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Credit markets give fuel to equity rout

EQUITY INVESTORS grappling with a technology selloff, trade tensions and hawkish monetary chatter have a new foe to contend with: growing angst in credit markets.

After resisting the full force of the gales that swept through markets earlier this year, corporate bonds are sending ominous messages. Traders are jumping out of the asset class as investment-grade spreads sit near their widest in six months and yields rise to the highest in more than six years — just as stock investors seek to recover from the first S&P 500 correction in two years.

“If credit spreads widen, the equities with bad balance sheets will underperform,” said Louis de Fels, a Paris-based fund manager at Raymond James Asset Management International. “We’re quite cautious on the quality of the assets.”

Corporate bonds held by smart money have historically proven a leading indicator for the direction of stocks. That may spell disappointment for investors heeding Wall Street advice to shift towards equity, a late-cycle outperformer.

“Credit leads equities and will underperform,” said Andrew Brenner, the head of international fixed-income at Natalliance Securities in New York, citing Federal Reserve hikes, signs of softer US output and corporate sales of short-term US debt. “We expect equities to catch up on the downside.”

For now, stock investors appear sanguine. US equity funds took in a record $34.5 billion in the week to March 14, compared to just $2.4 billion for bonds, according to Stanford C Bernstein & Co. That brings the quarterly total for debt funds to $37.3 billion, the slimmest quarterly addition since the three months ending in December 2016, the data show.

Credit softness first emerged in some of the world’s most popular exchange-traded funds (ETF) and has continued to worsen. Short interest on the iShares iBoxx Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF, ticker LQD, relative to its US equity ETF counterpart is now at its highest on record.

“When we see a widening of credit spreads, it’s always a problem,” said Matt Maley, a Miller Tabak equity strategist. “The cost of carrying leverage goes up and people’s models say that they need to unwind.”

While credit weakness and a junk bond selloff in November proved to be a headfake, “this time around, I’m more nervous about some weakness in investment-grade credit seeping into big-cap stocks,” Peter Tchir, the head of macro strategy at Academy Securities Inc., wrote in a note.

The telltale sign? Underlying corporate bond spreads have widened while credit default swaps have stayed largely steady. Higher dollar funding costs are now beginning to curb appetite for credit risk — a bearish signal missing from derivatives, for now likely thanks to technical factors, Tchir noted.

Add weakness in the primary market, and pressure on credit markets is likely to endure, he said. That increases the prospect of a risk-off trade that would weaken stocks and lift government bond prices.

In any case, equity investors had better make peace with cracks in credit markets and any ensuing increase in debt financing costs for companies.

Money managers in high-grade credit have pared their exposure to the lowest since October 2010 as they brace for interest-rate increases, according to a Bank of America Corp. survey this month. Funds that reported inflows fell to a net 29%, the lowest in two years, the survey found.

“We are seeing clear signs that US credit is in the midst of the transition away from global QE as inflows to high-grade continue to decline,” strategists at the bank led by Hans Mikkelsen wrote in a note Sunday. — Bloomberg

Sta. Lucia signs P5-B corporate notes facility

STA. LUCIA LAND, Inc. (SLI) on Tuesday said it has signed a P5-billion notes facility with several banks, as it seeks to pay existing debt and fund new projects.

In a statement, SLI said it signed the notes facility with China Bank Capital Corp. acting as the sole arranger and bookrunner, while Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) acted as co-manager.

The note holders of the facility are China Bank Savings, Inc., China Banking Corp., DBP, and Maybank Philippines, Inc.

“The use of proceeds will be for payment of existing indebtedness and for financing of development costs,” SLI said.

The listed property developer in an earlier disclosure said the note facility will have a base size of P3 billion, and an overallotment option of up to P2 billion.

The notes facility forms part of SLI’s plan to raise P15 billion in the local capital markets in the next three to five years to fund the expansion of its residential, retail, commercial, and tourism-related projects.

SLI has previously said it will be entering into joint venture projects located in Batangas, Palawan, Baguio, Quezon City, Cavite, Rizal, and Negros Occidental. It has also been propping up its landbank with the planned acquisition of more than 1.01 million square meters of land, spread out across Batangas, General Santos City, Dagupan City, Cavite, Laguna, Iloilo, and Davao.

The company, along with its parent Sta. Lucia Realty and Development, Inc., currently has 220 developments covering about 10,000 hectares of land in the country.

SLI’s net income attributable to the parent grew by 31% to P700.5 million in the first nine months of 2017, following a 17% increase in revenues to P2.79 billion.

Shares in SLI were unchanged at P1 each at the Philippine Stock Exchange on Tuesday. — Arra B. Francia

How PSEi member stocks performed — March 20, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, March 20, 2018.

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PAGCOR to rely on offshore gaming to meet P65-B target

THE PHILIPPINE Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) has set a P65-billion gaming revenue target this year, which it expects to generate largely through the Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGO) segment amid a moratorium on “integrated resorts” or casinos.

The target is about 13.36% greater than the P57.34 billion revenue raised in 2017.

“Now our target, only for gaming revenue, is P65 billion. So in 2.5 years, we’ve gone from P47.5 billion to (over) P60 billion,” PAGCOR Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Andrea D. Domingo said during the ASEAN Gaming Summit yesterday.

She said that bulk of the growth will come from POGO, with overseas betting subject to third-party audits.

“We expect offshore gaming revenue to double this year from P3.9 billion as we now have an independent third party auditor who will install mirroring applications not only for the operators but also the service providers,” she said.

“We’ve been assured that we will be able to double our income because we will not pay the third-party audit provider if they do not add any income from our monthly minimum guarantee fees right now, which is $150,000 per operator,” added Ms. Domingo.

However, the integration of the auditor into the POGO system will not be completed until the end of the month.

She noted that there are about eight new applicants for gaming operations related to sports betting.

There are 53 offshore gaming operators with 153 attached support services currently, and Ms. Domingo said that PAGCOR will still welcome new POGO applicants.

“We are satisfied. I think that we got the best and the biggest. But if there are those who are still qualified the board is open to evaluating and assessing if we should grant any more operating licenses,” she said.

PAGCOR’s double-digit revenue growth target comes despite President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s moratorium on new casinos announced on Jan. 11, to prevent oversupply.

Ms. Domingo said that there are about 18 casinos nationwide, with four in Entertainment City.

PAGCOR also expects an P186 billion in gross gaming revenue from the entire gaming industry this year, up 9.41%. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

ERC outlines 2018 capacity limits for power plant operators

THE Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has capped the 2018 maximum power generating capacity of a single entity and its related groups to 5,466,779.34 kilowatts (kW) or no more than 25% of the installed capacity in the national power grid.

It said the single-entity capacity limit is stipulated in the law that deregulated the energy sector.

For Luzon, the market share limitation (MSL) was set at 4,552,790.23 kW or no more than 30% of the main island’s set installed generating capacity (IGC) as called for under the ERC resolution released this week to media.

In the Visayas and Mindanao, the market share limit was 958,466.4 kW and 1,048,878.57 kW, respectively. These limits represent 30% of the separate installed generating capacity in the island groups.

ERC Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer Agnes T. Devanadera said setting the installed generating capacity and the market share limitation, per grid and national grid, “ensures consumer protection through the promotion of free and fair competition in the generation and supply of electricity.”

“The ERC, as part of its monitoring activities, shall continuously monitor to ensure that no generation company or other entity violates or breaches the MSL per Grid and National Grid,” she said in a statement on Tuesday.

ERC Resolution No. 04, Series of 2018, “A Resolution Setting the Installed Generating Capacity and Market Share Limitation Per Grid and National Grid for 2018” was signed on Feb. 27, 2018.

The limits were based on national installed generating capacity estimates by the ERC for 2018, which placed the country’s total at 21,867,117.35 kW or around 21,867 megawatts (MW), with that of Luzon set at 15,175,967.44 kW or 69.4% of the country’s total.

For the Visayas and Mindanao, the installed generation capacity was set at 3,194,888 kW (14.6% of the total) and 3,496,261.91 (16%), respectively.

The ERC is mandated under Sec. 45 (a) of Republic Act No. 9136 or the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 (EPIRA) to set the numbers annually to prevent a person, company, related group or independent power producer administrator, singly or in combination, to own, operate, or control more than 30% of the IGC per grid, and 25% of the national grid.

In line with the EPIRA provision, the ERC issued Resolution No. 26, Series of 2005, which set the guidelines for the determination of installed generation capacity for each grid and the national grid — the high-voltage backbone system of interconnected transmission lines, substations and related facilities.

The IGC is the sum of the maximum capacity of the generation facilities that are connected to the transmission system or distribution system that forms part of a particular grid.

Separately, the ERC approved and adopted the 2017 edition of the Philippine Distribution Code (PDC), which it said was a result of several years of technical review, analysis and coordination work among the members and technical staff of the Distribution Management Committee, Inc.

“We saw the need to update the existing PDC to include new standards, policies, requirements and rules issued by the ERC, Department of Energy, and other authorities to address issues on the developments brought about by the promotion of renewable energy, and open access and retail competition,” Ms. Devanadera said.

The new PDC edition takes into account the Philippines’ adoption of new and emerging technologies including variable renewable energy, as well as best practices and experiences of foreign jurisdictions in the use of these technologies.

The code has been harmonized with relevant provisions of the Philippine Grid Code 2016 Edition, the market rules of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM), and subsequent rules and guidelines issued by the ERC applicable to distribution systems. — Victor V. Saulon

Competition regulator approves BCDA-MTD joint ventures to develop New Clark City

THE Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) has approved the joint venture of the Bases Conversion Development Authority (BCDA) and Malaysian developer MTD Capital Bhd., a partnership that aims to turn New Clark City into a national government center.

The regulators said its Mergers and Acquisitions Office signed off on March 13 after finding that the tie-up does not result in substantial lessening of competition.

“[T]he creation of the joint venture will not have any substantial structural effect on the market,” it said in a Tuesday statement.

The joint venture will be responsible for the financing, design, engineering, establishment, construction, and eventually operation of the National Government Administrative Center (NGAC) in the Clark Special Economic Zone (CSEZ).

Under the proposed NGAC, the Clark military reservation will be converted for civilian use and become a hub for the national government’s backup offices. The move is expected to resolve Metro Manila’s perennial road congestion problems while ensuring the government continues to function in the event of a calamity.

The NGAC was modeled after Malaysia’s Putrajaya and Sejong City in South Korea.

MTD Capital is an investment holding company with interests in civil engineering and construction, infrastructure development, real estate and property development, energy, ports, and the manufacture of building materials.

The parent company of Alloy MTD Philippines, MTD won the bid to construct the 220-hectare NGAC, which broke ground for the first phase in January.

The initial phase of the project will include sports facilities for use in the Southeast Asian Games in November 2019.

“The projects lined up by BCDA for Clark are also a testament to the administration’s promise of inclusive growth by increasing government spending on infrastructure, and creating jobs and opportunities outside the capital region,” BCDA said in a statement e-mailed to reporters Tuesday.

Aside from the NGAC and NCC, BCDA’s priority projects include the expansion of the Clark International Airport and the Subic-Clark railway. — Janina C. Lim

New Clark City solar power provider obtains service contract

SUNRAY Power, Inc. (SPI) has received its solar service contract from the Energy department, paving the way for the development of its P8.5-billion, 100-megawatt (MW) solar farm in Capas and Bamban in Tarlac province, it said on Tuesday.

SPI said its Clark solar project is being developed in partnership with state agency Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA), the developer of the New Clark City, or the Clark Green City as it was known during the previous administration.

“We are excited to do this solar project in partnership with BCDA and we are looking at doing more projects with them as part of our long-term plans,” said Carlos Jose P. Gatmaitan, SPI president and chief executive officer, in a statement on Tuesday.

The solar farm is to be constructed within a 256-hectare property leased from BCDA by SPI, an affiliate of listed company MRC Allied, Inc. Mr. Gatmaitan is also chairman and independent director of MRC.

“The success of this project would be another proof that the private sector and the government can actually work hand in hand towards achieving a common goal — the creation of cleaner, greener, more sustainable communities,” he said.

New Clark City is described by its proponents as the country’s first “smart green city and among the priority projects of the Duterte administration.

SPI said that upon the green city’s completion, it will have five major districts: government; central business; academic; agri-forestry research and development; wellness, recreation and eco-tourism.

New Clark City covers 9,450 hectares within the Clark Special Economic Zone owned by BCDA in Tarlac.

SPI affiliate MRC holds a diversified portfolio in property development, mining exploration and is currently pursuing energy projects. The listed company under its new management announced a target to develop at least 1,000 MW by 2022.

MRC, a property company which diversified into energy development early last year, plans to invest between P80 billion and P100 billion in the next 10 years to achieve its aspirational goal of putting up 10,000 MW of power capacity. — Victor V. Saulon

DENR finds 49 businesses in Siargao to be non-compliant

THE Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has identified 49 out of 148 business establishments that have failed to comply with environmental law in the resort island of Siargao, Surigao del Norte.

In a statement on Tuesday, the DENR’s CARAGA region office is said it is in the process of serving notices of violation (NoVs) to the establishments after a two-month inspection ordered by Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Roy A. Cimatu.

DENR-CARAGA aims to finish serving the NoVs by end of March.

“Siargao is still one of the country’s best tourist destinations, but if we want to sustain its viability as an international surfing capital we must show that we are all helping to protect and conserve its environment,” Mr. Cimatu said in the statement.

According to DENR, the 49 establishments in Siargao, which is the largest marine protected area in the country, lack environmental compliance certificates (ECC) and have no sewage treatment facilities.

These businesses, which are restaurants and resorts, were found to have violated the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act and circumvented the system for issuing Environmental Impact Statements. Some of the establishments were also found to have been improperly disposed of solid waste.

Local governments were also found to have issued business permits without requiring an ECC.

“This should be the template by which other regions conduct their inspection and monitoring activities, We want to be fast, but follow the law at the same time,” Mr. Cimatu said.

Aside from the issuances of NoVs, the DENR is pushing for the approval of a solid waste management plan which includes the construction of a sanitary landfill on the island and the stricter implementation of sewage treatment rules. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Blue Ribbon panel to seek quarterly BIR, Customs progress reports

THE Senate committee on accountability of public officers and investigations (also known as Blue Ribbon) plans to summon the Bureau of Customs (BoC) and the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) for quarterly sessions to monitor their collection of taxes.

“I would like to call a Blue Ribbon Committee meeting every quarter as oversight for accountability of public officials together with Loren Legarda’s finance committee so we can guard carefully the collections of Customs and BIR,” Committee Chairman Senator Richard J. Gordon said Tuesday, during a Senate investigation on the alleged corruption at the BoC.

Mr. Gordon presented documents revealing the extent of uncollected duties and value-added taxes (VAT) that the agencies failed to raise from imports.

“It’s a tsunami of leakage of taxes, of smuggled goods,” he said, citing a 2017 study by the University of Asia and the Pacific which estimated that P905 billion was foregone from 2011 to 2015 due to smuggling and VAT leakage.

He added that another P423 billion was uncollected from imports from China from 2012 to 2016. This included duties and VAT uncollected by the BoC based on his computations from Chinese and Philippine official data on the Mainland’s exports to the Philippines.

Mr. Gordon also alleged that several consignees or importers appeared to pay minimal duties to the BIR relative to the volume of goods being imported.

One company allegedly paid only P15,629 to the BIR despite having imported P833 million worth of goods over years. Another company allegedly imported P684 million worth of goods over five years but only paid P62,597 worth of taxes.

Mr. Gordon said the quarterly meeting will generate progress reports from the BoC and BIR, specifically on their response to the allegations of undercollection.

“We need to monitor this every quarter and that’s what I intend to do,” he told reporters.

Customs commissioner Isidro S. Lapeña has agreed to the quarterly sessions, and added that the agency will meet with the BIR to improve the collection of taxes.

“We will meet with BIR and we will ensure that what is due to government should be given to government,” he said. — Camille A. Aguinaldo

Payment systems for SMC, MPIC toll roads integrated by April

INTEROPERABILITY of payment systems in use at expressways operated by San Miguel Corp. (SMC) and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) will be achieved by the end of April, a regulator said.

Toll Regulatory Board (TRB) Executive Director Abraham P. Sales said that tests are being performed in the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx) and Skyway to make the EasyTrip radio frequency identification (RFID) system, used in Metro Pacific-operated expressways, interoperable with SMC-operated expressways.

According to reports, Autosweep RFIDs can now be used for the North Luzon Expressway (NLEx), Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway (SCTEx), and the Manila-Cavite Expressway (Cavitex). EasyTrip RFIDs however are not yet compatible for use in SMC-operated expressways such as South Luzon Expressway (SLEx) and the Skyway.

“What I understand is towards the end of April. That is the commitment made by San Miguel (Corp.) (SMC),” Mr. Sales said during a briefing on Easter preparations by the Department of Transportation and Metro Pacific Tollways Corp.

The government and 17 companies operating 13 expressways in Luzon signed in September an agreement for toll interoperability and interconnection of payment systems.

MPTC extends assistance operations

Separately, MPTC said it will be expanding its assistance operations to motorists to other holidays. The tollways arm of MPIC is expanding the coverage of its annual motorist assistance program to include not only Easter, All Saints’ Day (Undas), and the Christmas holidays, but also long weekends such as Araw ng Kagitingan (April 7-9), National Heroes’ Day (Aug. 25-27), and Bonifacio Day (Nov. 30-Dec. 2).

The company will also render 24-hour towing services for Class 1 vehicles for the holidays indicated, instead of the usual 12 hours.

MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based FirstPacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.

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. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

DoJ suggested Napoles witness protection entry

JUSTICE SECRETARY Vitaliano N. Aguirre II confirmed in a press conference on Tuesday that the Department of Justice (DoJ) recommended the entry of alleged pork barrel scam mastermind Janet L. Napoles into its Witness Protection Program (WPP).

“Sabi namin file mo lang ’yan, bahala na Sandiganbayan,” Mr. Aguirre told reporters in Malacañang. (We said file it, the Sandiganbayan will decide on it.)

“Napoles’ lawyers informed us that she is now ready to tell all and execute an affidavit regarding the (2013) pork barrel scam. We accepted it and agreed to put her in WPP,” Mr. Aguirre said, explaining the DoJ’s move in her behalf.

The decision to place Ms. Napoles — the alleged mastermind of a scandal that saw the misuse of an estimated P10 billion worth of government funds — under the DoJ’s WPP was not disclosed until last Friday, March 16, despite her admission into the program as early as Feb. 27.

The Justice chief added: “I told her lawyers to get Janet out of Taguig jail and file the appropriate motion before the divisions in Sandiganbayan. Ang gusto niya kasi… (Ms. Napoles’ lawyer, Stephen David, wanted) another opinion (that, since) you are covered by WPP, that Napoles can be taken out already of the Taguig detention cell because there’s a threat to her life, and be put in a safe house outside Taguig.”

“’Di ako pumayag sa (I did not agree with) lawyer David….We need order from Sandiganbayan. The lawyer (Mr. David) asked the Executive Secretary (Salvador C. Medialdea) kung pwedeng baliktarin ’yung akin (if what I decided could be overturned), but Medialdea’s opinion is the same as mine.”

“I have an open mind. Pwede naman ako ang mali, siya ang tama.” (I can be wrong and he could be right.)

Mr. Aguirre also explained that the appointment with Mr. Medialdea “two or three weeks ago, I can’t remember,” was sought by Mr. David, adding that “malimit iyan dito sa Palasyo (he’s in the Palace a lot).”

For his part, Mr. Medialdea in a statement denied giving legal advice to Mr. David, as the latter disclosed to the Sandiganbayan on Monday.

“Why would I give a legal advice to a lawyer for his client? If I were his client I will fire him,” Mr. Medialdea said in his statement.

Mr. Aguirre, in his press briefing, said of Mr. Medialdea’s communication with Mr. David: “It’s not a legal advice. It’s an opinion.”

Senator Grace Poe-Llamanzares in her statement said: “How can Janet Lim Napoles NOT appear as most guilty when she has been identified as the ‘pork barrel queen’? The pieces of evidence against her even led to the indictment and detention of several high-profile public officials.”

“Tinamad na naman ba ang prosekusyon sa pagkalap ng mga ebidensya?” she also said. “Bakit kailangang bigyan ng special treatment ang isang tao?” (Has the prosecution become lazy once again in gathering evidence?…Why give special treatment to this one person?).

The opposition Liberal Party in its statement said in part “the government must pursue (Ms. Napoles’) criminal prosecution, instead of using the people’s money to give her refuge and protection through the Witness Protection Program.” — Dane Angelo M. Enerio with Arjay L. Balinbin