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Singaporean researchers develop autonomous drone that takes photos

SINGAPORE — As more people shoot pictures and videos from consumer drones, researchers in Singapore have found a way round the frustrating task of framing and taking photos while manually piloting the craft.

More than 2.8 million consumer drones are expected to be sold this year, up from 2 million last year, says research firm Gartner. Most carry some kind of camera.

“We want to enable more intuitive and natural interaction with the flying drone to take photos autonomously — even for the novice user who has not used drones before,” said Ziquan Lan, one of four researchers behind the project. Their innovation, called XPose, works in several stages. The user tells the drone to take photographs from different angles of the subject, such as a statue. Next, the shot is composed by moving objects on photos from a sample gallery.

Then the drone finds the best position to take the commissioned photo. No manual piloting of the drone is needed.

The researchers from the National University of Singapore say their prototype, based on a Parrot Bebop quadcopter, relies mainly on a single monocular camera and works reliably even when there is no GPS signal.

Some remotely controlled drones take their cue from global positioning system satellites, or GPS, which requires the drone pilot to know where the image is in respect to the drone, adding another layer of complexity to the process.

But XPose does away with that. The researchers said it had a higher success rate in photo-taking tasks than the usual touchscreen joystick interface.

“Drones will be even smaller (than they are now) so we can carry them around as a smartphone camera, throw it in the air and take photos for us,” Mr. Lan said, as he outlined his vision of the future.

But the problem is a thorny one, he said, adding that he and fellow researchers Mohit Shridhar, David Hsu and Shengdong Zhao went through dozens of methods and environments to evolve a working prototype.

Several companies are working to simplify how users take airborne pictures and videos.

A US-based startup, Skydio, which aims for “flying cameras without the complexity,” is working on a drone that follows its operator using onboard cameras to capture a 360-degree view of its environs.

Another firm, Squadrone System, offers an “autonomous flying camera” called HexoPlus for $1,000. A user can program it via a smartphone app with simple instructions, such as “follow” or “hover close.”

For $700, the Mota Group offers the Lily Next-Gen camera drone that flies itself and hovers above the user, taking photos and video. — Reuters

Butter, wine, foie gras: French face triple whammy as key food shortages abound

WITH butter spread thin and wine output drying up, whatever next for the unlucky French? A shortage of foie gras, the must-have liver pate that takes pride of place on most Christmas tables.

Two waves of bird flu leading to the cull of millions of ducks and geese in southwestern France have caused production to plunge by 44% since 2015, according to the CIFOG foie gras trade association.

The shrinking output has fed into prices, which have climbed between 10% and 30% depending on the packaging and quality.

The shortage comes on the back of a butter crisis, with retail supplies melting — and prices rising — as wholesalers channel their stocks into Asian markets with a newfound taste for the spread.

The crisis sparked panic buying at French supermarkets and a spate of do-it-yourself butter-making videos on YouTube.

To make matters worse, an unusually mild March and frosty April combined to wreck part of this year’s wine harvest, depressing output by 19%.

While the overall quality of the grapes is up, so too are wine prices.

Now, the French also face having to fork out more for their beloved foie gras, a controversial delicacy made from the livers of force-fed poultry that is usually rolled out during Christmas and New Year celebrations.

A typical 200-gram (seven-ounce) block of duck foie gras of the Delperyat brand is currently selling for €13 ($15.40).

The foie gras industry, which had export earnings of some €55 million ($65 million) in 2015, has been reeling since the H5N1 bird flu virus hit late that year.

Just as producers were recovering from that onslaught, the highly pathogenic H5N8 virus struck a year later.

Goose liver pate — prized for its sweeter taste and longer finish in the mouth — will be in especially short supply this year after bird flu wiped out entire flocks in the Landes region as well as neighboring Gers.

Maison Paris, a goose farm in the Landes town of Pomarez, saw its flock shrink to 200 from its usual 1,000.

“We are keeping livers for buyers who are especially passionate about this product and a few high-end stores,” said farm manager Sandrine Lesgourgues.

Despite the industry’s woes, it can rest assured that old gastronomic habits die hard.

A consumer study carried out in May found that 92% of respondents would still buy foie gras in France despite higher prices.

A family of four can expect to pay two euros more for their share, said CIFOG head Marie-Pierre Pe, adding: “Psychologically that’s not a major obstacle for a pleasure that remains exceptional.” — AFP

The coin of the future

Ever since the invention of the personal computer and the internet, technology has advanced by leaps and bounds, and along with it, disruptions to traditional ways and means of doing business. With the advent of cryptocurrencies as a viable means of peer-to-peer transfer of value, the next industry that could be shaken to its very core is the financial system itself.

Currency, or its more common name, money, is nothing more than a medium of exchange, and any material of limited and controllable quantity or character can serve this purpose – shells, beads, amber, gold, silver, and now, fiat money have all been used. Through experience and history, the ideal characteristics of money, e.g., durability, convenience, recognizability and divisibility, led to a preference of one form over another. But history, too, taught another lesson: that trust is also, if not, the most essential characteristic of any chosen medium of exchange.

While fiat money (i.e., legal tender issued and backed by governments) remains the prevailing medium of exchange, the trust reposed in such instruments has suffered recurring crises from time to time. Numerous examples recur over the ages. The US Continental Currency, Philippine Revolution pesos, German Papiermark, Japanese wartime/invasion notes, and Zimbabwean dollar are all cases in which the money used as a store of value suffered runaway inflation and/or ultimate collapse for one reason or another, requiring the redenomination and/or reissuance of a new currency, as the trust in the old currency evaporated entirely.

The most recent, and perhaps, widespread shock to the financial system, not only of a single country but worldwide, was the Global Financial Crisis of 2007-2008. It rivaled, if not exceeded, the Great Depression of the 1930s, as the extent and the speed by which the crisis spread was magnified many times over by technology. Learning from hindsight, but perhaps, with fingers crossed over the risks, governments worldwide likewise responded with extreme measures, to shore up liquidity with vast quantities of fiat money, through the process now known as Quantitative Easing.

While runaway inflation has not yet occurred, the stopgap is only due to a very delicate balance maintained between the amount of money actually circulating and the available goods. The situation, however, remains precarious. This threat to the world’s financial system spurred the development of cryptocurrencies as an alternative means not only to transact, but to store wealth and value in the eyes of a technologically-oriented generation.

Bitcoin, which was proposed through a white paper in 2009 (just after the Global Financial Crisis) by an individual or a group known merely as “Satoshi Nakamoto,” was the first cryptocurrency which uses a revolutionary technology known as a blockchain. With the blockchain, control over the supply of cryptocurrency is devolved to a computer program, which limits the issuance of the currency to a set amount; in the case of Bitcoin, it is 21 million. No government issues the cryptocurrency, as this is generated, and maintained, by decentralized computer “nodes” all over the world. Each “node” would effectively have one vote, and in no case would a transaction in the blockchain be considered confirmed unless a majority (or more than 50%) of the nodes agree to recognize the said transaction. The supply of Bitcoins is also gradually increased through a process called “mining,” by the very same computer nodes, where the miners will be paid a portion of the newly-minted Bitcoin which would effectively pay for the maintenance of the system.

Development and acceptance was slow, and initially, a Bitcoin had a value next to nothing. In one of the first known transactions, a pizza was purchased in 2010 for 10,000 Bitcoins. However, as the cryptocurrency gained recognition and use, the value ascribed to it exploded. Bitcoin reached $1,000 for the first time in 2013; it took nearly 1,300 days to double to $2,000, another 147 days to breach $5,000, 47 days to double again to reach the $10,000 mark just last week, and a mere 12 hours after that to reach $11,000 before settling down to around $10,000. In other words, the same pizza transaction a mere seven years ago would now be worth over $100 million, an astounding rate of return which made some very early adopters multi-millionaires, even billionaires.

But not all is sunny in the land of crypto. Several challenges continue to hound its use for day-to-day transactions. Due to the limitations of the network and the amount of data that it is capable of transmitting, only two to three transactions can be processed in a second; compare that to VISA, which alone can process some 1,500 transactions a second (not to mention MasterCard, PayPal and others). Since a majority of the nodes would have to “agree,” and in case of system enhancements, upgrade their software, getting the consensus to any change has been a stumbling block to development. In Bitcoin’s case, this has led to a “hard fork” in August this year, and another one in the near future. The consequence of a “hard fork” is that two sequences of the blockchain would result, causing uncertainty over which would eventually prevail, which would also lead to mixed results on the trading floor. Due to disagreements between the proponents, the latest hard fork was postponed, and so Bitcoin still faces the challenge of improving its capabilities, even as preserving the integrity of the original blockchain remains paramount.

Also, while Bitcoin (the blockchain itself) is difficult, if not nearly impossible, to hack as this would require simultaneous successful attacks on a majority of the “nodes” worldwide, the exchanges as well as individual users have proved vulnerable. This has led to stolen bitcoins, and by various estimates, around 3.8 million bitcoins, or almost 24% of the current supply, may have been lost forever. There are also thousands of competing cryptocurrencies, which would like to mimic or even attempt the same success as Bitcoin such as Ethereum, Litecoin, Monero, Ripple, and Dash to name a few.

However, these challenges could turn out to be mere birth pangs of a newfangled commercial reality. The sad fact is, fiat money has already demonstrated its shortcomings, and is long overdue to be replaced by something better. Ever since Nixon decoupled the dollar, the world’s reserve currency, from gold in the 1970s, fiat money has suffered irreversible erosion in value, due to overprinting as well as overspending of governments. This has also led inevitably to a concentration of the world’s wealth in the top 1% as businesses are relatively inflation-proof, while the vast majority including the middle class, depending merely on near-stagnant wages which cannot keep pace with inflation, continuously suffer loss of purchasing power and decreasing quality of life.

For its early adopters who are mostly from less-affluent classes, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies offer the ordinary person a chance to start anew, with a currency that is less subject to government or institutional control. In the current scheme of things, they do not have much to lose anyway. On the other side of the social pyramid however are the wealthy, who have more to risk in case their current wealth is denominated and stored in fiat money that could eventually turn out to be not worth much more than the paper they are printed on.

Much like the Internet which has fundamentally changed our very way of life in merely two decades, the blockchain is poised to do the same to the world’s financial system. A number of those which may have viewed it as a threat already called for bans on Bitcoin or its exchanges. However, these have so far failed as Bitcoin and similar cryptocurrencies have been designed to ignore such bans. On the other hand, neither could any currency gain universal use and acceptance without the participation of the wealthy and the powerful.

Bitcoin may have been ignored in its infancy when it was actually insignificant as compared to the estimated $200 trillion in financial wealth and assets worldwide. Now, the tide appears to be turning as the cryptocurrency market, particularly Bitcoin, has skyrocketed from practically nothing to more than $300 billion in just a few years, and is now gaining the attention of main street investors. Instead of bans, there are now proposals for regulation. Even Bitcoin has been recognized by major exchanges such as CME and NASDAQ, where futures may be traded in the near future.

The question now is, what is the stand of regulators, investors and consumers on Bitcoin as the global market currency of the future? Are Filipinos prepared to participate and adapt to this revolutionary idea or will we be overtaken by events as they happen? We will know when we look ahead 30, 20, or even just 10 years into the future, to see how well we have responded to the seemingly inexorable rise of the world’s first real digital currency.

The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only, and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.

Jaffy Y. Azarraga is a Director at the Tax Services Department of Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the PwC network.

+63 (2) 845-2728

jaffy.y.azarraga@ph.pwc.com

How PSEi member stocks performed — December 6, 2017

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Wednesday, December 6, 2017.

Performance outlook in select Asia-Pacific economies

THE UNITED NATIONS’ (UN) regional development arm has lowered its Philippine economic expansion forecasts for 2017 and 2018, even as the country will still be rivaled only by China and India among Asia’s fastest-growing major economies in those years. Read the full story.

Nation at a Glance — (12/07/17)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

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Google sees next billion users from ‘emerging countries’ like Philippines amid surge in mobile data usage

The Philippines is among the countries from where tech giant Google sees its next billion users emerging.

Google’s seven products, namely Gmail, Android, Google Chrome, Google Maps, Google Search, Youtube, and Google Play Store, currently have more than a billion users each. And the company seeks to have the same engagement with its recently‑launched data management app Datally.

“When you look at where the future growth would be, we realize that the next generation of people who will come online will come from emerging countries,” Kenneth Lingan, head of Google Philippines, said during the launch of Datally on Nov. 28 at the company’s local headquarter in BGC, Taguig City.

These countries, he said, include Indonesia, Nigeria, Brazil, India, and the Philippines, among others.

“This is really exciting thing for us because we know that the future growth would come from [these regions]. These countries come from different regions around the world, but what is amazing is the fact that a lot of these countries have similar fundamentals especially with the way they engage [with] the internet,” he added.

However, Lingan said users from the said countries, which the company calls NBU, are “mobile‑only,” which is a “threat” that results in some other challenges.

“[For] most of us here the first experience of the internet would probably come from a desktop or a laptop, but for most of the NBU, they’re coming from an experience where [their] only entry point to the internet is their mobile phones. It’s not mobile first, in fact in most cases, it’s mobile‑only,” he said.

A large number of these users, according to him, use lower‑end smart phones that “have limitations in terms of power, memory, and capability.” They also encounter challenges in internet connectivity that are “very expensive or sometimes not good enough and not fast enough.”

He added that these users also fail to find “locally‑relevant contents” in their countries.

“The realization for us [at] Google Philippines is the fact that the NBU should not just have different internet from what we enjoy, the first billion users enjoy; it just means that we need to develop a diff ecosystem that is really suitable to their needs and acknowledging the unique needs that they have,” he said.

Mobile data usage surging in Philippines

In the Philippines alone, Lingan said the booming number of Filipino internet users is “truly remarkable.”

“I joined Google three years back and at that time there were less than 45 million people online, today there are more than 60 million online and we’re almost close to half a million people going online every single month. That’s really amazing,” he said, citing Google’s internal statistics.

From January 2016 to January 2017, the number of Filipinos who use internet grew by 27% or 13 million to about 60 million users, based on a report by social media agency We Are Social.

Along with this growth is the booming number of Filipinos who access the internet through their mobile devices. In fact, Google projected a 16% year‑on‑year increase in mobile usage in the country this year.

“That means that there are many more millions of Filipinos who are going online for the first time through their mobile devices. And it opens a lot of opportunities,” he said, adding that smartphones have become “the big game changer.”

According to Lingan, these statistics are evident in Google’s products. Mobile searches through Google Search has increased by 30% year‑on‑year while YouTube’s mobile watchtime also rose by 95% this 2017.

Gabby Roxas, marketing manager of Google Philippines, echoes the same sentiment.

But despite this growth, managing mobile data remains to be a struggle for many Filipinos, Roxas said. This is a problem that Google seeks to address with the launch of Datally.

 

READ: How the new Datally app will help you manage your mobile data usage

 

Citing previous studies conducted by Google Philippines, Roxas said lack of data is the second reason “why Filipinos avoid trying out new apps on their mobile devices.”

“The challenge is do we really understand how much of our data is going to get used up based on what you want to do online? That’s where it can get confusing,” he explained.

Filipinos also struggle in controlling their data usage as many get engrossed with the experience in using apps without minding the amount of data they consume.

“They get engrossed with the experience, then they realize that they need to check how much data they have left. Typically, once they find out how much load or balance they have left, chances are they will restrict their usage because there really is a fear, that they don’t want to use up all their data and get disconnected,” he said.

Despite the internet seemingly becoming a necessity of many Filipinos, mobile data remains expensive.

“If you just look at, say, the most popular pack that is ₱50 with 1GB, the challenge there is for minimum wage earners to spend ₱50 over three days, that’s already 3‑4% of their income, and you have to balance that off with other expenses like basic necessities, education, and other things you need to pay for,” he said.

Due to these problems, Roxas said, many users choose to either set their phone on airplane mode, tether, or schedule their data consumption, which all prevent them from making the best out of their mobile devices.

“These are the challenges that we’re seeing among Filipinos and I think we see it everyday. There are also implications in terms of what we see on our products because there’s really a lot of potential for us to help. If we look at mobile data usage on android phones, 72% have data for up to 15 days over one month, and there’s is an opportunity there,” he said.

Food prices drag Nov. inflation lower

By Lourdes O. Pilar
Researcher
with Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan
Reporter

LOWER food prices caused inflation to ease in November after four straight months of picking up, the government said yesterday.

Food prices drag Nov. inflation lower

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said headline inflation slowed to 3.3% last month from October’s 3.5%, but was still faster than the 2.5% clocked in November last year.

The preliminary result fell within the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) 2.9-3.6% range for the month and was faster than the 3.2% median estimate in a poll BusinessWorld conducted last week.

With the November result, year-to-date inflation settled at 3.2%, matching the BSP’s full-year forecast and keeping within its 2-4% target band for 2017.

In a statement, the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) attributed November’s easing to lower prices of several food items, with the food and non-alcoholic beverages sub-index slowing to 3.2% in November from October’s 3.6%, the lowest since October 2016.

Food-alone inflation slowed to 3.3% during the month, down from October’s 3.8% and November 2016’s 3.5%.

“This can be attributed to lower prices of vegetables, sugar, jam, honey, chocolate and confectionery, fruits, oils and fats, and rice,” the NEDA statement read.

Core inflation — which excludes volatile food and energy prices — was also at 3.3%, slightly faster than the previous month’s 3.2% and past year’s 2.4%.

“We are starting to see year-on-year price declines for ampalaya, cabbage, carrots, tomato, white potato, and imported garlic in the National Capital Region. This signifies that supply is starting to stabilize again,” Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said.

Slower annual increments were also observed in the indices of alcoholic beverages and tobacco (6.1% from October’s 6.8%), clothing and footwear (1.8% from 1.9%) and education (2.2% from 2.3%).

“Inflation fell in November as the appreciation of the peso and better weather conditions in the country resulted in a slower increase in the prices of food, beverages and tobacco,” said Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at Land Bank of the Philippines (Landbank).

“In particular, there was a marked slowdown in the prices of fruits and vegetables, with the latter showing a decline in cost from previous year’s level. The softening in domestic inflation was tempered by higher oil prices, which contributed to higher upticks in the costs of transport, fuel, and electricity,” he added.

Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at Union Bank of the Philippines (UnionBank), shared this view, saying: “With core inflation moving faster, a notable slowing of price growth came from the heavily weighted food and non-alcoholic beverages.

“Together with softer price increases in crude oil, the prices of these basic commodities were toned down by the peso’s recent strength impacting particularly imported goods,” he added.

Mr. Asuncion also noted that the easing of inflation was caused by “largely favorable” weather all-year-round, resulting in fewer supply shocks.

The peso has returned to the P50-per-dollar level since mid-November after breaching the P51-per-dollar level in the third quarter. The local currency’s recovery was attributed to the faster-than-expected 6.9% economic growth in the third quarter and the increased optimism following the approval of the tax reform plan in the Senate.

“Inflation during the last eleven months suggests that the full-year average might settle slightly above midpoint, but will still be well within our target of 2-4%. This already considers expected price spikes owing to holiday season spending this December,” NEDA’s Mr. Pernia said.

In addition, higher international crude oil prices brought by production cuts from the Middle East and higher electricity and fuel prices “will also continue to exert pressure on headline inflation in the near-term,” Mr. Pernia added.

BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. was of the same view, saying in a text message to reporters that the inflation print “was expected” following October’s peak.

“We’re still on track with the 3.2% inflation [target] for 2017…” Mr. Espenilla said.

For UnionBank’s Mr. Asuncion, inflation is expected to settle within 3.2-3.5% this month, saying that inflation levels from November to December “usually rise” due to stronger domestic demand amid the holiday season.

On the other hand, Landbank’s Mr. Dumalagan forecasted inflation to come in at 3.4%, citing the possibility of a depreciation of the peso amid expectations of another US rate hike when the Federal Open Market Committee meets for the last time this year on Dec. 12-13.

RATE HIKES LOOM IN 2018
For analysts at Nomura Global Research, a rate hike by mid-year 2018 is possible despite inflation clocking in below their 3.6% estimate for November.

“As such, we continue to see rising risks that our policy rate forecast of two 25 basis point-hikes in H2 2018 may be delivered earlier in the year,” they said in a research note.

“While some of these price pressures in 2018 are driven by supply-side factors (particularly oil and tax reform adjustments), we believe it will be difficult for BSP to look through the resultant inflation risks with growth persistently coming in above potential, which could push core inflation higher, as well as rising concerns of overheating.”

ANZ Research analyst Eugenia Fabon Victorino expects the BSP to keep policy on hold in its next Monetary Board meeting on Dec. 14.

“We are pencilling in rate hikes to begin in [the first quarter]. Inflation pressures are rising even before the tax reform is implemented. Considering the continued rise in credit growth, we believe that tighter monetary policy is necessary,” she said.

“Strong domestic demand should keep average inflation in the upper half of the central bank’s target range. Even with delays in the tax reform, inflationary pressures are already rising.”

For Jose Mario I. Cuyegkeng, senior economist of ING Bank, seasonal demand could push inflation to 3.4-3.5% this month.

“The likely implementation of the Philippine tax reform measure in 1Q 2018 would also exert some upward pressure on inflation. BSP regards the tax-related pressure as transitory,” Mr. Cuyegkeng said.

“Nevertheless, the BSP at the last policy meeting expected inflation in 2018 to average at 3.4%, within the target range of 2-4%. We remain cautious and expect average inflation in 2018 closer to the upper end of the range at 3.7-3.8%,” he added.

“The moderation argues for BSP to continue to utilize this leeway of moderate and within-target inflation expectation by keeping policy settings steady at its Dec. 14 policy rate meeting. We anticipate the first tightening move of BSP in 2Q 2018.”

ADB earmarks half of assistance for infrastructure development

THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) has set aside fresh funds for Philippine loans over the next three years, with infrastructure accounting for nearly half of the pie, the Finance department said in a press release on Tuesday.

Following a meeting with ADB officials on Nov. 24, the Finance department said that the multilateral lender, under its 2018-2020 Country Operations Business Plan (COBP), will provide a total of $4-billion loans, consisting of $1.9 billion (48% of the total) allotted for sustainable infrastructure and development, $1.2 billion for regional development and finance, as well as $900 million for human development.

This is more than the $3.8 billion ADB had earmarked in August for the same period, with $1.8 billion (47%) going to infrastructure development; $1.5 billion to education and skills development, access to finance, expanded social protection and employment opportunities for the youth; and $500 million for good governance and finance programs.

The latest total compares to $4.32 billion in actual loans approved under the 2011-2016 COBP, consisting of $1.45 billion (34%) for sustainable and climate-resilient infrastructure, $2.57 billion for good governance and finance, and $300 million for employment and education programs.

On top of COBP allocations, the ADB also offered $3.68 billion under its separate 2018-2020 Philippine Sovereign Lending Program, 40% of which will go to infrastructure projects. Under this program, it has earmarked about $920 million with another $400 million on standby for 2018, $1.4 billion for 2019, as well as $1.35 billion with $600 million on standby for 2020.

Projects eligible for ADB’s sovereign financing program include the Expanding Private Sector Participation in Infrastructure Sub-Program 2 ($300 million), Inclusive Financial Sector Development Program ($300 million), Secondary Education Support Project ($300 million), Expanded Social Assistance Project ($300 million), Metro Manila Transport Project ($100 million), Metro Manila Water Supply Project ($200 million), Mindanao River Basin Flood Control Project ($160 million), Central Spine Connectivity Project Phase 1 ($100 million) and the Davao Public Transport Modernization Project ($70 million).

The ADB also reaffirmed its support for the Philippines’ flagship infra projects by co-financing with Japan the P211.46-billion Malolos-Clark Railway and the P134 billion North-South Commuter Rail line from Tutuban in Manila City to Los Baños, Laguna, as well as its commitment for a $5.225-million grant for the reconstruction of Marawi City. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Central bank eyes rules for coin offerings as Bitcoin use surges

THE PHILIPPINES is looking at regulating so-called initial coin offerings (ICOs), as the use of cryptocurrencies gains ground in the country.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. said the central bank is in talks with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on ways to oversee ICOs, in which companies raise funds through the sale of digital tokens.

Companies are seeking to facilitate ICOs and act as a central counterparty for trade in the related tokens to take advantage of the “strong growth potential in this space,” he said in an e-mail.

The use of Bitcoin and its counterparts is rising especially among overseas Filipinos sending money home, as they offer a cheaper and quicker way to move cash.

BSP estimates remittance transactions using bitcoin are now worth about $6 million a month, three times the volume seen last year. While that represents a small proportion of the $2 billion or so of funds Filipinos working abroad send home each month, the increasing use of cryptocurrencies has caught the attention of local regulators.

“The SEC is concerned about possible unlicensed investment-taking activity or otherwise selling of investment contracts in the guise of so-called cryptocurrencies via a so-called initial coin offering,” Commissioner Ephyro Luis B. Amatong said via text.

BSP in February asked businesses using digital currencies to register as a remittance company or a money changer, conduct client checks and report suspicious transactions, following through on a pledge a year ago to oversee the industry. Digital-currency firms had welcomed that development, Mr. Espenilla said.

Still, it “does not, in any manner, constitute an endorsement of virtual currency as legal tender, store of value or investment instrument,” he said.

Governments and regulators around the world are seeking to come to terms with how to treat cryptocurrencies as their prices soar to fresh records almost daily, contributing to a surge in ICOs over the past year. Bitcoin, the biggest cryptocurrency by market value, has surged 12-fold this year and recently changed hands at more than $11,000. — Bloomberg