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Siphoning of MT Terranova reaches over 402,000 liters

THE SUNKEN MT Terra Nova off Bataan. — PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD FACEBOOK PAGE

Oily waste collected from the sunken MT Terranova on August 19 to 25 summed up to 402,042 liters, according to the contracted salvor. 

A month after the motor tanker sank in Limay, Bataan, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) shared the breakdown report of Harbor Star on siphoned oil. Oily waste flow rate on Sunday was 13,614 liters per hour, it added. 

  • 19 Aug – 2,350 liters 
  • 20 Aug – 36,100 liters 
  • 21 Aug – 42,026 liters 
  • 22 Aug – 81,136 liters 
  • 23 Aug – 17,103 liters 
  • 24 Aug – 121,724 liters 
  • 25 Aug – 101,603 liters 

TOTAL: 402,042 liters 

Despite installing another booster pump to improve the siphoning efficiency on Terranova’s eight tankers last Thursday, the Harbor Star still failed to reach its target of 200,000 liters of siphoned oil daily. 

Further, the salvor aims to siphon the 1.4 million liters of industrial fuel oil cargo in 13 days.  

According to PCG, the siphoning operation of MT Terranova tanks to MTKR Helen Marie is currently on hold to change the receiving tank.Almira Louise S. Martinez

Australian employees now have the right to ignore work e-mails, calls after hours as law takes effect

PIXABAY

SYDNEY — Is your boss texting you on the weekend? Work e-mail pinging long after you’ve left for home?

Australian employees can now ignore those and other intrusions into home life thanks to a new “right to disconnect” law designed to curb the creep of work e-mails and calls into personal lives.

The new rule, which came into force on Monday, means employees, in most cases, cannot be punished for refusing to read or respond to contacts from their employers outside work hours.

Supporters say the law gives workers the confidence to stand up against the steady invasion of their personal lives by work e-mails, texts and calls, a trend that has accelerated since the COVID-19 pandemic scrambled the division between home and work.

“Before we had digital technology there was no encroachment, people would go home at the end of a shift and there would be no contact until they returned the following day,” said John Hopkins, an associate professor at Swinburne University of Technology.

“Now, globally it’s the norm to have e-mails, SMS, phone calls outside those hours, even when on holiday.”

Australians worked on average 281 hours of unpaid overtime in 2023, according to a survey last year by the Australia Institute, which estimated the monetary value of the labor at A$130 billion ($88 billion).

The changes add Australia to a group of roughly two dozen countries, mostly in Europe and Latin America, which have similar laws.

Pioneer France introduced the rules in 2017 and a year later fined pest control firm Rentokil Initial 60,000 euros ($66,700) for requiring an employee to always have his phone on.

Rachel Abdelnour, who works in advertising, said the changes would help her disconnect in an industry where clients often have different working hours.

“I think it’s actually really important that we have laws like this,” she told Reuters. “We spend so much of our time connected to our phones, connected to our e-mails all day, and I think that it’s really hard to switch off as it is.”

REFUSALS MUST BE REASONABLE
To cater for emergencies and jobs with irregular hours, the rule still allows employers to contact their workers, who can only refuse to respond where it is reasonable to do so.

Determining whether a refusal is reasonable will be up to Australia’s industrial umpire, the Fair Work Commission (FWC), which must take into account an employee’s role, personal circumstances and how and why the contact was made.

It has the power to issue a cease-and-desist order and, failing that, levy fines of up A$19,000 for an employee or up to A$94,000 for a company.

But the Australian Industry Group, an employer group, says ambiguity about how the rule applies will create confusion for bosses and workers. Jobs will become less flexible and in doing so slow the economy, it added.

“The laws came literally and figuratively out of left field, were introduced with minimal consultation about their practical effect and have left little time for employers to prepare,” the group said on Thursday.

The president of the Australian Council of Trade Unions Michele O’Neil said the caveat built into the law meant it won’t interfere with reasonable requests. Instead, it will stop workers paying the price for poor planning by management, she said.

She cited an unidentified worker who finished a shift at midnight, only to be texted four hours later and told to be back at work by 6 a.m.

“It’s so easy to make contact, common sense doesn’t get applied anymore,” she said.

“We think this will cause bosses to pause and think about whether they really need to send that text or that e-mail.” — Reuters

Harris has raised $540 million since launching her presidential campaign

UNITED STATES VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris speaks at her Presidential Campaign headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, US, July 22, 2024. — ERIN SCHAFF/POOL VIA REUTERS

WASHINGTON — Democrat Kamala Harris has raised $540 million in little more than a month since she began her race for US president, with a surge of donations flowing in during the Democratic National Convention last week, her campaign said on Sunday.

A memo released by Ms. Harris’ campaign manager, Jen O’Malley Dillon, said the $540 million raised included $82 million that came in during convention week and is a sign of Democratic enthusiasm for her candidacy.

“This is the most ever for any presidential campaign in this time span,” she said.

Vice President Harris became a candidate for president on July 21 when President Joseph R. Biden stepped aside under pressure from fellow Democrats concerned about his cognitive ability after he stumbled during a June 27 debate against Republican Donald Trump.

The Harris candidacy has generated momentum that has put Mr. Trump on the defensive and he has struggled to maintain the media spotlight on him.

Ms. Harris and her vice presidential running mate, Tim Walz, take their campaign for the White House on a bus tour through Georgia this week, looking to build support in a state looming large in the Nov. 5 election. — Reuters

Pavel Durov has nothing to hide, Telegram says of arrested founder

TELEGRAM founder Pavel Durov — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG/

PARIS/MOSCOW — Pavel Durov, the Russian-born founder of Telegram who was arrested in Paris, has nothing to hide and it is absurd to hold an owner responsible for abuse of the messaging and social media platform, Telegram said in a statement.

Mr. Durov, a 39-year-old billionaire, was arrested at Le Bourget airport outside Paris shortly after landing on a private jet late on Saturday from Azerbaijan.

The arrest of the Telegram Chief Executive Officer (CEO) prompted a warning from Moscow to Paris that he should be accorded his rights, and criticism from X owner Elon Musk who said that free speech in Europe was under attack.

Telegram, in a short statement released after midnight Paris time, gave no details of the arrest but said the Dubai-based company abided by European Union laws and its moderation was “within industry standards and constantly improving.”

“Telegram’s CEO Pavel Durov has nothing to hide and travels frequently in Europe,” Telegram said. “It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.”

“We’re awaiting a prompt resolution of this situation. Telegram is with you all.”

Mr. Durov, who has dual French and United Arab Emirates citizenship, was arrested as part of a preliminary police investigation into allegedly allowing a wide range of crimes due to a lack of moderators on Telegram and a lack of cooperation with police, a French police source said.

A cybersecurity gendarmerie unit and France’s national anti-fraud police unit are leading the investigation, the source said, adding that the investigative judge was specialized in organized crime.

Telegram was founded by Mr. Durov, who left Russia in 2014 after he refused to comply with demands to shut down opposition communities on his VK social media platform, which he has sold.

The encrypted application, with close to 1 billion users, is particularly influential in Russia, Ukraine and the republics of the former Soviet Union. It is ranked as one of the major social media platforms after Facebook, YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram, TikTok and WeChat.

Mr. Durov, who was born in Soviet Leningrad and graduated from St Petersburg State University, lists his political views as “libertarian” and says he was inspired by Apple Co-Founder Steve Jobs.

Estimated by Forbes to have a fortune of $15.5 billion, Mr. Durov said in April some governments had sought to pressure him, but the app should remain a neutral platform and not a “player in geopolitics.”

Mr. Durov, whose arrest led news bulletins in Russia, came up with the idea for an encrypted messaging app while facing pressure from Russian authorities. His younger brother, Nikolai, designed the encryption.

“I would rather be free than to take orders from anyone,” Mr. Durov said in April about his exit from Russia and search for a home for his company, which included stints in Berlin, London, Singapore and San Francisco.

Russian lawmaker Maria Butina, who spent 15 months in United States prison for acting as an unregistered Russian agent, said Mr. Durov “is a political prisoner — a victim of a witch-hunt by the West.” — Reuters

New Zealand to push through law to reverse ban on oil and gas exploration

MODELS of oil barrels and a pump jack are displayed in this illustration photo taken on Feb. 24, 2022. — REUTERS

NEW ZEALAND said on Monday it would pass laws by the end of this year to reverse a ban on offshore oil and gas exploration, and take urgent steps to remove regulatory hurdles to import liquefied natural gas (LNG) amid energy shortages.

The law would end the ban, in place since 2018, on exploration outside onshore Taranaki, an energy-rich region on the country’s North Island as the right-of-center government plans to lure investment to the country’s oil and gas sector.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said severe shortages over the last few weeks had led energy prices to spike to some of the highest levels among developed economies.

“We are responding to a situation as I said New Zealand should never have seen in the first place,” Mr. Luxon said during a media briefing, and urged opposition parties to support the bill.

“It would be the sensible, common sense thing to do if they genuinely cared about New Zealand’s energy security.”

The previous center-left Labor-led government banned offshore petroleum exploration.

Natural gas production fell by 12.5% in 2023 and a further 27.8% in the first three months of 2024, triggering a nationwide energy shortage as generators switched to more coal and diesel to power the grid, Energy Minister Simeon Brown said.

Renewables including hydro, solar and wind were not making up the shortfall, the government said.

“The lakes are low, the sun hasn’t been shining, the wind hasn’t been blowing, and we have an inadequate supply of natural gas to meet demand,” Mr. Brown said.

The government will also make it easier and cheaper to consent, build and maintain renewable power generation, and electricity distribution and transmission.

The consent and re-consenting processing period for most renewable energy projects will be done within one year, and the government will aim to open a first feasibility permit round for offshore renewable energy schemes in 2025, Mr. Brown said. — Reuters

Philippines says two new mpox cases are milder variant

AN ILLUSTRATION of mpox virus particles. — FRED HUTCH CANCER CENTER/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

MANILA – The Philippines has confirmed two more mpox virus infections of the milder clade 2 variety, its health ministry said Monday, bringing the number of active cases to three.

“We continue to see local transmission of mpox clade II here in the Philippines, in Metro Manila in particular,” Health Minister Teodoro Herbosa said in a statement.

The newly confirmed cases were a 37-year-old male in Metro Manila who had rash on his body last week and was brought to a government hospital, and a 32-year-old male from the capital who had skin lesions on his body.

The Philippines announced last week it had detected a case of the mpox virus’ milder variant in a 33-year-old male who had no travel history outside the Philippines.

The three cases this year means the Philippines has had 12 laboratory-confirmed case since July 2022.

The World Health Organization earlier this month declared mpox a global public health emergency, its highest form of alert, for the second time in two years, because of an outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that had spread to neighboring countries.

A new form of the virus has triggered global concern as it seems to spread easily though routine close contact.

The disease, caused by the monkeypox virus, leads to flu-like symptoms and pus-filled lesions. It is usually mild but can kill, with children, pregnant women and people with weakened immune systems, such as those with HIV, all at higher risk of complications. – Reuters

No agreement in Gaza ceasefire talks in Cairo; process to continue, sources say

A view shows houses and buildings destroyed by Israeli strikes in Gaza City, Oct. 10, 2023. — REUTERS

 – There was no agreement on Sunday in the Gaza ceasefire talks that took place in Cairo, with neither Hamas nor Israel agreeing to several compromises presented by mediators, two Egyptian security sources said, casting doubt on the chances of success in the latest US-backed effort to end the 10-month old war.

A senior US official, however, described the talks as “constructive”, saying they were conducted in a spirit on all sides to reach “a final and implementable agreement.”

“The process will continue over the coming days through working groups to further address remaining issues and details,” said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, adding that the teams would remain in Cairo.

Months of on-off talks have failed to produce an agreement to end Israel’s devastating military campaign in Gaza or free the remaining hostages seized by Hamas in the militant group’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel that triggered the war.

Speaking at a news conference in Halifax, Canada, US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Washington was still “feverishly” working in Cairo to get a ceasefire and a hostage deal.

Key sticking points in ongoing talks mediated by the United States, Egypt and Qatar include an Israeli presence in the so-called Philadelphi Corridor, a narrow 14.5-km-long (9-mile-long) stretch of land along Gaza’s southern border with Egypt.

Mediators put forward a number of alternatives to the presence of Israeli forces on the Philadelphi Corridor and the Netzarim Corridor which cuts across the middle of the Gaza Strip, but none were accepted by the parties, Egyptian sources said.

Israel also expressed reservations on several of the Palestinian detainees Hamas is demanding the release of, and Israel demanded their exit of Gaza if they are released, the sources added.

There has been much back and forth between the teams from Israel, the United States and Egypt since Thursday to narrow the remaining gaps, the senior U.S. official said, in preparation for Saturday, when Qatar and Egypt met with senior representatives of Hamas to walk through the proposal in detail.

On Sunday, senior officials from Israel joined the talks to address outstanding issues with the support of mediators, the senior US official said but did not provide a definitive assessment on whether there was a breakthrough or not.

Hamas said Israel has backtracked on a commitment to withdraw troops from the Corridor and put forward other new conditions, including the screening of displaced Palestinians as they return to the enclave’s more heavily populated north when the ceasefire begins.

“We will not accept discussions about retractions from what we agreed to on July 2 or new conditions,” Hamas official Osama Hamdan told the group’s Al-Aqsa TV on Sunday.

In July, Hamas accepted a US proposal to begin talks on releasing Israeli hostages, including soldiers and men, 16 days after the first phase of an agreement aimed at ending the Gaza war, a senior Hamas source has told Reuters.

A Hamas delegation left Cairo on Sunday after holding talks with mediators, senior official Izzat El-Reshiq said, adding that the group had reiterated its demand that any agreement must stipulate a permanent ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. – Reuters

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un oversees tests of ‘suicide drones’

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves as he boards his train at a railway station in the town of Artyom outside Vladivostok in the Primorsky region, Russia, Sept. 17, 2023. — GOVERNMENT OF RUSSIA’S PRIMORSKY KRAI/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

 – North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watched as new “suicide drones” took off and destroyed test targets including a mock tank, and urged researchers to develop artificial intelligence for the unmanned vehicles, state media reported on Monday.

Mr. Kim visited the Drone Institute of North Korea’s Academy of Defense Sciences on Saturday and viewed a successful test of drones correctly identifying and destroying designated targets after flying along different preset routes, state news agency KCNA said.

Mr. Kim called for the production of more suicide drones to be used in tactical infantry and special operation units, such as underwater suicide attack drones, as well as strategic reconnaissance and multi-purpose attack drones, KCNA said.

Also known as loitering munitions, such weapons been widely used in the war in Ukraine as well as in the Middle East.

Loitering munitions can typically be aloft and ready to strike before a specific target is located, then attack by crashing into the target with a built-in warhead.

Photos released by state media showed at least four different types of drones, some of which were launched with the aid of small rocket engines before their propellers took over.

When asked about visual similarities between some of the North Korean drones and Russia’s ZALA Lancet and the Iranian-designed Shahed, which is also used by Russia, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said more analysis is necessary.

“We understand that some gifts (drones) were given in an exchange between North Korea and Russia in the past… We need to analyse various measures to see if those have improved performance,” a spokesperson for the JCS said in a briefing.

Nuclear-armed North Korea has close ties to Russia and Iran and a history of military cooperation with both.

Seoul’s Unification Ministry said it was the first time Pyongyang had unveiled suicide drones.

Several North Korean drones crossed the border into the South in 2022 and even briefly entered a no-fly zone surrounding Seoul’s presidential office, before turning back.

South Korea has said it will deploy laser weapons to shoot down North Korean drones this year, becoming the world’s first country to deploy and operate such weapons in the military, and some skyscrapers in Seoul host anti-aircraft guns on their roofs.

South Korea and the US kicked off annual summertime military exercises last week, including practicing responses to North Korean drones. – Reuters

China central bank rolls over maturing loans, injects cash

REUTERS

 – China’s central bank rolled over maturing medium-term loans and injected cash through its liquidity instruments on Monday, underlining market expectations for further easing as the economy struggles to gain traction.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said it was keeping the rate on 300 billion yuan ($42.11 billion) worth of one-year medium-term lending facility (MLF) loans to some financial institutions at 2.30%, unchanged from the previous operation.

And it injected another 471 billion yuan through seven-day reverse repos while keeping borrowing costs unchanged at 1.70%.

“Today’s outcome adds to expectation for a near-term reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut,” said Frances Cheung, head of FX and rates strategy at OCBC Bank.

“Meanwhile, as US rates fell further, there may also be renewed expectations for an interest rate cut (in China).”

China is struggling with a prolonged property crisis that has curbed investment and dented consumer demand.

Monday’s reverse repo operation was meant to “keep month-end banking system liquidity conditions reasonably ample,” the central bank said in an online statement.

A batch of 401 billion yuan worth of MLF loans was due earlier this month, when the PBOC said it would postpone the loan rollover.

The postponement and the sequence of a string of key interest rate cuts last month suggested that the central bank has changed its monetary policy framework, market watchers said, shifting the short-term rate to being the main signal guiding markets.

OCBC’s Cheung expected the difference in yields between 5-year and 30-year, and 2-year and 30-year China government bond yields, to steepen.

PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng, in remarks published in state media on Saturday, said the central bank would adhere to supportive monetary policy to guide reasonable growth in credit lending and help the world’s second-largest economy.

On Friday, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell made it clear the US central bank would not shy away from pivoting to interest rate cuts in the final weeks of a presidential election campaign and that protecting the job market was now its top priority. – Reuters

China’s military says it conducted armed patrols, joint police patrols near China-Myanmar border

REUTERS

 – China’s military said on Monday it had organized army units and joint air-ground police patrols near the Myanmar border to maintain security and stability as fighting between Myanmar’s ruling junta and rebel forces escalates.

The patrols will focus on Ruili, Zhenkang and other frontline areas, the military said in a statement.

The Southern Theater of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army organized army units to test troops’ ability to “quickly move, block and control, and strike together, and maintain security and stability in the border areas,” the military said.

China had said it planned more drills near the Myanmar border as fighting between Myanmar’s junta and rebels resulted in artillery shells injuring people and damaging structures in Chinese territory.

China has said the conflict was having a negative effect on stability and social order on the China-Myanmar border.

Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi also said recently that China would continue “its commitment to restore peace and stability in Myanmar.” – Reuters

China’s actions in South China Sea patently illegal, Philippine Defence Min says

DEFENSE SECRETARY GILBERTO ‘GIBO’ C. TEODORO, JR. — SENATE PRIB

 – China’s actions in the South China Sea are “patently illegal”, the Philippines’ defense secretary said Monday following a clash in disputed waters on Sunday over what Manila said was a resupply mission for fishermen.

“We have to expect these kinds of behavior from China because this is a struggle. We have to be ready to anticipate and to get used to these kinds of acts of China which are patently illegal as we have repeatedly said,” Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro told reporters.

Manila’s South China Sea task force accused Chinese vessels of ramming and using water canons near Sabina shoal against a Philippine fisheries vessel transporting food, fuel and medicine for Filipino fishermen.

The Chinese coast guard said the Philippine vessel “ignored repeated serious warnings and deliberately approached and rammed” China’s law enforcement boat, resulting in a collision.

Asked if the latest incident would trigger treaty obligations between the United States and the Philippines, Mr. Teodoro said: “That is putting the cart before the horse. Let us deter an armed attack, that is the more important thing.”

US officials including President Joe Biden have reaffirmed Washington’s “ironclad commitment” to aid the Philippines against armed attacks on its vessels and soldiers in the South China Sea.

“Everybody is too focused on armed attack, let’s make ourselves strong enough so that does not happen,” Mr. Teodoro said.

The Chinese embassy in Manila did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Monday is a public holiday in the Philippines.

The clash on Sunday had overshadowed efforts to rebuild trust and better manage disputes in the South China Sea after months of confrontations.

China claims sovereignty over nearly all of the South China Sea, including areas claimed by the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and Brunei.

An international arbitral tribunal in 2016 ruled that China’s claim had no basis under international law, a decision Beijing has rejected. – Reuters

Fed cuts to bolster BSP easing cycle

People are seen in Divisoria in this file photo. — PHILIPPINE STAR/WALTER BOLLOZOS

By Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson, Reporter

THE US Federal Reserve’s latest signals of policy easing may give the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) more confidence to continue its own rate cut cycle, analysts said.

Jonathan L. Ravelas, senior adviser at professional service firm Reyes Tacandong & Co. said that the start of the Fed’s easing cycle would “open doors” for the BSP to continue cutting rates.

“If Philippine inflation continues to trend lower, a cut in December is likely,” Mr. Ravelas said in a Viber message.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell on Friday endorsed an imminent start to interest rate cuts, saying further cooling in the job market would be unwelcome and expressing confidence that inflation is within reach of the US central bank’s 2% target, Reuters reported.

“The time has come for policy to adjust,” Mr. Powell said in a highly anticipated speech to the Kansas City Fed’s annual economic conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. “The direction of travel is clear, and the timing and pace of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”

Analysts and financial markets anticipate the Fed to deliver its first rate cut at its Sept. 17-18 policy meeting, a view that was cemented after a readout of the central bank’s July meeting said a “vast majority” of policy makers agreed the policy easing likely would begin next month.

Leonardo A. Lanzona, an economics professor at the Ateneo de Manila University, said that Fed rate cuts have already been widely expected as US inflation has stabilized.

“The delay has resulted in a slowdown in the US economy. Thus, the BSP anticipated this eventual decline in rates and proceeded to reduce its policy rates before the Fed in order to avoid any negative effects on the Philippines,” he said in an e-mail.

“Considering these factors, the eventual decrease in Fed rates will no longer have any impact on the Philippine economy.”

The Monetary Board this month reduced the target reverse repurchase rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 6.25% from the over 17-year high of 6.5%.

Mr. Lanzona said that markets likely already took into account the Fed’s projected moves as the BSP had already cut ahead of the US central bank.

“Whatever its consequences it could have made were already incorporated into business decisions, and thus whatever we are experiencing now is going to continue since the lower rates have already been enforced by the BSP,” he said.

“While short-term investments might slightly be affected, the long-term investments are not going to change since the lower rates in both countries have already been rationally incorporated in their forecasts.”

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said that local policy rates could fall to as low as 4-5% levels from next year through 2026 as the Fed begins cutting rates.

“Local interest rate benchmarks would go down further by another 50 or 100 basis points or even more from current levels from 2025 to 2026, as the Fed would cut rates by a total of about 225 bps from 2024 to 2026 (that could be matched locally by the BSP) based on the latest Fed dot plot,” he said.

BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. has signaled the possibility of another 25-bp cut in the fourth quarter. The Monetary Board has two remaining rate-setting meetings this year, on Oct. 17 and Dec. 19.

Meanwhile, Mr. Lanzona noted that risks to the inflation outlook in the Philippines could pose a risk to the BSP’s policy reductions.

“The inflation here is fundamentally a supply-side phenomenon, and the policy rates are really not supposed to stop inflation but merely to eliminate inflationary expectations,” he said.

“Hence, because the government has not been able to effectively implement a strong productivity plan, especially in agriculture, inflation will remain a threat that can weaken the currency.”

The BSP sees headline inflation averaging 3.4% this year and 3.1% in 2025. Inflation accelerated to a nine-month high of 4.4% in July.

“Furthermore, the continued pump-priming of the government further adds on to the risks of inflation. This means that BSP’s reduction of interest rates is ill-advised,” Mr. Lanzona said.

He added that the BSP must continue monitoring the Fed rate to support the peso. “It should keep its rate very close, if not higher, than the Fed rates.”

Mr. Ricafort likewise said there must be a “healthy” interest rate differential to stabilize the exchange rate. 

The Fed funds rate is currently at the 5.25-5.5% range.

“Further cut in local policy rates are possible if the peso exchange rate is relatively stable or stronger, global crude oil prices still among 2.5-year lows, and if headline inflation remains within the BSP’s inflation target of 2-4% for the coming months,” Mr. Ricafort added.

The peso closed at P56.333 per dollar on Thursday, strengthening by 16.7 centavos from its P56.5 finish on Wednesday. The local currency was previously trading at the P57-58 level in the past few months. — with inputs from Reuters