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Bank of Japan’s next move to be more easing: Reuters poll

TOKYO — Expectations have risen sharply that the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) next policy move will be to ease further, a Reuters poll of economists found, as the US Federal Reserve looks set to cut interest rates this month for the first time in over a decade.

Three-quarters of economists said the BoJ’s next move would be to expand stimulus, up from about half last month and 38% just two months ago. Almost two-thirds of those who predicted easing expect it within the year and some as early as this month.

Speculation had already been growing for further easing as the US-China trade war and weakening global demand threaten Japan’s export-reliant economy.

Fed rate cuts could inflict further damage by boosting the yen against the dollar, making Japanese exports less competitive and eroding profits when repatriated to Japan. A major effect of the BoJ’s massive stimulus since 2013 has been a weaker yen.

“The pace of the yen’s appreciation against the dollar when the Fed starts cutting rates will definitely help decide whether the BoJ needs to adopt more easing,” said Yasunari Ueno, chief market economist at Mizuho Securities.

“If the gap in interest rates between Japan and the United States shrinks and US shares tumble at the same time, the yen could try 100 yen per dollar. Then the BoJ will have to ease further knowing there would be side effects.”

The Japanese currency last strengthened beyond 100 to the dollar in August 2016. It traded around 107.90 on Thursday.

US Federal Reserve policy makers, moving toward their first interest rate reduction in a decade later this month, on Tuesday sketched out arguments for whether rates should be cut by a quarter or a half a percentage point.

Thirty of 40 economists predicted the BoJ’s next move would be to loosen policy further, while 10 said the bank would tighten, the July 3-16 poll found.

Seven of the economists who forecast more easing said the central bank would ease this month, six predicted September, five selected October and two said December.

Among possible steps, 25 economists expected the BoJ to tweak its forward guidance. The BoJ pledges to keep very low interest rates “at least through around the spring of 2020” and economists predicted the central bank would extend this period.

Eight economists said the BoJ would increase its buying of exchange-traded funds and Japanese real estate investment trusts. Three predicted the bank would deepen its negative interest rates only, while two forecast that it could cut both its negative interest rates and the 10-year bond yield target. This question allowed multiple answers.

Under a policy dubbed yield curve control, the BoJ guides short-term rates at -0.1% and the 10-year bond yield around 0%.

At last month’s policy review, the BoJ kept policy steady but Governor Haruhiko Kuroda signaled its readiness to ramp up stimulus as global risks cloud the economic outlook, joining US and European central banks in dropping hints of additional easing.

JAPAN-SOUTH KOREA FEUD
Tokyo and Seoul are in an escalating row after Japan recently announced tighter controls on exports to South Korea of some materials used to make smartphone displays and chips.

Asked about the Japanese government’s decision, 15 of 23 economists said they did not support the move, while eight responded they did, the poll found.

Asked how the move would affect Japan’s economy, 15 economists saw “little impact” and two said “no impact”, while 12 projected a “moderate impact.”

“The direct impact will be limited,” said Kazuma Maeda, economist at Barclays Securities Japan.

“But we need to watch for an indirect impact on Japanese production of things like electronic parts and devices, if the export curbs have an unforeseen impact on the global supply chain for the semiconductor industry.”

The poll also found Japan’s economy would expand 0.5% in the fiscal year to March 2020, having contracting an annualized 1.8% in the fourth quarter when growth is hit by a scheduled sales tax hike in October. It is projected to grow at the same rate of 0.5% in the next fiscal year.

“We expect Japan will avoid falling into recession thanks to solid domestic demand such as public investment and capital expenditure,” said Yosuke Yasui, senior economist at Japan Research Institute.

The nation’s core consumer price index, which includes oil products but not fresh foods, will rise 0.7% this fiscal year and 0.6% the following year, the poll showed. — Reuters

TV5 franchise renewed for another 25 years

THE franchise of ABC Development Corp., currently known as TV5 Network, Inc., has been renewed for another 25 years.

This after Republic Act (RA) No. 11320 lapsed into law on April 22, 2019, without President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s signature.

The TV5 franchise was approved by the House of Representatives on Dec. 4, 2018, and amended by the Senate on Feb. 4, 2019. The House approved the amendments on Feb. 8, 2019.

At the same time, RA No. 11319 which extended the franchise of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) for another 25 years also lapsed into law without Mr. Duterte’s signature.

A bill may become a law, even without the President’s signature, if the President does not sign it within thirty days from receipt in Malacañang.

Ibig sabihin kung pina-lapse niya…okay sa kanya. That means, effectively parang pinirmahan niya rin iyon (If he let the bills lapse into law, that means he is okay with the proposed measures. That means, effectively, it is the same as signing the bills into law),” Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said during a briefing on Thursday.

Both TV5 Network and CBCP are allowed to continue to “construct, install, operate, and maintain radio and television broadcasting stations in the Philippines.”

TV5 Network primarily broadcasts sports and news programs, through ESPN and News5. Its franchise was first granted in December 1994, under Republic Act No. 7831.

The CBCP, for its part, operates radio stations across the country through its Catholic Media Network arm.

Under their franchises, both media companies should not use their stations or facilities for “obscene or indecent transmission, or for the dissemination of deliberately false information or willful misrepresentation, or assist in subversive or treasonable acts.”

The franchise of media giant ABS-CBN Corp. is also set to expire next year. Mr. Duterte has previously expressed his opposition to the renewal of ABS-CBN’s franchise.

But Mr. Panelo said it’s up to Congress to approve ABS-CBN’s franchise renewal, not Mr. Duterte.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — A.L.Balinbin

Pay, career dev’t top factors for PHL job seekers — Jobstreet

ONLINE JOB search site Jobstreet.com said that Filipinos are attracted to work for companies that offer good pay, work development opportunities, and flexible hours.

On Thursday, Jobstreet.com reported the findings of its “Laws of Attraction” study, which it is offering to human resources managers via the Jobstreet website, to provide insights on how to attract and retain employees.

“These data are for the hirers (to help them) attract the best candidates in the market… candidates are attracted to different industries because of various attractions…and that is now being made available for the hirers in the Philippines,” said Jobstreet Country Manager Philip A. Gioca in the online resource’s launch on Thursday.

Mr. Gioca added that this is the “most granular” study put out so far by the company, adding “The unprecedented level of detail in the data gives us actionable insights on even the tiniest factors that can make or break an employee.”

The “Laws of Attraction” study is Jobstreet.com’s largest study to date, with 18,378 respondents who are active job seekers. The study was conducted from January 18 to March 4.

Filipino respondents reported that salary was the top consideration for deciding on a job (16.8%) followed by career/development opportunities (14.2%); and work-life balance (11.7%).

Other top considerations were job security (11.6%); management/leadership style (7.0%); location (6.7%); additional benefits (6.4%); company reputation (5.4%); corporate social responsibility (4.6%); culture of the organization (4.2%); colleagues/co-workers (4.1%); working environment (4.0%); recruitment process (2.2%); and size of company/market position (1.2%).

The study also noted that those in the Business Processing Outsourcing (BPO) industry consider salary to be the top consideration while those in the engineering sector valued career/development opportunities. Public sector workers valued job security while food and beverage and agriculture workers cited corporate social responsibility. — Gillian M. Cortez

Myx launches its own YouTube channel

TO MAKE artist performances accessible to everyone at anytime, Filipino music cable channel Myx has launched a new YouTube channel called All Music Myx.

“Through the years, people who have been watching Myx want to see specific performances again and again. They always request if they can watch it online. So, we always tell them the schedule of what time it airs on Myx, but because of our busy lives, they miss the television airing,” Myx Channel Head Andre Allan Alvarez said of audience behavior and demands, during the YouTube channel’s press launch on July 11 at the ELJ Communications Center in Quezon City.

All Music Myx is dedicated to musical performances by Filipino and international acts. New episodes of MYX Live! will drop every Thursday at 7 p.m. on All Music MYX before the show’s television premiere on Sundays at 8 p.m.

Viewers are also able to suggest an artist they hope to see through the comments section of uploaded videos or the discussion tab.

“We’re making it more interactive [by] having people tell us who they want to guest at ano yung mga kantang gusto nilang ma-perform (and what song they want performed) on the Myx Live stage,” Mr. Alvarez said.

The initial lineup of featured artists include rock band Franco, the rapper Shanti Dope, IV Of Spades, and Kyline Alcantara.

Aside from premiering new performances, the channel also includes throwback videos from the music channel’s extensive archive.

“We’re going to really put our ears on the ground and listen to what people are looking for and that’s what we’re going to give them,” Mr. Alvarez said.

Myx Philippines is shown on ABS-CBN TVplus (channel 12), SKYcable (channel 23), and SKYdirect (channel 37). — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

PCHC records higher electronic fund transfers following launch of PESONet

PHILIPPINE Clearing House Corp. (PCHC) saw a jump in electronic fund transfers (EFT) in 2018 following the launch of the Philippine EFT System and Operations Network (PESONet).

According to a report posted on its website, PCHC posted a record P805.65 billion in transaction value coursed through PESONet last year.

This was 35.9% higher than the P592.67 billion transferred the previous year via Electronic Peso Clearing System (EPCS), PESONet’s predecessor.

Likewise, the electronic facility made 6.06 million transactions in 2018, 53.8% higher than 3.94 million recorded in 2017.

“The year 2018 marked an important milestone for PESONet, PCHC’s Electronic Fund Transfer solution…launched on November 8, 2017,” the clearing house corporation added.

PESONet is an EFT service that compiles all interbank fund transfer instructions, runs a batch process, and credits the amount to the receiver by the end of the banking day.

PESONet is the first automated clearing house (ACH) under the National Retail Payments System adopted by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. The framework was put in place to promote a “cash-lite” economy wherein financial transactions veer away from cash and check towards EFTs and digital wallets.

As of end-June, there were 51 participants of PESONet, which includes banks and e-wallet companies.

Aside from PESONet, InstaPay was also launched in April last year as an ACH that processes real-time transfers worth P50,000 or lower across accounts or e-wallets from different banks or service providers. Money is sent and credited to a destination account in a matter of seconds or minutes.

As of the end of the second quarter, there were 28 financial institutions that can send and receive funds using InstaPay, while 14 participants used the ACH to receive money.

The BSP required all banks and other financial firms offering electronic and mobile banking services to get onboard the two ACHs which process online payments. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

PayMaya allows top-ups via BPI

PAYMAYA Philippines, Inc. is now allowing users of its mobile wallet to top up money using the mobile banking facility of the Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI).

The digital financial services arm of PLDT, Inc. said in a statement Thursday it is tapping the Ayala-led bank as one of its channels for the Add Money function of its mobile platform.

“To encourage more Filipinos to utilize this channel for adding money to their accounts, PayMaya is making transfers via BPI free of charge until further notice. This is in support of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ goal of transforming 20% of transactions in the country to digital by 2020,” it said.

The new partnership boosts PayMaya’s existing 40,000 channels that allow users to add money on the mobile wallet, which include local banks, payment kiosks, business centers, convenience centers and Smart Padala centers.

“With BPI having one of the country’s largest user base, more Filipinos will be able to gain access to the digital economy through this partnership,” PayMaya Director and Head of Wallets Business Kenneth Palacios said in the statement.

PayMaya is handled by PLDT’s digital arm Voyager Innovations, Inc., which is backed by China’s Tencent Holdings Ltd.; US-based Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR); International Finance Corp. (IFC) and IFC Emerging Asia Fund.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Denise A. Valdez

Philippine Airlines to maintain London, US flights

PHILIPPINE Airlines (PAL) is committed to maintaining its Manila-London flights, and expanding its services to United States, despite a recommendation from an aviation think tank to abandon its long-haul routes.

In a statement Thursday, the flag carrier said it is holding on to its long-haul routes and is exploring possibilities to mount more direct flights to United States.

“While there is market clamor for the opening of new routes to the US and Europe and these are under review, PAL remains focused on implementing a well-calibrated program centered on network expansion, fleet modernization and service innovation,” the airline said.

Last month, Australia-based Center for Asia Pacific Aviation (CAPA) released a report saying PAL is better off dropping its expansion plans to North America and ending its flights to London as these are low-yielding operations.

“PAL has slipped into the red in the past two years, due mainly to losses in the long haul segment… Suspending London and shelving the launch of new US destinations is a sensible initial move by PAL as it tries to restore profitability,” it said then.

PAL currently operates 57 weekly long-haul flights to North America through gateways in Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York, Vancouver, Honolulu and Toronto. It also flies five times weekly to London Heathrow airport.

“The flag carrier’s non-stop US-Manila flights remain highly popular for business and leisure travelers and Filipino balikbayans,” PAL said.

It added there is improved passenger load on its London route due to “more aggressive marketing campaign in the U.K. — Denise A. Valdez

New man on the board to help clean up Deutsche Bank’s act

FRANKFURT — The Qatari-backed lawyer tasked with trying to draw a line under Deutsche Bank’s regulatory scandals has risen rapidly at the German bank, jumping to the management board after three years as a “sparring partner” on the bank’s supervisory body.

Deutsche Bank is desperate to clean up its act and restore its reputation after years of turmoil including the Libor rate-rigging scandal and money-laundering investigations, and Stefan Simon has an intimate knowledge of the bank’s rocky relationships with regulators and courts.

The enigmatic corporate lawyer will soon be sitting on Deutsche’s management board, promoted from its external oversight board as part of a 7.4 billion euro ($8.3 billion) overhaul which will see the bank shrink and lose 18,000 jobs.

Simon joined Deutsche’s supervisory board three years ago, with the backing of the lender’s largest shareholder, Qatar. He played an influential role on that board, impressed his backers and served on the very committee that engineered his own promotion.

The 49-year-old former partner at Bonn-based law firm Flick Gocke Schaumburg has kept largely out of the public eye, but he has worked behind the scenes since his 2016 appointment to shake up Deutsche’s management.

“The role of the supervisory board as a sparring partner for the management board…has become more important in recent years,” he wrote several months ago.

Simon sits on six of the supervisory board’s nine committees, more than any other member other than Chairman Paul Achleitner. His seats include one on the most powerful committee — the chairman’s committee, which decides on the appointment and dismissal of management board members.

This month, the supervisory board fired three of the bank’s nine management board members, including those overseeing the investment bank, the retail bank and the regulatory chief, the role that Simon himself will fill.

Simon replaces Sylvie Matherat, a former French central banker appointed to Deutsche in 2015. Achleitner last week praised her for enhancing Deutsche’s “new compliance and risk culture,” but she fell out of favor with regulators and investors as Deutsche repeatedly landed in hot water.

DAMAGED REPUTATION
In 2017, the bank was fined $7.2 billion in the US for its role in the mortgage crisis, nearly toppling the bank. It failed stress tests with the US Federal Reserve, and German regulators took the rare step of condemning the bank for lapses in controls to prevent money laundering.

In November, Matherat sought to downplay Deutsche’s role in a money laundering scandal involving Danske Bank and suspicious payments totaling 200 billion euros from 2007 until 2015.

But Simon, as head of the supervisory board’s integrity committee, opted to get an independent view and commissioned the law firm Gibson Dunn to advise the board on Danske, a person with knowledge of the matter said.

Gibson Dunn didn’t respond to a request for comment.

As a lender to US President Donald Trump, Deutsche has also been subpoenaed by US Congress to hand over information on his finances.

The US Department of Justice is separately investigating Deutsche for trades that authorities said were used to launder $10 billion out of Russia, which has led to the bank being fined nearly $700 million.

In Germany, prosecutors are escalating a money laundering inquiry involving Deutsche Bank using a subsidiary alleged to help clients avoid taxes. Deutsche has said it is cooperating with the investigation and Simon’s integrity committee vowed to devote “special attention” to it, according to Deutsche’s annual report in April.

When asked last week about Simon, Deutsche’s chief executive officer Christian Sewing told analysts: “We have looked for somebody who knows, obviously, our legal portfolio, who has contributed to the clean-up over the last two to three years.”

RAPID RISE
At Flick Gocke, Simon advised Deutsche on its involvement in the Libor rate-rigging scandal, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. That helped put him on the bank’s and Qatar’s radar.

The bulk of Simon’s career was focused on mergers and acquisitions, insolvencies and corporate governance. He was made partner after just five years and his clients included the energy company E.ON and the bank HVB, according to Juve, a publication that follows the legal industry.

Simon was “really entrepreneurial,” something “untypical” for a lawyer, said Thomas Roedder, a partner at the firm.

He attracted unwelcome attention though, when the founder of one of his clients, an insolvent developer of offshore wind farms, filed a criminal complaint accusing Simon of acting against the interests of the company. Simon denied wrongdoing and prosecutors didn’t pursue the suit.

When Simon left Flick Gock to join Deutsche’s supervisory board he founded his own firm, Simon GmbH, based in Zurich, locating himself close to where he likes to cycle in the Alps.

He has also tried his hand at acting and film production and had a role in the 2017 film “Dirty Bomb” about wartime Germany.

When he makes the switch to the management at the end of July, his income from the bank is set to increase to at least 2.4 million euros, plus bonus, from the 488,000 euros he earned last year from the bank.

It is unusual for someone to jump to management from the supervisory board, but not unheard of. Former CEO John Cryan made the shift. Regulators are likely to have informally signed off on Simon’s appointment, three people with knowledge of the matter said.

Deutsche Bank declined to comment and a spokesman for Simon declined to be interviewed. — Reuters

Climate change concert set for next weekend

ABS-CBN’s music portal, One Music, is set to organize a musical event which “aims to raise awareness on climate change” on July 27 at the La Mesa Ecopark in Quezon City. The concert will feature singers Maris Racal, Sam Mangubat, and AC Bonifacio.

“It’s part of [our network’s] values to come up with events not only to entertain people but to have advocacy… [the concert] is a movement that harnesses the power of music,” Mercy Joy Mesina, editor-in-chief of One Music, told BusinessWorld during the launch on July 7 at the ABS-CBN offices in Quezon City.

Titled One Paradise Puno ng Musika: A Tree Planting Gig, this is an acoustic concert coupled with a tree-planting session to “inspire the youth to protect Metro Manila’s last remaining forest: the La Mesa Watershed,” said a press release.

This is the third leg of the One Paradise concert series which started in 2017 during the Labor Day weekend celebrations in La Union. Coming off of the success of the second staging, Ms. Mesina said that they decided to hold the concert within Metro Manila.

Tickets are priced at P650 and include a shirt and a tree seedling planted in the ticket buyer’s name. Tickets are available at ktx.abs-cbn.com. — ZBC

Ping An-backed Lufax to exit P2P lending business

BEIJING/SHANGHAI — Lufax, one of China’s largest online wealth management platforms that is backed by financial giant Ping An Insurance, plans to exit its once-core peer-to-peer lending (P2P) business, three sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The move by Lufax to exit P2P, in which companies gather funds from retail investors and loan the money to small corporate and individual borrowers, is due to regulatory hurdles, two of the sources said, and comes amid China’s crackdown on the business to contain broader financial risks.

The sources said they did not know exactly when Lufax’s P2P business would be shuttered, or how the outstanding business will be handled, but added that the company has already started the process of applying for a license in consumer finance, a business which it intends to focus on.

A ditching of the P2P business and a focus on consumer finance could smoothen the path for Lufax to again pursue a stock market listing. The startup postponed a Hong Kong float slated for the first half of 2018 amid uncertainty over China’s consumer lending regulation, sources have said.

Formally known as Shanghai Lujiazui International Financial Asset Exchange, Lufax was set up in 2011 as a P2P platform by Ping An.

P2P boomed in China — becoming far bigger than the rest of the world’s combined P2P lending — until regulators took notice three years ago as claims of frauds surfaced, and as part of a wider Beijing-directed crackdown on potential bubbles in the financial system.

Lufax’s move to ditch its P2P business comes after it struggled to meet requirements since 2016 for P2P lenders to register with local authorities, two of the sources said.

They said that financial regulators, including the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC), told Lufax that it would be hard for the firm to register as a P2P lender with the local authorities in the near future.

Lufax’s P2P staff will be incorporated into a new department focusing on consumer finance, one source said.

Ping An declined to comment. Lufax and CBIRC did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The sources declined to be named because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Lufax’s new consumer finance focus will involve the company using the group’s banking unit, Ping An Bank, as the hub, one source said.

Consumer finance — the business of lending for the purchase of products including mobile phones, electronics and home appliances — is growing fast in China with 24 companies licensed currently, according to data from CBIRC.

Lufax has already diversified into wealth management products, although such products under its management shrank by 20% to 369.41 billion yuan ($53.72 billion) in 2018 as new rules curbing leveraged investments were introduced, according to Ping An’s annual report.

Outstanding loans on the balance sheet of Lufax reached 375 billion yuan by the end of 2018, up 30% from a year earlier.

In December, Lufax raised $1.33 billion in a funding round from a dozen investors that valued it at $38 billion prior to closing. — Reuters

7-Eleven’s Philippine operator plans to open ATMs in Metro Manila stores

By Arra B. Francia, Senior Reporter

PHILIPPINE Seven Corp. (PSC) looks to open 300 automated teller machine (ATMs) in Metro Manila next year to take advantage of the payment volumes entering its e-commerce platform.

The local licensee of the 7-Eleven convenience stores said it will be pilot testing Seven Bank, Ltd.’s services in the country by 2020. Seven Bank currently operates a network of about 18,000 ATMs across Japan’s 7-Eleven stores through partnerships with different financial institutions.

“Seven Bank is working on putting recycling ATMs in our stores. Recycling ATMs are basically what everybody in Japan uses, it’s both a bill reader and an ATM,” PSC President and Chief Executive Officer Jose Victor P. Paterno said in a media briefing ahead of the company’s annual shareholders’ meeting in Ortigas Thursday.

Recycling ATMs allow customers to withdraw and deposit cash into the machine. Mr. Paterno noted that the Philippines will be the first country outside Japan that will offer Seven Bank’s services.

“We want to test it first at 300 ATMs and go from there…They (Seven Bank) have to have agreements with different banks, they need system integration which takes even more time,” he explained.

The top executive said they are currently in talks with a number of banks for partnerships with Seven Bank.

Meanwhile, the company said it is on track to have close to 3,000 stores under its portfolio by the end of the year. It currently has about 2,700 stores, which means it will have to open about 300 new outlets in the second half of the year.

PSC earlier said it will spend P3.5 billion in capital expenditures this year to support its store openings for the year. It will also renovate about 100 stores that have been operating for six to seven years.

A portion of the capex will also be spent for new product launches, including the expansion of its fried chicken and brewed coffee offerings.

The company is tracking a high single-digit growth in sales for the year, after posting same store sales growth of 6.8% in the first quarter.

“I think we saw strong acceleration in the second quarter, because there was elections and the Holy Week was in second quarter, last year it was in the first quarter. So there is an acceleration, and for some reason sales are stronger, we’ll see whether inflation will be slower,” Mr. Paterno said.

PSC’s net income attributable to the parent dropped 41% to P112.15 million in the first quarter of 2019, amid an 18% increase in gross revenues to P11.698 billion

Shares in PSC ended flat at P142 each at the stock exchange on Thursday.

Anti-endo bill touted as ‘balanced’ between worker, employer interests — Senator

SENATOR Emmanuel Joel J. Villanueva said the proposed Security of Tenure Bill strikes a balance between employers and workers interests, as business groups called on President Rodrigo R. Duterte to veto the measure.

“The Security of Tenure bill strikes a balance between contrasting interests of labor and employers,” he told reporters in a phone message late Wednesday.

Mr. Villanueva, who chairs the labor and human resources development committee, was among the sponsors of Senate Bill No. 1826, or the “Security of Tenure and End of Endo Act of 2018.”

The Senate approved the bill on third reading last May 22, and it was later adopted by the House of Representatives on May 28, doing away with the need for both chambers to harmonize the measure’s provisions. The proposed SoT Bill was transmitted to the Office of the President on June 27.

Under the 1987 Constitution, the President has 30 days to act on a bill upon receipt from Congress, or else it lapses into law.

“The bill adheres to the Constitution, which mandates the regulation of relations between workers and employers, recognizing the right of labor to its just share in the fruits of production and the right of enterprises to reasonable returns on investment, and to expansion and growth.”

He noted the Senate is expecting the President to sign the measure ahead of his fourth State of the Nation Address on July 22.

The remarks followed a joint statement, issued by the Philippine Business Group-Joint Foreign Chambers, asking the President to veto the bill, which will amend Presidential Decree No. 442, or the Labor Code of the Philippines, by prohibiting labor-only contracting and defining penalties for noncompliance.

The statement, signed by thirteen business groups, noted that the bill involves issues already addressed by Department Order No. 174 of the Department of Labor and Employment and Executive Order 51, which need stronger enforcement.

Asked to comment, the President’s Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said in a briefing Thursday that while the President has not declared his intentions yet on the proposed measure, he will take business sentiment into consideration.

“He hasn’t talked about it. But you know, the problem with these bills as he explained it, there are so many documents he has to sign. And at the same time, he has so many activities that he has to attend to — (such as) out of town trips,” Mr. Panelo said. The Security of Tenure bill was among the priority bills identified by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council during the 17th Congress. “The President is always appreciative and considerate on whatever opposition or concerns raised by any sector in this country relative to any bill passed in Congress and subject to his signature or veto.” — Charmaine A. Tadalan

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