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NG debt slips to P14.93 trillion as of end-March

REUTERS/THOMAS WHITE/ILLUSTRATION

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.

National Government outstanding debtYear 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

Proposed Luzon corridor expected to attract more investments from businesses de-risking from China

A WORKER adjusts a machine at a manufacturing facility in Manila, Dec. 10, 2008. — REUTERS

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.

Leviste buys 8.5% stake in ABS-CBN, becomes 2nd-largest shareholder

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

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

MPTC expects to bag Indonesia toll project contract in May

PANGILINAN-LED Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) hopes to secure the contract for its toll project bid in Indonesia next month, a company official said.

“We are the preferred bidder. So, we are in the process of negotiating with Jasamarga. Hopefully, we can close the negotiation in one month, [and] be awarded the contract by the end of May,” MPTC Chief Finance Officer Christopher Daniel C. Lizo told reporters on April 25.

In 2023, MPTC, the tollway arm of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), said that it expected to invest about $600 million to secure its bid for a portion of the Trans-Java toll road in Indonesia. The company, along with Singapore’s GIC, jointly bid for a toll project in Indonesia.

The Trans-Java toll road in Indonesia is being bid on by Jasamarga Transjawa Tol, a state-owned enterprise and the largest toll road operator in Indonesia.

MPTC, through Metro Pacific Tollways Asia, holds 76.31% share in PT Nusantara Infrastructure in Indonesia.

PT Nusantara Infrastructure owns infrastructure concessions in both the western and the eastern portions of Indonesia. It operates businesses in transportation, toll roads, communication, and distribution networks.

“What was bid out was 35% of the company. The company that holds the concessions, the model in Indonesia is different. There’s a government entity that constructs the roads, the expressways. The government takes responsibility over the right of way as well as the construction over the right of way. Once complete, they are open to the private sector,” Mr. Lizo said.

The Pangilinan-led company is the biggest toll road developer in the Philippines. Some of its tollways include the North Luzon Expressway, the Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway, Cavite-Laguna Expressway, and Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway.

San Miguel Corp. (SMC) and MPIC have been in discussions regarding a possible joint venture for a toll road business.

In March, SMC President and Chief Executive Officer Ramon S. Ang said that he expects finalizing the planned joint venture with MPIC in the coming months, pending the evaluation of its tollway arm’s Indonesian assets. 

MPTC is the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp., one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Over half of Filipinos in the music industry earn less than P20,000

FILIPINO ARTISTS and musicians busking in the park at Cagayan de Oro.

MORE THAN 50% of Filipinos employed in the music industry earn under P20,000 a month, according to a national music stakeholders survey by the Department of Science and Technology-National Research Council of the Philippines (DoST-NRCP).

A statement from the DoST-NRCP noted that this amount “almost falls a little over the minimum wage in the National Capital Region.”

The project analyzed the country’s music market based on 700 respondents and data from focus group discussions with music stakeholders, music-related companies, and organizations from different regions nationwide. It found that the majority of Filipino musicians are freelance artists, with non-music-industry income to support their living expenses.

“Local artists would always have to go through what we normally identify as sariling sikap (self-reliance), that is, without any government intervention and support in music training, marketing, and promotion,” said Maria Alexandra Chua, head of DoST-NRCP’s Musika Pilipinas Project, in a statement.

Preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed that the gross value added of the country’s creative industry-related activities expanded from P1.61 trillion in 2022 to P1.72 trillion in 2023. The music sector’s contribution to that is 8.8%, which amounts to P18.1 billion.

Ms. Chua concluded from the findings that “a centralized music coordinating council that will handle the dynamics, concerns, strategic development plan, and challenges faced by the Philippine music industry and its stakeholders” must be created.

Jim Paredes, singer-songwriter-producer and board trustee at the Filipino Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (FILSCAP), told BusinessWorld in a voice call that the large number of low earners is due to the many respondents who have music only as an alternate source of income.

However, the existence of organizations like FILSCAP, allows for more avenues for musicians to improve. “I highly recommend that musicians join a guild. It’s very helpful. For example, if your songs are registered with FILSCAP, they monitor if the songs are being played and you get royalties,” he explained.

For Mr. Paredes, such groups aid with professionalizing fees, with songwriting workshops, developing legislation, and for representation — though there’s always room for improvement.

He cited the Philippine Creative Industries Development Act, created in 2022 to boost the country’s potential to be a hub for creative industries, as an important starting point. The next step is for artists, composers, and musicians to make their voices heard in discussions. — Brontë H. Lacsamana

PAL income falls in Q1 on higher expenses

REUTERS

PAL Holdings, Inc., the operator of the flag carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL), saw a 22.6% decrease in its attributable net income for the first quarter (Q1), falling to P3.6 billion from P4.65 billion a year ago, attributed to increased expenses during the period.

For the January to March period, the company’s expenses grew to P39.07 billion, marking a 12.7% increase from P34.68 billion in the previous year.

PAL’s higher expenses were fueled by its flying costs at P21.15 billion, accounting for the majority of its expenses at 54.1% share of its total spending for the period.

The company’s flying costs were also higher compared to P19.48 billion last year.

For the first quarter, the company recorded a combined revenue of P45.8 billion, which is 8.5% higher than the P42.21-billion top line logged in the corresponding period last year.

Broken down, passenger revenues surged to P40.35 billion from P37.62 billion, while cargo revenues contracted by 2% to P1.92 billion from P1.96 billion in the first quarter last year.

“[W]e are on track with our growth strategies, in the areas of fleet growth, route network expansion and service innovations.  We are particularly pleased with the strong reception that the Manila-Seattle route has been getting since our announcement last month,” PAL President and Chief Operating Officer Stanley K. Ng said in a media release.

“However, supply chain issues remain and continue to put a strain on our operations, but we are determined to address these challenges.”

The airline company has allocated $450 million, or more than P25 billion, for this year’s capital expenditures to expand its fleet and meet increasing market demand. 

PAL is scheduled to operate nonstop Manila-Seattle flights three times a week by October.

Seattle will be PAL’s sixth destination in the US and its eighth in North America, the airline said.

Earlier, PAL said it is also looking to explore more Asian and local destinations. However, some long-haul flights it plans to offer will be on hold for now until the arrival of its aircraft order.

At the local bourse on Thursday, shares in the company closed five centavos or 0.84 lower at P5.90 each. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Yields on BSP’s term deposits inch higher amid hawkish Fed

BW FILE PHOTO

YIELDS on the term deposits auctioned off by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) inched higher on Thursday amid more hawkish signals from the US Federal Reserve.

Demand for the BSP’s term deposit facility (TDF) totaled P250.729 billion on Thursday, lower than the P320 billion placed on the auction block but higher than the P250.346 billion in tenders seen for a P190-billion offer last week.

This week’s TDF auction was moved to Thursday from the usual Wednesday schedule due to a regular holiday on May 1 for Labor Day. Tenors were also adjusted to reflect the shortened maturities.

Broken down, the six-day deposits attracted tenders amounting to P110.571 billion, lower than the P160-billion offering as well as the P122.965 billion in bids recorded the prior week for a P90-billion offer of seven-day papers.

Rates for the one-week papers ranged from 6.5% to 6.55%, a tad wider than the 6.5% to 6.54% range recorded in the previous week. This brought the average rate for the tenor to 6.5309%, inching up by 0.09 basis point (bp) from the 6.53% seen on April 24.

For the 13-day deposits, tenders hit P140.158 billion, below the P160-billion offering but higher than the P127.381 billion in bids last week for the P100 billion in 14-day term deposits placed on the auction block.

Accepted yields were from 6.5495% to 6.6%, also wider than the 6.55% to 6.5825% margin logged a week prior. This brought the average rate of the two-week deposits to 6.5707%, up by 0.39 bp from the 6.5668% logged a week ago.

The central bank has not auctioned off 28-day term deposits for more than three years to give way to its weekly offerings of securities with the same tenor.

The term deposits and the 28-day bills are used by the BSP to mop up excess liquidity in the financial system and to better guide market rates.

TDF yields were slightly higher week on week on Thursday amid hawkish signals from the Fed amid sticky inflation in the world’s largest economy, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

The US Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday and signaled it is still leaning towards eventual reductions in borrowing costs, but put a red flag on recent disappointing inflation readings that could make those rate cuts a while in coming, Reuters reported.

Indeed, Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell said that after starting 2024 with three months of faster-than-expected price increases, it “will take longer than previously expected” for policy makers to become comfortable that inflation will resume the decline towards 2% that had cheered them through much of last year.

That steady progress has stalled for now, and while Mr. Powell said rate increases remained unlikely, he set the stage for a potentially extended hold of the benchmark policy rate in the 5.25%-5.5% range that has been in place since July.

US central bankers still believe the current policy rate is putting enough pressure on economic activity to bring inflation under control, Mr. Powell said, and they would be content to wait as long as needed for that to become apparent — even if inflation is simply “moving sideways” in the meantime.

The Fed’s preferred inflation measure — the personal consumption expenditures price index — increased at a 2.7% annual rate in March, an acceleration from the prior month.

“Inflation is still too high,” Mr. Powell said in a press conference after the end of the Federal Open Market Committee’s two-day policy meeting. “Further progress in bringing it down is not assured and the path forward is uncertain.”

Mr. Powell said his forecast remained for inflation to fall over the course of the year, but that “my confidence in that is lower than it was.”

Whether there are rate cuts this year or not remains in doubt.

“If we did have a path where inflation proves more persistent than expected, and where the labor market remains strong but inflation is moving sideways and we’re not gaining greater confidence, well, that would be a case in which it could be appropriate to hold off on rate cuts,” Mr. Powell said. “There are paths to not cutting and there are paths to cutting. It’s really going to depend on the data.” — L.M.J.C. Jocson with Reuters

Digital Telecommunications Phils. to hold Annual Meeting of Stockholders on May 27 via MS Teams

 

 


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Bona, 44 years later

NORA AUNOR from the restored version of Lino Brocka’s 1980 film Bona. — CARLOTTAFILMS.COM

Bona (1980)
Lino Brocka

THERE’s a lovely symmetry to having the restored print of director Lino Brocka’s Bona (1980) screened in the 2024 Cannes Classics section, in the same city where the film had its world premiere (at the parallel Director’s Fortnight) decades ago. Feels like a combination homecoming, resurrection, and revelation all at the same time.

Carlotta Films and Kani Releasing collaborated to have Cite de Memoire laboratory in Paris do a 4k digital restoration of the 35 mm print and sound negatives kept by LTC Patrimoine; the film will be released in French theaters on Sept. 25 — no word yet on a DVD or streaming platform, but fingers crossed.

Meantime, looking at the latest available copy — if memory serves, a Cinema One video from the Cinematheque Francais back in 2006 — I wondered if the film could stand a rewatch, even in a relatively cruder state of repair.

We are familiar with the premise: Bona is a middle-class teen fixated on aspiring actor Gardo (Philip Salvador), and casting Nora Aunor — then the Philippines’ biggest star — as said admirer tickled the imaginations of local film enthusiasts (but not the general public, the film was not a commercial success). Call this Aunor’s covert critique of the fans that made her famous and of her own messianic persona — one revealed to be pathetically self-sacrificing, the other monumentally self-absorbed; they meet and spin off in a dance of mutual destruction.

The film opens in a state of tumult — The Black Nazarene, a dark-skinned wooden Jesus with crucifix on one shoulder, mounted on a motorized carriage and paraded outside of Quiapo Church. Crowds swirl about hauling rope (to clear a path?), tossing rags that the attendants pick up, wipe across the statue’s face and cross, toss back (the figure supposedly possesses healing powers that are somehow passed on in the rags).

The massive images of the Nazarene, shot verité style, serves as Brocka’s large-scale introduction to the theme of unblinking, unthinking idolatry — a swarthy icon simultaneously venerated (paraded before the church) and humbled (subject to Roman torture); Nora is similarly venerated and humbled, as star of the film playing the lowliest of the low.

Except in the church procession, you see the act of worship performed as large-scale spectacle in all its terrible grandeur; Brocka zooms in to capture the act of worship as personal drama, a story unnoticed by everyone except the filmmaker’s restless camera.

The film quickly establishes its premise, spends time adding detail: when we first see Gardo he’s walking past Bona, one of his many girls clinging to one arm; when Gardo is beaten up by four men (the plot development neatly explained away as a complication from one of Gardo’s love affairs) Bona spends the night caring for him, and next day is whipped by her father for not coming home. Bona doesn’t resist the whipping, but neither does she totally submit; she ends up at Gardo’s doorstep asking for shelter in exchange for — well, cooking, cleaning, laundering, anything that he needs done.

Gardo agrees reluctantly — at this point he considers her a loyal supporter, a crutch more than anything. What he doesn’t realize — and what most folks watching seem unaware of — is the delicate balancing act Aunor and Brocka and Salvador maintain between the two: the growing dependence Gardo has on Bona, Bona’s developing passive-aggressive jealousy over Gardo. We can say Gardo has the upper hand, he even slaps her around once in a while, but once he’s vented his anger he often relents and treats her kindly; at one point, when she’s tossed the umpteenth one-night stand out the door, Gardo actually stops bringing them home, at least for a while. Bona has emerging stature in Gardo’s world, whether Gardo likes it or not.

Then there’s Nilo (Nanding Josef), a neighbor of Gardo’s who has fallen hard for Bona. Nilo provides an intriguing contrast to Gardo’s good-looking narcissism — he’s painfully self-conscious, and shy; in many ways he’s like Bona, a largely ignored nonentity who has to look elsewhere for meaning in his life. In Gardo’s scheme of things Nilo counts for almost nothing; in Bona’s he’s beneath contempt — if she is nothing in Gardo’s world then Nilo, who loves her, is less than nothing.

Nilo does have one special ability: he sees Bona. He appreciates her as a person, admires her natural warmth and goodness and is smitten by her shy mouse beauty. Perhaps one reason Bona finds Nilo so annoying is because she’s lurked in the margins of Gardo’s universe for so long she finds the spotlight Nilo trains on her unnerving — she doesn’t want to be noticed, not by anyone except Gardo, and even with Gardo she doesn’t demand to be the center of his life, just a satellite in constant orbit. She wants to stay with him no matter what, close by if not beside; people like Nilo threaten that equilibrium, and she dislikes it.

But even that assessment is incomplete: Nilo has one other special ability, and that is the ability to grow, adjust, develop beyond his original cast. He escapes the trap of unrequited love, presumably because he isn’t especially handsome, or particularly obsessive; he just is a reasonably balanced, reasonably sane young man. As written, Nilo has the potential to be terminally uninteresting; as played by Josef with unalloyed simplicity he’s the one breath of sanity in this lurid melodrama, the unexpected moral center in this otherwise off-center film.

It pained Philip Salvador to realize his Gardo was so repugnant he would not win a single acting award that year; it should have dawned on him (and on everyone else dense enough to confuse character and creator) that his portrait was so deftly sketched, drew so deeply from his inner insecurities and real-life issues as an actor that he may have delivered the performance of his career.

Aunor’s best-known role is that of the countryside prophetess in Ishmael Bernal’s Himala (Miracle), where she doesn’t play a character really but a religious figure, an icon, her dark petite figure embodying the mysteries of a universe that may or may not contain a god (it’s the ambiguity that gives the film its power).

Aunor’s equally known for playing the smallfolk, the oppressed, the diminutive maiden forever threatened by foreign powers or the male patriarchy or whatever has endangered our country at one time or another, in one way or another, who somehow manages to rise up despite her lack of stature and show the resilience of the Filipina. 

But I submit in Bona Aunor not only performs the role superbly, she leans into it, plays it to the absolute hilt, uncovers all kinds of nuances and darker implications. Ever oppressed, she’s capable of oppressing; ever ignored, she will demand attention; ever manipulated or humiliated, she can (passive-aggressively) manipulate and humiliate and inflict as much suffering as is inflicted on her. Her sisters in cinema are legion: Glenn Close’s Alex Forrest, Kathy Bates’ Annie Wilkes, Isabelle Adjani’s Adele H. — but Aunor plays Bona with masterful subtlety and zero caricature and Brocka captures that performance with consummate skill. The film isn’t just a fine film, it incarnates the virtues of Philippine cinema at its best: simplicity of story, sincerity of intention, and a white-hot core of passion that sets the very seas boiling.

Meralco energizes Malinta substation

MANILA Electric Co. (Meralco) said it has switched on the P170.81-million Malinta Substation in Valenzuela City, aiming to enhance electricity services in the area.

The project involved the conversion of the substation’s old 115-kilovolt (kV) conventional single bus switchyard into a modern indoor-type double bus configuration gas-insulated switchgear.

Meralco said the new substation will help limit incidents of scheduled and long power outages to the benefit of customers in Valenzuela and Malabon. 

“This will also enhance both the reliability and flexibility of the substation and the 115 kV sub-transmission line system,” Meralco said.

In February, Meralco said it has energized two new smart substations in Taguig City to cater to the growing demand in the business center.

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

ACEN Corp. boosts investment in ENEX Energy Corp.

ACEN Corp. said it has agreed to subscribe to additional shares in its subsidiary ENEX Energy Corp., amounting to P30 million.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Thursday, ACEN said it signed a contract on April 30 to subscribe to 30 million of ENEX’s non-voting preferred shares priced at P1 apiece.

ENEX is a unit of the listed company ACEN Corp. that engages in oil and gas exploration and production locally and internationally.

“The subscription price will be used to fund the operational requirements of ENEX, and transaction costs for the creation and issuance of the preferred shares,” the company said.

Currently, ACEN holds a total of 5.45% outstanding shares in ENEX.

ACEN has around 4,200 MW of attributable capacity spread across the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, India, and Australia.

The energy company is targeting to expand its renewable energy portfolio to 20 gigawatts by 2030.

ACEN shares went down 3.37% to P4.01 a piece on Thursday. — Aubrey Rose A. Inosante

More Filipinos tap BNPL services as credit access remains limited

PICKAWOOD/UNSPLASH

THE USE of buy now, pay later (BNPL) services among Filipinos increased in the first quarter from the previous year amid limited access to credit and lending products, according to a study by TransUnion.

TransUnion’s Consumer Pulse Study showed that among the Filipino respondents who said they have heard of BNPL, which was at 82% of the total, 63% said they made at least one BNPL transaction in the past year, up from 61% in the first quarter of 2023.

The survey was conducted from Feb. 6-14 and covered 977 Filipino consumers aged 18 years and older.

Gen Z’s drove the increase in the use of BNPL services, with 81% being aware of these products and 65% saying they used BNPL in the past 12 months, up from 57% a year prior, which was the biggest increase among all generations.

“Gen Z’s technological literacy and personal financial outlook appeared to contribute to a trend observed with buy now, pay later services — an alternative credit-enabled payment method that allows consumers to immediately finance purchases and pay them back in fixed installments over a relatively short period of time,” TransUnion said.

Easy application was the top reason Gen Zs cited for using BNPL, along with simply wanting to try it (17%), spreading payments over time (11%) and as an alternative to afford a larger purchase (11%).

Meanwhile, 68% of Millennials who claimed awareness of BNPL (86%) said they made at least one BNPL purchase in the period, TransUnion said.

“For many Filipinos, buy now, pay later services offer financial convenience and flexibility by letting them tailor their payment terms to best suit their needs and preferences,” said Weihan Sun, principal of Research and Consulting for Asia Pacific at TransUnion.

“With the noted increase in usage of such services among consumers, especially the younger generation, businesses and other players in the formal financial sector must develop robust underwriting systems to efficiently cater to the expectations of an increasingly digital savvy demographic. This entails striking a delicate balance between capitalizing on the growing opportunities and mitigating potential risks in terms of operational efficiency and delinquency management,” Mr. Sun added.

The study showed that 96% of Filipino respondents see credit as important in achieving their financial goals, TransUnion said. However, only 35% of them said they have sufficient access to credit and lending products, down from 46% in the same period last year, the study showed.

Of the Filipinos surveyed, Gen Z, or those aged 18-26, said they had the least access to credit and lending products at 32%. This was followed by Baby Boomers (30%), Millennials (28%) and Gen X (26%). 

Majority or 88% of the survey’s Gen Z Filipino respondents said they carried out online transactions in the first quarter. Meanwhile, 89% of them said they expected their income to increase in the next 12 months.

MONITORING CREDIT, FRAUD
Amid increased online transactions, TransUnion’s study also found that more Filipinos are monitoring their credit, with 70% of the respondents saying checked their credit reports at least monthly, up from 65% last year.

“This uptick reflects a growing awareness of the importance of credit health and its implications on financial opportunities,” it said.

The age group that checked their credit reports the most was Millennials at 75%, followed by Gen Z at 74%, Gen X at 65%, and Baby Boomers at 56%.

The Gen Z respondents who said they did not monitor their credit reports also went down to 14% from 17% at end-2023.

“Over the past year, the percentage of Gen Z Filipinos who said they do not monitor their credit reports fell every quarter — all the way from 29% in Q1 2023,” TransUnion said.

The top reason for Gen Zs checking their credit reports was for protection against fraud at 55%. This was followed by finding ways to improve their credit score (34%) and to learn about possible credit offers (30%).

“Among methods employed by fraudsters, phishing — the deceptive practice of masquerading as a trustworthy entity in e-mails or via websites to steal sensitive information — was the most reported scheme (49%) among Filipinos who said they were targeted with online, e-mail, phone call or text messaging fraud attempts in the last three months,” TransUnion said.

“Other common fraud methods reported were smishing (43%) — similar to phishing but conducted through SMS text messaging — and money or gift card scams — where victims are deceived into sending money or purchasing gift cards under false pretenses (36%),” it added.

Younger generations showed growing awareness of these kinds of financial scams, it said, as Gen Z Filipinos who said they were not aware of being targeted by fraudulent schemes in the last three months dropped to 28% from 37% last year.

“As technology advances, consumers now have access to a variety of payment options that cater to their preferences. Yet, alongside the growth of digital convenience comes the inherent risk of fraud. Although it is encouraging to see the increased ability of younger Filipinos to recognize fraudulent schemes, fraudsters remain relentless in their efforts to adapt and exploit vulnerabilities,” Mr. Sun said. 

“These dynamics underscore the critical need for proactive fraud prevention strategies which encompass robust security measures and continuous consumer education by financial institutions. As more members of Gen Z enter the consumer market, implementing multi-layered defenses against fraud while ensuring friction-right customer experiences becomes crucial for the long-term success of all financial institutions in the country,” he added. — A.M.C. Sy

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