Home Blog Page 12033

Melco Resorts PHL to delist from PSE

CITY OF DREAMS Manila was developed by Melco Resorts and Entertainment (Philippines) and Belle Corp. — AFP

MELCO RESORTS and Entertainment (Philippines) Corp. said on Monday it is voluntarily delisting from the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE).
In a disclosure to the stock exchange, Melco Resorts Philippines said its board of directors had approved the voluntary delisting of the company’s common shares from the main board of the stock exchange.
The listed firm said its majority shareholder MCO (Philippines) Investments Limited will conduct a tender offer for up to P1,543,421,147 outstanding common shares held by the public at P7.25 per share. This represents 27.23% of the company’s outstanding capital stock.
Melco Resorts Philippines, which operates City of Dreams Manila, said the tender offer report will be filed with the PSE and Securties and Exchange Commission “on or around Sept. 17.”
For the first six months of 2018, the company reported its net income surged 437% to P1.89 billion, from P352.2 million during the same period a year ago, “primarily related to improved operating results as well as lower interest expense, net of capitalized interest.”
However, total operating revenues were 1% lower at P16.54 billion for the first half, due to the adoption of a new revenue standard “which resulted in higher commissions paid to gaming promoters being deducted from casino revenues.”
Casino revenues for the January to June period dropped 13% to P13.48 billion. This was attributed to the P4.2 billion “more commission paid to gaming promoters and complimentary goods and services deducted from casino revenues,” but was partially offset by higher casino revenues of P2.17 billion.
Revenues from the Nuwa hotel, Nobu Hotel and Hyatt City of Dreams, jumped 164% to P1.37 billion during the first six months of 2018.
On the other hand, operating costs and expenses dropped 9% to P13.56 billion.
Located inside the state-run Entertainment City, the City of Dreams Manila was developed by Melco Resorts Philippines alongside Sy-led Belle Corp.
City of Dreams Manila was the second integrated resort and casino to open in the area, after Bloomberry Corp.’s Solaire Resorts and Casino in 2013.
Shares in MRP rose 11.11% to close at P6.9 each on Monday.

Bustling condominium sector attracting more suppliers to Philconstruct Mindanao

DAVAO CITY — About 40 new companies joined this year’s Philconstruct Mindanao, pulled in mainly by the flurry of condominium projects in Davao City.
Patrick Lawrence Tan, chief executive officer of Global-Link MP Events International Inc. (GLMP) that organizes the event, said about 300 brands participated in the expo, held back-to-back with the Pack Print Plas and Manufacturing Technology Davao 2018 over the weekend.
Many of the participants are suppliers for finishing products such as flooring, various home equipment, air-conditioner, air filtration, and cleaning systems.
“There are a lot of air conditioning companies that are here, all the big brands. I think because they know the market is here and there is a lot of residential condos that are being built,” Mr. Tan said.
He said modern construction machinery and other related technology were also prominent at this year’s expo, the 9th staging of the event, not only for real estate projects but also for public infrastructure works.
“The industry is not only growing… if you look at the shows, it’s technology based. (And) unlike before it’s more of inquiry-based, but now it is different… The booths are displaying products that are suitable for the (Mindanao) market,” Mr. Tan said.
“Looking at the structures and land base… Most of the buildings are not high so the structural studies are quite different,” he added.
PhilConstruct also held the TechnoForum Mindanao, a series of seminars to provide a learning platform for over 8,000 trade professionals and buyers during the three-day show.
“The exhibitors see a dynamic economy in Davao and in Mindanao. They look at the potential, and in fact next year, the show will be split into two: one week after another because the event is growing and the markets are very dynamic. Construction is moving forward, real estate prices are growing… There is money going around here,” Mr. Tan said. — Maya M. Padillo

Gov’t makes partial award of T-bills as rates rise

THE GOVERNMENT made a partial award of the Treasury bills (T-bill) on offer yesterday, even with yields climbing across all tenors as investors await the possible rate hike by the local central bank following the faster-than-expected August inflation print.
The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised just P13.47 billion during the T-bills auction on Monday, falling short of the P15 billion it intended to borrow.
This, even as the offer remained oversubscribed as total tenders amounted to P21.9 billion, lower than last week’s P27.5 billion.
Broken down, the government partially awarded the 91-day T-bills on offer, borrowing just P2.47 billion out of the P4 billion it wanted to raise. Total bids from banks reached P5.78 billion and the average rate picked up to 3.549%, 32.4 basis points (bps) higher than the 3.225% logged in the previous auction.
Meanwhile, the BTr awarded P5 billion as planned in the 182-day debt papers versus tenders totaling P8.075 billion. The average yield ended 25.2 bps higher at 4.353% from last week’s 4.125%.
The Treasury also borrowed the programmed P6 billion via the 364-day T-bills, with demand reaching P8.051 billion. The papers were quoted at 5.137%, up 23.8 bps from the 4.899% booked the previous offer.
At the secondary market ahead of the auction yesterday, the three- and six-month papers were quoted at 4.2804% and 4.4054%, respectively, while the yield on the one-year T-bills was at 5.4179%.
At the close of trading, all tenors rallied to fetch lower rates. The 91-day papers yielded 3.5298%, the 182-day debt fetched 4.368% and the 364-day T-bills were quoted at 4.9662%.
National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said rates climbed across-the- board as the inflation figure triggered bets of another hike from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
“What do you expect? [Investors] are already saying that the BSP should be hiking by another 50 basis points,” Ms. De Leon told reporters following the auction.
The average rise in prices of widely used goods picked up to a nine-year high of 6.4% in August due to higher food and oil prices. This was faster than July’s 5.7% as well as the 2.6% tallied in the same month last year.
On Friday, BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. hinted on another round of tightening, saying that the monetary authority will take “strong immediate action” to respond to emerging threats to prices and inflation expectations.
Mr. Espenilla added that the Monetary Board may meet ahead of the Sept. 27 meeting to address such issues.
Ms. De Leon added that the elevated bids will likely persist until the central bank convenes since the market is expecting another hike.
“That would go on because they’re anticipating… Analysts would also want to see the BSP to anchor inflationary expectations,” she said.
Meanwhile, a trader said the Treasury tried to catch up with the bids given the “spike” in inflation last month.
“We saw a huge pickup especially in the 91-day [tenor] since bids are pulled back. They tried to catch up,” the trader said in a phone interview.
The government is set to borrow P300 billion from the domestic market this quarter through auctions of securities, offering P195 billion in T-bills and another P105 billion in Treasury bonds. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Two big voices belting on one stage

LANI MISALUCHA and Morissette Amon

A VERSATILE songstress often called “Asia’s Nightingale,” Lani Misalucha shares the stage with up-and-comer Morissette Amon in a two-night concert this Sept. 22 and 23 at the Theatre at Solaire Resort and Casino in Parañaque City.
The concert titled “A Lani Morissette: Musical Journey” (a play on the name of Alanis Morissette, the Canadian-American singer behind Jagged Little Pill) will consist of “unexpected song choices that showcase their versatility, vocal range and own style of performance,” said a press release.
Ms. Misalucha first burst into the Philippine music scene with her 1996 hit “Ang Iibigin ay Ikaw,” which was a finalist at the Metro Manila Popular Song Festival (Metropop) and the winner of the Record of the Year award at the Awit Awards in the same year.
Three years later, she once again entered MetroPop with the song “Can’t Stop Loving You.” This time, the song, written by Elzar “Dodjie” Simon, won the contest’s top prize.
Her career in the Philippines following her debut earned her more honors, including 1999’s Artist of the Year Award, Aliw Award for Best Lounge Act, Awit Award for Best Performance by a Female Recording Artist, and an Awit Award Nomination for Best Stage Actress for her role in S.K. Production’s musical play Rama at Sita, where she played the titular Sita.
She has released 15 albums so far and her hits include “Sana Dalawa ang Puso Ko,” “Bukas Na Lang Kita Mamahalin” and “Tunay na Mahal.”
In 2004, she moved her family to the United States and continued her career by performing in Las Vegas. Her stint there earned her another nickname: “Siren of the Strip.”
In 2008, she was voted the Best Singer (staff pick) in the 27th Annual Best of Las Vegas poll by the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Meanwhile, Morissette Amon, gained prominence after joining the first season of ABS-CBN’s The Voice Philippines (the Philippine edition of the Dutch singing contest franchise, The Voice). Though she failed to make it to the finals, Ms. Amon eventually signed with Star Records, which produced her eponymous debut album. Her song “Akin Ka Na Lang,” which was part of Himig Handog’s 2014 slate, became popular because it showed her mastery of the whistle register.
“They’re asking for a showdown, although we don’t want the concert to appear like a showdown between Morissette and I, we might give the audience a little of what they’re asking for,” Ms. Misalucha said during the press conference on Aug. 21 at Solaire Resort and Casino.
Ms. Misalucha admitted that, at 46, she doesn’t have the same stamina she used to have. “I really need to prepare myself,” she said in the press release. Meanwhile, Ms. Amon is working on calming her nerves at the thought of sharing the stage with Ms. Misalucha. “She’s one of the music icons I really look up to,” said Ms. Amon of the older singer.
“I’m also very happy that we jive in so many ways—not just in our singing style but also our personalities,” Ms. Amon said in the release. — Zsarlene B. Chua
“A Lani Morissette: Musical Journey” will be held on September 22 and 23 at the Theatre in Solaire Resort and Casino. Tickets are available at Ticketworld: visit ticketworld.com.ph or call 891-9999.

Metro Pacific Tollways unit raises stake in Indonesian firm to 78%

A UNIT of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) increased its stake in Indonesian infrastructure firm PT Nusantara Infrastructure Tbk, as the result of a mandatory tender offer.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Monday, parent company Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) said PT Metro Pacific Tollways Indonesia (PT MPTI) now owns 77.94%, on a fully diluted basis, of the outstanding capital stock of PT Nusantara.
“As a result of the mandatory tender offer, a total of 3,760,231,769 PT Nusantara shares, which is equivalent to 24.68% on a fully diluted basis, were tendered at an approved price of IDR 211 per share,” MPIC said.
MPIC said the total cost stood at IDR 794.54 billion, which is equivalent to P2.86 billion.
In July, PT MPTI raised its stake in PT Nusantara to 53.26%, prompting the conduct of a mandatory tender offer. At that time, PT Nusantara’s minority shareholders collectively owned 44.21% of the firm, with the other 2.53% held as treasury shares.
PT Nusantara is involved in toll roads, water, energy, port operations and telecommunications. It operates a total of 34.47 kilometers in toll roads in Indonesia.
The partnership between MPTC and PT Nusantara comes as the former looks to expand its toll road business in Southeast Asia.
MPTC currently has a 29.45% stake in Don Muang Tollway Public Company Limited, a major toll road operator in Bangkok, Thailand, and 44.9% in CII Bridges and Roads, a firm with road and bridges projects in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Domestically, the company operates the North Luzon Expressway, Subic Clark Tarlac Expressway, and Cavite Expressway. It also has three toll road concessions under construction, namely the Cavite Laguna Expressway, the Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway, and the NLEx-South Luzon Expressway Connector Road.
MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of First Pacific, the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. 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.

HK’s rich get richer flipping floors in property frenzy

IN Hong Kong, a city of property superlatives, add this one: World capital of flipping office floors.
Logistics heir Johnny Cheung Shun-yee made roughly HK$900 million ($115 million) in about nine months by buying and selling two floors of the city’s most expensive office building, based on estimates in local media reports.
Dubbed “Logistics Cheung” by the local tabloids because of his family’s Man Sun Logistics Ltd., the businessman sold the 49th and 50th floors of a 346-meter skyscraper called The Center in August.
He’s far from alone in chasing riches this way. Wealthy individuals and families are slicing and dicing office buildings that would be too expensive to buy outright, giving them access to a market unencumbered by government efforts to slow home-price gains. The value of so-called strata-title office deals in the Chinese enclave reached $3.8 billion in the first half, doubling from a year earlier, according to Real Capital Analytics.
Among the world’s biggest commercial hubs, only New York comes close to boasting similar volumes over the past half-decade.
Strata-title deals allow for separate owners of sections of buildings, as opposed to an entire property being owned by a single entity. Back in 1952, developer Ng Tor Tai started floor-by-floor sales in Hong Kong by asking lawyers to devise a new ownership structure for two of his buildings in Tsim Sha Tsui, according to C.K. Lau, head of valuations advisory services at Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.
The deals allow deep-pocketed investors to make quick profits in an office market where prices have more than doubled over the past decade, while still remaining cheaper than luxury housing on a square-foot basis. Office space has the added lure of lower stamp duties than in residential transactions.
Mr. Cheung was part of a consortium of investors which bought 75 percent of The Center from billionaire Li Ka-shing’s empire last year for $5.2 billion, the world’s biggest office property deal. The final group also included the “Minibus King” Ma Ah Muk, the “King of Cassettes” Chan Ping Che, and the “Queen of Shell Companies” Pollyanna Chu Yuet Wah, to use the nicknames local press have bestowed on them.
SELLING THE CENTER
Three consortium members, including Mr. Cheung, have since divested at least three floors and part of a fourth floor in strata-title deals, according to local media reports. The fourth floor was carved into 12 units, according to property broker Midland IC&I Ltd.
Mr. Cheung bought the Center floors for less than half the square-foot price of a typical luxury home, he said in an interview where he shrugged off questions about risks. “It’s a good investment. The Center is a grade-A office building in Central, after all.”
Office costs in Central, the main business district on Hong Kong Island, are the highest in the world.
Mr. Cheung sold the two floors for HK$50,000 and HK$52,000 per square foot, respectively, according to local media reports, which cited unidentified people. That adds up to HK$2.6 billion, based on the size of the floors. At a reported average purchase price of HK$33,000 per square foot, Mr. Cheung would have paid about HK$1.7 billion. Mr. Cheung, who still holds a third floor, declined to discuss details of the sales.
When it comes to the pool of families and individuals with enough money to do strata-title deals, Hong Kong has few peers. The city surpassed New York last year for the number of people with wealth of at least $30 million, according to research firm Wealth-X. The city’s individuals in that category numbered about 10,000. Hong Kong had 170,400 millionaires in 2017, according to Capgemini SE, or about one in 50 residents.
Wealthy people investing in Hong Kong’s strata office market usually have experience in real estate and often have backgrounds in metals trading or construction materials, according to Daniel Mok, director of capital markets at CBRE Group Inc. Individuals account for about half of the deals, he estimated, adding that “we have also seen some local families partner up to establish investment funds.”
In 2017, there were 205 strata-title office transactions of more than HK$30 million each, according to Colliers International Group Inc.
While the stamp duty on commercial purchases is capped at 8.5 percent, the rate can reach as high as 30 percent on residential deals. Selling residential real estate within six months of buying can incur an extra 20 percent tax.
With Chinese demand for commercial space showing no signs of weakening and limited new supply, speculators deterred by government efforts to curb prices in the residential market continue to flock to strata-title deals.
In April, the 34th floor of 9 Queen’s Road Central set a record square-foot price for a strata-title sale, surpassing the previous mark by 11 percent, according to Midland IC&I. Offices in the core business area, including Central and Admiralty, are particularly sought after.
“Investors can see that there won’t be land plots available for development in the near future, while rents in Central have been rising,” said Adrian Tang, head of Kowloon markets and strata-title office sales at Jones Lang LaSalle. — Bloomberg

RCBC offers first tranche of P20-B LTNCD program

RIZAL COMMERCIAL Banking Corp. (RCBC) has started its offer the first tranche of its P20-billion long-term negotiable certificates of deposit (LTNCD) program to raise funds.
In a regulatory filing on Monday, the Yuchengco-led bank said it will raise an undisclosed amount from the peso-denominated issue.
The issuance constitutes the first tranche of its P20-billion LTNCD program approved by the central bank last July 12.
The notes being offered will mature in five years and six months.
RCBC started offering the debt papers yesterday, with the sale to run until Sept. 21. The issue and listing date is targeted for Sept. 28.
The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd. will serve as the sole lead manager of the offer. It will also act as a selling agent alongside Multinational Investment Bancorporation, RCBC and RCBC Savings Bank.
Like regular time deposits offered by banks, LTNCDs offer higher interest rates. However, LTNCDs cannot be pre-terminated but can be sold on the secondary market, making them “negotiable.”
In June, RCBC raised P15 billion through a stock rights offer to strengthen its capital ratio and fund its business expansion. It also offered the second tranche of its senior unsecured fixed-rate notes worth $150 million in April under its medium-term note facility.
A number of banks have been tapping the capital markets in recent months to raise more funds ahead of tighter risk management measures that will take effect on Jan. 1, 2019 under the international Basel 3 standards.
RCBC posted a P2.2-billion net income in the first semester, down 6.4% from a year ago.
Shares in RCBC closed unchanged at P27.65 apiece on Monday. — K.A.N. Vidal

Moonves leaves CBS over sexual misconduct claims

US television giant CBS announced Sunday the immediate departure of powerful CEO Leslie Moonves, one of the biggest scalps in the #MeToo era, following a slew of escalating sexual misconduct allegations.
Mr. Moonves, who transformed the corporation into the most watched television network in the country, was one of the most respected executives in Hollywood until he was first publicly accused.
Two articles published by The New Yorker—on July 27 and on the day that his departure was announced—detailed allegations against the 68-year-old television titan from 12 different women.
CBS subsequently declared that he would depart as chairman, president and CEO “effective immediately,” and that he and the network would donate $20 million to supporting the #MeToo movement and equality for women in the workplace.
“The donation, which will be made immediately, has been deducted from any severance benefits that may be due Moonves,” CBS said.
The disgraced CEO will not receive any compensation, pending the results of an investigation into the allegations against him being conducted by two blue-chip law firms, the corporation announced.
“Any payments to be made in the future will depend upon the results of the independent investigation and subsequent board evaluation,” CBS announced in a statement.
Mr. Moonves’s departure had been widely expected, with US media reporting that the terms of his exit had been under negotiation for weeks, and a deal had been anticipated before markets open Monday.
POLICE REPORT
At least one report had suggested that he could get a golden handshake of $100 million in stock.
One of his accusers, Jessica Pallingston, told the Pulitzer-winning journalist Ronan Farrow, who broke the allegations against Mr. Moonves in The New Yorker, that such a payoff would be “completely disgusting.”
CBS announced that chief operating officer Joseph Ianniello will be president and acting CEO, overseeing all operations of the company, while the board searches for a permanent successor.
Along with Mr. Moonves’s departure, CBS said it had agreed to settle a lawsuit with National Amusements pending in Delaware that would appoint six new independent directors to the board.
The deal upheld the control of the Redstone family, whose members control an 80% voting stake in CBS, who agreed to drop—for at least two years—a proposed merger with the Viacom group.
In July, Mr. Farrow’s first bombshell report detailed sexual harassment allegations from six women and complaints from dozens of others about a culture within the company tolerating sexual misconduct.
While CBS appointed a team of lawyers to investigate, there was outrage from some advocates that Mr. Moonves was kept on the job.
On Sunday, The New Yorker published allegations from another six women, who said that Mr. Moonves sexually harassed or assaulted them between 1980 and the early 2000s.
They included claims that Mr. Moonves forced them into perform oral sex, exposed himself to them without their consent, and that he used physical violence and intimidation against them. Some of them also said Mr. Moonves retaliated after being rebuffed, damaging their careers.
One of the women, television executive Phyllis Golden-Gottlieb, filed a criminal complaint last year with Los Angeles police. The New Yorker said that while police found her allegations “credible” the alleged incidents happened too long ago to prosecute.
Mr. Moonves told the magazine that three of the encounters were consensual.
“I have never used my position to hinder the advancement or careers of women,” he said.
“In my 40 years of work, I have never before heard of such disturbing accusations. I can only surmise they are surfacing now for the first time, decades later, as part of a concerted effort by others to destroy my name, my reputation and my career.” — AFP

AirAsia joins consortium for Clark O&M bid

AIRASIA Group Bhd. is joining a consortium, which includes Indonesian airport operator PT Angkasa Pura, that will make a bid for the operations and management (O&M) contract for Clark International Airport in Pampanga.
Dexter M. Comendador, Philippines AirAsia CEO, said the budget carrier is preparing the bid submission for the Clark O&M contract.
“It’s in progress. We’re just a small part of the consortium,” he said.
Aside from AirAsia, the consortium includes PT Angkasa Pura — an operator of multiple airports in Indonesia; an unnamed Philippine company, and foreign company.
Last month, AirAsia Group CEO Tony Fernandes revealed on Twitter the company’s interest in bidding for the Clark airport.
“Bringing Asean together. Indonesia, Malaysia and Philippines to bid for Clarke (sic) airport in Manila and build a big East Asean hub. Walking the talk on Asean. Kudos to Indonesia airports. Look what can be done in Asean when we work together,” Mr. Fernandes said in an Aug. 3 tweet.
The government is bidding out the 25-year, P5.61-billion O&M contract for the Clark International Airport.
In May, eight companies already bought the bid documents, namely the consortium of Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR Infrastructure Ltd.; Metro Pacific Investments Corp.; Filinvest Development Corp.; San Miguel Holdings Corp.; Prime Asset Ventures, Inc.; Central Luzon Infrastructure Consultancy, Inc.; Consortium; GVK Airport Developers Ltd.; and Groupe ADP.
The new passenger terminal building in the Clark airport is targeted to open in July 2020.
Meanwhile, Mr. Comendador, a former pilot, expressed concern over air safety, if the government’s plans to build other airports near Manila push through.
He noted the air space in the Metro Manila area is getting crowded with the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, Clark, Basa Airbase, Sangley Point and Subic airports operating so close to one another.
The skies are expected to get even busier if San Miguel Corp. gets the go-signal to build a New Manila International Airport in Bulacan.
“The point is, at the moment, it’s already busy up there. If the air space is getting too crowded, and you want to add a sixth airport within the 60 nautical mile radius, it’s going to be a nightmare on the air,” Mr. Comendador said.
“If you move some of the traffic into Clark, then it will loosen up Manila a bit. But you add a third airport that is planning to put in four runways, Clark is trying to have three runways in the future, that’s just my concern,” he added. — Denise A. Valdez

Pueblo de Oro to launch residential subdivision in Batangas by 2019

PUEBLO de Oro Development Corp. (PDO) is developing a 40-hectare residential subdivision in Malvar, Batangas.
In a statement issued Wednesday, the property unit of Investment & Capital Corporation of the Philippines (ICCP) said the residential subdivision will be launched in the fourth quarter of 2019.
It is part of the 250-hectare “live-work” community being developed by its sister firm, Science Park of the Philippines, Inc. (SPPI).
PDO said it chose to expand in Batangas due to the projected influx of locators in the area from Southeast Asian countries.
“With ASEAN integration and the pick-up in the economy, we expect more multinationals and industrial locators to come in and setup in areas outside Metro Manila such as Batangas,” PDO President Rhoel Alberto B. Nolido said in a statement.
PDO currently has several projects around the country, with its first being a 360-hectare township in Cagayan de Oro developed in 1995. Others are located in Mactan, Cebu; San Fernando, Pampanga; and Sto. Tomas, Batangas.
Its residential projects carry the brands La Aldea del Mar, Park Place, and Horizon Residences.
PDO’s expansion comes after its positive performance in 2017, where it recorded a 38% increase in sales to P1.3 billion. Its net income accordingly grew by 130% to P204.4 million, versus the P89.8 million it posted in the same period a year ago.
“We secured further growth potential in the financial year by expanding and improving our portfolio. Our latest acquisitions and collaborations make us confident that we will continue on this course for this year and onward,” Mr. Nolido said.
PDO also cited the need for more housing projects in the country, given the six-million unit housing backlog, according to government data. The company said the backlog is projected to increase to as high as 10 million units by 2030.
“The housing sector must work quickly to produce enough decent homes to make a dent on this huge demand. This is the reason PDO is constantly looking for opportunities to take advantage of this market and develop new and improved housing models which buyers will be proud to own,” Mr. Nolido said.
PDO is part of the ICCP Group, which was established in the country 27 years ago with the DBS Bank of Singapore. The group also has a venture capital unit through ICCP Venture Partners, Inc., and another property firm with SPPI.
SPPI develops industrial parks in the country, with more than 800 hectares of industrial estates under its portfolio. — Arra B. Francia

Rediscount borrowings reach P9.41B in August

BORROWINGS from the BSP’s rediscount facility surged in August. — BW FILE PHOTO

BANKS SCRAMBLED to get hold of rediscount loans from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) in August to hit nearly P10 billion at a time of rising interest rates.
Peso rediscount loans reached P9.41 billion for the month, soaring from the P838 million availed by the lenders in July.
The spike in rediscount loans brought the eight-month tally to P20.024 billion, well above the P470 million incurred during the comparable period in 2017.
The BSP’s rediscount window allows banks get hold of additional money supply by posting their collectibles from clients as collateral. The banks may use the fresh cash — expressed in the peso, dollar or yen — to grant more loans for corporate or retail clients as well as service unexpected withdrawals.
Nearly half of the rediscount loans to support capital expenses, which accounted for 41.4% of the running total. Meanwhile, commercial lending also reached nearly 31% while credit for permanent working capital took up a fourth of the sum, the BSP said.
The rediscount facility likewise allows the BSP to fulfill its role as lender of last resort by arming banks with additional liquidity when they need it.
Banks expanded their rediscount loan lines in August, which came amid a series of tightening moves from the BSP. Benchmark rates were raised by another 50 basis points (bps) during the central bank’s Aug. 9 policy meeting, marking its strongest response in a decade as inflation continues to trend above target.
This follows two hikes worth 25 bps each in May and June, which was the BSP’s way of reining in inflation expectations as price pressures keep mounting. This brought benchmark yields to the 3.5-4.5% range.
Inflation has leaped to a fresh nine-year high of 6.4% in August, beating market expectations and surpassing the 2-4% target band.
As of Aug. 13, rates for peso rediscount borrowings stand at 4.5625% for loans up to 90-day loans and 4.625% for 91-180 day loans. This is based on the BSP’s overnight lending rate plus a premium.
On the other hand, the dollar and yen loan facilities remained unused in August, sustaining a trend observed last year. Loan margins also dropped from the previous month.
For September, rates for dollar borrowings slid to 4.32075% for one to 90-day loans; 4.38325% for 91- to 180-day loans; and 4.44575% for 181- to 360-day loans, the BSP said yesterday. Yields imposed on yen-denominated loans softened to 1.96767% for one to 90-day loans, 2.03017% for 91- to 180-day loans, and 2.09267% for 181- to 360-day loans.
Bank analysts said that the sustained price spikes merit another tightening move from the central bank this month, possibly by another 50 bps in order to temper future inflation. This, in turn, will push both rediscount and market interest rates higher. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Toronto film festival looks at politics and sex

DO VOTERS need to know about a political candidate’s sex life? This came up during Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign but also three decades earlier when adultery ended another presidential run now the focus of a new film.
Director Jason Reitman’s The Front Runner, about US Senator Gary Hart’s 1988 presidential campaign and the scandalous affair that derailed it, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. It stars Hugh Jackman, Vera Farmiga and J.K. Simmons.
“The film is always asking what should we know, what do we need to know, what do we want to know,” Mr. Reitman told a press conference on Saturday.
“You ask one person and they’ll say I don’t need to know what’s going on in the president’s bedroom… And the next person might say he’s the president and everything should be available, he should have no secrets.”
After two terms of Ronald Reagan in the White House, the Democrats were eager to wrestle back power in 1988.
Mr. Hart was their star candidate, with intelligence, charisma and a strong political pedigree. But it all fell apart when it came out that he was a womanizer who had an affair with a young woman, Donna Rice. Mr. Hart dropped out of the race.
The film is based on journalist Matt Bai’s book All the Truth is Out: The Week Politics Went Tabloid.
In order to adapt the story for the silver screen, he teamed up with Jay Carson, who was press secretary for former secretary of state Hillary Clinton during her failed 2008 presidential bid.
Although the script was written before the 2016 election, when Trump was accused of paying hush money to two women with whom he allegedly had affairs—porn actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal—Mr. Carson insists, “It’s a way to speak to what we’re going through today.”
“It’s a way to engage with the questions that we’re asking ourselves today without the divisiveness of having to be talking about something that’s happening right now,” echoed producer Helen Estabrook.
The movie presents all sorts of viewpoints, from the candidate himself defending his privacy, to journalists questioning his morality, and political staffers left to deal with the fallout.
There has certainly been a shift in what American voters want to glean about their leaders over the past three decades.
Mr. Bai suggested that the public cares less now about extramarital affairs when they cast a ballot. “What is the measure of someone’s integrity? I think those are questions we still wrestle with, particularly in a news cycle that goes so fast,” he said.
“Do we (as journalists) assume that everyone is lying and fraudulent and it’s our job to find out how. Or do we endeavor to provide context? … What have they been for their whole lives, their careers, how have they voted, have they been corrupt, have they been honest with constituents in addition to their wife?” Mr. Bai asked.
Mr. Jackman, who hung out with Mr. Hart to prepare for the role, noted: “Post-Watergate every single journalist, every voter assumes there is a flaw that needs to be found out.”
But, added Mr. Carson, “whoever we’re going to elect is a human being and a human being has flaws. “So we have to ask ourselves what kind of flaws do we want in that person,” he said.
Mr. Reitman said he showed the film last week to Mr. Hart, and then they went out for hot chocolate. The movie will be released on Nov. 6, coinciding US midterm elections. — AFP

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT