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DM Consunji eyeing Japanese partner for NSCR civil works bid

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter
DM CONSUNJI, Inc. is currently in talks with a Japanese partner to form a consortium that will bid for the construction contract for the North-South Commuter Rail (NSCR) traversing Malolos to Tutuban.
DM Consunji Chairman Isidro A. Consunji said he will be flying to Japan on Tuesday to continue ongoing discussions with a Japanese firm for a project involving the installation of the railway’s civil works and system.
“I think the Japanese are serious kasi naglabas na sila ng (because they prepared) bid documents… Kailangan may (There is a need for a) local counterpart,” Mr. Consunji said during a briefing over the weekend.
The $2.88-billion NSCR — running from Malolos, Bulacan to Tutuban, Manila — will be funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency through official development assistance loans.
Mr. Consunji said the Japanese company has already shown the engineering design and specifications of the railway, noting the difficult part is convincing the Japanese that a local firm can handle such a large project.
“One of the issues is: can a Filipino company handle a project this big? Pero ang Pilipino madali naman mag-scale up pag malaki ang trabaho. Hindi naman mahirap (But for Filipinos, it is easy to scale up if it is a big job. It’s not hard),” he said.
The NSCR is the first phase of the North-South Railway Project, spanning Metro Manila to Albay. The entire railway will consist of four tracks, the first of which connects Malolos, Bulacan to Tutuban, Manila. The second phase will link Tutuban to Los Baños, Laguna. The Malolos-Clark railway will be connected to the Tutuban-Malolos portion, while the fourth phase will connect Calamba, Laguna to Legazpi, Albay.
Mr. Consunji expects the government to tap various contractors for different phases of the project to speed up its completion.
The NSCR, which will use electric and high-speed technology, is expected to service up to 100,000 passengers per hour. In comparison, the Light Rail Transit has a capacity of around 20,000 passengers per hour.
The project aims to ease congestion in Metro Manila, with the 37.6 kilometer-Malolos-Tutuban line expected to cut travel time from two hours to 35 minutes.
“That’s a very big change in Metro Manila. We should aim for that to happen,” Mr. Consunji said, calling the project a “game-changer” for transportation in the Philippines.
Should the DMCI consortium secure the contract, Mr. Consunji said it would take three years to complete the project.
The executive further added there will be no right of way issues since the company will use the line of the Philippine National Railway.
“Walang right of way issue, kaya ang laki ng chance it can happen (There is no right of way issue, so there’s a big chance it can happen),” Mr. Consunji said.
The NSCR is one of the flagship projects of the current administration’s infrastructure program called “Build, Build, Build.” In December last year, the Department of Transportation awarded the consulting contract for NSCR to a Japanese consortium led by Oriental Consultants Global.
DM Consunji is part of diversified engineering conglomerate DMCI Holdings, Inc. The listed company’s net income rose 5% to P4.3 billion during the January to March period of 2018, lifted by an 8% climb in revenues to P20.3 billion. The company was affected by unplanned outages from its power business during the period, which was offset by higher coal prices.

Davao targets 1,000-ha. in extra land for coffee

THE government is hoping to upgrade the coffee bean crop by raising production in the Davao region and by improving the genetic quality of domestic output.
Melani A. Provido, the Department of Agriculture (DA) Region XI’s High Value Crops Development Program coordinator, said in a statement that the office hopes to add another 1,000 hectares (ha) planted to coffee, from the current 2,300 ha in the Davao Region due to the 2.4% annual increase in demand.
“[This] is expected to rise in the coming years. More and more people drink coffee every day as the younger generations drink more,” she said.
Under the Philippine Coffee Industry Roadmap 2017-2022, the government plans to expand the area planted to coffee by 20,000 ha annually and increase production volume to 120,000-200,000 tons from 37,000 tons.
By year’s end, the total area planted to coffee should be 16,597 ha, with 12,448 ha dedicated to the Robusta variety, 4,149 ha to Arabica and 1,000 to Liberica.
“To sustain coffee production, there is a need to rejuvenate old trees to improve their productivity. It is a widely accepted practice for revitalizing coffee farms and has been found more advantageous than replanting,” Ms. Provida said.
The DA has so far rehabilitated 185,500 trees which are expected to bear larger berries after a year. Replanted trees, on the other hand, need another three to four years before flowering to produce the same results.
Under the roadmap, the government is seeking to increase the yield of green coffee beans to 1 metric ton per ha by 2022 and cut the importation of coffee bean and its products by 65%.
DA Agriculturist John Paul Matuguinas recommends that farmers pick red berries for their fully-developed flavor instead of “strip picking” or picking all of the berries.
“Proper picking, drying and storing must also be observed to produce quality coffee. Poor handling and storing practices can worsen the quality of coffee,” he added.
“In producing specialty coffee, the wet process is observed where red berries are washed, de-pulped, parched and fermented for 24 hours. After fermentation, beans are air dried in an elevated drying bed.”
With higher yields, the roadmap also targets 3% in increased employment and the adoption of environmentally-friendly technologies.
Ms. Provido said that the DA will provide processing equipment such as pulper machines to ensure quality and reduce waste in picked berries.
Cavite State University researchers in cooperation with the Department of Science and Technology are also working to improve the genetic diversity of coffee beans which was found to be “low.”
The study found that some distinct coffee varieties turned out to be genetically the same, while some were also almost indistinguishable even at molecular level, according to the Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development.
The state universities of Benguet, Central Philippines and Mindanao also took part in the project which also seeks to conserve and manage the coffee’s genetic resources.
The project will enable researchers to identify the genetic origins of the beans and “define possible parental linkages for breeding” through a database which can be used for breeding programs in the future. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

With riot of color, Virgil Abloh marks new era for Louis Vuitton menswear


PARIS — On an outdoor catwalk decked out in a riotous rainbow of colors, Louis Vuitton’s new menswear designer Virgil Abloh unveiled his streetwear-infused take on the brand with his first collection on Thursday.
The show, where models in arrays of all-white outfits or tie-dye prints walked between tree-lined avenues, drew celebrities from hip-hop’s Kanye West to singer Rihanna in the front row, while rapper Kid Cudi even took to the runway.
Abloh, an American whose own label Off-White is known for its luxury urban creations such as branded hoodies, was appointed to the Vuitton job in March.
He replaced Kim Jones, who moved to design menswear at Christian Dior — also one of the large roster of brands owned by France’s LVMH, at a time of upheaval for men’s designs as sales pick up in an industry long dominated by womenswear.
A lurch toward streetwear looks — including the ubiquity of sneakers, which all top luxury brands are now embracing — has helped growth in the category.
Abloh surprised with less of an emphasis on logos and urban looks than some expected, opting for carefully tailored-suit jackets in block colors, including bold reds or beige.
“He respected the codes and the heritage of Louis Vuitton, which is very important for a house of this nature, but he infused his own sensibility and his own DNA into what we saw,” said Roopal Patel, fashion director of department store Saks Fifth Avenue.
The designer also put the accent on accessories — one of the mainstays of Vuitton, originally a luggage maker — with holster-style leather vests worn over the shoulders, and classic bags offset by edgy, fluorescent chains hanging from the handles.
The collection kicked off with all-white styles before evolving into colors. Some looks included bead-incrusted jackets with a motif drawn from 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz and featuring its heroine Dorothy, who is transported in the film into a color-infused dream world from her black-and-white life.
The kaleidoscope effect was also present on the edges of the catwalk, with 3,000 fashion students and Vuitton workers wearing colored T-shirts flanking the runway.
Paris Men’s Fashion Week ran until June 24. — Reuters

Luxury sneakers: high style and a booming market

NEW YORK — Christian, aged 10, has 20 pairs of high-end sneakers in his closet at his home in the suburbs of New York.
Maxance, who just turned 14, asked his parents for an $800 pair of Adidas shoes for his birthday. He did not get them.
“We live in a world where sneakers are basically works of art,” the teenager said.
The world is also one in which luxury sneakers — often limited-edition collaborations between the big names in sportswear and fashion labels, rappers or famous athletes — have become coveted accessory for everyone from tween boys to middle-aged men.
Some pairs fetch tens of thousands of dollars — the super-rare Derek Jeter Air Jordan 11, named for the New York Yankees superstar, were going for about $50,000 in recent weeks. Only five pairs were released.
Such shoes are bought second- or third-hand, mainly on the internet but also in chic boutiques or pop-up stores, packaged in plastic wrap to protect them.
New York is one of the capitals of this flourishing high-end sneaker culture, though the trade in trainers is hardly new.
It began in the 1990s — when Nike made it big with the first Air Jordans, made for the legendary basketball star Michael Jordan, those shoes quickly became must-have collector’s items.
Then in the 2000s, the market grew as the internet boomed, especially on auction sites like eBay.
JUST PART OF THE MARKET?
Today, boosted by celebrities, social media influencers and the mainstream influence of rap culture, the sneaker biz has gone global. It’s particularly big in the United States, Europe and Asia.
Since 2016, it even has its own “stock exchange” — the StockX website.
Matt Powell, a sports industry analyst for the NPD Group, says the actual size of the luxury sneaker market is hard to estimate, but one thing is clear — “that market has had nice growth.”
Even if it’s centered on a few key industry players, the market is fed by a mass of small-time vendors — many of them sneaker addicts themselves looking for a quick way to make extra cash.
“Estimates of the resale market is that it’s at one billion dollars,” Powell says, explaining that it’s still a “pretty small sliver” of the overall athletic shoe market, which hit $38 billion in the United States in 2017, and $100 billion worldwide.
But for John McPheters, the president and co-founder of Stadium Goods — mainly a web business, but which opened what has become one of New York’s most popular sneaker stores in Soho in late 2015 — these estimates are way too low.
Stadium Goods sold more than $100 million in shoes last year, McPheters says. And sales have at least doubled this year, in what he says is a healthier market now that certificates of authenticity have become the norm.
“What we are doing today is really just scratching the surface of what is going to be an even bigger business in the years to come,” the 38-year-old says.
WHAT ABOUT WOMEN?
The future plans of McPheters and Stadium Goods are a good indication of the luxury sneaker market’s potential and worldwide appeal.
While internet sales account for 90% of the firm’s total for now, they plan to open several more actual stores in the US and abroad.
China is its largest market outside the US, followed by Britain and Canada, McPheters explains.
Thanks to a partnership with Britain-based online fashion platform FarFetch, Stadium Goods is hoping to soon break into the Russian market.
Matt Troisi, 29, is a regular customer at Stadium Goods — he owns about 300 pairs of sneakers — and an experienced buyer and seller online. He is convinced the market is huge and about to explode.
Troisi says he earns $25,000-35,000 a year in the sneaker trade — about half of what he makes as a manager for the Tao restaurant group, where he rubs shoulders with celebrities who help him get access to limited-edition treasures.
“Men — sometimes we don’t have the best fashion. We don’t really know what the cool stuff is,” Troisi says.
“We can wear all black and have no style whatsoever in clothing and just throw on a cool pair of sneakers and that’s your outfit!” he adds with a laugh. On his feet? A pair of Nikes marking the 1969 Moon landing that are worth about $1,000.
McPheters says one key to the future growth of the luxury kicks business will be to attract more women.
“That’s one of the problems in the industry, one of the areas brands need to focus on,” he says.
“For a long time, brands have tried to entice female sneakerheads with pink laces, and ‘feminine’ colors while in reality, women want the exact same products as men do,” he adds.
“Over the next few months, we’re working on some innovative ways to better present our products with women in mind.” — AFP

Savoy Hotel to open this week

MEGAWORLD CORP. is set to open Savoy Hotel Manila within its Pasay City township this week, adding 684 rooms to the company’s hospitality portfolio.
In a statement issued over the weekend, the listed property developer said it will start operations of Savoy Hotel Manila inside Newport City on June 28. The hotel is located across the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Terminal 3, and is within the same township that hosts integrated resort and casino Resorts World Manila.
The hotel’s standard rooms range from 23 to 27 square meters (sq.m.) in size, while executive suites are from 35 to 50 sq.m. for executive suites.
Savoy Hotel Manila will feature the Squares, or co-working spaces located on various guest floors that will be open 24 hours a day. It also has three food and beverage outlets, namely the Savoy Cafe which features Asian and Western cuisines, the Zabana Bar intended for cocktails and drinks, and the Poolside.
Guests staying in the executive suite rooms will have access to the Connect Lounge, an exclusive lounge that will serve as an extension for Savoy Cafe.
The hotel offers roundtrip airport transfers, complimentary daily supply of newspapers, pool and gym access, and laundry services for guests, among others.
“From businessmen who need a venue for meetings, travelers who want to spend the night beside the airport terminal, to families who want to enjoy staycation together, the hotel is a perfect venue for a different hotel experience beside NAIA Terminal 3 and within the 24/7 leisure and entertainment complex of Newport City,” Savoy Hotel Manila General Manager Lorenzo Tang said in a statement.
Savoy Hotel Manila is the second hotel carrying the company’s homegrown brand. The first Savoy Hotel is located inside Boracay Newcoast, its 150-hectare tourism estate in Boracay Island.
Megaworld in 2016 said it is spending P5 billion to build three Savoy hotels. The third one will offer 547 rooms, and is currently being built in the 20-hectare Mactan Newtown township in Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu.
This year, the company has committed to launch P80 billion worth of residential projects, in a bid to take advantage of the growing demand from both local and foreign buyers. With this, Megaworld expects to hit P110 billion in reservation sales in 2018.
Megaworld will be spending P60 billion in capital expenditures this year to support this target, with around P10 billion already rolled out during the first quarter of the year.
The property firm of tycoon Andrew L. Tan booked an 11% increase in attributable profit to P3.2 billion during the first three months of 2018, following an 11% uptick in revenues to P13.1 billion. — Arra B. Francia

Bamboo designated ‘golden crop’ by Davao agri expo in September

DAVAO CITY — This year’s Davao Agri-Trade Expo will promote the planting of so-called “golden crops,” which include cacao, coffee, coconut, corn, cassava, rice, banana, as well as bamboo.
“The reason we included bamboo is because it is an emerging crop and it is very easy to grow and it can grow in the hinterlands,” said John Carlo B. Tria, chair of the 2018 expo, which is set for Sept. 20-22.
Mr. Tria said while bamboo is mainly grown for use as a building material, furniture, crafts, and fiber, the organization aims to promote it as well for food.
Bamboo shoots are used in Asian cooking.
Focusing on the golden crops, he said, will help sustain the momentum of Mindanao’s economic growth.
He noted that in the last few years, key Mindanao regions have been exhibiting steady growth rates in their respective gross regional domestic products, with agriculture, fisheries and forestry still the major sectors.
“There is potential for agriculture to create wealth,” Mr. Tria said, if production is improved alongside sustainable practices.
The expo, which is on its 20th year, will also feature a conference on agricultural innovations to promote technological advancement to increase productivity.
The innovations, he said, cover not just farming techniques, but also agribusiness management, agri-tourism, and financing.
The expo will also tackle food security, support infrastructure, and efforts to get young people interested in farming. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

Treasury bills, bonds likely to fetch higher rates

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES on offer this week will likely fetch higher yields amid likely tepid demand from investors following a fresh interest rate hike by the local central bank.
The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) is offering P15 billion worth of Treasury bills (T-bill) today. Broken down, the Treasury plans to raise P5 billion via the three-month papers, P4 billion through the six-month tenor, respectively, and another P6 billion in one-year T-bills.
The government will also offer P10 billion in reissued five-year Treasury bonds (T-bond) with a remaining life of four years and eight months on Tuesday.
“For the bills, we expect yields to pick up by around five basis points across all tenors from the previous auction,” a trader said in a phone interview Friday.
Last Monday, the Treasury made a partial award of the short-dated securities, raising just P8.356 billion out of the P15 billion it intended to borrow.
The government rejected all bids for the 91-day tenor while it fully awarded the P4 billion for the 182-day papers. The government borrowed just P4.356 billion out of the planned P6 billion for the 364-day securities. The six-month and one-year T-bills fetched average rates of 3.766% and 4.357%, respectively.
Meanwhile, another bond trader said the five-year bond auction on Tuesday will fetch higher yields that might land within a 5.75-6% range.
The first trader likewise placed the average rate for the five-year papers at “around 5.65-5.85%.”
In April, the Treasury raised P10 billion as planned from the reissued five-year bonds, with total tenders amounting to P18.924 billion. The bonds fetched an average rate of 5.592%, higher than the coupon rate of 5.5%.
At the secondary market on Friday, the three- and six-month papers were quoted at 3.9536% and 4.2393%, respectively, while the one-year T-bills fetched 4.3119%.
The five-year bonds, meanwhile, were quoted at 5.8467%.
The first trader said investors will “take into account the recent hike in policy rates” of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) in pricing their bids.
Last Wednesday, the BSP’s rate-setting Monetary Board decided to raise its interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point amid concerns of rising inflation. Rates now stand at 4% for the overnight lending rate, 3.5% for the overnight reverse repurchase rate, and 3% for the overnight deposit rate.
The BSP decided to hike its benchmark rates as “inflation expectations remained elevated for 2018 and that the risk of possible second-round effects from ongoing price pressures argued for follow-through monetary policy action.”
However, the second trader noted the BSP rate hike was already priced in by the investors on previous auctions.
“The policy setting already affected the market as bids rights now are higher, so expect the weak demand for bonds to continue,” the trader said in a text message.
The second trader noted that there will be lack of demand for the T-bonds “as the market awaits BTr’s borrowing plan for the second half.”
The first trader added that the weakness of the peso against the dollar will also be factored in by the market.
The local currency has been slipping to near 12-year lows since May amid lingering concern over the trade tensions between the United States and China.
The Treasury is holding two auctions per week this quarter — one for T-bills and another for T-bonds — to reflect increased borrowing requirements as it is set to raise P325 billion via the domestic market in the period. However, it has made several rejections and partial awards in previous auctions amid rising rates.
The government plans to borrow P888.23 billion from local and foreign sources this year to fund its budget deficit, which is capped at 3% of the country’s gross domestic product. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Himalaya Botanique introduces five flavors of herbal toothpaste


IN 1930, M. Manal travelled around the forests of Burma where he witnessed a local pacify elephants by feeding it the root of Rauwolfia serpentina, a glabrous perennial herb with medicinal values. Mr. Manal’s curiosity led him to examine the herb’s properties which, in turn, led to the founding of the Himalaya Drug Company in India. At present, the company provides herbal health care and personal products in over 90 countries.
Unlike regular toothpaste, Botanique is “made with 100% Organic Certified (USDA certified) ingredients and from 97% natural source[s]” and is free from nine chemicals found in regular toothpastes — paraben, fluoride, gluten, carrageenan, and sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS), saccharin, sorbitol, sodium hydroxide, triclosan.
Himalaya Drug Co. CEO for Asia Pacific Sake Gore said at the launch of the products on June 20 at Makati that their team chose to introduce the brand to the Philippines after research showed that “Filipinos brush their teeth maximum times in a day anywhere in Asia” which indicates their value for oral hygiene. Added to that, there had yet to be an herbal brand of toothpaste to be introduced in the country.
Botanique toothpaste comes in soy-based ink printed boxes and 150 gm tubes with orange caps. The toothpaste has two lines — Complete Care (in peppermint, mint, and cinnamon flavors) and Whitening Complete Care (in peppermint and mint flavors).
The Himalaya Botanique toothpaste lines — Complete Care (P345) and Whitening Complete Care (P355) — are available at Watsons Personal Care Store, selected Mercury Drug stores, and Lazada. — MP Soliman

Petron keeps top credit rating for P20-B bonds

PETRON CORP. grew its net income by 4% to P5.8 billion during the first quarter of 2018. — AFP

PETRON CORP. maintained the highest credit rating for its P20-billion outstanding bonds, a local debt watcher said.
In a statement over the weekend, Philippine Ratings Services Corp. (PhilRatings) said it has retained the PRS Aaa credit rating for the listed firm, indicating that its obligations are of the highest quality with minimal credit risk.
PRS Aaa is the highest on the debt watcher’s credit rating scale. The retainment of the rating pertains to Petron’s “extremely strong” capacity to meet its financial commitments.
The rating was given a stable outlook, which means that it is unlikely to change within the next 12 months.
Petron’s P20-billion bonds were issued back in 2016, as part of its P40-billion shelf registration program with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The issuance consisted of Series A fixed-rate bonds worth P13 billion due 2021, and Series B fixed rate bonds amounting to P7 billion due 2023.
The company’s shelf registration will last until 2019.
Philratings said it maintained the highest rating for Petron’s bonds due to its strong sales performance and market position not only in the Philippines but also in Malaysia. The company likewise cited Petron’s sound business strategy and experienced management, on the back of a positive outlook on the Philippine economy.
Citing data from the Department of Energy, PhilRatings said Petron is the leading player in the local oil industry, capturing a 27.6% share of the market through more than 2,400 service stations in the country. Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corp. trailed with a 20% share, while Chevron has 7%.
Petron is also the third-largest player in Malaysia, behind Petronas (Petroleam Nasional Berhad) and Shell Malaysia. The company has around 600 service stations in Malaysia, bringing its global station network to more than 3,000.
The company is currently expanding its capacity by 90,000 barrels a day, with the goal of producing 270,000 barrels a day by 2020.
Petron is the largest contributor to the earnings of diversified conglomerate San Miguel Corp., which holds an aggregate ownership of 68.3% of the company. — Arra B. Francia

Brazil cane crop size hard to gauge due to irregular rains

SAO PAULO — Sugar market players in Brazil are diverging widely about the size of the 2018-19 cane crop in the center-south, the world’s largest sugar producing region, as erratic weather makes it difficult to assess the season’s likely final tally.
The outlook for the center-south crop has been one of the hot topics in the global sugar market after recent harvest downward revisions due to below-average rains in key areas such as Sao Paulo state.
While some market participants believe the crop could fall further, others see a tendency for recovery mainly in cane fields outside of Sao Paulo that could prevent further cuts to the overall center-south volume.
Estimates for cane crush vary as much as 32 million tons from the highest to the smallest view.
“We had a dryer-than-normal weather in Sao Paulo in recent months, indeed. But it was about normal in Mato Grosso do Sul and Minas Gerais, for example, so it is hard to guess (the final crop size),” Rui Chammas, chief executive of Biosev, the Brazilian sugar unit controlled by commodities trader Louis Dreyfus, told Reuters.
Copersucar, which sells sugar and ethanol for 35 center-south associated mills, projected this week the region’s cane output at 555 million tons, the lowest estimate so far, adding it could do another evaluation later this month.
Paraná state, which is expected to produce 37 million tons of cane, has also had better weather recently. “We had good rains last week, they will improve the conditions for cane to be harvested later in the crop,” Miguel Rubens Tranin, the head of local industry group Alcopar, told Reuters.
Fabio Meneghin, chief analyst for sugar and ethanol at Agroconsult, says the consultancy is maintaining its number at 570 million tons for now. “We know that there were losses, but seems that some projections were a bit drastic,” he said.
It is unclear if other regions could make up for losses in Sao Paulo.
“The situation in some areas, as in northern Sao Paulo, is critical. I don’t remember seeing such a prolonged dry weather,” Vitor Campanelli, a large cane farmer and supplier to French group Tereos in Brazil, said.
Thomson Reuters Eikon’s Agriculture Weather Dashboard shows no rains for most of Sao Paulo state through July 7. — Reuters

Peso may consolidate vs dollar

THE PESO is seen to consolidate against the dollar this week due to likely hawkish speeches from some United States central bank officials and following the decision of the local monetary authority to raise interest rates.
The local unit strengthened against the greenback on Friday, ending the session at P53.28 against the dollar from the P53.46-per-dollar finish a day ago amid continued market concerns over the trade spat between the US and China.
Week on week, the peso was almost flat from its P53.27-per-dollar finish on June 14.
Last week, a foreign currency trader said the peso will consolidate in the coming days as it is expected to track the movement of the dollar.
“The peso will take its cue from how the dollar will move next week,” the trader said in a phone interview.
Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at Land Bank of the Philippines, said the greenback is expect to move sideways with an upward bias this week amid likely upbeat US data and possible hawkish remarks from some US central bank officials.
On Monday, he said the dollar “may possibly” dip following the weaker-than-expected US reports on services and manufacturing.
“[Following its decline], the dollar is expected to show some upward bias in the remaining days of the week due to potentially upbeat US data on housing and durable goods orders as well as likely mixed-to-hawkish speeches from five Federal Reserve officials,” he said in an e-mail on Saturday.
While St. Louis Fed President James B. Bullard is expected to maintain his “dovish” view on future rate hikes, Mr. Dumalagan said other Fed officials might generally affirm the US central bank’s recent guidance of four US rate hikes this year.
Mr. Dumalagan also noted that lingering concerns over the trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies may also support the greenback by keeping safe-haven demand strong.
“The impact of hawkish signals on the dollar might be reinforced by sustained demand for safe-haven currencies amid escalating US-China trade conflict,” he said.
“For now, I guess we will consolidate,” the trader noted. “Let’s see if there’s a chance for dollar-peso to [strengthen] to get that correction coming from the hike done by the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas).”
Last Wednesday, the BSP raised its interest rates by 25 basis points during their fourth review this year amid continued concerns over inflation. Rates now stand at a 3-4% range.
“At least it should give a little bit of reprieve from the weakness that we’ve been seeing,” the trader added.
For this week, Mr. Dumalagan expects the peso to trade between P53 and P53.50, while the trader sees the local currency moving within a P53.20-P53.50 range on Monday. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

KC Concepcion, Megan Young talk of family, insecurities during sale launch

E-COMMERCE platform Shopee is holding its beauty fair until June 27. The third-party buy-and-sell platform will offer discounts on beauty products on the app until the aforementioned date.
Because the app’s sale will be about beauty products, the company tapped two speakers to talk about their own journey with beauty and their struggles with society’s standards of beauty.
KC Concepcion is the daughter that fans of Sharon Cuneta and Gabby Concepcion in the 1980s wanted and waited for after the marriage of their favorite actress. While that marriage ended, it seemed Ms. Concepcion didn’t rely on her parents’ star power to get where she is. She did have to audition to be an MTV VJ, for example, she said during the Shopee beauty fair launch last week.
Ms. Concepcion went on to become an actress, and now endorses Palmolive shampoo and conditioner.
When asked about who influenced her standards of beauty today, she said, “I think it was the people around me; growing up with successful women, growing up with women who have such high standards of beauty.”
“When you grow up with women who appreciate beauty and hard work and people, I guess that’s something you catch.”
Ms. Concepcion does yoga and pilates five or six times a week to maintain her figure. As for her inner beauty, she takes care of that too: “Learn to give yourself time to just be: stop doing, doing, doing, all the time.”
While Ms. Concepcion is the pampered child of her family and her parents’ fans, life wasn’t so easy for Miss World 2013 Megan Young.
The Filipino-American actress grew up in Zambales and then moved to Manila to pursue an acting career in the early 2000s.
During the launch, she talked about her insecurities growing up: being too thin and having lips that were too thick (this according to her). “I’m in a relationship with my insecurities,” she said. “At such a young age, I was already conscious about my body.”
She talked about how her journey to become a pageant queen shaped her and let her know who she really was. By knowing who she was, she didn’t let the noisy hype of pageant preparations change her completely. “By knowing who I was, and the things that I like, that’s when I felt empowered.” — Joseph L. Garcia

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