Greenpeace calls on the government to mitigate the impacts of the climate crisis

As 5G is fast becoming the connectivity of choice among mobile subscribers in the country, leading integrated telco network PLDT Inc (PLDT)’s wireless subsidiary Smart Communications, Inc (Smart) saw a sustained increase in average monthly 5G data traffic in 2023, bolstered by its award-winning 5G mobile network.
In 2023, average quarterly 5G data traffic almost doubled, up 95% compared to the previous year. In the fourth quarter of 2023 alone, Smart posted a 16-percent increase in average monthly data traffic on its 5G network, versus the previous period. Driving this growth were the availability of new, more affordable 5G devices and the continued push of Postpaid Unli5G Signature plans.
“As we strive to continue delivering the best mobile experience to our customers, we also ensure that our offers are value-packed and relevant, and that we are also able to make the latest handsets more accessible for our subscribers to make it easier for them to upgrade,” said Alex O. Caeg, Head of Smart Consumer Wireless Business.
Supporting this continuous increase in data usage is Smart’s mobile network, which was recently recognized for delivering the Philippines’ Best 5G Coverage Experience, according to the latest report by independent analytics firm Opensignal. Smart’s mobile network covers 97% of the population and is part of the Philippines’ largest integrated network that includes PLDT’s 1.1 million kilometer fiber infrastructure.
“Coverage is key to 5G adoption. Our latest citation from Opensignal is a testament to Smart’s commitment to expand the reach of our network across the Philippines. These efforts are also bearing fruit, as can be seen in the increase in our 5G data traffic, which has practically doubled,” Caeg added.
Smart’s initiatives to deliver enhanced mobile products and services are aligned with the PLDT Group’s endeavors to narrow the digital divide and provide connectivity to all, supporting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNSDG) particularly on SDG No. 9 – Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure. These also reinforce the Group’s support for the Government’s overall digitalization thrust.
Opensignal Awards – Philippines: Mobile Network Experience Report April 2024, based on independent analysis of mobile measurements recorded during the period January 1– March 30, 2024 © 2024 Opensignal Limited.
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TAIPEI – Taiwan’s defense ministry said on Friday it had detected a renewed incursion by Chinese military aircraft across the sensitive Taiwan Strait, as China reported its navy had carried out combat drills with landing craft.
Over the past four years, China’s military has significantly ramped up its activities around democratically-governed Taiwan. Beijing views the island as its own territory, a position the government in Taipei strongly rejects.
The defense ministry, in its daily morning update on Chinese activities in the previous 24 hours, said 14 Chinese military aircraft crossed the Taiwan Strait’s median line, getting as close as 41 nautical miles (76 km) to the northern Taiwanese port city of Keelung, home to a major navy base.
The median line is used to serve as an unofficial border between the two sides, but Chinese military aircraft now regularly cross it. China says it does not recognize the line’s existence.
Taiwan said on Thursday that China had carried out a “joint combat readiness patrol” near the island for the second time in a week.
China’s defense ministry did not answer calls seeking comment on Friday, the country being in the middle of its Labor Day holiday.
On Thursday, the Eastern Theatre Command of China’s People’s Liberation Army, which is responsible for the area around Taiwan, showed pictures on its WeChat social media account of ships carrying out what it called live combat landing drills.
It did not say when or where exactly the exercises took place, but showed images of ship-mounted guns opening fire and operating in formation.
“The vanguard of the landing team are always ready to fight,” it said in text to accompany the pictures.
The island’s top security official said on Wednesday that Taiwan is on alert for China to carry out military exercises following the inauguration of President-elect Lai Ching-te later this month.
Taiwan National Security Bureau Director-General Tsai Ming-yen said China had begun using unusual new tactics, including staging night time combat patrols and using landing ships and minesweepers in those patrols.
Mr. Lai, who is inaugurated on May 20 after winning election in January, is strongly disliked by China which believes him to be a dangerous separatist. China’s government has rejected his repeated offers of talks, including one made last week.
Mr. Lai, like current President Tsai Ing-wen, rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims; both say only the island’s people can decide their future.
Mr. Lai has been Taiwan’s vice president for the past four years. – Reuters
The success of ballistic missile defenses facing their first complex, high-stakes combat scenarios in Israel, the Red Sea and Ukraine will encourage militaries globally to invest in the pricey systems, experts say – and intensify missile arms races.
Iran launched as many as 120 intermediate-range ballistic missiles at Israel on April 13, US and Israeli officials say. US SM-3 and Israeli Arrow interceptors destroyed nearly all of them, leaving drones and smaller threats to the Iron Dome system.
In previous months, interceptors fired from U.S. Navy destroyers stopped Houthi anti-ship ballistic missiles, while in Ukraine, U.S.-made MIM-104 Patriot batteries have shot down advanced Russian Iskander and Khinzal missiles.
Reuters spoke with six experts who said more militaries would look to invest in ballistic missile defense, a potential windfall for companies such as Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, which build those types of systems.
“It’s undeniable that any wealthy country with the technological wherewithal will continue to invest in missile defencs,” said Ankit Panda of the US-based Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a defense and security think tank. “All of this is a recipe for a conventional arms race.”
European countries such as the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden and Poland already operate RTX subsidiary Raytheon’s Patriot batteries, the most common Western advanced ballistic missile defense system.
Saudi Arabia has used its Patriots for years to defend against Houthi attacks; it and the United Arab Emirates also operate the Lockheed Martin Terminal High Altitude Air Defense (THAAD) system. Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain have Patriot batteries as well, and Oman has expressed interest in missile defense.
In the US, Lockheed Martin in April won a $17.7 billion contract for a next-generation interceptor for the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense (GMD) program – designed to shoot down small numbers of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) aimed at the continental United States.
But the impact may be most acute in Asia, where China has invested heavily in conventionally armed ballistic missiles. A 2023 Pentagon report said the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force has about 500 DF-26 missiles, designed to accurately strike targets thousands of kilometers away.
That puts US and allied bases in Japan and Guam within range of an attack that may only come with 20 to 30 minutes’ warning.
“In the Pacific, you’ll see further interest in missile defense, which will push the Chinese to build more systems,” said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California. “Countries will want to acquire (offensive) missiles because they see other countries using them … That will drive up demand for missile defenses.”
US Indo-Pacific Command and China’s Ministry of Defense did not respond to requests for comment.
China rarely discusses its missile arsenal beyond statements that its forces are meant to preserve peace and are not aimed at any specific country.
Raytheon did not respond to a request for comment. A Lockheed Martin spokesperson referred questions to the company’s first-quarter earnings briefing in late April, in which it said it continued to lead the industry in “missile defense missions, which, given world events, are becoming more critical than ever”.
DOLLAR SIGNS
Ballistic missile defense works by spotting an attacking weapon either at launch or in flight, then using a surface-based radar to guide an interceptor to the target.
Interceptions can occur in the atmosphere or in space, and each domain requires different hardware. For instance, fins won’t work outside the atmosphere – interceptors must have small steering rockets to function there.
The necessary high-powered computers, far-seeing radars and missiles as large as telephone poles are not cheap, together stretching into the billions. In 2022, for example, the U.S. approved the sale of both Patriots and THAAD systems to Saudi Arabia, in deals worth as much as $5.3 billion.
In the Indo-Pacific region, wealthier countries such as Japan, Australia and South Korea are prime candidates for missile defense, Mr. Lewis said, while nearly every country in Asia is already investing in missiles.
Japan’s defense ministry said the country “needs to fundamentally and swiftly reinforce its defense capabilities, including integrated air and missile defense”. It said it is investing in improved Patriot missiles, better radars and enhanced naval anti-missile capabilities.
In its latest defense budget, South Korea increased funding by 12% for its Korea Air and Missile Defense System to expand it “from the existing lower-level defense concept,” the country’s defense ministry said in a statement.
“Cases such as the Israel-Hamas conflict and the Russia-Ukraine war have reaffirmed the importance of a ‘ballistic missile defense system’ to respond to increasingly sophisticated missile threats,” the ministry said.
In mid-April, Australia announced a A$500 million ($328 million) contract with Lockheed Martin to deliver its Joint Air Battle Management System for tracking and destroying aircraft and missiles.
The cost of a ballistic missile is often much cheaper than the system meant to stop it.
But that isn’t the right way to consider cost, said Yoji Koda, former commander in chief of Japan’s Self-Defense Fleet, and an advocate of stronger missile defenses in his country.
“In a war economy, the cheaper the better. But sometimes what is necessary, is we need to protect key infrastructure, or key command centers, at any cost. Because without them we would lose.”
THE CHINA QUESTION
Most of China’s conventionally armed ballistic missiles are designed to hit targets on land.
But it also fields steerable warheads meant to hit ships at sea, including the DF-21D and variants of the DF-26, developed by the state-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation.
Such anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs) had never been used in combat until late 2023, when Houthi forces in Yemen began firing Iranian-made models at ships in the Red Sea.
Between November – the first documented use – and April, U.S. Central Command reported at least 85 ASBMs fired in the region, with 20 interceptions and one civilian ship reported sunk.
CENTCOM has declined to provide specifics about the effectiveness of Iranian ASBMs but has noted missiles posing no threat were not engaged and most that were not intercepted landed harmlessly.
The effectiveness of missile defenses on land and at sea will catch China’s attention, said Tong Zhao, a senior fellow with the Nuclear Policy Program and Carnegie China.
“It raises the possibility that the U.S. and its allies could depend on missile defense significantly against a ballistic missile attack,” Zhao said.
Although the technical specifics of China’s missiles are closely held secrets, the country’s heavy investment means they are likely to be more reliable, and are widely believed to use complex countermeasures to complicate interception.
“For opponents such as China which have missile stockpiles an order of magnitude larger than that of Russia or Iran and which field more sophisticated systems … it’s not clear that the lessons learned invalidate existing operational constructs,” said Sidarth Kaushal, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute.
But the political and practical incentives to invest in missile defense will be too attractive for many countries to ignore, Lewis said.
“All defense procurement decisions are ultimately about politics,” he said. “The politics of this stuff is really simple: do you want to defend the country or not? And the winning answer is always ‘Yes’.” – Reuters
The International Association of Business Communicators (IABC) Philippines is excited to introduce the CommChat Series 2024, beginning with a webinar titled “Sustainability: A Journey from Divergent Paths.” This event sets the stage for a series of discussions leading up to the prestigious Triple P Awards, focusing on sustainability and best practices in Environmental, Economic, Social, and Governance (EESG).
Sustainable Practices Discussion
During the webinar hosted by IABC Philippines Trustee Dave Devilles, IABC President Belle Tiongco delivered a powerful message emphasizing the importance of responsible environmental stewardship in the light of recent events such as the catastrophic floods in Dubai. Tiongco stressed the urgency and shared responsibility in the quest for sustainability. “At the end of the day, Mother Earth is the boss,” she stated.
June Cheryl “Chaye” Cabal Revilla, Executive Vice-President and Chief Finance Risk and Sustainability Officer of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), and President and CEO of mWell, took the spotlight to discuss MPIC’s commitment to sustainability and its best practices. Revilla explained how MPIC has embraced EESG metrics as key performance indicators, incorporating sustainable practices deeply into their corporate strategy. She underscored MPIC’s efforts in environmental stewardship and their impact on enhancing community life, emphasizing, “When we uplift ourselves, it’s our duty to uplift everyone around us. A happy community fosters safety for all. For us, sustainability is not just a policy; it is a cornerstone of our existence.”
Revilla also highlighted MPIC’s alignment with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Philippine National Development Goals through initiatives like mWell. mWell is a health and wellness application developed by Metro Pacific Health Tech, representing the first fully integrated, all-in-one health and wellness mega app in the Philippines. It is designed to make health access available and affordable for everyone, everywhere. “To achieve a truly sustainable world, it starts with healthy individuals. Through mWell, we are dedicated to ensuring all Filipinos have access to health services, supporting SDGs focused on good health, economic growth, and reduced inequalities, among others,” Revilla shared.
This first episode with insights on MPIC’s sustainable practices exemplifies the core objectives of the CommChat Series. Revilla’s presentation highlights the importance of integrating sustainability into business strategy, inspiring participants to adopt similar approaches in their industries.
Upcoming CommChat Session
The series will continue with the next CommChat session scheduled for June 2024, promising more engaging discussions and valuable insights from industry leaders on driving sustainable practices across various sectors.
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Mark your calendars and get ready for the event of the year as Corona Sunsets Sessions will be held on the idyllic shores of Newcoast Cove 2 Boracay on May 4, 2024, starting at 3 p.m.
This electrifying event promises an unforgettable day filled with music, sunsets, and good vibes that will transport you to paradise.
Picture yourself surrounded by swaying palm trees, the soft sand beneath your feet, and the gentle sound of waves crashing against the shore. As the sun begins its descent, casting a golden hue over the horizon, the atmosphere comes alive with excitement and anticipation.
Corona Sunsets Sessions is more than just a music festival — it’s a celebration of life, love, and the beauty of sunsets. It’s a time to let loose, dance like nobody’s watching, and connect with friends old and new. Whether you’re a seasoned partygoer or simply looking for a day of relaxation, this event has something for everyone.
With a lineup of talented performers such as Lola Amour, Sunkissed Lola, Dara Carmina, Kat DJ, Marxx Monterola, and Justin V., the energy is palpable from the moment you arrive. The music fills the air, creating a soundtrack to accompany the stunning sunset unfolding before your eyes. From upbeat rhythms to soulful melodies, each song adds to the magic of the moment, creating memories that will last a lifetime.
Corona Sunsets Sessions is also about the vibe. It’s about embracing the present moment and savoring every second of this enchanting experience. So be ready for awesome activities like face painting, silk screen printing, kinetic installations, macrame lanterns, and more!
To be part of this unforgettable event, visit coronasunsetssessions.ph and secure your spot today! Be sure to follow Corona Philippines on Instagram and Viber for all the latest updates and exclusive behind-the-scenes content. Join the conversation using the hashtags #CoronaSunsetsSessions, #CoronaPH, and #ThisIsLiving.
So pack your sunscreen, grab your shades, and get ready to experience the epic sunset escapade at Corona Sunsets Sessions! This is your chance to bask in the beauty of Boracay and create memories that will last a lifetime. See you there!
Spotlight is BusinessWorld’s sponsored section that allows advertisers to amplify their brand and connect with BusinessWorld’s audience by publishing their stories on the BusinessWorld Web site. For more information, send an email to online@bworldonline.com.
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By Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson, Reporter
HEADLINE INFLATION may have quickened for a third straight month in April and possibly breached the Philippine central bank’s 2-4% target range, analysts said.
A BusinessWorld poll of 16 analysts yielded a median estimate of 4.1% for the consumer price index (CPI) in April, within the 3.5-4.3% forecast of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
If realized, April inflation would be faster than 3.7% in March but slower than the 6.6% print a year ago.
This would also surpass the 2-4% target band for the first time since the 4.1% print in November 2023.
April would also mark the third straight month that inflation picked up on a month-on-month basis.
The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) will release April CPI data on May 7.
“I’m expecting a further rise in inflation in April to 4.1%, breaching the 4% upper bound of the BSP’s target range for the first time in five months,” Pantheon Chief Emerging Asia Economist Miguel Chanco said.
“The silver lining, though, is that this further upshift should be down mainly to adverse food price base effects — a technicality — rather than a real intensification of food price pressures,” he added.
Bank of the Philippine Islands Lead Economist Emilio S. Neri, Jr. said the monthly change in food prices appear to have “stabilized” in April.
“But a noticeable uptick of the year-on-year headline print in April from March is likely to emanate more from unfavorable base effects, something we expect to persist in May and June,” Mr. Neri said.
Analysts noted that food inflation continued to be the main driver of inflation.
ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said rice inflation is expected to be north of 24% year on year due to “tight supply conditions” in April.
In March, rice inflation accelerated to 24.4%, its fastest print since the 24.6% in February 2009.
As of end-April, the price of local well-milled rice averaged P48-P55 a kilo from P39-P46 a year ago, data from the Agriculture department showed. A kilo of regular milled rice averaged P50 from P34-P42 a year ago.
Analysts also noted April inflation will reflect the impact from the El Niño weather pattern.
“The main upward pressure comes from rising food prices as the dry spell from El Niño continues to put a toll on crop yields. Notably, rice and pork are the two food items that have suffered heavy supply-side disruptions,” Moody’s Analytics economist Sarah Tan said in an e-mail.
As of April 23, agricultural damage due to the El Niño has reached P4.39 billion. Rice was the most affected crop, accounting for 62% of total agricultural damage, equivalent to P2.71 billion.
“Private transport will also contribute to inflation in April after several weeks of price increase with only the last week of April seeing prices ease somewhat,” Mr. Mapa said.
For the month of April, pump price adjustments stood at a net increase of P2.25 a liter for gasoline, and P0.50 a liter for diesel. Kerosene prices had a net decrease of P0.80 a liter.
“Sequentially, fuel prices likely edged higher, particularly towards the end of the month reflecting a temporary jump in the global oil prices,” Makoto Tsuchiya, an economist from Oxford Economics, said in an e-mail.
OUTLOOK
Inflation may continue to accelerate for the rest of the second quarter before easing in the latter part of the year.
“We expect headline inflation to peak in the range of at least 5% year on year in April-May, consistent with broad food inflation peaking at 6.2% year on year in April before easing to 5.5% in July,” Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at Union Bank of the Philippines, Inc., said
HSBC economist for ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Aris D. Dacanay said he expects inflation to return to within the BSP’s 2-4% target band once the unfavorable base effects wear off in the third quarter.
With inflation likely to remain elevated, the BSP is seen to extend its policy pause at its next meeting.
“We think the BSP will stay put at the upcoming meeting given lingering inflationary risks as well as recent currency movement,” Mr. Tsuchiya said.
The peso returned to the P57 level this month. The BSP has said that this is due to the strong US dollar and not a weak peso amid the Middle East conflict.
“A faster print, especially above the BSP’s target, will strengthen the case for a sustained policy rate pause in May,” Philippine National Bank (PNB) economist Alvin Joseph A. Arogo said.
The Monetary Board stood pat for a fourth straight meeting in April, keeping its benchmark rate at a near 17-year high 6.5%.
From May 2022 to October 2023, the BSP has raised borrowing costs by 450 basis points (bps).
The Monetary Board is set to review policy on May 16.
Weaker-than-expected gross domestic product (GDP) growth may also prompt the BSP to keep its key rate unchanged.
“We suspect that the case for a continued pause will be bolstered by the first-quarter GDP data, which we expect to fall short of expectations,” Mr. Chanco added.
The government is targeting 6-7% growth this year. First-quarter GDP data will be released on May 9.
Mr. Tsuchiya said he expects the BSP to deliver its first rate cut in the fourth quarter.
“For as long as the El Niño impact on food CPI has not receded, BSP will not hesitate to keep its hawkish pause (thus, delay any BSP rate cuts) or highlight the risks to the outlook is still tilted to the upside,” Mr. Asuncion said.
There is also less chance for a rate hike, Ms. Tan said.
“The odds are low for the tightening cycle to resume. BSP is also cognizant that inflation can creep above the upper bound of their target range in the second quarter this year. Meanwhile, it is not yet time for BSP to begin monetary easing, especially as the US Federal Reserve appears to be delaying its first policy rate cut,” she added.
The Federal Reserve kept its Fed funds rates steady at its meeting on April 30-May 1.
By Beatriz Marie D. Cruz, Reporter
PHILIPPINE MANUFACTURING activity in April expanded at its fastest pace in five months amid an increase in output and new orders, S&P Global said on Thursday.
The S&P Global Philippines Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 52.2 in April from 50.9 in March, marking the strongest improvement in five months or since the 52.7 reading in November 2023.
A PMI reading above 50 means improved operating conditions from the previous month, while a reading below 50 shows deterioration.
The Philippines’ PMI reading remained the second fastest among six Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member countries in April, just behind Indonesia (52.9) and ahead of Vietnam (50.3).
Myanmar (49.9), Malaysia (49), and Thailand (48.6) all saw a contraction in manufacturing activity in April.
The Philippines’ PMI reading was above the ASEAN average of 51.
“Building on growth seen in the first quarter of the year, the Filipino manufacturing sector showcased further gains in April,” Maryam Baluch, economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence said in the report. “A quicker rate of expansion was observed for new orders, which in turn triggered a renewed and solid rise in production.”
According to S&P Global, new orders in April increased at the fastest pace since November 2023.
“Export market conditions also improved in April, with new export orders rising for the third month running and at the quickest pace in five months,” it said.
S&P Global said the rate of growth in goods production was “solid” and the “most pronounced” in four months
“With production requirements rising, hiring and purchasing activity remained in growth territory. Moreover, stockbuilding became more widespread in anticipation of greater future output,” Ms. Baluch said.
Manufacturers ramped up purchasing in April, the fastest pace in nine months, due to improved demand and increased production requirements.
“Stronger rates of stockpiling were also recorded at Filipino manufacturing firms, with pre- and post-production stocks accumulated at fastest paces in 12 and 17 months,” it said.
S&P Global noted that manufacturing jobs increased for a third month in a row in April, although easing from March.
“However, the accelerated growth in new orders meant that pressure on capacity had intensified, with some firms struggling to complete work in hand. As a result, the latest rate of backlog depletion was marginal overall and the weakest since August 2023,” it said.
S&P noted that a slower-than-average increase in cost burden meant most manufacturers kept their charges unchanged month on month.
“Prices data indicated a relatively subdued inflationary environment, which also is likely to help support growth in the coming months as firms were able to price more competitively,” Ms. Baluch said.
A BusinessWorld poll of 16 analysts showed inflation may have accelerated to 4.1% in April from 3.7% in March.
Manufacturers were “largely positive” in the next 12 months, with around a quarter saying there will be growth in production. However, the degree of confidence dropped to a four-year low, S&P Global said.
The PMI measures a country’s manufacturing conditions based on the weighted average of five indices: new orders (30%), output (25%), employment (20%), suppliers’ delivery times (15%) and stocks of purchases (10%).
“(PMI) seems to have been unaffected by inflation, with cost of production as measured by the Producer Price Index for manufacturing, having fallen by 1% year on year in March, marking the third consecutive month of decline, although it saw a slight month-on-month increase of 0.3%,” Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces said in a Viber message.
If the PMI reading continues to improve, Mr. Roces said he expects an upside to gross domestic product growth.
Bank of the Philippine Islands Lead Economist Emilio S. Neri, Jr. said stronger demand in the electronics and food processing sectors contributed to the uptick in factory activity.
“S&P’s survey is consistent with the recovery in Asian electronics exports, which happens to be one of the major manufacturing subsectors in the Philippines,” he said in a Viber message.
“It is also possible that the local food processing industry, despite higher input costs, continues to thrive given the strength of overall domestic demand, driven largely by favorable demographics and declining unemployment rates,” he added.
Oikonomia Advisory & Research, Inc. President and Chief Economist John Paolo R. Rivera said in a Viber chat that slower inflation may have helped boost factory activity in April.
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the uptick in factory activity may have been due to the higher number of working days in April versus March.
“This is a sign of resilience despite and defying the still relatively higher interest rates that increased financing costs/borrowing costs for manufacturers since 2022 due to higher prices/inflation,” Mr. Ricafort said in an e-mail.
THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT’S (NG) outstanding debt slipped to P14.93 trillion as of end-March, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) reported.
Data from the BTr on Wednesday showed that NG debt stock dipped by 1.67% from the record-high P15.18 trillion as of end-February due to the net redemption of government securities.
However, outstanding debt rose by 7.71% from P13.86 trillion in the same period a year ago.
Year to date, the debt portfolio went up by 2.12% from P14.62 trillion as of end-December 2023.
As of end-March, more than two-thirds or 68.86% of debt came from domestic sources.
Domestic debt declined by 2.83% to P10.28 trillion as of end-March from P10.58 trillion in the previous month. However, it increased by 8.03% from P9.51 trillion a year ago.
Government securities accounted for nearly all domestic debt as of end-March.
“The decline (in domestic debt) resulted from the P299.45-billion net redemption of government securities offsetting the P0.24-billion effect of peso depreciation on foreign currency domestic debt,” the BTr said in a statement.
Data from the BTr showed the peso weakened by 8.6 centavos to P56.26 against the dollar at end-March from P56.174 at end-February.
Meanwhile, external debt inched up by 1% to P4.65 trillion as of end-March from P4.6 trillion as of end-February. Year on year, it went up by 7.01% from P4.34 trillion.
“The increase resulted from the net availment of foreign loans amounting to P44.01 billion, as well as local currency depreciation which added to the valuation of US dollar-denominated debt by P7.05 billion. This more than offset the P4.83-billion impact of the appreciation in third currencies against the dollar,” the BTr said.
External debt was composed of P2.22 trillion in loans and P2.43 trillion in global bonds.
The NG’s guaranteed obligations inched up by 0.3% to P346.04 billion as of end-March from P344.93 billion in the previous month.
“The increment in the level of NG guarantees was due to the net availment of domestic guarantees amounting to P2.48 billion and the P0.25-billion effect of local currency depreciation against the US dollar on external guarantees,” the BTr said.
“On the other hand, the net repayment of external guarantees offset P1.15 billion while the net appreciation on third-currency denominated guarantees trimmed P0.47 billion,” it added.
Year on year, guaranteed obligations declined by 9.9% from P384.12 billion.
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said that the government’s repayment of maturing debt reduced the overall debt stock.
“The month-on-month decline in outstanding NG debt largely brought about by the large maturities of retail Treasury bonds (RTB) in early March 2024, though offset by earlier record RTB issuance in the latter part of February 2024,” he said.
Outstanding debt could also further increase amid future global bond offerings, elevated interest rates and further weakening of the peso.
JAPAN LOANS
Meanwhile, the Department of Finance (DoF) said it has lined up $1.5 billion worth of projects with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) from this year until 2025.
“The DoF is set to execute around $1.5 billion worth of pipeline projects with JICA for 2024-2025, and is working towards executing four major loan agreements within the year,” it said in a statement on Thursday.
The loan agreements will cover projects on maritime safety, roads, and flood risk management.
“Aside from the usual portfolio of infrastructure projects funded by JICA, the agency shared that it is expanding into other sectors that are in line with the Marcos administration’s development objectives, such as agriculture, education, and health,” it added.
The DoF and JICA are set to finalize the signing of the projects before the end of the year.
JICA is planning to commit an annual average of about $1.6 billion until 2027 for the country, it added.
The Finance department also said that JICA is looking into co-financing the Climate Change Action Program (CCAP), Subprogram 2. The program aims to ramp up the implementation of national climate policies.
As of end-December, the JICA was the Philippines’ top source of official development assistance, accounting for 32.8% of the total or $12.3 billion. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson
By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter
AN ECONOMIC CORRIDOR that the United States proposes to put up in the Philippine main island of Luzon would help the country attract American and Japanese companies seeking to reduce dependence on China, according to trade experts.
Through the ambitious project that aims to focus on high-impact infrastructure, the Philippines can offer itself as an “alternative investment location” for US and Japanese investments leaving China for friendlier shores, said George N. Manzano, a trade expert at the University of Asia and the Pacific.
“The corridor will likely enhance the ability of the Philippines to participate in the global supply chain by increasing efficiency through better logistics, as well as opening business opportunities for supplier industries,” he said in an e-mail.
The proposed Luzon Economic Corridor is the latest under the US-led G7 Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGI) and the first of its kind in the Indo-Pacific region, according to a statement from the US State department, which will oversee the project’s implementation.
The Group of Seven (G7) is a grouping of some of the world’s advanced economies such as the US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and Japan, with a combined economic output of $46.3 trillion last year.
The proposed corridor seeks to boost connectivity between the capital Manila, the southern Luzon province of Batangas, and two former US military bases Subic Bay and Clark, with a focus on “high-impact” infrastructure such as rails and ports and strategic investments involving semiconductors, clean energy, and supply chains.
The project, which is considered a “key deliverable” under the PGI component of the US-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, will be pursued by Washington with the help of Japan, Manila’s largest source of overseas development assistance.
US President Joseph R. Biden, Jr., Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced the planned Luzon corridor following their trilateral summit, which was held earlier this month in Washington, D.C. amid worsening tensions with China.
China claims the South China Sea almost in its entirety, including areas that are well within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone, doing dangerous maneuvers and deploying water cannons to block Philippine resupply and rotation missions.
The US, which has vowed to defend Manila in case of an armed attack anywhere in the waterway, has been locked in a years-long trade war with China since 2018, when then-President Donald J. Trump slapped tariffs on Chinese products over alleged unfair trade practices.
“The Philippines can expect through the PGI a vehicle to channel investments from the US and other like-minded countries such as Japan, to develop its infrastructure, subject to international standards,” Mr. Manzano said.
SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRY
Mark Bryan Manantan, director of cybersecurity and critical technologies at the Hawaii-based Pacific Forum, said the Philippine semiconductor industry is likely to be among the first sectors to receive foreign investments that would be unlocked by the corridor.
“The country is well poised to absorb investments in the semiconductor industry given regulatory alignment with the US and Japan as far as strategic trade management is concerned, especially on highly sensitive technologies like chips,” he said in an e-mail.
A delegation led by US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo in March vowed to help the Philippines set up a wafer fabrication plant, citing the potential for Manila to double the number of its semiconductor plants.
The semiconductor and electronics sector accounts for about 60% of the country’s merchandise exports.
The Philippines is one of seven countries that the US is partnering with to diversify its semiconductor supply chain under the CHIPS and Science Act, which provides $52.7 billion in federal subsidies to encourage chipmakers to relocate from China back to the US or to other friendly countries.
But Mr. Manantan said it would not be easy for the Philippines to pursue the ambitious Luzon corridor project since it still needs to address gaps in infrastructure and produce an adequate and skilled labor force.
“It must also beef up the cybersecurity and resilience of the manufacturing industry that has been increasingly targeted by malicious actors,” he added. “Another challenge is adequate energy supply.”
The Luzon grid has been placed under yellow and red alerts since last week amid outages at several power plants.
The Philippines’ energy security is also threatened by the expected depletion of its sole indigenous source of natural gas by 2027.
“The US and Japan vowed to help the Philippines build its civil-nuclear energy program, but of course this will still take time,” Mr. Manantan said.
Terry L. Ridon, convenor of Philippine infrastructure think tank InfraWatch, warned that China may hinder the passage of vessels in areas that it claims, potentially hampering the corridor’s routes.
“The fact that this corridor faces the West Philippine Sea should be considered a slight risk, as Beijing may implement a policy of containment to deter the free passage of goods and vessels in areas it deems its territory,” he said in an e-mail.
“The success of the economic corridor is contingent on massive foreign support through infrastructure and investments, particularly as bilateral relations with Beijing continue to deteriorate,” he added.
Mr. Manantan said the recent US trade mission and Mr. Marcos’ trilateral summit with his US and Japanese counterparts “aim to signal to China that the US and Japan can coordinate their efforts to help the Philippines buffer any potential economic retaliation from Beijing.”
“For now, it remains to be seen how China will use its economic leverage, but I think the Marcos administration has already taken such a calculation when it entered the trilateral agreement.”
China is the Philippines’ largest source of imports and the second-biggest market of exports. The US, on the other hand, is the largest destination of Philippine products and the fifth-largest source of imports.
Experts have noted efforts by Washington to boost economic partnerships with Manila as they ramp up security ties following the expansion of American military bases in the Philippines.
“While many Filipino policy makers welcome the prospects of deeper economic engagement from Washington, D.C., the reality is that everyone is on a wait-and-see mode given the volatility in American domestic politics, especially with the upcoming US Presidential elections in November,” Mr. Manantan said.
Amid political uncertainties, he noted Manila could always rely on Japan, which has “always been the mediator” for the two countries amid domestic political shifts.
“Like the rest of Southeast Asia, Japan remains to be the trusted partner of choice for the Philippines to avoid too much reliance on China,” he added.
Mr. Manzano, meanwhile, said that despite these developments, China would remain as the Philippines’ top trade partner.
“The comparative advantage of the US is quite different from China.”
The US State department said Washington will partner with multilateral development banks and the private sector “to deploy capital and development and finance tools to support infrastructure projects across the (Luzon) corridor.”
A trilateral event to promote the corridor will be held on the sidelines of the Indo-Pacific Business Forum in Manila in May.
SOLAR Philippines Power Project Holdings, Inc. Founder Leandro Antonio L. Leviste has bought an 8.5% stake in ABS-CBN Corp., positioning him as the media company’s second-largest shareholder after the Lopez group.
Mr. Leviste bought 76.5 million shares, equivalent to 8.5% of ABS-CBN, through his companies LL Holdings, Inc. and Countryside Investments Holdings Corp., Solar Philippines said in a Facebook post on Thursday.
“ABS-CBN is a great company that has helped countless people over the years. I hope there may now be a way for us to be of help, for the benefit of ABS-CBN’s shareholders and employees, and the media industry of the Philippines,” Mr. Leviste said in the social media post.
In a separate disclosure, ABS-CBN said that LL Holdings owns 75.88 million ABS-CBN shares, while Countryside Investments owns 619,000 ABS-CBN Holdings Corp. shares that are being converted into ABS-CBN shares and transferred to LL Holdings.
Countryside Investments is the parent company of LL Holdings.
“LL Holdings has the sole power to vote or to direct the vote and to dispose or to direct the disposition of the aforementioned shares of ABS-CBN,” it said.
The shares are valued at approximately P390 million based on ABS-CBN’s stock price of P5.10 apiece at the close of Thursday’s trading.
Mr. Leviste is the son of Senator Regina “Loren” B. Legarda, a former ABS-CBN producer and news anchor.
Solar Philippines sold more than P6 billion worth of shares of SP New Energy Corp. (SPNEC) in the past year. The company and its affiliates still own 20.6 billion shares of SPNEC worth about P22 billion.
SPNEC was founded by Mr. Leviste but is now controlled by the Pangilinan group through MGen Renewable Energy, Inc.
Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT Inc.
Mr. Leviste previously bought 7.55% or 188.89 million shares of Roxas and Co., 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. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave