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Pepsi PHL seeks permission to sell HFCS inventory to AAC

BEVERAGE manufacturers Asian Alcohol Corp. (AAC) and Pepsi-Cola Products Philippines, Inc. (PCPPI) have asked the Sugar Regulatory Administration to authorize AAC the use of PCPPI’s remaining high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) inventory.
In a letter dated April 4, AAC requested to purchase PCPPI’s 418 containers of high fructose corn syrup which it intends to use for its own production.
The 418 container loads amount to 9,196 metric tons of HFCS.
AAC said that the HFCS will serve as an additive to molasses which is needed for the production of potable grade alcohol.
“The distillery sector […] is in constant search for materials that could make its production cost-efficient to remain economically competitive amidst the issues of increasing prices of molasses and stresses in its supply,” the parties said in a letter.
TAAC clarified that the use of HFCS will not be used as a replacement for sugar and molasses, but will only be used to spur the production of yeast in the fermentation process to produce ethanol.
In a letter dated April 5, PCPPI said that while it will abide by SRA’s memorandum issued on the disposal of its HFCS stock, it wants to take AAC’s offer in consideration.
“In this connection, we humbly request for reconsideration and instead of destroying these stocks, we may be allowed to dispose these in favor of AAC,” PCPPI said.
“[AAC] intends to apply the total volume of the subject HFCS as an additive to molasses, hence, as an aid to the fermentation of its potable-grade alcohol products.”
Late last month, the SRA allowed PCPPI to reclassify its remaining HFCS stocks from Class D or for export to Class B or for public consumption, but also ruled the stocks must be disposed of without the company profiting from it.
PCPPI chose not to use HFCS after the first package of the tax reform law took effect, which imposed a P12 per liter tax for beverages using HFCS. PCPPI then decided to shift to cane sugar, which in beverages is taxed at P6 per liter.
The SRA will rule on the matter after its board meeting on April 12. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Consumer group calls for LTFRB to stop meddling in review of Uber-Grab deal

Consumer group Laban Konsyumer Inc. on Tuesday told the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) to stop meddling in the ongoing review of the Philippine Competition Commission of the Uber-Grab deal, instead focus on fast-tracking the accreditation of prospective ride-hailing companies.
In a statement on Tuesday, Laban Konsyumer President Atty. Vic Dimagiba said that the LTFRB should avoid a “turf war” with PCC by issuing statements that might affect the regulatory review by the anti-trust agency. — Janina C. Lim

Oil rises after Xi’s speech on optimism US-China spat may ease

Oil advanced above $64 a barrel after Chinese President Xi Jinping’s conciliatory tone in a closely watched speech raised hopes that U.S.-China trade tensions may ease, lifting global risky assets.
Futures in New York erased earlier losses in the day to rise as much as 1.5 percent as Xi vowed to open sectors from banking to auto manufacturing, increase imports and lower foreign-ownership limits. That came after U.S. President Donald Trump expressed optimism on reaching a deal with China. Markets from global equities to metals gained on expectations that a trade war between the world’s two largest economies can be averted.
Oil has struggled after touching a high of more than $66 a barrel in March as investors worry that tit-for-tat tariff increases between the U.S. and China could impact wider economic growth and curb energy demand. Record level of U.S. crude production also counters efforts by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies to curb output and drain a global glut.
“All risk assets are rallying after President Xi’s speech as the Chinese leader expresses greater openness,” said Will Yun, a commodities analyst at Hyundai Futures Corp. “Investors’ sentiment is turning positive as China’s willingness to open up the market gives confidence to the global economy and it could lead to better demand.”
West Texas Intermediate for May delivery rose as much as 96 cents to $64.38 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and was at $64.29 as of 3:10 p.m. in Singapore. The contract climbed $1.36, or 2.2 percent, to $63.42 on Monday. Total volume traded was about 50 percent above the 100-day average.
Brent for June settlement was 91 cents higher at $69.56 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The contract on Monday rose $1.54, or 2.3 percent, to $68.65. The global benchmark crude traded at a $5.29 premium to June WTI, the widest since March 29.
Yuan-denominated futures for September delivery were 2.8 percent higher at 413.5 yuan a barrel on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange. The contract rose 8 yuan to 402.3 yuan a barrel on Monday.
Xi’s Speech
The Chinese leader pledged a “new phase of opening up” and said Cold War and zero-sum mentalities were “out of place” in his keynote address Tuesday to the Boao Forum for Asia. The long-planned speech was being closely watched by traders for any response to Trump’s plan to hit hundreds of Chinese products with duties in an escalating trade spat. Following Xi’s speech, Asian stocks and U.S. futures jumped in Asian morning trading.
In the oil market, U.S. crude inventories were forecast to fall by 1.5 million barrels last week in a Bloomberg survey before U.S. government data on Wednesday. That would be a second consecutive week of declines after a surprise drop of 4.6 million barrels last week. — Bloomberg

While the world cracks down, Japan emerges as a crypto haven

Japan’s emergence as a global center for cryptocurrencies didn’t start with open-minded lawmakers or prescient investments by the country’s financial giants. Instead, it began with an American felon who arrived in the country looking for a fresh start.
Roger Ver came to Japan in 2006 after getting out of prison for selling explosives online and stumbled upon bitcoin in its early days. He became an enthusiastic supporter who threw parties and gave away coins to encourage their use. He also forged a relationship with Mark Karpeles, a young Frenchman in Tokyo who bought Mt. Gox — then the world’s largest bitcoin exchange — and relocated its headquarters to the city.
Together, the pair helped create a community of crypto experts who popularized the currencies, seeded early startups and persuaded government officials of the concept’s potential. That helped Japan emerge as a bitcoin haven, even as the rest of the world cracked down. It has maintained a supportive regulatory environment, despite troubles ranging from investor fraud to the $500 million hack of a Japanese crypto-exchange this year.
“If it wasn’t for Mt. Gox, I wouldn’t have been involved with Bitcoin regulation at all,” says Mineyuki Fukuda, a former Liberal Democratic Party lawmaker who helped create the country’s rules.
After a boom in the popularity of cryptocurrencies, governments from the U.S. to China have proposed tight regulations or outright bans to prevent abuse. Japan has been particularly hard hit with hackers swiping a total of almost $1 billion.
But the nation’s lawmakers have remained firmly supportive. They’re moving to regulate new exchanges, rather than ban them outright. Last week, they took the first step toward legalizing initial coin offerings, or ICOs, a controversial fundraising technique outlawed in places like China and South Korea. Emboldened by the government’s stance, tech and financial firms are stepping up investment.
“Personally I was thinking, OK, they’re probably going to take the Chinese approach of ‘We’re just going to ban this thing and nobody’s going to be able to do it again’,” says Thomas Glucksmann, a former employee of Mt. Gox. “But they kind of went the opposite way.”
Ver didn’t have any of this planned when he came to Japan. He was a millionaire thanks to the same online business that landed him in trouble with authorities in the U.S. He said he’d had a Japanese girlfriend once and decided to move to the country in part to find a new one. Karpeles also landed in Japan on a whim, attracted by its culture and anime.
After discovering Bitcoin in early 2011, Ver began buying coins on Mt. Gox and talking up the prospects for currencies independent of any government. He organized gatherings for enthusiasts, first at a fruit parlor and then at a bar in Tokyo’s Roppongi neighborhood. Bitcoin Jesus, as he became known, also gave away coins when they were worth about $1. (A single Bitcoin now trades at about $6,700.) He estimates he handed out more than 10,000 coins.
“That would be worth more than $50 million dollars today,” Ver says.
Ver stayed bullish even after Mt. Gox filed for bankruptcy in 2014, sending prices tumbling. He says the laws Japan implemented last year in the wake of the bankruptcy — regulating crypto exchanges and allowing bitcoin use in retail payments — were more industry-friendly than he expected. But ever a libertarian, he says he’d prefer no rules at all.
“I’m a bit averse to dealing with politicians, regulators and lawmakers,” says Ver, who resides in Japan but also holds citizenship in the tax haven of St. Kitts. “The regulators aren’t technologists. They don’t know about this.”
Those laws are now responsible for an influx of corporate interest. Electronic retailers like Yamada Denki Co. have embraced bitcoin for payments. Large tech firms including messaging provider Line Corp. are launching crypto exchanges. And big banks are pouring millions into blockchain startups that promise to disrupt the financial order.
“You’ve gone from Japan as this inconspicuous crypto hub which happened organically because of the presence of Mt. Gox and a handful of crypto evangelists like Roger Ver,” says Glucksmann. “To now very much a top down driven ‘Welcome to Japan. We want to be the crypto hub of Asia, if not the world’.”
Ver says he can’t take full credit for the country’s embrace of crypto, but agrees he played a role in the early years. Karpeles, still on trial for embezzlement charges related to Mt. Gox, didn’t respond to interview requests. But reflecting on the past decade, he wrote recently that he’s glad he came to Japan.
“I’d guess I lost everyone except for a few close friends,” he wrote last week in online posts on Reddit. “I don’t regret it (despite all that happened).” — Bloomberg

China’s Xi pledges greater openness amid Trump trade dispute

Chinese President Xi Jinping reiterated pledges to open sectors from banking to auto manufacturing in a speech that also warned against returning to a “Cold War mentality” amid trade disputes with U.S. counterpart Donald Trump.
Xi pledged a “new phase of opening up” in his keynote address Tuesday to the Boao Forum for Asia, China’s answer to Davos. While the speech offered little new policy, Xi affirmed or expanded on proposals to increase imports, lower foreign-ownership limits on manufacturing and expand protection to intellectual property — all central issues in Trump’s trade gripes.
“Human society is facing a major choice to open or close, to go forward or backward,” Xi told hundreds of investors gathered on the resort island of Hainan, in a speech that didn’t mention Trump’s name. “In today’s world, the trend of peace and cooperation is moving forward and the Cold War mentality and zero-sum-game thinking are outdated.”
Trade talks between the world’s biggest economies broke down last week after the Trump administration demanded that China take steps to curtail support for high-technology industries, a person familiar with the situation said. The conciliatory tone of Xi’s speech helped bring risk appetite back to Asian markets as shares from Sydney to Hong Kong rose alongside oil and metals and Treasuries extended declines with gold and the yen.
Xi’s long-planned speech — marking 40 years after the first economic reforms transformed China — was being closely watched after Trump’s plan to hit hundreds of Chinese products with duties. The country faces a credibility gap after years of promises to free up the economy were followed by more centralized control, market-access barriers and state support for local companies.
Those practices are at the center of Trump’s threats to levy some $150 billion of tariffs against China. The U.S. has asked the country to reduce its trade surplus by $100 billion, cut tariffs on cars and stop forced technology transfers by foreign corporations, among other things.
A White House official who watched a broadcast of Xi’s speech said the Chinese president’s reference to autos following Trump’s Twitter complaints about the issue appeared to be an opportunity to develop trust between the two sides. The official said that the U.S. was expecting China to put concrete proposals forward.
What our economists say…
“The U.S. side will likely want to see deeds, not just words, before it considers softening its protectionist stance,” Bloomberg Economics Chief Asia Economist Tom Orlik wrote in a note. “Even so, with Xi’s speech positioning China as conciliatory, the chances of a damaging trade war appear a shade lower.”
The speech was attended by leaders including Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, and International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde.
“I read much of that speech as being about cementing China’s regional leadership as an open country fostering free trade and development,” Jim McCaughan, chief executive officer at Principal Global Investors, told Bloomberg Television. “The idea that there is going to be a quick fix on this is unlikely.”

FDIs hit two-month high in January

Foreign direct investments (FDI) surged to a two-month peak in January, the central bank said Tuesday, April 10, with inflows expected to keep rising this year amid upbeat domestic activity and positive market sentiment.
Investments to the Philippines netted $919 million for the month, jumping by 56.7% from the $587 million posted in January 2017, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said. The figure is the highest since the $990 million received in November last year.
“Investor outlook on the country’s economic performance remained positive on the back of strong macroeconomic fundamentals,” the central bank said in a statement.
Singapore, China, Taiwan, Japan and the United States were the biggest sources of capital during the month. Companies involved in manufacturing; financial and insurance; real estate; electricity, gas, steam and air-conditioning supply; and wholesale and retail trade activities received the biggest investments, the central bank said.
FDIs are a key source of capital for the local economy, creating more jobs for Filipinos as these fuel business expansions. The inflows likewise provided a strong start towards an $8.2-billion FDI forecast for 2018. Net inflows posted a record $10.049 billion last year, jumping by a fifth from $8.28 billion in 2016. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Couple nabbed in P900-million bitcoin scam

The Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) arrested a couple allegedly responsible for a multi-million scam involving the virtual currency bitcoin.
The suspects, identified as Arnel and Leonady Ordonio, registered owners of NewG company, were apprehended in an entrapment operation last April 4 in Vigan City, Ilocos Sur. They were charged with syndicated estafa before the Office of the Special Prosecutors for amassing P900 million from more than 50 victims.
The couple purportedly promised the victims of 30% return of investment after 16 days, with P90,000 to P160,000 as capital. The investment scam, which operated via social media, victimized individuals from various locations.
Sa una ibibigay niya muna (earnings), first at saka second. After that, mawawala na siya. This is a simple case ng estafa at saka pyramiding kasi meron silang upline, may downline,” CIDG Police Director Roel B. Obusan said in a press briefing on Tuesday.
(Initially they will give the earnings, the first and the second. After that, they disappear. This is a simple case of estafa and pyramiding because it has upline and downline.)

One of the victims, Ms. Rosanne Maglunot, a resident of Malolos City in Bulacan, said she and her relatives invested P29 million after she was invited by a trusted friend. She and her husband invested P4 million in November last year for a “personal slot” or the arrangement for participants who cannot invite other people as downline.
Ms. Maglunot said she started suspecting the legitimacy of the scheme in December when her upline failed to give her earnings, but she was promised that the issue will be fixed by January.
“We were able to talk to Arnel Ordonio through Facebook Messenger… and he promised P3 million every five days para lang mabalik yung kapital. So nung hindi na natupad ‘yon, humingi na kami ng tulong from (PSUPT. Heryl L.) Bruno of PNP Malolos para makarating na sa sitwasyon na ‘to,” Ms. Maglunot said.
(We were able to talk to Arnel Ordonio through Facebook Messenger… and he promised P3 million every five days just so he can return the capital. When that did not happen, we sought the help of [PSUPT. Heryl L.] Bruno of PNP Malolos which led to this situation.)
Bitcoins is used mainly in online transactions and investment due to its fluctuating value. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has issued guidelines last year to regulate bitcoin exchanges in the country. — Minde Nyl R. Dela Cruz

Three communist rebels killed, five arrested in Camarines Sur clash — military

Amid the impending revival of peace negotiations between the government and communist rebels, three alleged members of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) were killed and five others were arrested in a clash against the 83rd Infantry Battalion in Bato, Camarines Sur in the morning of Tuesday, April 10.
Three M16 rifles were recovered from the rebels. Two of the five arrested were wounded and are reportedly being treated.
Southern Luzon Commander Lieutenant General Danilo Pamonag, maintained support for the resumption of peace talks but said the military troops operating in Southern Tagalog and Bicol “will still perform their mandate to protect the people.” — Minde Nyl R. Dela Cruz

Hyundai unveils quartet of contenders

Text and photos by Kap Maceda Aguila

A HOT hatch, a crossover, an SUV and a hybrid comprised the summer salvo of launches by Hyundai Asia Resources, Inc. (HARI), the country’s official distributor of Hyundai passenger and commercial vehicles, at the recent Manila International Auto Show (MIAS).
During the opening day of the annual car show, HARI President and CEO Ma. Fe Perez-Agudo led the introduction of the all-new Hyundai Veloster, Kona, Santa Fe and the Ioniq Hybrid. Dubbed the “Greatest Show From Hyundai,” the unveilings were done amid a number of entertainment productions from Korean Buganda drumbeaters, Douglas Nierras’ Powerdance, and Jett Pangan of the The Dawn.
VELOSTER
The first-generation Veloster debuted in 2011, and overtly targets a younger segment of drivers. Sleek and low, the coupé is staunchly quirky and funky in design execution — most notably with its 2+1 door concept. With its MIAS launch, Filipinos got to quickly see the second iteration of the Veloster, which was first presented globally early this year at the North American International Auto Show.
The Veloster is powered by a turbocharged, 201-hp, 265-Nm, 1.6-liter engine mated to a seven-speed dual-clutch transmission. Priced at P1.798 million, the hot hatch is poised to be a contender in the “pocket rocket” niche with its aggressive looks and expected sprightly performance.
KONA
The South Korea-headquartered automaker has apparently had enough of sitting around in the new high-rewards battleground that is the crossover class as its Japanese counterparts make bale upon bale of hay while the auto gods shine on the niche. Following on the heels of an apparently scuttled entry of the Creta (also a crossover), the more aggressively styled Kona will be Hyundai’s more worthy contender.
The subcompact SUV is equipped with a 2.0-liter NU engine promising 149 hp and 179 Nm, whose performance is accessed via a six-speed automatic transmission. The final sticker price of the Kona is yet to be determined, but is expected to slot below the P1.5-million mark.
SANTA FE
The fourth generation of the Santa Fe sees more contemporary, dynamic styling for Hyundai’s beloved mid-size sport ute. First unveiled at the last Geneva Auto Show, the all-new seven-seat SUV packs a 2.2-liter CRDi engine mated to an eight-speed automatic. A maximum of 197 horses and a robust 441Nm should enable the vehicle to shove its way around for any conceivable duty.
IONIQ
Coming with a price tag of P1.498 million, the Ioniq now firmly takes its place as the country’s most affordable hybrid vehicle — partly made possible by the government’s new taxation scheme. The Ioniq is principally powered by 1.6-liter engine (good for 104 hp and 147 Nm) mated to a six-speed dual clutch transmission. Its lithium-ion polymer battery has a capacity of 1.56 kWh — supplying 42 kW and 240 volts to its electric motor which, in turn, delivers 43 hp and 170 Nm. The Ioniq shares bones with the Kia Niro, a compact crossover hybrid. There’s still some time to mull about getting an Ioniq, as units are expected to actually get here in the latter part of the year.

Suzuki offers ‘tech peek’ of new Dzire

By Aries B. Espinosa
IN what could be considered a long overdue move, Suzuki Philippines (SPH) finally joined the Manila International Auto Show MIAS on its 14th edition.
According to SPH vice-president and general manager for automobile Shuzo Hoshikura, MIAS opened opportunities for SPH to further its goal of strengthening the brand’s foothold in the country.
“We want to build on the momentum we achieved early this year. While our expansion and sales efforts prove to be effective, we remain active in looking for platforms that can help us broaden the reach of the Suzuki brand in the country, and joining MIAS showed promising potential to fulfill that objective,” he shared.
Seemingly making up for lost time, SPH put on a classy opening in the early afternoon of April 5, with bossa nova singer Sitti literally setting the tone for Suzuki’s subtle but spirited booth.

Suzuki Philippines
Suzuki Philippines managing director Norminio Mojica (left) and assistant general manager for automobile Cecil Capacete (right) present the brand’s young ambassadors for road safety, the Suzuki Safety Scouts.

Suzuki brand influencers Kelly Misa (for the Ertiga) and Mikael Daez (for the Vitara) were joined by the Suzuki Safety Scouts — child ambassadors of Suzuki — to promote Suzuki’s road safety advocacy.
As for the displays themselves, SPH put its best foot forward, and then some. On display were best-selling, as well as award-winning, vehicles the all-new Vitara (2017 Car of the Year-Philippines in the subcompact crossover category), the Ciaz (Best Fuel Economy Rate award recipient of the 2017 edition of the DoE Eco Run, and Best Personal Commuter in the 12th C! Magazine Awards), and the popular LUV, or “life utility vehicle,” Ertiga.
Besides cars, SPH also displayed the Suzuki Hayabusa, representing the brand’s motorcycle division, and outboard motors from the marine division.
Taking the center stage, however, was the new Suzuki Dzire with the Auto Gear Shift technology upgrade. The combination of the manual gearbox and automatic transmission is claimed to deliver better engine performance, smoother driving and, thus, better fuel efficiency. Though the Dzire wouldn’t be available in the Philippines until later this year, SPH decided to give this sneak peek a go at the MIAS to whet the appetites of the model’s target market — millennials and members of Gen Z.

Ford trots out topless Mustang, aluminum-clad Expedition


LOW-VOLUME products but which create a big impact are what Ford Philippines unveiled at this year’s edition of the Manila International Auto Show. Introduced by the American car maker were a pair of its US-market staple models — the Ford Mustang and Expedition — that, in the Philippines, cater to a more affluent set of buyers rather than to the mass market.
The Mustang is offered in four variants, including the range-topping convertible, with prices set between P2.798 million and P3.678 million. The lineup starts with the fastback fitted with a 2.3-liter EcoBoost engine and a 10-speed automatic transmission, then moves up to the 5.0-liter V8 GT, the convertible with the same V8 engine but with a six-speed manual transmission, and the convertible with both the V8 and 10-speed automatic.
In EcoBoost form the 2.3-liter four-pot makes 310 hp and 474 Nm of torque. The 5.0-liter V8, which according to Ford has been “extensively redesigned” and has been fitted with a new port fuel direct injection system, puts out 460 horsepower and 569 Nm. The V8 can also be paired with an active valve performance exhaust, which lets drivers to select how (relatively) muted or loud the exhaust notes can get.
Besides refreshed styling defined by crisper lines, a lower hood, additional vents, some new lower-body aero pieces and whole set of LED jewelry, the Mustang also has an updated cabin marked by new materials. And fitted to whichever variant is a 12-inch fully customizable LCD display cluster from where infotainment and performance settings can be controlled.
Regardless of variant too, the Mustang is equipped with driver-assist technologies , including a blind spot information system with cross-traffic alert, lane-keeping assist, a rear-view camera and adaptive cruise control. Also fitted is Ford’s TrackApps, a suite of applications that lets drivers to review or fine-tune their performance on a racetrack. It can record acceleration pace, amount of g-force generated and braking performance, as well provide a countdown, lap timing and launch control.
The new Expedition has also received the EcoBoost treatment, and so this relatively small 3.5-liter V6 engine is still capable of churning out 375 hp and a massive 637 Nm of torque. Combined with a 10-speed automatic transmission and an auto start/stop feature for the engine — which shuts off the engine when the car is merely idling in traffic — lower emissions and improved fuel consumption are assured, Ford said.
Helping in this regard further is the Expedition’s structure. In its latest form the vehicle is propped by a redesigned, fully boxed, high-strength steel frame over which a body made entirely out of aluminum — significantly cutting down on weight — is draped. Ford said the latest Expedition weighs up to 135 kilograms less than its predecessor model.
What the new Expedition retains is the spacious interior for which the nameplate has been known. Its cabin furniture is also still flexible enough to take in more passengers or cargo — if not both. Among the new items in there are a B&O Play premium audio with 12 speakers and HD radio, as well as power outlets on every row and a wireless charging system compatible with select mobile phones. The vehicle also comes with a foot-activated lift gate.
Driver-assist technologies fitted on the Expedition includes hill-descent control, hill-start assist, blind spot information with trailer coverage and cross-traffic alert, a forward and reverse sensing system, and traction control.
Ford sells the Expedition, available solely in four-wheel drive for P4.258 million. Add P100,000 for a set of bucket seats. — BMA

PSEi falls even as rest of Asia cheers Xi’s assurance

THE Philippine Stock Exchange on Tuesday ignored optimism across much of Asia in the face of China President Xi Jinping’s promise to open his country’s economy further, dropping further below the 8,000 mark for the second straight trading day as investors in local equities apparently chose to remain largely on the sidelines amid lack of more compelling leads.
The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) retreated for the second straight trading day by 10.98 points or 0.13% to close at 7,934.68 — there was no trading on Monday which was a public holiday — while the all-shares index dropped 11.03 points or 0.22% to end 4,817.47.
RCBC Securities, Inc., in its Stock Market Daily Recap for Tuesday, noted that “Philippine equities traded sideways, missing the regional rally of its peers, as local investors may have been waiting for stronger catalysts such as the incoming 1Q2018 results to justify entry given the recent market volatility.”
Also on Tuesday, while noting that “some fund managers were not participating, as evidenced by the thinly traded volume” in the wake of “an extended break,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan also noted in a mobile phone message that the US Congressional Budget Office now expects the fiscal deficit of the world’s biggest economy to go beyond four percent of gross domestic product from this year onward.
PSEi had returned below the 8,000 line last Friday after the government reported a 4.3% inflation rate for March that was the fastest in at least five years and pierced a 2-4% full-year target range for 2018.
Mr. Xi’s remarks at the Boao Forum for Asia on Tuesday — in which he vowed to cut import tariffs on products like cars — helped defuse escalating US-China trade tensions, in turn, helping fuel a rally for most of Asia. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and TOPIX index, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index, South Korea’s KOSPI Index, the Shanghai Composite Index, the Jakarta Composite Index and the MSCI AC Asia Pacific gained 0.54%, 0.35%, 1.65%, 0.27%, 1.67%, 1.26% and 0.69%, respectively.
At home, the six sectoral indices were equally divided between winners and losers, with sectors that gained consisting of industrials which added 61.91 points or 0.55% to finish 11,218.39; holding firms that increased by 10.33 points or 0.12% to 7,997.95; and property which edged up by 2.07 points or 0.05% to end 3,646.57.
Sectors that lost consisted of services that gave up 32.1 points or 1.93% to finish 1,628.33; mining and oil which dropped 151.95 points or 1.34% to 11,155.2; and financials which retreated by 6.78 points or 0.33% to close 2,017.63.
Tuesday’s list of 20 most active stocks was equally divided between those that gained and those that lost. Ayala Corp. gained 2.12% to P938.50 apiece and Jollibee Foods Corp. added 2.16% to P284 each, while Bloomberry Resorts Corp. gave up 2.96% to P13.10 apiece and Leisure & Resorts World Corp. erased 10.08% to P5.35 each.
Trading volume thinned to 1.70 billion shares worth P7.65 billion changing hands from Friday’s 2.37 billion worth P7.58 billion. Foreigners stayed largely bearish for a third straight trading day, though net selling slipped by 3.51% to P465.76 million from Friday’s P482.69 million. — with interview by J. C. Lim

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