, both from their side and our side, the hope is we would rapidly be able to build quite a few.”
Ahold Chief Executive Frans Muller confirmed the deal on Wednesday and said it should help expand online faster and at a lower cost than with standalone warehouses.
“With the robotized solution we can optimize those picking costs and be closer with micro fulfillment to our catchment areas. We also reduce the cost of the last mile,” he said.
Ahold’s shares jumped 5 percent on Wednesday as it reported third-quarter results that beat analysts’ forecasts, lifted by strong online sales and growth in its key markets.
ONLINE GROCERY WAR
Ahold’s move is the latest salvo in a war for the online grocery market that has escalated since Amazon’s takeover of Whole Foods last year. Whole Foods since launched same-day grocery delivery with Amazon’s Prime Now in more than 60 cities. Other retailers are also racing to respond: Walmart will test Alert Innovation’s Alphabot automated grocery picking at a store in New Hampshire, and Kroger has teamed up with British online grocery expert Ocado.
Kroger said it will disclose the location for the first three U.S. sites out of a planned 20 high-tech Ocado warehouses in the next couple of weeks. They will take about two years to build and each cost Ocado about $39 million.
Ahold Delhaize, the operator of U.S. chains such as Giant Food, Food Lion and Hannaford, acquired Chicago-based online grocer Peapod in 2000 which is still the market leader.
However, growth has slowed at Peapod since Amazon bought Whole Foods and as supermarkets — including Ahold’s own chains like Stop & Shop — team up with start-ups like Instacart to offer curbside pick-up, or one- to two-hour delivery.
Ahold reported U.S. online sales growth picked up in the third quarter, but Muller said he was still not happy with that.
HAND TO MOUTH
Until now, Ahold’s strategy has been largely manual. At its warehouses, known as “dark stores,” pickers grab items from shelves and put them into crates for packaging and delivery. Ahold has decades of experience in delivering groceries to homes, starting in the Netherlands in 1986 when its Albert Heijn chain took orders by phone or fax.
At one Albert Heijn warehouse outside the Dutch city of Eindhoven, pickers each grab an average of one product every 10 seconds, walking about 4.5 km a day. Algorithms work out the shortest path through the aisles, and try to minimize trolley congestion.
Pawel Kamienczuk, a 28-year-old order picker from Poland, sweats as he races down an aisle, trying to meet a target of 380 items an hour.
“At the beginning, it took time to get used to it, but now I don’t feel tired,” he said.
Kamienczuk wears a device like a smartphone on his wrist which tells him where to go and which items to grab next.
He scans each product with a device mounted on his forefinger and puts it into one of 18 blue crates stacked on a large trolley.
Albert Heijn warehouses can pick and pack 135-140 units per labor hour, lower than Kamienczuk’s rate because it takes into account work done by others to unload supplies, stack shelves, assemble orders and pack delivery vans.
The figure is also less than the 163 units Ocado reported for the first half of 2018, but analysts say it is impressive given than Albert Heijn’s capital outlay for its centers is a fraction of the cost of Ocado’s automated warehouses.
Efficiency is key at a time when labor costs are rising in the United States and Europe.
The Dutch jobless rate is at an 18-year low and U.S. unemployment is around the lowest in five decades, wage pressures are rising and companies are increasingly complaining about a scarcity of workers.
Last month, Amazon said it would raise the minimum wage for U.S. workers to $15 an hour, in part to attract staff.
China hopes to escape bumpy landing as trade ties improve
At Ahold’s Peapod warehouse in Jersey City, pickers who start on about $12 per hour with benefits can make up to $3.50 an hour extra if they beat speed targets, but they are also closely monitored for quality: a dented tin could mean a refund.
“When we shop, we have many people that check after us,” said Amal, an expert “shopper” who specializes in selecting bananas, Peapod’s top selling product.
The Peapod warehouse in New Jersey is the firm’s biggest and most sophisticated to date in terms of automation.
There, crates move along conveyer belts to teams of pickers who focus on different food categories, while robots add non-food items like shampoo. Peapod does not share pick times.
Despite the automation, Peapod employs 825 people here, working two shifts from 5 a.m. until 2 p.m. and from 5 p.m. until 2 a.m. in a warehouse with seven temperature zones.
NEXT DAY VERSUS SAME DAY
Peapod has only offered next-day delivery so far. The partnership with Takeoff will enable the group to offer same-day delivery, or click-and-collect, initially to customers living near a pilot warehouse at a Shop & Stop in Connecticut.
Avallone declined to comment on the financials of the Ahold deal, but said Takeoff should be able to roll out the concept quickly as it takes 16-20 weeks to set up its 10,000 square foot warehouses, which can handle up to $50 million in annual sales.
That contrasts with Ocado’s newest facility in Britain, which is a 563,000 square foot site, with a potential annual turnover of 1.2 billion pounds ($1.55 billion).
The U.S. grocery ecommerce market is still in its infancy at just 1.6 percent of sales, but it is expected to more than double by 2023, according to industry research group IGD.
Ahold, which makes almost two thirds of its sales in the United States, wants to boost ecommerce sales to 5 billion euros ($5.8 billion) by 2020, or about 8 percent of total turnover, from 2.8 billion in 2017. It will update that target next week.
Its U.S. online sales should near $1 billion by the end of the year as it creates a shared ecommerce infrastructure for all of its store-based brands, along with its online grocery site Peapod, Muller said in August. — Reuters

Sun Life still country’s top life insurer in 2017

SUN Life of Canada (Philippines) Inc. was the top life insurer in 2017 based on premium income with P32.11 billion, the Insurance Commission (IC) said on Thursday.
The IC released the list of top life insurers in 2017 in terms of net premiums, new business premiums, net income, assets, and net worth based on firms’ audited annual statements.
Philippine Axa Life Insurance Corp. was second, with P26.18 billion in net premiums last year.
BPI-Philam Life Assurance Corp. (BPI-Philam) ranked third with P20.33 billion in net premiums, followed by Philippine American Life & General Insurance Co., (Philam Life) with P19.90 billion, and Pru Life Insurance Corp. of UK (Pru Life UK) with P19.22 billion.
The top five firms kept their 2016 rankings. The life insurance industry overall had a combined premium income of P202.77 billion last year, 10.89% higher than the P182.86 billion recorded in 2016.
In terms of premiums from new policies, Sun Life remained on top with annual new business premiums worth P6.64 billion in 2017, followed by AXA Philippines with P5.36 billion, Pru Life UK with P4.81 billion, Philam Life with P4.17 billion, and BPI-Philam with P3.88 billion.
Sun Life also booked the highest net income among life insurers in 2017 with P7.03 billion, jumping from its seventh spot finish in 2016.
Philam Life was second with P6.15 billion, followed by Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd. with P4.02 billion, Manufacturers Life Insurance Co. (Phils.), Inc. (Manulife Philippines) with P3.07 billion, and AXA Philippines with P2.36 billion. These firms all saw their ranks go down by a notch from 2016.
“The reported net income of the top players accounts for 80.53% of the total net
income of the life insurance industry in 2017,” the Insurance Commission said.
Meanwhile, Philam Life retained its top rank in terms of totals assets in 2017, booking P259.48 billion.
Sun Life followed with P232.77 billion worth of assets, Insular Life with P137.38 billion, and AXA Philippines with P113.70 billion, who all retained their respective second, third, and fourth ranks from 2016.
BPI-Philam meanwhile went up to the fifth spot from sixth in 2016 as it recorded P103.42 billion in total assets in 2017, overtaking Pru Life.
On the other hand, Philam Life booked the highest net worth last year at P77.53 billion, followed by Insular Life’s P38.27 billion, Sun Life’s P27.28 billion, Manulife Philippines’ P14.07 billion, and United Coconut Planters Life Assurance Corp.’s P7.56 billion. The rankings were unchanged from 2016.
“By end of 2019, existing insurance companies are required to increase their respective net worth to P900 million coming from the existing minimum of P550 million. This is the penultimate mandatory increase in minimum net worth requirement as required under the Insurance Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 10607,” the IC said.
The law also mandates insurance companies to increase the net worth further to P1.3 billion by December 2022. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Converge ICT opens network node in Taiwan

CONVERGE ICT Solutions, Inc. on Thursday said it has opened a new network node in Taiwan, as the fiber internet provider continues with its nationwide expansion.
In a statement, the company, owned by Pampanga-based businessman Dennis Anthony Uy, said this node will “serve as a buffer and backup for Converge ICT’s current fiber network, providing better and stronger network resiliency and reliability in case of emergency network downturns.”
The new node will have a direct connection to Google’s largest data center operating in Changhua County, Taiwan.
“(It) is set to leverage its strategic location to efficiently manage and route network traffic for Converge ICT’s consumer and enterprise-level user,” the company said.
ICT Converge currently has nodes located in Singapore, Hong Kong, and the United States.
“This critical deployment for Converge ICT’s network operations is also done in line with the company’s current campaign to attain global-standard technical requirements for reachability and reliability, spreading its network capacities to address any possible points of failure and congestion beforehand,” the company said.

Michael Douglas gets Hollywood star


MICHAEL DOUGLAS celebrated his 50th year in show business on Tuesday with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame near that of his screen legend father, Kirk Douglas, now 101. Douglas, 74, best known for his Oscar-winning turn as Gordon Gekko in Wall Street, was accompanied by his father — star of 1960 gladiator movie Spartacus — his actress wife Catherine Zeta-Jones and The China Syndrome co-star Jane Fonda. Douglas has appeared in more than 60 films and TV shows, including 1970s police series The Streets of San Francisco, psychological thrillers Fatal Attraction and Basic Instinct, and more recently the Marvel comic book movie Ant-Man. Douglas is also a film producer, winning an Oscar for the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and producing dozens of independent movies. — Reuters