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LTFRB command and control, and passengers inconvenience

HERE’s a mixture of news for traffic-wary motorists and passengers in Metro Manila and other big cities in the country.
The good news: (1) more big infrastructure projects like skyway extension, M.Manila subway and Makati subway are either near completion or about to start construction, and (2) regular passengers of transport network vehicle service (TNVS) will soon experience shorter waiting time as the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) has increased the number of accredited cars by 10,000 last August 24.
The bad news: (3) many roads leading to and after exiting the skyway will remain congested because of the big volume of vehicles, (4) the 10,000 new TNVS cars to be accredited by LTFRB are not enough to significantly bring down waiting time and fares, and (5) many accredited but inactive, suspended, or booted out TNVS drivers and their cars are still not delisted in the LTFRB “masterlist” and hence, cannot be replaced by new ones who can help expand the number of available ride-sharing vehicles.
The LTFRB is ground zero of these endless problems not only with TNVS but also other types of public transportation in the country. Here are the reasons.
One, franchise control. Putting a small and fixed cap on the number of accredited TNVS, UV express vehicles, buses, taxis, resulting in huge numbers of people unable to get fast and safe rides. Queuing and waiting too long, or standing in cramped, heavily-loaded buses and jeepneys, force many people to drive their cars, which further worsens traffic congestion.
In the table below, when there was still Grab-Uber competition, total number of cars and drivers was 43,000. After the merger, it went down to 35,000 because LTFRB did not and would not accredit 8,000 former Uber drivers and cars to be absorbed by Grab. The immediate result is longer waiting time for passengers and higher fares as additional disincentives for limited drivers to go into heavy traffic or frequently flooded areas.

Two, fare control. Fare-setting is not a function of rise or fall of oil prices, or degree of competition per route per hour, but a function of the willingness of the Board’s bureaucrats to meet and decide on fares that hardly change for months or years.
Three, route control. Disallowing buses, UV express, jeepneys, etc. to serve routes that experience high passenger volume (there is a barangay or city or provincial fiesta, etc.).
Four, very bureaucratic and costly procedures to get LTFRB accreditation. For instance, if one would apply as a new TNVS driver/partner, applicant must provide (a) proof of existence/various IDs, (b) proof of sufficiency of garage, (c) TCT or tax declaration or contract of lease/Authority to use with TCT of lessor, (d) LGU Zoning Certificate for garage, (e) proof of financial capability, latest income tax return, proof of bank deposit of P50,000, (f) DTI business registration, (g) BIR certificate of registration, (h) Proof of publication, (i) affidavit by the publisher, copies of publication, etc.
Five, rising regulations and requirements. Which means rising cost of operating public transportation. Mandatory receipts in taxi, GPS for buses and taxi, unbundling and detailed breakdown of fares by TNVS. Soon mandatory CCTV inside buses and TNVS, other wild requirements.
LTFRB has become a wild-cannon bureaucracy that creates more inconvenience to passengers instead of making their travels more convenient, more safe.
LTFRB should be checked by Congress or the Office of the President. Providing safe and convenient transportation to wary passengers is not a crime that should be penalized with endless command and control culture, stiff fines and penalties, even confiscation of private property like a car, van or bus.
 
Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is president of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia.
minimalgovernment@gmail.com

Ex-technocrats join call for abolition of NFA

WORKERS display the 10-kilo repacked NFA rice which sells for P360 a sack at a stall inside the Pritil Public Market in Tondo, Manila. The 10-kilo sack offers P36 per kilo NFA rice to consumers is part of the “Tulong sa Bayan” affordable rice program of the Department of Agriculture. — PHILSTAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

By Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio
THE Foundation for Economic Freedom said on Thursday that it is throwing its support behind Senators Cynthia A. Villar and Sherwin T. Gatchalian, who have called for the abolition of the National Food Authority.
In a statement, the FEF, whose members include prominent former economic ministers, said that the “NFA has caused and aggravated rice inflation and rice shortages in several regions, compounded the debt and losses of the national government, and provided opportunities for graft and corruption for its officers and employees, from the purchase of imported rice to the distribution and transportation of subsidized rice.”
According to the FEF, which tends to support free-market economic policies, food security does not depend on the existence of the NFA, and a smaller agency can be created to manage and maintain buffer stocks of rice to prevent shortages that raise prices.
“[T]he NFA has been inefficient and clueless on the right timing for importing rice and its distribution. The private sector should be free to import rice from any source in whatever quantities the market needs. This is the only solution to the current rice shortage crisis and to the pervasive malnutrition caused by high food prices,” the FEF said.
The FEF called for the immediate passage of the rice tariffication bill by the House of Representatives and in the Senate.
“We support a version of the bill that will abolish the National Food Authority and its powers, including imposing import quotas on the private sector in the importation of rice and licensing traders and importers,” FEF said.
The NFA has said that it used its funds to repay maturing loans and avoid paying higher interest rates, limiting its ability to purchase rice from farmers.
“Our funds are committed to paying off maturing loans,” NFA Spokesperson Rex C. Estoperez said in a phone interview.
“The funds are all accounted for,” Mr. Estoperez added, adding that heavier interest payments would affect the financial capacity of the NFA if these are not paid.
Meanwhile, in a chance interview on the sidelines of the 14th Agriculture and Fisheries Technology Forum and Product Exhibition in Mandaluong, Ms. Villar said that the NFA should not have used the funds to repay debt but to maintain buffer stocks to prevent supply problems, particularly in the supply of low-cost rice, which poor families depend on.
“The NFA was given a P7-billion budget and they did not buy from farmers,” Ms. Villar said.
“Those funds were not intended for paying down debt, they should have used it for buffer stock to enable the agency to sell low-cost rice and keep traders from controlling the supply of rice,” Ms. Villar added.
Ms. Villar, who chairs the Senate’s committee on agriculture and food, apologized for the rising price of rice.
“I think we have failed in our job to serve our fellow Filipinos. I am apologizing on behalf of the Department of Agriculture, the National Food Authority and the Department of Trade and Industry for failing to control the spiraling price of rice,” Ms. Villar said in her speech during the forum.
In a statement, the NFA said some local shortages were beyond its control.
“The rice crisis in Zamboanga happened not because of NFA’s inefficiency or incompetence. It was due to the significant depletion of commercial rice stocks; the unavailability of commercial rice sources due to the closure of the Malaysian border which led to the sudden price surge; and the declaration of a State of Calamity in Zamboanga City to allow the local government to control rice prices and purchase buffer stocks using calamity funds,” NFA said.
“We are open for scrutiny anytime. Those who want to verify what we have been doing can check our records, go around the country and ask the people. For the first time in many years, indigenous peoples, small farmers, fisherfolk, island dwellers, the urban poor, those living in resettlement areas — the real marginalized sectors of our society — are happy and thankful that they have access to quality, low-priced NFA rice,” it added.
NFA also said it received P5.1 billion in subsidies from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) based on a Notice of Cash Allocation issued on Feb. 24, 2017. Of the total, the Bureau of Treasury (BTr) automatically deducted 10% or P510 million as payment for previous years’ guarantee fees while P2.5-billion represented its annual contribution to servicing the P8 billion worth of 10-year Treasury Bonds issued to finance the NFA in February 2008.
The agency said that it received on March 1, 2017 net proceeds of P2.09-billion.
“The 2.09 billion net subsidy was used to pay for importation and palay procurement, which is in accordance with the General Appropriations Act. In fact, the subsidy fell short as NFA’s total cost of importation in 2017 amounted to P5.2 billion pesos,” NFA added.

Energy dep’t backs down on Euro 2 fuel order

THE Department of Energy (DoE) has promised to review a recent order directing oil companies to offer diesel fuel compliant with the Euro 2 emissions standard as an inflation-control measure, after opposition to the order surfaced at a Congressional hearing.
Undersecretary Donato D. Marcos told reporters on Thursday that the department will conduct more extensive consultations.
“We will review it, and we will consult the public; the consuming public (and) the industry players,” he said.
He added, “We’ll be coming up (with a new order).
Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian called for the circular’s cancellation at a hearing by the Oversight Committee on Biofuels, which he chairs.
He added, “No doubt that the intention is noble but there are unintended consequences.”
The DoE issued Department Order No. DO2018-08-0012 or “Directing the Philippine Downstream Oil Industry to Offer Euro 2 Compliant Diesel as a Fuel Option for the Transport and Industry Sector” on Aug. 10.
The order cites the need “to reduc(e) the impact of rising petroleum prices in the world market” and directs “all industry players… to provide Euro 2 compliant automotive diesel oil at the retail level as a fuel option for transport and industrial customers.”
In 2015, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) pushed for the adoption of the Euro 4 emissions standard. This year, DENR requires all new registered vehicles to be equipped with Euro 4 compliant engines.
Marinduque Representative and committee co-chairman Lord Allan Jay Q. Velasco said, “It is our role to lighten the burden of the Filipino public but our foremost concern should be effectively and sustainably lightening this burden.”
Philippine Institute of Petroleum (PIP) Executive Director Teddy M. Reyes said that bringing in Euro 2 fuels will add to the fuel companies’ costs, mainly in distribution, and in particular buying more tankers to separately transport the Euro 2 fuel.
Euro 2 also allows higher sulfur content of 500 parts per million (ppm), as opposed to the Euro 4 cap of 50 ppm.
“The health of the nation may be compromised by the illnesses due to exposure to contaminated air,” Department of Health (DoH) Environmental and Occupational Health Officer Luis F. Cruz said. He added that being exposed to levels of sulfur puts people at risk for respiratory diseases.
For his part, The Philippine Biodiesel Association (TPBA) President and operations Manager Dean Ang Lao said the risks that come with bringing in Euro 2 are not worth it.
“For a temporary measure, I feel it requires the deployment of too much resources for little impact. There are other ways of reducing costs,” Mr. Lao said. — Gillian M. Cortez

Senate panel approves presidential budget

THE SENATE finance committee has reported out for plenary discussions the 2019 budget of the Office of the President (OP), which is 12% higher than this year’s budget.
In a hearing Thursday, Senator Loren B. Legarda, who chairs the committee, said the P6.77 billion budget for the OP and the attached Presidential Management Staff (PMS), said: “The budget submitted is deemed approved for plenary.”
Testifying on the OP’s behalf, Deputy Executive Secretary for Internal Audit Rizalina N. Justol said “At first the proposed budget was cut but we were given a ceiling (for allowed funding). That’s why I had to talk to (Budget) Secretary (Benjamin E.) Diokno because of the needs of the president.”
The OP budget includes P1.08 billion for salaries. Ms. Legarda noted that the salary bill is higher in 2019 in part due to the Salary Standardization Law.
The proposed funding for Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE) will rise 11.09% to P5.18 billion.
The Capital Outlay (CO) in 2019 will rise 38.22% to P511 million to replace old equipment and retrofit buildings.
On Wednesday, the House of Representatives also approved the proposed 2019 OP budget.— Gillian M. Cortez

Duterte to sign labor, defense deals during Israel, Jordan visits

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte is expected to sign agreements on labor, defense, trade and investment, among others, when he visits Israel and Jordan next week, Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Enersto C. Abella said.
In a briefing at the Palace on Thursday, Mr. Abella said Mr. Duterte is “undertaking historic visits on Sept. 2 to 8 to renew and expand ties with Israel and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan upon invitation of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan.”
With Israel, he said, “the areas of cooperation will be enhanced by the signing of the following agreements: Labor — a memorandum of agreement (MoA) on the employment of Filipino caregivers; Science — a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on scientific cooperation; and Investment — an MoU between the Board of Investments and [its counterpart] in Israel.”
Mr. Abella added: “We are elevating our relationship with the Kingdom with the first ever visit of a Filipino President to Jordan on the 6th to the 8th of September 2018.”
He said the areas of cooperation to be enhanced are: “Labor — agreement on the employment of domestic workers; and also an MoU on labor cooperation, we expect improvement of working conditions of Filipino domestic workers bound for Jordan. Next, Defense — MoU on defense cooperation, we expect an upgrade of the country’s defense capabilities; Foreign Affairs — political consultations on trade and investments, we are expecting an investment agreement with Jordan Investment Commission.”
The two countries will also mutually recognize “STCW or Standards of Training and Certification of Watchkeepers for Seafarers,” he added.
He said the expanded relationship with Jordan is in line with the government’s “friends to all, enemies to none” foreign policy, Mr. Abella said, adding: “The Philippines hopes to do its part in promoting peace and stability in the region.”
“Strengthening ties with these nations will promote economic growth, create new employment opportunities and enhance security. A closer relationship with these nations means more opportunity to share expertise with each other in the fields of science, agriculture, industry and counter terrorists,” he added.
Mr. Abella said the MoU with Jordan on labor and employment will establish proper procedures for the recruitment, deployment, and arrival of Filipino workers through licensed Jordanian recruitment firms in partnership with licensed Philippine recruitment agencies.
“The agreement provides that the recruitment and employment of Filipino domestic workers will be governed by a standard employment contract and other measures that will ensure the protection of the rights and welfare of workers,” he said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

DoF hopes to tap yuan loans from AIIB, betting on strong dollar

US Dollar
BW FILE PHOTO

THE PHILIPPINES hopes to tap Chinese-currency loans from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) to take advantage of favorable borrowing costs, the Department of Finance (DoF) said.
“We explored the possibility of using local currency financing using variable spreads facility in providing the loans… and also possible co-financing arrangements with other multilateral institutions,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told reporters.
“If you take the view that dollar will strengthen against all other currencies, it makes sense to borrow other currencies,” he added.
The Philippines tapped the renminbi debt market for the first time in a March bond offer, raising 1.46 billion yuan, or about P12.01 billion.
Mr. Dominguez along with other Cabinet officials visited Beijing last week to firm up financing for various China-supported projects.
“We are quite sensitive to interest rates. Although they may seem small amounts, we do not want to reverse the trend of lowering our spreads. So it is very encouraging to consider variable spreads (over LIBOR),” Mr. Dominguez was quoted as saying to AIIB President Jin Liqun, referring to the London Inter Bank Offered Rate.
“As much as possible we will do co-financing using partly lower-cost ODA (official development assistance) funds and blending it with long-term multilateral funds which are generally more expensive. We (want to) bring down the average cost and stretch our money with the low-cost financing,” said the Finance chief.
Finance Assistant Secretary Mark Dennis Y.C. Joven said that AIIB will send a mission to Manila this year to review possible financing deals for infrastructure projects.
“They will send people here for study. During our discussions, they will limit the prospective projects to physical infrastructure,” he said, but noted that there is “nothing firm yet” specific project details.
The AIIB is currently co-financing the $500-million Metro Manila Flood Control Management Project with the World Bank.
Among the projects that are lined up for China ODA are the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project, New Centennial Water Source-Kaliwa Dam Project, the Philippine National Railways’ South Long Haul Project, and the Davao-Samal Bridge Construction Project.
The second basket of projects include the Ambal-Simuay River and Rio Grande de Mindanao River Flood Control Projects, the Pasig-Marikina River and Manggahan Floodway Bridge Construction Project, the Subic-Clark Railway Project, the Safe Philippines Project Phase 1, and the Rehabilitation of the Agus-Pulangi Hydroelectric Power Plants.
China grants already provided cover the Binondo-Intramuros and Estrella-Pantaleon bridges, and other technical assistance. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

BSP seen needing two more rate hikes in 2018

THE CENTRAL BANK will need at least two more rate hikes this year to keep local yields competitive and address inflation concerns “nervousness” in the global markets, a Danish international banker said.
Peter Lundgreen, founding chief executive officer at Lundgreen’s Capital, said the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) runs the risk of remaining behind the curve with further rate hikes from the United States Federal Reserve.
“There’s a lot of argument now that the central bank is still behind the curve. It’s still valid,” Mr. Lundgreen told BusinessWorld in an interview in Manila. “Of course the Philippines runs its own independent monetary policy, although an emerging market is always more dependent on what happens in the US.”
“Just to keep up with the US for the coming rate hikes is another 50 basis points (bp) and BSP is behind already, so there’s actually more than 100bp still to go just to sort of cope with the environment.”
Mr. Lundgreen said the Fed is expected to raise rates by 25bp each in September and December, which will follow two increases of the same magnitude in March and June. The Fed raised rates once in 2015 and 2016, and three times in 2017 en route to a “gradual” rate normalization.
Mr. Lundgreen believes the central bank should have raised rates in 2017 as a preemptive move.
BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. has acknowledged that policy makers did not see the need to raise rates when 2018 opened, but eventually saw the need to rein in inflation.
The central bank has raised rates by 100bp so far this year, capped by an aggressive 50bp increase on Aug. 9 which was the strongest move in a decade. Mr. Espenilla has said that the bank is keeping the door open for further rate hikes as needed.
Goods prices have been on the rise since the year opened as the first package of the tax reform law took effect. This was later on aggravated by the sharp rise of oil prices in July. This pushed the seven-month inflation tally to 4.5%, well beyond the 2-4% central bank target.
Mr. Lundgreen added that financial stress “has gone up” recently amid domestic and external events. In particular, the exchange rate will bear the brunt of these developments.
The Danish financial advisory firm still sees the peso trading as weak as P55 against the dollar by year’s end.
“There’s no reason to change that view. In the next six months, nervousness will increase,” Mr. Lundgreen said. “The risk for the peso is increasing, but it’s still not alarming.”
A widening trade deficit will largely drive a weaker currency, although additional rate hikes from the BSP could help temper these pressures. However, Mr. Lundgreen said that the Philippines is not likely to suffer from contagion amid the Turkish lira crisis, but acknowledged that this adds to current headwinds faced by emerging markets.
The BSP’s Mr. Espenilla has said that the bank will let the market determine exchange rates, as prescribing a fixed level for the peso could do more harm than good to the economy. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Philippines channels India with ID system to get poorest on map

MAYALYN MAGRACIA is one of millions of undocumented Filipinos.
“Like an alien,” is how the housekeeper in Manila describes what she felt when she discovered she had no birth record.
That was over a decade ago, when Magracia hoped to find work in a factory or restaurant. Having no birth certificate made it impossible to apply for a government-issued identity card to land a regular job.
President Rodrigo Duterte’s solution to this is a new biometric system that will give Filipinos like Magracia a national identity card, opening up access to everything from government services to bank accounts and jobs.
As head of the statistics office, Lisa Grace Bersales is in charge of rolling out the P30 billion peso program, which was signed into law earlier this month.
“Everyone will be in the picture,” she said in an interview at her office in Manila. “No one will be left behind.”
The first step, 60-year-old Bersales said, will be collecting data, such as eye scans, fingerprints and facial images, from one million beneficiaries of state cash handouts in the fourth quarter. Undocumented individuals and minority ethnic people will be targeted next, with the goal of registering and assigning a permanent ID number to all 106 million Filipinos by 2022.
INDIA’S SUCCESS
The aim is to replicate the success of India’s biometric ID program, the largest in the world, which has enrolled about 1.2 billion people since its launch in 2009.
Known as Aadhaar, or foundation, the ID is used for everything from opening a bank account to registering a marriage.
In the Philippines, Southeast Asia’s worst saver, the program is key to the central bank’s financial inclusion push, which centers around using mobile-phone applications and online payments systems to draw more people into the banking system. At least 10 million people can’t open bank deposit accounts because they don’t have identity documents and cards.
For many Filipinos, it’s a nightmare to transact with formal financial institutions, which require at least two government-issued ID cards and other documents. About 7.4 million Filipinos don’t even have the most basic record of identity, a birth certificate, the statistics authority estimates. A reliance on cash means many of them turn to loan sharks and pawnbrokers for loans that carry interest rates of as much as 20% a month.
FINTECH BOOST
For financial technology companies like Globe Telecom Inc. and Jack Ma’s Ant Financial, the national ID system — known as Phil-ID — is a boon in a country where 70% of the population own a mobile phone.
“This legal recognition is essential to citizens, assuring them of their most basic human rights such as their right to access financial services,” said Lito Villanueva, managing director at FINTQnologies Corp., the financial technology unit of PLDT Inc.-backed software company Voyager Innovations Inc.
A nationwide ID program will reduce the company’s risk and transaction costs and help its goal of bringing 30 million people into the formal financial system by 2020, he said.
Businesses like Ayala Corp. and Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc. also see opportunities, submitting a proposal to the statistics agency to collect, manage and authenticate identity information of individuals.
Bersales said the government prefers a competitive auction, but will consider the proposal along with about 40 other companies that have submitted informal plans. The contract will be awarded in November.
The biometric system isn’t without its critics. Religious groups, the media and data privacy watchdogs have raised concerns that the ID can be used to centralize and monitor transactions. Leftist lawmakers who objected to the bill said it can be used to harass opponents of Duterte.
Bersales said the concerns were unfounded and any data collected will be subject to existing privacy laws.
For the 31-year-old housekeeper Magracia, it’s all about finally becoming official.
“People say a birth certificate is important and more especially so when you die,” she said. “They say you can’t be buried without it, so I’m still hoping to get one someday if given the chance.” — Bloomberg

Galunggong imports seen threatening1.5M fisherfolk

THE importation of round scad, or galunggong, will affect the livelihoods of 1.5million fisherfolk, according to Senator Cynthia A. Villar, who chairs her chamber’s committee on agriculture and food.
“There is a need to help fisherfolk to produce more fish rather than import. Imports compete with the fish sold by one and a half million fisherfolk using municipal waters, who are very poor,” Ms. Villar told reporters on Thursday on the sidelines of the 14th Agriculture and Fisheries Technology Forum and Product Exhibition in Mandaluyong.
“We should not always think of importing, we should think of empowering our fisherfolk to produce more,” Ms. Villar added.
Agriculture secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said that the Philippines has long been importing round scad to augment supply during the closed fishing season between November and March, noting that 130,000 metric tons of the fish was imported in 2017.
“We have been importing,” he said, while downplaying the idea of “Chinese galunggong, Taiwan galunggong, Vietnamese galunggonggalunggong doesn’t have nationality,” Mr. Piñol said.
The closed fishing season is implemented to allow fish stocks time to regenerate. — Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

Peso up on US trade talks

THE PESO strengthened a tad against the dollar on Thursday as risk appetite improved on the back of trade negotiations between the United States and Canada.
The local unit closed Thursday’s session at P53.43 versus the greenback, three centavos stronger than the P53.46-per-dollar finish on Wednesday.
The peso opened the session stronger at P53.43 versus the dollar, climbing as high as P53.405 intraday. Its worst showing for the day stood at P53.485 against the US currency.
Dollars traded slipped to $501.28 million from the $527.3 million that exchanged hands the previous day.
A foreign exchange trader said the peso mostly moved sideways, tracking the dollar.
“The peso is still range-bound as we tracked the move of the dollar for the day since we’re not anticipating any key data,” the trader said by phone.
Reuters reported that the dollar index was at its one-month low of 94.52 against a basket of major currencies as some investors bet a likely trade deal between the United States and Canada.
“The peso appreciated amid market optimism on a possible trade deal between US and Canada with the two countries starting their discussion [on Wednesday],” another trader said in an e-mail.
US President Donald J. Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed confidence that they could reach a new deal on the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) by Friday.
“We recognize that there is a possibility of getting there by Friday, but it is only a possibility, because it will hinge on whether or not there is ultimately a good deal for Canada,” Mr. Trudeau said.
Canada rejoined the talks to overhaul the 24-year-old NAFTA after the US and Mexico reached a bilateral deal on Monday.
“The main contribution of the trade negotiations for the peso would be the risk-on sentiment it brought,” the first trader said.
For Friday, the first trader sees the peso moving between P53.30 and P53.55 against the greenback, while the other gave a P53.35-P53.55 range.
“The local currency, however, might erase some of its gains ahead of major economic data from the US which might be favorable towards the greenback,” the second trader noted. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal with Reuters

PHL stocks rebound ahead of MSCI rebalancing

LOCAL EQUITIES staged a gradual climb on Thursday, as investors looked forward to the MSCI rebalancing on Friday and amid positive sentiment across international markets.
The 30-member Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) rose 0.28% or 22.20 points to 7,853.16, bouncing back from the previous session’s decline. The broader all-shares index also firmed up by 0.21% or 10.04 points to 4,760.90.
“For our local bourse today, it is our view that it is still on consolidation mode still waiting for a major catalyst such a MSCI rebalancing which will take effect [on Friday],” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Research Associate Piper Chaucer Tan said in a text message on Thursday.
Mr. Tan added that there was positive sentiment on the back of the infrastructure push of the government.
The government unveiled last Tuesday P36.23 billion worth of large-scale flood control, road and railway projects which form part of the flagship infrastructure projects for 2019.
Most of the projects will be funded through a hybrid framework with initial funding by state budget or official development assistance for the construction phase, while opting for public-private partnerships for operation and maintenance.
Another analyst also attributed the performance to window dressing ahead of the last trading session of August.
“The local market closed slightly with early window dressing, with the Nasdaq surging to a new high and a possible soft Brexit as drivers [Thursday, August 30],” Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan said in a mobile message. A soft Brexit means that the United Kingdom will continue to maintain ties with the European Union.
Wall Street indices also advanced overnight, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average adding 0.23% or 60.55 points to 26,124.57. The S&P 500 index firmed up 0.57% or 16.52 points to 2,914.04, while the Nasdaq Composite index jumped 0.99% or 79.65 points to 8,109.69.
The PSEi bucked the slower performances of its regional counterparts, as fears over the trade war between the United States and China pulled down most Asian indices.
Back home, four sectors moved to positive territory, led by holding firms which rose 0.82% or 63.47 points to 7,737.48, followed by financials that gained 0.52% or 9.49 points to 1,821.68. Mining and oil went up 0.3% or 29.89 points to 9,952.63, while industrials increased 0.21% or 23.76 points to 11,287.06.
On the other hand, services dropped 0.27% or 4.26 points to 1,535.34, while property slipped 0.21% or 8.37 points to 3,951.05.
Some 1.25 billion issues valued at P6.33 billion switched hands, rising slightly from the previous session’s P6.21 billion.
Advancers outpaced decliners by a slim margin, 99 to 97, while 50 names remained unchanged.
Foreign investors reversed their buying position to record net sales of P105.35 million Thursday, August 30, versus Wednesday’s net inflow of P91.21 million. — Arra B. Francia

Nestle wants your DNA

The company that brought you milk chocolate, Maggi instant noodles and Rocky Road ice cream is worried about your health.
Nestle SA, the world’s largest food company, has joined the trend for personalized nutrition with a blend of artificial intelligence, DNA testing and the modern obsession with Instagramming food. The program, begun in aging Japan, could provide the Swiss company with a wealth of data about customers’ wellness and diet as it pivots toward consumers who are seeking to improve their health and longevity.
In Japan, some 100,000 users of the “Nestle Wellness Ambassador” program send pictures of their food via the popular Line app that then recommends lifestyle changes and specially formulated supplements. The program can cost $600 a year for capsules that make nutrient-rich teas, smoothies and other products such as vitamin-fortified snacks. A home kit to provide samples for blood and DNA testing helps identify susceptibility to common ailments like high cholesterol or diabetes.
“Most of the personalized approach is driven by smaller companies, that’s why it was fairly limited,” said Ray Fujii, a partner at L.E.K. Consulting in Japan. “Nestle is taking a further step. They’re trying to figure out the algorithm between the test results and the genetic information and what they recommend as a solution. If they could do it, it’s a very big step.”
Snacks to Supplements
Nestle’s program is part of a change in direction for the 152-year-old company, which sold off its U.S. candy unit this year amid falling demand for sugary treats. Nestle has made a spate of investments targeted at healthier options including vegetarian meal maker Sweet Earth Foods and meal-delivery service Freshly. The company bought Canadian dietary supplements maker Atrium Innovations in March for $2.3 billion, its biggest medical-nutrition purchase in more than a decade.
“Health problems associated with food and nutrition have become a big issue,” said Kozo Takaoka, head of the company’s business in Japan, in an interview in Tokyo. “Nestle must address that on a global basis and make it our mission for the 21st century.” He said the wellness segment could eventually account for half of Nestle’s sales in Japan.
The investments come with the burgeoning interest in so-called nutraceuticals — food-derived ingredients that are processed and packaged as medicine or wellness aids — among consumers that are increasingly skeptical about mass products. Nestle employs more than a hundred scientists in areas including cell biology, gastrointestinal medicine and genomics at the Nestle Institute of Health Sciences and has been developing tools to analyze and measure people’s nutrient levels.
“Decades in the future, all companies will probably have to be doing it,” said Jon Cox, an analyst at Kepler Cheuvreux. “The industry has probably had a setback as consumers also want natural and less processed products while adding supplements is seen as artificial or creating Frankenstein food.”
Some nutritionists are skeptical that tailored diet plans based around supplements are useful and that they may have more of a psychological effect than a medical one.
“Nestle’s program is designed to personalize diets in ways unlikely to be necessary,” said Marion Nestle, a nutrition professor at New York University who isn’t linked to the KitKat maker. “If we think something will make us healthier, we are likely to feel healthier.”
Genetics and AI
One of the early adopters among the food companies was Campbell Soup Co., which invested $32 million in 2016 in San Francisco-based startup Habit, which uses DNA and blood profiles to make diet recommendations, as well as offering nutritional coaching and tailored meal-kits.
Big Food is tapping expertise in AI and genetics to navigate a sea change in the way consumers make choices, which has upended businesses from transportation to television.
“In the 21st century, innovation is using the internet and AI to solve problems that our customers didn’t realize they had, or problems they had given up on,” said Takaoka, who is famous in Japan for making the KitKat chocolate wafer an iconic local snack by adding green tea and other flavors.
He said big consumer companies can no longer rely on the power of their brands to woo a generation that grew up with e-commerce.
“They just search for things, they don’t pick the brand,” he said. “When people talk about brand marketing, I’m just thinking ‘what’s that?’”
Kale Smoothies
Hitomi Kasuda, a 47-year-old freelance writer, says drinking Nestle’s kale smoothie and other health drinks as much as four times a week helps her feel better about not eating enough vegetables. She gave up using the chat function on the app, but said she’s keen to get the DNA test.
“There’s probably a lot of things I don’t realize about my health that I can discover in a blood and genetics test,” said Kasuda, who lives south of Tokyo in Yokohama. “Even if I feel healthy, I’d like to know more about the quality of my health.”
In his 2016 book “Nutrition for a Better Life,” former Nestle chief Peter Brabeck-Letmathe proposed that personalized diet and health programs were the future of nutrition. “Using a capsule similar to a Nespresso, people will be able to take individual nutrient cocktails or prepare their food via 3-D printers according to electronically recorded health recommendations,” he wrote.
Two years later, Japanese subscribers in the wellness program now drink nutrient-fortified teas dispensed in capsules using a product similar to Nespresso, Nestle’s trademark coffee machine.
“We’re getting consumer buy-in because we live in a hedonistic, me-first kind of world,” said Peter Jones, a nutritional scientist at the University of Manitoba in Canada. “This is going to be the manifestation of the future. The one-size-fits-all platform is a thing of the past.” — Bloomberg

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