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Widow of slain militants arrested

THE WIDOW of two slain militant leaders has been arrested for allegedly supporting extremist groups and possessing firearms and explosives, Philippine police said Sunday.

Juromee Dongon was married to a senior leader of the notorious Abu Sayyaf kidnap-for-ransom group, Khadaffy Janjalani. After his death in 2006 she married Malaysian bombmaker Zulkifli bin Hir, alias Marwan, who was killed in 2015 in the Philippines, police said.

Authorities arrested Ms. Dongon along with her relatives in her home in Lanao del Norte province in the restive southern region of Mindanao where they found firearms, ammunition and bomb-making components, a police statement said.

“She assists, associates, networks and supports terrorist groups,” regional police spokesman Superintendent Lemuel Gonda told AFP.

“Juromee is linked with Abu Sayyaf during the time of Janjalani and then later Jemaah Islamiyah,” he added, referring to a Southeast Asian militant group.

Mr. Marwan was a leading member of Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) and a suspect in the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings that killed 202 people as well as in two deadly Philippine attacks.

He died in a raid in the southern Philippines that also left 44 police commandos dead. The US had offered a $5-million bounty for him.

In two operations on Sunday, police arrested Ms. Dongon as well as her two sisters and father, Mr. Gonda said, adding the family had “connections with terrorists.”

The Dongons faced charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives.

Abu Sayyaf is an Islamist militant group which was set up in the 1990s with seed money from the Al-Qaeda network, and has been blamed for the worst terror attacks in the Philippines’ history, including bombings.

The Abu Sayyaf had harbored JI militants in their bases in remote southern islands, including key suspects in the Bali bombings.

Security analysts have said widows of militant leaders played important roles in extremist groups as they enhanced the status of their second husbands. — AFP

EDSA bus project

TRANSPORTATION officials and private stakeholders inspect the proposed stations of the EDSA bus project yesterday, Feb. 25. The Department of Transportation plans to deploy modern e-bus units along EDSA, equipped with large side doors for persons with disabilities, and to ensure safer and faster loading and unloading of passengers, has installed CCTV cameras, and will use the automatic fare collection system.

Tagum starts conversion of old city hall into P190-M cultural, historical center

THE OLD CITY HALL of Tagum will soon become the site of a P190-million cultural and historical center, which will house a museum, a modern city library, a pasalubong (souvenir) center, the Knights of Rizal headquarters, and a 1,000-seater theater. The city government, in a statement, said the cultural center is part of several projects being funded through a loan from the Development Bank of the Philippines. The other projects include a P4-million child minding center, P30.5-million Tagum City Police Training Complex, P20-million City Disaster Risk Reduction Management Office building, P30-million Overland Transport and Integrated Terminal with commercial building; and P8-million Meditation House.

Freedom

FORMER President Fidel V. Ramos, together with other key figures in the 1986 EDSA Revolution, and government and security officials, prepare to raise the Philippine flag during yesterday’s 32nd anniversary celebration of the peaceful People Power uprising that toppled the Marcos dictatorship.

Giving up arms

SARANGANI Governor Steve Chiongbian Solon receives firearms from 15 former members of the communist New People’s Army (NPA) who have recently given up the rebel life during a turnover ceremony on Feb. 23. Also present during the event were Rochelle Mahinay-Sero, provincial director of the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG); and Police Senior Superintendent Arpha Abul Kyr Macalangcom Jr., police provincial director. The ex-NPA members each received P65,000 as livelihood assistance from the DILG’s Comprehensive Local Integration Program of the DILG.

Nation at a Glance — (02/26/18)

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

Peso to weaken on Fed officials’ speeches

THE PESO will likely weaken against the dollar this week due to hawkish speeches from US Federal Reserve officials amid generally mixed US economic data.

The local currency strengthened against the greenback to P51.89 last Friday, 21 centavos stronger compared with the P52.10 logged the previous day, on a continued correction from its plunge early last week. Week-on-week, the peso also ended stronger from its P52-per-dollar finish on Feb. 15.

“The dollar might bounce back this week after last Friday’s drop, supported by likely hawkish speeches from various US Federal Reserve officials,” Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist of Land Bank of the Philippines (Landbank), said in an e-mail.

Mr. Dumalagan said “potentially upbeat” remarks from Fed officials Loretta J. Mester, John C. Williams and James B. Bullard may boost the dollar’s upward move, adding that the officials are expected to affirm views of more US interest rate hikes ahead.

According to Reuters, Mr. Williams said that the Fed should raise its rates “three to four times” this year, adding that the next rate hike should take place in the near future.

However, Mr. Bullard warned central bankers to be more careful in raising the rates too quickly as this could slow down the US economy too much.

“The idea that we need to go 100 basis points in 2018, that seems like a lot to me,” Mr. Bullard said on Thursday

Aside from the potentially bullish speeches, Mr. Dumalagan said “likely firm” US reports on consumer confidence and new home sales would also give a lift to the dollar despite possible weaker US durable goods orders.

On the last two trading days of the week, Mr. Dumalagan said the dollar may experience more volatility as the new Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell, as well as US growth and personal consumption expenditures index data, could significantly influence expectations on the US central bank’s future policy moves.

“While these market catalysts are expected to remain supportive of a stronger dollar, the greenback’s appreciation might be disrupted by potentially softer to mixed US reports on pending home sales, manufacturing, personal spending, and personal income,” he said.

Meanwhile, another trader said that the impact of the trade gap will likely weaken the peso in the short term.

“Fundamentally, you hear from most of the analysts that the weaker peso is due to the trade gap. Eventually, this should be good because the trade gap is because of the high amount of imports we are taking in for capital expenditures which will be used for the infrastructure push of the government,” the trader said.

“Having said that, though, the short-term impact on the peso should still be weaker.”

For today, the trade sees the peso to move between P51.80 and P52.10, while Mr. Dumalagan gave a forecast range of P51.50 to P52.40 for the week. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal with Reuters

Stocks seen sideways ahead of earnings reports

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter

LOCAL EQUITIES may continue trading sideways this week as investors reposition their portfolios ahead of the earnings season.

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) moved back to the 8,400 level on Friday, losing 0.56% or 48.01 points to 8,467.56 at closing bell. The market recorded a three-day decline after testing the 8,700 resistance on Monday, when it closed at 8,710.22.

Week on week, the market lost 144 points or 1.7%, weighed down by the 2.2% and 2% decline in the sectors for industrial and holding firms, respectively.

“[This] week there may be some repositioning ahead of window dressing. Earnings will be the main driver,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan said in a mobile phone message last Friday.

A number of listed firms will be conducting their 2017 financial results briefings this week, including PSEi-member firms Semirara Mining and Power Corp. and BDO Unibank, Inc. on Monday, Manila Electric Co. on Tuesday, and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. on Thursday.

These four firms have a combined weight of 12% in the PSEi, according to online brokerage firm 2TradeAsia.com.

Manila Water Company, Inc., PXP Energy Corp., and Philex Mining Corp. will also have their analyst briefings on Wednesday.

The online brokerage added that volatility is expected due to movements in global markets, affected by rising inflation in the United States.

“Expect whipsaws over the coming months, as global markets work their way in absorbing the net effect of US inflation versus employment. This backdrop will support range-trading episodes for now, until players at home have fully assessed the net impact of the initial phase of the tax reform law,” 2TradeAsia said in a weekly market note.

Locally, economists expect the first package of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion law to boost inflation in February. Last month, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported that the overall increase in prices of goods and services increased by 4% in January, the highest recorded in three years. This is faster than December’s 3.3% uptick, as well as the 2.7% increase recorded in January 2017.

With this, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said it expects full-year inflation to average at 3.4% this year, still within the official 2-4% target.

On the other hand, Regina Capital’s Mr. Limlingan added that speculation on MSCI and FTSE rebalancing, which will be released at the beginning of March, may fuel trading activity this week.

“The equities market in general is not singular-phase in direction and volatilities should be expected,” according to 2TradeAsia.com.

The index’ immediate support is pegged at 8,400, while resistance is from 8,500 to 8,550, analysts said.

Fed resists upgrading long-run growth outlook after tax cuts

Federal Reserve officials are showing surprise at just how much the recently-enacted tax cuts are boosting the U.S. economy. But they’re still not impressed enough to lift estimates for long-term growth, a stance that puts them at odds with the White House.

Minutes from the Jan. 30-31 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, released this week, showed “a number” of policy makers had already upgraded their month-old outlooks for growth in 2018, citing an impact from tax changes “somewhat larger in the near term than previously thought.”

Missing, however, were any hints that committee members believe those tax cuts will elevate the speed at which the economy can grow in the long run without sparking faster price gains. The Trump administration, by contrast, expects a pickup in growth and no significant rise in inflation, a position taken this week by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

With unemployment already the lowest since 2000, the Fed’s outlook implies that greater expansion would risk overheating the economy and potentially warrant a faster pace of interest-rate increases, thereby blunting the effect of the tax changes. Lawmakers could potentially question Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on these issues when he testifies before Congress next week in his first hearings as central bank chief.

“To get a lasting effect you want to see it raise investment growth and push productivity,” thereby boosting the economy’s “supply side,” said Peter Hooper, a former senior Fed staffer and now chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York. “I don’t see any really hard-core supply-side enthusiasts on the FOMC,” he said.

Congress passed, and President Donald Trump signed, the legislation in December, lowering personal and corporate profit tax rates. Fed officials, with a couple of exceptions, have been cautious in estimating how that would affect the economy. Yet reports gathered by regional Fed banks from companies in their districts appear to be coming in more positive than expected.

Mester’s Outlook

Loretta Mester, president of the Cleveland Fed, has said that type of feedback has prompted her to consider working extra growth into her forecasts for 2018 and 2019 after already adding as much as 0.5 percentage point for each year.

The minutes hinted at more of that. Officials “characterized their business contacts as generally upbeat about the economy,” citing tax cuts and an improved global economic outlook.

“They were caught off guard a little bit by the response,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities in New York. He said Fed officials were making a mistake in not predicting a supply-side impact.

“The Fed is positioned to underestimate the effects of the tax changes,” he said. “This does change the economics of investing for corporations.”

Officials will have to make their views clearer when they issue their next set of quarterly forecasts in March. The minutes strongly suggest that the median forecast for 2018 economic growth will rise from the 2.5 percent submitted in December. A bigger surprise would come if they also upgraded their “longer-run” forecast of 1.8 percent.

Optimism, Caution

Randal Quarles, appointed by Trump as a Fed governor, has been decidedly optimistic about the potential for lasting supply-side improvements. In a speech Thursday, he said a five-year drought in business investment “may finally be breaking.” St. Louis Fed chief James Bullard has also said the tax cuts could potentially lift productivity by encouraging more investment. Other officials have so far been more cautious.

Vincent Reinhart, another former Fed senior staffer and now chief economist at Standish Mellon Asset Management in Boston, said even if more FOMC members were inclined to start talking about higher longer-run growth, the January FOMC session was an unlikely time to start, given that it was the last presided over by Chair Janet Yellen.

Yellen has expressed skepticism that the tax package would significantly raise her estimate of the economy’s historically low trend growth rate.

With Yellen out of the picture and Powell taking over, Reinhart said, “That means there is scope for some surprise in March.” — Bloomberg

Saudis see oil output cuts easing in 2019 without hurting market

OPEC and its allies including Russia may next year ease the crude-output curbs that have helped prices recover from the worst crash in a generation, according to Saudi Arabia’s oil minister.

With the market moving toward equilibrium and bloated inventories shrinking, the next step for global producers will be to phase out the reductions, Khalid Al-Falih told reporters in New Delhi on Saturday. The nations taking part in the supply curbs are currently studying what a crude re-balancing will entail, and will announce their next steps once that’s analyzed, he said.

The production curbs may be eased “sometime in 2019, but we don’t know when and we don’t know how,” Al-Falih said. “What we know is that it’s going to be done in a way that it will not in any way disturb the balance and undo the hard work since 2016.”

A deal between the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners aimed at shrinking a global glut began in 2017 and runs through the end of this year. With U.S. production booming and the International Energy Agency predicting that expanding supply from non-OPEC countries may cover global demand growth for the next two years, speculation has increased over how long the cartel will have to curb supply.

U.S. Oil “Welcome”

Al-Falih welcomed the rise in U.S. production, saying that demand is seen remaining strong in 2018 and that the market will be able to absorb that supply. While America is pumping out record volumes, that’s being accompanied by a surge in exports, which has jumped to a four-month high. Even Saudi Arabia has considered shipping American crude abroad. The demand for cargoes is helping drain the nation’s stockpiles, easing concern that OPEC’s efforts to erode a glut will be undermined.

While countries involved in the production cuts are considering how to extend their partnership in coming years, keeping output constrained could be a challenge as the deal has shown some signs of strain. Russian oil companies, eager to press on with new projects, have pushed for a swift end to the curbs, while OPEC members like Iraq, Iran and Libya are keen to expand capacity after years of lost revenues amid sanctions and conflict.

“The framework beyond 2018 is yet to be determined, but for sure from the Saudi and from the OPEC standpoint, there is a determination to translate the success of 2017 and 2018, partial as it may be, into a lasting framework that allows us to avoid instability in the oil markets,” Al-Falih said.

Saudi Arabia is committed to meeting its production curb pledge and balancing exports, he said, adding that the nation, the world’s biggest oil exporter, will keep overseas shipments in March below 7 million barrels a day.

The country is also committed to the initial public offering of its state-run producer, Saudi Arabian Oil Co., known as Aramco, Al-Falih said. “We will announce the details of the listing venues and exact timing in due course.”

The IPO is the centerpiece of the kingdom’s plan to wean its economy off oil. The government has estimated the share sale could value the company at $2 trillion, though analysts make lower estimates. — Bloomberg

DENR mulls forming task force to enforce wildlife protection laws

The Department of Environment and Natural Resource (DENR) is mulling over the formation of a separate bureau to strictly enforce wildlife and environmental laws as ordered by Secretary Roy A. Cimatu.

DENR Biodiversity Management Bureau (DENR-BMB) Director Theresa Mundita S. Lim said while they develop the policies on environmental laws, these are implemented by regional offices and other enforcement agencies such as the Philippine National Police and the Philippine Coast Guard.

“[The DENR chief] now has an instruction to set up a bureau that will focus mainly on enforcement against environmental crimes which includes wildlife. So, among the challenges, on wildlife enforcement is also following the apprehension, that there should be charges as well. Cases are filed and they (violators) are prosecuted.”

Ms. Lim said that, at present, whenever the government manages to confiscate illegally-traded animals, these are sometimes returned to the traders due to lack of proper law implementation or legal knowledge. This is despite the country having special prosecutors and courts that hold trials on environment-related crimes.

Aside from enforcement, Ms. Lim said that the DENR-BMB will also focus on providing awareness and alternative livelihood to the communities that had been exposed to illegal wildlife trade.

“[We should] give these violators different enterprises so that they have other than just unsustainable collection, we can probably teach them how to sustainably utilize our wildlife resources,” Ms. Lim said.

“Or, if there are other wild life resources that can be introduced in the area that can help the communities, that can veer them away from illegal collection. That’s another activity, another program that we are undertaking right now.” — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Philippines uses dollar pile against speculators — BSP governor

The Philippine central bank sells dollars from its pile to curb excessive peso volatility against speculators using a cut in banks’ reserve ratios “as pretext,” Governor Nestor Espenilla said.

The peso, the worst-performing among emerging markets next to the Argentine currency, fell the most in three weeks on Feb. 19 after the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) announced a cut in lenders’ reserve requirement ratio (RRR) to 19% from 20%. While the move effective March will free up P90 billion ($1.7 billion) from banks’ vaults, Espenilla said this isn’t monetary easing.

Below are Espenilla’s comments:

“If BSP wants to change the monetary policy stance, BSP will signal that overtly, by changing the policy rate (overnight reverse repurchase rate or RRP). But it can also do that more subtly without necessarily changing the RRP rate, by allowing the market-determined TDF (term deposit facility) rates to rise (or fall) by altering auction volumes.”

“The establishment of this new IRC ( interest rate corridor) mechanism since 2016 has given BSP the fine maneuvering room to conduct monetary policy and gradually bring down RRR. The speed and timing of the RRR phase-down is largely a function of the liquidity absorbing ability of OMO (open market operations). Therefore, analyst fears of ensuing looser monetary policy that can fuel more inflation is really unfounded.”

“Moreover, to the extent that speculators use RRR reduction as pretext for peso depreciation, BSP sells FX from its reserves to manage excessive peso volatility. That in itself also has the effect of draining peso liquidity from the system, which causes a self-correction.”

“The bottom line, the BSP has many options to maintain firm monetary control. The key reason it is lowering RRR is to promote a more efficient and level financial system that’s less biased against deposit-taking financial institutions which creates market distortions. This is really in a sense part of a grand normalization process. Alongside capital market reforms and FX liberalization.” — Bloomberg