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Senate asks Duterte to certify as urgent its proposed Bangsamoro bill

The Senate on Tuesday, May 22, asked President Rodrigo R. Duterte to certify the Senate bill on the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) as an urgent measure.
The request was coursed through a letter dated May 21, which was signed by Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III and Senate Majority Leader Juan Miguel F. Zubiri.
“May we once again respectfully request that Senate Bill No. 1717 under Committee Report No. 255 entitled ‘An Act Providing for the Basic Law for the Bangsamoro and Abolishing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao…’ be certified as urgent by your Administration,” the letter stated.
The letter also indicated that the Senate aims to pass the proposed BBL on third and final reading before the Congress sine die adjournment on June 2.
The proposed BBL remained pending on second reading in the Senate while the status of its version in the House of Representatives remained in the committee level.
Last April, Mr. Duterte also directed Congress to pass the proposed BBL before it adjourns in June through separate letters sent by the Presidential Legislative Liaison Office (PLLO) to then Senate President Aquilino L. Pimentel III and House Speaker Pantaleon D. Alvarez. — Camille A. Aguinaldo

Revolution Precrafted bags deal to supply prefab villas in Puerto Rico

Revolution Precrafted Properties Philippines, Inc has been tapped by Puerto Rico’s Grupo Cacho, Inc. to deliver more than 2,000 residential villas on the island of Vieques and Boqueron Bay Cabo Rojo, bagging its fifth international deal in the last six months.
The company said in a statement that it has recently signed an agreement with the Puerto Rican real estate firm for the project.
Grupo Cacho has residential, resort, hotel, and commercial developments under its portfolio, known for its Martineau Bay Resort in Vieques which was later renamed to Caribbean W. Hotel.
The agreement will be executed in two phases, with the initial phase to cost $13.5 million. This includes 27 mid-range and luxury residential units standing on a 4.2-hectare property in Vieques. Each house will cover 200 to 250 square meters of floor area on 1,000-sq.m lots.
For the second phase, Revolution Precrafted will construct around 2,000 houses on a 212-hectare area near Boqueron Bay. The two- to three-bedroom villas are sized 150 sq.m., with a lot area of around 600 sq.m. — Arra B. Francia

AUB’s Q1 consolidated net income grows 21%

Asia United Bank (AUB) reported its consolidated net income went up in the first quarter on the back of double-digit growth in its core lending businesses.
In a disclosure to the local bourse Tuesday, May 22, the Ng-led bank and its subsidiaries, namely Cavite United Rural Bank and Rural Bank of Angeles in Pampanga, logged a consolidated net income of P797.7 million in the January to March period, up 21.3% than a year ago.
AUB said its net income last quarter was boosted by growth in interest income from loans and receivables as well as growth in other operating income, which rose 29.4% and 42.6%, respectively, in a comparable year-ago period.
Loans and receivables grew to P129.6 billion by 29.2% as of end-March compared with the P100.3 billion logged in the same period last year.
According to AUB, this was supported by double-digit growth in commercial loans as well as other loan segments such as auto, housing and salary loans.
As a result, AUB’s net interest income rose 9.1% P1.681 billion in the first quarter from P1.542 billion last year. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

How a government employee began to weave dreams

Akaba’s 24yearold chief operating officer Daniel Lumain was immersed in implementing policies for government-run companies before the country changed leadership in 2016 and put an end to his two-year career.

But that backdrop gave him “not just the connections,” but also the fuel to continue being of service to his countrymen. He then returned to his undergraduate thesis at the Ateneo de Manila University and grew it into what Akaba is today: a social enterprise selling bags and accessories made of handwoven textiles by over 100 weavers from Ilocos Norte, Isabela, Abra, Oriental Mindoro, Zamboanga, Sulu, Basilan, Iloilo and South Cotabato.

“It’s our mission to help these weavers promote their artistry and craftsmanship, but at the same time create a sustainable business that is relevant to the supply chain,” he said. “When we went to Ilocos Norte, we found out that a lot of weavers create handwoven textiles for around a month or so, but only sell them for around P20 per yard, and when we went to the market we actually saw middle men selling them for P150 to P200.”

Unlike many handwoven crafts, however, Akaba didn’t target the so-called “tita market.” “We chose a younger market and lowered our price points. What we always say is if you buy a high-end product worth P10,000, sure you’ve helped a community, but when is the next time you’ll help them? We can sell a product for around P1,500, sell a hundred pieces, and basically continuously support the communities.”

Akaba currently sells its wares across major malls, but because it aims to become an established “Southeast Asian brand,” it is also expecting to enter e-commerce platform Amazon to tap the American market this year, on top of its plan to expand its ties with Cambio Market to further introduce the brand in Canada. Lumain added that the team is also considering to widen its Asian market by selling its products in Hong Kong and Japan.

“I always believe that poverty is not just an economic situation, it’s a mindset problem,” he said. “These people changing their views, believing that there’s a chance for them to have a better life, that in itself is the biggest achievement that we’ve had.”


INCIDENTAL INTELLIGENCE:
Shop at akaba.co.

PSBank plans to raise up to P15 billion through LTNCDs

Philippine Savings Bank (PSBank) is planning to raise up to P15 billion by selling peso-denominated long-term negotiable certificates of time deposits (LTNCD).
In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange Tuesday, May 22, the thrift banking arm of Ty-led Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. said its board of directors approved to issue up to P15 billion in LTNCDs in two or more tranches.
The issuance program will be conducted over a one-year period and with a tenor of five-and-a-half years.
The offering will still require approval from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. Its final terms, including the offer period as well as the interest rate, will depend on market conditions.
“The issuance of LTNCTDs will give PSBank an opportunity to access long-term funding as the Bank further expands its consumer banking business,” PSBank said in the disclosure. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Carpio: Philippines must formally protest China militarization

In response to the sighting of Chinese long-range bombers in the Paracel Islands, Acting Chief Justice Antonio T. Carpio on Tuesday, May 22, insisted that, “the Philippine Government must formally protest the increasing militarization of the (West Philippine Sea) by China.”
Mr. Carpio, in a press statement released to media on Tuesday, said, “failure to formally protest means the Philippines is acquiescing or consenting to the militarization, and worse, to the claim of China that all the islands, waters, and resources within the nine-dashed line form part of Chinese territory.”
“A formal protest is necessary to preserve our sovereignty over Fiery Cross Reef… A formal protest is also necessary to preserve our sovereignty over Subi Reef… Moreover, a formal protest is also necessary to preserve our exclusive sovereign rights over Mischief Reef which the arbitral tribunal ruled forms part of the Exclusive Economic Zone of the Philippines,” read Mr. Carpio’s statement. — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

Coming up roses

At the height of the AlDub love team phenomenon, Diane Yap and Lauren Gavino, who had been running an online flower shop for only a month then, received an order for 49 stems of red Ecuadorian roses to be delivered at the Philippine Arena in Bulacan, where some concert with ticket sales reaching P14 million would be filled with 55,000 people.

Their response: “If you want, on top of the cost of the arrangement, pay for our gas and toll.”

On that day, October 24, 2015, that three-hour commercial-free episode registered a TV rating of 50.8%, the channel stated citing data from AGB Nielsen, compared to the 5.4% registered by the competitor. Tweets for the hashtag reached 39.5 million. And amid that number of viewers, actor Alden Richards was walking up the stage carrying that 49-rose boxed arrangement himself— the brand name “Petalier” in clear, full view.

Gavino found herself crying in front of the TV.

“Ang kapal ng mukha namin ‘di ba?,” the two now laugh, looking back at what they consider their store’s big break. “Sobrang fail namin. We didn’t know who AlDub was.”

But entrepreneurship isn’t a bed of roses, and getting flowers on screen took more than just luck or serendipity. At 11 p.m. the previous night—only a few hours before the concert—their supplier for the flowers backed out. Yet instead of giving up right then and there, they insisted on delivering.

Yap had a backup plan ready. The day before, she had begun contacting all the flower suppliers she could find on Google—pleading “Please po, magbabayad kami.”—all while going around public markets to do surveys for a senator she was then still working full-time for. After finding one, a certain “Dra. Anna” who remains their main supplier to this day, they finally got the flowers by 2 a.m., arranged all 49 stems, then had their personal driver to deliver it to Bulacan. The rest, as they say, is history.

“That’s the first time people saw pretty roses in a box,” Yap said.

Influencer marketing has since been Petalier’s main avenue to drive sales.

A “calculated gamble,” Yap describes. “Sometimes they’re effective, sometimes they won’t post you. So that’s money out the door.”

Still, it works, and the two have also launched a new baby: a luxury balloonery called Blloons.

“We thrive on Instagram. We’re typical millennial business people. Uber doesn’t own a single car. We thrive online,” she said. “You can go far with just online. We’re the perfect example.”


INCIDENTAL INTELLIGENCE
Petalier is an online business. Orders can be placed on petalier.com but queries can be sent to 0977- 841-7738 or mail@petalier.com.

Cesar Montano resigns from Tourism Promotions Board amid controversy

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
Actor Cesar D. Montano has stepped down as chief operating officer (COO) of the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) amid the controversy over his P80-million Buhay Carinderia food-promotion project with marketing agency Marylindbert International Inc.
“Yes, of course,” newly appointed Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat told BusinessWorld in a text message on Monday evening, May 21, when asked if she was aware of Mr. Montano’s resignation.
In a text message to Palace reporters, the tourism chief said that she “would like to consider the matter closed from [her] active involvement.”
She also said that she “trust(s)” that the Commission on Audit (CoA) “will get to the bottom of this episode.”
In his resignation letter, as shared by Special Assistant to the President (SAP) Christopher Lawrence T. Go, Mr. Montano said: “In faithful adherence to my duty as a public servant, I am respectfully tendering my courtesy resignation as Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB), effective immediately.”
He said he is “grateful for the trust and the opportunity” that President Rodrigo R. Duterte has bestowed upon him “to serve [the] country through the Tourism Promotions Board.”
Documents obtained by BusinessWorld last week showed that a total of 80,640,172.80 has been paid in tranches, as of April 4, to Marylindbert even before the project had started.
In a press conference on May 17, Ms. Romulo-Puyat announced that she had ordered the suspension of the implementation of Mr. Montano’s project.
She said she wrote a letter to CoA requesting it to review the projects under Mr. Montano’s watch.
In his press briefing at the Palace on Monday morning, Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. said the President is “very pleased” with Ms. Romulo-Puyat’s handling of the DoT.
“She was appointed with the expressed mandate to do good and to fight corruption and she is doing just that. The President is very pleased,” Mr. Roque said.
In an official statement on Tuesday, May 22, the TPB said its projects and programs “are expected to contribute significant returns on marketing investments that are beneficial in promoting Philippine tourism.”
“Amidst the current controversies, the TPB remains a professional organization that works relentlessly in promoting the Philippines domestically and internationally,” the TPB added.
The agency also extended its support to the direction of Ms. Romulo-Puyat in “guaranteeing transparency in all of its dealings.”
On May 8, Wanda T. Teo also resigned as tourism chief amid criticism over the P60-million DoT advertisement issue, involving her brothers, Bienvenido “Ben” T. Tulfo of media company Bitag Media and broadcaster Erwin T. Tulfo of PTV-4.

Clark airport O&M attracts interest

A CONTRACT to operate and maintain (O&M) for 25 years an expanded Clark International Airport — designed to decongest the premier gateway in Metro Manila — has attracted several groups that sent representatives to a pre-bid conference in Bonifacio Global City, Taguig City on Monday.
Eight companies bought bid documents as of Monday, the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said in a statement, identifying them as the Megawide-GMR Consortium which in December also won the deal to construct Clark airport’s new passenger terminal building and has done the same for Mactan Cebu International Airport; Metro Pacific Investments Corp.; Filinvest Development Corp.; San Miguel Holdings Corp.; Prime Asset Ventures, Inc.; Central Luzon Infrastructure Consultancy, Inc.; Consortium; GVK Airport Developers Ltd.; and Groupe ADP.
BCDA noted that representatives of about 30 groups attended Monday’s conference, including Zurich Airport AG; Sojitz Philippines Corp.; Udenna Corp.; Malaysia Airports Holdings Berhad; Clarkfield Aviation Services, Inc.; Mitsubishi Corp.; Macquarie Group Limited; JG Summit Holdings, Inc.; Halder & Associates; PAL Express; Samsung Electronics Co.; Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc.; AirAsia Group; Evercon Builders and Equipment Corp.; and Miescor Logistics, Inc.
BCDA said interested parties may buy bid documents until June 18 for a non-refundable fee of P1 million.
Under a preliminary timetable, bid submission will take place on July 20, which will also see the opening of qualification documents; opening and evaluation of technical bids on July 26; opening of financial bids on Aug. 6; issuance of notice of award on Aug. 24; contract award and signing on Aug. 30.
O&M will start with the existing passenger terminal building this Dec. 1, while the new building should be up and running by July 2020.
The Philippines’ premier gateway, Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) in Metro Manila, is itself about to undergo modernization.
NAIA handled 42 million passengers last year, beyond its 30.5 million designed capacity. A Clark project brief noted that in 2016, “over 13%” of the 39.5 million passengers who passed through NAIA “were bound to or were coming from… northern and Central Luzon, CIA’s (Clark International Airport) catchment area.”
The National Economic and Development Authority Board, chaired by President Rodrigo R. Duterte, last month gave final green light for the P753.63-billion international airport project proposed by San Miguel Corp. to be built in Bulacan, also to help decongest NAIA.
A few technical requirements were questioned during Monday’s conference, including one that requires a bidder to have been in charge of O&M of an airport listed in Skytrax’s top 20 best airports. Skytrax is an airline rating organization based in United Kingdom. Some of those who attended the pre-bid conference said this requirement is too restrictive.
Another requirement is for bidders to have experience in O&M of an international airport for at least three consecutive calendar years with an annual passenger throughput of at least 8 million passengers, while still another says a “[p]rospective bidder must not have any stake in any facility operator within the main island of Luzon, or must not hold, whether direct or indirect, a majority equity interest in a concession holder of an international airport in the Philippines.” — Denise A. Valdez

Executive wants Congress to approve tax amnesty bill by June — Dominguez

By Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan
Reporter
A PLANNED GENERAL tax amnesty could start next semester if Congress could ratify the bill by June, the Department of Finance (DoF) said yesterday.
Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III bared the DoF’s desired timetable for legislation of the succeeding packages of the tax reform program, as the second regular session of the 17th Congress nears its end on June 1.
“We aim to have a tax amnesty bill pass Congress in the next month,” Mr. Dominguez said in a speech on Monday at the 65th National Convention of the Rural Bankers Association of the Philippines in Davao City, a copy of which was distributed to reporters.
Asked how soon could the government implement the amnesty program once the bill hurdles in legislation, Mr. Dominguez said in a mobile phone message: “depends on how complex the requirements will be, but definitely before year end.”
However the measure, filed as House Bill No. 7105 and Senate Bill (SB) No. 942, has yet to emerge from committee-level deliberations, even as both versions were initially targeted to hurdle Congress within the first quarter.
House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee Chairperson Dakila Carlo E. Cua (Quirino) said last week that his panel has been “rushing” the bill’s approval at the committee level “hopefully before we go on a break”.
The House version imposes an eight percent tax on amnesty availers’ net worth, covering taxable year 2017, or P10,000-10 million, depending on the type of taxpayer — in exchange for immunity from civil, criminal and administrative penalties. The bill also includes the relaxation of the Bank Secrecy Law, allowing the Bureau of Internal Revenue to inspect tax amnesty availers’ bank accounts to ensure accuracy of their declarations during the amnesty period.
The Senate version, in comparison, imposes a lower five percent amnesty rate covering taxable year 2015.
The tax amnesty bill forms part of so-called Package 1B, consisting of provisions that had been stricken from Republic Act No. (RA) 10963, or the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act law, signed into law in mid-December and which took effect last January.
Package 1B also includes an estate tax amnesty — which had been approved on third and final reading by the House early last year but which is pending with the Senate ways and means committee — and the motor vehicle users tax that is still stuck in committee level in both chambers.
Package 1B will increase projected additional revenues from the first of up to five planned tax reform packages (RA 10963) to P124.9 billion this year from P82.3 billion initially.
Mr. Dominguez also said the DoF is “targeting the third week of July as the deadline for filing Packages 3 and 4 with Congress,” with the former consisting of changes in property taxation and valuation to give national and local levies in this sector a uniform framework, and the latter restructuring capital income and financial taxes.
Mr. Dominguez added in his speech that “Package 2 of the comprehensive tax reform program that will lower corporate income tax rates for everybody… and modernize our fiscal incentives is moving at a good pace towards legislation.”
In order to “prepare for conditions of high growth and more intensive economic activity, we need to prepare our systems and institutions,” he said.
The DoF aims for Packages 2, 3 and 4 to be implemented next year.
Mr. Dominguez said earlier that the DoF will be proposing to Congress within this year “Package 2+” which includes more increases to tobacco and alcohol taxes and a comprehensive mining tax reform to give the government a bigger share in miners’ revenues, but made no mention of them in his speech yesterday.

Thai Q1 GDP expands at best pace in five years; gov’t raises 2018 forecast

BANGKOK — Thailand produced its fastest economic growth in five years in the first quarter, boosted by strong exports and tourism plus a slight firming in long-weak private consumption.
With the robust January-March performance, the national planning agency raised its 2018 growth forecast to 4.2-4.7% from 3.6-4.6% seen three months ago.
The agency said on Monday it didn’t lift its forecast much as annual growth “is likely to slow because of a high base effect” for coming periods.
Thammarat Kittisiripat, economist of KT Zmico Securities, said the new outlook “suggests smaller downside risks to growth, with a good sign on improving domestic demand and government spending.”
He predicts 2018 growth of 4.2%, following last year’s 3.9%, the best in five years.
Capital Economics said Thailand started 2018 on a strong note but growth “may now have peaked,” though the economy should remain in good health.
Gross domestic product grew a seasonally adjusted 2% in the first quarter from the fourth, the fastest pace since 2012’s last quarter, the National Economic and Social Development Board (NESDB) said.
The pace was nearly twice a Reuters poll’s 1.05% forecast and far above October-December’s 0.5%.
January-March’s annual pace was 4.8% — above the poll’s 4% and the best for a quarter since January-March 2013.
Deputy Prime Minister Somkid Jatusripitak told reporters “it took us five years” to get growth this high, and the level should boost the private sector’s confidence.
The NESDB raised its 2018 export growth forecast to 8.9% from 6.8% seen three months ago.
Exports, a growth driver, surged about 10% in 2017 after years of poor numbers, and also expanded 10% in January-March, with solid shipments of cars, electronics and hard drives.
RELIANCE ON EXPORTS
Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy has recorded better headline growth in the last few years, supported by solid global recovery, but it is not yet firing on all cylinders.
Growth remains heavily reliant on exports, and private investment and consumption remain tepid, curbed by high household debt, while excess industrial capacity remains a problem.
The military government is trying to ramp up spending and large infrastructure projects to spur activity, but disbursement has slowed following stricter procurement rules imposed in 2017’s second half.
In January-March, tourist numbers surged 15.4%.
Private consumption was up 3.6%, compared with 3.4% a year earlier, and private investment rose 3.1%.
Investments by state enterprise rose 11.5% from a year earlier but spending by the government contracted, NESDB data showed.
The agricultural sector rebounded 6.5% in the first quarter from a year earlier, on better crops, after a 1.3% fall in October-December.
With inflation subdued, Thailand’s central bank is widely expected to keep interest rates near record lows the rest of 2018, though some predict policy tightening late in the year.
The policy rate has been 1.50% since a quarter-point cut in April 2015.
The central bank next reviews policy on June 20. — Reuters

US agrees with China to shelve tariff threats

WASHINGTON — The US trade war with China is “on hold” after the world’s largest economies agreed to drop their tariff threats while they work on a wider trade agreement, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Sunday.
Mr. Mnuchin and US President Donald Trump’s top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, said the agreement reached by Chinese and American negotiators on Saturday set up a framework for addressing trade imbalances in the future.
“We are putting the trade war on hold. Right now, we have agreed to put the tariffs on hold while we try to execute the framework,” Mr. Mnuchin said in a television interview on Fox News Sunday.
On Saturday, Beijing and Washington said they would keep talking about measures under which China would import more energy and agricultural commodities from the United States to narrow the $335-billion annual US goods and services trade deficit with China.
During an initial round of talks this month in Beijing, Washington demanded that China reduce its trade surplus by $200 billion. No dollar figure was cited in the countries’ joint statement on Saturday.
The official China Daily said on Monday everyone could heave a sigh of relief at the ratcheting down of rhetoric, and cited China’s chief negotiator, Vice-Premier Liu He, as saying the talks had proved to be “positive, pragmatic, constructive and productive.” “Despite all the pressure, China didn’t ‘fold,’ as US President Donald Trump observed. Instead, it stood firm and continually expressed its willingness to talk,” the English-language newspaper said in an editorial. “That the US finally shared this willingness means the two sides have successfully averted the head-on confrontation that, at one point, seemed inevitable.”
Tension between the two sides has been growing since the Trump administration proposed tariffs of $50 billion on Chinese goods and said it might extend the levies to an additional $150 billion. China responded with its own measures targeting US agriculture.
The US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, said that getting China to open its market to more US exports was significant, but that it was far more important for the United States to resolve issues with China such as forced technology transfers and cyber theft. “Real structural change is necessary. Nothing less than the future of tens of millions of American jobs is at stake,” Mr. Lighthizer said in a statement on Sunday.
Mr. Kudlow told CBS Face the Nation it was too soon to lock in the $200-billion figure for China’s promised purchases. “The details will be down the road. These things are not so precise,” he said.
In addition, he told ABC’s This Week that the broader issues were still in play, and that China had “structural reforms” such as lowering tariffs and non-tariff barriers that will allow the United States to boost exports.
Mr. Trump was in a “very positive mood about this,” Kudlow said.
However, he said there was no trade deal yet reached.
“There’s no agreement for a deal,” Mr. Kudlow told ABC. “We never anticipated one. There’s a communique between the two great countries, that’s all. And in that communique, you can see where we’re going next.”
One next step will be dispatching Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to China to look at areas where there will be significant increases, including energy, liquefied natural gas, agriculture and manufacturing, Messrs. Mnuchin and Kudlow said.
Mr. Mnuchin said the United States expects to see a big increase of 35-40% in agricultural exports to China this year alone and a doubling of energy purchases over the next three to five years. “We have specific targets. I am not going to publicly disclose what they are. They go industry by industry,” Mr. Mnuchin said.
Saturday’s statement made no mention of whether there would be a relaxation of paralyzing restrictions on Chinese telecommunications equipment maker ZTE Corp. imposed last month by the US Commerce department.
The action was related to violation of US sanctions on Iran and North Korea and banned American companies from selling semiconductors and other components to ZTE, causing the Shenzhen-based company to cease most operations.
Trump said last week he had directed Mr. Ross to put ZTE back in business, but Mr. Kudlow said any change would be minimal.
“If any of the remedies are altered they are still going to be very, very tough, including big fines, compliance measures, new management, new boards,” he said.
“Do not expect ZTE to get off scot-free. Ain’t going to happen.” — Reuters