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CAB lowers fuel surcharge level

AS THE PRICE of jet fuel drops, the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) has brought down the allowable fuel surcharge level for Jan. 1 to Feb. 28, 2019 to Level 3 from the current Level 4.
“For October to November 2018, the price of jet fuel averaged to $88.20 per barrel, with the USD exchange rate of P53.41 for the same period. This is equivalent to P29.63 per liter, which corresponds to Level 3 of the Passenger Fuel Surcharge Matrix,” CAB said in an advisory on Friday.
Philippine Airlines (PAL) and Cebu Pacific started implementing a Level 3 fuel surcharge in September to help it recoup losses from growing expenses for jet fuel.
The CAB allowed the airlines to implement a Level 4 fuel surcharge for the November to December period. However, the airlines did not implement the additional charge on passengers, citing increased competition.
A Level 3 fuel surcharge is equivalent to an additional P74-P291 on domestic flights, and P381-P3,632 for international flights, depending on distance traveled. Level 4 fuel surcharge brings this up to P108-P411 for domestic flights, and P543-P5,189 for international flights.
Under the approved CAB resolution on passenger fuel surcharges, the government is required to announce the surcharge level every two months based on a two-month average price of jet fuel according to the Mean of Platts Singapore (MOPS). Airlines must then secure an approval from the CAB before it implements the increase.
Alexander G. Lao, president and CEO of Cebu Pacific subsidiary Cebgo, told reporters last week the company decided to leave its ticket prices unchanged in order to remain competitive in a price-sensitive market.
While PAL and Cebu Pacific both started collecting surcharges in September, budget carrier AirAsia Philippines chose not implement the fuel surcharge.
If the price of jet fuel continues to drop until it reaches below P21 per liter, airlines will no longer be allowed to impose a fuel surcharge. — Denise A. Valdez

India sugar output may drop next year as drought cuts cane planting

MUMBAI — India’s sugar production could fall in 2019/20 as farmers are struggling to plant cane because of a drought in two of the country’s top producing states, according to multiple industry officials and traders.
A drop in production would slash exports from the world’s second-biggest sugar producer and support global prices that have fallen 15 percent so far in 2018.
“Many farmers couldn’t plant cane in Maharashtra and Karnataka due to water scarcity. This will reflect in next year’s production,” said Prakash Naiknavare, managing director of The National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories Ltd, a sugar processor trade group.
Cane is a perennial crop harvested 10 to 16 months after planting. The western state of Maharashtra is the country’s second-biggest sugar producer, while southern state of Karnataka ranks third.
India’s production during the 2019/20 marketing year could fall to between 28 million tonnes and 29 million tonnes from this year’s estimated 31.5 million tonnes to 32 million tonnes, Naiknavare said.
Maharashtra’s production could fall 16.7 percent to 7.5 million tonnes in the next season, he said.
The sugar marketing year runs from October to September.
“We don’t have enough water for cane planted last year. Planting on new areas is not possible,” says Shrikant Ingale, who was planning to plant cane on 7 acres (2.8 hectares) in the village of Mhada, about 350 km (210 miles) southeast of Mumbai.
Maharashtra received 23 percent less rainfall than normal this year during the June to September monsoon season, while the rainfall deficit in Karnataka’s cane growing region was 29 percent during the period.
Production may fall by half in Maharashtra’s central part of Marathwada, where people are struggling to secure drinking water, said B. B. Thombare, managing director of Natural Sugar & Allied Industries, a sugar mill based in the region.
Apart from water scarcity, an infestation of white grubs will curtail production next season.
Farmers usually keep a ratoon crop, but this year many are uprooting those plants because of the white grub infestation and water scarcity, said Sanjay Khatal, managing director of the Maharashtra Co-operative Sugar Factories Federation.
The ratoon crop is the root stub of the cane after the first harvest that remains in the ground for a second harvest, but that must be removed to kill off the grubs.
After record production in the 2017/18 year, Indian mills were struggling to export the surplus and sought the government help for overseas sale and to support local prices.
A decline in sugar output could lift local prices and prompt the government to halt export incentives, said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm.
“Indians shipments would be limited next season. Mills will find it more lucrative to sell in the local market than overseas,” the dealer said. — Reuters

Prada will stop selling $550 monkey figure decried as racist

PRADA SPA will stop selling a $550 monkey figurine after social media users in the US called out a strong resemblance to racist caricatures historically used to dehumanize black people.
The monkeys are a part of Prada’s new “Pradamalia” line of small items like keychains and toys featuring cartoon creatures that come in several colors. The black and brown versions have oversized red lips, a traditional hallmark of blackface.
“They are imaginary creatures not intended to have any reference to the real world and certainly not blackface,” the company said in a statement. “Prada Group never had the intention of offending anyone and we abhor all forms of racism and racist imagery. In this interest, we will withdraw all of the characters in question from display and circulation.”
This marks the latest instance of a fashion house using imagery that’s at best tone-deaf, at worst, racist and exploitative. In November, Dolce & Gabbana angered Chinese customers with a video ad campaign that showed a Chinese model struggling to eat spaghetti and pizza with chopsticks.
Swedish apparel chain Hennes & Mauritz AB apologized after it featured a black child modeling a hoodie with the text “Coolest monkey in the jungle.” Some of its South African stores were vandalized and had to be closed temporarily.
The incident comes as Prada tries to plot its comeback. Prada, which is finally emerging from three years of falling profits set off by a slowdown in China and compounded by a failure to recognize that the internet had fundamentally transformed the luxury business, saw sales grow 9% in the first half of 2018. — Bloomberg

Draghi defends euro as guard vs ‘illiberal’ regime

EUROPEAN Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi defended the results of two decades of European political and monetary integration against the return of “illiberal” policies and regimes.
Speaking in his native Italy, where a euro-skeptic populist government is openly flaunting European Union (EU) rules, Draghi listed the euro’s successes, while admitting that not all have benefited equally from it. He said that lower than expected prosperity in some countries was due to domestic policy choices and to an incomplete monetary union.
The creation of the euro was an “exceptional,” even “anti-historical” response to a “century that had seen dictatorships, war and misery,” he said in a speech in Pisa at the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies commemorating the single currency’s 20th anniversary. In his remarks he didn’t make any reference to current monetary policy.
“The challenges that have arisen have become ever more global in nature and need to be tackled together, not alone,” he said. “This is even more true for Europeans, both at the level of their individual nations and for the continent as a whole: rich but relatively small; strategically exposed, militarily weak.”
DEFENSE OF RIGHTS
Draghi’s last scheduled appearance for the year, came just two days after announcing the end of his flagship bond-buying program and with less than a year before the conclusion of his term. He refrained from triumphalism in marking the euro’s anniversary but pushed back against two common criticisms of the single currency leveled by European nationalist and anti-establishment movements, from Brexit Britain to France’s Yellow Vests.
Draghi said the euro is not an expression of the globalization process, but rather is a natural consequence of the creation of an integrated continental market, which has allowed relatively small European countries to remain competitive and defend their way of life in an increasingly interconnected world. He said the EU has protected people against the worst consequences of globalization, for example by strengthening common rule-making and protecting workers’ rights.
He also denied that the economic under-performance of some euro-area countries could be reversed by leaving the single currency and ignoring EU deficit rules.
ITALY’S WOES
This message has a particular resonance in Italy where the government led by Giuseppe Conte is facing tensions with the EU over a budget plan that tests the bloc’s rules. While Italy is seeking to pacify the European Commission by offering a new lower deficit target for 2019, EU leaders and financial markets have continued to express concern over spending plans that could increase the country’s huge debt pile.
Draghi stressed that blaming Europe isn’t fair considering that Italy’s low growth “dates back a very long time before the euro.” He warned against nostalgia for a past that was not as rosy as some politicians like to remember.
“As the history of Italy has shown, monetary financing of government debt did not lead to real long-term benefits,” he said. “In the 1970s, maintaining a growth rate similar to its European peers required repeated devaluations. Inflation reached unsustainable levels and hit the most vulnerable in society.” — Bloomberg

Antique airport reopens commercial operations

THE CIVIL AVIATION Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) resumed commercial operations at the Antique Airport on Sunday, starting with the inaugural flight from Clark International Airport by Philippine Airlines (PAL).
In a statement yesterday, CAAP said the airport was upgraded by building a canopy for arriving passengers; extending the runway to 1.4 kilometers; repainting markers along the runways, ramp and stop-way; and cutting trees that used to block the flight path to the airport.
Aside from these developments, CAAP said it will further improve the gateway with the construction of passenger terminal building, administrative building, powerhouse, vertical path angle, staff house, perimeter and security fence, and new apron and taxiway.
“Situated at the province’s capital of San Jose de Buenavista, Antique Airport, also known as Evelio Javier Airport, is a principal class 2 airport and the only airport serving the province of Antique,” it said.
PAL said in a separate statement it will mount twice weekly flights from Clark to Antique every Tuesday and Sunday, which will leave Pampanga at 6 a.m. and arrive San Jose de Buenavista at 7:20 a.m. Return flights will then depart from San Jose de Buenavista at 7:40 a.m. and arrive at 9 a.m.
The flag carrier said it will use its brand new Bombardier Next Generation Q400 aircraft for the route.
“This new route empowers Antiqueños to fly straight to the heart of Central Luzon. More convenient air access helps keep the economy humming in Antique,” PAL Corporate Communications Vice-President Jose E. L. Perez de Tagle said in the statement.
PAL noted its new route to Antique is now its 20th destination coming from the Clark International Airport. — Denise A. Valdez

McDonald’s to curb antibiotic use in its beef supply

MCDONALD’S Corp said on Tuesday it plans to reduce the use of antibiotics in its global beef supply, fueling projections that other restaurants will follow suit.
The move by the world’s biggest fast-food chain addresses concerns that the overuse of antibiotics vital to fighting human infections in farm animals may diminish the drugs’ effectiveness in people.
McDonald’s becomes the biggest beef buyer to tackle the issue in cattle, potentially creating a new standard for livestock producers and threatening sales by drug companies such as Merck & Co and Elanco Animal Health.
“McDonald’s iconic position and the fact that they’re the largest single global purchaser of beef make it hugely important,” said David Wallinga, a senior health adviser for the environmental group Natural Resources Defense Council.
McDonald’s said it will measure the use of antibiotics in its 10 biggest markets, including the United States, and set targets to curb their use by the end of 2020. The markets cover 85 percent of the company’s global beef supply chain.
Under the McDonald’s policy, medically important antibiotics cannot be used to routinely prevent disease in food animals in the supply chain.
The company does not expect the policy to raise hamburger prices, although franchisees set their own menu prices, spokeswoman Lauren Altmin said.
Franchisees operate about 90 percent of McDonald’s restaurants. — Reuters

San Miguel Corp. (SMC)

INVESTORS UNLOADED shares in San Miguel Corp. (SMC) last week after a court ruling ordering the return of assets acquired by several firms through the coconut levy fund, which include shares of the diversified conglomerate.
SMC was the ninth most traded stock in terms of value turnover last week, with around 6.82 million shares worth P1.022 billion exchanging hands from Dec. 10-14, data from the Philippine Stock Exchange showed.
The share price of SMC closed at P142 apiece on Friday, down by 12.5% from Dec. 7’s P162.20 finish. Year-to-date, it was up by 23.7%.
“I think what made SMC one of the most traded stocks [last] week is the news about Sandiganbayan’s move to junk all appeals against the turnover of at least P75 billion in coco levy fund to the government,” said Jervin S. de Celis, equity trader at Timson Securities, Inc. (Timson Trade).
“[T]his has made investors worried, making the stock price plunge from P175 in Dec. 4 to an intraday low of P139 [on Dec. 14]. Foreigners have sold around P770 million worth of shares within this month,” he added.
Appeals to stop the transfer of the Coconut Industry Investment Fund (CIIF) worth P75 billion to the government were denied by the anti-graft court’s second division last Dec. 3.
These motions for reconsideration were filed separately by the United Coconut Planters Life Assurance Corp. (Cocolife), the United Coconut Planters Bank (UCPB) as well as by the six companies comprising the CIIF Oil Mills Group (CIIF OMG) and 14 CIIF holding companies.
The Court also ordered the transfer of 753.8 million preferred shares of SMC that were currently being held by the Bureau of Treasury, along with the income of the CIIF companies and holding firms, “to be used only for the benefit of all coconut farmers and for the development of the coconut industry,” according to the resolution.
CIIF, or the coco levy fund, was a tax imposed on coconut farmers during the administration of then-President Ferdinand E. Marcos. However, the coco levy fund was also used for the expansion of a few chosen companies.
Meanwhile, the House of Representatives’ final approval of tax measures aimed at increasing excise tax on alcohol products had some effect on SMC’s activity last week.
“I believe the investors might be digesting its short-term impact for consumption and might soften the volume for SMC particularly the San Miguel Food and Beverage group and Petron Corp.,” Cristopher Adrian T. San Pedro, certified securities representative at Unicapital Securities, Inc. (Unicap) said.
OUTLOOK
“For 2019, earnings per share is projected to grow by 12.13% and if three of the biggest revenue segments of the company continue to grow, SMC’s [consolidated] revenue may reach by as much as P1.005 trillion this year and P1.086 trillion by December next year,” Timson Trade’s Mr. de Celis said.
“A bounce play may start around the P130-135 range next week as this was the former support of the stock before the company was cleared by the BIR (Bureau of Internal Revenue) to consolidate its food and beverage businesses as well as the announcement of their share sale,” he added.
Mr. de Celis said resistance is seen at P170-180.
Unicap’s Mr. San Pedro, on the other hand, pegged the stock’s support levels at P133-135 and resistance at P148-152.9 for the coming weeks.
In the first nine months, SMC posted P761.173 billion in unaudited consolidated sales, up 27.5% from the same period a year ago. Its net income attributable to equity holders of the parent company dipped 4.9% to P19.859 billion. — M.M.M. Ramos

LCS Group marks fintech foray with cryptocurrency

A CRYPTOCURRENCY owned by Luis “Chavit” Singson’s LCS Group of Companies is set to be launched early next year as part of efforts to push more Filipinos to transact and pay through digital means.
Dubbed as Gold Chavit Coin (GCC), the virtual currency set to be launched next year marks the company’s foray into the financial technology industry.
In a statement yesterday, LCS said it will list GCC in local cryptocurrency exchanges where it can be traded using fiat money or other virtual currencies.
“Many Filipinos still have no access to a bank account, which prevents them from saving for their future and participating in basic financial transactions such as simple payments,” Mr. Singson was quoted as saying in the statement. “GCC aims to change all that by offering [an] ubiquitous currency that they can use for nearly all types of transactions, both in the country and abroad.”
GCC will be based on ERC-20 standards used in the Etherium blockchain network.
Cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Etherium and Ripple are virtual currencies not regulated by any state or central bank. They rely on cryptography to secure and verify transactions as well as control the creation of more units.
Cryptocurrencies are based on distributed ledgers called blockchain, which involves a large network of entities where data is stored in “blocks.” The storage units are continuously updated and being secured using cryptography, making data management and data-driven processes decentralized, tamper-proof and more transparent.
Virtual currencies can also be used to pay for goods through internet, and can be treated as investments given their fluctuating valuations.
Mr. Singson said a mobile application is being developed alongside GCC for bill payments and online and in-store purchases with affiliate retailers and banks, beginning with transactions among LCS Group of Companies.
“We plan to leverage the entire LCS network, in addition to partnerships with other vendors and firms, to drive mass adoption, which in turn will increase GCC’s market value,” Mr. Singson added.
The mobile application is being developed with Billion System Corp., the Japanese fintech company behind the PayB payment app.
“Blockchain in the Philippines remains in its infancy, but it has tremendous disruptive potential that can help not only individuals, but also the economy as a whole by further expanding e-commerce access in the country,” Mr. Singson added. — K.A.N. Vidal

Shares seen sideways ahead of Christmas break

By Arra B. Francia
Reporter
LOCAL SHARES may trade sideways in the week ahead amid a lack of leads and as investors go on break for the Christmas holidays.
The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) eked out a gain of 0.01% or 1.45 points to close at 7,524.37 last Friday. On a weekly basis, the main index was up 0.85%.
The counters for holding firms and services lifted the market as they gained 1.93% and 1.33%, respectively, for the week. Turnover improved by 2.08% to P8.88 billion last week, while foreign investors were net buyers at P796 million, marking the third straight week of foreign inflows.
Eagle Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John Mangun noted that the PSEi’s breakthrough to the 7,500 level was “exactly what the market needed,” citing the target for the index to break above its 7,630 resistance for a possible close above 7,700 this year.
“However, this will all come down to whether investors will continue to trade and not go on early vacation. If turnover value is low for the week then we may see it trade sideways and stay within the range at 7,400-7,600,” Mr. Mangun said in a weekly market note.
“But if foreigners continue to be net buyers, there is a strong possibility that we end the year closer to 8,000 rather than 7,500.”
For online brokerage 2TradeAsia.com, the PSEi could see volatility in the coming days since fund managers will “retool their portfolio.”
“No new leads might be in store at the fiscal front, with Congress set to adjourn for their holiday break this week. However, more corporate actions ahead of 2019 prospects would be at the forefront, specifically on debt re-strategies and inventory loading,” 2TradeAsia.com said in a weekly market note.
It added that some companies may close the year with prospects for mergers and acquisitions, particularly those with plans for backdoor listing.
On the international front, investors could look at the US Federal Reserve’s policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) policy meeting on Dec. 18-19. The committee’s decision could signal whether the global rate hike cycle will soon come to an end.
“Officials might give leeway to resolve the ongoing trade relations between US-China, which could significantly influence both nations’ economies. If a status quo is upheld by US FOMC, that would lead to a more dovish Fed and improve lending liquidity, at least in first quarter 2019,” 2TradeAsia.com explained.
The country’s own central bank also had its last policy meeting last week, where it chose to maintain policy rates on signs that inflation has already peaked. Benchmark interest rates remain at a nine-year high of 4.25-5.25%.
Eagle Equities’s Mr. Mangun placed the market’s resistance at 7,630 to 7,700, while support is at 7,350 to 7,500.

US confirms China soybean sale, but size of orders smaller than expected

CHICAGO — China’s meager first purchase of U.S. soybeans since its trade war with the United States began in July disappointed farmers, grain traders and a U.S. government official hoping for larger sales to lift slumping prices and absorb a huge surplus across the U.S. farm belt, they said on Thursday.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced private sales of 1.13 million tonnes of U.S. soybeans to China, confirming sales Reuters reported a day earlier.
But additional buying by the world’s top soybean importer has yet to materialize, traders said, even after U.S. President Donald Trump told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday that China is buying a “tremendous amount” of U.S. soybeans.
“Having a million, million-and-a-half tonnes is great, it’s wonderful, it’s a great step,” USDA Deputy Secretary Steve Censky said at an Iowa Soybean Association annual meeting on Thursday. “But there needs to be a lot more as well, especially if you consider it in a normal, typical year, we’ll be selling 30 to 35 million metric tonnes to China.”
Soybean prices fell as grain traders had hoped for more deals, eyeing a massive U.S. soybean surplus in storage and what is expected to be a record-large harvest from the world’s biggest soybean exporter Brazil just weeks away.
The sales came after Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping agreed to a 90-day detente in their tit-for-tat tariff war to negotiate a trade deal after meeting at the Group of 20 summit in Buenos Aires.
The purchases, which traders said were made by state-owned companies in China, were viewed as the most concrete evidence yet that Beijing is making good on pledges the U.S. government said Xi made when the two leaders met on Dec. 1 and agreed to a 90-day detente to negotiate a trade deal.
While it was the ninth largest single-day U.S. soybean sale on record, it amounted to just 3.5 percent of China’s U.S. soy purchases last year and 2 percent of U.S. shipments to all foreign buyers.
“If further activity and amounts aren’t confirmed, the trade could soon be ready to settle in for a long, cold, fundamentally bearish winter,” said Matt Zeller, market intelligence analyst with INTL FCStone.
TRADE AID DELAYED
The actively traded Chicago Board of Trade March soybean contract SH9 fell more than 1 percent on Thursday to the lowest in a week, in the steepest drop in 2-1/2 weeks.
The 25 percent tariff Beijing imposed on U.S. soy shipments in July in retaliation for American duties on Chinese goods remains in place.
China last year bought about 60 percent of U.S. soybean exports in deals valued at more than $12 billion. The purchases confirmed on Thursday were less than $500 million.
“There was talk we’d see like 5 million tonnes over the next few days, so we will need some follow-through buying from China, especially outside of Sino,” one U.S. trader said, referring to China’s state-run buyer Sinograin.
U.S. exports to China dropped to 8.2 million tonnes in the first 10 months of the year, with the vast majority of that shipped before the tariffs took effect in July. That was down from 21.4 million in the same 10-month period last year, according to government figures.
With exports to China drying up, U.S. soybean prices have traded around their lowest levels in a decade in recent months.
The White House this week delayed additional payments from a promised $12 billion aid package for farmers stung by the trade war because it expected Beijing to resume buying U.S. soybeans.
The U.S. Soybean Association said in a Thursday statement the sale announcement would not fix the “prolonged period of low prices soybean farmers have faced since the trade war began.”
Davie Stephens, the association’s president and a Kentucky grower, said “it is critically important that we see additional purchases and actual deliveries, and for USDA to make a payment on the second half of 2018 soybean production.” — Reuters

An unsatisfied customer starts his own spa

MASSAGE ENTHUSIAST Justin Xiao has tried various massage techniques during his stay in the Philippines. However, the various services left him frustrated.
To satisfy his unmet need, Mr. Xiao opened Breeze Oriental Spa and Massage in BGC, in Taguig city — 100 meters from Bonifacio High Street — which offers traditional Chinese oriental massage techniques.
“He is always in search for a good massage shop, but he gets frustrated that the services [he tried] did not give him the comfort for long,” Maideline A. Vego, operations manager of Breeze Oriental Spa and Massage told BusinessWorld during the spa’s launch on Dec. 4. “So, he came up with this concept [of a massage spa]. He wanted to give service to people which is not only short-term comfort.”
Chinese oriental massage treatments apply acupressure and focus on targeting one’s pressure points to relieve stress and pain.
The spa’s team of 20 therapists are led by four Chinese masters of oriental therapy. Signature treatments such as the Detoxify Oil Massage are designed to improve the lymphatic system. It is also recommended for pregnant women as it includes breast massage for lactation.
Other services which may be booked with master therapists include cupping therapy where warm cups are used to suction the back as a treatment for “blood statis”; back scraping using buffalo horn to remove dead skin; and a traditional pedicure which is said to improve blood circulation and includes a method where nails are trimmed with a traditional scalpel.
The treatments are done in air-conditioned private rooms equipped with reclining chairs.
This writer tried out the oriental foot massage which included soaking the feet in Chinese medicine. The treatment began with a different kind of shoulder massage since it was done by the therapist applying pressure on the shoulders with her forearms and which was quite painful at first.
The rest of treatment was relaxing and may eventually lead one to dose off midway. The treatment ended with the therapist serving either hot water or tea upon the guest’s preference.
“We encourage people to have the massage therapy in their daily lives to manage stress and fatigue and prevent the need for prescriptive medicine,” Ms. Vego said, adding that it is encouraged to have treatments at least once a month.
According to Ms. Vego, other branches are targeted to open in Makati and Parañaque’s Entertainment City.
Breeze Oriental Spa is located at Ore Central, 9th Ave. corner 31st St., BGC, Taguig. For reservations, call 0917-867-6699. Prices of treatments start at P450. The spa is open Monday to Friday, noon to 1 a.m., and on Saturdays and Sundays from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

How PSEi member stocks performed — December 16, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Friday, December 14, 2018.
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Philippine Stock Exchange’s most active stocks by value turnover — December 14, 2018
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