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Tawi-Tawi prepares seaweed industry 2019 action plan

SEAWEED INDUSTRY stakeholders in Tawi-Tawi met last week to assess last year’s implementation of programs and prepare for the 2019 action plan, according to the Department of Trade and Industry-Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (DTI-ARMM). One of the highlights of the planning session was the presentation of the recently-approved P258 million Renewable Energy Technology to Increase Value Added of Seaweed in Tawi-Tawi project funded by the European Union-Access to Sustainable Energy Programme. The green energy project will be implemented in four municipalities — Sitangkai, Sibutu, Panglima Sugala, and Tandubas — from February 2019 to June 2021. Tawi-Tawi’s seaweed sector is also a recipient of funding from the World Bank’s Philippine Rural Development Project (PRDP), involving post-harvest facilities. Based on the PRDP Value Chain Analysis, the island province has an annual seaweed production of about 294,000 metric tons.

Villafuerte submits to Sandiganbayan’s 90-day suspension order

CAMARINES SUR 2nd District Rep. Luis Raymond F. Villafuerte, Jr. has voluntarily submitted himself to the 90-day suspension order of the Sandiganbayan. “While I firmly believe that only the House of Representatives has the authority to discipline its members, I would like to inform your good office that I am nonetheless voluntarily submitting to the said preventive suspension,” Mr. Villafuerte said in a letter to Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo dated Feb. 11. He, however, clarified that his submission is not an admission of guilt. The Sandiganbayan Fourth Division ordered the preventive suspension of Mr. Villafuerte in a resolution dated Jan. 30 in connection with alleged irregularities during his reign as Camarines Sur governor. The suspension is in effect Feb. 11 to May 12. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Davao City police probes pyramiding scheme

THE DAVAO City Police Office (DCPO) is looking into the report that some of its members have invested in Kapus Padatuon (Kapa), a group allegedly involved in the pyramiding scheme and promising to provide a 30% return on investment every month. Senior Supt. Alexander C. Tagum, DCPO chief, said his office has monitored the entry of members of the group in the city, although he has yet to receive any formal complaint against it. Mr. Tagum warned the public, including police officers, to stop investing in the scheme. “We know that the first, second and third tiers (of investors) will really have income,” he said, but the next groups “would become victims.” Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio also raised a warning following reports that some groups involved in such schemes are even using her name to lure investors. Last month, the General Santos City Chamber of Commerce and Industry also made a similar call after it monitored drastic bank withdrawals due to the eagerness of some residents to invest in Kapa and two other similar corporations. The local office of the Securities and Exchange Commission said Kapa and these other groups have not secured any license to sell any financial instruments. Kapa, however, said in its social media account that it is not deceiving its members and its intent is to help alleviate poverty. It said the General Santos City business group is simply being manipulative as it does not “want us to grow and (become financially free).” — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Peso weakens ahead of US inflation data

peso bills
THE PESO is expected to trade between P52 and P52.20 today.

THE PESO weakened against the greenback on Wednesday, even as it breached the P51 level intraday, as market players awaited the release of US inflation data.
The local currency ended yesterday’s session at P52.13 versus the greenback, 5.5 centavos weaker than the P52.075-per-dollar finish last Tuesday.
The peso opened the session stronger at P51.96 per dollar, reaching to as high as P51.90 intraday. On the other hand, its worst showing stood at P52.17 against the US currency.
Trading volume slid to $1.098 billion from the $1.165 billion that switched hands the previous day.
A foreign exchange trader said the peso continued to swing sharply as it traded strongly in the morning session.
“We saw the market pushed the peso lower during the morning session, but in the afternoon, we saw inflows from corporations, pushing the peso to a high of P52.17,” the trader said in a phone interview.
Another trader said the local unit depreciated as local players positioned ahead of the release of US inflation data.
The consumer price index (CPI) in the US is expected to decelerate in January amid absence of inflationary pressures.
In a note, financial giant Morgan Stanley said that falling oil prices should “continue to weigh on the energy category,” where prices are expected to decline by 1.8%.
“Projections show that US CPI is likely to indicate softer readings but the market is still uncertain as the data is seen either to confirm or contradict the Federal Reserve’s assessment on the US economy during its latest meeting,” the second trader added.
While the dollar strengthened slightly against the peso, it edged lower against its peers on Wednesday as upbeat expectations on the US-China trade deal prompted investors to put money into riskier currencies, Reuters reported.
US and Chinese officials are set to meet this week in Beijing in hopes to strike a trade deal before the March 1 deadline of its 90-day truce.
For today, the second trader expects the peso to trade between P52 and P52.20, while the other gave a wider range of P52 and P52.40. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

PSEi falls below 8,000 as foreigners turn sellers

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter
THE MAIN INDEX plunged for the fourth straight session on Wednesday, marking its worst finish in nearly a month on sustained profit taking.
The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) slumped 1.12% or 89.68 points to close at 7,920.24 yesterday, while the broader all-shares index dropped 0.95% or 46.42 points to 4,811.99.
“(The PSEi) is an outlier in Asia today, with most neighboring bourses up on the day. We attribute the PSEi’s lagging performance to continued profit taking after a spectacular start to the year,” AAA Southeast Equities, Inc. President William Matthew M. Cabangon said in a mobile phone message on Wednesday.
The PSEi hit an intraday high for the year, so far, of 8,213.71 on Feb. 6, closing above the 8,100 level the next day at 8,100.30. It has since maintained a downward trajectory, which analysts described as a healthy correction.
For Diversified Securities, Inc. trader Aniceto K. Pangan, the market continued in correction mode due to the MSCI rebalancing. “Market continued its correction due to… portfolio adjustments related to the MSCI rebalancing, wherein it cut the weightings of key heavyweight stocks,” Mr. Pangan said via text.
Markets abroad rallied overnight on a tentative congressional spending deal to avert another US government shutdown and on optimism over Sino-US trade talks.
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq Composite index jumped 1.49%, 1.29% and 1.46% respectively.
Elsewhere in Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 and TOPIX indices, Shanghai SE Composite Index, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index and South Korea’s KOSPI index rose 1.34%, 1.06%, 1.84%, 1.16% and 0.50%, respectively.
Back home, most of the six sectoral indices moved into negative territory except for mining and oil, which managed to climb 0.49% or 41.89 points to 8,569.86.
The rest dropped: services by 1.44% or 23.25 points to 1,581.45, financials by 1.34% or 24.53 points to 1,803.66, holding firms by 1.18% or 94.70 points to 7,887.65, property by 1.06% or 42.75 points to 3,963.64 and industrials by 0.31% or 35.97 points to 11,438.16.
Foreign investors snapped 18 straight sessions of net buying with P246.034-million net sales.
“Upcoming corporate earnings have also led some to reduce their exposure to local equities, with about P245 million of net foreign selling today,” AAA Southeast Equities’ Mr. Cabangon said.
Turnover reached P7.27 billion after some 4.63 billion issues switched hands, compared to Tuesday’s 2.74 billion shares worth P7.24 billion.
Stocks that fell were nearly double those that gained 134 to 75, while 50 others ended flat.
Wednesday’s list of 20 most active stocks showed only three that gained: Pacifica, Inc. (30.77%), Manila Bulletin Publishing Corp. (12.35%) and Jollibee Foods Corp. (1.28%).

Nation at a Glance — (02/14/19)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.
Nation at a Glance — (02/14/19)

WATCH: AI takes on debate champion in first public debate between man and machine

By Santiago J. Arnaiz

IBM made history on Tuesday evening hosting the first ever public debate between man and machine.
Previously debuted in a small, closed-door event in June 2018, Project Debater stepped onto the public stage for the first time in San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center to take on Harish Natarajan, world-class debate champion and head of economic risk at AKE International. Each contender had only 15 minutes to prepare their arguments on whether or not pre-schooling should be subsidized — with Project Debater in the affirmative, and Mr. Natarajan opposing.
Project Debater is the first AI system designed to debate humans on complex topics using a combination of cutting-edge capabilities, including: data-driven speechwriting and delivery, listening comprehension, and modeling human dilemmas.
Moderated by John Donvan, the debate followed the Intelligence Squared format of three rounds preceded and followed by audience polls. Whichever debater changed the most minds by the end of the program won.
“Greetings, Harish,” Project Debater said, opening the evening’s debate in her charming, but unmistakably synthesized voice. “I have heard you hold the world record in debate competition wins against humans. But I suspect you have never debated against a machine. Welcome to the future.”
After three rounds of debate, Mr. Natarajan came out on top with a conclusive victory. Project Debater, however, won the second poll, with more of the audience feeling the AI better enriched their knowledge on the topic matter.
While the AI may have lost her first public debate with a human, she definitely proved her value as a game-changing resource for humans. If applied, Project Debater could potentially see use cases in advising public policy makers, helping legal teams craft cases and establish jurisprudence, and supplementing boardroom meetings with evidence-based arguments for or against potential decisions.

“What really struck me was the potential value of Project Debater when synthesized with a human being, in that the amount of knowledge she is able to grasp, but more than that, the ability to contextualize that knowledge by saying ‘this information tells us this,’” said Mr. Natarajan. “I think if you take some of those skills and and add to that a human who could use them in more subtle ways, I think that could be incredibly powerful.”
Within the next few years we could see versions of IBM Project Debater organizing massive amounts of public and private data into clear, easy-to-digest formats for human decision-makers.

Trade deficit narrows in December

By Marissa Mae M. Ramos
Researcher
THE COUNTRY’s trade-in-goods deficit narrowed in December to the smallest in three months as merchandise imports fell for the first time in 17 months, although this did not prevent the full-year gap from surging faster than in 2017, according to data the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released on Tuesday.
Philippine trade year-on-year performance (December 2018)
In a preliminary report, the PSA said merchandise exports dropped 12.3% to $4.721 billion in December — marking the biggest fall in 11 quarters or since the 13% decline in March 2016 — from $5.384 billion in December 2017, and were similarly down 15% from $5.569 billion in November.
For full-year 2018, merchandise exports were down 1.8% to $67.488 billion from $68.713 billion in 2017. This was below the two-percent target set by the Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC).
On the other hand, the merchandise import bill fell by 9.4% to $8.473 billion in December from $9.356 billion in the same month in 2017.
The import decline was the first since July 2017’s 0.3% and was the largest in 3 years, or since December 2015’s -26%.
For the year, merchandise imports rose by 13.4% to $108.928 billion from $96.093 billion in 2017, topping the DBCC’s nine-percent projection for the year.
These flows brought the country’s trade deficit to $3.752 billion in December, 5.5% smaller than the year-ago $3.972 billion. It was also the smallest trade gap in three months.
Meanwhile, the country’s total external trade in goods — or the sum of export and import goods — shrank 10.5% to $13.194 billion in December, marking the weakest activity in three years, or since the 15.15% plunge in December 2015.
Cumulatively, the country’s trade balance posted a record-high $41.440-billion deficit in 2018, 51.3% more than the $27.380 billion recorded in 2017 which itself saw a 2.5% increase.
The export of manufactured goods, which made up 84.8% of total sales in December, went down 13.2% to $4.002 billion from $4.610 billion in the same month in 2017.
The bulk of the decline was seen in electronic products, which made up around 57.2% of the total exports, plunged 15.2% to $2.703 billion from $3.186 billion. Full-year 2018 saw sales of these products edge up just 2.8% to $37.569 billion.
Mineral products (-42.8%) and petroleum products (-59.8%) registered sharp declines as well during the month.
Bucking the trend were growth in the export of agro-based products (40.1%) and forest products (0.8%).
For imports, capital goods — which accounted for 33.6% of total imports — declined 10.6% to $2.846 billion. Meanwhile, raw materials and intermediate goods — with a 36.3% share — went down by 5.8% to $3.075 billion from $3.266 billion.
Imports of consumer goods and mineral fuels, lubricant and related materials were also down, contracting 12.1% (to $1.351 billion) and 14.4% (to $1.137 billion), respectively.
HEADWINDS
In a statement, the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) attributed the trade performance in December to “external headwinds.”
“Merchandise trade in all the monitored Asian economies continued to weaken in the last month of 2018 as the region began to feel the impact of the weakening Chinese economy and the US-China trade tension,” Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, who is NEDA’s director-general, was quoted in the agency’s statement as saying.
“Policy uncertainty remains a threat to global trade, investment, and output, especially as US-China trade tensions continue,” Mr. Pernia said, adding that the government should continue to work on legislative reforms that will open up the economy further to foreign investment in areas like retain trade and utilities.
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Secretary Ramon M. Lopez told reporters in a mobile pone message that “[Since the Philippines] as well as 10 other Asian economies, suffered from an export decline in December, it is quite apparent that the downward trend in exports was brought about by softening global demand induced by global growth slowdown as well as increased uncertainty amid escalating US-China trade tensions.”
“Electronics supply chain in the region was adversely affected as lower orders from one country can lead to lower orders in other supplier countries.”
The country’s non-electronics exports, he said, were “still affected by production capacity issues.”
For Michael L. Ricafort, economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC), external developments like the US-China trade war, the 35-day US government shutdown, the slowdown of China’s economic growth and Brexit concerns “may have also led to some slowdown in Philippine trade with the rest of the world.”
ERODED INVESTMENT MOMENTUM
On the local front, Mr. Ricafort cited last year’s elevated domestic inflation and the raising of interest rates by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) as factors that may have led to lower demand for imports as well as lower production by exporters.
For ING Bank N.V Manila senior economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, December’s trade data showed a “surprise contraction in capital goods imports and raw materials, which could signal that the recent tightening of the BSP is starting to bite into investment momentum.”
“With more than [a] 15% drop in electronics exports, this posed a drag on overall exports while all other subsectors of outbound shipments were also in contraction. This could mean that the ongoing trade spat between superpowers is starting to feed into our supply chains,” Mr. Mapa added.
Economists expect the trade deficit to persist this year.
“The sustained drag of net exports will be noted in 2019 as exports fail to even get close to our import numbers,” said ING’s Mr. Mapa, adding that this could affect economic growth for the year through a decline in capital formation if import growth “continues to be skewed less to capital goods”.
“Overall, we’d likely see [a] slight narrowing of the trade gap, but still quite substantial to drive a current account deficit,” he added.
“For 2019, we expect imports to grow by single digits but not likely to see extremely strong growth from inbound shipments as a whole…”
“Exports, on the other hand, are expected to remain lackluster given the fears about a global slowdown in trade, once again owing to the US-China trade spat.”
For RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort, “increased government spending, especially on mega infrastructure projects under the Build Build Build Program… could still sustain the country’s relatively wide trade deficit for 2019, though this may [be] offset by the decline in global crude oil prices that still linger among the lowest levels in more than a year…”
Despite such headwinds, DTI Assistant Secretary Angelo B. Taningco said in a recent interview that the department targets growth of foreign sales of goods and services to be at an “achievable” 9-10% on the back of improved factory output.
DTI chief Lopez said separately: “[W]e reiterate our views to focus efforts… in building our capacities for a more robust, innovative, competitive manufacturing sector that will allow us to do more import substitution as well as improve our export performance in the long term…” — with Janina C. Lim

Philippine trade year-on-year performance (December 2018)

THE COUNTRY’s trade-in-goods deficit narrowed in December to the smallest in three months as merchandise imports fell for the first time in 17 months, although this did not prevent the full-year gap from surging faster than in 2017, according to data the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA)released on Tuesday. Read the full story.
Philippine trade year-on-year performance (December 2018)

Infrastructure delay, high interest rates to weigh on capital formation — ING

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter
CAPITAL FORMATION will likely hit a snag this year amid higher interest rates and delays in infrastructure projects, which in turn will pull growth below the state’s 7-8% goal.
ING Bank N.V. Manila senior economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said investments may decelerate due to delays in the enactment of the national budget, and as the impact of last year’s increases in benchmark interest rates feed into commercial borrowing costs.
“We’re seeing that election boost, but it doesn’t come necessarily from your consumption numbers — it comes from capital formation,” Mr. Mapa said during the ING Economic Briefing held yesterday at the Fairmont Makati hotel.
“Capital formation is indeed hampered by rate hikes by the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) and delays in the budget. We’ve had six percent-plus growth for 15 quarters and if we see that coming slightly below that, maybe that’s a good sign that it’s time to ease on [monetary] policy.”
The bank economist said that higher borrowing rates have crept their way into the wider financial system, with signs that both consumer and corporate clients have begun to feel the pinch.
Investments have been taking a bigger share of overall economic growth, with its slice expected to grow to 31% in 2019 from just 24% in 2015. Economic activity remains largely consumption-driven, although its share has eased to about 66% this year from 69% four years ago.
Capital formation grew by 3.3% in 2018, which helped drive the full-year gross domestic product (GDP) growth to 6.2%.
Mr. Mapa said he expects a steady pace in 2019, contrary to some market bets that growth will receive a boost this year owing to the May 13 mid-term polls. Citing data, previous election years saw capital formation grow faster at 4.4% in 2010, 4.3% in 2013 and 4.9% in 2016.
“I don’t think you can have that kind of capital formation this year. One, the BSP hiked rates by 175 basis points (bp) — capital formation will take a hit. Second… you don’t have that public construction boom,” Mr. Mapa said, referring to the delayed enactment of the 2019 budget.
“We’ll still get a decent number — maybe 3.3% — but it’s not gonna be enough to bring you back to close to 7% growth just because it’s an election year.”
ING sees 2019 growth at 6.3%, which if realized will slightly pick up from last year’s pace but will miss the 7-8% target set by the Duterte administration.
He added that the delayed enactment of the national budget — which cleared Congress just last Friday – will “definitely hit” investment growth.
The national government is currently operating under a re-enacted budget, since the proposed P3.757-trillion spending plan yet to be signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte, hence, leaving new programs and projects unfunded.
Mr. Mapa clarified that his forecasts assume that the government will have to pause all public works during the 45-day ban ahead of elections.
Economic managers have said that they will ask the Commission on Elections to exempt priority construction projects from the ban.
Mr. Mapa is projecting a slow start for the Philippine economy, with GDP growth expected to ease to 5.8% this quarter, pick up to 6.1% in the second quarter, then 6.3% in the third quarter and at 6.4% for October-December.
The bank expects tempered GDP growth to result in a 25bp rate cut in May, followed by another reduction next semester. The reserve requirement ratio is also expected to be slashed by 200bp this year, Mr. Mapa added.

Hanjin rehab draws interest of three ‘major’ shipbuilders

By Janina C. Lim
Reporter
THREE MAJOR shipbuilders have signaled interest in the rehabilitation of Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Philippines, Inc. by asking for meetings on the matter.
In an interview in Olongapo City on Friday last week, HHIC-Phil’s former rehabilitation receiver Stefani C. Saño said he has received three letters of intent from “big players” in the shipbuilding industry, with one meeting scheduled this week.
Tatlong letters na na-receive ko (I have received three letters), but they still have to go through due diligence,” Mr. Saño said.
The letters of intent were “only general expressions of interest and proposals for initial meetings to discuss possible investments in the shipyard,” which defaulted on its loans to domestic creditors, worth about $412 million, Mr. Saño said.
He declined to identify the shipbuilders concerned, saying only that they are based in Asia and the United States.
Asked if the companies were open to a joint venture, merger or acquisition, Mr. Saño said, “all of the above were mentioned.”
Mr. Saño resigned as receiver last week, but will stay put until his replacement is appointed.
He said he will proceed with the meeting scheduled this week with one of the interested parties.
A HHIC-Phil official, who asked not to be named, said negotiations to seek further bank financing are under way.
“Lay-offs will happen if no banks will help us,” the official said in a telephone interview on Tuesday.
The company is set to shed more than 3,000 workers on Feb. 15, leaving the yard with a reduced staff of about 300.
Mr. Saño has said such numbers will not be sufficient to operate the yard.
HHIC-Phil last month defaulted on $412 million worth of debt to Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. ($145 million); Land Bank of the Philippines (reported at $85 million); Metrobank ($70 million); BDO Unibank, Inc. ($60 million) and the Bank of the Philippine Islands ($52 million).

Tax bureau sets targets, priorities for this year

THE BUREAU of Internal Revenue (BIR) expects to collect nearly P80 billion from the tax reform law this year, which should help boost total revenues to a fresh record high.
Revenue Memorandum Order 9-2019 spells out the bureau’s collection targets for the year.
The BIR, which is the government’s biggest tax collector, is tasked to raise P2.331 trillion, 14.3% more than the P2.044-trillion target in 2018 and 18% more than the P1.962 trillion that the bureau actually collected last year.
For 2019, the BIR is counting on Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law that took effect in January 2018, to bring in an additional P79.012 billion this year. That law reduced personal income tax rates for those earning below P2 million and put in place a simpler system for computing donor and estate taxes. These foregone revenues will be offset by the removal of some value-added tax (VAT) exemptions; increased tax rates for fuel, cars, tobacco, coal, minerals, documentary stamps, foreign currency deposit units, capital gains for stocks not in the stock exchange, and stock transactions; and new taxes for sugar-sweetened drinks and cosmetic surgery.
Actual 2018 BIR collections of P1.962 trillion fell four percent short of program even as they were a tenth more than 2017’s tax haul of P1.781 trillion. Income tax and VAT collections went down from 2017, with faster inflation discouraging household spending and, in turn, leading to lower consumption tax collected.
This year, the tax bureau expects to collect P1.06 trillion from income taxes to account for nearly half its collection goal.
This is followed by VAT which is expected to contribute P506.825 billion, while excise taxes are projected to bring in P400.51 billion.
Revenue from percentage taxes are targeted at P112.366 billion, while other taxes are projected to add P177.453 billion. Meanwhile, taxes from non-BIR operations — consisting of final withholding and documentary stamp taxes on government securities transactions — are seen to bring in P73.206 billion.
By office, the Large Taxpayers Service that covers big businesses is projected to generate bulk of collections at P1.441 trillion, while revenue regions — the bureau’s various offices nationwide — are seen to raise P816.115 billion.
The administration of President Rodrigo R. Duterte expects to raise P3.2 trillion in total revenues this year.
Together with borrowings and official development assistance, these funds are expected to fuel a planned boost in state spending to as much as P3.8 trillion, including for more aggressive infrastructure development. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

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