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Stocks climb as buying picks up ahead of ASEAN

THE Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) bounced back on Thursday after two days of downward movements, lifted by earnings results, but fell short of its previous high.

The main index closed at 8,519.82, up by 11.33 points or 0.13%, missing the latest high of 8,523.07 recorded on Monday.

The all-shares index closed at 4,979.82, up by 8.79 points or 0.17%.

“The buying momentum continued…ahead of the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Summit and more earnings announcements,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan said in a text message.

Jervin S. de Celis, equities trader at Timson Securities, Inc. said the market is still consolidating, but the earnings results of big players have been key for the PSEi staying above the 8,500 mark.

“Investors are waiting for a major catalyst — that’s why the index has been consolidating for the past three days. The earnings disclosures of blue-chip stocks are also keeping our market above the 8,500,” Mr. De Celis said in a text message.

Leading firms such as DMCI Holdings, Inc., SM Investments Corp., and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. reported good earnings for the third quarter.

Mr. De Celis said the release next week of the gross domestic product (GDP) data for the third quarter might be the catalyst needed by the market. “We have the GDP report by next week so we might see a major move on the day of the announcement.”

Among the sectors, holding firms, services, and property posted gains yesterday. Holding firms closed at 8,707.47, up by 55.81 points or 0.64%. Property rose 12.52 points or 0.31% to 4,037.43 and services climbed 4.29 points or 0.25% to 1,700.86.

Meanwhile, mining and oil led declining counters as it plunged by 645.47 points or 4.9% to end at 12,537.42. Financials closed at 2,086.71, down by 9.86 or 0.47%, and industrials dropped 19.91 points or 0.18% to close the session at 10,994.15. Losers outnumbered advancers at 114 to 89, while 37 names were unchanged.

Value turnover reached P9.32 billion, rising from the previous day’s P7.67 billion, with 1.5 billion shares changing hands.

Foreigners sold their shareholdings, with net outflows recorded at P238.76 million, a reversal of Wednesday’s net foreign buying of P144.67 million.

Meanwhile, other Southeast Asian stock markets were largely buoyant on Thursday, with Singapore inching higher to a fresh two-year high and Vietnam set to extend its gaining run to the fifth session, scaling a 10-year peak.

Record-setting gains overnight on Wall Street brought cheer to broader Asia, lifting MSCI’s index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan to a fresh 10-year high.

Meanwhile, data showing surprisingly strong producer prices in China last month and a pickup in consumer inflation underscored the resilience of the economy. — P.P.C. Marcelo with Reuters

Uy’s Chelsea buys another logistics firm

CHELSEA LOGISTICS Holdings Corp. (CLC) has acquired domestic logistics firm Worklink Services, Inc. (WSI), as part of its continuing expansion.

In a statement, the firm led by Davao-based businessman Dennis A. Uy said it acquired 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of WSI on Nov. 8.

Established in 1994, WSI is a private company that provides courier, forwarding, trucking, and logistics services in the Philippines.

“WSI will augment our logistics and manpower businesses as well as create additional synergy within the group,” CLC President and CEO Chryss Alfonsus V. Damuy said in a statement.

In a separate statement, CLC said it finalized the acquisition of domestic shipping firm Starlite Ferries, Inc. and its subsidiaries. This after it received clearance from the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) that its buyout of Starlite will “not lead to a substantial lessening of competition in its relevant market.”

Starlite’s fleet of 14 vessels will add to the current fleet of CLC of 11 tankers, 9 tugboats, 7 roll-on/roll-off vessels with passenger accommodation (RoPax), 4 barges and 4 cargo ships.

Shares in CLC closed at 9.57, higher by 0.21 or 2.24%. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Six reasons why employee cash rewards can fail

Sometime ago, you cited many examples of zero-cash strategies that motivate employees. But still, why do many organizations and their people managers continue to rely on various forms of employee incentive program that involved giving cash rewards? — Doubting Dory.

A college student confronted the professor after class and asked for the meaning of the notations on his examination paper. The student inquired: “How come I got 65% on a paper you marked “good and original?” The professor said that the explanation was simple:

“The part that was not good appears original, and the part that was original wasn’t good.”

A thing is not right because many people are doing it. But, you’ve an interesting question. Still, why do many management executives rely on cash incentives? Perhaps they’ve not studied carefully the relationship between cash incentives and their effects on labor productivity, morale and other related things.

In 1993, Alfie Kohn, an American author and lecturer in human behavior, wrote the article “Why Incentive Plans Cannot Work” for the Harvard Business Review. Looking back, I still find it a timeless guide for managers to understand what the best approach is to motivate people. Kohn says: “Rewards buy temporary compliance, so it looks like the problems are solved. It’s harder to spot the harm they cause over the long term.” Let’s summarize the following arguments of Kohn here:

One, salary is not a motivating factor. Kohn cites many studies showing “pay typically ranks only fifth or sixth… There is no firm basis for the assumption that paying people more will encourage them to do better or even in the long run, more work.” I must concur with Kohn. In my more than 30 years of conducting exit interviews with more than 1,000 resigned employees, the top three reasons why employees resign from their work are as follows: toxic bosses, lack of challenging work assignments, and low pay and perks, in that order.

Two, cash rewards punish more than they reward people. That’s because coercion and fear destroy motivation and would rather create defiance, defensiveness and rage, according to Kohn. “Kick in the pants — may produce movement but never motivation.” Citing the work of Frederick Herzberg, Kohn says “punishment and rewards are two sides of the same coin. Rewards have a punitive effect because they, like outright punishment, are manipulative. ‘Do this and you’ll get that’ is not really different from “do this or here’s what happen to you.

Three, rewards can damage work relationships. People who are in the same race for career advancement are “often the casualties of the scramble for rewards.” The players themselves reduce the possibilities for greater cooperation among themselves. Each and every worker work hard for their individual gain rather than the benefit of a team or group or even the whole organization. Kohn writes: “The surest way to destroy cooperation and, therefore, organizational excellence, is to force people to compete for rewards or recognition, or to rank them against each other.”

Four, rewards ignore reasons for one’s achievement or failure to perform. Kohn argues that many people managers don’t even know the answer to issues like the adequate or lack of preparation of their workers to do the job right, their effective collaboration with their peers and bosses, and the organizational hierarchical format that may at times look intimidating to people. “Some evidence suggests that productive managerial strategies are less likely to be used in organizations that lean on pay-for-performance plans.”

Five, rewards discourage risk-taking. Kohn says the root of the problem often lies “(W)henever people are encouraged to think about what they will get for engaging in a task, they become less inclined to take the risks or explore possibilities, to play hunches or to consider incidental stimuli. In a word, the number casualty of rewards is creativity.” Because of this, “excellence pulls in one direction, rewards pull in another. Tell people that their income will depend on their productivity or performance rating, and they will focus on the numbers.”

Sixth, rewards undermine interest. Everyone’s goal is excellence, but “no artificial incentive can ever match the power of intrinsic motivation. People who do exceptional work may be glad to be paid and even more glad to be well paid, but they do not work to collect a pay check. They work because they love what they do,” according to Kohn. This echoes what industry leader Toyota has been saying since time immemorial: “People go to Toyota not to work, but to think.” This is simplified in every Toyota statement that reads: “Good thinking. Good products.”

“Whatever is the reason that you may think over and above the above-stated reasons, you’ll come to the conclusion that any incentive tends to make people less enthusiastic about their work, and therefore less likely to approach it with a commitment to excellence.”

ELBONOMICS: Incentives work only for people who want to be bribed to do things they don’t like to do.

 

elbonomics@gmail.com

US mom says Kevin Spacey assaulted son

NEW YORK — A Massachusetts mother on Wednesday accused Kevin Spacey of sexually assaulting her 18-year-old son on the holiday island of Nantucket last year and said police had opened a criminal investigation.

Former television news anchor Heather Unruh told a news conference in Boston that the double Oscar winner assaulted the teen after plying him with alcohol late at night in a Nantucket bar in July 2016.

Police told AFP that they could not confirm or deny any such report was filed. “Reports of sexual assaults are confidential under Massachusetts General Law,” a spokesperson for the police department said.

Unruh described her son at the time as a “star-struck, straight” 18-year-old.

“Kevin Spacey bought him drink after drink after drink, and when my son was drunk, Spacey made his move and sexually assaulted him,” she told a news conference in Boston.

“Spacey stuck his hand inside my son’s pants and grabbed his genitals,” Unruh said. Her intoxicated son, whom she did not name, panicked and froze.

When the House of Cards star left briefly to use the bathroom, he allegedly fled to his grandmother’s house, where he allegedly told his sister what had happened.

“Last week my son filed a police report and handed over evidence, and now a criminal investigation has begun,” Unruh told reporters.

The scores of women who have accused Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault, and actor Anthony Rapp levelling the first public accusations against Spacey had motivated them to speak publicly now, Unruh said.

“I want to see Kevin Spacey go to jail,” she said. “Not just for my son but for the many others,” she added.

Unruh said her son did not report the incident at the time “largely because of embarrassment and fear.”

The family lawyer also told reporters Wednesday that his client had spoken to Nantucket police, who were investigating.

Unruh previously alleged via Twitter on Oct. 13 that Spacey had “assaulted a loved one,” but had not previously identified that person as her son.

Netflix late week dropped Spacey, its star actor on hit series House of Cards whose career is in free-fall over spiraling assault accusations. According to British media, London police are also investigating him for an alleged assault in 2008. — AFP

Underwater photography shootout

THE STAGE is set for the world’s largest underwater macro photography shootout and it is happening in the Philippines.

Dubbed as the “World Cup of Underwater Photo Competitions,” the Anilao Underwater Shootout is back for its fifth year on Nov. 28 to Dec. 2 in Mabini, Batangas.

Organized by the Department of Tourism (DoT) and co-organized by Philippine Airlines (PAL), the 5th Anilao Underwater Shootout is expected to attract more than 200 underwater photography enthusiasts from all over the world, thus making it one of the biggest in the world.

Last year’s competition drew in 165 competitors from the Philippines, Singapore, China, Thailand, Japan, Malaysia, Taiwan, Korea, Turkey, Portugal, the USA, Switzerland, Germany, France, Australia, and Canada. With PAL offering an additional 40 kilos free in baggage capacity for traveling divers, more overseas participants are expected to flock to the waters of Anilao and capture through their lens its colorful and diverse marine life.

Anilao has a variety of dive sites suitable for every type of diver and photographer and stunning seascapes which makes it one of the world’s premier underwater photography destination and the perfect setting for the annual shootout.

Anilao Underwater Shootout Logo

“The DoT is also leading in the implementation of a strict ‘No Marine Life Manipulation’ policy for underwater photography competitions, employing the assistance of spotters and dive guides to help ensure the protection and conservation of marine life during the competition proper. With the cooperation of the local government units and the resorts owners association, we have been able to successfully implement this so that the country continues to enjoy Anilao as one of the best dive destinations in the world,” said Undersecretary for Tourism Development, Benito C. Bengzon, Jr., in a press release.

The panel of judges at this year’s shootout are nature photographer and Lennart Nilsson Award winner David Doubilet; aquatic biologist and widely published photojournalist Jennifer Hayes; Palme D’or winner and photographer Scott “Gutsy” Tuason; Singapore-based veteran diver and underwater photographer William Tan; Tobias Friedrich, diver and award-winning photographer from Germany; and Yoshi Hirata, Philippines-based Japanese marine biologist and accomplished underwater photographer.

The competition will have an Open Class for participants with any type of camera and accessories, in which published and professional photographers will automatically be placed; and a Compact Class, exclusively for participants using cameras without interchangeable camera lenses. Mirrorless, SLR, and similar types of cameras are not permitted in this class. The categories for the competition will be: Macro/Supermacro, Marine Behavior, Nudibranch, Fish Portrait, and Cephalopod.

Two special categories are also available at this year’s competition: Blackwater and Bonfire, which must feature animals found and photographed by doing either blackwater or bonfire dives; and GoPro/iPhone Special Beginners, a new category for participants who use GoPros, smartphones, and the like for underwater photography.

Each category will have 1st, 2nd, and 3rd placers for both Open and Compact classes, while special categories will have one winner each. DoT and PAL will also be awarding the Photographer of the Year, with one winner each for the Open and Compact Classes.

Registration and submission of entries for the competition proper will be held at Acacia Resort and Dive Center, while awarding and closing ceremonies will take place at Camp Netanya. Visit www.facebook.com/anilaounderwatershootout/ and http://anilaoshootout.ph for details.

Airport transfers and tourism

Is there a connection between tourism and the travel time to and from the international airport and the city proper?

I asked myself this question while I was reading Eva Air’s inflight magazine en route to Houston, Texas.

I spent a total of 17 hours traveling — two hours from Manila to Taiwan, a layover of one hour, and another 14 hours from Taiwan to Houston.

The good news is that all three airports mentioned have free Wi-Fi, especially in Taiwan, which offers fast Internet connections without requiring registrations. The bad news is that free Wi-Fi does not reach some gates at the NAIA.

I paid a visit to Houston to attend the “America First Energy Conference,” set for Nov. 9 at JW Marriott Houston, sponsored by the Heartland Institute, which also provided me a travel scholarship.

The airline’s En Voyage inflight magazine has one table that shows the list of the global airports they serve, distance from airport to downtown, the estimated travel time by train, bus and car/taxi (C), and cost in local currencies. I reconstructed the table and chose only major cities in East Asia, computed the average speed by car/taxi travel, then added data on each country’s international tourist arrivals and tourism receipts in 2016 (see table).

Airport transfers and tourism

From the above numbers, these preliminary analysis would show:

1. Economies that have quick and convenient transport systems between their airports and city centers have higher tourism arrivals, even if their airports are far away from the cities. These examples include: China, Hong Kong, Japan, Malaysia, Thailand, South Korea, and Singapore.

2. Airports near their city centers have fewer visitors, if transport systems between locations are slow. These examples include: Vietnam (especially Ho Chi Minh airport) and Philippines, both NAIA/Manila and Mactan-Cebu airports.

There are many factors of course why some countries have very high tourist arrivals while others have fewer visitors. These factors are convenience of the airport itself, overall peace and order situation of the country, dominance of the rule of law, proximity of that city/country to other important tourism areas in other cities and countries.

If one lands in Bangkok, one can go to Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam by land, without the need to take other flights.

Preliminary data show that yes, there seems to have a positive connection or correlation between fast airport transfer and tourism arrivals.

The data on Manila airport is a bit outdated because (1) there are now convenient and fast bus transportaion from NAIA/Manila airport to city centers of Makati City, Pasay City, and Manila and vice-versa, and (b) newly opened NAIA Expressway (PPP project by San Miguel) has significantly cut the travel time by car from the airport’s three terminals to city centers.

Some implications for the Philippines and its infrastructure and tourism policies.

One, NAIAEx tollway is doing good and should contribute to attracting more visitors into the country; thus, further extension of this tollway to BGC and other areas as planned by the project proponents and O&M operators should be facilitated by the government and not subjected to various cumbersome and costly regulations and permitting procedures.

Two, moving the Philippine international airport to a farther but bigger space (Clark in Pampanga, or Sangley Point in Cavite, or currently rice lands in Bulacan, etc.) complemented by fast train and/or buses to city centers will be a win-win situation.

Three, allow more integrated PPP (builders and O&M operation functions are assigned to only one winning bid player or consortium of players) for big, new airports, not hybrid PPP.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the head of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member-institute of EFN-Asia.

minimalgovernment@gmail.com

NATO looks to seize momentum in Afghanistan conflict

BRUSSELS — Defense ministers from across the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) alliance meet in Brussels on Thursday to review next steps in the Afghanistan conflict and brainstorm ways to deal with the 16-year-old security crisis.

NATO this week announced it would be sending some 3,000 extra troops to the war-torn country, bringing the Western military footprint up to about 16,000 soldiers.

The additional troops, most of them American, will help train and advise local Afghan forces who have struggled to hold the Taliban at bay while suffering heavy casualties.

NATO leaders are optimistic that 2018 could see Afghan forces start to gain momentum against the Taliban, thanks to renewed training efforts, a growing air force and thousands of extra Afghan commandos.

Plus US President Donald J. Trump has given American forces greater leeway in how and when they can hit the Taliban, and Afghan forces are increasingly going on the offensive.

Speaking ahead of the NATO defense ministers summit in Brussels, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance would boost its presence “to help the Afghans break the stalemate, to send a clear message to Taliban to the insurgents that they will not win on the battleground.”

Immediately following the NATO summit, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis will host a separate meeting with partners from the coalition fighting the Islamic State (IS) group in the Middle East, where the jihadists continue to lose territory.

Mr. Mattis said coalition partners are looking to the United States for a clear plan about what follows the physical defeat of IS.

“Maybe three-quarters of the questions I am getting asked now is (about) going forward. It’s not about are we going to be able to stop ISIS, are we going to be able to overcome ISIS. They are now saying: ‘What’s next? How is it looking?’” Mr. Mattis told reporters this week using another acronym for the group.

Following back-to-back losses, including of their Syrian and Iraqi strongholds of Raqa and Mosul, IS fighters are down to defending their last holdouts along the Euphrates River valley.

America’s military involvement in Syria has until now been focused solely on fighting IS, but with the jihadists on the ropes, Washington must articulate its longer-term interests and what role, if any, US forces will play in Syria. — AFP

Health advocates rebuffed on new tobacco taxes

NEW TAX on tobacco being pushed by health advocates cannot be accommodated in the first package of tax reform program, Senate committee on ways and means chair Juan Edgardo M. Angara said.

“We are aware of this especially now that they (health advocates) are very vocal,” Mr. Angara said, adding, “We wish that they came earlier.”

The Sin Tax Coalition, which includes health care workers, was present at the Senate on Wednesday, Nov. 8, during the committee hearing discussing Tax Reform Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) legislation.

“We cannot afford to wait for 2019 to increase the tobacco tax.  We have presented this to Sen. Angara several times. If our Senators delay this measure we expect 200,000 new smokers, most probably children, next year and thereafter,” according to Dr. Maricar Limpin, a pulmonologist and former president of the Philippine College of Chest Physicians (PCCP) and executive director of the Action on Smoking and Health organization.

University of the Philippines (UP) College of Medicine Professor Antonio Dans said: “The current [law] increases the tax of tobacco by 4% every year… Despite this, you will end up with 1 million more smokers by 2022 at the current tax rate.

Mr. Angara said it may be possible to include the proposal in subsequent packages of TRAIN.

“Perhaps not in the first package as it is too late… and there is a deadline, but of course the body can overrule me. I’m just one vote at the end of the day,” Mr. Angara said.

Mr. Dans said: “[I]f we include it in TRAIN2, the earliest implementation is 2019. In that one year delay, there will be 200,000 new smokers.”

“Another reason is we don’t think we will be able to pass TRAIN 2,because the current administration is losing political capital,” Mr. Dans added.

Senators Emmanuel D. Pacquiao and Joseph Victor G. Ejercito have filed Senate Bills 1599 and 1605, respectively,  seeking to further increase the excise tax on tobacco products by P60 to P90 per pack from its current tax rate of P30.

In a statement released by the office of Mr. Pacquiao in October, the senator said that “the implementation of the Sin Tax Reform Act (RA 10351) has been proven effective in minimizing if not totally stopping the smoking habit and in raising funds for public health.” —  Arjay L. Balinbin

BDO Leasing profit down at end-Sept.

BDO LEASING and Finance, Inc. (BDO Leasing) booked a slightly lower net income amid an uptick in funding costs.

In a statement disclosed to the Philippine Stock Exchange on Thursday, the Sy-led BDO Leading said it saw a 4% decline in its net income to P406 million in the first nine months, from P425 million in the comparable period last year.

BDO Leasing recorded gross revenues of P2.3 billion, up 9% from the previous year.

Its net lease and loan portfolio, meanwhile, booked a 13% increase, amounting to P34 billion.

In the same statement, BDO Leasing said it will continue to strengthen its marketing efforts in emerging provincial areas while leveraging the broad market reach of its parent company to extend its services.

“Additionally, the company intends to expand and optimize its funding sources to match its asset growth and manage its funding,” it said.

Shares in BDO Leasing closed at P3.84 apiece on Thursday, down by two centavos or 0.52% from Wednesday’s finish of P3.86 each. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Davao 1st half investments down, but recovery seen in 2nd half

Vulnerabilities of our techno-laden world

Almost a quarter of a million stock market online investors’ personal data may have been stolen by hackers, as reported by the country’s largest online stockbroker, COL Financial to the National Privacy Commission on October 20. The company informed its clients that its computers were subject of a “possible breach” and further advised them to change their passwords used to access their online trading portfolios.

Early last year, the country suffered its worst ever government data breach when personal information, including fingerprint data and passport information belonging to around 70 million people is said to have been compromised by hackers, as reported by BBC. Then just barely a month, the Philippine Commission on Elections (Comelec) saw its website defaced by hackers.

In the global scene just in September, Equifax Inc, a U.S. provider of consumer credit scores, announced that personal details of as many as 143 million U.S. consumers were accessed by hackers between mid-May and July, in what could be one of the largest data breaches in the United States.

It gets even nastier when Wired Magazine noted that the first six months of 2017 have seen an inordinate number of cybersecurity meltdowns, ranging from massive and viral WannaCry ransomware, to leaks of spy tools from US intelligence agencies, to full-on campaign hacking.

These are the downsides of technology and a connected world – one that can be manipulated, as underscored by Marc Goodman, New York Times best-selling author of “Future Crimes”. He goes on to give examples of terrorists who can use smartphones and Google Earth and to stage attacks on nations and states, and advanced drug cartels that could synthetically modify organisms to produce illegal narcotics.

He is not only a futurist but a realist as well. Having worked in law enforcement and technology, he states early in the book, “The cornucopia of technology that we are accepting into our lives, with little or no self-reflection or thoughtful examination, may very well come back and bite us.”

Then he goes on to describe the vulnerabilities we all face as consumers of technology, citing a scary statistic that 600,000 Facebook accounts are compromised each day. He describes how scammers sell fake versions of apps and can suck down sensitive personal information in the process by manipulating app stores.

He then points out the how Facebook, Google, and Twitter make money from using our personal information and erode our privacy, and how flawed antivirus software create a false sense of security which hackers can exploit.

But in the end, Goodman implores us to take responsibility for the tech-laden world that’s unfolding before us by considering the most extreme scenarios and taking action.

Catch Marc Goodman give share more insights as he delivers his keynote in PiliPINASCon 2017 with the theme “Increasing the Filipino’s Awareness on Cybersecurity” this Nov 28 at The Tent, Enderun Colleges, McKinley Hill, Taguig City, organized by Global Chamber Manila. The conference is packed with practical insights and visionary prognostications on the state and future of cybersecurity in the Philippines and the world, with a host of experts and panelists from tech companies, government agencies, NGOs and industry associations, and academe.

For more information, you can email mnl@globalcahmber.org or register online at manila.globalchamber.org.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of FINEX. The author may be emailed at reylugtu@reylugtu.com.

Reynaldo C. Lugtu Jr. is the Managing Director of The Engage Philippines, digital marketing and customer engagement solutions company.  an information and communications technology firm. He is the Chairman of the ICT Committee of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX). He teaches strategic management in the MBA Program of De La Salle University. He is also an Adjunct Faculty of the Asian Institute of Management.

How PSEi member stocks performed — November 9, 2017

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Thursday, November 9, 2017.