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Samsung unveils newest smartphone hoping for sales boost

New York — South Korean electronics giant Samsung unveiled the new Galaxy Note 9 smartphone Thursday, its latest effort to address flagging sales of the high-functioning gadgets.
Boosting the power and the price, Samsung hopes to win back customers in the competitive market. The consistent leader in the global smartphone market, the company nonetheless suffered a 22 percent drop in mobile technology sales in the second quarter.
The company blamed the drop in part to disappointing demand for the Galaxy S9, but it also has been pressured by growth in Chinese competitor Huawei.
At a glitzy the launch event in Brooklyn, Samsung unveiled a suite of high tech products, including a smart speaker and watch, and then showed off the new Galaxy Note 9, which will be available for purchase on August 24.
The phone contains a series of improvements but was described by analysts as having no radical new innovations. The latest model boosts memory capacity, and allows customers to play video games such as the popular Fortnite.
Customers will have the option of 128 or 512 gigabytes of memory, and also can insert a micro card to boost capacity beyond a terabyte, a record for a smartphone.
Samsung also enhanced the gadget’s batteries so it can now be used for an entire day without needing to be recharged — a common headache for cell phone users.
Other improvements include tweaks to the device’s “S Pen” feature, which can be used as a remote control for taking pictures or selfies using Bluetooth technology.
And the new model has enough capacity for video games. Samsung has set up a promotion with the popular Fortnite game that lets users download a special mobile version.
According to some trade media sources, the Galaxy Note 9 version with 512 gigabytes will be the most expensive smartphone geared towards the general public.
Pricey, not radically new
The price for that model will be $1,250 in the United States, while the 128 gigabyte version will go for $1,000. Apple’s iPhone X in a 256 gigabyte version sells for about $1,150.
Global smartphone sales fell 1.8 percent in the second quarter to 342 million amid market saturation and rising prices, according to tech-industry trackers International Data Corporation.
Avi Greengart, analyst at GlobalData, described the upgrades in the latest Samsung as “iterative,” adding “there is nothing radically new here.”
“It’s a really expensive phone and for people who are looking for a premium Android phone, they may well find it quite appealing,” he said. “But it isn’t likely to get people to consider the Note for the very first time.”
By contrast, Apple’s more dramatic overhaul of the iPhone X design and user interface showed there is a “large group of people who are willing to spend whatever it takes” to upgrade, Greengart said.
Samsung also introduced the Galaxy Watch and the Galaxy Home speaker device, a first for the South Korean company in a market that already contains Amazon’s Echo and Alphabet’s Google Home program.
The company also announced a partnership with streaming music service Spotify to allow “streamless listening” across all Samsung devices, including phones, tablets and smart TVs, as well as the Galaxy Home.
The smart speaker may have a better shot outside the United States, said Patrick Moorhead, analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy.
“In the US, Alexa is very entrenched and so is Google Assistant, so it might be a challenge, but not so much in other parts of the world,” Moorhead said. — AFP

JG Summit’s second-quarter profit down, revenues up

JG Summit Holdings, Inc.’s attributable profit dropped by a third in the second quarter of 2018, as the weaker peso, higher fuel prices, as well as rising prices of raw materials for its food, airline, and chemical units tempered the double-digit increase in revenues.
In a regulatory filing, the listed conglomerate said net income attributable to equity holders of the parent went down to P5.02 billion in the April to June period, against the P7.13 billion it generated in the same period a year ago.
In contrast, revenues climbed 11.4% to P74.6 billion, thanks to the performance of Universal Robina Corp. (URC)’s branded consumer foods and agro-industrial units, the growth in Robinsons Land Corp. (RLC), and higher average selling prices of products under JG Petrochemcial Group.
“While we continue to face the challenges arising from inflation and the weaker currency further exacerbated by tougher competitive dynamics, we are delighted to see improvements in our 2Q18 results,” JG Summit President and Chief Executive Officer Lance Y. Gokongwei was quoted as saying in a statement.
“We believe that we can navigate this environment with the fundamentals of each of our businesses intact and issues are more cyclical than structural,” Mr. Gokongwei added. — Arra B. Francia

Gatchalian files resolution on evaluating federalism’s economic implications

Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian has filed a resolution urging his colleagues to look into the economic implications of the proposed shift to a federal system of government.
Filed on Aug. 7, the Senate Resolution No. 823 directs the appropriate Senate committee to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, to evaluate the economic implications of a shift to a federal system of government including, but not limited to, the attendant economic risks and opportunities, the implications to regional economic growth, the additional fiscal costs of the shift to federalism, and the effects on investments due to emerging issues on the imposition of additional taxes.
Mr. Gatchalian’s resolution also seeks to evaluate the administration of incentives in a federal system and its repercussions on the ease of doing business.
In his resolution, Mr. Gatchalian noted that Socio Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia has warned that “the regions in the country are not ready for the system, that the momentum of infrastructure improvement in the regions is going to be disrupted, and that the shift to federalism will entail immense expenditures, which may increase the fiscal deficit to GDP (gross domestic product) ratio….”
In a text message to reporters on Friday, Mr. Gatchalian explained that “the shift to federalism will radically alter the structure of national and local governments.”
He added that it will “create uncertainties in economy and doing business.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

RCBC posts lower net profit in first half

The Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) posted a P2.2-billion net income as of end-June, fueled by steady growth in its core businesses but dampened by lower trading gains.
Net profit of the Yuchengco-led lender slipped by 6.4% from the P2.35 billion it previously reported during the first six months of 2017.
In a disclosure, RCBC said core income posted a robust 47% growth year-on-year, with net interest income growing 12% to P9.7 billion as yields improved.
Total loans and receivables also surged by 14% to reach P372 billion. Credit lines extended to the small business segment rose 36%, while credit card debts picked up by a third. Both consumer and corporate loans also posted increases worth 17% and 11%, respectively.
Despite the pickup in lending, soured debts took a measly 1.18% share of total loans, improving from 1.35% in the same period last year.
Bank deposits also grew to reach P396.4 billion.
Despite the income drop, RCBC president and chief executive officer Gil A. Buenaventura said they are “above target” as of the first semester.
“With the new P15 billion capital raised in July, we will remain focused on growing our lending business especially the Consumer and SME, and Microfinance business throughout the Philippines.” Mr. Buenaventura added.
RCBC, the country’s tenth-biggest bank, currently runs 509 branches nationwide, adding 14 new offices from 495 in June last year. The bank’s network of automated teller machines also grew to 1,597 during the first semester. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Peso weakens vs dollar

The peso slipped versus the dollar on Friday, Aug. 10, to its weakest in a week, as investors await the turnout of key economic data in the United States and further hints on the country’s ongoing trade war with China.
The local unit closed at P53.135 against the greenback, 4.5 centavos weaker from Thursday’s P53.09 finish. This is the weakest showing of the peso since the P53.15-per-dollar close on Aug. 3.
The peso opened the session at P53.13, already weaker than the previous day’s rate. It touched P53.09 as its best showing during the day but also hit as high as P53.20 before trading ended.
This also marked the fourth straight day of peso depreciation, coming from Monday’s P52.85 close.
Sought for comment, a trader attributed the peso’s slip to gains favoring the dollar, even if the aggressive rate hike announced by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) should have provided support to the local currency.
“The peso depreciated [on Friday] as investors positioned ahead of firm US inflation readings tonight, with the 50-basis point rate hike from the BSP having already factored in by the local market during the week,” one trader said.
The central bank raised benchmark interest rates by 50 basis points (bp) on Thursday afternoon, signalling a more aggressive move to rein in price pressures given threats that inflation could remain elevated until 2019.
This is the BSP’s strongest policy response in a decade, but has been expected by market players following the higher-than-expected 5.7% inflation rate in July. BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. said they see inflation “on the high side,” with policy makers now seeing signs that prices could exceed the 2-4% target next year.
On the other hand, the US government will report July inflation data Friday night, which will help determine the timing and pace of future rate hikes from the Federal Reserve. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Further US sanctions would be ‘declaration of economic war’: Medvedev

Moscow, Russia — Russia warned Friday that if the US followed through with threats to impose further harsh economic sanctions it would be seen as a “declaration of economic war”.
The warning by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev came after Washington unveiled a raft of new sanctions against Russia over its alleged use of the Novichok nerve agent against a former double agent which Britain has blamed on Moscow.
The incident, which took place in a city in southern England in March, triggered a major diplomatic crisis despite Russia’s denial of any role.
The announcement of the sanctions prompted Russian stocks and the ruble to tumble on Thursday.
“While I don’t want to comment on the talk about future sanctions, I can say that if we end up with something like a ban on banking activities or the use of certain currencies, we can clearly call this a declaration of economic war,” Medvedev was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.
“And we must absolutely respond to this war. By economic means, by political means and if necessary by other means,” he added.
“Our American friends must understand this.”
Announced late on Wednesday, the first set of sanctions, which will take effect in just under two weeks, impose a ban on the export to Russia of “national security sensitive” US technologies.
Until now such exports had been previously allowed on a case-by-case basis, with a senior State Department official saying the move could cut off hundreds of millions of dollars worth of exports to Russia.
Further sanctions loom?
A second round of sanctions that could go into effect 90 days later would cut far deeper, including blocking all American bank loans to Russian entities, an outright ban on US exports to Russia, and suspension of diplomatic relations.
The State Department said the sanctions were aimed at punishing Moscow for having “used chemical or biological weapons in violation of international law”, mandated under the Chemical and Biological Weapons and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991.
However the sanctions announcement could bolster US President Donald Trump’s claim that his administration is taking a tough stance on Moscow, even as he continues to denounce as a “witch hunt” an independent probe whether his election campaign colluded with Russia.
According to the 1991 Act, the president shall tighten the penalties within 90 days — unless the party in question provides “reliable assurances” that it no longer engages in such activities, and allows on-site inspections by United Nations observers.
Russia had on Thursday responded furiously to the sanctions, denouncing them as “categorically unacceptable” as the markets tumbled and the ruble fell to its lowest level in almost two years.
On Wednesday, Russia’s Kommersant daily published excerpts from another piece of draft US legislation which proposes a ban on US citizens purchasing Russian sovereign debt as well as steps against the country’s biggest banks as well as its oil and gas sector, a key driver of the economy.
The sanctions follow the US Treasury’s imposition of sanctions in March against 19 Russian citizens and five entities for interfering in the 2016 US election — the toughest steps against Moscow since Trump took office.
Also in March, Washington ordered the expulsion of 60 Russian diplomats, and the closure of Russia’s consulate general in Seattle over the Novichok incident.
The Russian economy has only recently started to recover from international sanctions imposed on Moscow in 2014 over its actions in Ukraine and a crash in oil prices the same year. — AFP

Smart taps Ericsson for 5G roll out in 2019

PLDT, Inc.’s wireless subsidiary Smart Communications, Inc. said its roll out of fifth generation (5G) technology is booked for the first half of 2019 as it ties up with Ericsson.
In a statement on Friday, Aug. 10, the telco company said it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Ericsson, which outlines that the 5G network will kick off its deployment in Luzon.
“The 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Project) compliant 5G Trial System that will be deployed in Smart includes Ericsson 5G RAN, Core and Transport solutions. The 5G pilot deployment will allow Smart to explore industry partnership engagements, collaborate with schools and universities, and further develop competence in 5G,” it said.
PLDT Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan said in a press briefing on Thursday, Aug. 9, the company has conducted a pilot test with Ericsson for its 5G network on Wednesday.
In June, the Pangilinan-led company said it has opened a 5G Technolab, a dedicated facility for research and development, standardization and testing of the technology.
Smart has so far prepared more than 2,000 of its sites for compatibility with the 5G network.
Rival Globe Telecom, Inc. announced in June it will also be bringing the 5G technology to the country by second half of 2019. Partnering also with Huawei, its 5G network is expected to reach speeds from 50 megabits per second (Mbps) to 100 Mbps.
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. — Denise A. Valdez

Qatar set to be outstripped as world’s richest place by Macau

Qatar is on track to lose its status as the richest place in the world to the Chinese gambling enclave of Macau.
The global casino hub’s economy will reach the equivalent of about $143,116 per person by 2020, according to projections from the International Monetary Fund. That will put Macau ahead of the current No. 1 Qatar, which will reach $139,151 in the same time frame.
A former Portuguese outpost on the southern tip of China, Macau has become a gambling mecca since returning to Chinese control almost two decades ago. It’s the only place in China where casinos are legal, turning it into a magnet for high-rollers from the mainland. Macau’s gross domestic product has more than tripled from about $34,500 per capita in 2001, the IMF data shows.
The wealth gap between the two places is also expected to widen beyond 2020, with Macau’s GDP per capita set to reach about $172,681 by 2023, according to data compiled from the April edition of the IMF’s Global Economic Outlook database. Qatar’s, meanwhile, will grow to just $158,117.
Elsewhere, financial hub Singapore’s GDP per capita is expected to top six digits by next year and is on track to grow to about $117,535 by 2023, while Hong Kong — across the water from Macau — will touch almost $80,000 by that time, the IMF projections show.
Three European countries — Luxembourg, Ireland, and Norway — made the top 10 places expected to be the world’s wealthiest by 2020, while the U.S. came in at No. 12. — Bloomberg

Oil set for sixth weekly loss as trade war stokes demand fears

A bruising week for oil has set prices on course for the longest weekly losing streak in three years as a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies stokes fears it could sap energy demand.
Futures were headed for a 3.3 percent loss this week. The U.S. and China are threatening to slap additional tariffs on imports from each other in a matter of weeks, with the tit-for-tat protectionist measures set to expand. The trade conflict overshadowed a decline in American crude inventories and potential supply losses from Iran.
Oil is trading near a seven-week low on fears the intensifying trade tension will crimp global economic growth and increase financial vulnerability. Meanwhile, some Iranian crude buyers have started looking elsewhere for supplies as renewed U.S. sanctions aimed at curbing oil exports from the OPEC nation are set to take effect in November.
“Overall, there seems to be a bigger downward force on oil with China’s retaliatory tariffs against the U.S.,” Min Byungkyu, a Seoul-based global market strategist at Yuanta Securities Co., said by phone. “There are still concerns over a possible decline in U.S. oil sales to China as it could disrupt America’s supply balance by increasing its stockpiles and even end up creating a glut.”
West Texas Intermediate crude for September delivery traded at $66.26 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 55 cents, at 8:54 a.m. in London. The contract slipped 13 cents to $66.81 on Thursday. Prices are headed for a sixth weekly decline, the longest such streak since August 2015. Total volume traded was about 15 percent below the 100-day average.
Brent for October settlement fell 54 cents to $71.53 on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. Prices fell 21 cents to $72.07 on Thursday, and are headed for a 2.3 percent drop this week. The global benchmark crude traded at a $5.95 premium to WTI for the same month.
Futures for September delivery fell 1.2 percent to 512.9 yuan a barrel on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange, after losing 0.8 percent on Thursday.
China will apply 25 percent duties on American diesel, gasoline, propane and other petroleum products from Aug. 23, according to the nation’s commerce ministry. The latest levies against an additional $16 billion worth of imports from the U.S. match America’s plan to add 25 percent tariffs on the same value of Chinese goods. Washington is also reviewing 10 percent duties on a further $200 billion in Chinese products.
In the latest list, U.S. crude was spared in a sign that America has become too big to ignore in the oil market. As recently as June, China was the top foreign buyer of American crude, importing a record 15 million barrels that month. The Asian nation may impose duties later if President Donald Trump doesn’t back down, according to Li Li, a research director at ICIS-China.
In the U.S., nationwide crude stockpiles declined by 1.35 million barrels last week, according to the Energy Information Administration, while supplies stored in the key hub of Cushing, Oklahoma, fell for a twelfth straight week. Gasoline inventories expanded for the first time in six weeks, the data showed. — Bloomberg

Asia markets sink at end of upbeat week, lira battered

Hong Kong — Asian markets fell on Friday after a broadly positive week as traders await the latest developments in the China-US trade row, while the Turkish lira briefly dived 12% to fresh record lows buffeted by a diplomatic row with Washington.
After last week’s turmoil, the past five days have seen investors a little more positive as they took in stride tit-for-tat threats of tariffs from the world’s top two economies, though the fears of an all-out trade war are keeping everyone on their toes.
However, on Friday Hong Kong fell one percent after a four-day win streak.
Tokyo shed 1.3% despite data showing the Japanese economy grew more than expected in the second quarter. The outlook was dimmed by concerns about a trade war with the United States.
Sydney was down 0.3 percent, Singapore shed 1.3% and Seoul dropped 0.9 percent. Taipei, Mumbai, Manila and Bangkok also lost ground. However, Shanghai ended the day marginally higher.
The losses followed a broadly negative lead from Wall Street.
With few major catalysts in the trade stand-off, focus is now on the release later in the day of US consumer price index data for July, which will give an idea about price pressures across the country and help guide the Federal Reserve in its interest rate plans.
The central bank is tipped to lift borrowing costs twice more this year, having already hiked two times so far as Donald Trump’s massive tax cuts kick in and the economy continues to hum along.
Expectations for further hikes have sent the dollar rallying and the unit maintained its strength Friday after a top Fed official usually considered dovish indicated he would back more increases.
“If the US consumer prices data for July confirms a steady rise in inflation, it will support the dollar on the back of speculation that the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates again in September,” said Kengo Suzuki, forex strategist at Mizuho Securities.
‘Doves are hawkish’
Chicago Fed President Charles Evans backed “somewhat restrictive” rate levels to offset the fiscal stimulus, citing the possibility of inflation hitting 2.2 percent. Evans had previously voted against hikes on concerns that inflation would not hit the Fed’s two percent target.
“When doves are hawkish we have to take a little notice,” said Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader.
While the dollar was struggling against the safe-haven yen owing to the trade uncertainty, it was up against most other units sitting at a more than one-year high against the pound. The euro tumbled on concerns a crisis in Turkey could spill over into Europe.
The Turkish lira plunged 12% to a record low at one point on tensions between Ankara and Washington over the detention of a US pastor. The losses extended Thursday’s drop as high-level talks seeking to slacken tensions with the US produced no apparent breakthrough.
The lira recovered slightly but has lost about 50% since the turn of the year.
At the same time, the Turkish economy under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is showing signs of overheating, with the country running a large current account deficit that makes it heavily dependent on foreign capital inflows.
“The backdrop to endemic lira weakness is of course the familiar one of an economy suffering rising inflation and a burgeoning balance of payments crisis alongside a central bank that has in effect been stripped of much of its independence since Erdogan was re-elected… in June,” Ray Attrill, head of forex strategy at National Australia Bank, said in a note.
The South Korean won and Australian dollar were down about one percent against the dollar while Indonesia’s rupiah and the Mexican peso were also well off.
The Russian ruble tumbled again and is now five percent down since the US on Wednesday hit Russia with new sanctions over its alleged involvement in a nerve agent attack in Britain.
In early trade, London fell 0.4%, Paris shed 0.9 percent and Frankfurt was down 0.8%. — AFP

UnionBank readies stock rights offering

Union Bank of the Philippines (UnionBank) will proceed with its planned stock rights offer next month, as the lender works to raise fresh capital to support expansion.
In a disclosure on Friday, Aug. 10, the bank said they will offer up to 200 million common shares via a stock rights offering in September, two months later than the original plan.
Back in May, UnionBank chief financial officer and treasurer Jose Emmanuel U. Hilado said that the lender plans to issue P10 billion worth of additional shares by July of this year, after securing approval from the bank’s board of directors.
The Aboitiz-led lender told the Philippine Stock Exchange this week that they will be offering the additional shares to all stockholders on record as of Sept. 3.
The offer period will start on Sept. 10 and end Sept.21. The offer price is yet to be determined.
The additional capital will boost the lender’s common equity Tier 1 and total capital adequacy ratio of the bank.
“The proceeds from the stock rights offer will be used to allow for continued growth of assets of the bank,” UnionBank told the local bourse. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Wilcon Depot earnings up 20% in first half

Earnings of Wilcon Depot, Inc. went up by a fifth in the first six months of 2018, fueled by higher sales from existing stores alongside its expansion to new markets.
The listed firm said in a statement on Friday that net income jumped to P914 million in the first half, versus P763 million in the same period a year ago. Net sales logged an 18% increase to P10 billion.
The company attributed the increase to strong comparable sales, the development of new stores, and improving margins following its product mix strategy.
“Wilcon is looking at maintaining its 2018 net sales target growth rate of mid to high teens. While we have achieved our target for the first half, we have to continue to work hard in the second half to sustain our momentum,” Wilcon Chief Financial Officer Mark Andrew Belo was quoted as saying in a statement. — Arra B. Francia