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DoE eyes power access in 167 areas via third microgrid auction

SOLAR PV SYSTEM - Lahuy Island - Camarines Sur Qualified Third Party Project — FP ISLAND

THE DEPARTMENT of Energy (DoE) said it hopes to provide electricity to 167 unserved and underserved areas through the third round of bidding for microgrid system providers (MGSPs).

“This third round of MGSP-CSP marks a pivotal step in our push for total electrification,” Energy Undersecretary Rowena Cristina L. Guevara said in a statement on Tuesday.

The schedule for the auction is expected to be announced by the end of June.

For the third round, the DoE said it has enhanced the policy and regulatory framework governing microgrid service operations “to create a more transparent, efficient, and investor-friendly environment for interested private investors.”

Republic Act No. 11646, or the Microgrid Systems Act of 2022, mandates the DoE to conduct a competitive selection process (CSP) for potential concessionaires seeking to serve off-grid areas.

The DoE recently revised the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) of the law, streamlining CSP procedures, clarifying provisions of the microgrid service contract and the corresponding responsibilities of stakeholders, and enhancing incentives for microgrid service provision.

Under the revised IRR, the award of a microgrid service area to a provider will automatically qualify the project as an energy project of national significance, allowing concerned entities to fast-track the issuance of necessary permits and licenses.

Additionally, the notice of award will include a renewable energy service contract for the renewable energy components of the microgrid system, “subject to the completion of remaining requirements, particularly the submission of proof of possessory rights over the service area.”

“By streamlining regulatory procedures, introducing policy innovations, and strengthening coordination across government and the private sector, we are sending a clear signal: the Philippines is ready and open for sustainable microgrid investments,” Ms. Guevara said.

“Through these efforts, we aim to empower our most remote communities with clean, reliable, and affordable energy, because energy access is not just a policy objective — it is a fundamental right,” she added.

The first MGSP auction was conducted in 2023, in which only one firm out of nine prequalified bidders submitted a complete bid proposal.

In the second round, only one proponent expressed interest and was later deemed prequalified. However, Ms. Guevara earlier told BusinessWorld that the bidding failed as the only prequalified bidder was unable to submit a complete bid proposal by the set deadline.

Ms. Guevara previously said the potential market for MGSPs includes over 200 sites with economic growth potential if given access to electricity.

The 2023-2032 National Total Electrification Roadmap targets 100% electrification by 2028, the end of the Marcos administration’s term. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

SEC revokes Cyfle OPC’s registration

BW FILE PHOTO

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has revoked the corporate registration of Cyfle One Person Corp. (OPC) following findings of unauthorized investment activities.

In an order dated May 16, the SEC’s Enforcement and Investor Protection Department (EIPD) said it canceled Cyfle’s registration due to violations of Section 44 of Republic Act No. 11232, or the Revised Corporation Code (RCC), in relation to Section 6(i), paragraph 2 of Presidential Decree No. 902-A.

The RCC bars corporations from exercising powers beyond those set in their articles of incorporation (AoI).

The SEC also imposed a P1-million fine on Cyfle for offering securities to the public without securing the necessary registration or license.

In addition, the commission directed Cyfle, along with its sole stockholder-director-president, nominee, and alternate nominee, to pay P1 million in administrative sanctions.

Cyfle, incorporated in 2022, declared in its AoI that its primary purpose was to provide management consultancy services. However, the SEC said its investigation found that Cyfle had offered investment products despite a clause in its AoI prohibiting the solicitation, acceptance, or receipt of investments, as well as the issuance of investment contracts.

According to the SEC, Cyfle promoted a scheme promising a 30% return on a minimum investment of P50,000 over a one-year term.

The commission said the structure of the scheme resembled a Ponzi scheme, in which returns to earlier investors are paid using funds from newer participants — an arrangement prohibited under Section 26 of Republic Act No. 8799, or the Securities Regulation Code.

“The investment scheme of [Cyfle] also operates to defraud investors as it deceives the investing public by making it appear that they have the authority to deal in securities,” the order read.

“This also amounts to serious misrepresentation as to what they can do or are doing to the damage and prejudice of the investing public,” it added.

The SEC had issued an advisory against Cyfle in July 2024, warning the public about the company’s unauthorized solicitation of investments. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Swan Lake as the gold standard

BALLET MANILA/TONY ABELLO

Ballet Manila brings international ballet stars to Aliw stage

SUPERSTARS from the San Francisco Ballet in the United States will be gracing the home stage of Ballet Manila, the Aliw Theater, for its production of the iconic Swan Lake.

The ballet will be headlined by Katherine Barkman and Esteban Hernández who are the first soloist and principal dancer of San Francisco Ballet, respectively. Their performances will be on May 30 at 8 p.m., May 31 at 5 p.m., and June at 5 p.m.

Meanwhile, Ballet Manila’s principal dancer Abigail Oliveiro will pair up with San Francisco Ballet company artist Nathaniel Remez for matinee performances on May 31 and June 1, both at 1 p.m.

Ballet Manila’s artistic director Lisa Macuja-Elizalde said at a May 20 press conference that having Mr. Hernández perform as Basilio in Ballet Manila’s staging of Don Quixote in 2023 proved that he was “the complete package.”

In Swan Lake, he takes on the role of Siegfried.

“Siegfried is a very different character — elegant, noble, restrained. Esteban and Katherine have already danced Swan Lake together, so I think that they will, as a principal couple, be very effective in their roles,” said Ms. Macuja-Elizalde.

Ms. Barkman’s excitement to take on the dual role of Odette and Odile reflects her confidence as an experienced dancer.

“I feel like my approach to the characters has shifted. With experience comes more of a fearlessness. I take more risks. I don’t worry so much if it’s perfect or not. I would rather have my dancing be exciting to watch than safe and predictable,” she said.

It will be Ms. Barkman’s homecoming to Ballet Manila, the stage where her professional journey began. She and Mr. Hernández, known as a trailblazer from Guadalajara, Mexico, have danced Swan Lake before in the United States.

Ms. Macuja-Elizalde added that the other pair — Ms. Oliveiro and Mr. Remez — is a perfect match due to their height.

“Abi will learn and grow so much in her interpretation of Swan Lake when she explores the choreography with a new partner like Nathaniel. Their partnership is one I’m really looking forward to,” she said.

A DIFFERENT SWAN LAKE
Ms. Oliveiro explained that she is looking forward to giving “a little more soul” to her performance now that she has done Swan Lake three times.

“I’ve had many opportunities to refine my technique, my nerves, and my artistic qualities,” she said. “Now, I feel like I have a different story to tell, even though it’s the same story. It’s a different Odette, it’s a different Odile for me.”

Ballet Manila describes Swan Lake as “a timeless tale of love and the eternal juxtaposition of good and evil.” For its two pairs of dancers, each partner delivers something new in terms of chemistry.

“Every time you get to perform it, it’s a different version, so I’m excited to discover what this is going to be,” Ms. Oliveiro said.

For Ms. Macuja-Elizalde, having played the role of Odette/Odile during her prima ballerina days, this full-length Swan Lake will reflect changes that she found necessary to make for “the story to be clearer” and to ease the burden on the women, given the number of shows.

“Four acts for the women en pointe is not a joke, so I really wanted this version of Swan Lake to have a little bit more shared responsibility between the boys and the girls,” she explained. “We also changed the ending so it’s a new Ballet Manila Swan Lake.”

Ms. Macuja-Elizalde concluded by saying that Swan Lake, as the “gold standard that any classical ballet company must mount,” shows Ballet Manila’s strengths, particularly as the ballet company is marking its Pearl or 30th anniversary.

“When I was planning The Pearl Year last year, I asked myself, ‘What classical ballet do I program for The Pearl Year that signifies that Ballet Manila has truly recovered and arrived after the pandemic?’ And hands down, it was Swan Lake,” she said.

All performances will be staged at the Aliw Theater, CCP Complex, Pasay City. For tickets, visit www.ticketworld.com.ph. — Brontë H. Lacsamana

Moody’s affirms ratings of BDO, Metrobank, BPI

REUTERS

MOODY’S RATINGS on Monday affirmed the long- and short-term deposit ratings of the Philippines’ three biggest private banks in asset terms, putting them at par with its assessment of the sovereign.

The debt watcher kept the Baa2/P-2 long-term (LT) and short-term (ST) foreign currency (FC) and local currency (LC) deposit ratings of Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), BDO Unibank, Inc., and Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. (Metrobank) with “stable” outlooks, citing their steady profitability.

It also affirmed these banks’ Baa1/P-2 LT and ST FC and LC counterparty risk ratings, their Baa1(cr)/P-2(cr) LT and ST counterparty risk assessments, as well as their baa2 baseline credit assessment (BCA) and baa2 adjusted BCA.

BDO, Metrobank, and BPI were the three largest private banks as of end-March with assets of P4.9 trillion, P3.475 trillion, and P3.3 trillion, respectively.

Moody’s said an upgrade in the three banks’ deposit ratings and BCA are unlikely in the near term unless there is an upgrade in the Philippines’ Baa2 sovereign credit rating.

BDO
Moody’s also kept the BDO’s FC senior unsecured medium-term note program rating at (P)Baa2, its FC senior unsecured rating at Baa2, and its FC other short-term rating at (P)P-2, it said in a statement. “We have also affirmed BDO Unibank, Inc., Hong Kong Branch’s FC senior unsecured medium-term note (MTN) program rating at (P)Baa2 and its FC other short-term rating at (P)P-2.”

“The affirmation of BDO’s BCA and ratings reflects the bank’s stable asset quality and strong credit underwriting despite its high consumer loan growth over the past three years. At the same time, the affirmation reflects the bank’s robust funding and liquidity, good profitability and adequate capital,” Moody’s said.

BDO’s asset quality has remained stable, with its nonperforming loan (NPL) coverage also strong, even as amid robust consumer loan growth and its large exposure to big Philippine companies, the debt watcher said.

Moody’s expects the bank’s NPL ratio to remain low this year as risks from unseasoned loans are expected to be mitigated by BDO’s strong underwriting and its strategy of growing its consumer loans via its current depositor base.

It also sees BDO’s profitability to be “broadly stable,” with its return on assets (RoA) expected to be at 1.6%-1.7% this year from 1.77% in 2024, as the expected compression in its net interest margin (NIM) due to the central bank’s policy easing likely to be partly offset by strong loan growth amid ample liquidity in the financial system and the expansion of higher-yielding consumer credit.

“At the same time, we expect the bank’s credit costs to remain low, at around the current level of 40 bps (basis points), and its growth in non-interest income to continue, which will support the bank’s overall profitability,” Moody’s said.

“We expect the bank’s capital ratio to remain largely stable at around the 14%-15% range in 2025 as its internal capital generation will be sufficient to keep up with its loan growth,” it added. “Meanwhile, we expect the bank’s funding and liquidity to remain its key strengths, with a robust and growing dominant franchise supporting its deposit market share, which was the highest among its domestic rated-peers as of end-2024. Its reliance on market funds remains low at 6% of its tangible banking assets and its liquidity remains strong, with a liquidity coverage ratio of 132% as of end-2024.”

Moody’s said it could lower the bank’s BCA if its capital position deteriorates and its asset quality worsens, as this could drive up credit costs, which would consequently affect profitability.

METROBANK
On Monday, Moody’s also affirmed Metrobank’s Baa2 FC senior unsecured rating and its (P)Baa2 LC and FC senior unsecured MTN program ratings.

“The affirmation of Metrobank’s Baa2 ratings and baa2 BCA reflects the bank’s strong solvency, balanced against weakened funding and liquidity metrics. While we assume Metrobank will receive support from the Government of Philippines (Baa2 stable) in times of need, the bank ratings do not benefit from government support uplift because its BCA is already at the same level as the sovereign rating,” it said.

The bank’s strong solvency metrics are supported by its robust asset quality and stable profitability, Moody’s said, adding that Metrobank’s NPL ratio was steady at 1.6% at end-March even as it saw more problem loans in the retail segment.

“While the asset quality of retail loans will remain weaker than non-retail loans, we expect the NPL ratio of the bank to remain broadly stable, as non-retail loans continue to account for a sizable proportion of the loan book and will remain the key driver of asset quality over the next 12 to 18 months. Metrobank has also maintained a strong loan loss buffer, with reported loan loss reserves as a percentage of problem loans at 151% as of March 2025.”

The bank’s RoA was also stable at 1.4% at end-March, it noted. “While we expect profitability to decline modestly over the next 12 to 18 months due to slower loan growth and rate cuts, we estimate RoA to stay above 1% during this period.”

Meanwhile, Moody’s said that while Metrobank’s capitalization has declined in recent years, it is likely to stay stable in the near term.

“Metrobank’s funding structure deteriorated over the past 12 to 18 months. As of March 2025, market funds as a percentage of tangible banking assets increased to 21% from 10% a year earlier, as the bank used cheaper funding to support its growth. We expect the reliance on market funds to remain broadly stable at the current level,” it said.

“While loan growth will moderate in 2025, we expect the bank to maintain its net interest margin by funding its growth with cheaper sources of funds. Meanwhile, the bank continues to maintain a strong liquidity buffer, with a liquidity coverage ratio at 184% as of March 2025. While it has declined from 276% a year earlier, it remains higher than some of its rated peers in Philippines.”

The debt watcher added that a downgrade in Metrobank’s BCA is possible if its reliance on market funds increases further or its liquid banking assets decline materially.

BPI
Moody’s on Monday said it also affirmed the Baa2 FC senior unsecured rating and (P)Baa2 FC senior unsecured MTN program rating of BPI.

“The affirmation of BPI’s Baa2 long-term deposit ratings, senior unsecured ratings, and baa2 baseline credit assessment reflects the bank’s adequate capital, healthy liquidity, and good profitability. These credit strengths are balanced against BPI’s deteriorating asset quality, driven by its rapid loan growth into the higher risk consumer segments,” the credit rater said.

It noted that BPI’s NPL ratio rose to 2.1% in 2024 from 1.8% a year prior due to higher problem loans in unsecured lending segments such as credit cards, personal loans and microfinance.

“Its reported NPL ratio has further increased to 2.3% as of March 2025. The bank’s problem loan coverage level has also declined to 77% from 99% over the same period due to higher write-offs on its retail book. We expect further weakening in the bank’s asset quality as its loans season, and as a consequence of its target of double-digit growth in higher risk segments such as its credit cards, personal and business bank (small- and medium sized-enterprises) loans. This would likely see BPI go down the credit curve as it seeks to increase financial inclusion,” Moody’s said.

For profitability, BPI’s RoA could weaken to about 1.6%-1.7% this year from 1.91% in 2024 “as modest NIM expansion from a larger share of higher yielding retail loans will be offset by higher credit costs as the bank grows its unsecured retail portfolio and rebuilds its loan loss buffers,” it said.

Meanwhile, Moody’s expects the bank’s capital to remain stable even amid faster loan growth. It said BPI’s funding and liquidity will likely stay “robust” as the bank has large liquid banking assets and low reliance on market funds.

“We expect the bank’s funding and liquidity metrics to remain strong despite some deterioration as the bank accelerates growth,” it said.

The debt watcher said it could downgrade the BPI’s BCA if there is a significant deterioration in the bank’s solvency metrics. — BVR

Vista Land’s Q1 income rises 4% to P2.96 billion

VISTAESTATES.VISTALAND.COM.PH

VILLAR-LED property developer Vista Land & Lifescapes, Inc. reported a 4% increase in first-quarter (Q1) attributable net income to P2.96 billion from P2.84 billion a year earlier, driven by higher real estate sales.

In a regulatory filing on Tuesday, the company said consolidated net income for the January-to-March period rose by 5% to P3.4 billion from P3.23 billion in the same period last year.

Total revenue grew by 3.9% to P10.65 billion as revenue from real estate sales increased by 5% to P5.85 billion.

“(The higher revenue from real estate sales) was primarily attributable to the increase in the overall completion rate of sold inventories of some of its business units as well as the recognition of the significant financing component for the period,” Vista Land said.

Vista Residences, Inc. recorded a 7% increase in real estate revenue to P1.51 billion due to stronger condominium unit sales.

Crown Asia Properties, Inc. saw a 67% rise in real estate revenue to P740 million, attributed to a higher volume of home sales in the upper middle-income residential segment and the recognition of the significant financing component.

Brittany Corp. posted a 20% increase in real estate revenue to P573 million on improved sales in the upscale residential segment.

Communities Philippines, Inc. reported a 4% increase in real estate revenue to P2.08 billion, citing more homes sold in the affordable residential segment.

Camella Homes, Inc. posted a 1% growth in revenue to P1.36 billion on the back of increased unit sales in the Mega Manila area.

Rental income rose by 4% to P4.35 billion due to higher lease rates. Interest income declined by 22% to P105 million, reflecting fewer buyers availing of in-house financing.

Revenue from parking, hotel operations, mall administrative and processing fees, and other sources declined by 9% to P338 million due to lower contributions from hotel and miscellaneous revenues.

Total costs and expenses decreased by 5% to P4.39 billion.

Cost of real estate sales rose by 12% to P2.01 billion due to higher unit sales, while operating expenses fell by 16% to P2.38 billion on reduced travel-related spending and lower depreciation charges.

Vista Land shares declined by 0.62% or one centavo to P1.61 apiece on Tuesday. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Smart, JuanHand empower Filipinos with ease of access and connectivity

L-R: WeFund Lending Corp. Digital Marketing Manager Bryan Carlo Nicolas, Business Development Officer Maxine Isabell G. Juan, Business Development Head Jackie Duan, President and CEO Francisco "Coco" Mauricio, Smart First Vice-President Lloyd Manaloto, Smart Assistant Vice-President George Gordon, Key Account Manager Iya Abainza, and Senior Marketing Manager Claudia Fernandez

Smart, the country’s telecommunications giant, has teamed up with JuanHand, the country’s leading fintech lending app, to enhance connectivity for Filipinos nationwide.

The landmark partnership will allow Pinoys to load their Smart prepaid phones on credit. Gone are the days when you need cash to load. With the Smart x JuanHand collab, simply download JuanHand, apply for a loan, and once approved, click the mobile top-up icon and load your Smart prepaid account. It’s that easy.

“This collaboration with JuanHand is perfectly aligned with Smart’s drive to keep expanding access to our services. By integrating our prepaid load offerings with JuanHand’s digital lending platform, we are making connectivity more accessible to our subscribers,” said Lloyd Manaloto, First Vice-President at Smart.

As Smart continues to expand its network, this partnership is expected to further enhance the customer experience by providing added value and innovative services. For JuanHand, this collaboration will not only boost user engagement but also solidify its position as a leading fintech provider that prioritizes user convenience.

“We are excited to partner with Smart to provide our users the ability to load their prepaid account on credit. This ‘Load Now, Pay Later’ partnership underscores our commitment to enhance the digital connectivity of Pinoys, whenever they need it most,” said Francisco Roberto Mauricio, CEO of JuanHand.

JuanHand, operated by WeFund Lending Corp., has disbursed over P45 billion in loans to more than 15 million registered users. With minimal requirements and approval as fast as 5 minutes, JuanHand remains committed to making financial services accessible and reliable for every Filipino.

 


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Reframing art at Calle Wright

JUDY SIBAYAN performing Reframing Art, featuring an old painting by Johnny Manahan, 2025. — BRONTË H. LACSAMANA

FOR conceptual artist Judy Freya Sibayan, finding a modest art collection worth exhibiting at a gallery was not something she expected while unpacking decades’ worth of personal archives.

She discovered posters, paintings, collages, and photographs of works by the likes of Huge Bartolome, Roberto Chabet, Ray Albano, and Johnny Manahan, among many others. These works now make up an enviable collection that serves as a vibrant documentation of the formative years of Philippine contemporary art.

Aside from a look back in history, they capture a time where many dared to reinvent art and rebel against its more traditional forms. The collection covers 16 years, hence the exhibit’s title Early Philippine Contemporary Art (1969-1985): Works and Documents from the Collection of Judy Freya Sibayan.

Its beginnings are inextricable from Mr. Chabet, the founder of the CCP Art Museum, and Mr. Albano, the museum director after him, who started writing about the art they exhibited as “contemporary.” Ms. Sibayan’s show maps out these interconnections, formed through shared exhibitions, collaborations, and discourse spanning conceptual art, installations, performances, and interactive and site-specific art.

“Not a single piece here is not from a Thirteen Artists awardee, because most of my early artmaking was in CCP (Cultural Center of the Philippines),” Ms. Sibayan told BusinessWorld, at the exhibit’s opening at Calle Wright on May 25.

“I haven’t shown in white cubes for a long time, so it takes me seven years to come back and put up a show. This show marks a lot of milestones,” she explained.

The exhibition’s opening began with Lemon Cake, where a lemon cake is placed on a table next to a metronome, and sliced up and served to guests — a performance last done in 1974, over 50 years ago. Afterwards, Ms. Sibayan performed Reframing Art, where she unrolled an old Johnny Manahan painting and effectively reframed it by unrolling it and tying it up on the wall to be displayed inside the gallery.

“It was seven years ago that I did my first installation performance in Calle Wright. It was a prayer for the survival and health of places like these, and true enough, it has survived and is very healthy and well, set to begin an artist residency with its three studios at the back,” she explained. “That’s another milestone.”

Unfortunately, the archive she had installed is set to be organized and packed up to donate to an institution abroad, which cannot yet be named. “It’s sad, but there’s no institution here that can accept it and give it the proper care it merits,” she told BusinessWorld.

In the meantime, visitors to Calle Wright can revel in this playful, radical side of art history for the next three months, including Ray Albano’s various posters, and notes shared between Ms. Sibayan and Huge Bartolome as part of their various performances.

“The creation of art is actually dependent on the agents within a cultural field, who create the belief that an object is valuable as art,” she explained. “There are levels to the definition of art.”

The exhibit aims to invite those who are curious about how Filipino artists began going beyond known forms of art, to explore the conceptual. Early Philippine Contemporary Art (1969-1985): Works and Documents from the Collection of Judy Freya Sibayan runs until Aug. 31 at Calle Wright, 1890 Vasquez St., Malate, Manila. — Brontë H. Lacsamana

Century Pacific Food, Inc. to conduct 2025 Annual Stockholders’ Meeting on June 30

Amended Notice of Annual Stockholders’ Meeting

Notice is hereby given that the Annual Stockholders’ Meeting will be held on Monday, June 30, 2025 at 8:30 in the morning.

The agenda for the said meeting shall be as follows:

  1. Call to Order
  2. Secretary’s Proof of Due Notice of the Meeting and Determination of Quorum
  3. Approval of the Minutes of the Stockholders’ Meeting held on July 1, 2024
  4. Management’s Report
  5. Ratification of Acts of the Board of Directors and Management During the Previous Year
  6. Election of Directors (including Independent Directors)
  7. Appointment of External Auditor
  8. Other Matters
  9. Adjournment

The meeting shall be presided by the Chairman of the Board and held at the principal office of the Corporation located at  7th Floor Centerpoint Building, Julia Vargas Ave. corner Garnet Road, Ortigas Center, Brgy. San Antonio, Pasig City. Copies of the Notice shall be published in two (2) newspapers of general circulation on May 27 and May 28, 2025.

A brief explanation of the agenda item which requires stockholders’ approval is provided in the Definitive Information Statement. The Definitive Information Statement, Management Report, and Annual Report for 2024 will be uploaded to the Company’s Website at https://www.centurypacific.com.ph/ and at PSE EDGE under Century Pacific Food, Inc. Company Disclosures.

The record date for the determination of the shareholders entitled to vote at said meeting is on May 9, 2025.

Stockholders may attend the meeting and vote via remote communication only.

Stockholders should pre-register at this link:
https://centurypacific.com.ph/investor-relations/ASM2025, from May 29, 2025 to June 3, 2025.

Upon registration, Stockholders shall be asked to provide the information and upload the documents listed below (the file size should be no larger than 5MB):

A. For individual Stockholders:

  • Email address
  • First and Last Name
  • Address
  • Mobile Number
  • Current photograph of the Stockholder, with the face fully visible
  • Stock Certificate Number and number of stocks held
  • Valid government-issued ID
  • For Stockholders with joint accounts: A scanned copy of an authorization letter signed by all Stockholders, identifying who among them is authorized to cast the vote for the account, as well as valid government-issued ID of the authorizing stockholders

B. For corporate/organizational Stockholders:

  • Email address
  • Name of stockholder
  • Address
  • Mobile Number
  • Phone Number
  • Stock Certificate Number and number of stocks held by the stockholder
  • Current photograph of the individual authorized to cast the vote for the account (the “Authorized Voter”)
  • Valid government-issued ID of the Authorized Voter
  • A scanned copy of the Secretary’s Certificate or other valid authorization in favor of the Authorized Voter

Stockholders who will join by proxy shall download, fill out and sign the proxy form found in https://centurypacific.com.ph/investor-relations/ASM2025. Deadline to submit proxy forms is on June 20, 2025.

All registrations shall be validated by the Corporate Secretary in coordination with the Stock Agent. Successful registrants will receive an electronic invitation via email with a complete guide on how to join the meeting and how to cast votes.

Only stockholders of record as of the close of business on May 9, 2025 are entitled to notice and to vote at the meeting.

  

Sgd.
MANUEL GONZALEZ
Corporate Secretary

 


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Keppel Philippines Holdings, Inc. notifies shareholders of tender offer extension

 


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BTr partially awards reissued 20-year bonds

BW FILE PHOTO

THE GOVERNMENT made a partial award of the reissued 20-year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) it offered on Tuesday as rates rose due to waning appetite for longer tenors amid concerns over the health of the US economy.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised just P19.758 billion via the reissued bonds it auctioned off, lower than the P30-billion plan even as total bids reached P34.469 billion as it sought to cap the increase in yields. The award brought the total outstanding volume for the bond series to P184.1 billion, the Treasury said in a statement.

The bonds, which have a remaining life of 13 years and eight months, were awarded at an average rate of 6.473%. Accepted bid yields ranged from 6.3% to 6.5%.

The average rate for the reissued papers rose by 37 basis points (bps) from the 6.103% fetched for the series’ last award on Aug. 20, 2024 but was 27.7 bps lower than the 6.75% coupon for the issue.

This was also 6.4 bps above the 6.409% quoted for the 15-year bond — the tenor closest to the remaining life of the papers on offer — and 12.3 bps higher than the 6.35% seen for the same bond series at the secondary market before Tuesday’s auction, based on PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service (BVAL) Reference Rates data provided by the BTr.

The government partially awarded its bond offer as the papers fetched yields higher than prevailing secondary market rates following Moody’s move to downgrade the US’ triple-A credit rating due to fiscal concerns, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

Demand was also weaker compared to recent T-bond offerings, with the BTr choosing to reject high bid yields, Mr. Ricafort said.

“It looks like there’s less appetite for bonds with tenors longer than 10 years,” a trader said in a text message. “This is what we saw during the 20-year auction as well where the market demanded higher yields, although the result was different.”

“The award was at the higher end of the expected range. This somehow gives a signal on where demand is at the moment. We expect the BTr to focus the supply on five- to 10-year space for the third quarter borrowing mix.”

Tuesday’s auction was the last for May. In June, the BTr is looking to raise P230 billion from the domestic market, or P100 billion via Treasury bills and P130 billion through T-bonds.

The government borrows from local and foreign sources to help fund its budget deficit, which is capped at P1.54 trillion or 5.3% of gross domestic product this year. — A.M.C. Sy

Shakey’s Pizza Asia Ventures, Inc. to conduct 2025 Annual Stockholders’ Meeting on June 27

Notice of Annual Stockholders’ Meeting

Notice is hereby given that the Annual Stockholders Meeting will be held on Friday, June 27, 2025 at 8:30 in the morning.

The agenda for the said meeting shall be as follows:

  1. Call to Order
  2. Secretary’s Proof of Due Notice of the Meeting and Determination of Quorum
  3. Approval of the Minutes of the Stockholders’ Meeting held on June 20, 2024
  4. Management’s Report
  5. Ratification of Acts of the Board of Directors and Management During the Previous Year
  6. Election of Directors (including Independent Directors)
  7. Appointment of External Auditor
  8. Other Matters
  9. Adjournment

The meeting shall be presided by the Chairman of the Board and held at the principal office of the Corporation located at  WOW Center 15KM East Service Road corner Marian Road 2, Brgy. San Martin de Porres, Paranaque City. Copies of the Notice shall be published in two (2) newspapers of general circulation on May 27 and May 28, 2025.

A brief explanation of the agenda item which requires stockholders’ approval is provided herein. The Information Statement, Management Report, SEC Form 17A will be uploaded to the Corporation’s website https://www.shakeysgroup.ph/ and PSE EDGE.

The record date for the determination of the shareholders entitled to vote at said meeting is on May 9, 2025.

Stockholders may attend the meeting and vote via remote communication only.

Stockholders should pre-register at this link:
https://www.shakeysgroup.ph/ir/register from May 29, 2025 to June 3, 2025.

Upon registration, Stockholders shall be asked to provide the information and upload the documents listed below (the file size should be no larger than 5MB):

    A. For individual Stockholders:

    1. Email address
    2. First and Last Name
    3. Address
    4. Mobile Number
    5. Current photograph of the Stockholder, with the face fully visible
    6. Stock Certificate Number and number of shares held by the stockholder
    7. Valid government-issued ID
    8. For Stockholders with joint accounts: A scanned copy of an authorization letter signed by all Stockholders, identifying who among them is authorized to cast the vote for the account
    B. For corporate/organizational Stockholders:

    1. Email address
    2. Name of stockholder
    3. Address
    4. Mobile Number
    5. Phone Number
    6. Stock certificate number and number of shares held by the stockholder
    7. Current photograph of the individual authorized to cast the vote for the account (the “Authorized Voter”)
    8. Valid government-issued ID of the Authorized Voter
    9. A scanned copy of the Secretary’s Certificate or other valid authorization in favor of the Authorized Voter

Stockholders who will join by proxy shall download, fill out and sign the proxy found in https://www.shakeysgroup.ph/ir/register. Deadline to submit proxy forms is on June 17, 2025.

All registrations shall be validated by the Corporate Secretary in coordination with the Stock Agent. Successful registrants will receive an electronic invitation via email with a complete guide on how to join the meeting and how to cast votes.

Only stockholders of record as of the close of business on May 9, 2025 are entitled to notice and to vote at the meeting.

 

Sgd.
MARIA ROSARIO L. YBANEZ
Corporate Secretary

 


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An alternative to the MBA

IESE.EDU

(Part 2)

Since 1958, more than 59,000 IESE* Business School alumni from all over the world have experienced the integrative, people-centered, and socially responsible approach to decision making in business and organizations. Its programs are transformative journeys towards personal and professional growth.

As I personally verified during my stint there as a Visiting Professor during the School Years 2006 to 2008, IESE’s professors, advisors (especially from leading business schools like the Harvard Business School), and partners from all over the world, are active at the highest levels of business and academia. Those who participate in their numerous management development programs are invariably challenged by its rigorous research and state-of-the art teaching methodologies.

IESE Business School is truly global. Its unique reach goes beyond its five international campuses and over 50 alliances with top universities. Populating its classrooms are among the brightest of over 150 nations. Anyone who attends a program at IESE becomes part of its highly global community of partner companies, alumni, and friends.

In the last five years or so, IESE has been accepting aspiring managers in their early twenties in an innovative program that jibes well with what as early as 1989 we at the University of Asia and the Pacific already considered as an alternative to the traditional MBA program made famous by the Harvard Business School. We were the first university in the Philippines that offered a Master in Science in Management that does not require years of work experience as a pre-requisite for admission.

That is exactly what the IESE Master in Management (MiM) is all about. It prepares recent college graduates to join a masteral program in management which enables them to start their first job in management and to make a lasting mark. During the program, which is open to graduates in engineering, the social sciences, law, humanities, and other disciplines, the participants are helped to develop the essential analytical skills and knowledge one needs to succeed in entry-level management roles. The participants in the program will also learn what it means to be an inspirational leader who puts people first — and take their initial steps toward having a positive impact on the world.

The MiM takes into account that, in comparison with the typical MBA program in the best schools here or abroad, the participants will be less mature and less experienced in the world of work, because they are just out of college. The advantage of MBA students is that they can identify more with the so-called business cases, hundreds of which they will be discussing, because most of them have had an average of three or four years of working experience. That is why the MiM is structured so that it can help the students who are in their early twenties, with very little or no work experience, to go further through:

Great guidance. Their professors and mentors are experts in their respective fields. Some 95% of them have PhDs, and there are IESE faculty members from almost half the countries of the world. The participants will be helped to develop new perspectives and opportunities, despite their young ages.

Great peers. They will learn from, and alongside diverse, talented classmates as they share a transformative journey together. They will develop a network of friends and contacts that will last a lifetime.

Great content. They will acquire the tools to take on any challenge. They will learn to think critically, backed by solid fundamental knowledge. They will sharpen their skills by applying them to hands-on experiences and real case studies. Upon graduation, they will have the ability to analyze business problems, tackle real-life complexity and make informed decisions — ready for the first role in management.

Great career support. IESE’s experienced Career Development Center team will connect them with the best recruiters and help them prepare to land their dream job. With their support, they will be confident and ready to show the best of themselves in interviews, on their CVs, at networking events, and in society.

Even at this very early stage of the MiM, IESE already has attracted a very diverse student body which contributes to the formative nature of the course. Students come from all walks of life. A typical class profile is as follows: 10% are from America, 5% from Africa and the Middle East, 3% from Spain, 35% from the Rest of Europe, and 10% from Asia. In fact, UA&P already had a representative in the first few classes and more graduates from Ateneo, UP, and De La Salle have sent their applications. Undergraduate background consists of 40% from business courses, 40% from engineering, 10% from the humanities, and 10% others.

The rationale behind introducing an alternative to the traditional MBA in building the foundation for a lifetime of growing in the science and art of management is the greater demand in this age of the Industrial Revolution 4.0 for constant reskilling, upskilling, and retooling made necessary by the vertiginous changes in technology.

The sooner a college graduate can build the foundations of a lifelong career, the better are his or her chances of rising on the management ladder. At IESE, the MiM participant will be stretched, pushed, and challenged to master the essentials. During the MiM program, the recent college graduate will have his or her entrepreneurial skills honed and will be exposed to business concepts in different sectors, markets, and regions — across five continents.

During the MiM program, the participant can join an optional team-building journey on the famous Camino de Santiago (the road to the city of Santiago de Compostella) in order to experience cultural immersion and personal growth while strengthening bonds with classmates. This unforgettable adventure, experienced by people from all over the world over several centuries, is meant to enhance leadership skills and to foster resilience, creating lasting memories and connections.

The topics to be covered for the whole 11-month course are financial accounting, excel and python datacamp; capital markets, critical business thinking, financial accounting, marketing management; anthropology and ethics, decision analysis, operational finance, marketing implementation, and operations; business analytics, corporate finance, managerial accounting, operations II, and strategy; fintech, macroeconomics and geopolitics; managerial economics; negotiations; new venture creation; understanding the world: present and future; business ethics, and digital company.

As in the longer MBA program at IESE and a few more business schools in the US and Europe, the MiM uses the case method whenever it can be used because it has been found to be the most effective way to leverage each classroom’s immense diversity. All the cases are taught in alignment with the Harvard Business School’s teaching method, which enables discussion of real business situations from a general management perspective under the expert guidance of a world class faculty.

During the MiM Program, the participants will be connected with many career opportunities via career fora, recruiting activities, company presentations and networking events. Some of the top recruiters are Accenture, Amazon, Axon Partners, Bain & Co., BNP Paribas, General Electric, Iberdrola, KPMG, P&G, PwC, Red Bull, and Roland Berger.

* Instituto de Estudios Superiores de la Empresa

 

Bernardo M. Villegas has a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard, is professor emeritus at the University of Asia and the Pacific, and a visiting professor at the IESE Business School in Barcelona, Spain. He was a member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission.

bernardo.villegas@uap.asia