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Fed may need less forward guidance in uncertain times

SAN FRANCISCO — The US central bank should consider giving less forward guidance about its monetary policy intentions, particularly in uncertain times, San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Mary Daly said on Sunday.

“Words have power, which is a great tool. But words can be harder to reverse than the interest rate,” Ms. Daly said in remarks prepared for delivery to the Western Economic Association International annual conference that did not include any comments on the economic or monetary policy outlook. “They set expectations, which can be hard to change in the event the economy evolves differently than we expect.”

In 2021, the Fed said it would keep expanding its balance sheet and would not raise rates until inflation was on track to exceed its 2% goal for some time, an approach it felt was warranted given that inflation had under-run the 2% goal for years. Analysts and many Fed policymakers now say they believe the Fed was late to start raising rates to fight rising inflation in part because of this definitive guidance.

“The lesson for me from that period is that being definitive in highly uncertain times comes with a price,” Ms. Daly said. The central bank should, she said, be flexible and dynamic in how it communicates to the public.

The Fed is currently reevaluating its policy framework, and Daly said her remarks were not specifically about that effort. The Fed is also expected to redo its approach to communications, including potential changes to its so-called “dot plot” setting out Fed policymakers’ expected rate paths and used by markets as a guide to where the Fed expects rates to go. — Reuters

MPower inks power deal with Gokongwei Group

URC.COM.PH

MPOWER, the local retail electricity supply (RES) unit of Manila Electric Co. (Meralco), has signed a new power supply agreement with the Gokongwei Group to serve its major facilities across Luzon.

Under the contract, MPower will supply electricity to the Gokongwei Group’s flagship companies under JG Summit Holdings, Inc., including Robinsons Land Corp., Cebu Pacific, Universal Robina Corp., JG Summit Olefins Corp., and RL Commercial REIT, Inc.

The agreement also covers Robinsons Supermarket Corp., the supermarket chain under Robinsons Retail Holdings, Inc.

“With MPower as our partner, we are able to integrate a 60% renewable energy solution into our operations. This is a meaningful step forward in our journey to reduce our environmental impact while continuing to serve Filipino communities through our businesses,” JG Summit Holdings President and Chief Executive Officer Lance Y. Gokongwei said.

The new partnership builds on the companies’ initial agreement in 2013, when MPower began supplying electricity to key JG Summit units.

“Our two groups have shared more than just business interests over the years — we’ve shared a deep commitment to nation-building, innovation, and service to the Filipino people. Through all the changes, one conviction has remained constant: that companies like ours must do more than generate value — we must create impact,” Meralco Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Manuel V. Pangilinan said.

MPower serves contestable customers, including large corporations within Meralco’s franchise area. It currently holds more than a 25% share of the Competitive Retail Electricity Market within Meralco’s coverage.

Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Entertainment News (06/24/25)


Song of the Fireflies comes home to the Philippines

THE musical film Song of the Fireflies, which was awarded Best Film at the 2nd Manila International Film Festival in California, USA, is coming to Philippine cinemas on June 25. Produced by Culturtain Musicat Productions, the film tells the story of the internationally renowned Loboc Children’s Choir. Singer-actress Morrissette was also awarded Best Actress for playing humble teacher and choir master Alma Taldo, while Rachel Alejandro won Best Supporting Actress for the role of Equit Butalid, an influential patron of the choir.


Ed Sheeran releases song for F1: The Movie

ATLANTIC RECORDS is dropping F1 The Album, which accompanies Apple Original Films’ action-packed F1: The Movie starring Brad Pitt and directed by Joseph Kosinski. One of the songs on the album is “Drive” by Ed Sheeran. Both the movie and album will be released on June 27. “Drive” was produced by Blake Slatkin and John Mayer. In it, Mr. Sheeran is backed by Mr. Mayer on guitar, Dave Grohl on drums, Pino Paladino on bass, and Rami Jaffee on keyboards.


Araneta City hosts ‘Love Laban sa Araneta’

ARANETA CITY will hold its Pride Month celebration, “Love Laban,” on June 28 at Gateway Mall 1 in partnership with Pride PH, as part of the larger Quezon City Pride celebration. Running simultaneously with the “Love Laban” program at the University of the Philippines Diliman, “Love Laban sa Araneta” aims to be a massive gathering for the LGBTQIA+ community and allies in the metro. The full-day affair features the Love Laban Pride Village, a festive mix of booths, interactive games, raffles, and drag performances. The afternoon program will spotlight acts like Pinoy drag superstar Maxie Anderson, The Addlib dance company, and a lineup of guest drag queens.


Elio now in Ayala Malls’ 4DX cinemas

AN out-of-this-world family movie experience is now showing at Ayala Malls Cinemas: Disney-Pixar’s Elio. The animated movie features the voices of Academy Award winner Zoe Saldaña, Brad Garrett, Jameela Jamil, and Yonas Kibreab as Elio. Aside from regular cinemas, it is available in 4DX cinemas, which include motion seats and other immersive effects. The film follows Elio on his journey of meeting aliens, discovering new planets, and developing his own identity. There are 4DX cinemas in Bonifacio High Street, Taguig City, and UP Town Center, Quezon City.


M3GAN 2.0 out in Philippine cinemas this week

THE creepy robot doll M3GAN is back, but she’s not alone. The murder doll will finally meet her match in Amelia, the ultimate killer spy developed using M3Gan’s AI technology. A sequel to the hit horror movie M3GAN, the film M3GAN 2.0 sees doll fight doll. It is helmed by director Gerard Johnstone. It premieres on June 25.


Lantin, Tarroquin win Catwalk Philippines 2025

THE male and female victors of this year’s Catwalk Philippines 2025 are Earl Christian Lantin and Sherlyn Tarroquin. The modelling competition recently crowned the two winners at Sky Dome in Quezon City. They triumphed after acing the swimwear and resort wear, luxe wear by MICHAELA, haute couture, and posing categories. Catwalk Philippines is a modeling search produced and organized by First Sun Production, with MICHAELA as the main presenter, in partnership with the Designers Circle Philippines.


The Kid LAROI releases new single

GRAMMY-NOMINATED, multi-platinum star The Kid LAROI has dropped his new single, “HOW DOES IT FEEL,” via Columbia Records. The track features a special appearance from Thundercat, who plays the song’s hypnotic bassline. The music video stars Talia Rider alongside The Kid LAROI himself, directed by CALMATIC. It showcases their smooth dance moves, filmed at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. “HOW DOES IT FEEL” is out now on all digital music streaming platforms.


JADE returns with new single

MUSIC star JADE is back with her new single, “Plastic Box.” Written by JADE with GRADES and Lauren Aquilina and co-produced by Oscar Görres, the track is an electro synth-pop song about jealousy and irrational emotion. It is the first from her upcoming debut solo album THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY!, to be released on Sept. 12. Other collaborators JADE worked with on the album are Mike Sabath, Lostboy, Cirkut, RAYE, and Pablo Bowman.

Gearing up grid transition in the Philippines

STOCK PHOTO | Image Evening_tao from Freepik

By Marko Lackovic and Jamie Bawalan 

INVESTING in the grid is investing in energy transition. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that a $25-trillion investment in grid upgrades will be required by 2050 to achieve our net-zero goals — equivalent to about one-quarter of the world’s annual total economic output today.

This need is even more pronounced in Southeast Asia, where legacy grid infrastructure is struggling to keep pace with demand growth. Regional electricity consumption has tripled in the past two decades, fueled by rapid economic growth — with millions of consumers gaining access to power. Demand will continue to grow in coming years, rising at 4% annually, from 1,300 terawatt hours (TWh) to a projected 2,000 TWh by 2035.

Both transmission and distribution infrastructure will be vital for this transition, yet it is the former where some of the most prominent challenges lie.

To align with the IEA’s Net Zero Emissions scenario, average annual investment worldwide in transmission and distribution networks needs to be 88% higher from 2020 to 2030 than it was from 2012 to 2021. The Boston Consulting Group’s latest report, “Delivering the Energy Transition Will Come Down to the Wires,” explores how if we’re to deliver on energy transition goals, we need to tackle complex and interconnected challenges and recognize that there is no transition without transmission.

WHY GRID INVESTMENT MATTERS
Grid investment is critical to a fit-for-purpose modern electricity ecosystem. Renewable energy additions are a major factor, with growing investment meaning grid companies need to adapt to changing generation paradigms. Seventy percent of global power generation is projected to come from variable renewables by 2050, rising from about 10% today.

In the Philippines’ context, peak electricity demand is projected to quadruple from about 16.6 gigawatts (GW) in 2022 to 68 GW in 2050 according to the Philippine Energy Plan 2023-2050. This is equivalent to an average growth rate of 5% per year in peak load. This includes ambitious renewable energy targets — aiming for renewables to contribute 35% of power share by 2030 and 50% by 2040, up from around 27% as of 2023. That means delivering an estimated 14 GW of additional renewable energy capacity by 2030.

Achieving this goal will mean overcoming challenges around energy grid investment, and modernizing infrastructure which in turn could unlock significant green-energy economic opportunities.

In the Philippines and across the region, transmission grid companies must build out their networks so that they can connect geographically dispersed generators. In particular, a dramatic expansion of offshore wind operations in many major markets will require the addition of power lines and substations to connect offshore projects to the transmission grid and add onshore grid capacity to prevent networks from becoming overloaded.

Accelerating electrification will also increase the strain on an aging grid infrastructure. Like many countries in the region, much of the Philippines’ transmission network was built decades ago, and is structured around large, centralized power plants. The grid was never designed for two-way power flows or with the flexibility that renewable-heavy systems require.

The grid is already straining at the seams. Decades of underinvestment have led to bottlenecks and high line losses. Line losses nationally averaged about 9.5% loss of output over the last decade — notably higher than regional players like China and Japan (sub-5%) and on-par with regional neighbor Indonesia (around 9%).

The grid is also highly fragmented due to the archipelagic nature of national geography, which presents a challenge for generation trying to reach rural areas and islands. Transmission line length grew by less than 0.6% per year from 2009 according to the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines. It’s difficult to imagine that growth rate aligning with expanding electrification and accelerated renewable energy ambitions.

The government is working to address this, with a P22.3-billion fund ($392 million) allocated to maintain existing grid infrastructure from 2021 to 2025, and on-going work on the Mindanao-Visayas Interconnection Project (MVIP) to link local grids via a high-voltage direct current system.

The challenges the Philippines faces are not unique. The Boston Consulting Group’s report highlights a global need to address a major backlog in energy grid improvements, solving grid reliability issues and accelerating adoption of lower-cost renewable energy sources.

Grid modernization will be key, introducing equipment which can operate effectively in a grid dominated by variable renewable power, geographically dispersed generation, evolving power line interconnections, and more. This modernization includes the complex integration of new, supporting technologies such as battery energy storage systems (BESS).

ELECTRIFYING CHALLENGES TO OVERCOME
Grid companies are already operating with constrained supply chains, resulting in severe shortages and higher prices. What’s more, most grid companies lack the capabilities and workforce capacity to deliver the increase in capital expenditures (capex) needed if players are to achieve their build-out goals.

At the same time, government leaders are exerting substantial pressure on companies to build faster. But local opposition to projects — alongside complex planning rules and, at times, the regulatory environment — creates additional hurdles for grid companies. According to the IEA, 1.5 terawatts of renewables projects are already waiting in grid connection queues due to inadequate processes in planning.

Renewable capacity in the Asia-Pacific region (excluding China) is expected to grow to 1,332 GW by 2030, equivalent to an additional 680 GW between 2024 and 2030. Investing in the grid to meet that demand is critical.

These represent substantial investment needs on a significant scale. The amount of capital involved in preparing the grid globally will put pressure on electricity bills and trigger associated resistance from consumers. Furthermore, the financing of grid investments is already severely straining many companies’ balance sheets.

ENERGIZING A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE FOR THE GRID
Addressing the challenges apparent in grid modernization will require a paradigm shift in delivery.

Clearing congestion will be key, curtailing costs and rethinking traditional network planning with a holistic strategy. Companies will also have to deliver more with less, mastering capital and prioritizing resources appropriately.

The backbone of grid delivery must also be strengthened, securing supplies of critical equipment and talent. Finally, stakeholders will need to be aligned to address regulatory inertia or public pushback.

Enhancing grid delivery will be a multi-stakeholder effort. Governments and regulators have an important role delivering enabling initiatives. National grid infrastructure to establish more interconnections with neighboring markets is a powerful example — encapsulated by the long-held ambition of the region’s ASEAN grid. Interconnections can help countries avoid overbuilding generation and storage capacity, reduce wholesale electricity costs, and lower capacity market and curtailment costs.

The Philippines, and the wider region, now faces an inflection point. The long-touted energy trilemma has changed — the barriers to transition are more based on infrastructure than generation technologies. Renewables are here, and at scale, but integrating that solution is a generational challenge.

 

Marko Lackovic is the managing director and partner at the Boston Consulting Group. Jamie Bawalan is a principal at the Boston Consulting Group. The authors give special thanks to Karan M Sabnani, project leader at the Boston Consulting Group.

GreatWork to open Cavite site by 4th quarter

GREATWORKGLOBAL.COM

GREATWORK GLOBAL WORKSPACES, a homegrown flexible workspace provider, plans to open its first location outside Metro Manila by the fourth quarter of 2025.

The 410-seater flexible workspace, spanning 2,000 square meters, will occupy the 10th floor of CBC Asia Technozone Tower 1 in Bacoor, Cavite.

“As for the expansion, we would want to capture the new markets in the southern area [of Luzon] because, as you know, we’ve been mostly present in the north [of Metro Manila],” GreatWork Sales Head Nicole Formoso told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of PRIME Philippines’ 12th anniversary briefing on June 19.

At present, the company operates three locations — two in Quezon City and one in SM Mega Tower in Mandaluyong City.

“We also thought of Cavite as an ideal expansion for GreatWork because some of our existing clients are looking for a business continuity site or swing space outside NCR (National Capital Region),” Ms. Formoso said.

She said the Cavite location would allow GreatWork to tap key southern markets such as Alabang, Muntinlupa, and Las Piñas, particularly the business process outsourcing sector, freelancers, and other industries.

The property will offer co-working areas, meeting rooms, serviced offices, an events area, and virtual offices. It can accommodate rooms ranging from single-seaters to 30-seaters, Ms. Formoso said.

It will also feature a conference room, lounge area, pantry, and stable Wi-Fi connectivity.

“We also made sure that the set-up of the facility is flexible to our target market… So, we have a big co-working area where we can host potential space requirements,” Ms. Formoso said.

With its aim to “bring the outdoors in,” GreatWork Cavite will incorporate biophilic design elements. Its curved walls and furniture are intended to mimic movement and the flexible nature of GreatWork’s spaces.

The site will also be surrounded by windows, offering tenants views of the Metro Manila skyline and nearby residential areas in Cavite.

GreatWork is also looking to open additional flexible workspaces in Makati and Taguig, Ms. Formoso said. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Singapore’s money changers keep cash alive in digital financial hub

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Rawpixel

IN THE HEART of Singapore, a financial hub where billions of dollars zip around the world over computer screens in nanoseconds, there’s a crowded building where cash still reigns.

Six days a week, hundreds of people line up in a rundown mall abutting Raffles Place square to buy and sell hard currency at one of around 30 money changer stalls. All manner of notes can be had in minutes: Singapore dollars for British pounds? Coming right up. Indonesian rupiah for Vietnamese dong? Icelandic króna? Maldivian rufiyaa? No problem. Some 150 currencies are available.

“Cash will remain forever,” said Abdul Haleem, 65, a veteran of the industry whose kiosk sits at the entrance to the narrow, three-story plaza called The Arcade. The towering offices of global banking giants JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of China Ltd. are just steps away.

The number of licensed money changers in Singapore dropped during the COVID-19 pandemic when many people were unable to travel and retail shops struggled to pay rent. But there are close to 250 physical stalls still operating, and new ones continue to spring up across the city-state’s 284 square miles of land. That’s even though multi-currency payment apps such as YouTrip, Wise and Revolut have grown in popularity.

To understand how so many cash dealers can survive the digital age, you need to know a bit about Singapore’s place in the world. Though it’s now among the richest countries — where financial titans from UBS Group AG to BlackRock, Inc. manage more than $4 trillion and billionaires including James Dyson, Ray Dalio and Sergey Brin have set up family offices — the island nation remains a shipping and transit hub at its core.

Hundreds of vessels anchor in Singapore’s harbor each day, many waiting to load and unload cargo at one of the world’s busiest maritime ports. For decades, that’s made Raffles Place a prime location for money changers, just a few blocks from where the Singapore River empties into the Singapore Strait. Many sailors need to swap cash from their previous locations, and change money for their next destination.

“They get off the boat and come right here,” said Mr. Haleem, whose uncle Abdul Gaffoor, now 99, started City Money Changers on the Arcade’s ground floor in 1980.

OLD-WORLD RELIC
Many office workers also come in search of the best exchange rates — which are often better than what banks offer. It’s an old-world relic resisting the bits and bytes revolution. Mobile phones and tablets have replaced newspapers, while e-mails and social media have supplanted faxes and letters. Now digital payments are coming for the ancient culture of coins and paper notes.

Mohamed Rafik, 55, a partner at Arcade Money Changers, a stall opposite Haleem’s, remains optimistic. His evidence is that there are new licensees entering the industry who wouldn’t do it if they couldn’t make a living.

“Money changers won’t go out of business,” said Mr. Rafik, while handling cash and paper receipts on a busy afternoon. Digital payment wallets may seem attractive now, but the companies also have overheads and may try to increase rates in the long run, he predicted.

Right now, a thriving tourism industry is driving demand during the summer school holidays. Singapore is close to Southeast Asian holiday hotspots like Phuket in Thailand, Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay and Bali, Indonesia, where cash is still needed to pay for food at street stalls or small restaurants, or to offer tips.

Travelers with cash also avoid the higher exchange rates and foreign transaction fees imposed by many credit cards.

LIFE LESSON
For Christina Ng, a teacher in her 40s who came to Mr. Haleem’s stall for Korean won, cash gives a sense of security while traveling. Paying with notes and coins is also a lesson for her three children.

“I want them to learn how to use the cash and do the transaction, so they need to see the physical money,” she said. “We don’t want them to just tap, tap, tap without actually knowing what they’re spending on.”

The money changers are good leading indicators of travel trends. Whereas demand used to be strongest for US dollars and Malaysian ringgit, the Japanese yen is now most sought-after, along with Korean won and Taiwanese dollars, Mr. Haleem said. A record number of tourists have flocked to Japan to visit historic sites, dine on sushi and take advantage of the weakened currency.

At the Arcade, the money changers carve out an existence on the fringes of the multitrillion-dollar global foreign-exchange market. Customers throng the narrow passages to scrutinize buy and sell rates at tightly packed stalls, which are required to post rates on electronic screens.

Frugality gives them an edge against the financial institutions that occupy the opulent towers surrounding Raffles Place, according to Mr. Rafik at Arcade Money Changers. The changers will survive even if digital platforms cut their margins to zero to gain market share, he said.

Congregating in one location attracts more customers, but it also pares margins to the bone. Foreign currency bought at a commercial bank can cost 1% to 4% or more once you factor in a poorer exchange rate and transaction fees.

At City Money Changers, it’s a high-volume, low-margin business where Haleem typically makes fractions of a penny on the dollar in a swap. “Everybody wants to see the best price so they will shop around,” he said, while taking a break from his tiny kiosk.

On Thursday afternoon, Mr. Haleem’s stall was selling the greenback at S$1.2900, versus the S$1.2972 offered by DBS Group Holdings Ltd., Singapore’s largest bank, on its retail app. The cash exchange rate wasn’t as favorable as YouTrip’s rate of S$1.2877 per US dollar.

With all this cash on hand — some changers can turn over S$500,000 ($389,000) a day, he says — you’d expect to see armed guards all over the plaza. Not in Singapore, where violent crime is almost non-existent.

Instead, the stall-holders rely on security cameras — there are some 90,000 across the city — to monitor activity. The dealers are the eyes and ears for each other, on the alert for any suspicious customers.

Regulators have scrutinized the industry in the past, concerned about the potential for money laundering.

In 2016, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) cited a Raffles Place currency changer, along with other banks, for their roles in the scandal at 1MDB, the Malaysian sovereign wealth fund. The probe revealed inadequate risk management practices at the changer, and failure to identify the beneficial owners of funds.

Money changers are now required to conduct customer due diligence measures for cash transactions exceeding S$5,000, or for those topping S$20,000 where the money is funded from an identifiable source like a bank account. That includes verifying customers’ identities and keeping proper transaction records. The industry poses a “moderate level” of money-laundering threats due to its cash-intensive nature, according to the Money Laundering National Risk Assessment on the website of the MAS, the country’s financial regulator.

Mr. Haleem, who’s been at this trade for 40 years, concedes that the future isn’t all bright for his industry. Business is about half that of pre-COVID levels, and the increased competition is eroding margins, while wild currency swings can leave him sitting on devalued cash overnight.

He predicts the trend toward digital payments is only going to accelerate. “It will become worse and worse,” he said, though he thinks there will always be a little room in people’s wallets for cold hard cash.

One floor up at Crown Exchange, Thamim A.K., a money changer in his 60s, is more sanguine. Sitting in a backroom surrounded by wads of Korean won and Indonesian rupiah, he says his 40 years of trading, with all its ups and downs, gives him hope for the future.

“I’ve seen everything, all the currencies, fluctuations,” Mr. Thamim said. “The bank notes business is still there. It’s growing, in fact. It’s fighting with digital.” — Bloomberg

Philippines rises in world citizenship list

The Philippines rose five spots to 89th out of 188 countries* in the latest edition of CS Global PartnersWorld Citizenship Report (WCR). The report assesses a country’s citizenship based on five indicators valued by high-net-worth global investors: safety and security, quality of life, economic opportunity, global mobility, and financial freedom. The country scored 53.1 out of 100, the fifth lowest in the region.

Philippines rises in world citizenship list

How PSEi member stocks performed — June 23, 2025

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, June 23, 2025.


Duterte party asks SC to order manual recount of May 12 votes for senator

PHILIPPINE STAR/PAOLO ROMERO

FORMER PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte’s political party on Monday asked the Supreme Court (SC) to order a manual recount of the May 12 senatorial elections, alleging fraud.

In a six-page motion, Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan (PDP-Laban), represented by National Vice-Chairman Alfonso G. Cusi, asked the tribunal to allow it to file a supplemental pleading detailing “irregularities” on and before election day.

“Whether such manual counting or recount be partial, targeted, or nationwide, the petitioners humbly leave the same to the sound discretion of this honorable court, with due regard to the extent of necessity, efficiency, and economy or cost-effectiveness in implementing the pertinent election laws,” it said.

“What is essential is that the mandated process under our prevailing election laws be carried out, so that the truth may be known, accountability may be identified and exacted, and public confidence in the electoral process may be restored,” it added.

The party originally filed a lawsuit on April 3 asking the high court to order a manual counting of votes on May 12.

Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio, whom the party adopted as its vice-presidential candidate in the 2022 elections, earlier alleged election fraud, claiming that three senatorial bets of the party had been cheated.

The lawsuit named the Commission on Elections (Comelec) and Chairman George Erwin M. Garcia as the respondent.

The party said its call for a vote recount is anchored on Republic Act No. 9369 or the Automated Election System Act, and Batas Pambansa Blg. 881 or the Omnibus Election Code.

PDP-Laban argued that Section 31 of RA 9369 provides for the conduct of a manual count of votes to safeguard the integrity of elections and ensure they are free, honest and credible.

Among the irregularities cited was the discovery of equipment — including Starlink transmission devices and solar panels — inside a private residence in Buhangin Village, Davao City, which the party said raises a “potential conflict of interest.”

“Comelec welcomes remedies like this to prove the real mandate of the electorate,” Mr. Garcia told reporters in a Viber chat in mixed English and Filipino. “We will just wait for the Supreme Court action on this matter.”

PDP-Laban also alleged discrepancies between actual ballots and voter receipts, as well as the exclusion of more than 17 million senatorial votes from the final tally after the Comelec allegedly classified these as “overvotes.”

“The proposed supplemental petition is being submitted together with this motion and it seeks merely to incorporate the updated facts or recent developments — transactions, occurrences or events which have happened subsequent to the filing of the original petition — to aid in the full, fair and fast adjudication of the issues already raised in the original petition,” PDP-Laban said.

The ruling Alyansa Para sa Bagong Pilipinas coalition secured six Senate seats.

PDP-Laban coalition senatorial candidates Christopher Lawrence T. Go and Ronald M. dela Rosa, both re-electionists, and Party-list Rep. Rodante D. Marcoleta won.

Ms. Duterte earlier this month said PDP-Laban senatorial candidates Jesus V. Hinlo, Jr., James Patrick “Jimmy” R. Bondoc and Richard T. Mata had been cheated, without providing evidence.

Election watchdog National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections earlier said it did not observe any unusual activity during the 2025 midterm elections but noted that certain irregularities warrant further investigation. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

US slams harassment of Philippine fishery vessel

The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) deployed two PCG vessels and an aircraft in response to reports of illegal swarming by Chinese Maritime Militia (CMM) in Rozul Reef on June 20, 2025. — PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD

THE US Embassy in Manila on Monday denounced the Chinese Coast Guard’s (CCG) use of a water cannon on a Philippine vessel conducting a resupply mission near Chinese-occupied Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea last week.

“The United States stands with the Philippines in upholding freedom of navigation and condemning the China Coast Guard’s dangerous actions that disrupted a lawful Philippine mission to provide supplies to fisherfolk within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone,” it said in a statement.

Beijing’s coast guard last week fired a water cannon at a Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources ship on its way to deliver supplies to Filipino fishermen near the shoal.

The vessel also faced unsafe maneuvers from the CCG ship that tried to hinder the mission.

The Philippines’ National Maritime Council earlier condemned China’s coast guard for its “aggressive” actions against Philippine civilian ships near Scarborough Shoal on June 20.

“We call on China to cease unlawful actions, act with restraint and adhere to international law to maintain regional peace and stability,” it said in a statement on Sunday.

The Philippine Coast Guard on Friday said two ships of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources were harassed by the CCG near Scarborough Shoal, with authorities monitoring two Chinese navy vessels loitering nearby.

“These actions violate international law,” the council said, adding that their activities jeopardize the safety of fishermen in the area.

Chinese ships have repeatedly barred Filipino fishermen from accessing Scarborough Shoal, which lies within Manila’s exclusive economic zone.

The atoll is a vast fishing lagoon near major shipping lanes that China seized in 2012 after a standoff with Philippine troops.

The shoal is 240 kilometers west of the main Philippine island of Luzon and is nearly 900 kilometers from Hainan, the nearest major Chinese landmass.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea via a U-shaped, 1940s nine-dash line map that overlaps with the exclusive waters of the Philippines and neighbors like Vietnam and Malaysia.

A United Nations-backed tribunal in 2016 voided China’s sweeping claims for being illegal, a ruling that Beijing does not recognize.

Meanwhile, Japanese Ambassador to the Philippines Endo Kazuya said Japan seeks to deepen security ties with the Southeast Asian Nation.

“In light of the changing security environment, Japan intends to further strengthen cooperation with like-minded partners like the Philippines, which is located in a strategic position,” he told a news briefing.

Manila and Tokyo signed a reciprocal access agreement in July 2024, allowing the entry of equipment and troops for military drills and disaster response on each other’s soil.

Japan’s Parliament ratified the military pact last month, while the Philippine Senate did so in December.

Mr. Endo said the agreement is expected to promote security and defense cooperation between the two countries. “(This will) also firmly support peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.”

The deal is the first of its kind to be signed by Japan in Asia and coincides with increased Chinese assertiveness in the South China Sea, where Beijing’s expansive claims conflict with those of several Southeast Asian nations.

The Philippines and China have repeatedly clashed in the disputed waterway, with both sides accusing each other of raising tensions.

He added that both countries are also in talks for a security of information agreement that would allow them to share classified information.

“Japan also remains committed in supporting the modernization of the Armed Forces of the Philippines through the transfer of defense equipment to the Philippines and the utilization of Japan’s official security assistance,” Mr. Endo said. — Adrian H. Halili

VP asks Senate to junk impeachment case, cites House abuse of power

VICE-PRESIDENT Sara Duterte-Carpio — OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT

By Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio, Reporter

VICE-PRESIDENT (VP) Sara Duterte-Carpio on Monday asked the Senate to dismiss the impeachment complaint against her, describing the attempt to remove her from office as a “clear abuse” of power.

In a pleading, her lawyers said that her impeachment violated the 1987 Constitution’s prohibition against multiple impeachment proceedings, adding that the allegations are baseless.

“There are no statements of ultimate facts in the fourth impeachment complaint,” she said in the pleading, a copy of which was sent to the House of Representatives.

“Stripped of its ‘factual’ and legal conclusions, it is nothing more than a piece of scrap paper.”

Ms. Duterte, a likely contender in the 2028 presidential election, faces accusations of budget anomalies, amassing unexplained wealth and plotting the assassination of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. his wife and the Speaker. She has denied any wrongdoing.

She was impeached without a hearing on the final day of the congressional session in February, after more than 200 lawmakers endorsed a fourth complaint that consolidated three filings since December.

Ms. Duterte said the House of Representatives “deliberately withheld” its referral of the three impeachment complaints filed against her by activists, clergymen and civil society groups.

She accused the House secretary-general of deliberately withholding the first three impeachment complaints — allegedly upon the instruction by congressmen — to avoid the application of the one-year ban.

“This is a direct contravention… of the 1987 Constitution,” she added.

House Secretary-General Reginald S. Velasco did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment.

The Vice-President also said her trial could not continue in the 20th Congress, citing a lack of constitutional provision allowing an impeachment trial to cross from one Senate to another.

“Only the Senate of the present Congress can try and decide an impeachment case,” she said. “The proceedings of this case should be dismissed outright as these cannot cross over.”

The Senate, sitting as an impeachment court, earlier sent the ouster charges back to the House to certify that it did not violate the Constitution when it impeached the Vice-President.

The court had ordered the Vice-President to respond to its summons within 15-days. House prosecutors will have five days to reply to her comment.

The trial is expected to start in late July under the 20th Congress.

Marcos reaffirms commitment to make education accessible in Marawi City

Damaged properties in the aftermath of the Marawi City siege in 2017. — REUTERS

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., on Monday reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to making education accessible in Marawi City, which is still recovering from a deadly urban conflict that displaced tens of thousands in 2017.

Mr. Marcos toured Temporary Learning Spaces (TLS) in the Sagonsongan village, where makeshift classrooms currently serve around 720 students across five schools, according to a statement from his office.

These emergency education facilities — built from tents, modular structures, or repurposed buildings — are intended to provide uninterrupted schooling for children affected by the siege.

The President also oversaw the installation of a Starlink internet unit at the TLS site, where he pledged further support by donating one Starlink units to each remote public schools in Marawi: Bangon Elementary School, Bacarat National High School, Angoyao National High School, and Cabasaran Primary School.

The Office of the President likewise distributed bags and school supplies to all enrollees at the TLS facilities.

Moreover, Mr. Marcos inspected the soon-to-open Marawi City Hospital, a 100-bed primary care facility expected to begin operations by August.

“We are giving the contractors and all of the government agencies a deadline of August to open the hospital to serve our countrymen,” he said in mixed English and Filipino, according to a transcript from his office.

He also visited the city’s port, one of several facilities to be built around Lake Lanao to improve regional connectivity across 18 municipalities.

The government has resolved key utility issues, including water and power supply, to support these infrastructure projects, according to the chief executive.

Coordination with the National Housing Authority and the revamped Marawi Compensation Board is expected to expedite compensation and accreditation processes.

The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao has also committed funding support to accelerate the rebuilding process.

“These are the main infrastructure developments that we have initiated here in Marawi,” he added.

“We still have a lot to do, and we will be able to show the progress that we have been making in putting Marawi back together.”

Marawi’s rebuilding has been a recurring concern for successive governments following the five-month battle in 2017 between Philippine forces and militants linked to ISIS. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana