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Instagram founders exit Facebook as Zuckerberg tension grows

By Bloomberg
The founders of Instagram are leaving Facebook Inc. after growing tensions with Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg over the direction of the photo-sharing app, people familiar with the matter said. The stock dropped 2 percent in pre-market trading Tuesday.
Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, who have been at the company since Instagram’s acquisition by Facebook in 2012, had been able to keep the brand and product independent while relying on Facebook’s infrastructure and resources to grow. Lately, they were frustrated with an uptick in day-to-day involvement by Zuckerberg, who has become more reliant on Instagram in planning for Facebook’s future, said the people, who asked not to be identified sharing internal details.
Without the founders around, Instagram is likely to become more tightly integrated with Facebook, making it more of a product division within the larger company than an independent operation, the people said.
For years, Systrom and Krieger were able to amicably resist certain Facebook product initiatives that they felt went against their vision, while leaning on Facebook for resources, infrastructure and engineering talent. A new leader may not be able to keep the same balance, or may be more willing to make changes that help the overall company at the expense of some of Instagram’s unique qualities.
The New York Times earlier reported Systrom and Krieger’s departure. The founders confirmed their decision in a blog post, although Facebook didn’t have a comment on the tension.
“Kevin and Mike are extraordinary product leaders and Instagram reflects their combined creative talents,” Zuckerberg said in a statement. “I’ve learned a lot working with them for the past six years and have really enjoyed it.”
Krieger and Systrom built Instagram and sold it to Facebook for $715 million six years ago. When the deal was announced, the company had only 13 employees and 30 million registered users. Now more than 1 billion people use the app monthly, and it is the main source of advertising revenue for Facebook outside the social network’s main news feed. A Bloomberg Intelligence analysis in June said Instagram is worth more than $100 billion.
“We’re planning on taking some time off to explore our curiosity and creativity again,” Systrom said in a statement on the Instagram blog. “Building new things requires that we step back, understand what inspires us and match that with what the world needs; that’s what we plan to do.”
While Facebook has weathered scandals on privacy, fake news and election interference, Instagram’s brand has remained mostly untarnished, and continued to quickly add users. With more than 2.2 billion users, Facebook is running out of people in the world to sign up for its social network, and can only push so many advertisements into its news feed. That means it has become increasingly dependent on the standalone photo-sharing app for its future.
Instagram attracts a younger cohort of users who are critical to Facebook’s growth. Facebook users also have been flocking to Instagram as an escape, tired of the political bickering and privacy scandals that plague the parent company. Users averaged 53 minutes a day on Instagram in June, just five minutes less than on Facebook, according to Android data from analytics company SimilarWeb.
Instagram is on track to provide Facebook with $20 billion in revenue by 2020, about a quarter of Facebook’s total, Ken Sena, an analyst at Wells Fargo Securities, wrote to investors earlier this year.
The company recently launched Facebook Watch, a television-like platform that it’s spent hundreds of millions of dollars on, mostly for content. That was followed by the rollout of Instagram’s IGTV, an app that allows anyone to produce and post longer-form videos. Instagram has a more natural relationship with influencers, who have built up huge followings on the platform, so it hasn’t had to pay for them to use the new feature.
In a July earnings call, company executives explained that revenue growth would slow in the coming years, and that Facebook would have to spend more to expand. That announcement caused the biggest one-day stock market wipeout in American history. Menlo Park, California-based Facebook is still a drag on technology stocks, which overall have propelled the U.S. stock market to record highs. FAANG shares — for Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google — soared about 58 percent last year.
Facebook shares are down more than 6 percent this year after rising in every one of the previous five years. The Instagram departures may put further pressure on the stock.
The company has started mentioning Instagram more frequently on its earnings calls and taking credit for its success. In the most recent call, Zuckerberg explained that Instagram grew twice as fast being part of Facebook as it could have on its own, a statement that many Instagram insiders felt was unnecessary and unprovable.
The departure of Instagram’s founders comes just weeks after Facebook decided to bring the photo app’s chief operating officer, Marne Levine, back to Facebook to become its global head of business development. While at Instagram, Levine had helped maintain a harmonious relationship with the parent company. Nicole Jackson Colaco, Instagram’s head of public policy, also left earlier this year.
Adam Mosseri, who formerly ran Facebook’s news feed, was brought to Instagram to be head of product earlier this year. He’s the most likely successor for the founders, people familiar with the matter have said, though Facebook declined to comment on who might take over.
In the past year or so, Facebook has lost several top executives at its biggest acquired properties. Brian Acton and Jan Koum, the founders of WhatsApp, announced their departures after disagreements with Zuckerberg over the messaging application’s business model. Chris Daniels, an executive close with Zuckerberg who formerly ran the troubled Internet.org project to connect emerging markets to the internet, replaced them at the app.
Since the WhatsApp shuffle, Instagram employees became nervous about something similar happening to their group, according to people familiar with the matter.

Big brother is creating a two-tier society in China: Adam Minter

By Bloomberg
Even for Chinese authorities, who have long tried to limit the influence of foreign media and ideas, last week marked an escalation. In the span of a few days, authorities blocked access to Twitch, the video-game live-streaming platform owned by Amazon.com Inc.; ordered a purge of foreign content from school textbooks; and proposed restricting foreign programming — especially current-events shows — from television and online streaming sites.
One might take the clampdown as yet more evidence of the government’s hold over what Chinese can see and read. In fact, such restrictions are only further dividing China into a society of information haves and have-nots — of cosmopolitans and everyone else. Chinese with money, especially in cities, can circumvent official controls via technology and travel. Meanwhile, rural and less-affluent Chinese are left to consume what censors deem appropriate. It’s a chronic condition that underlines existing economic and social divisions, and it’s sure to get worse.
The urban-rural divide has been a source of social and political tension throughout Chinese history. That’s not news to the current government, which has recently doubled down on efforts to spur rural growth. Yet by almost any measure, the divide persists. According to a recent working paper from the International Monetary Fund, income inequality has widened more in China than in any other developing region since 1990. Among the contributing factors are a lack of educational opportunities in rural China and the resulting lower incomes. For more than a decade, average disposable incomes in cities have been more than double those enjoyed in the countryside.
A yawning digital divide only exacerbates the problem. According to the government, the population of Chinese internet users swelled to 802 million in the summer of 2018. As impressive as that number sounds, it leaves out almost two in every five Chinese, for an internet penetration rate of only 57.7 percent. That’s well behind rates in most G-20 countries and far behind the government’s own aspirations.
This plays out in ways that are more and less obvious. For example, the 42.3 percent of Chinese who aren’t connected to the internet are subjected to the most stringent levels of censorship that China exacts. Traditional media — films, television, radio, newspapers and books (including textbooks) — are strictly vetted for messages that don’t conform to the government’s core priorities.
The world of information expands greatly when a citizen can afford to purchase a smartphone — even one that’s subject to China’s savvy and evolving online censorship systems. The ceiling rises even further as incomes grow. China’s university campuses, for instance, have long been hubs for the piracy of music, films and television. If you want to watch “Crazy Rich Asians” — a movie that hasn’t been released in China — on your phone, the quickest way is to ask a college student for directions to the nearest pirate streaming site.
Meanwhile, wealthier Chinese can afford to set up virtual private networks [VPNs] and other means of leaping China’s internet controls (China’s announced spring 2018 crackdown on VPNs hasn’t been implemented fully). Decoder boxes that evade censorship and copyright controls are increasingly popular. Foreign visitors to China (including myself) are often surprised to find that twentysomething Chinese are more up-to-date on U.S. films and television shows than many young Americans.
Wealth also provides access to information beyond China. Over the last 40 years, 5.2 million Chinese have studied in overseas educational institutions, using uncensored textbooks and with access to an uncensored internet. That’s a small percentage of China’s population, and many of them remain overseas. But those who return form a kind of information elite.
They’re also far from alone in developing a cosmopolitan outlook. In 2017, Chinese tourists took 129 million overseas trips, making China the largest source of overseas travel in the world. Shopping, beachgoing, and sightseeing — not information evasion — motivate most of these journeys. Nonetheless, exposure to places beyond China’s borders only further widens the gap between China’s information haves and have-nots.
For now, economic growth, upward mobility and nationalism have blunted discontent among China’s elites about increasing censorship, while a desire to join their ranks has taken the edge off rural discontent. Long-term, however, the information gap only serves to worsen an income gap that remains among China’s most serious and chronic problems. If China is really serious about becoming an information economy, it’s going to have to let all of its citizens see the same information.

Philippines considers price controls on rice, pork, chicken

By Bloomberg
Philippines is “seriously considering” price ceilings for rice, pork and chicken as food prices remain elevated after a typhoon damaged crop output, the country’s trade secretary said.
Early data shows farm-gate prices are already falling and the government is waiting to see if traders reduce retail prices correspondingly, Department of Trade and Industry Secretary Ramon Lopez said in an interview in London.
If the price reductions don’t happen and profiteering is detected, he is open to recommend that President Rodrigo Duterte impose price limits on food items which retailers will be required to comply with, he said.
“I am a free-market proponent,” he said. “But if profiteering happens, I will have to recommend it.”
Read more: Philippines Says Typhoon Damage on Farms Highest Since Haiyan
While rising oil prices have led consumer-price growth to accelerate to 6.4 percent in August, compared with 2.9 percent in December, damages to crop output from Typhoon Manghut have ruined prospects for a quick moderation in inflation.

Saudis shift own oil diet to supply buyers who are shunning Iran

By Bloomberg
As impending U.S. sanctions squeeze Iranian oil supplies, top OPEC member Saudi Arabia is changing its own crude diet to meet customer demand for alternative cargoes.
The trading arm of state-run producer Saudi Aramco is said to be offering an ultra-light oil known as Khuff condensate, a rarely traded grade that’s typically processed in the nation’s domestic refineries. To free up this more valuable supply for export, the Middle East country is diverting its Extra Light crude to units that split it into raw materials for petrochemicals and fuels.
Saudi Khuff supplies are entering the market at a time of growing demand for condensate, as operators of purpose-built splitters in countries such as South Korea and Japan scramble for alternative feedstock following a halt in purchases of Iran’s South Pars variety. The countries have turned to cargoes from Norway and the U.S., as well as the oil-product known as naphtha, to make up for the shortfall.
Spot supplies of Khuff are valued at about $2 a barrel over the official selling price for Arab Extra Light crude for the month of October, according to a Bloomberg survey of three traders who participate in the market. Unlike crude exports from the kingdom, condensates can be traded in the spot market and come without destination restrictions.
While Aramco sells most of its output via long-term contracts, its trading unit is increasingly leveraging the parent’s global network in procurement and refining. It’s dealing in non-Saudi crude, and made a sale of U.S. Mars oil to Taiwan’s Formosa Petrochemical Corp. in July this year. It’s also leaning on domestic refining operations to absorb restricted barrels in order to cash in on demand for more valuable and freely traded grades.
Its strategy is playing out just as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries rebuffs demands from U.S. President Donald Trump that it take action to reduce prices. The group and its allies signaled less urgency and stopped short of promising specific extra volumes of crude, saying output would be boosted only if customers requested it.

Nike CEO feels `very good and proud' of Kaepernick campaign

By Bloomberg
Nike Inc.’s controversial ad campaign starring Colin Kaepernick debuted three days after the end of the company’s first quarter, but that didn’t stop executives from discussing the impact of the campaign during a first-quarter earnings call.
“We feel very good and proud of the work that we’re doing,” Chief Executive Mark Parker said. His comments were some of his first public remarks on the campaign, and he didn’t mention Kaepernick by name. “It’s driving a real uptick in traffic and engagement, both socially and commercially.”
Nike reported mixed results Tuesday, and shares dropped as much as 4.6 percent in after-hours trading. The company fell short of consensus estimates on gross margin and some overseas revenue, while overall revenue posted double-digit growth to $9.9 billion. North American sales, which had stalled in recent years, grew 6 percent to $4.14 billion.
Nike’s first quarter ended Aug. 31, so the underlying numbers don’t include any fallout from the Kaepernick advertisement, which went public on Sept. 3. Shares dipped following the ad’s release, but Nike quickly erased those losses. Last week shares traded at an all-time high $86.04.
The campaign drew wide praise from Wall Street analysts, who saw the the ad as a clever way to cater to Nike’s main U.S. customers — young, diverse city-dwellers who are more likely to agree with Kaepernick’s position on police brutality and racism in America.
Research from Edison Trends, which scans receipt data from more than 200 online retailers (including Nike.com) also suggests that the company’s online sales have been tracking ahead of last year in the new quarter.
The ad campaign also drew an outpouring of support, both from the professional athlete community and from other consumers. Actress Jenifer Lewis wore a Nike sweatshirt on the red carpet at the Emmy Awards and praised both Kaepernick and the company.
Kaepernick, 30, hasn’t played in the NFL since 2016. He’s currently suing the league for collusion.

Craft beer is model for meat industry, says legendary scientist

By Bloomberg
One of the most renowned voices in the world of meat production says there’s a battle taking place for the future of the livestock industry.
On the one hand, there are people including Tom Hayes, the outgoing chief executive officer of Tyson Foods Inc., who represents a side of the meat industry that may be considered more “progressive,” according to Temple Grandin, a professor of animal science at Colorado State University. Hayes and others are working to change livestock production to account more for animal welfare.
On the other side are veterans of the industry, Grandin said. They have produced meat for decades with time-tested methods and don’t see why things have to change. Some feel that their integrity is being questioned when ideas for new methods are discussed, she said Monday at a press briefing at the Women in Agribusiness Summit in Denver.
Who will prevail? That may be partially driven by consumers, Grandin said.
If animal science had rock stars, Grandin would be Bob Dylan. In her four decades in the industry, she developed innovative equipment and analysis techniques that redesigned slaughterhouses to reduce stress on animals. She worked with Cargill Inc. and other major meat producers and helped manage supplies for buyers including McDonald’s Corp. She has written bestsellers and was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most-influential people in 2010. Also an autism advocate, Grandin was the subject of a 2010 biopic that starred Claire Danes.
Meat production in the U.S. may go the way of beer, Grandin said, referring to the thriving microbrewery industry in Fort Collins, where Colorado State University is based. Niche markets, such as pasture-raised chickens, will become more prominent and expand alongside large-scale commercial operations.
“What’s going to drive things in the future is going to be that consumers will drive buyers,” she said, citing giant meat purchasers such fast-food companies.
Changing consumer tastes are starting to transform traditional commodity meat production rapidly as more people express concerns over the environment, animal welfare and healthy eating.
Some of the largest food companies have taken steps to meet those demands. McDonald’s, one of the world’s biggest buyers of beef, plans to source more than 20 million of its Angus burgers in Canada over the next year from farms and ranches that have been certified sustainable. Tyson Foods, the top U.S. meat company, bought organic chicken producer Tecumseh Poultry earlier this year. Alternatives to meat, whether from plants or grown in labs, have emerged as hot trends.
“There’s a fight going on between the people that know we’ve got to move the industry forward and the people that just are living in the box,” Grandin said. “The industry’s got to let the more progressive people win, or they’re going to be in trouble.”

A construction boom and a thriving cement industry

Construction activities in the Philippines are swelling. According to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), the total number of constructions in the second quarter of 2018 was 40,182, up 11.7% from the 35,983 constructions recorded in the same period in 2017.

From April to June, the agency recorded 29,060 residential constructions, 5,644 non-residential constructions, 1,511 additions to existing structures, and 3,697 alterations and repairs made to existing structures.

The top five regions in terms of number of constructions were CALABARZON (9,608 constructions or 23.9% of the total), Central Luzon (5,028 or 12.5%), Central Visayas (4,555 or 11.3%), Ilocos Region (3,123 or 7.8%) and the National Capital Region (3,043 or 7.6%).

The growth in constructions has been taking place alongside an increasing number of infrastructure projects being undertaken by the administration of President Rodrigo R. Duterte under its “Build, Build, Build” program. Early this year, Gil S. Beltran, Undersecretary of the Department of Finance, was quoted in news reports as saying that about 60 infrastructure projects were then under construction and pre-construction.

The construction boom has been a boon to the industry that supplies one of the most basic construction materials — cement. In a report, Oxford Business Group noted that cement sales reached 24.4 million tons in 2015, citing data from the Cement Manufacturers’ Association of the Philippines. The following year, sales climbed to 26 million tons. (In mid-2017, the association announced that it would no longer collect sales data for the cement industry.)

It’s worth noting that the price of cement hasn’t always gone up despite increasing demand for it. PSA reported that cement index in the National Capital Region in January of this year was down 3.4% from the same period in 2017. But the situation is beginning to change. Latest data from the agency shows that in August of this year, cement index grew 1.5% compared with the same period last year.

Cement manufacturers are busy building up their capacities. Eagle Cement Corp. (ECC) has recently opened its third cement facility in San Ildefonso, Bulacan, which will raise by two million metric tons (MT) its current capacity of 5.1 million MT per year.

“We’re expecting some volume growth compared to previous year’s second half… impact financially will be second half,” ECC President and Chief Executive Officer John Paul L. Ang was quoted as saying in a June BusinessWorld report.

The company’s fourth cement line, in Malabuyoc, Cebu, is already in the works. This plant, which will have a capacity of two million MT, is slated for completion in 2020.

Holcim Philippines is pushing forward with the upgrades of its facilities in Luzon, with a view to better support construction activity in the island. In a recent press release, the company said it is installing new equipment and storage facilities to increase the annual cement production capacity of its La Union plant to 1.8 million tons next year from the current one million tons. At the same time, it is implementing efficiency initiatives in its facilities in Bulacan, Batangas and Manila to ensure better cement supply for the whole of Luzon.

“Holcim Philippines remains committed to the development of Luzon and the entire country and we intend to continue being so for many decades more. These expansion and efficiency initiatives help ensure a reliable supply of high-quality cement that enable our partners to build better with certainty the many ongoing and upcoming construction projects in the region,” said John Stull, president and chief executive officer of Holcim Philippines.

These initiatives are also part of the company’s plan to raise its nationwide cement production to 12 million MT from the current 10 million MT.

The bottom lines of these two cement manufacturers have been boosted by the construction boom. Holcim Philippines’ net sales grew 18.5% to P10.1 billion in the second quarter of 2018 from P8.6 billion in the same quarter last year, even though cement prices were low. “Our Q2 performance showed encouraging trends which translated into significant sales growth on the back of strong building activity,” Mr. Stull said in a statement.

But he noted that their second-quarter business performance continued to be affected by factors like rising fuel costs, the depreciation of peso against the U.S. dollar and tighter competition. “Still, there are many opportunities for our business given the robust building activity throughout the country, and this is seen in our substantial sales growth in the second quarter,” he said.

Holcim Philippines posted revenues of P18.8 billion in the first half of 2018, up 8% from the same period last year.

ECC reported a net profit growth of 5% to P2.3 billion for the first six months of the year as a result of robust sales and efficient operations. Its net sales climbed 10% to P8.2 billion during the same period.

“We remain confident that we will be able to sustain growth towards the end of the year, with the improving construction activity of the private sector and expected roll out of government infrastructure projects,” Mr. Ang said in a statement.

A Transition Year: The road to WESM run by an independent market operator

Year in review

The past year saw some significant strides and historic shifts in the governance and operation of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM).

In July 2017, the Department of Energy (DoE) designated the PEMC (Philippine Electricity Market Corporation) Transition Committee (PTC) to spearhead the transition of WESM operations from PEMC to an Independent Market Operator (IMO). The PTC, led by former Energy Regulatory Board (ERB) Member Atty. Oscar E. Ala and four others, namely, Atty. Francis Saturnino C. Juan, Rauf A. Tan, Engr. Jose Mari T. Bigornia, and Atty. Jose M. Layug, Jr., took over the PEMC management, the sole electricity spot market operator of the Philippines.

Under the PTC leadership, PEMC worked to strengthen its stakeholder communication and engagement initiatives. It conducted several WESM Stakeholder Engagement meetings with WESM Members, service providers, and other parties to discuss and address their specific needs, issues and concerns in relation to market policies and processes.

Moreover, in line with the mandate to establish the Renewable Energy (RE) Market, PEMC participated in the Development for Renewable Energy Applications Mainstreaming and Market Sustainability (DREAMS) Project Steering Committee Meetings. It formulated and presented the Terms of Reference for the RE System to procure the Philippine Renewable Energy Market System (PREMS), the IT platform that will be used in the RE Market.

PEMC organized a workshop with the System Operator, the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), to identify shared aspirations for a strong partnership between the two companies. Strengthening the coordination between the two is key to a more efficient WESM. The workshop is only the first of a series of concerted activities to be undertaken by the Market Operator and the System Operator. These activities are intended to provide a venue to discuss and address concerns and challenges related to efficiencies of the end-to-end business processes covering both organizations, and to ensure policy and quality standards alignment between them.

As the designated Central Registration Body (CRB), PEMC plays a pivotal role in the implementation of the retail market. Under the existing legal framework for Retail Competition and Open Access (RCOA), electricity end-users become part of the contestable market upon reaching the applicable contestability demand threshold. After being certified by the ERC, these contestable customers are given option to secure their supply from a retailer of their own choosing duly-licensed by the ERC. As CRB, PEMC manages the registry of these contestable customers and their current suppliers, tracks the market transactions made by their suppliers on their behalf, and facilitates customer-switching in the retail market. To date, the CRB has registered more than a thousand participants in the retail market.

PEMC also supported the Department of Energy’s (DoE) thrust to prepare Mindanao stakeholders for the eventual commercial operations of WESM in Mindanao. PEMC conducted several WESM trainings for the said stakeholders, started the registration of the Mindanao WESM participants using the Central Registration and Settlement System (CRSS), and performed trial runs to give them a feel of the market. It provided the DoE with regular readiness assessment reports and coordinated with NGCP to include the Mindanao grid in the Market Network Model (MNM) of the WESM.

Enhancements to the WESM design integrated in the New Market Management System (NMSS) and Central Registration and Settlement System (CRSS) involve all market-related processes such as registration, offer submission/nomination, pricing and scheduling, metering and settlements. These systems are currently undergoing parallel operations by PEMC. The CRSS has already been certified by an independent auditor while the NMMS is currently undergoing audit to ensure compliance with the WESM Rules and Manuals.

Transition to Independent Market Operations (IMO)

To bring to reality the IMO transition, the PTC crafted and proposed the Transition Plan for an Independent Market Operator (IMO). After unveiling the Transition Plan, the PTC consulted with the DoE and the market participants to gather their views and comments thereon.

The said plan calls for the formation of a new company to become the IMO, while PEMC remains the governing body for the WESM. While the IMO Board is composed of independent members, PEMC will continue as a stakeholder board with independent members.

During the PEMC Special Membership Meeting held in February 2018, the first ever membership meeting conducted by PEMC, WESM members representing the generation, distribution, supply and transmission sectors, voted to approve the plan. The approval was overwhelming.

With the joint endorsement of the PEMC membership and the DoE, the Independent Electricity Market Operator of the Philippines, Inc. (IEMOP) was formed and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 16, 2018 to act as the IMO envisioned under the law.

Another first for the organization, PEMC conducted the elections of the PEM Board directors on June 25, 2018. It also marked the relinquishment by the DoE Secretary of the chairmanship of the PEM Board in favor of one of these directors duly-elected by the PEMC membership. This stood as one of the major milestones that brought the WESM stakeholders closer to the start of the IMO regime.

Also on the same day, the names of the seven IEMOP members who would comprise its Board of Directors, headed by PTC member Atty. Francis Saturnino C. Juan, were announced. They immediately organized the Board of Directors and thereafter tirelessly worked on the transition activities, such as identifying and hiring the necessary personnel from PEMC, identifying the assets and liabilities that will transfer to IEMOP, and finalizing the Operating Agreement to be executed with PEMC, to enable it to assume and perform the role of IMO. In less than three months from the time it was organized, in close collaboration with PEMC, IEMOP was ready to take on the task. On Sept. 19, 2018, IEMOP executed the Operating Agreement with PEMC to effect the transfer of its personnel, assets and liabilities pertaining to market operations in its favor effective Sept. 26, 2018.

A new WESM story unfolds

Republic Act No. 9136, otherwise known as the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), requires that WESM market operation be transferred to an independent entity that is separate from its governing body, which is the PEMC Board of Directors. As jointly endorsed by the market participants and the DoE, it is IEMOP that takes on this role to pursue the WESM objectives of having a transparent, fair, competitive, and reliable market for the trading of electricity throughout the Philippines.

As market operator, IEMOP is bound to strictly comply with the EPIRA, its Implementing Rules and Regulations, the WESM Rules and other related issuances of the DoE. Its service obligations are reiterated in the Operating Agreement it executed with PEMC, which agreement also formalized the transfer from PEMC of the assets and liabilities pertaining to market operations effective Sept. 26.

Beginning Sept. 26, IEMOP becomes the operator of the electricity market to manage the registration of market participants, receive generation offers, come out with market prices and dispatch schedules of the generation plants, and handle billing, settlement, and collections, among other functions. Under the policy and regulatory oversight of the DoE and the ERC (Energy Regulatory Commission), PEMC remains as governing body for WESM to monitor compliance by the market participants with the market rules.

Under the new setup, the transformation of the WESM is inevitable. The roles of governing body and market operator are now clearly delineated. They can now focus on their respective roles. Handing over the market operation to an independent entity bodes well for more transparency, fairness, and accountability in WESM. In time, the impact of conveying the governance of the WESM to market stakeholders and entrusting its operation in the capable hands of the IEMOP will manifest in terms of more competitive WESM and renewed investor confidence. In the end, it is the electricity end-users that stand to benefit from a stable supply of electricity at efficient and competitive prices. This is the only fitting ending to the new WESM story.

A Transition Year: The road to WESM run by an independent market operator

Year in review

The past year saw some significant strides and historic shifts in the governance and operation of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM).

In July 2017, the Department of Energy (DoE) designated the PEMC (Philippine Electricity Market Corporation) Transition Committee (PTC) to spearhead the transition of WESM operations from PEMC to an Independent Market Operator (IMO). The PTC, led by former Energy Regulatory Board (ERB) Member Atty. Oscar E. Ala and four others, namely, Atty. Francis Saturnino C. Juan, Rauf A. Tan, Engr. Jose Mari T. Bigornia, and Atty. Jose M. Layug, Jr., took over the PEMC management, the sole electricity spot market operator of the Philippines.

Under the PTC leadership, PEMC worked to strengthen its stakeholder communication and engagement initiatives. It conducted several WESM Stakeholder Engagement meetings with WESM Members, service providers, and other parties to discuss and address their specific needs, issues and concerns in relation to market policies and processes.

Moreover, in line with the mandate to establish the Renewable Energy (RE) Market, PEMC participated in the Development for Renewable Energy Applications Mainstreaming and Market Sustainability (DREAMS) Project Steering Committee Meetings. It formulated and presented the Terms of Reference for the RE System to procure the Philippine Renewable Energy Market System (PREMS), the IT platform that will be used in the RE Market.

PEMC organized a workshop with the System Operator, the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), to identify shared aspirations for a strong partnership between the two companies. Strengthening the coordination between the two is key to a more efficient WESM. The workshop is only the first of a series of concerted activities to be undertaken by the Market Operator and the System Operator. These activities are intended to provide a venue to discuss and address concerns and challenges related to efficiencies of the end-to-end business processes covering both organizations, and to ensure policy and quality standards alignment between them.

As the designated Central Registration Body (CRB), PEMC plays a pivotal role in the implementation of the retail market. Under the existing legal framework for Retail Competition and Open Access (RCOA), electricity end-users become part of the contestable market upon reaching the applicable contestability demand threshold. After being certified by the ERC, these contestable customers are given option to secure their supply from a retailer of their own choosing duly-licensed by the ERC. As CRB, PEMC manages the registry of these contestable customers and their current suppliers, tracks the market transactions made by their suppliers on their behalf, and facilitates customer-switching in the retail market. To date, the CRB has registered more than a thousand participants in the retail market.

PEMC also supported the Department of Energy’s (DoE) thrust to prepare Mindanao stakeholders for the eventual commercial operations of WESM in Mindanao. PEMC conducted several WESM trainings for the said stakeholders, started the registration of the Mindanao WESM participants using the Central Registration and Settlement System (CRSS), and performed trial runs to give them a feel of the market. It provided the DoE with regular readiness assessment reports and coordinated with NGCP to include the Mindanao grid in the Market Network Model (MNM) of the WESM.

Enhancements to the WESM design integrated in the New Market Management System (NMSS) and Central Registration and Settlement System (CRSS) involve all market-related processes such as registration, offer submission/nomination, pricing and scheduling, metering and settlements. These systems are currently undergoing parallel operations by PEMC. The CRSS has already been certified by an independent auditor while the NMMS is currently undergoing audit to ensure compliance with the WESM Rules and Manuals.

Transition to Independent Market Operations (IMO)

To bring to reality the IMO transition, the PTC crafted and proposed the Transition Plan for an Independent Market Operator (IMO). After unveiling the Transition Plan, the PTC consulted with the DoE and the market participants to gather their views and comments thereon.

The said plan calls for the formation of a new company to become the IMO, while PEMC remains the governing body for the WESM. While the IMO Board is composed of independent members, PEMC will continue as a stakeholder board with independent members.

During the PEMC Special Membership Meeting held in February 2018, the first ever membership meeting conducted by PEMC, WESM members representing the generation, distribution, supply and transmission sectors, voted to approve the plan. The approval was overwhelming.

With the joint endorsement of the PEMC membership and the DoE, the Independent Electricity Market Operator of the Philippines, Inc. (IEMOP) was formed and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 16, 2018 to act as the IMO envisioned under the law.

Another first for the organization, PEMC conducted the elections of the PEM Board directors on June 25, 2018. It also marked the relinquishment by the DoE Secretary of the chairmanship of the PEM Board in favor of one of these directors duly-elected by the PEMC membership. This stood as one of the major milestones that brought the WESM stakeholders closer to the start of the IMO regime.

Also on the same day, the names of the seven IEMOP members who would comprise its Board of Directors, headed by PTC member Atty. Francis Saturnino C. Juan, were announced. They immediately organized the Board of Directors and thereafter tirelessly worked on the transition activities, such as identifying and hiring the necessary personnel from PEMC, identifying the assets and liabilities that will transfer to IEMOP, and finalizing the Operating Agreement to be executed with PEMC, to enable it to assume and perform the role of IMO. In less than three months from the time it was organized, in close collaboration with PEMC, IEMOP was ready to take on the task. On Sept. 19, 2018, IEMOP executed the Operating Agreement with PEMC to effect the transfer of its personnel, assets and liabilities pertaining to market operations in its favor effective Sept. 26, 2018.

A new WESM story unfolds

Republic Act No. 9136, otherwise known as the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), requires that WESM market operation be transferred to an independent entity that is separate from its governing body, which is the PEMC Board of Directors. As jointly endorsed by the market participants and the DoE, it is IEMOP that takes on this role to pursue the WESM objectives of having a transparent, fair, competitive, and reliable market for the trading of electricity throughout the Philippines.

As market operator, IEMOP is bound to strictly comply with the EPIRA, its Implementing Rules and Regulations, the WESM Rules and other related issuances of the DoE. Its service obligations are reiterated in the Operating Agreement it executed with PEMC, which agreement also formalized the transfer from PEMC of the assets and liabilities pertaining to market operations effective Sept. 26.

Beginning Sept. 26, IEMOP becomes the operator of the electricity market to manage the registration of market participants, receive generation offers, come out with market prices and dispatch schedules of the generation plants, and handle billing, settlement, and collections, among other functions. Under the policy and regulatory oversight of the DoE and the ERC (Energy Regulatory Commission), PEMC remains as governing body for WESM to monitor compliance by the market participants with the market rules.

Under the new setup, the transformation of the WESM is inevitable. The roles of governing body and market operator are now clearly delineated. They can now focus on their respective roles. Handing over the market operation to an independent entity bodes well for more transparency, fairness, and accountability in WESM. In time, the impact of conveying the governance of the WESM to market stakeholders and entrusting its operation in the capable hands of the IEMOP will manifest in terms of more competitive WESM and renewed investor confidence. In the end, it is the electricity end-users that stand to benefit from a stable supply of electricity at efficient and competitive prices. This is the only fitting ending to the new WESM story.

Palace moves to boost farm supply

By Arjay L. Balinbin
Reporter
MALACAÑANG has issued four orders, all dated Sept. 21, to help improve supply of agricultural products in the market.
Administrative Order No. 13 directed the National Food Authority (NFA), the Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) and the Department of Agriculture (DA) — in coordination with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) — to lift non-tariff barriers and streamline administrative procedures in the importation of such products.
Among others, the agencies were told to streamline procedures and requirements in accreditation of importers; minimize processing time for approval of applications for imports; exempt traders that are already accredited from registration requirements; facilitate importation of select farm products beyond their authorized minimum access volume (MAV) by reducing or removing fees involved; liberalize issuance of permits and accreditation of traders who want to import rice and, when necessary, temporarily allow direct importation of sugar-using industries to cut their input cost.
The order also authorizes the NFA Council “to approve additional rice importation beyond the MAV commitment… for allocation to the private sector”; DA to allow importation of more fish “to augment the 17,000 metric tons (MT)… already being distributed in the market”; the Bureau of Customs to prioritize unloading and release of farm products; DA and DTI to “take concrete steps to improve logistics, transport, distribution and storage of agricultural products” and for DTI, NFA,the National Bureau of Investigation and the Philippine National Police (PNP) — with private sector assistance — to form surveillance teams to monitor importation and distribution of farm products to warehouses and retail outlets.
Memorandum Order No. 28 directs the NFA “to immediately release to markets approximately 230,000 MT of rice currently in stock in its warehouses across the country” and “the 100,000 MT… previously contracted to be delivered” by the end of this month.
In a phone interview, NFA Spokesman Rex C. Estoperez said the country will be bringing in 750,000 MT next quarter. “May mga stocks pa naman ang NFA, so pag dating ng imports (NFA still has stocks, so when the imports arrive), hopefully we can influence the price of the market.”
Memorandum Order No 26 directs DA and DTI to take steps to reduce the gap between farmgate and retail prices, “including the setting up of public outlets and cold storage [facilities] where producers of agricultural commodities, as well as poultry producers, can sell directly to customers”.
In a mobile phone message, Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez said such measures include “arrangements that will lead to more direct supply of goods from producers to market: NFA rice in supermarkets on top of NFA retail stores in public markets; DTI, DA, and NFA will open up outlets in community centers in LGUs (local areas) to directly connect producers to sellers; and expand SRP (suggested retail price) system for select basic agricultural products to manage better the margins of traders and retailers.”
Finally, Memorandum No. 27 directs DA, the Department of Interior and Local Government, the PNP and the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority to take steps “to ensure efficient, seamless delivery of imported agriculture and fishery products from ports to markets”, including designation of food lanes along roads for trucks transporting agricultural products.

Gov’t plans P270-B Q4 borrowing

By Karl Angelo N. Vidal
Reporter
THE GOVERNMENT plans to borrow P270 billion from the domestic market next quarter through auctions of securities, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) announced on Tuesday.
In a memorandum posted on its Web site, the Treasury said it will sell P180 billion worth of Treasury bills (T-bill) and P90 billion worth of Treasury bonds (T-bond) in the next three months.
The planned borrowing for October-December is slightly less than the P300 billion it offered this quarter but more than the P150 billion placed on the auction block in 2017’s fourth quarter.
Broken down, the government plans to raise P15 billion through T-bills — P4 billion in 91-day tenor, P5 billion in 182-day debt, and P6 billion in 364-day bills — which will be offered in five auctions in October four in November and three in December.
For T-bonds, the Treasury will auction off five-year, seven-year and 10-year debt papers.
Following Tuesday’s T-bond sale, Deputy Treasurer Erwin D. Sta. Ana said: “Basically, it’s the same approach as the last quarter. Same volume and same frequency.”
This quarter, out of its P300-billion program, the government borrowed P200.6 billion from domestic creditors, with bulk of awards made in Treasury bills.
One bond trader noted the planned borrowing was “more on the long end,” saying the government was “trying to catch up with rising interest rates. If their projection is higher inflation number, I guess they better lock in the yields for their borrowing.”
The central bank is widely expected to adopt another 50-basis point interest rate hike tomorrow, after a cumulative 100-bp hike so far this year.

Labor chief estimates NCR floor wage hike at no less than P20

By Gillian M. Cortez
BUSINESSES in Metro Manila may have to pay their minimum wage workers at least P20 more per day — roughly the same increment under the prevailing wage order — once the National Capital Region (NCR) gets new rates next month, the Labor chief said on Tuesday.
Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said over radio station dzMM that a daily minimum wage “adjustment” can be expected “next month,” adding in a press conference at the Department of Labor and Employment’s (DoLE) headquarters in Manila that “[i]t won’t go below P20.”
Kung ibababa pa ‘yan, hindi mararamdaman ang adjustment (Any less and the adjustment won’t be felt by the minimum wage earner),” Mr. Bello explained.
[‘Yun] ang pinarating sa atin ng… head ng NWPC (That is what the head of the National Wages and Productivity Commission told me),” he had said in the morning radio interview, adding “… [‘yun] lang ang kaya (It’s what we can give).”
“Any time now, the (Regional Tripartite Wage and Productivity) Board is going to submit their recommendation for the approval of the NWPC,” he added at the DoLE head office.
Wage Order No. NCR-21, which took effect on Oct. 5 last year, raised Metro Manila’s daily minimum wage for private-sector workers by P21 to P475 for agriculture establishments, retail/service businesses employing up to 15 workers and manufacturing establishments with less than 10 employees, as well as to P512 for non-farm workers.
By law, daily minimum wage rates cannot be adjusted within a year after the prevailing wage order took effect, except in the case of supervening conditions like unduly high inflation rates.
So far, 12 of the country’s 17 regions have new wage orders:

• Cordillera Administrative Region: P20-30 to P300-320 that took effect Aug. 20;

• Ilocos Region (Region 1): P13-30 to P256-310 effective Jan. 25;

• Central Luzon (Region 3): P16 to P264-380, Aug. 1;

• Calabarzon (Region 4A covering Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon): P9-21.50 to P303-400, Aug. 20;

• Bicol Region (Region 5): P20-30, effective Sept. 21, to P310 by the end of the second tranche due May 1 next year;

• Western Visayas (Region 6): P8.50 to P295-P365, effective July 12;

• Central Visayas (Region 7): P10-52 to P313-386 effective Aug. 3;

• Eastern Visayas (Region 8, June 25): P20-30 to P275-303, effective June 25;

• Zamboanga Peninsula (Region 9): P20 to P303-316, effective July 30;

• Davao Region (Region 11): P56 to P381-396, effective Aug. 16

• Soccsksargen (Region 12 covering South Cotabato, Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani and General Santos City): P16-18 to P290-P311, effective May 11;

• Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao: P15 to P270-280, effective June 15.

Besides the NCR wage board, still to issue their new orders are those of Cagayan Valley (Region 2) and Mimaropa (Region 4-B covering Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon and Palawan) in Luzon as well as Caraga in eastern Mindanao and Northern Mindanao (Region 10).
Mr. Bello said in the Tuesday press conference that “Region 2 will be next.”
Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr., honorary chairman of the Employers Confederation of the Philippines, said any increase in daily minimum wage at this time of multiyear-high inflation rates would weigh heavily on small- and medium-scale enterprises which account for about 99.6% of the country’s businesses and provide 70% of jobs. “As much as possible, the minimum wage shouldn’t be touched,” he said in a telephone interview on Tuesday.