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DoF: less pressure to put off oil tax hike

By Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan
Reporter
THERE MAY BE less pressure for the government to press on with its stated commitment earlier this week to put off an oil excise tax hike set in January amid signs that Dubai crude price — Asia’s benchmark — could in this final quarter average less than the $80 per barrel (/bbl) trigger price under the law for automatic suspension, the Department of Finance (DoF) hinted in a bulletin on Wednesday.
At the same time, one DoF senior official said in an interview that the situation bears watching as oil prices remain “too volatile,” hence, pressure is still tilted to the upside.
“While Dubai oil price levels for the next six months using Oct. 8 futures prices would have required suspension of the adjustment in excise tax for the next six months, the latest prices levels show otherwise,” read the bulletin — attributed to DoF Undersecretary and Chief Economist Gil S. Beltran — which was e-mailed to reporters, citing data from S&P Global Platts.
“From $82.577/bbl on Oct. 8, Monday, Dubai crude [futures] dropped 2.9% on Oct. 12, Friday to $80.188/bbl. Similarly, Dubai crude oil futures for the next six months dropped below US$80/bbl.”
Oct. 12 futures data show $77.913/bbl for November and $77.482 for December, from above $80/bbl for both months on Oct. 8 and 11, yielding a prospective $78.53/bbl average this quarter.
Dubai crude spot price rose by 43% to $77.02/bbl in September from $53.86/bbl a year ago and by 6.78% from August’s $72.23/bbl.
Spot prices averaged $81.74/bbl in the 12 trading days to Oct. 16, 49% more than the $54.86/bbl in last year’s comparable period. Dubai crude dropped to $79.30/bbl on Oct. 15 and further to $78.80/bbl on Oct. 16 from above-$80/bbl since September’s last three trading days.
Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act (TRAIN) that took effect in January, raised fuel excise taxes by P2.50 per liter this year and is scheduled to add P2/liter and P1.50/liter in 2019 and 2020, respectively, totaling a P6/liter excise tax hike.
Malacañan Palace announced its commitment to suspend the scheduled oil tax hike last Monday in the wake of Oct. 11 futures data showing above-$80/bbl levels this month to December, with prices falling below that trigger starting January. Oct. 8 futures data showed below-$80/bbl starting April. The Finance department explained then that Malacañang made the announcement in advance to douse inflation expectations.
“The announcement was made when the price and the futures market were above $80, so the decision to suspend will be released some point next year. Malacañang will announce it formally,” Assistant Secretary Antonio Joselito G. Lambino II, DoF’s spokesman, said in a telephone interview.
“[Presidential] Spokesperson [Salvador S.] Panelo already made an announcement that the suspension is forthcoming. We will abide by Malacañang’s decision. But the decision was made based on recommendations made by the leadership in the Senate and the… House and a support statement from the economic managers.”
Analysts said this week that the law’s trigger price may not be the only deciding factor in this issue, since the January trigger period is just four months away from the May mid-term elections that, in turn, have a bearing on the 2022 presidential elections.
The DoF bulletin on Wednesday noted that “[u]ncertainties in the global economy arising from the trade war, US President (Donald) Trump imposing sanctions on Iran, and declining Venezuela production scared financial and commodity markets, sending equities and commodity prices gyrating from day to day.”
“This has resulted in volatile crude oil prices,” the department explained.
But Mr. Lambino said that pressure remains on the upside.
“My understanding from experts is that it’s too volatile. We’re also looking at intensification of sanctions by the US against Iran by November. We’re also looking at the actual demand for oil, so that’s volatile,” he said.
“When the announcement was made, the prevailing price was about $80, and that was about a week ago. We’re still looking at the major factors globally when it comes to oil prices.”
SPENDING CUTS
The Finance department estimates suspension of January’s scheduled oil tax hike to cost the government some P41 billion in foregone revenues.
Economic managers are now scrounging for items — except for infrastructure and human capital development — for which expenditures could be suspended.
Also on Wednesday, Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno said that the increase in fuel vouchers for public utility jeepney franchise holders will be put on hold, following Malacañang’s announcement of impending suspension of the scheduled oil tax increase.
The program was intended as a mitigating measure for the public transportation sector affected by the fuel tax hike under TRAIN.
About 179,000 jeepney franchise holders nationwide are entitled to receive P5,000 worth of fuel vouchers this year and P20,515 in 2019.
“The Pantawid Pasada for next year is premised on the P2 adjustment. Now if the P2 adjustment is suspended, then the Pantawid Pasada benefits will be based on 2018,” Mr. Diokno said in a media briefing on Wednesday.
Surging oil and rice prices drove headline inflation to multiyear peaks lately, averaging five percent in the nine months to September against the central bank’s 2-4% target range for full-year 2018.
The government now forecasts full-year inflation to average 4.8-5.2% this year and 3-4% in 2019.

Competition body fines Grab, Uber P16 million

By Denise A. Valdez
Reporter
THE PHILIPPINE COMPETITION COMMISSION (PCC) has imposed fines totaling P16 million on Grab Philippines (MyTaxi.PH, Inc.) and Uber Philippines for violations of interim measures ordered on April 6 as the watchdog reviewed the companies’ March 25 acquisition deal.
“Last Thursday, Oct. 11, PCC imposed a fine on Grab and Uber amounting to P16 million. This is for violating the interim measures order that PCC issued last 6th April,” PCC Commissioner Stella Luz A. Quimbo said in a press briefing on Wednesday. “The interim measures order contained a total of seven interim measures and PCC found violations in two of these measures. And for these two measures, we found a total of 10 counts of violations.”
The measures bound the firms to maintain separate business operations and to refrain from executing final agreements that would transfer assets, equity and interest — including Uber’s assumption of a board seat in Grab — during the review period.
Both companies were collectively fined P4 million for proceeding with the merger during the PCC’s review period. An additional P8 million was imposed on Grab for failure to maintain pre-merger business conditions (pricing, rider promotions, driver incentives and service quality) during the review and P4 million on Uber for the same violations.
“These fines are not for finding of a substantial lessening of competition, but rather the fines are imposed for causing undue difficulties on the PCC review and decision making process,” Ms. Quimbo explained.
Grab gained 93% of the ride-hailing market in the Philippines after the deal and Uber stopped operations in the Philippines on April 16. The PCC reviewed the deal on April 3-Aug. 10.
PCC Commissioner Johannes R. Bernabe said Uber got a smaller fine since it had to comply with the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board’s April 11 cease-and-desist order from continuing its operations after the merger.
Grab Philippines said it was studying legal remedies to address the situation.
“We are currently studying all our legal options with regard to the fine imposed by the Philippine Competition Commission. We will continue to provide additional information as it becomes available,” it said in a statement.
Mr. Bernabe said the PCC will exhaust all legal means to compel Uber to settle the penalty.
The PCC last week appointed United Kingdom-based audit firm Smith and Williamson to monitor Grab’s compliance with voluntary commitments for 12 months.
Those commitments are meant to address competition concerns the PCC raised on May 22, including Grab’s service quality, fare transparency, pricing, removal of a “see destination” feature for drivers, driver and operator non-exclusivity, incentives monitoring and a service improvement plan.

Market unfazed as BSP says Espenilla to take ‘intermittent medical leaves’

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter
BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. has extended his medical leave until the end of the month, adding that he could take “intermittent” leaves in the future.
Observers said, though, that this did not worry the market.
In an advisory, the BSP’s Corporate Affairs Office announced on Wednesday that Mr. Espenilla will be on medical leave until Oct. 26, marking the fifth straight week that he would be out of office.
“Thereafter, he may be taking intermittent medical leaves. During his medical leaves, BSP deputy governors will be taking turns as officer-in-charge in accordance with established BSP business continuity protocol,” the statement read.
“In the meantime, the BSP team stays steadfast in pursuing the Continuity ++ agenda while Governor Espenilla is completing his treatment.”
The central bank chief was diagnosed with early-stage tongue cancer in November 2017. Mr. Espenilla, now 60, said in February that he was declared cancer-free after surgery and radiation therapy.
Analysts said they believe that markets are unfazed by Mr. Espenilla’s health issues.
Traders sought for comment said there was “no observable impact” on financial markets following the news.
“[T]here is no change in views regarding BSP’s monetary policy,” one currency trader pointed out.
Policy direction remains clear, according to industry observers.
“Generally it’s very difficult to comment on the issue given the sensitivity of the matter. However, I do believe that for as long as BSP provides a clear, consistent and decisive communications strategy, the market will carry on with their business and look to the speedy recovery of the Governor,” said Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, senior economist at ING Bank NV Manila.
“BSP’s adherence to a consistent and forceful hawkish stance has helped calm markets of late and rendered relative stability even as the Governor remains away. Consistent messaging will be key in maintaining market stability and the deputies will continue to hold the down the fort for as long as the Governor needs to get back to good health.”
Central bank officials have kept a hawkish stance as they announced another 50 basis points increase in policy rates last month, which was a show of force to rein in price expectations as inflation surged to a fresh nine-year high.
Monetary Board Member Felipe M. Medalla, however, said on Tuesday that the BSP may pause its tightening cycle should inflation momentum ease starting this month.
The peso has been seeing some reprieve this week as it returned to the P53 level versus the dollar level, which traders attributed to negative sentiment on Wall Street.
The Philippine Stock Exchange index has also been seeing sustained foreign outflows, with investors wary about trade tensions between the United States and China and, recently, the worsening political row between Washington and Saudi Arabia.
“At this point, market reaction regarding the governor’s health remains minimal, luckily, because BSP already laid their immediate plans out in the last meeting, and, as far as the public knows, the officers left in charge during his absence remain in line with Espenilla’s intended direction,” said Rens V. Cruz II, an analyst with Regina Capital Development Corp.
“However, investors will begin raising issues if the current macroeconomic woes (high inflation, currency depreciation, current account deterioration) persist and BSP will be delayed in responding with tightening policy measures.”
BSP Deputy Governor Chuchi G. Fonacier told reporters recently that monetary authorities have been able to communicate with Mr. Espenilla daily even during his leave. He had also assured that his new round of treatment has been “progressing very well.”
Also yesterday, the BSP governor said via WhatsApp messages that the central bank is piloting the use of digital tools for its bank supervision and consumer protection services through the RegTech for Regulators Accelerator.
To be rolled out are chatbots which will automate the handling of complaints from the public which are sent via mobile phone message and online platforms, which comes at a time of an aggressive push towards electronic transactions.

Avida allots P7.4 billion for Mandaluyong condo

AVIDA LAND Corp. will be spending P7.4 billion to build the first phase of its multi-tower residential condominium in Mandaluyong.
The mid-range brand of listed property developer Ayala Land, Inc. unveiled on Wednesday Avida Towers Verge, a three-tower condominium development along Reliance Street corner Mayflower Street, Mandaluyong City.
The first tower consists of 34 floors with a total of 1,020 residential units and seven commercial units. The units range from junior one-bedroom, or studio units, spanning 22 to 24 square meters (sq.m.), and one-bedroom covering 34 to 36 sq.m.
The junior one-bedrooms are priced from P4.2-4.4 million, while one-bedroom units are sold from P6.7-7.7 million. Monthly amortization starts at P17,000.
Avida Land Manager for Project and Strategic Management Group Melissa D. Corpuz said the company expects to generate P4 billion from the sale of units in the first tower, noting that 10% has been sold so far. At this pace, Ms. Corpuz said they expect to out the tower by next year.
“We are targeting professionals and millennials. Practically for them, a condo unit will serve as a primary or secondary home to be closer to their place of work and socials,” Ms. Corpuz said during a press briefing in Makati City on Wednesday.
The company will start constructing the second tower once it reaches 70% sales take-up in the first. The entire development will have more than 2,500 units.
Construction of amenities will also be done in the first phase. This includes a clubhouse, indoor gym, swimming pool, kiddie pool, play area, and gazebos.
The launch of Avida Towers Verge followed the completion of Avida Towers Centera, its four-tower condominium project also located along EDSA in Mandaluyong. The company said it spent P5.3 billion to develop the project.
Avida Land is currently turning over units at Avida Towers Centera, where it has nearly sold out 2,526 units.
Since its launch in 2011, Avida Land said prices of units have appreciated by as much as 40% to P139,000 per sq.m.
“Mandaluyong is a prime real estate hot spot. Its condo market is the country’s most buoyant, with demand often outstripping supply… While prices of condo units significantly rise in the area over time, it continues to be at a mid-level price range compare to other cities in the country,” Avida Land Vice-President for Project and Strategic Management Group Apollo B. Tanco said in a statement.
The company is likewise leasing the 32 retail units in the first and second levels of the property, 70% of which have already been leased out.— Arra B. Francia

IDC to spend up to P3 billion to expand provincial projects

ITALPINAS Development Corp. (IDC) plans to spend P2-3 billion for the expansion of two projects next year, driven by the demand for more housing units in the areas where it is present.
IDC Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Romolo V. Nati said the company will be launching the expansion of Primavera City in Cagayan de Oro, Misamis Oriental, and Miramonti in Sto. Tomas, Batangas.
Mr. Nati said the second phase of Miramonti will be similar in architecture to the first phase, which houses a total of 362 residential units and 12 commercial spaces. It will also have a bigger commercial podium compared with the first phase.
“We are surrounded by industrial parks with more than 100,000 employees, and the Batangas Port is growing fast, occupancy of hotels is very high in the area so we will develop this project so we can take advantage of this market condition,” Mr. Nati told reporters after the company’s annual shareholders’ meeting at the Manila Polo Club in Makati City.
IDC said it has already sold about P400 million worth of units in Miramonti, or 45% of the project. The entire Miramonti development will house 1,100 units across three towers standing on a 55,000-square meter (sq.m.) property.
For Primavera City, IDC will launch two more residential towers, which will also have office spaces. The mixed-use project will have a total of seven towers to be developed in four phases, and will offer 1,400 units once completed.
IDC has sold 82% of the first phase of Primavera City worth around P672 million.
Mr. Nati said the projects will be partially financed through the P500 million it will raise from the issuance of preferred shares. The company’s board of directors approved earlier this year the conversion of up to 100 million unissued common shares into preferred shares. He added that they will be working with banks for the rest of the funding.
“We are focusing on our fund-raising activity so we can acquire more land and develop more projects,” Mr. Nati said.
The IDC executive declined to specify target locations for future projects, but noted that the company wants to take advantage of the growth in emerging cities.
Asked about the company’s performance this year, Mr. Nati said sales so far have been “beyond expectations.”
IDC’s net income attributable to the parent went up 22% to P23.7 million in the first six months of 2018, as gross revenues doubled to P165.8 million in the same period.
Shares in IDC dropped 4.3% or 22 centavos to P4.90 each at the stock exchange on Wednesday. — Arra B. Francia

MediXserve builds blockchain unified medical records system

new medixserve logo
HTTPS://WWW.MEDIXSERVE.COM/

MEDIXSERVE IS rolling out a unified blockchain-based electronic medical record (EMR) system to make patients’ medical histories trackable “from womb to tomb.”
The system, which MediXserve said is a first for the Philippines, will be a centralized database of medical records accessible — upon the patient’s approval — to anyone and anywhere.
“The technology will allow you to access all your medical records from all the doctors that you’ve been to, to all the hospitals you were confined since the day you were born,” Jorge C. Azurin, founder and CEO of MediXserve, said in an interview with BusinessWorld.
“Now, people will say technology is already available. Actually, hindi (no)… it’s really difficult because you have one hospital using a different system, another hospital using a different system, so the inter-operability is difficult, so blockchain fixes it,” Mr. Azurin explained.
The Philippine-based health care services company has acquired several existing businesses with existing revenues and branded products, namely ShineOS+, Medixhome Care, Lifedata Systems Inc., and MyCareBuddy. Combined sales of these products has reached $5 million, MediXserve said. The price of its software ranges from just $50,000 to $1.1 million.
“We take patient medical history and we provide permanent, trackable, streamlined framework for the storage of that data. We provide it in a centralized manner, so it becomes more cost effective because…it becomes a paperless transaction. On the network, it becomes faster and more efficient as well as accurate in aid of decision support and diagnostic,” said Oliver V. Chato, MediXserve head for Blockchain Applications and System Integration.
The company said an offline version will be provided for areas where internet connection is limited. Users will input the data even with no internet connection, save it in a flash drive and upload it later when there is a connection.
Mr. Azurin said the data in the platform will be secure since blockchain is “unhackable,” with any attempt to change data in the system likely to be detected and rejected immediately as they are stored in chronologically — and linearly-connected blocks.
The company mainly targets developing countries, with health care expenditures in these economies seen to rise to $4 trillion by 2020. In the Philippines, health spending is seen growing to P1.2 trillion by 2022.
Ang target market namin (Our target market) is the Philippines and selected countries like Nigeria, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Egypt, even Europe… We already have team members operating there. It is a Philippine company that’s going for global operations,” Mr. Azurin said.
He said the company is raising up to $20 million from foreign investors to boost its operations.
“Most of the investors are in SouthEast Asia, a lot are based in Singapore mostly in the health and blockchain industry.” — V.M.P Galang

CSS Corp. opens 2nd facility in PHL

TECH support firm CSS Corp. has opened its second delivery center in Metro Manila as part of its continued expansion in the country.
In a statement, CSS Corp. said it plans to hire over 400 employees for the new facility, located in Bonifacio Global City (BGC), within the next six to eight months. The jobs will be for technical support, help desk, customer support and account management.
“Philippines continues to emerge as an outsourcing hot spot for global players, given its strong understanding of customers in US and EU, coupled with the surge in digital-savvy talent and technical skills,” Manish Tandon, CSS Corp. chief executive officer, said in the statement.
The 24,218-square feet facility will feature “state-of-the-art” workspaces, two training centers, technical labs, collaboration rooms and recreational areas including a 24-hour cafeteria, karaoke and billiard rooms.
“The Philippines, with its ease of doing business, burgeoning tech talent, and exceptional language skills, has become a favored destination for support capabilities, especially with the rise in cognitive technologies. Coupled with strong labor policies and government incentives, the country brings tremendous potential for growth in the near future,” Arvind Kingsly Appavu, country head and assistant vice-president — Philippines at CSS Corp., said.
CSS Corp. opened its first center in Manila in 2009. The new BGC facility will bring the company’s presence in Asia to eight.
Last year, CSS Corp. opened a development center in Costa Rica and Bengaluru, India.
CSS Corp. is a new age information technology and technology support service provider that utilizes various technologies such as artificial intelligence, automation, analytics and cloud, among others. — Janina C. Lim

HiDok app aims to end waiting time at clinics

DAVAO CITY — Patients waiting in line, sometimes for hours, outside a doctor’s clinic is a common sight in the Philippines, either in public or private medical facilities.
HiDok Inc., a Davao-based company led by a nurse, aims to change that landscape through an application, in both online and offline platforms, that will make appointment setting more efficient and convenient.
“We are making it easier for patients to schedule their appointment without asking their (doctors’) secretaries and without spending precious times waiting outside of their clinic,” HiDok Chief Executive Officers Aljabier A. Sangkigay, said in an interview.
Mr. Sangkigay, who has also ventured into hospital operations with two 36-bed facilities in Maguindanao and Cotabato City, said they are now in discussions with potential investors for expanding their product that went online about a month ago.
Vic Melvin L. Cabatbat, HiDok chief financial officer, said they will need about P25 million to operate three hubs, including the one in Davao City, which currently has a network of 180 physicians.
Mr. Cabatbat said they are assessing the different funding schemes offered by venture capitalists.
“We are scrutinizing the offers,” said Mr. Cabatbat, who also has a nursing degree but has been engaged in a machinery business.
Aside from setting schedules, the HiDok app is also envisioned to allow patients to access their electronic medical records (EMR).
“But the EMRs will only become part of the application once we get a (bigger) number of registered patients and doctors,” he said.
Mr. Sangkigay said the business plan targets a revenue stream from joining fees, charges on appointments set, and from advertisers.
“Right now, registering with the application is still free,” he said. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Why would anyone ever pay $558,000 for a bottle of Burgundy?

By Elin McCoy, Bloomberg
WHEN A private Asian collector bid an eye-popping $558,000 for a single bottle of 1945 Romanée-Conti at Sotheby’s sale this past Saturday in New York, a world record was smashed. This was not just the highest price ever reached for a 750 ml bottle of Burgundy, but also the highest for any bottle of wine ever at auction.
Moments later, a second private collector, from the US, paid $496,000 for a second bottle of the same wine, and that too broke all previous records, minus the new one that had just been set.
Which begs the question: Why would someone pay half a million dollars for a bottle of wine?
After all, you could buy many cases of superb vino — even stellar Burgundy — for the same price, which amounts to about $100,000 per glass. (The Liv-ex online wine market points out that 133 bottles of 2010 Château Pétrus, a one-bedroom flat in London, and 400 ounces of gold would each set you back the same amount).
Well, the 1945 Romanée-Conti is a very, very special bottle, the rarest of the rare. Here’s why.
FABLED VINEYARD
All the wines from the Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, in the charming, tranquil town of Vosne-Romanée, are famous, sought-after Burgundies. An entire mystique surrounds the domaine, which is known by the nickname DRC. Farmed biodynamically, its grand cru vineyards are meticulously cared for, the grapes sorted individually.
But of its seven fabled reds and one white, those from the tiny 4.5-acre Romanée-Conti vineyard are absolutely iconic, the epitome of the highest-quality Burgundy. The late food writer Richard Olney once called this plot of land “timeless perfection.” Several years ago an extortionist threatened to poison the vines unless the domaine paid him a €1 million ransom. (He was caught). The 2015, which I tasted earlier this year, has amazingly complex aromas, long, savory layers of earth and spice flavors, and a silky texture that transfixes your tongue.
‘UNICORN’ VINTAGE
The 1945 vintage is legendary, a virtually unobtainable “unicorn wine.” The year was hot overall, the wines super-concentrated, and thanks to hail and frost, production was small. Only 600 bottles of Romanée-Conti were made, and, at this point, very few are left. There is really no normal opportunity to get it.
Furthermore, after the harvest, the vines were ripped out and the vineyard replanted. The next vintage of Romanée-Conti was 1952.
Jamie Ritchie, worldwide head of wine for Sotheby’s, said in a phone interview, “If you want to drink the world’s most special bottle of wine, this is it.” Although he’s sampled most of the world’s greatest wines, Ritchie admits he has never tasted the 1945. (Neither have I, but I’m happy to be invited anywhere for a sip).
A Hong Kong Burgundy lover once told me he’d kill to get his hands on the 1945. He’d missed the chance to bid for one at a 2011 Christie’s wine auction in Geneva where a bottle brought $123,899, besting the then world record. He wanted to drink it but also brag about it, he admitted.
PROFIT POTENTIAL
Ritchie hopes the two buyers, whom he describes as passionate Burgundy lovers, will drink the wines, and not resell them again at a profit.
Super scarcity and the current global thirst for Burgundy, especially DRC, make them pretty solid investments, though there’s no guarantee other collectors would be willing to pay quite this much.
Since 2010, Liv-ex’s Burgundy 150 index has climbed 108%, as reported in its 2018 Burgundy Report, though Brexit is taking a toll. In the past year, the great 1990 Romanée-Conti has appreciated more than 20%, and 3,862% since 1999. There are no such statistics on the 1945 because you hardly ever see it.
IMMACULATE PROVENANCE
Another reason for the excitement at Sotheby’s Saturday auction was the wines’ immaculate provenance, which adds to the investment value as well as potential longevity. 1945 was more than 70 years ago. Though Romanée-Conti is famously long-lived, and the concentration in the 1945 ensures it’s not going to die anytime soon, the conditions in which it was stored made the difference between a great wine and vinegar on the skids.
The two wines were in a 100-lot collection of Burgundy belonging to one of the most respected men in Burgundy, 85-year-old Robert Drouhin, whose family runs Maison Joseph Drouhin, founded in 1880. The 219 bottles and seven magnums of DRC wines on offer, including the 1945, had rested quietly and happily for decades in his pristine cellar, until they were boxed up and transported from Beaune, France, via air to Sotheby’s East Coast warehouse.
His family owns significant vineyards in Chablis, Côte de Nuits, Côte de Beaune, and elsewhere in Burgundy and is also one of the region’s major negociants. From 1928 to 1964, Drouhin’s father, Maurice, was also the exclusive distributor for DRC’s wines in France and Belgium.
Which means that the wines on offer traveled only a short distance from where they were made to the pristine storage conditions of the nearby Drouhin cellar, before their big debut decades later.
And in a world where fake Romanée-Conti keeps turning up in the news, this kind of provenance is the ultimate guarantee of authenticity: “…the pleasure is the wine itself but also the history and the scarcity,” Robert Drouhin observed in the catalog.
No wonder the bidding for the two bottles at Sotheby’s was, as they say, “frenzied,” as a New York real estate developer battled with an online Asian bidder, who won the prize.
The total sale brought $7.3 million, more than five times the high estimate. Ninety percent were lots of rare DRC. Burgundy is as hot as ever. Will the prices ever stop going up? Luckily, Drouhin has kept some rare DRC for his own family to enjoy.

SM to expand in Clark Global City

BUSINESSMAN Dennis A. Uy’s Global Gateway Development Corp. (GGDC) has engaged SM Prime Holdings, Inc. to be the first locator in its 177-hectare Clark Global City leasehold in Pampanga.
In a statement issued Wednesday, GGDC said it has signed a sublease agreement with Sy-led SM Prime for up to 10 hectares inside the Clark Freeport Zone.
“Having SM Prime as one of our anchor locators boosts our efforts in developing Clark Global City as the country’s new center of business, life and innovation,” Mr. Uy said.
Under the deal, GGDC will sublease an initial five hectares to SM Prime. The SM Group will then have the option of taking up five more hectares within the next three years.
“Clark Global City provides us another platform to help develop Clark and thereby unlock employment and business opportunities in the region,” GGDC quoted SM Prime Chairman Hans T. Sy as saying in a statement.
The subleased space will allow SM Prime to expand its adjacent developments in the area, which includes SM City Clark, a four-storey retail and office building for business process outsourcing firms, and the Park Inn Hotel.
“We will explore more opportunities to contribute to the transformation of Clark as a premier investment destination in Asia-Pacific,” Mr. Sy said.
Earlier this year, Mr. Uy’s group secured the government’s approval for the lease rights of Clark Global City for a total of 75 years. This came after the group’s $1-billion acquisition of the growing logistics hub in 2017.
Since the start of its development, the master planned development already has a 173-hospital bed carrying the Medical City brand and two fully-leased out Grade A office buildings covering around 57,000 square meters of leasable office and retail spaces. The buildings form part of the West Aeropark complex.
Mr. Uy’s group is currently constructing three more buildings in the office complex, all of which have been pre-leased.
“We look forward to welcoming more companies and investors as partners in realizing our vision for Clark Global City, which we believe will translate to more jobs and better living conditions for our fellow Filipinos,” Mr. Uy said.
GGDC’s parent, Udenna Development Corp., earlier said it plans to invest $6 billion for the development of Clark Global City. This includes the construction of more office buildings, residential developments, hotels, hospitals, schools, transport terminal, sports center, and a casino and entertainment complex. — Arra B. Francia

Term deposit yields decline on demand

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez, Senior Reporter
YIELDS FETCHED for term deposits declined this week amid strong demand, with banks willing to park more funds with the central bank even for longer periods.
Demand reached P119.08 billion during Wednesday’s auction, down from the P124.259 billion worth of bids received a week ago but still well above the P80 billion the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) wanted to sell.
All tenors remained oversubscribed for the third straight week, with offers piling up under the month-long tenor. With the strong appetite, banks even asked for lower returns for their placements across the board.
The seven-day deposits fetched P66.002 billion in total demand, settling higher than the P50 billion on the auction block although lower than the P73.282 billion in offers received the previous week.
Market players asked for smaller yields from a narrow 4.68-4.7488% range to fetch a 4.7207% average, a tad lower than last week’s 4.7274%.
Tenders for the 14-day instruments also stood buoyant at P31.273 billion, slightly lower than last week’s P33.216 billion but still beyond the central bank’s P20-billion offer. Banks also tempered their requested returns, which drove the average lower to 4.765% from 4.7729% previously.
Meanwhile, appetite for the 28-day tenor improved to P21.805 billion compared to P17.761 billion the past week and more than double the P10 billion the BSP put up for this week’s exercise. The stronger demand also drove average returns lower to 4.8362% coming from 4.8549% during the Oct. 10 auction.
The term deposit facility (TDF) is the central bank’s primary tool to capture excess money supply in the financial system. The weekly auctions are meant to usher market and interbank rates to within the BSP’s desired range by setting the standard for short-term instruments using the margins that they pay to banks for these TDF placements.
This is the first time that yields went down since the central bank announced another rate hike worth 50 basis points during their Sept. 27 policy meeting. The move, which is meant to rein in inflation expectations and support the peso, brought benchmark interest rates to the 4-5% range.
“Relative stability” in the foreign exchange market as well as sustained robustness in government spending are arming banks with more cash for lending and investments, with the surplus left to be parked under the TDF.
Monetary Board Member Felipe M. Medalla has said the central bank may “take a pause” with tightening moves should inflation momentum show signs of easing. The current key policy rate of 4.5% is at a nine-year high.
For next week’s offering, the BSP will raise the auction volume of 28-day deposits to P20 billion from P10 billion, bringing the total amount up for grabs to P90 billion.

Ayala acquires minority stake in health app

AYALA Healthcare Holdings, Inc. (AC Health) has acquired a minority stake in a home health application called AIDE, as it bets on technologies that can disrupt the health care industry in the future.
In a statement issued Wednesday, AC Health, a subsidiary of Ayala Corp., said the investment forms part of its strategy to invest in health technology solutions.
The company did not disclose the exact value of the investment, but a source noted that AC Health will hold a minority stake or less than 30%.
AC Health President and Chief Executive Officer Paolo F. Borromeo described AIDE as “an excellent platform to connect patients,” saying that home health could be one of the next game changers in the health care industry.
“Aside from developing our own technology solutions, we are also on the lookout for emerging start-ups and entrepreneurs who can disrupt the health care industry. AIDE is an excellent platform to connect patients with health providers, and we think home health will be one of the next game changers,” Mr. Borromeo said in a statement.
Founded by siblings Paolo, Pamela, and Patrick Bugayong, the AIDE mobile app allows patients to book doctors, nurses, and other medical professionals to provide health care services in their homes. Services range from medical consultations, nursing care, physical therapy, caregiving, lab extraction and interpretation, as well as veterinary care.
AIDE Chief Executive Officer Paolo Bugayong said the partnership with AC Health will help expand their reach to more Filipinos.
“Our goal is to serve both patients and medical professionals. For patients, we offer convenient home health care booking, while for medical professionals, we are offering an innovate cost-effective avenue for their services,” Mr. Bugayong said in a statement.
AC Health established earlier this year its health technology arm called Vigos. The platform develops its own products, such as an Electronic Medial Records and Clinic Information System which is being used across all FamilyDOC clinics. FamilyDOC is a network of community-based clinics also owned by AC Health.
The health care arm of Ayala in 2017 also invested in MedGrocer, an online pharmacy licensed by the Food and Drugs Administration which offers medicine delivery and corporate medicine benefits management.
“We believe AIDE is complementary to our other investments as it helps us extend our reach beyond our retail clinics and pharmacies. We hope to expand our health technology portfolio further because it is both an enabler and integrator of the health care ecosystem that we are building at AC Health,” AC Health Chief Digital Officer Christian Besler said in a statement.
The Ayala group seeks to expand its health care business to more than 1,000 Generika pharmacies, 100 FamilyDOC clinics, and other strategic partnerships with hospitals and specialty centers. Its foray into the health care business comes amid the growing Philippine economy, which the company said could push demand and awareness of health care products and services. — Arra B. Francia

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