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Senate approves extension of legislative franchise of two broadcast companies

THE Senate passed on third and final reading the bills extending the franchise granted to two radio station operators by another 25 years.
The franchises of Raven Media Broadcasting Corporation under House Bill No. 6707 and Advanced Media Broadcasting System, Inc. under House Bill No. 6708 were approved with 17 affirmative votes, zero negative votes, and no abstention.
Raven Media operates the FM radio station Jam 88.3, which airs alternative and independent music. Meanwhile, Advanced Media operates the FM radio station 103.5 K-Lite, which airs popular songs from the 1990s and 2000s.
Both firms form part of the media management company Tiger 22 Media Corporation, which was founded by Rufia Dorothy Vera. It also handles FM radio stations Magic 89.9, Wave 89.1 and Play 99.5.
The franchises allowed Raven Media and Advanced Media, to operate “radio and/or television broadcasting stations, including digital television system, through microwave, satellite or whatever means, as well as the use of any new technology in television and radio systems.”
Their franchises may also be revoked upon failure to operate continuously for two years, under the proposed measures.
The broadcast firms are also required to provide “public service time” for Filipinos to be informed of important public issues. The bills also allow for the companies’ self regulation of its broadcast content.
They are also required to inform Congress of any sale, lease, transfer, grant of usufruct or transfer of controlling interests within 60 days of the completion of the transaction. Failure to report to Congress will result to a franchise revocation.
An annual report of their compliance to the terms and conditions of the franchise must also be submitted to Congress. Failure to do so will subject the company to a fine of P500 per working day of noncompliance.
The Senate provided amendments in the House Bills which directs the broadcast firms to create employment opportunities and to hold on-the-job trainings in their franchise operations. — Camille A. Aguinaldo

Runway show celebrates Ortiz’ 30 years


WELL-DRESSED guests got up to give couturier Randy Ortiz a standing ovation at his 30th anniversary show at The Peninsula Manila last week.
The entire spectacle took up the whole of The Pen’s conservatory and mezzanine, with an enviable guest list of mostly showbiz figures, with a political figure or two, and a handful of socialites thrown in for good measure. Mr. Ortiz is sometimes called a “designer to the stars” — one of his big breaks was meeting talent manager Douglas Quijano, who tasked Mr. Ortiz with dressing his stars.
Mr. Ortiz was no stranger to high-society circles, however: born the son of a local politico from Mindanao, the De La Salle-educated Randy got his start in fashion by partnering with rich girl Katrina Ponce Enrile in the late 1980s. His career took a turn on in the ’90s with a retail deal with the then popular brand Sari Sari, and then he went on to become the creative director of Myth.
For this show that summarized a career of 30 years, Mr. Ortiz showed collections that played off on his strengths: very fine embroidery, hyperfeminine silhouettes, and an adventurous take on men’s tailoring (for while Mr. Ortiz is known for his gowns, he began his career in design through menswear).
On the runway were the children of his former muses: the children of models Tweetie de Leon-Gonzales and Marina Benipayo, and Juliana Gomez, the daughter of his celebrity clients Lucy Torres-Gomez and Richard Gomez. Singer Ogie Alcasid and actor John Estrada also danced a little jig on the runway — Senator Nancy Binay, however, wasn’t on the runway (Mr. Ortiz once designed a particularly maligned dress for the senator).
Some of the favorites were velvet dinner jackets on the men and one embroidered with silver palm fronds. On the women, favorites were ballgowns with a dreamy floral pattern, almost like watercolors, a dress with an asymmetrical bodice that made the woman appear as if in one of the stages of undress, an immaculate white ballgown with a dimple near the navel, and a waistcoat placed over a jumpsuit with a ruffled lace bodice. The results of Mr. Ortiz’s work for this collection reflected his unapologetic vision and a mastery of draping and texture that showed dimension and substance. All of this appeared on the runway — a long one mind you — with orchestral renditions of Filipina diva hits and then romping 1970s disco bops.
Surrounded by a mob of well-wishers by the steps leading to the lobby, BusinessWorld asked Mr. Ortiz how he has stayed in fashion (in every sense of the phrase) for 30 years. “For me, it’s all about my love for it,” he said. “At the end of the day, I have so much discipline. I do my homework; I do my job. That is the essence of it all.”
As for what he has learned doing this job for 30 years, he said, “I just learned to say thank you… and by thanking everybody to this day makes a lot of difference.”
“Just go back to my clients. I don’t know about shows. I just want to celebrate. Maybe in five years, 10 years again — I don’t know yet. I just have to embrace everything that is happening now in my life,” he said, talking about what else he has to look forward to.
In this fickle world, both triumphs and troubles fade away like the foam on the surface of the sea. In the end, he says, “I just want to be remembered that I’ve done really nice dresses: beautiful dresses that made women feel good about themselves… I guess it’s all about that.” — Joseph L. Garcia

US agency lifts 2019 biofuels mandate, drawing mixed reaction

WASHINGTON — The US Environmental Protection agency on Friday lifted its annual blending mandate for advanced biofuels, drawing praise from the US biofuels industry, but disappointment that the government had not done more to protect the agricultural market.
Under the US Renewable Fuel Standard, oil refiners must blend increasing amounts of biofuels into their fuel each year or purchase blending credits from those that do.
The EPA on Friday lifted its requirement for advanced biofuels by 15 percent for 2019, while keeping the volume for conventional biofuels like corn-based ethanol steady. The figures were the same as reported by Reuters on Thursday ahead of the official release, in an article citing an internal agency document.
Republican Senator Chuck Grassley from farm state Iowa welcomed the increase in the advanced biofuels requirement, but slammed the EPA for its refusal to reallocate biofuel volumes that had been previously waived under the small refinery exemptions program, one of the most controversial issues dividing the US corn lobby and the oil industry.
“I’m disappointed the rule didn’t reallocate waived volumes to make up for the damage done by former Administrator Pruitt,” Grassley said in a statement.
Small refineries can be exempted from the RFS if they prove that complying would cause them financial strain.
Since President Donald Trump’s election and under the former EPA administrator Scott Pruitt, who stepped down in July, the EPA has vastly expanded the number of waivers it has handed out to small refineries, in a bid to reduce the refining industry’s regulatory compliance costs.
The move has infuriated the US farmbelt, which argues the program erodes demand for biofuels.
“The latest EPA rule is … a missed opportunity to correctly account for billions of gallons of ethanol lost to refinery exemptions,” Growth Energy CEO Emily Skor said in a statement. “Until these are addressed properly, we’re still taking two steps back for every step forward.”
But recently, signs have emerged of a potential shift.
The Trump administration has temporarily put on hold the processing of current waiver applications as the EPA and the Department of Energy review the scoring system used to evaluate them, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters this week.
Senator Grassley said he was glad the EPA could revisit the practice, citing a meeting with Acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler on Thursday over the issue.
“The handling of these applications is ripe for review. There’s no good reason oil companies making billions of dollars in profits should be exempted from following the law as passed and intended by Congress,” he said.
The 2019 mandate includes 4.92 billion gallons for advanced biofuels, up from the EPA’s initial proposal in June of 4.88 billion and above the 4.29 billion that had been set for 2018, the EPA said. The requirement for conventional biofuels remains at 15 billion gallons for 2019, on par with 2018, and the same as proposed by the agency in June, it said. — Reuters

Peso seen to strengthenPeso seen to strengthen

THE PESO is expected to strengthen against the dollar this week on the back of potentially softer inflation for November, coupled with mixed developments in the United States as well as a seasonal surge in remittances for the holiday season.
The local currency strengthened on Thursday to P52.45 versus the greenback from the previous close of P52.585 following the dovish speech of US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Week on week, the peso was steady from the P52.45 finish on Nov. 23.
Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at Land Bank of the Philippines, said the dollar is seen to move sideways with a downward bias, boosting the peso.
“In the first three days of the week, the greenback may depreciate, despite some hawkish hints from US policy makers, amid expectations of softer domestic inflation data for November 2018.”
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. economist Michael L. Ricafort, on the other hand, said slower inflation as well as the “expected seasonal surge in the conversion of OFW (overseas Filipino workers) remittances for Christmas-related spending” as well as lower oil prices lingering at the one-year lows will lead to a stronger peso for this week.
Towards the end of the week, Mr. Dumalagan said the dollar might recover some of its losses brought by likely hawkish statements from Federal Reserve officials as well as bets of firm labor reports.
For this week, he expects the peso to move between P52.10 and P52.70, while Mr. Ricafort gave a P52-P52.30 forecast. — KANV

SunAsia estimates up to $1M per MW for floating solar energy system

SUNASIA Energy, Inc. expects an investment of around $850,000 to $1 million per megawatt (MW) for the floating solar energy system it plans to install on Laguna Lake with a French partner, its top official said.
Mas mataas ang installation cost ng floating solar (The installation cost of floating solar is higher),” said Tetchi C. Capellan, president and chief executive officer of SunAsia Energy, Inc. in a chance interview.
“It can ranged from $850,000 to $1 million depending on the waves,” she said, adding that if the lake surface is not as calm as expected, more anchors might be required to keep the solar panels steady.
Ms. Capellan declined to disclose the capacity of the power system that SunAsia plans to install on the lake, saying it might alarm the Laguna Lake Development Authority (LLDA). She placed the installation cost for a ground-mounted solar energy system at around $600,000 per MW.
Lahat kami 10 kilowatt ang pilot (All of us have 10 kilowatts for our pilot),” she said, referring to another company that is doing a pilot study of a floating solar in the same lake.
Ahead of disclosing the capacity of the project, SunAsia and French company Ciel & Terre (C&T) announced its collaboration to introduce the patented Hydrelio technology in the Laguna Lake project. The project is led by SunAsia subsidiary NorteSol.
Ms. Capellan described C&T as being behind 500 MW of floating solar installation outside the Philippines. She said the technology provider’s first project in the country is its collaboration with SunAsia.
“LLDA the regulator. They have to be convinced that there is no impact on the lake,” she said.
Ms. Capellan said a previous study by the Asian Development Bank for Vietnam found no harm brought by a floating solar installation on the fish habitat, water quality, and the area’s biodiversity.
She said the same study cleared a maximum penetration rate of 10% a lake’s total area, leaving enough room for floating solar projects on Laguna Lake’s 93,000-hectare total coverage area.
She said SunAsia’s NorteSol unit and LLDA had signed a memorandum of agreement for the floating solar project within the municipal waters of Bay in Laguna.
If LLDA approves the project, the installation could take around six to eight months to be completed, she said.
“Based doon sa pinirmahan namin sa LLDA, magko-conduct na kami ng environmental study (Based on what we have signed with LLDA, we will now conduct an environmental study),” she said.
SunAsia previously quoted LLDA as saying that the partnership between the private sector and government is a major step in harnessing not only Laguna Lake but also the hundreds of water surfaces, such as ponds, irrigation dams, and water quarries for solar energy production.
In October, Winnergy Holdings Corp. announced that it had commissioned a 10-kilowatt-peak (kWp) floating solar farm on Laguna Lake within Baras town of Rizal province. It claims the project is the first floating solar farm in the Philippines, thus opening the possibility of using energy from the sun beyond the traditional ground-based and rooftop-mounted systems. — Victor V. Saulon

Tommy Hilfiger gets sporty and retro for fall 2018

TRACK SUITS, oversized jackets, and color blocked dresses are among the pieces in Tommy Hilfiger’s 2018 fall collection.
This year, the brand collaborated with Formula One® champion Lewis Hamilton. The TommyxLewis collaboration revisits sportswear incorporated with the athlete’s luxury street style and lucky number 44.
“The unisex styling is really powerful and makes the whole collection work for everyone. This is something totally fresh for us, which can only come from collaborating with partners who share our values and drive. I’m excited to see how our global fans will add their own twist to the different styles this fall,” fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger said of the collection, as quoted in a press release.
Among the pieces are a red intarsia hockey sweater, a long military-green parka with detachable reversible liner, and a white tracksuit with velvet stripes on the arm and leg seams. The brand’s signature flag is positioned between Lewis Hamilton’s sky captain-colored initials in old English gothic typeset.
Tommy Hilfiger 2
Alongside the latest collaboration, the brand also released the TOMMY ICONS capsule collection with model Hailey Baldwin and model and activist Winnie Harlow as ambassadors.
“We embrace them, we put them in great ad campaigns, we collab[orate] and work with them. But at the same time, their social media following and their fan following helps us, so it’s a win-win on both,” Mr. Hilfiger told Vogue in September. “We’ve been fortunate in choosing people that are close to the DNA of our brand, and meaningful in our culture.”
Tommy Hilfiger has previously collaborated with celebrities in prime such as Britney Spears, Beyonce, and Aaliyah to represent the voice of the youth.
The collection includes a metallic gold puffer jacket, a black and red Arctic-inspired parka jacket, and a velvet and chenille yarn sweater with a “TOMMY” graphic. The signature appears in a “stretch” flag logo with hints of gold.
Tommy Hilfiger is exclusively distributed by Stores Specialists, Inc., with stores located at Central Square in Bonifacio High Street Central, Greenbelt 5, Kiss & Fly – NAIA Terminal 3, Newport Mall, Rustan’s Makati, and Rustan’s Shangri-La Plaza. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

China buys US pork despite trade tariffs as hog disease spreads

CHICAGO — China is loading up on US pork, despite import tariffs imposed due to the trade war, as a highly contagious swine disease ravages the Chinese hog herd.
The world’s top hog producer and pork consumer last week placed its largest order for American pork since the trade war began, US Department of Agriculture data showed on Thursday.
The purchases are a signal that an outbreak of African swine fever is raising concerns of an eventual supply shortfall, potentially superseding trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies, brokers and traders said.
“It’s kind of like, why do you buy from your enemy? Because you have to,” said Don Roose, president of Iowa-based broker US Commodities.
China has imposed retaliatory tariffs on imports of US farm products in the tit-for-tat trade row, including duties of 62 percent on American pork.
US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are scheduled to meet on Saturday at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires to discuss trade amid increasing tensions.
China in the week ended Nov. 22 bought 3,348 tonnes of pork to be shipped this year, USDA said, its largest purchase for the current season since February.
China also bought 9,384 tonnes of pork for shipment next year, accounting for 72 percent of the total weekly sales to all countries.
Combined, they were the biggest weekly sales to China since April 2017, sending US hog futures LHG9 up more than 4 percent.
The deals come as China may buy pork for its state reserves to support farmers struggling to sell pigs during the African swine fever epidemic.
“Pork is abundantly supplied right now in China; prices are low. That doesn’t mean there will be plenty of pork in China next year,” said Brett Stuart, president of US advisory Global AgriTrends.
The sales could benefit pork exporters such as WH Group Ltd’s Smithfield Foods and Seaboard Corp).
Smithfield Chief Executive Ken Sullivan said in October that African swine fever could roil global pork markets.
China has suffered more than 70 outbreaks of the disease, which kills pigs and has no cure or vaccine.
Chinese pig farmers have started to get rid of animals to cut their losses after prices dropped when Beijing banned the transport of live pigs from infected regions.
“Basically every hog that’s culled or killed to try to control this disease is a hog that has to be imported,” said Dennis Smith, a broker for Archer Financial Services in Chicago. — Reuters

EasyCall Communications Philippines, Inc.

By Jochebed B. Gonzales
Senior Researcher
EASYCALL Communications Philippines, Inc. saw its stock price more than double last week amid speculation of a brewing partnership with the incoming major telecommunications provider.
Price of EasyCall shares closed at P18.20 apiece on Thursday, up by 131.3% week on week, data from the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) showed. Year to date, it was higher by 7.7%.
“It hit the ceiling price [last Tuesday and Wednesday],” said Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco, research associate at Philstocks Financial, Inc., pertaining to EasyCall’s share price rising 50% for two days straight.
He cited EasyCall’s acquisition of a stake in parent company TDG Ventures, Inc. (TVI) which sparked interest from some investors.
“…EasyCall specializes in providing internet services, something that would come in very handy for Mislatel. However, their possible commercial partnership remains a speculation for the time being since there are no disclosures yet… On the part of EasyCall, however, we’ve not yet seen any expression of interest,” Mr. Tantiangco added.
The Mislatel Consortium — composed of China Telecommunications Corp., Dennis A. Uy’s Udenna Corp. and Chelsea Logistics Holdings Corp., as well as franchise holder Mindanao Islamic Telephone Company, Inc. — was formally announced as the country’s third major telecommunications company on Nov. 19.
“EasyCall was a ‘speculative buy’ among traders [last] week. It saw an accumulation in volume after it bought a stake in TVI, whose reported earnings were seen as positive for [EasyCall]… Those trading this stock are ‘day traders,’ meaning it’s not recommended for conservative players,” Jeng T. Calma, trader at A&A Securities, Inc., said.
Based on PSE data, some 13.6 million EasyCall shares were traded at the exchange from Nov. 26 to 29. Value turnover reached P269.34 million last week.
In an amended disclosure to the bourse on Nov. 26, EasyCall said that its board of directors had approved the P45.09 million investment in TVI consisting of 200,000 shares priced at P225.47 each. This is equivalent to 11.76% stake in TVI.
TVI has 82.68% interest in EasyCall and is the holding arm for the Transnational Diversified Group’s ventures in information and communications technology, lifestyle and travel and tourism.
“Maybe it’s the speculation of a possible joint venture with the third telco,” said Aniceto K. Pangan, trader at Diversified Securities, Inc. “[Mislatel] is not closing off the possibility of getting into partnership with other telcos especially if they have a nationwide coverage of their own system.”
EasyCall was once a major player in telecommunications, particularly in the paging industry, until the onset of short messaging service by mobile phone firms. Presently, the company is engaged in contact center operations and internet services as well as IP broadband solutions through very small aperture terminal (VSAT).
As of end-2017, EasyCall has 11 VSAT installations in the country which service remote communities in Samar, Quezon, Iloilo, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Isabela, Leyte and Antique.
It also said last January it had been setting up VSAT installations in Zambales, Negros Occidental, Cavite, Bicol, Isabela, Iloilo and Cebu.
In the first nine months of 2018, EasyCall recorded P47.84 million in consolidated service revenues, up 29% from last year’s comparable period. It netted P4.62 million, down 14% year on year.

GOW Exchange looks to serve big PHL companies

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter
NEW digital currency player GOW Exchange is setting its sights on serving big corporates as it enters the Philippine market, as it looks to disrupt traditional finance.
William Sung, GOW co-founder and chief technology officer, said the company sees a huge untapped market to offer virtual currency (VC) for institutional players in the country, as most virtual exchanges currently serve retail transactions.
“If I look at my competitors, they are all looking at trading crypto, the transaction fees on that. I’m looking at institutional players,” Mr. Sung said in an interview with BusinessWorld. “We anticipate strong partnerships…in terms of what services they want from us, and I think that will drive volume liquidity inside the exchange.”
Mr. Sung is a former investment banker in London. Meanwhile, GOW is among the seven virtual currency issuers accredited by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) through ETranss Remittance International Corp.
The VC exchange is looking to allow big investors to securitize their assets in the digital space via the GOW platform.
The BSP has stepped up to regulate virtual currency exchanges or firms which convert peso values into e-currency which are then traded online. Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission has released draft guidelines for initial coin offerings, which will cover firms who issue tokens or digital currencies to raise capital.
Since securing a license in July, Mr. Sung said the firm is now preparing to go live by yearend and open a flagship branch in Manila within the first quarter of 2019. Currently, it has nailed down deals with around five direct partners looking to foray into digital currencies.
He added that big firms can also look at VCs as digital assets to diversify their pool, which he described as a “liquidity bridge.” GOW also has four existing partner-banks to allow corporates to settle and cash in on their VC trades, Mr. Sung added.
“They can see us as a new business for them, and they have clients that we can serve as well. Once banks start to understand our business model – which is not crypto trading – we’re just allowing securitized asset classes in the digital age,” he said.
He said the Philippines has a huge untapped market for VCs, given a young population armed with smartphones while the economy is starting to be a “major player” in the region.
Still, GOW — which stands for Global Overseas Workers — expects strong flows from its remittance business as the use of blockchain has allowed them to reduce transaction costs to just 3-7%, while assuring faster speeds.

Spoils of trade war: Argentina loads up on cheap US soybeans

BUENOS AIRES/CHICAGO — A ship named the Torrent is nearing the end of a 5,000-mile trip carrying soybeans from the US Great Lakes to Argentina — a journey that only makes economic sense because of the US-China trade war.
The ship is scheduled to dock in the Rosario grains hub on Dec. 4, days after the leaders of the world’s two largest economies, US President Donald Trump and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, hold high-stakes trade talks in Buenos Aires.
They will meet on the sidelines of a Group of 20 nations summit and are expected to discuss how to roll back tit-for-tat tariffs — covering goods worth hundreds of billions of dollars — that have skewed global trade flows.
The Torrent’s 20,000-tonne soybean cargo is one such distortion, and just one of 14 ships the Argentine soy crusher Vicentin has lined up to import US soybeans, according to port data reviewed by Reuters. The previously unreported shipments are among the first significant Argentine purchases from the United States in two decades, according to Vicentin’s broker and port data, as the nation’s government and industry moves to capitalize on the tumult of the US-China conflict.
Argentina — one of the world’s top soybean exporters, and the top exporter of processed meal and oil — usually has no reason to import beans. But this year, the South American nation has raced to the top of the list of US soybean importers because the prices of US beans have fallen by 15 percent since late May, when China first threatened tariffs on them.
“One of the consequences of the trade war is that US beans have to find a new home,” said Thomas Hinrichsen, president of Buenos Aires-based brokerage J.J. Hinrichsen SA, which cut the deals for Vicentin. “You are in the money to ship cheaper US beans into efficient crushing plants in Argentina.”
Beyond price, Argentina needs US beans to feed its massive soy-crushing industry after a punishing drought. What is left of the nation’s own crops are going to feed pigs in China — where buyers are paying a premium for South American soybeans to fill the gap left by virtually halted imports from the United States.
“The combination of the drought in Argentina and the soy glut in the United States caused by the trade conflict has directed US soybeans toward Argentina,” said Guillermo Wade, manager of Argentina’s Port and Maritime Activities Chamber. “They are being used to keep our crushers working while freeing Argentine soybeans to go to China.”
Argentina’s International Trade Secretary, Marisa Bircher, told Reuters Argentina was also seeking to export more soy and byproducts to India and Southeast Asia. Argentina’s current top soymeal buyers include the European Union, Vietnam and Indonesia.
“Clearly, this US-China conflict is generating a change in the grain trade,” Bircher said.
The grains powerhouse is even negotiating a license to export soymeal directly to China — which has until now only imported Argentine beans for crushing in China.
“We have a very good relationship with China… we are negotiating to open the market to soybean meal before the end of the year,” said Bircher.
Argentina collects export taxes from companies on agricultural goods like soy, corn and wheat shipments, providing it with much needed revenue in the midst of an economic crisis.
The country, which is in the global spotlight as G20 host, has good relations with both the United States and China and has sought deals with both in recent weeks as it seeks to cash in on opportunities that have arisen due to the trade war.
Besides seeking the soymeal deal with China, it has negotiated a deal to export beef to the United States for the first time in 17 years.
The Torrent, which loaded a month ago at a Toledo, Ohio facility operated by Ohio-based The Andersons, is one of 43 US soybean ships that have sailed for Argentina since July and the second to sail from the Great Lakes region, on the other side of the world from the South American country. Just nine have sailed for China.
A year ago, 282 soybean cargo vessels were loaded in the United States bound for China in that time and none to Argentina, according to US Department of Agriculture data.
China’s soybean tariffs, which have virtually halted purchases of US soybeans that last year totaled $12 billion, came in retaliation for Trump’s duties on Chinese steel and aluminum. That has left US farmers and grains merchants with huge inventories of soybeans because China typically buys 60 percent of US soy exports.
Grains companies have had to adapt quickly to keep massive volumes of perishable goods moving at the lowest possible cost.
Bulk grain terminals in the US Pacific Northwest, the most direct outlet for Asia-bound shipments, are handling a quarter of their normal autumn soybean volume. The beans that are hauled there by rail are instead heading east to Great Lakes terminals or south to Mexico or Gulf Coast ports bound for countries other than China.
“By shipping soybeans out of the US to unnatural destinations — and moving Brazilian and Argentine soybeans in place of that into China when they should have come out of the US West Coast — there’s an inherent logistics cost in this,” Soren Schroder, Chief Executive of global grain trader Bunge Ltd told Reuters in a recent interview.
The inefficiencies amount to “many, many millions” of dollars in new costs, borne by the whole industry, he said.
The changes have also presented opportunities for agricultural trading giants such as Bunge, Louis Dreyfus Company and Cargill Inc, who are making money processing cheaper US soybeans in Argentina and Canada. They’re also selling those countries’ unprocessed beans at a premium to Chinese buyers who are struggling to replace the huge volume of soybeans they typically buy from the United States.
Nimble traders are reaping big profits, but the opportunities may be fleeting.
“Everyone’s getting on the ‘Make America Great’ Trump gravy train for soybeans from Canada,” said Dwight Gerling, president of Toronto-based DG Global, a Canadian exporter of soybeans by container.
On a delivered basis to China, Canadian soybeans were fetching a premium of up to $3 per bushel this fall over the Chicago futures price, more than double the premium US soybeans make in export markets, he said.
DG Global has increased soybean sales volumes by 80 percent year to date, due entirely to the US-China trade fight, Gerling said. DG buys cheap US soybeans to ship to its regular southeast Asian buyers — who would normally buy Canadian soy — and this autumn sent its Canadian soybeans to China, a new market for the company.
The sales to China have recently slowed, however, with winter shipping restrictions approaching on the Great Lakes, Gerling said. Chinese bids for Canadian soybeans are now only slightly higher than bids from other countries for American soybeans.
While companies are finding new ways to make money, US farmers in the export-focused Dakotas are feeling the sting of the trade battle as prices at their local elevators for their newly harvested soybeans are the lowest in more than a decade.
The concern there and elsewhere among US farmers is that the damage to their relationships with Chinese buyers — built up over three decades — will be difficult to repair even if Trump and Xi strike a deal in Buenos Aires.
“The Chinese can get soybeans from other places if we’re not a reliable supplier,” said Bob Metz, a fifth generation farmer in Peever, South Dakota. “They have 1.4 billion people to feed. They don’t want to be dependent on us.” — Reuters

The Harajuku store that won’t let you bring clothes home

A BRAND-NEW store opened in Tokyo’s Harajuku fashion district on Friday, walls lined with clothes, shoes and handbags — and with a twist: shoppers will walk away empty-handed.
The GU Style Studio store, opened by Asia’s largest clothier and Uniqlo operator Fast Retailing Co., is for customers to try apparel and place orders online for later delivery. They can also try out extra services, such as playing with clothing combinations on a virtual mannequin and creating a digital avatar.
Although the notion of showcase shopping has been around for a while, and remains somewhat popular in Europe, such stores have usually been reserved for electronics, household items, and knick-knacks. Seldom has the idea been ported over to the clothing sector. But, as the rise of e-commerce threatens to upend the global retail industry, apparel makers are experimenting with new ways of selling clothes.
“Among large specialty chain retailers, Fast Retailing has one of the most developed digital strategies,” said Dairo Murata, an analyst at JP Morgan Securities. “They are doing it all in-house, and it allows them to be more competitive.”
The line separating online and offline storefronts is becoming blurrier as e-commerce moves into physical locations and brick-and-mortar retailers shift online. That’s resulted in new shopping experiences such as Amazon’s Prime Wardrobe, which sends boxes of clothing to customers to try on, letting them send back what they don’t like. GU isn’t the first to open a try-on store; Inditex SA’s Zara also temporarily opened a look-and-buy outlet in Tokyo’s Roppongi district this year.
GU has steadily grown into a key pillar of Fast Retailing’s business, accounting for about 10% of revenue in the latest fiscal year. It has almost 400 stores across Asia, mainly in Japan, Taiwan, and mainland China, and is known for being more affordable and more fashion forward than its bigger sibling, Uniqlo.
The GU brand has also historically been more experimental with technology, being the first in Fast Retailing’s portfolio to introduce RFID tags and self-checkout. In 2017, a futuristic digital store popped up in the city of Yokohama with screens on shopping carts recommending various clothing combinations as people walked through the store.
JP Morgan’s Murata said GU’s new Harajuku outlet could be a template for rolling out smaller shops in cities that don’t have space to store inventory. He said it could be applied to Uniqlo as well. But Osamu Yunoki, GU’s chief executive officer, said the company hasn’t decided whether to adopt the concept for Fast Retailing’s other brands, or other conventional GU stores carrying inventory.
Shoppers at the new GU store can scan QR codes attached to clothes to bring up purchase links on their phones, and are also encouraged to test clothing combinations on a virtual mannequin on a separate app. Cameras placed in the store capture can also be used to create a virtual avatar of shoppers, although the resemblance was unconvincing.
The store is able to collect and use data on how customers are shopping, such as what items customers are scanning into their phone, which clothing they try on and whether they purchase it or not. That could serve an important function for Fast Retailing’s efforts to automate its entire supply chain.
“That kind of data from customers can be connected immediately to product development and manufacturing plans,” Mr. Yunoki said.
At the same time, he said, the company is trying to offer something new for shoppers.
“We’re fusing the in-store experience and e-commerce to offer a fun and convenient experience,” Mr. Yunoki said. “Harajuku isn’t just for shopping, it’s also a place where fashion is created. We’d like to use our customer’s creations as a stimulus for developing new types of fashion.” — Bloomberg

Telco frequency redistribution policy expected by 1st quarter

By Denise A. Valdez
Reporter
THE Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) said it will be releasing by the first quarter of 2019 a new policy that would allow it to take back and redistribute radio frequency currently controlled by telecommunications companies, possibly opening the door for even more telecommunications companies.
“There will be laws that will come out first quarter of next year that will redistribute frequencies more equitably,” outgoing DICT Acting Secretary Eliseo M. Rio, Jr. said in an interview on Thursday.
“The frequencies are a very limited resource that have been awarded. Once we take back the frequencies, we (could) have a fourth, even fifth telco,” he said.
He noted the frequency would not be taken back if the users prove they serve a certain number of subscribers.
“You could measure this by the number of subscribers. In 2G for example, the number of subscribers that use it is getting smaller. So we could take back the 2G frequencies,” Mr. Rio said.
The Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) has said that regulatory reforms are necessary to ensure the telecommunications industry’s new entrant is competitive against incumbents PLDT, Inc. and Globe Telecom, Inc.
The consortium of China Telecommunications Corp., Dennis A. Uy’s Udenna Corp. and Chelsea Logistics Holdings Corp., with franchise holder Mindanao Islamic Telephone Co., Inc. (Mislatel) was declared the industry’s third player.
It was awarded frequency bands of 700 megahertz (MHz), 2100 MHz, 2000 MHz, 2.5 gigahertz (GHz), 3.3 GHz and 3.5 GHz.
PCC Commissioner Johannes Benjamin R. Bernabe said majority of the frequency is still held by the two incumbents.
The National Telecommunications Commission said in June that 30.32% of frequencies is owned by PLDT, and 24.9% by Globe. It added 39.35% is unassigned or under litigation, with about 5.41% remaining.
Mr. Rio said the so-called “clawback” policy expected next year will help ensure a more level playing field.
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.

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