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China hasn’t delivered on its $24-billion Philippines promise

Almost two years after China pledged $24 billion in investment to the Philippines, barely any projects have materialized, prompting deepening concerns that President Rodrigo Duterte has undermined the country’s sovereignty with little to show in return.
Of the 27 deals signed between China and the Philippines during Duterte’s visit to Beijing in October 2016, China originally agreed to provide $9 billion in soft loans, including a $3 billion credit line with the Bank of China, with a further $15 billion worth of direct investments from Chinese firms in railway, port, energy and mining projects. It didn’t specify a timeline.
Since then, the Philippines has completed only one loan agreement with China worth $73 million to fund an irrigation project north of the capital, Manila, according to Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia. Two bridges in Manila to be funded with Chinese grants worth up to $75 million were inaugurated last week.
The process of securing loans from China “seems to be moving slower” compared to getting assistance from other countries such as Japan, Pernia said at a briefing earlier this month.
Duterte has repeatedly touted China’s financial help as a key reason for pivoting away from the U.S. and Europe, which he says haven’t produced material gains for the Philippines. Yet while Beijing remains the Philippines largest trading partner, when it comes to foreign direct investment, China is outranked by Japan, the U.S., the Netherlands, South Korea and Singapore.
As the Philippines’ only treaty ally, the U.S. also remains a key security partner, providing crucial assistance to the country’s armed forces last year as they struggled to defeat hundreds of Muslim militants who had laid siege to the city of Marawi.
China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs disputed the assertion that it had not followed through on its investment commitments in the Philippines, pointing to the bridge and irrigation projects.
“China-Philippines relations are continuously strengthening and deepening,” it said in an emailed statement. “China attaches great importance to friendly cooperation with the Philippines and enthusiastically supports President Duterte’s ’Major Construction, Strong Construction’ plan.”
Duterte’s visit to Beijing in 2016 served as a turning point for his administration, reinforcing his “ separation” from the U.S. and cementing his shift toward China. His critics have accused him of failing to respond forcefully after Beijing landed bomber aircraft on territory claimed by the Philippines and asserted its presence at Sandy Cay in the Spratly Island chain.
“Under Duterte, the Philippines has forward deployed its geopolitical concessions,” Richard Heydarian, non-resident fellow at ADR-Stratbase Institute, a think-tank, said in an interview. “We have been used by China.”
Territorial Dispute
China’s popularity has suffered in the Philippines, with net trust in the country plummeting to its lowest since April 2016, the month before Duterte was elected president, according to a Social Weather Stations survey of 1,200 voters conducted over the last weekend in June. Almost nine in 10 said they wanted the Philippines to assert its claims against China in the South China Sea.
For Alvin A. Camba, a doctoral candidate at Johns Hopkins University, timing isn’t the issue. The real measure is the annual foreign direct investment from China and Hong Kong, which has already reached $800 million, nearly two-thirds of what it was during the previous administration, Camba said.
“There shouldn’t be any expectations for these deal to be completed, or to be close to completion,” Camba, who has written extensively on Chinese investment in the Philippines, said in an email. “Opening the economy to Chinese FDI was the correct move.”
Still, many of the biggest deals don’t seem to be happening at all.
Greenergy Development Corp., which is based in Mindanao, signed an agreement to develop a $1 billion, 300-megawatt hydropower plant with Power China in October 2016.
When China Power asked for the initial project deadline to be extended several times through January last year, Cerael Donggay, chief executive of Greenergy, agreed.
“The last extension was in February 2017 and still nothing happened, so we terminated the agreement,” Donggay said in a phone interview, adding that his company was now in talks with a Hong Kong-based company to try to complete the project.
One of the Philippines largest nickel miners, Global Ferronickel, signed an agreement with Baiyin Nonferrous Group in October 2016 to explore the construction of a stainless steel plant in the Philippines for up to $700 million.
“It was put on hold,” Global Ferronickel president Dante Bravo said in an interview, because the government was yet to lift an executive order banning new mining projects. “It was exploratory. We have to convince them that it’s really viable,” Bravo said.
Another agreement signed in October 2016 was a $780 million proposal to raise three islands from a waterlogged area of Davao, Duterte’s hometown. That was canceled in July last year after the city’s mayor and presidential daughter, Sara Duterte-Carpio, said a review of the project found that it was not commercially viable.
“After the wave of euphoria which greeted those announcements in 2016, we realize now that those Chinese investment claims were hugely inflated,” said the ADR-Stratbase Institute’s Heydarian. “Looking forward, I expect Japan, the U.S. and other partners in Europe to remain the main suppliers of foreign investment to the Philippines.” — Bloomberg

Trade dep’t asks PCC to look into ‘excessive’ fees by foreign shipping lines

The Department of Trade and Industry has requested the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) to look into “excessive” charges imposed by foreign shipping lines to importers and exporters.
“We are requesting the Philippine Competition Commission, through Chairman Arsenio Balisacan, to act on the concerns of business sector regarding questionable destination and origin charges imposed on local importers/exporters,” Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez said in a Thursday statement.
“These excessive charges and fees are recurring issues that have brought significant negative impact on our local industries.”
The issue of exorbitant fees by foreign carriers was again raised by logistics service providers recently, according to the agency.
The concern has been tackled in a 2017 study jointly conducted by DTI- Export Development Council and National Competitiveness Council last year.
The study revealed that some shipping lines have developed a scheme that makes freight cost less transparent in order to benefit the exporters overseas at the expense of our importers, costing the Philippine economy roughly $2 billion to $5 billion annually. — Janina C. Lim

BDO warns customers of phishing scams

BDO Unibank, Inc. said it is taking measures to prevent phishing, warning its clients to be cautious in providing personal and financial information.
In a statement on Thursday, July 26, BDO said it is taking extra measures to thwart or minimize the impact of phishing or harvesting sensitive information through deceiving unsuspecting clients.
“BDO is taking extra measures… such as monitoring the Internet for the phony messages and sites, and implementing additional authentication procedures,” BDO said.
The e-mail messages usually contain links that, when clicked, may lead clients to what appears to be their bank’s Internet banking login page/website. Some links may generate a pop-up window requesting clients to enter confidential personal and financial information.
The Bank said it will never ask clients to change their password through an e-mail request. “The change of Internet banking passwords should be done only after they have successfully logged on to the secure BDO online banking sites,” BDO said in its statement.
BDO also reminded its customers to watch out for links in the e-mail that redirects them to a different website. “Make sure to personally type the website address (or URL) in the address bar of the browser to get the desired website,” it said. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

San Miguel calls out PSALM over alleged unpaid obligations

San Miguel Corp. (SMC) said state agency Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM) had gained $631 million from the $5.28 billion paid by the diversified company’s subsidiary as of June 2018.
“Again, it’s very clear. We are religiously honoring our contractual obligation to PSALM. In fact, they are already making billions out of the agreement. We are hoping PSALM will refrain from releasing questionable data that put us in a bad light. We want nothing more than for the pending cases to be quickly resolved. In the meantime, we wait and let the courts decide,” SMC president and COO Ramon S. Ang, SMC president and chief operating officer, told reporters on Thursday.
The company made the statement on reports that it still owes PSALM about P20 billion covering a period starting in 2013. — Victor V. Saulon

Manulife launches investment fund for Asian equities

Manulife Asset Management and Trust Corp. (MAMTC) launched an equity fund that seeks to invest in the Asia-Pacific region.
In a statement sent Thursday, MAMTC said it launched the Manulife Asia Best Select Equity Fund, an investment vehicle that seeks to invest in a diversified portfolio of companies across Asia.
“The Fund provides investors access to a wealth of equity opportunities in Australia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, People’s Republic of China, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam and Pakistan,” MAMTC said in the statement. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Visa survey finds most Filipinos confident of going cashless

Majority of Filipinos are now eager to pay electronically, Visa, Inc. said in a report as it flagged concerns on connectivity and infrastructure.
In a press conference Thursday, July 26, Visa said almost seven out of 10 Filipinos or 69% surveyed expressed confidence go cashless in a day, data from the 2017 Visa Consumer Payment Attitudes Study published recently.
The survey added that 70% of respondents have gone cashless for at least a few days citing convenience and safety as primary concerns.
“Filipinos are seeing the benefits of electronic payments in their lives, and this lead to a change in behavior where they become confident in leading a digital lifestyle,” Stuart Tomlinson, Visa country manager for the Philippines and Guam, was quoted as saying in a statement. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Competition, higher costs weigh on Holcim Q2 profit

Earnings of Holcim Philippines, Inc. slumped by a fourth in the second quarter of 2018, as higher costs and stiff competition dragged the double-digit increase in sales.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Thursday, July 26, the listed cement manufacturer said net income reached P868 million, 25% lower than the P1.16 billion profit it delivered in the same period a year ago.
The decline came despite the 18.5% growth in revenues to P10.1 billion. This marked the first time that the company reported an uptick in sales after three consecutive quarters of slower revenues.
“Our Q2 performance showed encouraging trends which translated into significant sales growth on the back of strong building activity. However, rising costs of fuel, power and distribution combined with the peso’s depreciation against the U.S. dollar and tighter competition continued to impact our business performance in the second quarter,” Holcim President and Chief Executive Officer John Stull said in a statement. — Arra B. Francia

IMI Q2 earnings rise on one-time gains

Ayala-led Integrated Micro-Electronics, Inc. (IMI) saw its attributable profit jump by 212% in the second quarter of 2018, following a one-time gain from the sale of its property in China.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Thursday, July 26, the listed global manufacturing firm said net income attributable to equity holders of the parent rose to $26 million in the April to June period, higher than the $8.34 million it generated in the same quarter a year ago.
IMI attributed the increase to the completion of its sale transaction to transfer its Liantang facility to the new Pingshan facility in Shenzhen. This gave the company a net gain of $11 million. Excluding one-offs, the company’s operating income would have increased by 28%.
Revenues for the period climbed 29% to $343 million, as the company benefited from the performance of both its core businesses and recently acquired entities. — Arra B. Francia

How Facebook’s $151 billion rout could rewrite the history books

Facebook Inc. has racked up plenty of milestones in its pioneering journey. Now the social-media giant is poised to add one it would doubtless rather avoid: the biggest stock-market wipeout in American history.
That could happen Thursday if the 24% tumble in Facebook’s stock in after-hours trading is replicated in the regular New York session. Its market capitalization plummeted late Wednesday, July 25, at one point by about $151 billion, as sales and user growth disappointed investors. A move of that magnitude on Thursday would likely be the largest ever loss of value in one day for a US-traded company.
The following is a look at some of history’s other notable one-day share slams, considering American firms that were worth at least $150 billion in any year over the past decade.
Back in the depths of the tech bust, Intel Corp. lost about $91 billion on one September day in 2000. Exxon Mobil Corp., already reeling from the financial crisis and recession in October 2008, lost $53 billion one wretched Wednesday that month. And the slowest profit growth at Apple Inc. in 10 years triggered a loss of almost $60 billion on January 24, 2013.
Facebook ended the after-hours session down 20 percent at $173.50, a loss of about $126 billion in market cap, having declined as much as 24 percent earlier. — Bloomberg

Asian stocks gain on trade deal

Asian stocks climbed, tracking gains in U.S. shares, after President Donald Trump reached an agreement with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker aimed at averting a transatlantic trade war. The yen climbed and the dollar retained its losses.
Equities from Tokyo to Hong Kong advanced after the S&P 500 Index rose to within 1% of a fresh record high, with the two sides agreeing to suspend new tariffs while negotiating over trade. The yield on 10-year Treasuries edged lower while the Japanese equivalent ticked up to levels matching those reached at the start of this week amid speculation the Bank of Japan is paving the way for a change in policy. The offshore yuan strengthened amid signs of further policy easing. Weak sales at Facebook dragged Nasdaq futures lower.
Trump’s meeting with Juncker came amid a raft of earnings from U.S. companies, some of which reflected the impact of recent trade threats from the White House. Facebook tumbled 20% in after-hours trading as revenue and user growth missed estimates and General Motors shares plunged after the carmaker cut its profit forecast on surging metals prices.
Elsewhere, West Texas crude ticked up above $69 a barrel as stockpiles decreased. Gold gained, as did copper futures.
These are the main moves in markets:
Stocks
Japan’s Topix index rose 0.8% as of 10:30 a.m. in Tokyo. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 0.6 percent. The Shanghai Composite rose 0.1 percent. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index fell 0.2 percent. South Korea’s Kospi index rose 0.9 percent. Futures on the S&P 500 Index slid 0.1% after the underlying gauge gained 0.9% Wednesday. Nasdaq futures sank 0.6%.
Currencies
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index held losses after sinking 0.5% to the lowest in almost seven weeks. The euro bought $1.1743 after advancing 0.4 percent. The offshore yuan rose 0.3% to 6.7433 per dollar. The yen gained 0.2% to 110.79 per dollar.
Bonds
The yield on 10-year Treasuries held at 2.97 percent. The yield on 10-year Japanese government bonds rose 2.5 basis points to 0.09%.
Commodities
The Bloomberg Commodity Index increased 1% Wednesday to its highest in over two weeks. West Texas Intermediate crude gained 0.4% to $69.56 a barrel. Copper rose 1.2% on the LME to $6,367 a ton. — Bloomberg

Duterte on US visit: Just a matter of ‘scheduling’

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
President Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday, July 25, said that his visit to the United States is still possible, saying that it is just a matter of “scheduling.”
“I have been invited to the United States several times. But you know it’s not because of anybody or any place there. It has something to do with the schedule,” Mr. Duterte said in his speech at the Asia-Pacific Healthy Islands Conference 2018 in Davao City on Wednesday evening.
Among the high-level figures present at the event were Chinese Ambassador Zhao Jianhua, Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III, and Climate Change Commission Secretary Emmanuel M. De Guzman.
The President added: “You know, I used to fly when I was young, many years [ago]. I had accumulated something like 670 hours of flying. But for the life of me, I cannot stand long flights anymore. Even the recovery of a jet lag, it would take me about almost two to three days to — just stretch it out before I can function as a person outside.”
The President also noted that he has yet to figure out why his “friend,” US President Donald J. Trump, decided to withdraw from the 196-nation Paris agreement on climate change.
“True enough, the United States withdrew… I don’t know why… I have to fathom the reason or even the rationale of the withdrawal. Is it because it cannot work hand in hand with other nations or is it because Trump would like to do it alone? He’s my friend,” he said.
Also in his speech, the President assured his audience that they have his “full support” as they engage with their counterparts and partners in the region and the rest of the world” on their advocacy on health and environment.
“Climate change is not a typhoon that visits your country once or twice a year. Climate change is a day-to-day problem and a day-to-day polishing,” he stressed.
On global peace and security issues, he said: “Before anything else, there has to be peace in the world. The South Korean Peninsula issue has to be resolved. Then, we stop egging Iran to go to war. Because if that’s what will happen, even about a few hundreds of missiles, nuclear, then there’s no use of talking about climate change.”
He said he appreciates nations that approach the problem with “sobriety” and “understanding.”
“China is doing its job and the other countries. But really, I cannot be too generic in my selection because you know how it is. I’m sure everybody knows what these things are. And so, before anything else, let us decide that we avoid war because that would be a disaster. I think it would be the end of the planet Earth,” he added.

2nd tax package runs into Senate wall

By Camille A. Aguinaldo
Reporter
PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. DUTERTE may have pressed Congress last Monday to approve his administration’s remaining tax reforms “in succession, for there is no chance that we can deliver our promises without an equitable tax system.”
There is just one major problem: there are no takers in the Senate.
“This matter is urgent. Do not be part of the problem by ignoring it. I hope to sign Package 2 before the year ends,” Mr. Duterte had said in his third State of the Nation Address (SONA), referring to the second package of tax reforms.
Adding that he supported efforts of leaders in the House of Representatives “to shepherd the bill,” Mr. Duterte said: “I hope the Senate will follow suit, maybe tomorrow, sir?”
Asked for updates on the bill, however, Senate Majority Leader Juan Miguel F. Zubiri told reporters on Tuesday evening: “Wala talagang takers sa amin na mag-sponsor ng (There are no takers among us to sponsor) TRAIN 2,” referring to the second package of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion program that aims to overhaul the entire tax system to shift the burden more on those who can afford it and increase revenue collections.
The first package — Republic Act No. 10963 which took effect last Jan. 1 — slashed personal income tax rates but increased or added levies on a host of items and removed several value added tax exemptions.
The second package seeks to cut corporate income tax rates gradually to as low as 20% from 30% currently in order to put them at par with most of Southeast Asia, and remove tax incentives deemed redundant which deprived the government of about P300 billion in foregone revenues in 2015, according to Finance department estimates.
“… [W]e’ll have to wait for the House (of Representatives) to approve it and do the normal course of action which is basically remit it here to the Senate for us to discuss,” Mr. Zubiri added.
Pero wala sa amin gustong mag-sponsor niyan (But none of us wants to sponsor that).”
The Executive plans to submit the remaining two to three other packages to Congress by the end of this month in hopes of securing their approval within the year, since it is expected that lawmaking — especially involving something as unpopular as taxes — will take a back seat to election campaigning as the May 2019 mid-term polls approach.
Mr. Zubiri reiterated his statement on Wednesday, saying that the tax measure has “very little support” in the Senate.
“What I had said was it has very little support from my colleagues and, as a matter of fact, no senator wants to sponsor the measure at this time,” he said, even as he acknowledged that “[d]efinitely, once the House of Representatives approves the measure and it’s automatically transmitted to us, the Senate would have to conduct public hearings.”
The development is reminiscent difficulties the first tax package had encountered in the House that prompted Mr. Duterte to meet with Senate leaders in March last year in a bid to ensure smooth sailing in that chamber. In his second SONA in July last year, however, he hinted of difficulties in the Senate as well.
Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III told reporters separately on Wednesday that the Senate has its own version of bills on the rationalization of tax incentives.
While tax measures are supposed to emanate from the House under the law, it has sometimes been practice in the interest of saving time for the Senate to deliberate its own measures and just harmonize them with what the lower chamber approves.
“The mentality of most of the members of Senate is to look at the possibility of how we will be able to help in trying to control inflation and the rising prices of commodities,” Mr. Sotto said.
“That is our thrust. So, if ever these bills are presented whether its TRAIN 2 or not, if it’s going to do that, we will take it up. If not, then we will follow the Senate version which is addressed towards better tax incentives.”
Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means committee, said that bills have been filed separately in the Senate seeking to cut corporate tax rates and streamline fiscal incentives.
“There are separate bills on rationalizing fiscal incentives. Two I believe and some bills on lowering corporate income taxes, around five to six. These bills form part of the second package,” he said in a text message to BusinessWorld.
Asked about the chances of the second package being passed by December, Mr. Zubiri said the Senate would have to study first the effects of TRAIN 1 on overall consumer price increases, which economic managers have argued has been minimal, accounting for 0.4 of a percentage point of last semester’s 4.3% headline inflation that compares to the central bank’s 2-4% target range for the entire 2018 and its downgraded 4.5% forecast full-year average.
“The President, of course, being the President, can fully sway and make the calls or his people can make the calls,” Mr. Zubiri said.
“But then I believe it is our responsibility as legislators or representatives of the people to let the President know what are the possible outcomes of the passage of this [reform].”
Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph G. Recto also said the proposed measure may be difficult to pass by December as Mr. Duterte requested.
“I support the objectives of tax reform 2 which are lowering corporate income taxes and rationalizing fiscal incentives, but with amendments,” Mr. Recto said in a text message to BusinessWorld.
“[It] may be difficult to pass by December.”
Sought for comment, Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno reminded the Senate of its responsibility “to respond to the demands of the President”, adding that economic managers will raise the matter in the next Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council (LEDAC) meeting.
“The President is very clear: he wants all the tax reform packages passed before the end of the year. We plan to convene the LEDAC as soon as possible, [so] we will thresh this out,” Mr. Diokno said in media briefing on Wednesday.
“We are optimistic that all tax packages will be passed before the end of the year; otherwise you will say goodbye to it,” he added.
“It’s either this year or forget it because 2019 is an election year. Tax is usually unpopular but let’s see.”
For his part, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said in a text message to reporters, “I will talk to the leadership of the Senate.”
Mr. Zubiri expressed “serious reservations” on TRAIN 2, especially on provisions regarding the fiscal incentives, and warned about the possible loss of jobs and investments if the incentives were removed since companies that enjoyed them could pack up and leave, while those looking to set up shop in the Philippines may just decide to look elsewhere.
“Although we welcome the lowering of corporate income taxes we need to look at the possible loss of jobs on the plan to remove incentives given to several industries including BPOs and export manufacturers which [has work forces that] number by the hundreds of thousands of people,” he said in his Wednesday statement.
“As the former chair of the Committee of Trade and Commerce, I have been briefed on the possible exodus of industries from our country if these incentives are lost. That’s why on a personal note I am not in favor of this measure but I will not stop the individual members of the Senate to discuss, amend, propose any bills relating to the issue.”
For his part, Mr. Recto said he supported the objectives of TRAIN 2 but noted that he will propose amendments “to ensure jobs are not lost but created.”
Sought for comment, Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at Union Bank of the Philippines, said the government would have to reevaluate TRAIN 2 to have senators agree to sponsor the bill. “A lack of sponsor in the Senate for TRAIN 2 would be problematic because a legislator has to sponsor the bill first before it goes through the legislative process. The government would have to look for someone who can champion the law in the Senate and would have to probably re-evaluate the bill to have someone agree to sponsor the bill eventually,” he said in an e-mail to BusinessWorld.
For his part, Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan said in a text message to BusinessWorld: “The main hurdle is that each legislator has his or her own idea what is ideal for TRAIN 2… Well, perhaps then just as the case of Train 1, the President will need to meet the 24 senators so they can discuss these apprehensions.”

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