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EPA to propose 19.88 billion gallon biofuels mandate, up 3%

THE US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will propose setting a 19.88-billion-gallon biofuels blending mandate in 2019 under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), up about 3 percent from 2018, according to two sources briefed on the matter.
The proposal will include 15 billion gallons for conventional biofuels like corn-based ethanol, unchanged from this year, and 4.88 billion gallons for advanced biofuels, up from 4.29 billion from this year, the sources said, asking not to be named.
The targets for biodiesel will be 2.43 billion gallons, up from 2.1 billion this year.
Biodiesel compliance credits, known as D4s, rose higher in early trading on news of the increased volumes, with trades at 53 cents each, up from 47 cents a day earlier, traders said.
The proposal, which could come as early as Friday, is not expected to include any proposed reallocation of biofuels volumes waived under the EPA’s smaller refinery hardship waiver program, the sources said.
EPA administrator Scott Pruitt was set to announce plans to force larger refineries to make up for gallons exempted at smaller plants, but the proposal was thwarted by an outcry from the oil industry.
The EPA administers the RFS, a 2005 law requiring refiners to blend biofuels like ethanol into the fuel pool or buy compliance credits from those that do. The agency is required to set targets for blending volumes by Nov. 30 for the following year. — Reuters

Republic Cement taps Aboitiz unit for 2 projects

ABOITIZ Construction, Inc. has been tapped by its affiliate Republic Cement and Building Materials, Inc. for the latter’s projects in Bulacan and Cebu.
“Much is expected by Republic Cement, and so we aim to do this right and on schedule. We will be able to accomplish this with everyone’s support and cooperation,” said Albert A. Ignacio, Jr., Aboitiz Construction president and chief operating officer, in a statement.
Under the contract, Aboitiz Construction will have to complete within 11 months the structural and mechanical works in the Bulacan and Cebu sites of Republic Cement, the infrastructure business unit of the Aboitiz group. The two had been working on some projects since 2017.
Aboitiz Construction quoted Republic Cement as saying that to support the country’s infrastructure growth, the company is studying initiatives to improve clinker and cement capacity for its plants in Teresa and Batangan and cement production in Iligan.
“Our investment activities are geared towards ensuring the stable supply of construction materials in support of the Philippine government’s ‘Build, Build, Build’ campaign. Ultimately, our goal is to help build a stronger Republic,” said Nabil Francis, president of Republic Cement Services, Inc.
Meanwhile, Aboitiz Construction, a registered triple A General Contractor with the Philippine Contractors Accreditation Board, has over 40 years of construction, fabrication, engineering and project management services. Aboitiz Construction continues to live its purpose of advancing businesses of clients with every structure it builds while, at the same time, advancing communities by the jobs it creates. It provides jobs for over 5,000 workers.
Aboitiz Construction has more than 40 years of construction, fabrication, engineering and project management services. Local cement maker and distributor Republic Cement has presence nationwide. — Victor V. Saulon

CIC expects centralized system to go live in Q3

By Karl Angelo N. Vidal, Reporter
STATE-RUN Credit Information Corp. (CIC) has pushed back the launch of the country’s centralized credit information system as it is still ensuring the quality and safety of data.
In an interview, CIC President and Chief Executive Officer Jaime P. Garchitorena said the national credit information system should go live “within the next quarter,” well beyond an earlier January target.
“We should be going live, I want to say July, but we should be going live within the next quarter,” Mr. Garchitorena told BusinessWorld last week.
Mr. Garchitorena said the national credit registry is still ensuring the security of their database amid escalated cybersecurity threats.
“In all my interviews, I’m very careful to couch my predictions because before going live, security is a major concern. And the environment has become such where many of the…data outside CIC can [be exposed] to fraud and misuse,” he said.
“The Comelec breach was the largest in the Philippine history, and the level of data that was leaked out of the public was so substantial that it actually has the potential to allow fraud to happen,” Mr. Garchitorena said.
To recall, hackers under the name LulzSec Pilipinas leaked the “whole database” of the Commission on Elections in 2016, exposing voters’ registration data.
Amid heightened cybersecurity threats, Mr. Garchitorena said the CIC instituted a series of information technology audits, vulnerability assessment and penetration testing to ensure the data in the centralized system will be secured.
“We moved back the go live schedule because of that,” he said.
In a July 2017 interview, Mr. Garchitorena said CIC’s January 2018 target for the database to go live may be pushed back should the firm experience issues in the system primarily involving security measures.
Republic Act No. 9510 or the Credit Information System Act mandates the establishment of a comprehensive and centralized credit information system, with CIC tasked to consolidate the data.
The law also states that submitting entities, which are the lenders, are required to submit and provide all credit data of their borrowers in their database to the CIC.
Aside from ensuring the security of the credit information system, Mr. Garchitorena added the CIC is currently in a “validation stage” where it is “getting a sense” of how much data they carry have inaccuracies that may stem from being old or poorly maintained.
“We expect real volumes of paid-for transactions to happen within the quarter. Once there’s a financial exchange, then it becomes a real product,” Mr. Garchitorena said.
By next quarter, the CIC hopes that it will be able to charge its users, receive data corrections from special accessing entities (SAE) and other financial institutions.
“That’s what we hope to see in the third quarter,” Mr Garchitorena said, noting that “going live” is not like flipping a switch to be open for business.
“Going live is rolling the services of the CIC in a manner where we can view the impacts across usage cycles and then start building safeguards or managing the situations as it happens.”
The system can be accessed by two kinds of users: the SAEs or credit bureaus, as well as the submitting financial institutions, such as banks, cooperatives, lending firms, to name some.
Currently, there are four official SAEs namely local firm CIBI Information, Inc., South Africa’s Compuscan, Italy’s CRIF S.p.A, and United States’ TransUnion Information Solutions, Inc.

Muji Greenbelt 3 reopens this week

ON JUNE 29, Japanese lifestyle brand Muji will reopen its store at Greenbelt 3 after three months of renovation. The store’s new interiors are inspired by nature and incorporate wood, stone, sand, and metal to its design. The 406-square-meter store will offer health and beauty products, stationery, travel items, kitchenware, houseware, furniture, and electronics items. Added to the mix are men’s and women’s apparel, bags, shoes, and accessories. Aside from its new interiors, Muji Greenbelt 3 introduces its newest offerings in the local market — the Aging Skin Care Series and Innerwear for men and women. Exclusive opening giveaways and promotions await customers as Muji unveils its new store concept. On opening weekend, customers will get the chance to receive special limited giveaways such as P200 Muji Gift Certificates, Sensitive Skin Care samples, and an exclusive Muji Greenbelt 3 My Bag, with a minimum purchase. Select Muji Essentials will be offered at a 20% discount including its large aroma diffusers, Oakwood paper cord chairs, PP case drawers, Organic cotton denim, and USB desk fans, to name a few. In addition, the new Aging Skin Care and Innerwear will have an introductory promo of 10% off.

Araneta BusPort now offers cashless payment options

PAYMAYA Philippines, Inc. and Araneta Center, Inc. have partnered to allow passengers at the Araneta Center BusPort to book and pay for their tickets through a cashless system.
The digital payments unit of PLDT, Inc.’s Voyager Innovations, Inc. said in a statement over the weekend it has partnered with Araneta Center BusPort to launch the latter’s website powered by PayMaya Checkout.
On the website, passengers can book tickets, reserve seats and make payments. Commuters can also pay using the PayMaya QR system, as well as Visa, MasterCard, and JCB cards at the terminal. This is part of the total digital payments suite offered by PayMaya Business to enterprises and merchants in the country.
Araneta Center BusPort is the first transport hub of its kind to integrate cashless modes of payment for commuters. Providing a cashless option is expected to reduce queues at the bus port, especially during peak season such as Christmas, New Year, and Holy Week.
“Whether it’s online or at the bus port, booking bus tickets is now more convenient for passengers, and their total experience now made more secure with the help of PayMaya’s cashless payment options,” Araneta Center Senior Vice-President for Operations Antonio T. Mardo was quoted as saying in a statement.
Orlando B. Vea, PayMaya Philippines president and CEO, said the partnership wit the Araneta Center BusPort is expected to “bring tremendous convenience to commuters,” and help the bus port improve operations.
PayMaya has similar partnerships with merchants including SM Group, Robinsons Retail, and Bounty Agro Ventures, Inc (BAVI), and Fruit Magic Co.
Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — P.P.A.Marcelo

Australian banks face rural lending reckoning

SYDNEY — Australian potato farmer Tom Fox says he had never missed a bank payment in two decades before a delay sending a shipment to Indonesia during a trade dispute between the countries prompted his lender to force him into receivership in 2013.
“I got a letter from the bank lawyers saying I had 12 hours to come up with A$2.4 million ($1.8 million), and that was an impossibility to do on that notice,” Fox told Reuters.
A third-generation farmer who built up the country’s biggest seed potato producer, Fox said his farm and equipment were sold below value by receivers for the country’s biggest rural lender, National Australia Bank Ltd.
Fox’s story encapsulates the issues driving a wedge between Australia’s $50 billion farm sector and its banks as a powerful public inquiry into financial sector misconduct begins its examination of agriculture lending practices this week.
Shareholder appetite for continuous profit growth and the widespread closure of rural bank branches have left some farmers with a sense that their livelihoods are controlled by city executives with little care of issues beyond their control such as drought, wildfires and trade disputes.
For Fox, for instance, Indonesia’s surprise ban on Australian fresh produce imports — widely seen as retaliation for an Australian ban on live sheep exports — didn’t affect his type of potatoes. But the bank didn’t see the difference when he reported the shipping delay, he says, and called in a receiver.
NAB’s general manager of agribusiness Khan Horne said Fox’s business was under “extreme financial pressure” by 2013, with “significant creditors dating back to the prior year’s trading, payroll issues and pressure from other suppliers”.
In an e-mail, Horne said the bank hired receivers for the potato farm “based on financial default,” and the receivers “sought to work co-operatively with Mr. Fox to realize value from the business and other assets.”
Stewart Levitt, a lawyer who has represented about 20 farmers in mediation with banks, said banks had to acknowledge that farming was full of ups and downs.
“The whole way you bank farmers has to be different to the way you bank other sectors of the economy.”
Farm banking in dry, hot Australia has often been difficult, but the relationship has become especially strained in the past decade since a wave of M&A deals left the country’s biggest banks holding loans they might not normally approve at a time of almost continuous drought and volatile commodity prices.
By dollar value, agribusiness is a relatively minor component of Australian banks’ loan books — for NAB, the biggest rural lender, farm loans are about a tenth the size of its mortgage book — but also one of the riskiest and politically sensitive.
A 2017 Senate report on farm finance, which Fox made a sworn submission to, offered a taste of what the more powerful Royal Commission may recommend.
Among the measures recommended by the Senate were a compulsory minimum period before banks can call on distressed farm loans, a ban on banks changing rural loan terms without consultation, and a compulsory national farm debt mediation scheme.
Anne Scott, a principal adviser at the Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman said many farmers still operated like they did when they had very close relationships with their banks.
“But what’s happened is banks have looked at their risk reduction, they see an economic downturn, they’re not interested it might not be very long, they just want to get out of that as quickly as possible.”
The Australian Bankers Association, a lobby group, says it supports a national rural debt mediation scheme.
But it suggests the narrative of banks forcing farmers out of their properties has been overplayed, with only a relatively small number of foreclosures in the primary services sector in 2017.
“Clearly more reform is necessary but it’s critical that the pendulum doesn’t swing so far that it reduces lending and makes home ownership, or running a business such as a farm more difficult,” an ABA spokesman said in an e-mail.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which inherited a large farm loan book when it bought rural lender BankWest from HBOS Plc in 2008, declined comment. Westpac Banking Corp., Australia’s second-largest bank, also declined comment.
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., which acquired thousands of rural loans when it bought the Australian Wheat Board’s financial services arm in 2009, did not respond to a request for comment.
Banks don’t break out profits from farm lending but the Royal Commission, now at the halfway point, has already wiped more than $20 billion from the sector’s share prices due to reputational damage and expectations the hearings will bring on tighter lending rules.
Natasha Keys, a consultant to farmers involved in bank disputes who plans to protest outside the hearings, said agribusiness lending should come with extra regulations partly because of the knock-on effect in rural centers when lenders “turn the tap off” and call in debts.
“Rather than the banks holding the debt, you’ve got all these suppliers and all these other businesses around in these towns accumulating debt,” she said.
“It causes a big structural problem. It doesn’t happen in other retail communities.” — Reuters

Yields on gov’t securities climb after BSP decision

YIELDS on government securities (GS) traded on the secondary market continued to climb last week following the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) decision to raise interest rates anew amid rising inflation.
On average, GS yields rose by 23.43 basis points (bp) week-on-week on Friday as bond prices of most papers dipped from week-ago levels, data from the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. showed.
First Metro Asset Management, Inc. (FAMI) said the BSP rate hike pushed up GS yields and improved sentiments of “the market hoping for another two rate hikes this year.”
“Investors remained in the short-end of the curve, especially “in a market where there are increasing rates,” it added.
For Carlyn Therese X. Dulay, head of Institutional sales at Security Bank Corp.: “The hawkish tone with the BSP rate hike caused yields to rise…with steeper levels on the intermediate portion of the curve.”
Last Wednesday, the BSP’s Monetary Board raised policy settings by another 25 bps during its fourth review for the year, similar to its move in May, to curb future inflation and keep local price yields competitive.
Yields 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 also tightened rates by 25bp during their May 10 policy review.
Prices of widely used goods rose by 4.6% in May, the fastest climb seen in at least five years. This brought the year-to-date inflation tally to 4.1%, higher than the central bank’s 2-4% target.
The BSP’s decision also came a week after another 25-bp increase in rates in the United States, with Federal Reserve chair Jerome H. Powell hinting at more rate hikes in the coming months as the US economy performs “very well.”
At the secondary market, movement was focused in the short end to the belly of the curve. Treasury bills (T-bill) saw their rates rise, with the 91-day papers climbing the most, adding 64.77 bps to 3.95%. Meanwhile, the 182-day and 364-day T-bills jumped 57.80 bps and 2.28 bps to fetch 4.24% and 4.31%, respectively.
Bonds at the belly and long end of the curve also surged. The two-year and three-year Treasury bonds (T-bond) both yielded 5.03%, up 42.40 bps and 6.85 bps, respectively. Meanwhile, the seven-year and 10-year T-bonds fetched 6.21% and 6.91%, which were 22.50 bps and 70.54 bps higher than week-ago levels.
This week, analysts said yields will continue to rise.
“Expect bond yields to continue to inch upward ahead of the T-bills auction, which is expected to print at 5-10 bps higher than previous levels, as well as the 5-year notes auction with market consensus at 5.675-5.85 bps,” Security Bank’s Ms. Dulay said.
“The soon to be released auction schedule for the second half of the year may add upward pressure to yields,” she added.
For its part, FAMI said yields will climb on expectations of “another 1-2 interest rake hikes in the second half of the year. The market is expecting BSP to raise 50 bps more this year, on top of the 50 bps hike implemented during the first half,” it said. — Carmina Angelica V. Olano

Shares to trade sideways after hitting fresh low

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter
THE MAIN INDEX is seen to trade mostly sideways in the coming days after hitting a new record low in 17 months last week due to concerns on the trade war between the United States and China alongside the peso’s depreciation.
The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) went down 0.49% to 7,063.20 on Friday, paring down losses at the closing bell after touching the 6,900 mark in early morning trading.
On a weekly basis, the market plunged 6.19% or 466.34 points, the biggest weekly loss recorded since June 2013.
The services sector led the week’s selling with a decline of 8%, followed by the 7% loss in holding firms. Losers prevailed versus gainers this week, 137 to 64.
Foreign investors continued to favor other markets, as net foreign selling ballooned to P6.60 billion, higher by more than 50% from the week before.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ decision to raise benchmark interest rates by 25 basis points for the second time this year last week also failed to cushion the PSEi’s fall as the peso continued to weaken against the dollar.
“It all comes down to the fact that investors who have held on to their positions as they thought they could wait out the correction, have finally realized it’s time to cut positions and get out of this market,” Eagle Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John Mangun said in a weekly market note.
The PSEi has already fallen by more than 20% since its record high of 9,078 in intraday trading last January, officially characterizing a bear market.
Online brokerage 2TradeAsia.com said investors should focus on fundamentals amid the continued sell-off.
“In bear market investing, it is important to make key decisions on fundamentals, and see what catalysts would bring the fund flows in… Capex rollout may slow as the rainy season starts in the second quarter, but the overall drive to expand has not abated across the spectrum,” 2TradeAsia.com said in a weekly market note.
Given the market’s latest retreat, the brokerage said fund managers are now awash with cash, giving them the position to go bargain hunting next.
Eagle Equities’ Mr. Mangun placed the index’s support level at 7,000. If breached, the next support will be found at 6,800, which would indicate a 25% correction from the PSEi’s peak of 9,078 last January. Resistance will be from 7,200 to 7,400.
“Right now, investors are in panic mode as prices continue to fall, next comes capitulation and then finally despondency which signals a bottom in the market. These signals tell me that we are very close to a bottom,” he said.
The analyst also noted that it is better to stay away from blue-chip stocks for the meantime, and scout for opportunities in second-liners.

US feedlots draw more cattle than expected

CHICAGO — Ranchers in May drove more cattle into U.S. feedlots than anticipated compared with the same period a year ago, said analysts after Friday’s U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) monthly Cattle-On-Feed report.
The data also showed the June 1 feedlot cattle supply climbed 4.1 percent from a year earlier — its highest for the month since USDA began tabulating the data in 1996.
Analysts attributed last month’s unexpected feedlot inflow to a surge in calves, feeder cattle, from Canada and Mexico.
Some analysts had predicted that fewer cattle entered feedlots in May due to low livestock prices at the time, which eroded feedlot margins.
Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle futures on Monday may have a mildly bearish reaction to Friday’s report, analysts said. But traders may soon turn to near-term market fundamentals such as beef demand and cattle prices, they added.
USDA’s report showed May placements at 2.124 million head, compared with 2.119 million a year earlier. It was above the average estimate of 2.026 million head.
The government put the feedlot cattle supply as of June 1 at 11.553 million head, up 4.1 percent from 11.096 million a year ago. Analysts, on average, forecast a 3.4 percent increase.
USDA said the number of cattle sold to packers, or marketings, were up 5.4 percent in May from a year ago to 2.056 million head.
Analysts had projected a 5.1 percent increase from 1.951 million last year.
There were a few more cattle placed in May than anticipated, which stops two consecutive months of lower than last year placement numbers, said Allendale Inc. chief strategist Rich Nelson.
The influx of Mexican and Canadian feeder cattle raises questions about the June placement figure in the next report, said Nelson.
Feeder cattle imports from Canada rose, an impact of a longer term effect of a major feedyard closing in Western Canada, said Livestock Marketing Information Center senior economist Katelyn McCullock.
Drought conditions in parts of Mexico landed more of those cattle in U.S. feedlots, coupled with a high volume of feeder cattle that moved through auction markets, she added.
“I don’t think these placements necessarily set a new trend moving forward. I wouldn’t be surprised to see placements again below a year ago between now and fall,” said McCullock. — Reuters

Criselda Lontok Spring-Summer looks


SEASON after season, Criselda Lontok’s fashion has been synonymous with elegance, with lace that softens bold cuts and strong colors. The 2018 collection now includes event-appropriate statement pieces inspired by the Maria Clara coupled with contemporary structures, as well as formal gowns. These include the “Autumn” lime green linen top with ruffled sleeves and “Pia” purple linen pants (L) and the “Armida” white gown with standing Mikado collar and lace sleeves (R). Criselda Lontok is exclusively available in Rustan’s.

Boracay Water’s waste-to-energy project gets ‘first proponent status’

BORACAY Island Water Co., Inc. (Boracay Water) on Friday said its proposal for the establishment of a waste-to-energy plant has received “first proponent status” from the local government unit.
Manila Water Total Solutions (MWTS) submitted the unsolicited proposal before Boracay island was shut down for a major clean-up in late April.
“[Our proposal] is considered as the primary project they consider for their PPP (Public-Private Partnership). So, it’s the first option already. Meaning to say, having submitted our proposal to the LGU, it’s the first option they will have to look into before accepting other offers from other companies,” Boracay Water General Manager and Chief Operating Officer Joseph Michael A. Santos said during a media briefing on Friday.
Mr. Santos declined to give details on the proposed waste-to-energy plant, which is aimed at addressing the solid waste management problem in Boracay.
Boracay Water is unaware if other companies have submitted their own proposals to build a waste-to-energy plant on the island
In May, the Municipality of Malay had already considered a Vietnamese company as a partner in building a waste-to-energy plant in Barangay Kabulihan located on the mainland.
Meanwhile, Mr. Santos said the Department of Natural Resources (DENR) instructed Boracay Water to speed up its plans to expand its sewage system to address the island’s waste water problem.
The company plans to extend its sewer network from 22 kilometers (km) to 42 km and increase its capacity from a total of 11.5 million liters per day (MLD) to 21 MLD with the expansion of its Manoc-Manoc sewage treatment plant (STP) and another STP in Barangay Yapak.
Boracay Water was formed in 2009 through a joint venture between the Tourism and Infrastructure Zone Authority and Manila Water Venture Philippine Ventures, a unit under Ayala-led Manila Water Co., Inc. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Regional snapshot: Job quality leaves a lot to be desired

LABOR SECRETARY Silvestre H. Bello III has urged regions deliberating on wage adjustments to fast-track this process by the “end of June” until July 15. Read the full story.

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