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BoJ keeps policy steady, trims inflation outlook

THE BANK of Japan left its policy unchanged again on Wednesday. — REUTERS

THE BANK of Japan (BoJ) left monetary policy unchanged as it cut its inflation outlook once again, underscoring how far away its price target is and how few options the central bank has for drawing closer.
The BoJ maintained its yield curve-control program and asset purchases, it said in a statement Wednesday, a result predicted by all but one of 50 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The bank lowered its inflation forecast for a fourth consecutive time in its quarterly outlook report.
With the European Central Bank meeting on Thursday and the Federal Reserve next week, the gap between the BoJ and its global peers keeps widening. While the Fed may hit pause soon, both it and ECB are seeking to return to pre-crisis policies, giving them more room to respond to another shock or downturn.
The BoJ’s inaction even as it cut its inflation forecasts was “strong proof” that it has few tools left at its disposal, said Shinichiro Kobayashi, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting. He noted that the central bank had previously taken preemptive action when inflation had been deemed at risk.
In its outlook report, the BoJ cut its inflation forecast for the fiscal year starting in April to 0.9% from 1.4%, citing lower oil prices as the primary reason.
But the BoJ’s inflation forecasts didn’t include the effects of expected cuts to cell phone fees or a government initiative to provide free education for young children. The central bank said the education policy alone would cut another 0.3 percentage point from core inflation in fiscal 2019 and 0.4 percentage point the next year — effectively bringing its forecasts to 0.6% and 1.0%, respectively.
A downgrade to 0.6% in fiscal 2019 would have been the biggest since Governor Haruhiko Kuroda took over the BoJ in 2013.
Japan’s core inflation slipped to 0.7% in December. Many economists expect that figure to fall below zero sometime this year. Yet after six years of extreme stimulus, few economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect any more to come, judging the BoJ’s bias to be toward normalizing policy eventually.
On Wednesday, the BoJ again stated that momentum toward its 2% inflation target is intact, though not yet sufficiently firm.
GROWTH OUTLOOK
As the global elite gathered in Davos, Switzerland, Kuroda said overseas risks are on the rise and the BoJ must pay close attention to how they affect sentiment among businesses and households in Japan. Yet his main view of the outlook hasn’t changed, he said, and Japan’s broad balance of supply and demand would push inflation higher.
The BoJ slightly raised its growth forecasts for the next two years, just days after the International Monetary Fund said it sees the Japanese economy growing faster than previously expected, citing additional fiscal support.
Yet the BoJ has plenty to worry about. In addition to a sales-tax increase scheduled for October, an escalation of the US-China trade war, a “hard” Brexit and a deeper slowdown in China could all take a big toll on Japan’s export-dependent economy. Data released earlier Wednesday showed that Japan’s exports fell for a second time in four months in December. Shipments to China slid 7%.
“If the China-US economic friction, trade friction becomes prolonged, it’s clear that we will see the impact from that,” Kuroda said. “I sincerely hope that they’ll get this resolved quickly.”
The question is whether the BoJ has the tools to respond to a shock or even a mere recession. Kuroda said the BoJ has plenty of unconventional policy measures left to choose from. “Our policy options have neither disappeared nor narrowed,” he said. — Bloomberg

Bourse operator amends short-selling guidelines

THE Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. (PSE) has amended the guidelines for short-selling transactions on Wednesday, clarifying that short- selling orders will not be allowed during the market’s pre-open and pre-close phase.
In a memorandum posted on its website yesterday, the PSE said it noticed a discrepancy between Section 2.e of the Short Selling Guidelines and Article IV, Section 5.2.c of the Trading Rules.
While the former states that short selling orders will not be accepted during pre-open, pre-close, and run-off/trading-at-last, the latter only rejects such transactions during pre-open and pre-close periods.
“For consistency and to avoid confusion to our stakeholders, Section 2.e. of the Short Selling Guidelines shall be amended, as follows: short selling orders shall not be accepted during the following trading phases: pre-open and pre-close,” according to the memo.
Short selling pertains to the sale of a security that is not owned by the seller, but will be settled by the delivery of borrowed securities. An investor can generate profits by selling borrowed securities at a time of lower prices, then buying them at a lower price in the future.
The PSE looks to allow short selling within the year. — Arra B. Francia

Amazon.com starts direct sales of merchandise in Brazil after delays

SAO PAULO — Amazon.com Inc is launching its long-awaited in-house fulfillment and delivery network in Brazil after months of delays caused by complicated logistics and a highly complex tax system in the largest Latin American economy.
Amazon, which some rivals had expected to kick off direct sales of items beyond books as soon as the Christmas selling season, said it will directly sell 11 categories of merchandise from over 800 suppliers from L’Oreal to Black & Decker as of Tuesday.
Its shift to stocking and delivering goods itself from acting mostly as a marketplace is expected to intensify competition for fast delivery of goods in Latin America’s largest economy as it exits a painful recession.
“We are launching (our direct sales platform) with 320,000 different products in stock, including 200,000 books… Our obsession is always to increase this catalog and to have everything Brazilian consumers seek and want to buy on the internet,” Amazon’s Brazilian country manager Alex Szapiro told Reuters.
In November, Reuters reported that Amazon’s attempt to advance with its so-called Fulfillment by Amazon program in Brazil had run into difficulties such as the nations’s tangled tax system, complicated logistics and testy relations with some prominent vendors.
“As in every negotiation, you take a seat at a table and you want to agree on the best possible terms,” said Szapiro when asked on the tone of conversations with suppliers, without entering in details.
Amazon entered Brazil quietly in 2012, selling e-readers, books and then streaming movies in the fast-growing Brazilian market. The company made its first big move into merchandise in October 2017, when it began offering the use of its Brazilian website to third-party merchants to sell electronics.
The company does not reveal the number of sellers in its marketplace, which it has slowly expanded over the past year, adding new categories while laying the ground for a direct sales platform.
As part of the fulfillment program, Amazon leased a 47,000 square-meter (505,904-square-foot) warehouse just outside of Sao Paulo, as first reported by Reuters almost a year ago.
Szapiro, who previously worked as Brazil country manager for Apple Inc, declined to say how much the company is spending on the new distribution center or how many people it is hiring, but said Amazon employs directly and indirectly over 1,400 people in Brazil.
In a report published on Monday, analysts at investment bank BTG Pactual said the expected direct sales launch signaled the company was ready “to strengthen investments, potentially via more partnerships with fulfillment operators and last-mile carriers.”
Even though the bank predicted Amazon would take a “gradual approach” and was likely to vye for a “low double-digit market share,” shares of Brazilian retailers reacted negatively to BTG’s report, with B2W, Magazine Luiza e Lojas Americanas among the biggest losers in Monday’s session. — Reuters

History-making Oscar nominations leave top prize up for grabs

LOS ANGELES — Netflix movie Roma and British historical romp The Favourite from Fox Searchlight led nominations for the Oscars on Tuesday in a history-making lineup that left the best picture race wide open.
The lists for the highest honors in the movie industry were packed with people of color, including nominees from Mexico, Greece and Poland, as well as films featuring the stories of women and gay and black people.
Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron’s semiautobiographical, black-and-white tale Roma scored a first best picture nod for streaming service Netflix, Inc. It will also compete in the foreign language film category, where it is widely considered a shoo-in.
Roma and The Favourite shared a leading 10 nods, followed by Lady Gaga musical A Star is Born and scathing political comedy Vice with eight apiece.
Walt Disney Co.’s Black Panther, which collected seven nods, became the first superhero movie in the 91-year history of the Academy Awards to win a best picture nomination.
“There is now no clear front-runner for best picture, making it an enormously suspenseful Oscar race,” Tom O’Neil, founder of awards website GoldDerby.com said in a telephone interview.
Shot entirely in Spanish and an indigenous Mexican language, Roma scored nominations across the board, including director, lead actress Yalitza Aparicio as a maid, supporting actress Marina de Tavira, screenplay, and multiple technical fields.
“It’s a movie centered on a domestic worker of indigenous origin who’s being celebrated. That’s what gives me the most pleasure,” Cuaron told Mexico City local radio program Aristegui Noticias.
Aparicio, 25, who had never acted professionally, said she was “humbled and honored.”
“As a daughter of a domestic worker and an indigenous woman myself, I am proud this movie will help those of us who feel invisible be seen,” she said in a statement.
The Oscars, chosen by the 8,000 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, will be handed out in Hollywood on Feb. 24.
The Favourite, set in the court of 18th-century British monarch Queen Anne, garnered nods for its British star, Olivia Colman, and supporting actresses Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz. Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos was also nominated for the film.
“Yorgos has such a unique vision. He is very witty, he takes a lot of risks,” Ceci Dempsey, one of the film’s producers, said in a telephone interview. “It’s a remarkable feeling to have a film with so many women in it get so many nominations.”
Warner Bros. A Star is Born, led by best actress contender Lady Gaga in her debut in a major movie, earned eight nods, including for Gaga’s hit song “Shallow.” But while Bradley Cooper will compete in the best actor category, he was snubbed in the director’s race.
Other snubs included the all-Asian cast romantic comedy Crazy Rich Asians, which got nothing, Black Panther director Ryan Coogler, and If Beale Street Could Talk, which was excluded from the best picture race but won a supporting actress nod for Regina King.
Crowd-pleaser Bohemian Rhapsody was nominated for five awards, including Egyptian-American Rami Malek for his role as Queen front man Freddie Mercury, who died of AIDS in 1991.
Gay and lesbian campaign group GLAAD said another three of the eight best picture nominees touched on gay issues, reflecting what it said was “a banner year for LGBTQ inclusion in film.”
Veteran actress Glenn Close, who has yet to win an Oscar, will compete for the seventh time, this year for her lead role in The Wife.
Green Book about the friendship that develops between a black pianist and his white driver in the 1960s, won nods for stars Viggo Mortensen and Mahershala Ali, but not for director Peter Farrelly. Nevertheless, the film remains a strong best picture contender after a win at the Producers Guild Awards on Saturday.
The Oscar ceremony looks set to take place without a host after the withdrawal in December of comedian Kevin Hart due to past homophobic comments he made on Twitter. — Reuters

In win for tech giants, EU copyright reforms stalled

BRUSSELS — EU efforts to reform copyright rules hit a roadblock on Monday when a meeting of lawmakers and officials was called off, prompting criticism of Google from publishers after it and other tech giants lobbied against the changes.
The European Commission, which launched a debate on the issue two years ago, says an overhaul is necessary to protect Europe’s cultural heritage and level the playing field between big online platforms and publishers, broadcasters and artists.
European Parliament lawmakers, representatives from EU countries and Commission officials were scheduled to meet on Monday to reconcile their positions on the reform drive. But the meeting was canceled after EU countries failed to resolve differences on Friday.
Commission digital chief Andrus Ansip expressed disappointment at the delay, saying reform was crucial and possible even at this stage.
“All involved parties have a huge responsibility: Playing lightly now with a ‘No deal is better than my own maximalist position’ as I read sometimes from position statements, is dangerous and irresponsible,” he said.
There is little time to hammer out an agreement due to European Parliament elections in May.
Two proposals have attracted the most attention. One, Article 11, could force Google, Microsoft and others to pay publishers for displaying news snippets. But after snippet taxes were introduced in Spain and Germany in the past, publishers reported plunging traffic on their sites.
The other measure, Article 13, would require online platforms such as YouTube and Instagram to install filters to prevent users from uploading copyrighted materials, which critics say could lead to censorship.
Member states at Friday’s meeting disagreed on the size of the carve-out for small- and medium-sized enterprises related to Article 13, with Germany pushing for a higher threshold for SMEs subjected to the rules while France wanted a lower bar, said an official.
Publishers criticized lobbying by Google.
“Google has intensified its scaremongering about the possible impact of a new neighboring right for press publishers,” the European Publishers Council, European Newspaper Publishers’ Association and the European Magazine Media Association said in a joint statement.
“They are running a ‘test’ of how they see Google Search might look in the event that press publishers can choose to seek licensing agreements with Google for the reuse of their content.”
Lawmaker Julia Reda from the European Pirate Party urged EU countries to drop upload filters from the overhaul.
“The Council should take the next step, delete Article 13 and say goodbye to upload filters once and for all. EU governments must be tough and block upload filters as they negotiate the Copyright directive,” she said. — Reuters

Gov’t considering bailout for Hanjin

THE GOVERNMENT may help save the troubled Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Philippines (HHIC-Phil) through a bailout via a white knight to be assisted by the state, Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno said on Wednesday.
Mr. Diokno floated the idea of injecting fresh funds to “somebody from the private sector” which will take over the operation of the South Korean shipbuilder. The additional capital, he said, will be coursed through government lenders Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK) as well as Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP).
“We’ll probably use somebody… [One] option is somebody from the private sector… Maybe tying up with countries like France or Israel — they can join forces, and then we will help them through the government banks,” Mr. Diokno told reporters yesterday, although noting there are no concrete details regarding the government’s involvement in the takeover as of yet.
Manghihiram sila (they will borrow money), we will provide the money. So may return naman iyon sa government,” he added.
Last week, Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana said he posed the idea of a government takeover of Hanjin’s facilities to President Rodrigo R. Duterte, adding that the latter was “very receptive” to the idea.
“While we sympathize with the financial woes of Hanjin, we are excited really by this development because we see the possibility of having our own shipbuilding capacity in the Philippines, especially large ships like what’s being built in Hanjin’s shipyard in Subic,” Mr. Lorenzana said during the Defense department’s 2019 budget deliberations in the Senate.
“And so, the Flag Officer-in-Command Admiral (Robert A.) Empedrad reached out to me — I think yesterday or the other day — and I said, ‘why not we takeover the Hanjin [facility] and give it to the Navy to manage?’” he recalled.
However, Mr. Diokno said the military will not take over the HHIC-Phil’s facility as the government can instead inject funds into DBP and LANDBANK to help the embattled firm.
Wala pang (there is still no) concrete plan, but we will not allow it to just [close] without any contingency plan. Meaning, there will be a white knight who will take over with our assistance.”
Should there be a military takeover, Mr. Diokno said the Navy might only assume a “small part” of the shipyard.
“If that was taken over, then we can use that to build our naval forces because we buy a lot of ships,” he added in a mix of English and Filipino.
The South Korean shipbuilder’s unit based in Subic Bay filed for corporate rehabilitation last Jan. 8, leaving some $412 million in outstanding loans from Philippine banks in limbo.
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. had the biggest exposure with $145 million lent to HHIC-Phil, followed by LANDBANK with $85 million; Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. with $70 million; BDO Unibank, Inc. with $60 million; and Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) with $52 million.
Meanwhile, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez downplayed the effects of the firm’s default to the domestic economy.
“You know that this Hanjin is of course a concern for some banks, but overall, it’s a relatively small amount for the entire economy… I’m sure the banks can work it out. We’re ready to help them,” he told reporters yesterday.
Mr. Dominguez, who is also the ex-officio chairman of LANDBANK, added that they are already discussing the issue with the Cabinet, given that the state-run bank’s exposure to the embattled shipbuilder “is not small.”
“We’re already starting now. We have to understand what’s going on. First of all, I’m the chairman of LANDBANK. $85 million is not small.” — K.A.N. Vidal

New Singapore-based firm to finance renewable projects in Southeast Asia

THREE foreign entities, two of which are based in Singapore, have teamed up to deploy a $100-million fund for clean energy projects in Southeast Asia, including a microgrid project in the Philippines.
In a statement released on Wednesday, Singapore’s WEnergy Global Pte. Ltd., ICMG Partners Pte. Ltd. and Greenway Grid Global Pte. Ltd. said they had formed a Singapore-based investment entity.
The newly formed Singapore company, CleanGrid Partners Pte. Ltd., aims to build and manage a portfolio of electrification projects valued at about $100 million within three to four years.
“WEnergy Global, one of the principal shareholders of the new company, has already set the stage by being an initiator for a microgrid project in Palawan in the Philippines, to be part of this electrification plan,” the statement read.
CleanGrid will finance and operate renewable energy projects in Southeast Asia, of which $20 million has been made available for short-term deployment.
“CleanGrid Partners is aiming at enabling a rapid replication of the Palawan project in several other places in Southeast Asia to meet the demand for off-grid and decentralized electrification. In Singapore, the partners aim at engagements in smart micro-grids at industrial estate level,” the company said.
“Several other projects in the Philippines, Indonesia and Myanmar are already in the pipeline.”
The statement described WEnergy Global as a Singapore-headquartered company that has taken on several public and private sector clean electrification projects in the region.
ICMG Partners is a global management consulting firm with operations in Singapore, Tokyo, Shanghai and Silicon Valley, while Singapore-based Greenway Grid Global counts Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power Company PowerGrid, Inc. as one its main shareholders. — Victor V. Saulon

Low-cost airline offers tasty low-cost dishes

AIR ASIA’s new meal options

MAYBE airline food is just there to make landing even more worthy, though with new meals by AirAsia, we guess it really does make the journey matter.
According to AirAsia Philippines CEO Capt. Dexter Comendador, the Santan menu was launched in 2015 to highlight ASEAN flavors. This season, it aims to make the flight experience healthier and friendlier with a Chipotle chicken wrap and a Caesar salad, priced at P100 and P120. The new menu aims for a “farm-to-air” concept, directly sourcing ingredients from a Tagaytay farm where the vegetables harvested that morning will be served on the day itself as an in-flight meal.
The menu was launched via a lunch in Discovery Country Suites in Tagaytay last week.
Fresh and new items in the Santan menu are California crab onigiri, Korean beef stew with kimchi rice, Cheesy pesto and tomato bun, Corned beef bun, and an array of sweets such as Brazo de Mercedes, Cookies and cream parfait and Butterscotch bars. These are priced from P70 to P180. Guests may order these dishes while booking tickets, or else onboard.
Karlo Sanchez, AirAsia Philippines’ Head of Ancillary Business, said that in preparing airline food they have three things in mind: “Safety, of course. We look at the passengers’ taste, and then something that, in terms of our pricing, same with our tickets: low-cost.”
Since AirAsia does not provide meals to all passengers, the airline being a low-cost carrier, Mr. Sanchez says, “We’re trying to perfect our meals, wherein, we want everyone to try it.”
It has become an easy joke to rag on airline food, but AirAsia wants to combat the trite stereotype. “With AirAsia, we’re giving them that option: quality meals, affordable pricing: and it tastes really good,” said Mr. Sanchez. “It’s not a ‘beef or chicken’ option on our side.” — JL Garcia

US Federal Reserve’s jumbled talk leaves balance-sheet message in ‘disarray’

THE FEDERAL RESERVE’S best laid plan for a below-the-radar rundown of its $4.1 trillion balance sheet has gone awry.
Rather than operating in the background as policy makers intended, the strategy has been thrust into the spotlight as investors and President Donald Trump have attacked it for fueling last month’s stock market sell-off.
“The sudden and unwanted attention that market participants attached to balance sheet policy has thrown the Fed’s communications on the topic into disarray,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief US Economist Michael Feroli said in a recent note.
The risk is that could lead to renewed market turmoil as investors try to parse the Fed’s plan for a draw-down that some consider more significant than policy makers do.
Chairman Jerome Powell will get a chance to explain the approach when he briefs reporters Jan. 30 after a two-day Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in Washington. No change is expected in its strategy of reducing its bond holdings by a monthly maximum of $50 billion. Interest rates are also seen being left on hold.
It’s not only Wall Street that’s wrong footed the Fed. Washington has too.
Republican lawmakers’ criticism of the bloated balance sheet as inflationary has been drowned out by Trump’s attacks on the Fed’s move to reduce it when price pressures are muted.
“Trump has done an extraordinary job of articulating” the market’s unease with Fed policy at key points, said PGIM Fixed Income Chief Economist Nathan Sheets.
US central bankers have already re-crafted their message about the unwind of quantitative easing in response to December’s stock slump.
No longer do they say the reduction is on autopilot. Instead, they assure that policy isn’t on a preset course and that they’re prepared to alter balance sheet plans if necessary to keep the economy on track.
The trouble is that the new formulation leaves much unsaid and could sow more uncertainty.
“Fed officials’ attempts to calm market panic over ‘quantitative tightening’ create further risk for confusion,” TD Securities Head of Global Macro Strategy Michael Hanson said in a note.
The chances of that happening are heightened by disagreement between the Fed and market pros like billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller over how consequential the unwind is. Central bankers just don’t buy the argument it sparked the fourth quarter stock sell-off.
“We don’t believe that our issuance is an important part of the story of the market turbulence,” Powell said Jan. 4. He instead pointed to investor concerns about slowing global growth and US-China trade negotiations.
The FOMC is holding in-depth discussions on the balance sheet that Vice Chairman Richard Clarida said will reach important decisions this year.
But those conversations have centered on what Hanson called “micro” issues, such as what operating framework the Fed should use in managing short-term rates, and not on the monetary policy implications of the unwind.
Hanson said that raises the risk that a halt to Fed portfolio paring could be mistaken by markets as something it’s not: a fundamental shift in the monetary stance.
Morgan Stanley Chief US Economist Ellen Zentner and her team forecast the balance sheet rundown will end in September.
Powell, though, recently suggested otherwise. The future balance sheet “will be substantially smaller than it is now,” he said on Jan. 10, sparking a brief drop in shares.
To avoid misconceptions about its strategy, the Fed in 2014 put out what it called its “policy normalization principles and plans.” Indeed, Powell cited the initial principles on Jan. 4 when he said the Fed was ready to change its strategy if needed to meet its goals.
But he failed to mention an augmentation of the plans agreed in 2017. It stated the Fed would be ready to stop cutting its bond holdings “if a material deterioration in the economic outlook were to warrant a sizable reduction” in short-term rates.
That wording itself was confusing. It suggested the Fed “could be putting one foot on the brake and the other on the accelerator” when it starts cutting rates, said Ethan Harris, head of global economics research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
The balance sheet divide between the Fed and markets dates back to quantitative easing’s 2008 start.
TAPER TANTRUM
Then-Chairman Ben Bernanke tried to name the Fed’s big bond purchases “credit easing” to focus attention on the impact they’d have on long-term rates. Investors insisted on the term quantitative easing.
Today, Fed officials are still focused on bond yields, arguing their low levels suggest the balance sheet run-off is not as frightening as feared.
Some investors though maintain that a shift to quantitative tightening by global central banks last fall fueled the stock slump.
This isn’t the first time confusion over balance sheet strategy has sparked turmoil. In May 2013, Bernanke triggered the “taper tantrum” when he hinted bond buying might soon stop. Then-Governor Powell said it was up to Bernanke to clarify the message in a press conference after the FOMC’s June 2013 meeting.
“It’s appropriate to give LeBron the ball at the end of the game,” he said, referring to basketball great LeBron James, according to transcripts.
Powell now has to play the role of closer at next week’s post-meeting press conference. — Bloomberg

Restaurant Row (01/24/19)

Gifts from Marriott

AT the Manila Mariott, one can give good luck for the Lunar New Year through items handpicked from Man Ho’s signature offerings. The Lunar New Year Hamper (P3,188) contains koi-shaped tikoy, chocolates inspired by Daruma piglets, XO sauce, chili sauce, walnuts, Jasmine green tea, and kiam muy; while the Tikoy Gift Box (P1,888) contains koi-shaped tikoy in two sizes. The gifts are available until Feb. 15. For details and orders call 988-9999.

Going keto at Resorts World Manila

CAFÉ MAXIMS’ Adlai and Chicken

CAFÉ MAXIMS at Resorts World Manila’s (RWM) has added a new dish to its ketogenic lineup for the month of January: the Adlai and Chicken meal. It is made with sautéed adlai grains topped with grilled chicken breast fillet coated with veal jus. Adlai, also known as Job’s tears or Chinese Pearl Barley, is a protein-filled, high-fiber, and gluten-free alternative to rice that is also loaded with minerals. Another keto-friendly dish on Café Maxims’ menu is Eggs Benedict — slabs of thick-cut bacon, poached eggs, and hollandaise sauce, but with hot almond buns instead of wheat-based bread. The café also serves Lava Cake which is made with almond flour and dark chocolate. Then there is Café Maxims’ “Brain Boost Coffee” which is made of freshly roasted and brewed organic coffee beans and comes with an extra dose of energy from the organic grass-fed butter and a shot of medium-chain triglyceride (MCT) oil. Select RWM dining outlets also have their Keto Thrill Meals options to give keto dieters more choices. Café Maxims is located at the ground floor of Maxims Hotel, Resorts World Manila. For inquiries and reservations, call 908-8833.

Chinese New Year by the bay

PIG SHAPED tikoy at New World Manila Bay’s Li Li

CELEBRATE the start of the Year of the Earth Pig at the New World Manila Bay Hotel’s restaurants. The Market Café will be offering classic Chinese dishes along with a spread of international dishes on Feb. 4 and 5. These include Cantonese noodles, dim sum, sizzling Szechuan specialties, BBQ favorites, and traditional Chinese desserts. The buffet is priced at P2,800 including free flowing sodas, iced tea, chilled juices, local beer, coffee and tea. Over at Li Li, set menus will be offered for the occassion featuring Cantonese specialties such as braised pork knuckle, wok-fried tiger prawn, and bird’s nest soup with rates starting at P2,688 per person. Guests can also purchase a box of pig-shaped nian gao (tikoy) from Li Li for gifting. Currently available until Feb. 5. The gift box is priced at P1,088. Early Birds who place orders before Jan. 25 will get a discount of 15%.

Heritage cuisine in Iloilo

THE Richmonde Hotel Iloilo will have a special night “Tabu-an sa Dinagyang,” a heritage dinner buffet featuring the heirloom dishes of Iloilo’s premier chef, Rafael “Tibong” Jardeleza. An advocate of preserving and promoting Ilonggo cuisine, the chef has been featured in media in an effort to educate the public on the true identity of Iloilo food which goes beyond the usual batchoy, pancit molo, and KBL. The buffet will include roast lamb, lechon, lengua con setas oliva, and tenderloin steak, among other dishes. Also on the buffet will be kinilaw na isda, paella negra, paella valenciana, pancit guisado, almondigas and street food fare. “Tabu-an sa Dinagyang” will be held on Jan. 26, 6 to 10 p.m., at the hotel’s pool deck area at the 7th floor. The buffet costs P2,000 net per person, and include bottles of San Mig Light Beer and bottomless lemonade. Diners can catch the Festive Mall fireworks happening at 9 p.m. and enjoy the music spun by DJ Enzo of Fatboidjs. Seats are limited so reservations are encouraged. For inquiries and reservations, call Richmonde Hotel Iloilo at +63 333-287-888 or e-mail rhireservations@richmondehotel.com.ph.

New flavors of chocolate

VILLA DEL CONTE has new chocolate flavors.

VILLA DEL CONTE introduces a new set of dark chocolate flavors. Its best selling chocolate pralines are now available in White Cream Cheese Cake flavor with Amaretto Grains filling. There are also two new Dragees flavors: Extra Dark Chocolate-covered Pearls Bretzel, and Extra Dark Chocolate-covered roasted coffee bean. These new chocolates are available at all Villa Del Conte stores. For bulk orders more details, call 893-2575 or visit www.villadelcontecioccolato.com.

Century Park’s dining offers

THE Century Park Hotel’s Café in the Park offers Century Burger, a ½ pound burger grilled to the diner’s preference. For those with hearty appetites, the lunch and dinner buffet is available at P1,495 (adult) and P795 (children six to 10 years old) from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., and 6 to 10 p.m. Senior citizens get 50% off on buffets every Saturday and Sunday. For ramen enthusiasts, Century Tsukiji suggests its tonkotsu ramen garnished with pork belly, egg, and vegetables. Head over to the Atrium Lounge and avail of the featured drinks of the quarter: The Hi-Ho/High Hope! cocktail and Trapiche Cabernet Sauvignon at P350 per glass. Deli Snack’s cake of the month is Torta Nacciole de Chocolato, a mix of chocolate ganache, Tanduay rhum, coffee flavoring, and whipped cream. The dessert is available at P1,080 (round cake) and P2,570 (rectangular). Meanwhile, the Pata Hamon or pork knuckles with raisins, pistachio nuts and chestnuts is available at P1,280/kg. For details visit www.centurypark.com or call 528-8888.

ECCP wants early implementation of corporate income tax cut

THE European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (ECCP) urged government to implement the reduction of the corporate income tax (CIT) earlier than the proposed 10-year schedule.
“We are supporting this but our recommendation would be to accelerate the implementation of the corporate income tax (reduction) in order to boost the economy,” ECCP President Nabil Francis said during a briefing in Taguig City on Wednesday.
The House of Representatives last September approved on final reading House Bill 8083, or the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High-quality Opportunities (TRABAHO). The bill seeks to cut the corporate income tax rate gradually to 20% by 2029 via a two-percentage-point reduction every other year starting 2021. The current corporate income tax rate is 30%.
Meanwhile, deliberations on the Senate version, which cuts the CIT rate in the first year of implementation but only to 25%, stalled pending lawmakers’ request for an official government data on job losses resulting from the planned incentive changes.
Referring to the House version, Mr. Francis said the ten-year wait is “too long,” as the Philippines competes with neighboring countries who are also moving to make their business environment more attractive to foreign investors.
Although Mr. Francis declined to provide his preferred timetable, he said “the shorter [the wait] the better.”
Mr. Francis noted the Philippines and other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) should take advantage of the on-going trade dispute between China and the United States. Some China-based companies are looking to relocate in Southeast Asia to avoid the higher US tariffs on their products.
“We know from our colleagues that [EU businesses] are looking into Vietnam, into Cambodia. The question is how can we become more attractive and make them invest in the Philippines,” ECCP Executive Director Florian Gottein said during the press conference.
Asked if any EU-based business has scaled down its Philippine operations due to the TRABAHO Bill, Mr. Gottein said: “As of now, we are not aware of a company that closed operations but some of them are putting their investments on hold, while some are looking at relocating their investments.”
The ECCP noted 2019 presents “encouraging” prospects in the Philippines.
“In a nutshell, our vision is that in 2019, all the ingredients to get a successful year, cautious optimism should prevail. There are good reasons to continue to cultivate good relationship between the EU and the Philippines,” Mr. Francis added.
Inflow of FDIs from the EU plunged 82.32% to $286.50 million in the January to October period last year from the $1.62 billion registered in the comparable period in 2017.
Nevertheless, overall FDIs during the period totaled $8.53 billion, close to government’s target of $10.4 billion.
The Joint Foreign Chamber is optimistic that FDIs this year will continue to breach the $10 billion level as it has been doing since 2017. — Janina C. Lim

China approves third batch of video games; Tencent still absent

SHANGHAI/BEIJING — China’s publishing regulator on Tuesday approved the release of a third batch of video games after a freeze for most of last year, with industry-leader Tencent Holdings Ltd. still absent from the list of new titles.
The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television approved 93 games in its third list since December, with Tencent’s domestic rival NetEase Inc. also absent for the third time.
Neither company responded to Reuters’ requests for comment.
China is home to the world’s largest video game market, where 620 million players spent $37.9 billion last year mostly on mobile and PC games, showed data from gaming market researcher Newzoo.
But authorities stopped approving the release of new titles from March last year amid regulatory overhaul triggered by growing concern about violent content and game addiction, particularly among young players.
Tencent’s share price subsequently tumbled, wiping billions of dollars from the stock’s market value. The shares are still down as much as 20% compared with before the freeze, and were trading more than 1% lower on Tuesday. Tencent, the country’s market leader in terms of gaming revenue, both produces and distributes games. Its fantasy multi-player role-playing battle game, Honour of Kings, is the top-grossing mobile game in China.
In 2017, it announced it would bring South Korea’s “PlayerUnknown’s Battleground” to China, the world’s best-selling game at the time. However, it has yet to receive a license that would allow it to monetize the game though it has altered the content to meet China’s strict rules on violence and gore.
Though the approval process is thawing, analysts and industry insiders said new releases would still be gradual as the regulator had a backlog of thousands of games.
Including Tuesday’s batch, the regulator has approved 257 games since December when it resumed processing applications after an almost year-long hiatus. Before the freeze, in January alone last year, the regulator approved 716 titles.
With two weeks separating the latest batch from the previous batch on Jan. 9, “Tencent and NetEase will likely have to wait until after the Lunar New Year holiday” running Feb. 4-10, said a NetEase executive, who was not authorized to speak with media on the matter and so declined to be identified. — Reuters