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RCBC upsizes MTN program to $2 billion to raise more capital

RIZAL COMMERCIAL Banking Corp. (RCBC) upsized its medium-term note program to raise additional capital.

In a disclosure to the local bourse on Monday, the Yuchengco-led RCBC said it has expanded its medium-term program to $2 billion from the previous $1 billion, as approved by its board on Jan. 29.

Banks usually employ a note facility to raise more capital to fund its programs and operation by issuing unsecured fixed rate notes.

The lender said that with the updated program, RCBC “retains the flexibility on favorable market conditions and tap the debt capital markets, while conforming to its term foreign currency borrowing strategy.”

In October 2015, RCBC raised $320 million from the issuance of unsecured fixed-rate notes as part of its $1-billion medium-term program.

The issuance, in denominations of $125,000 and increments of $1,000 thereafter, will mature on Feb. 2, 2021 and is listed at the Singapore Stock Exchange.

The offer received orders of over $1.3 billion, well above its intended issuance.

Credit rater Moody’s Investors Service said in a statement yesterday it has kept unchanged its (P)Baa2 grade for the updated program, which is a notch above the minimum investment grade.

Moody’s initially gave RCBC’s medium-term note program a (P) Ba2 rating, two notches below the investment grade, and subsequently upgraded it to (P)Baa3 in May 2015 and (P)Baa2 in November 2017.

The program was also rated BB by Fitch Ratings, two notches below investment grade.

Recently, local banks have been conducting various fund-raising activities to expand their networks and beef up their capital buffers.

Last month, UnionBank of the Philippines raised P3 billion from its long-term negotiable certificates of deposit, the first tranche of its P20-billion program.

In September 2017, BDO Unibank, Inc. said it will issue $700 million fixed rate senior notes under its $2-billion medium-term note program.

RCBC saw its net income climb to P4.3 billion in 2017, 11.4% higher than the P3.9 billion booked the previous year.

Latest data from the central bank showed RCBC was the tenth largest bank in the Philippines in asset terms as of September 2017.

RCBC shares closed at P47 apiece on Monday, unchanged from Friday’s finish. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Emoji Movie swoons below Tom Cruise, Mel Gibson at ‘worst in film’ Razzies

LOS ANGELES — Animated The Emoji Movie stunk up the annual Razzie awards on Saturday, tanking below all contenders for worst achievements in film, while Tom Cruise and Mel Gibson were also roasted for 2017’s most ignoble performances.

The Emoji Movie, Sony Pictures children’s film about talking emoticons, earned four Golden Raspberries, including worst picture, director, and screenplay.

In its 38th year, the Razzies serves as a tongue-in-cheek response to the Sunday’s Academy Awards by handing out $4.97-gold spray-painted berry trophies.

Cruise won worst actor for his leading role as a US Army sergeant who accidentally unleashes mayhem by disturbing an ancient grave in the much-maligned action reboot The Mummy.

Gibson was bestowed the worst supporting actor for his comedic turn in Daddy’s Home 2 alongside John Lithgow, Will Ferrell, and Mark Wahlberg.

Tyler Perry, a perennial Razzie punching bag, took home the worst actress raspberry for his popular drag character Madea in Boo 2: A Medea Halloween.

Oscar-winning actress Kim Basinger earned the Razzie dishonor for her supporting role in erotic romance Fifty Shades Darker, while the big screen adaptation of TV series Baywatch won the fan-voted award of “nominee so bad you loved it!”

The Razzies are chosen by more than 1,000 voting members from more than 26 countries, organizers said. — Reuters

NLEx plans P6-billion bond issuance

NLEX Corp. is planning to issue up to P6 billion in fixed-rate peso-denominated bonds, with the proceeds to be used to refinance debt.

“We have initial tranche that we are planning to launch — P6 billion or maybe P4-6 billion, that will be the initial issuance. Anytime, we can start soon. It will be used mainly for debt refinancing of P4 billion maturing debt,” NLEX Corp. President and CEO Rodrigo E. Franco told reporters on Feb. 26.

Last Feb. 14, the unit of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp.(MPTC) said its board approved the shelf registration, public offer, and insurance of fixed rate peso bonds up to P25 billion. NLEX Corp. said the bonds may be issued in one or more tranches within the shelf period.

After the initial tranche, Mr. Franco said the company will issue bonds when it needs funds for its projects.

“After that, the connector (NLEx-SLEx Connector Project) starts already. We have to time it with the requirement of the project, that’s why we have a shelf registration. We don’t want to issue too early,” he said.

NLEX Corp. is allotting P19 billion for 2018, primarily for the construction of Harbor Link Segment 10 and the North Luzon Expressway (NLEx)-South Luzon Expressway (SLEx) Connector Road project.

The Harbor Link Segment 10 is a 5.7-km. elevated expressway traversing NLEx from Smart Connect Interchange and crossover McArthur Highway in Valenzuela City, with down ramps along C-3/5th Avenue Interchange in Caloocan City.

The NLEx-SLEx Connector Road Project is an 8-km. all-elevated public-private partnership project of the Department of Public Works and Highways. The connector road will be built above the existing Philippine National Railways tracks from the C-3/5th Avenue Interchange in Caloocan City to Polytechnic University of the Philippines in Sta. Mesa, Manila.

MPTC is part of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), which is   one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. 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.C. Marcelo

Kuroda joins queue of central banks looking toward exit

THE END of the easy money era which spanned the global economy for the last decade came into even sharper focus as the Bank of Japan (BoJ) gave fresh insight into when it might slow its stimulus program.

Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s remarks on Friday that the central bank will start thinking about how to complete its unprecedented easing around the fiscal year starting April 2019 was the clearest signal yet that a conclusion might be in sight to emergency support for the Japanese economy.

While Kuroda’s statement in response to questions from lawmakers was in some ways stating the obvious — the BoJ forecasts inflation to reach its 2% target in fiscal 2019 — the significance is that he’s put down a marker in public that he can be held to.

“It’s notable how over the past few weeks Kuroda has been forced into talking more specifically about the exit,” said Izumi Devalier, head of Japan economics at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “A year and a half ago he would have shut down the discussion altogether with the blanket ‘it’s too early to talk about it’ statement.”

That means the last of the big central banks is finally thinking out loud about policy normalization or how to begin the process of unwinding years of asset purchases and ultra-low interest rates that were used to stoke growth after the 2008 financial crisis sparked the worst global recession in decades.

The Federal Reserve, Bank of Canada and Bank of England have already raised interest rates and may do so again soon, while the European Central Bank is debating how soon to end its own bond-buying. China’s central bank is sticking to what it describes as neutral policy settings and is ratcheting up money market rates to cool the pace of borrowing. Bloomberg Economics estimates net asset purchases by the main central banks will dwindle to around zero around the start of 2019.

The Bank of Japan under Kuroda has bought hundreds of trillions of yen of assets and pushed interest rates below zero in its efforts to generate inflation of 2%. As part of its program to pull the nation out of years of deflationary malaise, its holdings of Japanese government bonds are almost equal to the annual economic output of Japan, and it also buys exchange-traded funds, corporate bonds and other assets.

“Central banks worldwide are gradually normalizing monetary policy as growth and inflation risks return,” said Chua Hak Bin, a senior economist at Maybank Kim Eng Research in Singapore. “The Bank of Japan is preparing the markets for an eventual exit from its accommodative monetary policy.”

Traders leaped on Kuroda’s remarks. The yen surged while yields on Japanese sovereign debt climbed across the curve after the remarks.

The Nikkei 225 Index closed 2.5% lower on Friday and the Topix Index fell 1.8%.

Such moves suggest just how vigilant investors are to talk of a turn by policy makers. Stocks have fallen and bonds have risen recently amid concern that synchronized global growth, falling unemployment and signs of accelerating inflation would prompt central banks to become more hawkish.

“The market action shows how sensitive investors will be to normalization when it approaches, that even BoJ QE (quantitative easing) will not last forever, and we fear Kuroda may live to regret giving his critics a timeline to measure the BoJ against,” Krishna Guha, vice-chairman of Evercore ISI and a former New York Fed official, said in a note.

Earlier last week, new Fed Chairman Jerome Powell indicated US policy makers may raise rates this year by more than the three times they have been anticipating.

To be sure, Kuroda remains doggedly committed to powerful stimulus until inflation hits 2% and on Friday he, again, ruled out any consideration of an exit before then. Many in the market believe him.

“Hearing Governor Kuroda talk about the policy board debating exit is obviously bracing for markets and underlines the communication challenge the BoJ faces,” said David Fernandez, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Barclays Plc.

“However, he simply said that the exit debate would happen in fiscal 2019 because the policy board forecasts that they will have reached the 2% target by then.” — Bloomberg

Outlook mixed amid perceived construction boom

By Mark T. Amoguis, Researcher

REAL ESTATE players are less bullish about the sector’s performance and the economy in the first quarter and the next than they were in the final quarter of 2017, results of the central bank’s survey on business confidence showed.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) latest Business Expectations Survey, released last March 2, showed real estate sector confidence in the Philippine economy slipped in the first three months of 2018 to 44.8% from the 57.1% logged in the fourth quarter last year, but higher than the 38.1% recorded in the January-March period of 2017.

Separately, the construction sector bared optimism in the first quarter of this year with confidence reading of 29.8% during the period from 22.3% from the October-December period last year. This, however, was lower than the first three months of 2017’s 35.7%.

The confidence index is computed as a percentage of respondents who answered in the affirmative less those who responded in the negative when asked about specific indicators.

“The more upbeat outlook of construction firms for Q1 2018 was due mainly to expectations of new construction projects (both public and private) to be awarded in 2018,” the report read.

“Ongoing construction activities are expected to continue into Q2 2018, as the next quarter CI (confidence index) remained high although lower than that a quarter ago.”

Data last week showed infrastructure spending surging 15.4% to P568.8 billion last year, surpassing the P549.4 billion programmed under the 2017 budget according to the Department of Budget and Management.

The construction sector’s optimism reflected that as its outlook on its own operations improved to 35.1% against 20.1% in the last three months of 2017 and 34.2% in the first quarter last year.

But real estate players were more reserved with a 42.6% reading during the period, lower than 50.1% in 2017’s fourth quarter although higher than the 40.3% recorded in the first quarter of 2017.

Overall results of the survey pointed to business sectors, while optimistic in the first quarter, less confident about the economy on account of the “usual slowdown in business activity” following the holiday season as well as the “transitory impact” on prices brought by the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law.

MORE FAVORABLE Q3
Business sentiment in the second quarter of 2018 was more favorable with companies citing, among others, the expected increase in government infrastructure projects from its “Build, Build, Build” initiative and the increase in business activity due to the upcoming summer season.

Sentiment among construction firms was 49.1% next quarter, higher than 39.2% in the first quarter of 2017 albeit down from 59.7% in the October-December period of 2017.

Real estate, on the other hand, was less upbeat in its outlook with 42.4% compared to 43.7% and 46.6% in the fourth quarter and first quarter of 2017, respectively.

David T. Leechiu, chief executive officer of Leechiu Property Consultants, said the results had a lot to do with the risks that the country faced last year, citing the extrajudicial killings, the Marawi crisis, anti-Western sentiments, and the TRAIN law as factors.

“But this is temporary,” Mr. Leechiu said in a phone interview.

He said that many of the business process outsourcing companies are coming back to the Philippines, translating into pent-up demand in office space.

“In 2018, year to date, we have 420,000 square meters of office space already pre-committed and pre-leased. It is the highest we’ve seen in history,” Mr. Leechiu said.

“We forecast that 2018 will be a strong year with around 900,000 square meters of office space take-up for this year.”

Black Panther continues box-office romp

LOS ANGELES — Black Panther continued its record-setting romp this weekend, passing the half-billion-dollar mark in only its third week out in North America as it stayed on track to be one of the highest-grossing films ever, industry analysts said.

The Disney/Marvel collaboration, starring Chadwick Boseman as the superhero king of an idyllic if fictional African country, took in an estimated $65.7 million for the three-day weekend, Web site Exhibitor Relations reported.

That take, nearly four times the $17 million earned by the weekend’s No. 2 movie — Red Sparrow from Fox — gave Panther the third-highest weekend ever, trailing only Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($90.2 million) and Avatar ($68.5 million), according to Variety.com.

Panther, which also stars Lupita Nyong’o, Michael B. Jordan, Daniel Kaluuya, and Martin Freeman, has now taken in nearly $900 million globally, with its opening in China still days away.

Red Sparrow tells the story of Russian ballerina-turned-elite spy Jennifer Lawrence. She is backed by an all-star cast including Matthias Schoenaerts, Jeremy Irons and Charlotte Rampling.

In third spot was MGM’s new release Death Wish, with ticket sales of $13 million. The thriller stars Bruce Willis as a doctor who goes vigilante after an attack on his family. The cast includes Vincent D’Onofrio and Elisabeth Shue.

Next was comedy thriller Game Night from Warner Bros., taking in $10.7 million. The movie, starring Jason Bateman and Rachel McAdams, tells the story of six friends who get together for beer and games and stumble into a reality game where lives may be at stake.

And in fifth place was Sony’s Peter Rabbit, taking in $10 million in its fourth week out. The film, which mixes live actors with computer-generated animation, is based loosely on the children’s book by Beatrix Potter.

Rounding out the top 10 were: Annihilation ($5.7 million), Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle ($4.5 million), Fifty Shades Freed ($3.3 million), The Greatest Showman ($2.7 million), Every Day ($1.6 million). — AFP

ATI net profit hits P2.5 billion in 2017

ASIAN TERMINALS, Inc. (ATI) on Monday reported its net income rose 31% in 2017, driven by record cargo volumes handled at its international ports in Manila and Batangas.

In a statement, the listed port operator said its profit surged to P2.5 billion in 2017, from P1.9 billion in the previous year.

The company said revenues jumped 14.6% to P10.6 billion last year “on account of higher volumes of containerized cargoes and favorable cargo mix in the non-containerized segment.”

ATI said its ports in Manila and Batangas handled a combined container cargo throughput of over 1.3 million TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent units) last year, reflecting the country’s continued economic growth.

Manila South Harbor handled over 1.1 million TEUs in international boxed cargoes, up 6% from the previous year. Batangas Container Terminal (BCT), on the other hand, handled nearly 200,000 TEUs, 25% higher than the previous year.

“ATI’s record year in 2017 was also achieved through continuous process improvement, investment in equipment and facilities as well as innovations, while constantly promoting a safe industrial environment for port stakeholders,” the company said in a statement.

ATI operates the Manila South Harbor, the Port of Batangas, the BCT, and off-dock yards in Sta. Mesa, Manila and Calamba, Laguna.

Shares in ATI closed 8.33% or P0.92 higher at P11.96 apiece. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

ASEAN Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, February

THE PHILIPPINES contributed to an overall improvement of Southeast Asian factory business in February, though it bared the weakest performance among five economies in the region that registered growth, according to the Nikkei ASEAN Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) released on Monday. Read the full story.

How PSEi member stocks performed — March 5, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, March 5, 2018.

Damosa Land pumping P2.5B to build more homes, condos

DAVAO CITY — Mindanao-headquartered property developer Damosa Land, Inc. (DLI) is investing about P2.5 billion to build the residential components of its existing and new projects within the next three years.

DLI Vice-President Ricardo F. Lagdameo said those projects include the construction of the fourth tower of the Seawind condominium complex in Davao City, houses at the mixed-use project in the Island Garden City of Samal, and at the Agriya township in Panabo City.

“We are having two major developments this year aside from our existing projects,” said Mr. Lagdameo in an interview last week.

DLI, the real estate arm of the Floirendo-owned Anflo Management and Investment Corp., will start the construction of the fourth phase of the six-building Seawind condominium in Davao within the year.

The company is aiming to finish the whole complex by 2020, a year before the initial target completion date.

For the 88-hectare Agriya in Panabo, Mr. Lagdameo said land preparation works have already started.

Macy P. Bibat, Agriya project development manager, said the 20-hectare residential component of the township would have houses and not condominiums.

“We are launching the residential component earlier than the third quarter (of the year),” said Ms. Bibat.

Residents, she noted, would have full access to the entire township, which would feature a working farm area showcasing the agricultural sector in the Davao Region and the rest of Mindanao.

Other Agriya features are a commercial area and a campus of the University of the Philippines Los Baños focusing on agricultural courses.

In the island of Samal, Mr. Lagdameo said they plan to launch within the next two months the residential component of the developer’s 12-hectare mixed-use complex called Bridgeport.

Pauline Anne B. Ferrero, Bridgeport project manager, said the complex would have both condominiums and lots for high-end single-detached houses as well as a commercial component and a marina.

The condominiums would be located in two spots, one near the beach while the other at the elevated side of the property.

Lots for the stand-alone houses would be at least 400 square meters each. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

DBM funds TRAIN cash transfers to mitigate inflation impact

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez
Senior Reporter

THE Department of Budget and Management (DBM) has released funding for cash transfers provided under the tax reform law, which will be given the poorest Filipino families to help them keep up with rising commodity prices.

In a statement, the DBM said IT transferred P24.49 billion to the Land Bank of the Philippines (Landbank) for distribution to the country’s 10 million poorest households, as part of the Tax Reform Cash Transfer Project (TRCT) administered by the Department of Social Welfare and Development.

Within the month, some P4.3 billion in cash will be transferred to the accounts of over 1.8 million families currently covered by the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps), representing an additional P2,400 in their cash cards.

Signed into law as Republic Act 10963, the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law introduced additional taxes on fuel, cars, coal, sugar-sweetened drinks and a host of other items, which took effect Jan. 1.

Majority of Filipinos will also enjoy bigger disposable incomes under TRAIN, as it reduced the income tax rates for those earning below P2 million yearly. However, this does not include minimum wage workers as they were exempt from paying duties under the old tax regime.

The cash transfer represents a P200 monthly subsidy, which is intended to help the poor weather the inflationary conditions, with prices of basic goods and services rising by at least 4% year on year.

“The TRCT seeks to provide cash grants to poor households and individuals who may not benefit from the lower income tax rates but may be adversely affected by rising prices,” the DBM said.

Around 30% of the P82.3 billion in additional revenue generated by TRAIN will be spent on “social protection” programs, while the bulk of the collections will fund the government’s “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure agenda.

An additional 2.6 million families under the 4Ps program will also receive a top-up in the cash transfer which they receive in March, but they will be receiving it through other cash agents as they do not hold Landbank cards.

Meanwhile, three million senior citizens who are receiving social pensions are expected to get the cash transfers between April and May.

Some 2.6 million poor households who will be first-time beneficiaries of the government’s cash transfers scheme will be given a year’s worth of benefits by August, the DBM said.

The cash grants will eventually be increased to P3,600 for the years 2019 and 2020 or P300 per month. The distribution schedule will likewise be adjusted to the first quarter of the year as the system is put in place.

The government is looking to reduce poverty incidence to 14% by 2022, while spurring economic growth to as fast as 7-8%.

BoI-approved projects surge to P131.6B as of Feb.

THE VALUE of projects approved by the Board of Investments (BoI) in the first two months of the year rose sharply to P131.6 billion, with many investment applications related to the government’s ambitious infrastructure program.

In a statement, the BoI said on Monday that approved projects in the two months to February were worth significantly more than the P23 billion a year earlier.

Power projects approved for investment incentives by the BoI accounted for P87.7 billion; water supply, sewerage and waste management projects, P13.8 billion; and manufacturing projects, P12.7 billion.

The remaining P17.3 billion involved projects from other sectors such as transport. Among these were Mabuhay Maritime Express Transport, Inc.’s P602-million high-speed ferry which will operate between Kalibo, Aklan and Boracay.

Trade Undersecretary and BoI Managing Head Ceferino S. Rodolfo noted that more projects were registered in the power, cement and air transport sectors.

Among these were Solar Philippine Commercial Rooftop Projects, Inc.’s five solar-power projects worth at least P60 billion in total. These facilities are expected to reduce reliance on fossil fuels and help bring down the overall cost of power.

Meanwhile, Ionic Cementworks Industries, Inc. is set to put up a P12-billion cement plant in Pagbilao, Quezon.

Trade Secretary and BoI Chairman Ramon M. Lopez said “sound policies” and “strong investor sentiment” are driving the economy’s momentum, with the agency ahead of the pace in meeting its P680-billion investment target.

“There were so many prospects late last year that after seeing the unprecedented growth, they finally decided to roll out new investments and other firms remain bullish with their expansion to take advantage of the expansive economy,” Mr. Lopez added.

Central Luzon accounted for P61 billion of the total in the first two months, up from P1.2 billion a year earlier.

Calabarzon had P45.8 billion while the Davao Region came in third at P13.8 billion.

Investments for the National Capital Region fell 36% year-on-year to P2.47 billion from P3.87 billion a year earlier, reflecting the government’s policy of encouraging more investment in the countryside. — Janina C. Lim

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