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Manulife Philippines launches real estate investment product

MANULIFE PHILIPPINES has rolled out a new investment platform which allows Filipino clients to invest in real property across Asia-Pacific, at a time when local real estate investment tools remain scarce.
The insurer said the Asia Pacific Property Income (APPI) Fund pools placements from investors — mainly in the US dollar — which are then parked under real estate investment trusts (REITs) across the region.
REITs work like mutual funds by pooling individual investments, but are specifically meant to purchase shares in properties like malls, hotels, warehouses, highways and office buildings and generate income from rental fees.
Ryan Charland, president and chief executive officer of Manulife Philippines, said investing through the APPI allows clients to diversify their portfolios.
“It is also a very good instrument to hedge against inflation,” Mr. Charland was quoted as saying in a statement sent on Friday.
The investment fund makes bets in REITs in Singapore, Hong Kong, Australia, Thailand, and Malaysia, while profits can be reaped twice a year.
The APPI is a feeder fund tucked into the Asia Pacific REIT Fund of Funds run by the firm’s subsidiary, Manulife Asset Management and Trust Corp. It can also be accessed via Manulife’s variable insurance products.
In the Philippines, a law supporting REITs has been in place since 2009 but authorities are yet to unlock its potential as an investment tool amid uncertainties on taxation and regulation. Property developers have been lukewarm to the rules so far due to extra costs from value-added tax, and since they would have little control over REITs due to a 40-67% public float under the current implementing rules.
Revised guidelines are being finalized by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and may be out by June, amid assurances sought by Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III that gains from the REITs will be reinvested in the Philippines.
The 12% tax on transfer of real properties has been removed by the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act that took effect a year ago. Meanwhile, the SEC said it is favoring a lower 33% minimum public ownership level. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

PSE index slips on lack of fresh leads

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter
THE local stock market finished the week on a negative note on the lack of new catalysts to support its upward trajectory.
The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) tumbled 0.36% or 29.41 points to close at 8,070.89 on Friday. The broader all shares index likewise dropped 0.21% or 10.25 points to 4,896.32.
“PSEi ended flat after a lack of immediate catalysts led it to close 29 points down at 8,070.89. Index also saw weakness at the start of the day due to US markets closing in the red last night,” Papa Securities Corp. Sales Associate Gabriel Jose F. Perez said in an email.
Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan also attributed the local market’s dip to the weakness of the US markets, while noting that the PSEi paused following the local central bank’s decision to keep rates steady on Thursday.
“Philippine investors took a breather after the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) meeting announcement, the eurozone growth forecast being cut and the possibility Pres. Xi and Trump not meeting,” Mr. Limlingan said in a mobile message.
Following the Monetary Board’s first policy review for the year, benchmark rates remained within the range of 4.25-5.25%, in line with market consensus.
Mr. Perez noted that investors focused on Bloomberry Resorts Corp. and Petron Corp. on Friday, following the bourse operator’s announcement of the PSEi recomposition starting on Feb. 18. Bloomberry will be the newest addition to the PSEi, while Petron will be dropped from the 30-member list.
As a result, shares in Bloomberry surged 4.33% to P12.06 each, while shares in Petron lost 6% to P7.20 apiece.
Meanwhile, weakness in markets overseas is seen to be triggered by fears that US President Donald J. Trump will not meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping before their 90-day truce ends in March.
With this, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dumped 0.87% or 220.77 points to 25,169.53. The S&P 500 index retreated 0.94% or 25.56 points to 2,706.05, while the Nasdaq Composite index plunged 1.18% or 86.93 points to 7,288.35.
Locally, all sectoral indices ended in negative territory except for the counter for holding firms, which managed to climb 0.22% or 17.69 points to 8,033.
Leading the day’s decline was the industrial sub-index, which shed 0.99% or 116.15 points to 11,678.17. Financials fell 0.56% or 10.43 points to 1,847.39; property slumped 0.26% or 10.57 points to 3,997.85; services dipped 0.03% or 0.56 points to 1,619.34; while mining and oil went down 0.002% or 0.15 points to 8,739.62.
Turnover improved to P7.81 billion after some 3.16 billion names switched hands, versus the previous session’s P7.42 billion.
Decliners outpaced advancers, 119 to 98, while 34 names ended flat.
Net foreign buying persisted for the 16th straight session at P272.66 million, albeit slower than Thursday’s P610.59 million.

BSP steadies rates, cuts inflation view

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter
THE CENTRAL BANK on Thursday kept policy rates unchanged anew amid signs that inflation is on a sustained decline, with price increases sure to return to target soon.
The Monetary Board of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) voted to keep benchmark interest rates steady on Thursday at the 4.25-5.25% range, marking the second straight meeting in which the policy-setting body held off adjustments.
“The Monetary Board’s decision is based on its assessment of a more manageable inflation environment,” BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. said in a statement, as read by Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo during the media briefing yesterday afternoon.
“Latest baseline inflation forecasts show inflation settling within the target band of 3.0% ± 1.0 percentage point for 2019-2020, as price pressures continue to recede due to the decline in international crude oil prices and the normalization of supply conditions for key food items.”
“Inflation expectations have also declined further and are now aligned to the inflation target for 2019-2020,” he added.
This week’s decision was widely expected by market watchers, confident that the BSP will not budge on interest rates just yet.
The central bank raised interest rates in five consecutive meetings last year by a total of 175 basis points, just as inflation surged to the highest level in nearly a decade. The key policy rate currently stands at 4.75%, the highest in nearly a decade.
Inflation eased further to 4.4% in January, marking the third straight month of decline from a nine-year-high 6.7% in September and October although still above the 2-4% target band.
Central bank officials have said that this provides enough room to wait and see how the previous rate increases will be absorbed by the financial system.
Now, the BSP sees inflation risks “evenly balanced” for 2019, with the overall pace of price increases expected to slow further in 2020 despite a “more uncertain” global environment.
“Given these considerations, the Monetary Board deems the prevailing monetary policy settings to be appropriate, as previous monetary responses continue to work their way through the economy,” Mr. Espenilla added.
The central bank now expects inflation to trend even slower until next year, with price movements seen to return to target as early as March.
BSP Assistant Governor Francisco G. Dakila, Jr. said the latest forecast now stands at 3.1% for 2019, down from 3.2% previously, while the 2020 estimate was maintained at three percent.
“We still continue to expect inflation to settle below four percent by March of this year,” Mr. Dakila added.
The BSP official attributed the lower inflation forecast largely to a drop in world crude prices, with the estimate for Dubai crude down to $61.31 per barrel from $69.41/barrel in the December review.
Base effects will also come into play as price shocks from oil, food and excise taxes “dissipate.”
Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, senior economist at ING Bank N.V. Manila, said the window is open for policy makers to unwind their previous tightening moves.
“BSP’s inflation forecasts validate that the BSP is likely done with its tightening cycle, with a policy reversal in sights given slowing growth momentum and inflation in-check,” Mr. Mapa said in a market report.
He noted that a cut in bank reserve requirement ratio (RRR) may be announced as early as this month. “We expect BSP to announce a reduction in reserve requirements at an off-cycle meeting given Governor’s assertions that the RRR is no longer a policy tool.”
London-based Capital Economics also said it expects a cut in interest rates amid a “worsening outlook” for the economy, after gross domestic product growth slowed to 6.2% from 2017’s 6.7%, well below the government’s 7-8% growth target for 2018.
The BSP’s next rate-setting review is on March 21.

Jan. FX reserves hit 20-month high

FOREIGN CURRENCY reserves rose further in January to a 20-month high, as the central bank saw bigger income from offshore investments and the state sold dollar bonds.
Gross international reserves (GIR) reached $82.132 billion last month, picking up from the $79.193-billion level logged in December and the $81.224 billion tallied in January 2018, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Thursday.
This is highest reserve level since May 2017, when the GIR stood $82.177 billion.
In a statement, the central bank said GIR grew on the back of bigger net foreign currency deposits of the national government, as well as revaluation gains from higher gold prices in the international market.
The Bureau of the Treasury raised $1.5 billion from the sale of 10-year dollar bonds to foreign investors in January.
The central bank also saw income from its investments abroad grow to $69.649 billion from $66.733 billion the previous month.
The value of the BSP’s gold holdings also went up to $8.407 billion from the $8.154 billion recorded in December.
To add, the BSP’s foreign exchange operations — which resulted in a slightly stronger peso versus the dollar — helped lift the country’s reserves.
The central bank uses dollar reserves to help temper sharp swings in the exchange rate. The peso averaged P52.4679 against the greenback in January, compared to December’s P52.7691.
The BSP employs “tactical intervention” to managing currency swings, with the view that the exchange rate should be market-determined but can also be subject to regulatory interventions to control abrupt or steep changes in the day-to-day rate.
On the other hand, reserves held under the International Monetary Fund (IMF) edged up to $476.9 million from $473.8 million previously. The country’s special drawing rights — the amount that can be tapped under the IMF’s reserve currency basket — steadied at $1.184 billion.
January’s GIR shot past the $77-billion projection of the central bank for this year.
The reserves can cover up to 7.2 months of import payments, compared to December’s seven months.
The BSP said this was “ample” liquidity cover as it is well above the three-month global standard.
The GIR is also equivalent to 6.2 times the Philippines’ short-term foreign debt.
Credit raters have been citing the hefty GIR level as a source of strength for the Philippines, as it serves as a sufficient buffer against external shocks which could unduly weigh on the country’s foreign obligations. — Melissa L. T. Lopez

Congress targets 2019 budget ratification today

BOTH CHAMBERS of Congress will hold sessions today in a last-minute attempt to ratify the proposed P3.757-trillion national budget for 2019 despite lingering questions on perceived irregular fund “insertions.”
Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III said the bicameral conference committee on the national budget was scheduled to have a final meeting on Friday to sign the committee report on the national budget. Congress will then hold a plenary session in the afternoon just to ratify the report.
“So the whole bicam[eral conference committee] of the House and Senate will meet on Friday morning. They will review (the bicameral committee report), then sign it if they are okay with it and then, by 3 p.m., it will be ratified by both houses in their respective session,” Mr. Sotto told reporters after the Senate caucus on Wednesday night.
The Senate announced on Thursday afternoon, however, that the bicameral committee meeting was moved to 2 p.m. from 9 a.m.
Asked if the Senate will ratify the national budget, the Senate chief replied: “most probably.”
“Maybe some senators may raise questions and issues. But in all probability, because the executive department is requesting it and wants it fast-tracked, it will likely be passed.”
Both chambers of the Congress failed to ratify the 2019 budget before 2018 ended, leading to automatic reenactment of the 2018 budget — meaning no new projects or programs are funded.
The 17th Congress will take a Feb. 9-May 19 break and will have only between May 20 and June 7 to approve any bill afterward. Measures that do not make it out of the legislative mill, via ratification, by then will have to start from scratch in the 18th Congress that begins work in late July.
SAVINGS
House of Representatives Appropriations committee chairman Rep. Rolando G. Andaya, Jr. of Camarines Sur’s 1st district on Wednesday said the chamber was ready to ratify the bicameral committee report on the 2019 national budget, but said it would await the Senate’s counterpart action.
The House on Wednesday also subpoenaed Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno to attend its session today, partly to account for savings of P370 billion in 2017 and a suspected “much bigger amount… in 2018.”
“When he claimed that the P370-billion savings from 2017 reverted to Treasury, does he mean that these unexpended appropriations are still unspent and remain stagnant to this day? Of course not. We do not keep public funds in the Treasury for savings or time deposit. We spend them for programs and projects the following year. Appropriations have a minimum shelf life of two years,” Mr. Andaya said in a statement on Thursday.
“The DBM Secretary has the sole power to disburse them for government programs and projects. This savings-for-pork conversion must be stopped,” added Mr. Andaya, who served as the Budget chief of Speaker Gloria M. Arroyo during her term as President.
The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) on Thursday issued a statement, saying: “[W]e take any subpoena from the House as an opportunity to clarify all the matters not only to the public, but also for the official records of House.
“These accusations are without basis and are meant to discredit the good reputation of this administration’s DBM as one of the most transparent and credible institutions in the world.”
NOT THE LAST SAY
Senator Panfilo M. Lacson, one of the vice-chairpersons of the Senate Finance committee, said committee chairperson Loren B. Legarda during Wednesday’s caucus “merely articulated to the best of her recollection” the agreements she made with Mr. Andaya and what would be included in the bicameral committee report for ratification.
Mr. Lacson also said the final version of budget retained some “insertions” of lawmakers, such as the P160 million allocation per congressman and senators’ additional allocation to the Department of Public Works and Highways and other government agencies.
“The P160 million per House member plus the billion-peso insertions made by a number of their colleagues, and the P23-billion Department of Public Works and Highways insertions by a number of senators plus other insertions in different agencies have all been retained,” Mr. Lacson said in a statement on Thursday.
“Sadly, no matter how hard I argued last night, I only have one vote, although I have good reason to believe that some like-minded colleagues are supportive of deleting all pork insertions, particularly the excessive and unconscionable realignments made not only by our House counterpart, but by a number of our colleagues as well.”
He reiterated calls for President Rodrigo R. Duterte to veto irregular appropriations when the new budget reaches his desk.
“I would say, we have gained some headway in this regard. Hopefully, the President and his economic managers will further scrutinize the final version of the budget bill, as passed by Congress, and exercise his veto power to excise the line items that clearly look and smell like ‘pork’.”
Malacañang’s spokesman said on Thursday that Mr. Duterte is ready to veto provisions if needed.
“… [W]e recognize… the power of Congress to amend, to review and to amend and to do whatever it feels is correct, necessary and right. We leave it to them,” Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo told reporters in a briefing at the palace.
“Now if the President feels that it’s wrong, then he can use his veto power to correct it.” — Camille A. Aguinaldo, Charmaine A. Tadalan, Karl Angelo N. Vidal and Arjay L. Balinbin

Fed, polls, oil revive demand for Southeast Asian stocks

JAKARTA/MANILA — Bruised by global political and economic turbulence last year, foreign investors are now returning to Southeast Asian markets, encouraged by easing trade frictions, a more benign interest rate outlook and prospects of increased infrastructure spending.
So far this year, foreign investors have been net buyers of stocks in markets such as Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, while currencies in the region have clawed back some of their 2018 losses.
A key moment for investors was the US Federal Reserve’s surprise dovish tilt on policy last month, a source of relief for emerging markets that were hit by rising dollar and capital outflows in 2018.
The Fed, however, is just one of the bullish factors driving Southeast Asia.
For Sarah Shaw, portfolio manager at Australian boutique fund 4D Infrastructure, one of the top investment picks for 2019 is Indonesian state-owned toll-road operator PT Jasa Marga.
“We really like the infrastructure story in Indonesia,” Ms. Shaw said. “Jasa Marga is definitely capitalizing on the infrastructure investment that is ongoing in Indonesia.”
Companies such as Jasa Marga, whose shares are up by a quarter since November and mobile gadgets retailer Global Teleshop are leading a rally in Indonesian stock markets that investors believe will be driven by upcoming elections, a pause in Fed tightening and lower oil prices.
Foreigners have bought $1 billion worth of Indonesian equities so far this year, having been net sellers for the last two years. In the Philippines, foreigners have invested more than a third of their net $1.1-billion selling in 2018.
The Philippine stock market has risen 8.5%, while the Jakarta and Bangkok indexes are up about six percent each. The baht is at the fore of Asia’s rising currencies and up four percent this year.
“The re-pricing of the Fed is undoubtedly supportive for emerging market bonds and FX,” said Stuart Ritson, a portfolio manager for emerging market debt at Aviva Investors in Singapore.
At about 12% of Ritson’s $2 billion portfolio, Indonesian bonds are one of the larger overweights. Ritson sees value in holding these bonds against the backdrop of high real yields in Indonesia, a weakening dollar and stable US yields.
Another big factor that helped turn sentiment on these smaller Asian markets was the hope of a thaw in Sino-US trade tensions after the two superpowers agreed to talks early this year. The rupiah, traditionally known to be volatile, had been trading at its lowest levels since the Asian financial crisis before that.
Offshore investors, who hold a third of Indonesia’s high-yielding government bonds, have also been gradually returning to that market since June last year.
The rising tide hasn’t lifted all boats with uncertainty over the political and reform prospects in Malaysia crimping that market. Stocks there haven’t budged in 2019.
However, investors are taking a more positive view on elections in other markets, with Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines due to head to the polls.
Stocks such as Jasa Marga, for example, have been lifted by hopes that Indonesia’s general election in April will keep President Joko Widodo, who has promised massive spending on infrastructure, in power.
“Historically, Indonesian financial markets rally in election year on expectations of policies,” Ezra Nazula, chief investment officer, Manulife Asset Management, Indonesia.
Mr. Nazula, whose fund has about $4.7 billion under management, expects Indonesian 10-year bond yields, now slightly below eight percent, to drop by 50 to 100 basis points by the year end and for the Jakarta stock index to possibly rise by another 6-8% to record highs.
In the Philippines, investors are betting that consumption, which drives two-thirds of the economy, will pick up as politicians spend lavishly ahead of the May mid-term elections, and households are encouraged by falling prices.
Stocks of fast food leader Jollibee Foods Corp., shopping mall owner SM Prime Holdings, Inc. and snacks maker Universal Robina Corp. are among those that have registered double-digit gains and outperformed the main index this year.
In Thailand, the first election in seven years and King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s coronation have become reasons for the baht’s outsized rally and foreigners rushing to the stock market.
CLSA’s head of Thai equity strategy, Suchart Techaposai, expects the benchmark equity index to hit 1,850 this year, more than 11% above current levels.
Thai real estate firms such as Noble Development and AQ Estate jumped about 50% last month, more than 10 times the increase in the main index, as investors bet on booming consumer demand. — Reuters

High box office stakes for Alita: Battle Angel

LOS ANGELES — Manga-inspired action epic Alita: Battle Angel begins its worldwide cinema roll out this week but with a hefty budget and years in the making, producer James Cameron and director Robert Rodriguez acknowledge the stakes are high at the box office.
The CGI-heavy action adventure about a cyborg heroine in a post-apocalyptic world is reported to have been made with a budget of around $200 million, according to the Hollywood press.
Avatar director Mr. Cameron first wrote a script in 2004 for the film, but eventually passed on the project to Sin City director Mr. Rodriguez.
“It’s in that battle-cruiser class of budgets, there’s no question about it so, yeah, the stakes are high,” Mr. Cameron said at the film’s premiere in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
“If people show up we’re definitely going to do at least one more if not two. It’s mapped out for three in total.”
Critics have given lukewarm reviews to the movie, whose release date has been postponed twice.
“There’s a lot riding on it but you never know if it does really well, people come out to see it and people want more, you’ve want to make sure you’ve got your bases covered,” Mr. Rodriguez said.
The film stars Rosa Salazar in the title role with Christoph Waltz, Jennifer Connelly and Mahershala Ali in supporting roles. — Reuters

Ayala-led IMI earnings increase by 34% in 2018

AYALA-LED Integrated Micro-Electronics, Inc. (IMI) reported a 34% increase in attributable profit for 2018, due to net gains from the sale of a China unit and other one-off transactions.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Thursday, IMI said net income attributable to the parent reached $45.5 million, higher than the $34 million it posted in the same period a year ago.
IMI attributed the increase to non-operating items, including a net gain on the sale of a China entity and the reversal of contingent consideration related to its acquisition of United Kingdom-based electronics manufacturer STI Enterprises, Limited.
The company, however, noted that operationally and excluding foreign exchange impact, net income fell by 21% to $25.8 million in 2018. Effects of the depreciation of the Chinese yuan and the euro, alongside higher interest rates, also added downward pressure on the firm’s bottomline.
“2018 was a challenging yet exciting year. Although the company was affected financially by the global component shortage issue, we are confident that the choices we made years ago were the right decisions,” IMI Chief Executive Officer Arthur Tan said in a statement.
“We remain committed in our strategy to develop complex and high value products that allows us to remain relevant in our focused target markets.”
Consolidated revenues, meanwhile, grew by 24% to $1.35 billion for the full year, versus $1.09 billion. Its traditional business alone generated a 16% increase in revenues to $1.04 billion. Its recently acquired company, STI and Germany’s VIA Optronics, contributed $312.4 million, 61% higher year on year.
Despite challenges to improve its bottomline, IMI said its business pipeline grew following $320 million in new project awards. Of this, 72% are for automotive applications.
“This drive to be a critical contributor to the digital car of tomorrow and other technological breakthroughs will enable us to deliver and meet increasing expectations of our stakeholders,” Mr. Tan said.
IMI President and Chief Operating Officer Gilles Bernard also added that building solid relationships with customers and suppliers will help solve the imbalance between supply and demand in the business.
“We have to establish realistic targets with positive thinking to stay ahead of the game,” Mr. Bernard said in a statement.
IMI said it spent $65 million in capital expenditures in 2018 to build more complex manufacturing capabilities. The allocation was funded by proceeds from its stock rights offering worth P5 billion last year.
Shares in IMI shed 22 centavos or 1.62% to close at P13.38 each at the stock exchange on Thursday. — Arra B. Francia

Smart’s very first web series is the romance Find Her

SMART Communications Inc. has finally ventured into the realm of web series as it introduces Find Her, a seven-part miniseries about the role of technology in romance, which drops its first episodes on Feb. 9 on Smart’s YouTube channel.
“We’ve very proud to offer Find Her… because it’s groundbreaking and unique,” Andrew L. Santos, PLDT-Smart First Vice-President for consumer marketing, said during the launch on Feb. 6 at the cinemas of Century City Mall in Makati City.
“Instead of doing the usual two minute viral video, we decided that it’s really important to give the viewers what we think they like and if you look at the audience nowadays, they really like to binge watch [and so] we came up with something that is really beautifully crafted,” he said.
The series is directed by Victor Kaiba Villanueva who is best known for helming the Cebuano film Patay na si Hesus (2016), a dark comedy road trip film which won the Audience Choice Award at the 2016 Quezon City International Film Festival and the Jury Prize at the 2017 Pista ng Pelikulang Pilipino.
“[Find Her] was partly inspired by Your Name because I’m a bit of a fan of anime (Japanese animation) and I also wanted to do a sort of mature kind of romance [about people] in their 20s because that’s where I’m at right now in my life,” Mr. Villanueva said during the event.
Your Name or Kimi No Na Wa is a 2016 animated film by Makoto Shinkai about two high school students who embark on a quest to meet each other after they magically swap bodies.
Using the same theme of parallel worlds, Find Her follows three individuals — Lia (played by Bea Ruaro), Aika (Dionne Monsanto) and Gabe (Vance Larena) — as they each try to find out if love can be found online.
As this is his first digital project, Mr. Villanueva his challenge was to do the episodes in the way that they are still engaging despite the shorter running time. Each of the seven episodes is about 12 minutes long.
“I was particular with shortening the dialogue,” he said before explaining that unlike full-length features where he is given time to set up the scene and pour minutes into creating nuance, the web series format challenged him to tell the story quicker yet still be able to engage the audience.
Based on the first three episodes that the media previewed during the launch, it is a well-crafted and snappily paced mini series that elicited kilig (romantic excitement) from several members of the audience along with curiosity as the preview ended with a cliffhanger.
Because this is a Valentine’s Day offering, Mr. Santos said they made the decision to launch the first five episodes on Feb. 9 and the last two episodes on Feb. 14. This was done to let the audience know “the characters more” and so “they can get a feel of the story” but “the climax should be on Valentine’s Day.”
Find Her is the first in a line of web series created by Smart called “PLDT-Smart STORIES” though Mr. Santos was mum about the details of the other projects. He said that they are currently not shooting another series but are looking at other concepts to produce in the near future.
Find Her premieres its first five episodes on Feb. 9 on the Smart Communications YouTube Channel and will be followed by the last two episodes on Feb. 14.
Smart Communications is the wireless subsidiary of 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. — Zsarlene B. Chua

CCLEx concessionaire secures P19-B loan

THE private concessionaire for the Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway (CCLEx) has secured a P19-billion loan facility with six local banks, which will partially fund the construction of the bridge project in the Visayas.
Cebu Cordova Link Expressway Corp. (CCLEC) said in a statement it has inked a 15-year omnibus loan and security agreement with Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC), Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP), Robinsons Bank Corp., Union Bank of the Philippines, Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), and Security Bank Corp.
“Construction completion of the (CCLEx) project is assured now that it has secured a P19-billion syndicated loan facility,” the unit of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) said, noting the main foundation of the bridge is now nearing completion.
“All 21 piles of the main bridge’s Tower 2 have been completed while 17 out of 21 piles at the Tower 1 have been erected. These form part of the bridge’s main foundation,” the company said. “Piling works for the other project components such as the Cebu South Coastal Road on-ramp and viaduct are underway.”
The CCLEx is a P30-billion, 8.5-kilometer toll bridge that will link Mactan island to mainland Cebu.
The whole bridge is scheduled to open in 2021, by then it is hoped to benefit around 50,000 vehicles every day by decongesting the two existing bridges linking Mactan and Cebu.
MPTC is the tollways unit of the Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), one of the three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific 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. — Denise A. Valdez

Berlinale unrolls green carpet for politically charged film festival

BERLIN — A mother fleeing her violent husband, a serial killer who preys on women, and famine in 1930s Ukraine are among the weighty social and political themes explored in films showcased at this year’s Berlin Film Festival.
Short on star power but strong on gender balance and political engagement, the 2019 Berlinale opens on Thursday evening with the premiere of Danish director Lone Scherfig’s The Kindness of Strangers.
The film, set in New York, is about Clara, played by Zoe Kazan, fleeing her violent policeman husband, and touches on themes of power and abuse that pervade much of the festival.
Other highlights include Brazilian director Wagner Moura’s Marighella, about writer Carlos Marighella’s death at the hands of Brazil’s former military dictatorship, and Polish director Agnieszka Holland’s Mr. Jones, about a Welsh journalist whose 1930s reports from the Soviet Union exposed the horror of famine in Ukraine.
Other hotly tipped films include German director Fatih Akin’s The Golden Glove, the psychologically grueling true story of a serial killer who preyed on women in Hamburg’s port district in the 1970s.
Though stars are present at this festival — including Juliette Binoche, chair of the prize jury — the lower-key feel is typical of Dieter Kosslick, outgoing director of the Berlinale, said Scott Roxborough, European bureau chief at The Hollywood Reporter.
WOMEN DIRECTORS
With the film industry still reeling from the “#MeToo” movement, when a series of prominent male figures were revealed as sexual predators and serial abusers of women, this Berlinale stands out for its depth of female representation, he said.
“Seven of the 17 films (competing for a prize), 41%, are female-directed, which isn’t quite 50% but it’s a lot better than any of the other big film festivals,” Mr. Roxborough said. “Venice last year had one female director.”
Around 400 films will be shown at this year’s Berlinale, of which 17 are competing for the Golden and Silver Bears.
The absence of star-power is also a reflection of the festival’s timing, since Venice’s spring and Cannes’s autumn slots are better for films seeking to target the Oscars, which remain the film industry’s ultimate prize.
The Academy Awards, or Oscars, ceremony usually takes place in late February or early March.
In another nod to contemporary issues this year, the festival will highlight the importance of protecting the environment by replacing the traditional red carpet for stars to walk down with a green one woven from recycled fishing nets. — Reuters

PRC signals reduced coursework requirement for professionals

THE Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) said that it may require less refresher coursework from professionals as the agency makes adjustments to implement the Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Law.
In an interview with BusinessWorld, PRC Chairman Teofilo S. Pilando Jr. said that commission is planning a transition period before fully implementing the CPD law to reduce the burden on professionals, and to allow for time to build up the PRC’s capabilities. During the transition, mandatory refresher credit requirements may be eased.
A prescribed volume of coursework is required of professionals seeking to renew their PRC registrations.
“Among the things we are proposing will be a transition period in the implementation of the law,” he said.
Mr. Pilando added, “Under the old Implementing Rules and Regulations, most of the professions require 45 credit units but during the transition period, we will require at most 15 units. We know it takes time to ideally implement this but at the same time, we cannot say 0 units.”
Last year, in a Senate hearing, Senators Antonio F. Trillanes IV, Ralph G. Recto, Juan Miguel F. Zubiri, and Aquilino L. Pimentel III noted the difficulty many professionals have experienced in complying with the 45-credit requirement and the lack of PRC facilities to host coursework in many parts of the country.
The PRC Chairman said that the commission needs to build its capacity before it can fully enforce the CPD Law.
“We are supposed to achieve standardization… and develop further alternative modes of compliance… We have to have the necessary materials and premises,” Mr. Pilando said.
On Monday, the PRC was summoned for consultations with the Senate on its proposed amendments to the rules for renewing professional licenses.
“(T)o cushion the supposed burden of implementation, from the start we already know that we need some adjustments… considering what the law is contemplating, we are amending the IRR, to make it less burdensome and at the same time still maintain the intent of the law,” he said.
Asked to estimate how long the transition period will be, Mr. Pilando said “It’s hard for us to give definitive period because it hinges on the type of support we are going to get.” — Gillian M. Cortez