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Lanao provincial gov’t allays fears that military will take big chunk of Marawi City after rehabilitation

THE LANAO del Sur provincial government has assured locals that there is no truth to reports and social media conversations that the military will be setting up camp in a big portion of Marawi after the rehabilitation of the city ravaged by fighting between government forces and the Islamic State-inspired Maute group. In a statement released Friday, the provincial government said: “Please be informed that it is not true that the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) shall claim 6,000 hectares of the 8,000 hectares of Marawi City as this is military reservation per records of DENR (Department of Environment and Natural Resources).” The statement did acknowledge that there are “official documents” assigning the land area to the military, “but it is false that the AFP shall claim the 6k hectares now.” Provincial officials said these “false news” have frightened and been giving added “agony” to displaced residents, estimated at close to 400,000. “Please be assured that the government shall always respect the history and culture of the Maranaos,” the statement said. The National Government has formed a special multi-agency group, the Task Force Bangon Marawi, to plan and carry out the rehabilitation of the city. — Mindanao Bureau

Globe may further hike capex this year

GLOBE TELECOM, Inc. may raise its capital expenditure budget for this year, as it continues to ramp up investments in data infrastructure.

“Our capex for the year is between $750 (million) and $800 (million) right now. We will formalize our capex number in the third quarter earnings… We were tracking already in the $500 (million)-plus range, around $575 (million), or in the mid-$500s already for the first six months of the year, so there’s the possibility of raising the capex number forecast for the rest of the year,” Globe President and CEO Ernest L. Cu told reporters during the launch of the Southeast Asia-United States (SEA-US) submarine cable system last Friday.

Earlier this year, the Ayala-led telecommunications firm said it was allocating about $750 million in capex for 2017. The bulk of the capex will be invested in data-related projects, modernization of fixed line data infrastructure, and requirements for transmission facilities and for the deployment of more Long-Term Evolution (LTE) services.

Asked whether the company will need to raise additional funds for capex, Mr. Cu said: “We don’t know yet, that’s all being studied and we’ll make the announcement.”

“Everything we do in the network is geared towards data. That’s the growing part. As you know, SMS is declining, voice is declining,” he said.

Globe is planning to build more data centers this year, including one in the former BayanTel headquarters building in Quezon City.

“We think data centers should be smaller than what they are today, because of virtualization and cloudification of IT (information technology)… Globe’s view is that today, the world is all about the cloud, about virtualization,” the Globe official said.

Globe will also continued to shift its focus on the Home business, as it noticed more people are moving to streaming.

“In the second quarter we had 54% of market share in Home… We made the conscious decision that it was time to shift some of our focus on the Home… People are moving to streaming. Globe fortified its portfolio of over-the-top content (OTT) streaming partners… We’ll be announcing two more big partners before the end of the year,” Mr. Cu said.

For the first six months of 2017, Globe’s net income slipped 10% to P8.08 billion versus P8.97 billion a year ago, because of “higher interest expense and depreciation expenses, coupled with Globe’s share in equity losses and spectrum amortization related to the SMC (San Miguel Corp.) telco asset acquisition.”

Service revenues reached a new record of P62.9 billion for the first half, 5% higher than the previous year, driven by “strong contribution of data-related products and services.” — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Muted trade seen as start of ‘ghost month’ looms

LOCAL EQUITIES are expected to trade sideways this week, with the looming start of the “ghost month” seen to dampen investor sentiment alongside continued geopolitical tensions between the United States and North Korea.

The 30-member Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) ended at 7,928.43 on Friday, down 0.47% or 37.82 points.

PSEi_081417

The bellwether index was flat week on week, declining by just 0.06% from its Aug. 4 finish of 7,932.82.

“The PSEi’s attempt to move past 8,040 and sustaining this ascent could keep gauges within a narrow trading band for now, especially with the ‘ghost month’ approaching,” online brokerage 2TradeAsia.com said in a market note.

The “ghost month” is a period in the Lunar calendar when some Asian investors refrain from doing big investments or decisions that coincides with the vacation of fund managers in the West, thereby resulting in lower trading volumes.

For this year, the period starts on Aug. 22, the first day of the Chinese calendar’s 7th lunar month, and will last until Sept. 19.

The market showed minimal movements last week as the heated exchange between the US and North Korea tempered regional markets, with the latter saying its military would complete plans to fire four intermediate-range missiles over Japan by mid-August. The missiles are set to land near Guam.

US President Donald Trump issued another warning to North Korea on Friday with a reference to American weapons as being “locked and loaded.”

“Any form of diplomatic solution to this geopolitical tension would be favored, as the lack of such would keep investors on their toes,” 2TradeAsia.com said.

Meanwhile, Summit Securities Inc. President Harry G. Liu noted that the market will continue to consolidate as it has already taken into account the second-quarter earnings results. The deadline for companies to disclose their second-quarter reports is on Aug. 15.

“That’s the reason why the market continues to consolidate — those profits was already discounted by investors. That’s why the market has been trading at the level of 7,750 and a resistance of 8,100. If there are more companies with surprises, then maybe the market would surprise us by moving higher,” Mr. Liu said.

Without other developments such as updates on the passage of the government’s tax reform program, Mr. Liu said there are still no catalysts to boost the market this week.

“I think at the present moment, market conditions still show very good possibility we’ll be moving up later,” Mr. Liu said.

“Given the Philippines’ overall fundamental merits, we continue to hold the view that dips should be taken as buying windows, with an intention to extend positions over the long term,” according to 2TradeAsia.com.

Analysts placed immediate support for the PSEi at a range of 7,800 to 7,850, while resistance is pegged at 7,970 to 8,000. — Arra B. Francia with Reuters

An open call for start-ups in need of mentorship

START-UPS from different fields will be given a chance to undergo mentorship from serial entrepreneurs and industry executives in a program launched by the Asian Institute of Management (AIM) in collaboration with Filipino-American entrepreneur Diosdado P. Banatao.

On Thursday, AIM and Mr. Banatao, or “Dado” to many of the entrepreneurs he had helped, have started accepting applicant start-ups in their goal of accelerating the development of the start-up community and open up more opportunities for local entrepreneurship.

The AIM-Dado Banatao Incubator Program intends to support businesses from various industries such as science, engineering, communications, health and agriculture.

Start-ups need not to worry about the rental fee as the program offers a rent-free space with high-speed internet connectivity.

“Aside from providing qualified start-ups rent-free working space, AIM will also gladly make accessible to them a mentoring program and the expertise of our facility and alumni,” said Jikyeong Kang, AIM president and dean.

The incubator can accommodate 11 eleven start-ups with at least two to six members. There should be one founder who has science and engineering background, and another with market and business expertise.

The chosen start-ups will undergo mentorship from serial entrepreneurs, top executives and industry experts.

The mentors include Silicon Valley pioneer Mr. Banatao and Francisco “Paco” S.A. Sandejas, managing partner of Narra Venture Capital, who has knowledge in profitable returns in the fields of communications, semiconductors, and internet infrastructure.

The program is open to early stage start-ups with or without prior external funding, revenues or customer traction.

“We are accepting start-up even in concept stage,” said PhilDev Foundation Executive Manager Samuel “Chips” Guevara.

Interested applicants should apply online through their web site. The application process has no set deadline. As long as the incubator program has enough space, it will continue accepting applicants.

When asked about the funding for seed capital for each start-up, Mr. Guevara said: “We are working on it. We have an amount in mind, [but] it is premature right now to disclose.”

Given the joint partnership and leadership of AIM, Department of Science and Technology, and PhilDev Foundation, the AIM-Dado Banatao Incubator Program promises access to practical knowledge and expertise. – Rosemarie A. Zamora

Formidable course

Louis Oosthuizen was, of course, speaking in retrospect. After having negotiated a third round in which he found himself injured and treated by a therapist, he could not help but note that Quail Hollow required players “to keep everything together.” Which, to his credit, he did, going even par yesterday and actually moving up the leader board. Tied for fourth and just two strokes off the pace set by World Number 25 Kevin Kisner, he holds the distinction of being the only major winner among the 15 hopefuls under par at the PGA Championship.

Ayala firms’ finance chief looks beyond numbers to drive business

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez, Senior Reporter

FORESIGHT, or the lack thereof, could spell a huge difference for businesses in charting the way forward. More than crunching numbers, this finance chief lets the figures talk back.

SHERISA P. NUESA

For Sherisa P. Nuesa, a seasoned corporate planner and chief financial officer (CFO) of various Ayala Group of companies, it all boils down to going beyond numbers and digging deep – and she literally did so in charting Manila Water Co., Inc.’s turnaround and its well-received initial public offering (IPO) in 2005.

Ms. Nuesa brought the old state-run firm back in the black by opting to take on a complete pipe replacement process in its service zones to plug leaks and losses, which has fetched international awards for the utility provider.

The then-CFO also paved the way for Manila Water’s public listing – the first after the Asian Financial Crisis – which went 15 times oversubscribed in the global market. Following the successful IPO, Ms. Nuesa was named the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year in 2008.

She attributes her success to her dedication to look beyond numbers, guided by her degree in commerce from the Far Eastern University (where she finished summa cum laude) and post-graduate programs from the Ateneo Graduate School of Business, Harvard Business School and Stanford University.

“The formula on a personal level is really just work, work, work – working harder to understand and penetrating deep the drivers of the business,” Ms. Nuesa said in a recent interview with BusinessWorld.

“Anticipate what could happen and what could go wrong … If you know that you can manage the risk, you will be bolder.”

Ms. Nuesa said having deep insight into industries coupled with sharp instincts would push any leader to be more prepared and forward-looking, and would allow them to make bold but calculated business decisions despite challenges that lie ahead.

Her dedication is such that she often gets tagged as OC (obsessive-compulsive) given her attention to detail – may it be mapping out a company’s future strategy, mentoring teams at work, or just preparing lunch days ahead of an hour-long press chat.

Ms. Nuesa takes pride in being an aggressive risk-taker, prodding the IPOs of Ayala Land, Inc.; Cebu Holdings, Inc.; Cebu Property Ventures and Development Corp.; the Integrated Micro-Electronics, Inc.; and even the Gaisano family’s Metro Retail Stores Group, Inc. – all of which saw wide successes.

Despite the painstaking process, going public would help a company “mature faster,” she believes.

Currently, Ms. Nuesa wears multiple hats across industries as president of the Ayala-led ALFM Mutual Funds, and as a board director for Far Eastern University, her alma mater; pharmacy chain Generika Group; the Cebu-based Vicsal Development Corp.; and the Integrity Initiative Inc., to name a few.

Some sacrifices do come alongside a full-fledged CFO career, Ms. Nuesa said, but nothing unbearable for a business executive and homemaker.

Ms. Nuesa, who is the only female CFO on the list of the ING-FINEX winners so far, said she has never viewed gender as a force in the boardroom.

“It’s not really about gender. You have to think there is equality, that you are as good… It has to be merit,” Ms. Nuesa said, adding that women are very much capable of being competent finance managers.

“If someone who is brighter than I can understand it in an hour, I devote two hours and we’ll be equal. It’s the hard work that’s the equalizer.”

ING-FINEX has opened this year’s search for the country’s outstanding CFO, with nominations to be accepted until Aug. 31.

Crown executive freed

SHANGHAI — China on Saturday freed one of the last remaining Crown Resorts Ltd executives jailed for illegally promoting gambling, as a protracted saga that forced the Australian casino operator to cancel global expansion plans and hurt profits nears an end.

Agri dep’t. sees small impact from bird flu on farm output

THE GOVERNMENT expects the bird flu outbreak in Pampanga to have a small impact on agricultural output in the third quarter.

“I don’t think it will be that much, because we caught it early,” Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said in a phone interview over the weekend, noting that consumers may avoid purchasing poultry products for some time.

However, Mr. Piñol said he cannot yet quantify the drop in the value of farm production.

Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto C. Abella said in a statement: “We are closely watching the quality and the price of poultry products in the markets as the Department of Agriculture (DA) announced the culling of thousands of chicken in Pampanga.”

“We believe DA has acted fast on the issue and has managed to isolate and contain the virus.”

“Government agencies are now looking at businesses that might take advantage of the situation and are monitoring the price of raw and processed chicken meat in the markets,” he added.

“While we assure the public that there would be no price increase in chicken meat as there is only one area affected by the avian flu, we must see to it that uncontaminated meat is sold in the markets.”

For the three months ending September, Mr. Piñol earlier said he expects farm output to kick off to 6% — more than doubling the 2.98% growth in the same period in 2016.

The agency is expecting agricultural output growth of 6% to 7% this year.

Meanwhile, San Miguel Foods, Inc. (SMFI) assured consumers that its poultry farms remain avian influenza-free while the firm continues to coordinate with the Bureau of Animal Industry and other agencies to prevent the spread of the disease.

“We have implemented rigorous biosafety measures in all SMFI farms to avoid contamination from avian influenza. We continue to adhere to international food safety and health standards,” the company said in a statement.

Meanwhile, the United Broilers Raisers Association (UBRA) said the DA took quick action to contain the disease.

“We fully support the move of Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel ‘Manny’ Piñol to decisively stamp out the virus and declare a quarantine area in the town of San Luis in Pampanga,” UBRA President Lawyer Elias Jose M. Inciong said in the statement over the weekend.

On Friday, the department ordered the culling of about 200,000 fowl in San Luis, Pampanga where cases of avian influenza subtype H5 have been confirmed after four tests.

The deaths of some 37,000 fowl had been reported.

As such, the DA established a 7-km control zone for surveillance and 12 quarantine checkpoints within a 1-km radius of the affected areas.

Avian influenza or bird flu is a disease capable of causing extremely high mortality — up to 100% — in domestic or wild birds.

Some variants of the flu can also be transferred to humans. — Janina C. Lim

Multilevel marketer FrontRow presents skincare line

ESTABLISHED in 2008, this year, multilevel marketing firm FrontRow International develops beauty products to complement its health and wellness supplements.

Draghi calm as ECB tracks euro, inflation

IF MARIO DRAGHI is worried about the strength of the euro, he’s hiding it well for now.

The European Central Bank (ECB) president has shirked any invitation so far to bemoan the recent appreciation of the single currency in the style of his predecessor Jean-Claude Trichet, who used to complain about “brutal” moves that risk damping growth. Instead, Draghi has pointed to prospects for a stronger-than-anticipated recovery, suggesting he might tolerate the euro’s gain as proof that his campaign to revive the economy is returning results.

“A lot of central bankers take the view that if the currency rises for good, solid, fundamental reasons then it’s not worth standing in the way,” said Steven Bell, chief economist at BMO Global Asset Management in London. “The reality is that the growth outlook in Europe has changed dramatically — the economy is growing strongly — so some currency strength is only to be expected.”

That reality is founded on healthy domestic spending and investment, making the recovery less vulnerable to any damping impact of a stronger euro on exports.

Inflation, which the ECB is struggling to return toward 2%, may be less well insulated against currency gains and their effect on the price of imports.

Policy makers can assess the impact of the euro’s 12% jump this year when they start their discussion about the future path of quantitative easing (QE) in September. New economic forecasts will be published at that time.

Draghi has limited his commentary on the euro to a few seemingly untroubled words after the Governing Council’s last meeting: “The repricing of the exchange rate has received some attention during the various exchanges of views, and in various ways.”

But since that July 20 meeting, when he argued that financing conditions remain supportive of a pickup in price growth, they have deteriorated.

The last leg in the euro’s ascent started on June 27, when Draghi said in a high-profile speech that reflationary forces were at play, arguing that a continued recovery would allow the central bank to scale back stimulus.

Since then, the currency has strengthened 4% against the dollar — reaching its highest since before QE — and more than 7% in trade-weighted terms. Similar gains in 2007 triggered a warning by then-ECB President Trichet that “brutal moves” are never welcome. The euro traded at just under $1.50 at the time, compared with less than $1.20 currently.

Draghi has previously attempted to talk down the euro, when he expressed “serious concern” about the currency’s appreciation in May 2014. He has an opportunity to alter his present assessment after his vacation, when he addresses a conference in Germany on Aug. 23. He then heads to the Federal Reserve’s Jackson Hole symposium — where he put the ECB on course for large-scale asset purchases three years ago.

“Back in 2014, there were concerns the ECB is not doing enough and inflation is low,” said Hetal Mehta, senior European economist at Legal & General Investment Management Ltd. in London. “This time around, what we are seeing is that everyone is expecting the ECB to start tapering next year and they haven’t really done a lot to push back against those expectations.”

Economists predict the ECB will start phasing out asset purchases over nine months starting in January, and financial markets are pricing the first rate increase for late 2018.

For Ken Wattret, an economist at TS Lombard in London, the current market moves are reminiscent of those observed in the run-up to QE. The euro tumbled in the second half of 2014 in anticipation of large-scale bond buying, only to stabilize and even strengthen once the central bank started the program.

Under that theory, pressure on the euro — amplified by investor uncertainty about US politics — would ease once officials reveal their strategy to unwind stimulus.

“They don’t want to push the currency up much further,” Wattret said. “But they are probably thinking that, as long as they manage the communication of tapering relatively well, probably the impact on the exchange rate from this point will be more limited.”

Policy makers’ sanguine attitude so far toward a potentially intricate problem suggests that they’re convinced that the euro’s strength reflects economic fundamentals, and that solid, broad-based growth will eventually deliver inflation below, but close to, 2%.

“Silence on the currency at these levels is probably a good thing,” said BMO’s Bell. “Bear in mind that the euro zone has a current-account surplus, growth is improving, unemployment is falling and indeed you don’t want to precipitate any thermonuclear comment from Donald Trump to have a go at Europe.”— Bloomberg

Bullet-wounded flying lemur rescued

A FEMALE Philippine flying lemur, which had two bullet wounds on the legs, was rescued in Barangay Tuanadatu in Maitum town on Aug. 8 by Regie Batiller, a resident of a neighboring village. In a photo released by the Sarangani provincial office, the local government said the lemur, an endemic specie locally known as kagwang, was brought to the Office of Municipal Agriculturist where Rolando L. Delcano gave it first-aid treatment by injecting multivitamins and spraying antibiotics on the swollen wounds. The lemur has been referred to the Sarangani Provincial Environmental and Natural Resources Office for further examination and observation before releasing back to its natural habitat. — Mindanao Bureau

MVP to sell Inquirer stake to Prietos

BUSINESSMAN Manuel V. Pangilinan expects to finalize the sale of his minority stake in the Inquirer Group of Companies to the Prieto family this week.

“We’ve reached agreement with Mrs. Prieto, and I believe the documents should be executed by this week… We probably could sign by next week,” Mr. Pangilinan said, referring to Inquirer Group Chairman Marixi R. Prieto.

The Prieto family last month announced its sale of its majority shareholdings in the Inquirer group to San Miguel Corp. President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon S. Ang. The company, however, will not be managed by the San Miguel group, but instead would be a personal investment by Mr. Ang.

Mr. Pangilinan, who is also chairman, CEO and president of PLDT, Inc., said there is already a valuation of his 15% stake in the Inquirer, but declined to give details.

Asked whether the amount is in billions, Mr. Pangilinan said, “More or less.”

Ms. Prieto had previously said that the family had initially offered its 85% share in the Inquirer to Mr. Pangilinan, who owns the remaining 15%.

Mr. Pangilinan, however, refused the offer, citing possible conflict with Philippine competition law, as he already owns The Philippine Star, BusinessWorld, and the TV5 network.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo