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New Zealand seen as possible market for Mindanao mangoes

DAVAO CITY — The mango industry in the Davao Region has formed an industry council to take advantage of export opportunities to New Zealand and other countries.

The Mindanao Fresh Mango Producers Forum, held Nov. 21 in collaboration with the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) and the Department of Agriculture-Davao, discussed best practices and improving production, among other issues.

MinDA, in a statement, said the forum output will form part of the feasibility study on quality assurance systems for fresh mango being conducted by the New Zealand Embassy and NZ G2G Partnerships Ltd. (G2G) under a three-year co-investment project.

The program aims to help mango farmers comply with the sanitary and phytosanitary standards of New Zealand and other foreign markets.

The New Zealand Embassy’s Deputy Head of Mission Tim Stewardson is quoted in the statement as saying that his country “has a lot of experience in agriculture and we want to share that, with focus on Mindanao given its agriculture and agribusiness potential.”

MinDA said various mango industry councils in Mindanao will meet in December to organize a single body that will come up with a program for the commodity.

“We are looking forward to having this venue as the birthplace of a more organized, dedicated, and with a common vision, the ONE Mindanao Mango Industry Council,” said MinDA Chair Emmanuel F. Piñol. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Airlines get ready for jet biofuel take-off to meet Norway rules

OSLO — Airlines are confident of having sufficient supplies of biofuel-infused jet fuel to comply with a Norway requirement which takes effect next year, although they warn of additional costs.

From January, jet fuel suppliers in Norway must blend 0.5% of biofuel in all their aviation fuel, a policy Oslo hopes will boost supply and demand and lead to lower CO2 emissions.

Although aviation biofuel suppliers say it can cut the carbon footprint of airlines by up to 80%, it costs four times as much as normal jet fuel, which has so far curtailed usage and therefore demand for increased production.

And not all biofuels are equal when it comes to their environmental impact, both in production and transportation.

Norway’s new rule demands that airplanes refueled in the country use a product made from waste fats and vegetable oil, although it excludes palm oil.

“There are not that many suppliers that supply that type of fuel. We have access and can buy these quantities at this stage. As we go into the future though we need more,” Rickard Gustafson, chief executive of SAS, told Reuters.

The Scandinavian airline has set its own goal of powering all its domestic flights, which account for 17% of its total fuel consumption, with biofuel by 2030.

SAS expects Norway’s 0.5% biofuel requirement to mean an additional 3 million euro ($3.33 million) in annual fuel costs.

It said it may source the biofuel it needs from AirBP, BP’s specialist aviation division, and intends to buy more from Sweden’s Preem, which is building new facilities.

But with Sweden and Finland considering following Norway’s lead — all three say that by 2030 they want to increase aviation biofuel use to 30% of total refueling — there is a danger that demand will outstrip production.

“We have to create the market. There is strong demand for biofuel. But not enough is produced,” Norway’s Climate and Environment Minister, Ola Elvestuen, told Reuters.

Neste and Norwegian utility Statkraft are also developing new plants, while similar projects have been announced by Air France KLM and AirBP.

Wideroe, a small Norwegian airline, welcomes Norway’s requirement but called for other countries to follow suit.

“As a first step we would like to see national requirements of biofuel being replaced by international requirements. This would ensure a level playing field between airlines,” it said, adding that it wants to use electric planes by 2030.

However, budget airline Norwegian Air said Norway was creating artificial demand which, even though it can be met initially, could cause a future fuel squeeze.

“With other (biofuel) volume obligations in the future, we could easily get a supply shortage,” a spokeswoman said.

“In order to fulfil the mandate, imports from other regions might be necessary. How sustainable is biofuel that has been shipped half way around the world,” she said.

Norwegian Air has been investing in more fuel efficient planes, which should be encouraged instead, she added. Some in the airline industry market, including the SAS CEO, said some of the extra fuel costs may be added to fares.

Despite this, passengers at Oslo airport welcomed Norway’s pioneering move.

“I do not mind if it will cost a little bit more. We have to clean up the world and do what we can do to have cleaner fuel,” said 72-year-old Dag Christopherson. — Reuters

Wearing a bit of history on one’s wrist

NEVER FORGET: Queen Elizabeth II wore a Jaeger-LeCoultre Caliber 101 (then the world’s smallest movement), concealed within the links of diamond bracelet during her 1953 coronation. Every time you’re wearing a Jaeger-LeCoultre, you’re wearing a bit of history on your wrist.

Some of the brand’s novelties were launched in the Philippines late last week at a tea at the Raffles. The company was founded in 1830, appearing among the wrists of the world’s most famous people: think Amelia Earhart, Douglas MacArthur, and Charlie Chaplin.

For this year, the brand announced a limited edition of its Polaris Date limited edition — just 800 of them, to be exact. From the website, it said: “a self-winding mechanical movement delivers all the precision and craftsmanship one would expect from Jaeger‑LeCoultre. The in-house Calibre 899A/1 faithfully keeps the seconds, minutes, hours, and date (displayed through a dedicated window at the three o’clock position) while offering a power reserve of 38 hours. It’s secured by a closed caseback, which has four special engravings, including a SCUBA diving insignia, the Jaeger‑LeCoultre crest, and the phrase ‘1000 HOURS CONTROL’, denoting the assembled watch has undergone 1,000 hours of testing before leaving the Manufacture in the Vallée de Joux, Switzerland. Finally, the words ‘Limited edition — One of 800’ are inscribed near backing’s outer edge.”

As for the look, it features a “hand-lacquered blue double-gradient dial with sunrayed, grained and opaline finish, unique to this special model. The central disc and main dial now each incorporate a shimmering, color-change effect — from deep turquoise to a brilliant shade of royal blue. The blue rubber Clous de Paris strap, also unique to the model, is color-matched to the inner bezel, which, like the original Memovox Polaris and Polaris II, rotates for added functionality.”

For something more dainty, there is the Dazzling Rendez-Vous Night & Day, with a mother-of-pearl dial, and approximately 3.43 carats worth of diamonds on the bezel. An automatic, self-winding piece with a clear caseback, it displays the brand’s genius in combining technical masterpiece with a sense of beauty. — JLG

Fernandes won’t commit to timeline for AirAsia PHL IPO

By Arjay L. Balinbin
Reporter

KUALA LUMPUR — AirAsia Group Berhad Chief Executive Officer Anthony Francis “Tony” Fernandes won’t commit to a definite timeline for the planned initial public offering (IPO) of its Philippine unit.

“No. We are making money,” Mr. Fernandes told reporters here on Friday when asked about a target year for Philippines AirAsia, Inc.’s IPO. “No. I don’t think we can commit to a timeline. Let’s see how results go.”

Philippines AirAsia Chairman Joseph Omar A. Castillo said last month that the budget carrier is looking to launch its IPO by the third quarter of 2020 to first quarter of 2021.

He said the company was still “undergoing a restructuring” in preparation for the IPO.

Philippines AirAsia has postponed its planned public offering several times due to market volatility.

“We are [now] doing so well in the Philippines. The Philippines has been a problem child for us for a long time… I always see the Philippines as a diamond in the rough because it sits on the border of China, Korea, and Taiwan, and it is a great connector to the East Coast of America,” Mr. Fernandes also said.

“So, we are doing great… So what we will do? We will wait until we get a fair valuation. This is our first year of productivity, so wait a minute,” he added.

Michael L. Romero, owner of Philippines AirAsia majority stakeholder F&S Holdings, Inc., earlier said they were still looking at a $1-billion valuation for the company.

Mr. Romero has said also that for this year, Philippines AirAsia targets to post a net income of P2 billion and P29 billion revenue. The budget carrier posted a P2.11 billion loss last year.

The local unit of AirAsia saw a 777% surge in profit to P593.07 million in the second quarter, as revenues rose 38% to P7.51 billion.

Reporters arrived in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday to witness the welcome ceremony for Malaysia’s AirAsia Group Berhad’s first A321neo aircraft from Hamburg, Germany. The new aircraft is the first of 353 A321neos ordered by AirAsia Group from Airbus SE.

A321neos will replace AirAsia’s existing fleet of A320 and A320neo aircraft throughout its network including Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, India and Japan.

“We are proud to welcome our first A321neo today as the backbone of our future operations. This new aircraft will be deployed on popular routes delivering growth opportunities to new markets and add extra capacity in existing markets, particularly where there are expansion constraints due to infrastructure or slot availability limitations,” Mr. Fernandes said in his speech at a ceremony here on Friday.

“Last year, AirAsia flew over 90 million guests and now, with significantly improved operational efficiencies and 50 more seats per aircraft, AirAsia can look forward to flying even more people for less. As our cost is reduced we can pass on any savings to our guests in the form of even lower airfares,” he added.

Total Philippines offers free BMWs via ‘Drive Me Home’ promo

TOTAL Philippines is giving away five BMW G310GS Adventure Bikes and one 218i 7-seater Gran Tourer for its “Drive Me Home!” promo.

Starting on Oct. 28, a customer can get two raffle coupons for every purchase of P500 worth of TOTAL Excellium fuels, one raffle coupon for every P500 purchase of TOTAL Premium Unleaded and Regular Diesel, or P250 worth of purchases in Cafe Bonjour. The customer must present a proof of purchase or receipt to the cashier where the fuel purchase was made. On the other hand, a customer is entitled to two raffle stubs for every purchase of any TOTAL lubricant.

Only customers who are 18 years old and above are qualified to participate and they must present a driver’s license as proof. A customer may claim raffle coupons more than once, provided that their transaction meets the required purchase amount during the promo period.

The deadline for the first draw is on Jan. 3, 2020 and winners will be drawn on Jan. 17 where five BMW G310GS adventure bikes will be up for grabs. For the grand draw, one winner will be driving home a brand-new BMW 218i 7-seater Gran Tourer. Deadline of entries for the grand draw is on Feb. 28. Winners will be drawn on March 13.

Winners will be announced on TOTAL’s official Facebook page. Determination of winners will be held at the Artistespace, Inc. Head Office at Unit 406 Centerpoint Condominium, J. Vargas cor. Garnet St., Ortigas Business District Pasig. A winner can only win once.

Promo runs until Feb. 28, 2020.

For more information, visit Facebook.com/TotalinthePhilippines or totaloil.com.ph.

Yields on government debt close flat on profit taking

By Genshen L. Espedido

YIELDS ON government securities moved sideways last week amid lack of market leads, prompting investors to take profit instead as the year comes to a close.

Debt yields, which move opposite to prices, inched up by an average of 0.5 basis point (bp) on a week-on-week basis, according to the PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates as of Nov. 22 published on the Philippine Dealing System’s website.

“Strong two-way interest was noted throughout the week as investors await for fresh catalysts in the form of any progress on trade issues between the US and China,” Robinsons Bank Corp. peso sovereign debt trader Kevin S. Palma said in a text message last Friday, noting that GS yields continued to trade within a “tight band” on a weekly basis.

“In line with this, dealers were content servicing end-user requirements amid reinvestment flows ahead of a bond maturity last Nov. 22,” he said, referring to seven-year bond worth about P197 billion, which were originally issued in 2012 with a coupon rate of 3.8750% and was reissued last March 31, 2016.

For his part, ATRAM Trust Corp. Head of Fixed Income Jose Miguel B. Liboro said in a separate e-mail interview that yields last week adjusted higher “on the back of some profit-taking moving into yearend.”

“With further BSP easing unlikely for the balance of the year and inflation expected to begin adjusting higher, investors have been trimming positions on longer-tenor securities causing a slight steepening of the yield curve,” he added.

President Xi Jinping said China wants to work on the “phase one” trade agreement with the United States, but he warned of retaliation when necessary, according to a Reuters report.

Negotiations for this agreement could continue until next year, as initial trade deal could take as long as five weeks to work out, Reuters said.

At the end of the trading last Friday, yields ended mixed across the board as 91- and 364-day Treasury bills (T-bill) went down by 0.5 bp and 3.8 bps, respectively, to 3.174% and 3.518%. Meanwhile, the yield on 182-day T-bill rose by 3.5 bps to 3.338%.

At the belly of the curve, the rates on the two-, three-, four-, five- and seven-year Treasury bonds (T-bond) decreased by 2.4 bps (3.846%), 2.3 bps (3.98%), 2.3 bps (4.118%), 1.8 bps (4.258%) and 0.3 bp (4.5%), respectively.

Meanwhile, at the long end, yields on the 10-, 20- and 25-year T-bonds went up by 1.4 bps (4.720%), 6.9 bps (5.234%), and 7.3 bps (5.259%).

“Expect choppy trading with upward bias to persist as traders will keep a keen eye on the result of the 20-year FXTN auction on Tuesday and to remain highly vigilant for any leads regarding US-China trade issues,” Mr. Palma said.

“[M]arket players have been cautious with potential bond supply on the BTr’s (Bureau of the Treasury) 20-year auction next week which is expected to clear at slightly elevated levels of 5.2% or higher,” Mr. Liboro said.

The BTr will auction off reissued 20-year Treasury bond worth P20 billion on Nov. 26. Originally issued last Jan. 24, it has a remaining life of 19 years and two months and a coupon rate of 6.750%.

The government plans to borrow P220 billion from the domestic market this quarter as it looks to raise P1.189 trillion this year from local and foreign sources to fund its budget deficit, which is expected to widen to as much as 3.2% of the country’s gross domestic product.

Iloilo City roads bright with lanterns made by BJMP inmates

ILOILO CITY’S major roads are decorated for this year’s Christmas season with 1,600 lanterns, locally called parol, made by jail inmates as commissioned by a public-private partnership. “It is an inclusive collaboration of all sectors in society, meaning there is unity and diversity,” Alma May Tayo of the Zonta Club of Iloilo City II said. The Zonta Club was part of the Christmas Lantern Committee formed by the city government with the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) Iloilo chapter as lead. Mayor Jerry P. Treñas said he wanted inmates at the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP)-Iloilo City District Jail to have an income opportunity as well as a sense of fulfillment in contributing to the city. “The different colors of the parols show that even if we come from different political orientations, religious belief, racial differences, for Iloilo we are one,” he said. Each parol, which cost P1,500, measures six-by-six feet and is made with bamboo and plastic charol. “This project sends a very strong message of inclusivity among us here in Iloilo City. Iloilo is moving forward because of all of you. As we level up, no one will be left behind,” the mayor said. — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

Nadal fires Spain into Davis Cup final vs Canada

MADRID — Rafael Nadal fired hosts Spain into the Davis Cup final as he joined Feliciano Lopez to win a thrilling late-night doubles and seal a nail-biting 2-1 victory over Britain on Saturday.

The world number one, playing like a man possessed, sent a capacity crowd in the Magic Box wild as he almost single-handedly hauled his country home and set up a final with Canada in the inaugural edition of the revamped competition on Sunday.

With the semi-final on a knife edge at 1-1 after the singles were shared, Nadal and veteran Lopez came through an electrifying doubles clash against Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski, winning 7-6(3) 7-6(8) to take five-time winners Spain into their first Davis Cup final since 2012.

Just as on the previous night against Argentina in the quarter-finals, Nadal first had to win his singles to drag his team level after Lopez was outplayed 6-3 7-6 by Kyle Edmund.

Nadal completed that task with a 6-4 6-0 win over Dan Evans, which extended his incredible run of Davis Cup singles wins to 28 since 2004, and, just like 24 hours earlier, he bounded back on court around half an hour later for a doubles decider.

In a match of gut-wrenching tension played in front of a frenzied soccer-style crowd in the 12,500-seater stadium, Nadal, 33, and Lopez, 38, squeezed out the first set on a tiebreak in which every single point felt like a drama.

With the clock ticking well past midnight yet again, the inspired British pair kept their noses in front on serve in the second set and when Lopez made a horrible mess of a smash on the Nadal serve at 5-6 they had a set point.

Nadal saved that one with a nerveless forehand winner down the line but there was more trouble for Spain in the tiebreak.

After an angry Nadal clashed with the umpire Britain led 6-4 but Lopez saved the first set point with a big serve and then Nadal produced miracles to flick a lob over Murray before putting away a smash as the Scot replied with a lob.

It felt like Nadal was tackling Britain on his own as he saved a fourth set point with a monstrous forehand that whistled past Murray. Three-time Grand Slam champion Andy Murray, sitting at courtside after being left out, could not look.

Spain then had a match point which Nadal miscued, but when Skupski bunted a volley long it meant Lopez had a service point to seal it, and he delivered.

DRAMATIC COMPETITION
“Rafa Rafa” the crowd bellowed as they saluted their hero and he will need them behind him again in Sunday’s climax against Canada at the end of an exhausting week.

“This competition is dramatic and with this new format even more,” Nadal said on court. “It was very close. We knew it was going to be a very tough battle. But we found a way.”

Lopez was close to tears at the end and who could blame him after the tension of two dramatic hours.

“I’m living the dream,” he said. “It’s a very special moment. Rafa hit an unbelievable lob when we were down in the break 6-4. We are really happy and have a great opportunity to hold this trophy tomorrow.”

Canada reached their first Davis Cup final after Denis Shapovalov and Vasek Pospisil, who have played every rubber for their side this week, beat Russian duo Andrey Rublev and Karen Khachanov as their semi-final also went to the wire.

Pospisil’s run of three straight singles wins here came to an end in the opener against an inspired Rublev, the Russian winning 6-4 6-4.

Shapovalov levelled the tie when he beat Khachanov 6-4 4-6 6-4 before the Canadian duo edged the doubles 6-3 3-6 7-6(5).

“I don’t think any of us expected that we could get this far,” Shapovalov said. “You have to have a little bit of luck on your side and just play some ridiculous tennis and play at a ridiculous level. It’s dream to be in the final.” — Reuters

Zimbabwe scraps import controls on maize, wheat flour after drought

HARARE — Zimbabwe has removed import controls on maize and wheat flour following a severe drought that cut supplies, a cabinet minister said on Thursday.

More than half of Zimbabwe’s population requires food aid following an El Nino-induced drought that also reduced water levels in the biggest hydro dam, leading to rolling power cuts.

Acting information minister Simangaliso Ndlovu said in a post-cabinet press statement that the government would now allow anyone to import maize, maize meal and flour. Import duty on the products had also been removed so they can be brought into the country cheaply. Ndlovu said the measures were temporary.

Millers will no longer be able to buy grain at subsidized prices from the state grain agency, Ndlovu also said, in a move that takes immediate effect.

Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube had said in a budget speech last week the subsidies would end in January, raising concerns that impoverished citizens would face another round of price increases.

“The government will also be unveiling a mechanism for targeted subsidies for basic foodstuffs. This is intended as an additional cushion for vulnerable households and the generality of Zimbabweans,” Ndlovu said.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has this year moved to remove subsidies on fuel and electricity and introduce a new currency, reforms that have unleashed inflation.

Mnangagwa says the reforms are painful in the short term but will eventually put Zimbabwe on a sound economic footing.

The government has said Zimbabwe needs more than 800,000 tonnes of maize to plug its grain deficit. — Reuters

Anita Magsaysay-Ho in the house thanks to Rustan’s new home decor line

A MASTER artist’s work is most of the time enjoyed by private owners (those who acquire it directly from the artist, the winning bidder at an auction, or heirloom keepers). But Filipino modernist painter Anita Magsaysay-Ho (1914-2012) believed that art is to be enjoyed by everyone.

“She felt [that] art, in a way, was so inaccessible to most people,” the late artist’s daughter, Doris Magsaysay-Ho, said at the launch of Rustan’s for the Arts’s new line of home decor. “When she painted and somebody bought it, it was gone forever from anybody’s view. She really believed that it was important to have reproductions or ways that others could also enjoy these paintings.”

Rustan’s for the Arts fulfilled the artist’s vision in sharing her works with a wider audience with a collection of home decor called “Offerings.”

Named as one of the 13 Moderns of Philippine art, Anita Magsaysay-Ho was known for painting Filipino women wearing kerchiefs on their heads and engaged everyday activities. In 2017, the oil painting The Many Colors of San Francisco (1997) sold for P36.2 million at the Important Philippine Art Auction at Salcedo Auctions. In 2018, the 1950 piece Tahip went for P30 million at the ACC art auction at the Léon Gallery.

Ms. Magsaysay-Ho recalled that as a child, her mother would bring her along to see her exhibits in the now defunct Galerie Bleu at Rustan’s department store.

“I know the Tantoco family very well, so they asked me if I would consider doing it, I thought, my mother always felt that art should be accessible for everybody,” Ms. Ho told BusinessWorld during the launch on Nov. 20 at Rustan’s Makati.

Since 2016, Rustan’s for the Arts has released collections of home decor featuring works by National Artist for Visual Arts Benedicto “BenCab” Cabrera, Fernando Amorsolo, Arturo Luz, Al Perez, and Paulina Luz Sotto. The program is aimed at helping raise awareness for arts and culture.

The Magsaysay-Ho collection is highlighted by reproductions of the artist’s original painted plates — her Kakawati Dance, Man and Woman Dancing: Tinikling Dance, and Women with Pineapples — by Bernardaud. There are 350 pieces per design.

“Anita [Magsaysay-Ho] apparently believed that artwork for plates should be on plates, and the paintings are really for the wall,” Dina A. Tantoco, Rustan’s Head of Marketing and Communications told BusinessWorld, about the decorative plates.

“She really painted them on plates. I have the originals plates at home,” Ms. Magsaysay-Ho added. “She did [them] in the 1960s when she lived in Japan when she worked with a ceramics company.”

Other products in the “Offerings” collection include greeting card boxes, cushion covers, and table napkins.

The collection will be available at Rustan’s Alabang Town Center, Gateway, Shangri-La Plaza, and Cebu in January 2020.

A portion of the proceeds from the sales will be donated to the Anita Magsaysay-Ho Foundation, a non-profit organization that provides scholarships to students and supports organizations promoting art and culture. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

CTA expands SMIC tax refund award

THE Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) has ruled to allow a refund of P986.4 million, part of the amount sought by SM Investments Corp. (SMIC) for 2013.

In a 28-page amended decision dated Nov. 18, the court’s special second division partially granted the petition of SM Investments but increased the amount for refund.

The court in a March 4 decision only allowed the refund of P179.3 million out of the P1.17 billion excess creditable withholding tax claimed by SMIC for 2013.

The court said in its amended decision that SMIC had adequately explained its entitlement to a further P807.1 million refund.

“(P)etitioner has completely explained and proven that the corresponding income payment/gain of the CWT amounting to P807,070,650.00 was reported in its Annual ITR (income tax revenue) for 2013,” according to the decision.

“Clearly from the foregoing, SMIC established compliance with the requisite that the income upon which the taxes were withheld should be included in the return of the recipient, but only up to the extent of P807,070,650.00 with related gross income of P16,141,413,000.00, representing the property swap with SM Prime Holdings, Inc. which was accounted for using the pooling of interest method,” it added.

The court upheld the disallowance of the rest of the claims due to “failure to properly substantiate the same.”

It also denied a motion for reconsideration filed by the Bureau of Internal Revenue. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Semirara Mining continues to face regulatory challenges

SEMIRARA Mining and Power Corp. (SMPC) was among the most actively traded stocks last week, after the Department of Energy (DoE) issued a suspension of Consunji-led company’s coal trading activities for one month and coal mining operations due to a mudflow incident in Semirara island.

A total of P348.56 million worth of 16.36 million shares of SMPC exchanged hands on the trading floor from Nov. 18 to 22, data from the Philippine Stock Exchange showed, making it the 17th most actively traded issue last week.

SMPC shares closed at P20.75 apiece on Friday, up five percent from P19.76 the previous day but down 13.2% from P23.90 a week ago. Year to date, it slipped by 10.6%.

“The sudden news of coal mining shutdown made SMPC one of the most active stocks. In addition, the company was slapped with a fine and suspension for one-month due to coal trading,” Unicapital Securities, Inc. Technical Analyst Jeff Radley C. See said in an e-mail interview.

“The bears took control and push the price lower to new lows,” he said.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, SMPC said it suspended its mining operations after receiving a letter from the DoE dated Nov. 14 directing the company to “suspend any and all mining activities under Coal Operating Contract No. 5” until conditions set by the department are met.

The mudflow incident in its Molave Pit on Semirara island occurred on Oct. 2. SMPC’s mining operator went missing after the incident and his remains were found after a three-day search and rescue operation, the DoE said on Oct. 5.

“The DoE orders of suspension will result to opportunity loss in production per day from 40,000-45,000 MT (metric tons). The financial impact, however, shall depend on the prevailing price of coal,” SMPC said.

In a separate e-mail, Philstocks Financial, Inc. senior research analyst Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said SMPC’s share price fell by 13.18% week on week to P20.75 “due to the regulatory challenges it is facing.”

“Investors were worried of the opportunity losses brought by the suspension. At the same time, Investors feared the possible coal trading suspension brought by the Department of Energy (DoE) amid SMPC’s said transactions with Gold Anchorage, an unaccredited coal trader,” Mr. Tantiangco said.

Also last week, the DoE imposed a one-month suspension on SMPC, after the company was found to be in violation of Department Circular No. DC2012-05-0006 or the Guidelines on the Accreditation of Coal Traders and Registration of Coal End-Users. The company was found to have made coal trading transactions with an unaccredited coal trader.

The DoE also slapped a P1.735-million fine against SMPC for violating Section 3 of the same circular over alleged unabated and continuous coal trading despite suspension of its accreditation.

Last Thursday, SMPC appealed to the Energy department to reconsider the sanctions.

Mr. Tantiangco said that SMPC’s fundamentals are facing struggles with its power generating segment.

“While a suspension is already in place, the company’s coal production and shipment has already exceeded 2018 levels. And this is seen to support SMPC’s financial performance for the rest of 2019. This is unless the DoE’s coal trading suspension becomes final,” Mr. Tantiangco said.

SMPC’s consolidated net income during the nine months fell by 4.8% to P8.25 billion from P8.66 billion posted in the same period last year.

For this week, Mr. See placed the stock’s support level at P20.00. Meanwhile, resistance level is pegged between P24.00 and P25.00.

“The stock would move sideways for now awaiting the resume of their operation. The stock is a buy near P20.00 but make sure to place a mental stop just in case it moves down below its support,” added Mr. See.

Meanwhile, Mr. Tantiangco gave SMPC’s support price at P20.00 and a resistance range from P21.50 to P22.00, adding that if it fails to hold the P20.00 support line, its next support would be P18.00.

“The regulatory challenges are still expected to weigh on SMPC’s share price next week giving it a downward bias with a possible testing of the P20.00 support level. We could see a rally in its price if it is able to show positive developments in the said challenges,” added Mr. Tantiangco. — Lourdes O. Pilar

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