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Transport master plan attracts five bids

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said five companies have submitted technical bids to prepare the Philippine Transportation System master plan.

The DoTr said the five bidders were all joint ventures: Systra SA,  Systra Philippines Inc., Haskoning Nederland BV, and Haskoning Philippines, Inc.; Tecnica y Proyectos SA (TYPSA), SMEC International Pty. Ltd. and Palafox Associates; IDOM, and INCEO; Artelia Group, Egis Villes ET Transports, Bogazici Proje Muhendislik AS, Systema Consulting SA, and Transporti E Terrirorio SRL; and Ove Arup & Partners Hongkong Ltd. and Ramboll Pte. Ltd.

According to the request for expressions of interest, the DoTr sought consulting services for the formulation of the Philippines Transportation System Master Plan. 

The winning consulting service will prepare the master plan which runs until 2055; organize a transport data management system and data observation; and enhance the implementation competencies of the DoTr and the departments of Public Works and Highways, Economy, Planning, and Development and other agencies.

The DoTr said it obtained $44 million from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank to fast-track infrastructure studies, with some of the financing allocated to consulting services.

The winning contractor will be given 30 months to complete the project, the DoTr said.

Interested parties must have completed at least two multinational, national, or regional transport master plans within the last 15 years. Each plan should cover multiple transport modes, including road, railway, water, and air. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

SBCorp. allocates P2B in loans for female-run firms

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Benzoix from Freepik

THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said the Small Business Corp. (SBCorp.), has allocated P2 billion this year for a loan program targeting women-led enterprises.

“We continue to support women entrepreneurs seeking local and global expansion, while also opening opportunities for those ready to expand, create jobs, and strengthen local economies,” Trade Secretary Cristina A. Roque said.

“We understand that capital is a challenge to many, and the DTI through SBCorp. has tailored programs to meet the needs of our MSMEs, like this Women’s Enterprise Fund (WEF),” she added.

Such funding ensures continued support for female entrepreneurs that are ready to grow, hire, and increase their economic impact and profit.

“The fund aims to provide capital to start and expand their business, recognizing their contribution to economic growth,” the DTI said.

Under the WEF, women-owned and -led micro, small and medium enterprises can access loans between P30,000 and P20 million, with terms of up to five years.

Loans will have a one-year grace period, while collateral requirements are waived for loans of up to P5 million. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Tech-driven exports expected to boost Asia-Pacific growth

REUTERS

ECONOMIES in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region could gain some growth support from the boom in technology-driven exports, Fitch Ratings said, though tariffs remain a source of uncertainty.

“Fitch Ratings expects continued growth in AI-related exports in 2026, but the fading of front-loaded orders for other products and unfavorable base effects will likely weaken GDP (gross domestic product) growth rates,” Fitch Ratings Senior Director Kathleen Chen and Director George Xu said in a Jan. 27 report. 

According to Fitch, the Philippines had the third-best export performance in the region last year, behind Taiwan and Vietnam.

In 2025, Philippine exports were valued at $84.41 billion, up 15.2%, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority.

This was a turnaround from the 0.5% decline seen the previous year and exceeded the government’s estimate of a 2% drop.

Electronic products remained the Philippines’ top export. They grew 17.6% to $45.96 billion.

Global demand remains high for semiconductors, driving Philippine exports of such products up 18.7% at $34.62 billion last year.

However, Fitch Ratings warned that US tariffs could dampen the supposed growth boost from electronics exports.

“In addition, potential sectoral tariffs are a major risk, including Section 232 duties on semiconductors that make up a sizeable share of APAC exports to the US,” Ms. Chen and Mr. Xu said.

“The US administration imposed 25% duties on certain advanced AI chips albeit with multiple exemptions in January 2026 and is considering broader tariffs on semiconductors and related products,” they added.

Philippine goods entering the US have been charged a 19% tariff since Aug. 7. The US also recently imposed a 25% tariff on certain semiconductors such as advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chips.

However, analysts have said that the new levy will not directly impact Philippine manufacturers as most of the country’s semiconductor exports are legacy chips covered by the World Trade Organization Information Technology Agreement.

“Although new US tariffs have been imposed on certain advanced AI chips, the impact on the Philippines’ semiconductor exports is expected to be minimal,” Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co.’s Research and Market Strategy Department said in a report.

“We expect semiconductor exports, along with other manufactured and agriculture-based products, to sustain momentum in 2026,” it added. — Katherine K. Chan

Philguarantee says P640B in loans covered by its guarantee products

THE Philippine Guarantee Corp. (Philguarantee) said it has provided guarantee support for nearly P640 billion worth of loans since the end of 2019.

In a social media post on Wednesday, the state-run firm said its guarantees were coursed through 200 partner lending institutions.

“As we look ahead of the year, Philguarantee remains a trusted, reliable, and responsive partner, helping financial institutions lend with confidence, and enabling business, homeowners, and communities to move forward,” Philguarantee said.

It said its guarantees enabled lending to socialized and low-cost housing projects that built 640,804 units, supported 327,163 small farmers and fisherfolk, and assisted 71,288 MSMEs (micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises),” Philguarantee said.

The company facilitates by pledging to cover debts if borrowers default, and is active in supporting credit access to MSMEs, exporters, infrastructure and energy developers, farms, housing, tourism, and other industries.

Philguarantee remitted P1.28 billion in dividends to the Treasury in 2024. Its revenue rose 103% to P5.32 billion in 2023, generated primarily from guarantee fees and premiums, commitment fees, and the sale or rental of real estate. — Aubrey Rose A. Inosante

PHL to push sustainability agenda as EABC chair

THE PHILIPPINES is keen to increase its participation in the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and reduce trade barriers as it assumes the chairmanship of the East Asia Business Council (EABC).

Jay Y. Yuvallos, EABC chairman for 2026, said the EABC’s priorities are advancing sustainability, strengthening regional value chain integration and RCEP utilization, and reinforcing investor confidence.

According to Mr. Yuvallos, sustainability and the circular economy should be advanced in a realistic manner that is workable for businesses.

“Many companies, especially micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), want to participate meaningfully in the sustainability transition but face constraints in cost, capability, and access to practical guidance,” he said at a briefing on Wednesday.

“EABC will support approaches that strengthen competitiveness while making sustainability more achievable across the region,” he added.

He said that although RCEP offers strong potential, its utilization varies among participants.

“Its impact depends on how effectively companies can use it in practice,” he said.

In particular, he said that more advanced countries are benefiting more from the framework.

“They have a good system that we can follow; they are willing to share with us, specifically Japan and Korea,” he added.

He said RCEP is not meant to only benefit exporters but also the other companies, especially the MSMEs, who can participate in the global value chain.

“This is very ambitious … but we hope to leverage what we can for the chairmanship year of the Philippines,” he said.

“We have to look at the ecosystems that are thriving in our economy and how our MSMEs can plug into them” to play to our strengths, he added.

Despite the challenges, he said that the EABC remains confident in expanding trade within the region, more so if the region addresses barriers to trade.

“Digitalization is one of those key areas that we need to work on,” he added, noting that talks are in place to harmonize digital payments and platforms.

On Wednesday, the EABC held a chairmanship turnover ceremony from Malaysia and China to the Philippines and Japan. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

From pause to progress: Refined audit approach

Responding to widespread taxpayer concerns regarding audit procedures, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) took a decisive step by suspending tax audits in November. This strategic pause allowed the BIR to reevaluate and refine its audit approach to address the concerns effectively and redefine the landscape of tax audits.

In a news conference on Jan. 27, the BIR announced its readiness to resume audit operations as key reforms in the audit program are now in place.

After a two-month pause dedicated to identifying gaps and revising policies, the BIR issued Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 8-2026, formally lifting the suspension of tax audits and other field operations, effective immediately.

THE REFINED APPROACH
The lifting of the suspension comes with the issuance of Revenue Memorandum Order (RMO) No. 1-2026, prescribing revised policies, controls, and procedures for tax audit and assessment, effective immediately. This revision signals a new era of streamlined processes, enhanced oversight, and seamless digital integration, fundamentally transforming the tax assessment framework.

The revised policies introduce several critical changes designed to increase efficiency and reduce subjectivity in audits.

Single-instance audit framework: Taxpayers will generally receive one electronic letter of authority (eLA) for a given taxable year covering all internal revenue taxes, thereby eliminating the necessity for, and burden of, separate tax audits. The issuance of multiple eLAs covering the same taxpayer and taxable year is strictly prohibited.

However, this framework excludes: (1) one-time transactions; (2) tax clearance requests; (3) cancellation of business registration; and (4) cases involving fraud and irregularities.

In line with this reform, the BIR also launched the LoA Verifier feature in the REVIE chatbot through RMC No. 5-2026. This feature provides taxpayers a reliable and secure verification mechanism for Letters of Authority (LoA).

This reform was already part of the 2023 updated BIR Audit Program but reintroduced in 2026 for strict implementation.

Consolidation of pending eLAs: Starting March 4, multiple eLAs covering the same taxpayer and taxable year shall be automatically consolidated into one eLA, unless the taxpayer specifically requests non-consolidation.

To opt out of consolidation, taxpayers must file a written request to the BIR office handling the audit of all its internal revenue taxes, except VAT, on or before Feb. 16. The taxpayer and the revenue officers have until April 30 to close the audits. Beginning May 4, any unresolved cases will automatically be consolidated, regardless of the assessment stage and the request for non-consolidation.

Nonetheless, even prior to the automatic consolidation on May 4, the taxpayers still have the option to voluntarily settle assessed deficiencies, regardless of audit consolidation status.

Audit selection and assignment: The selection of taxpayers for audit will follow a risk-based and system-assisted approach, effectively removing discretionary selection by BIR officials. The issuance of new eLAs will be based on system-generated, anonymized lists, following defined criteria, as provided in Annex A of the RMO.

This approach was also part of the 2023 updated BIR Audit Program where selection of taxpayers and assignment of cases was to be automated using the Internal Revenue Integrated System (IRIS) – Audit Module. The new audit program further enhances the approach by anonymizing the list and requiring the approval of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR).

To implement this, the Information Systems Group (ISG) will generate lists based on the approved criteria, subject to approval of the CIR prior to dissemination to respective revenue regions and/or large taxpayer offices for assignment. Despite this process, recommendations of taxpayers for audit may still be made subject to the following: (1) written recommendations/justifications by the appropriate approving authority; (2) validation against the approved criteria; and (3) approval of the CIR.

An eLA shall be issued only after completion of the system-assisted selection, centralized approval, and anonymized assignment process.

Full automation is yet to happen, so the BIR is set to issue further guidelines on this on or before April 16.

Shutdown of audit task forces: With the implementation of other reforms, the authority to conduct tax audits and assessment will now be limited to the appropriate regular offices of the BIR.

This resulted in the dissolution of the VAT Audit Sections and Large Taxpayers VAT Audit Unit by May 15.

Audit and assessment proper: In conducting the tax audit, authorized BIR officers are to observe the following:

To guarantee consistency in all tax audits, BIR examiners will adhere to a standardized audit checklist, as provided in Annex B of the RMO, except in cases where additional documents are deemed relevant to the audit or in cases where industry-specific documentation is needed, subject to future issuance of industry-specific checklists.

There is to be proper documentation of audit events and taxpayer interactions. Each audit event will be thoroughly documented by the officer conducting the audit, ensuring transparency and accountability at every step. Additionally, strict oversight mechanisms will be enforced throughout the entire assessment process.

When determining deficiency taxes after the Notice of Discrepancy (NoD) stage, the tax issues to be raised must be based only on issues that were not resolved during the discussion of discrepancies due to valid factual and legal bases. 

In case of voluminous records, the taxpayer has the option to choose whether the audit will be conducted at: 1) the BIR office and submitting certified true copies of the relevant documents; or 2) the taxpayer’s principal place of business subject to prior coordination with the handling revenue officer.

Sanctions: Administrative, civil, or criminal actions will apply to BIR officials who violate or fail to comply with the provisions of RMO No. 1-2026. The RMO also provided an avenue for taxpayers to raise their concerns in case a BIR official acts beyond his authority as provided in the RMO.

THOUGHTS ON THE REFINEMENTS
The single-instance audit framework addresses concerns about multiple eLAs for the same taxable year, which will ease the burden of handling an independent VAT audit. However, it is unclear whether the other major concern of receiving eLAs for consecutive years will be resolved by other reforms like the anonymized system-generated list for audit selection.

Further, while this reform is a significant change, certain BIR officials can still recommend taxpayers for audit, which might undermine the objectives of the new program. If recommendations are permitted, issuing guidelines on exceptional cases that warrant the recommendations would be helpful. Additionally, putting a maximum limit on the number of such recommendations could help maintain the objectivity and fairness in the selection process.

Overall, I believe this reform offers hope by addressing inconsistent audit procedures and exaggerated tax assessments. The BIR’s recognition of taxpayer grievances has laid the foundation for improved processes and signals a transformative shift toward restoring confidence and trust among taxpayers.

I hope that the new audit program will be implemented diligently, ensuring a balanced and fair audit approach. This way, revenue officers and taxpayers can work together as genuine partners in governance rather than operating as adversaries with competing objectives in tax administration.

The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.

 

Maria Alyssa Mae Panis is a manager at the Tax Services department of Isla Lipana & Co., a Philippine member firm of the PwC network.

maria.alyssa.mae.a.panis@pwc.com

All-Filipino Conference kicks off Saturday; Nxled among favorites

NXLED CHAMELEONS — PVL

FROM 12 to 10 teams, a new format and a completely different landscape await the Premier Volleyball League (PVL) when it closes the season with the All-Filipino Conference (AFC) unfurling on Saturday.

With the defending champion Petro Gazz out on an indefinite leave and Chery Tiggo leaving, it will now be up to the remaining clubs to battle it out for the biggest, toughest and most prestigious conference of it all — the AFC.

Nxled, after absorbing the bulk of that Angels franchise that won it all in this same conference a year ago, should be one of the title favorites along with powerhouse teams like 10-time champion Creamline and PLDT, last year’s PVL on Tour and Invitational titlist.

The Chameleons will parade a vastly improved roster of Brooke Van Sickle, MJ Phillips, Myla Pablo, Jonah Sabete, Jules Tolentino and Bang Pineda from Petro Gazz, Aby Maraño from Chery Tiggo and Aduke Ogunsanya from Choco Mucho.

“It will be a good problem,” said Nxled coach Ettore Guidetti of the team lineup logjam.

For the Cool Smashers, they should be strong candidates to reclaim the title they last won two years ago especially now that Jia de Guzman is back after a three-year absence along with another returnee in Bernadeth Pons.

Ms. De Guzman was in Japan and was with Alas Pilipinas during her prolonged absence while Ms. Pons was with the beach volley team that snared the gold in last December’s Thailand SEA Games.

“Very excited with how much the PVL has changed and I would really expect that challenge,” said Ms. De Guzman.

For the High Speed Hitters, they have decided to keep the core that won them two crowns a season back and picked just one in middle blocker Seth Rodriguez, who will momentarily fill the vacuum left by Dell Palomata, who will be out of the country at least for a little over a month.

“We’re relying on our chemistry,” said PLDT Manager Bajjie del Rosario.

Choco Mucho should be another team to watch after acquiring possibly the biggest free agent in the market in Eya Laure and getting back Sisi Rondina, who, like Ms. Pons, was part of that golden squad in Thailand.

Teams like Farm Fresh, ZUS Coffee, Galeries Tower also made a free agent splash and should be contenders too.

Akari and Cignal, like PLDT, have also kept their core and should be somewhere up there in the standings.

The league opens on Saturday at the Filoil Arena with Galeries Tower battling Cignal at 4 p.m. and Akari tackling Choco Mucho at 6:30 p.m.

Under the new system, a team that sweeps the single round-robin eliminations earns an outright berth in the semifinals.

If not, the top four squads will clash in the Qualifying Round knockout matches, with the winners advancing to the next round. The losing teams, meanwhile, are not immediately eliminated.

Instead, they drop into the newly introduced Play-In Stepladder phase — another first for the league — where teams ranked fifth to 10th get a second chance to stay alive.

This Play-In format injects an added layer of drama and unpredictability, ensuring that no game is meaningless and that late surges can still rewrite a team’s destiny. Rankings throughout the eliminations and beyond will be determined using the FIVB Team Classification System, which accounts for wins, set ratio, and points ratio, reinforcing fairness and consistency.

The semis will be contested in a single round-robin format, again using the FIVB system to rank the teams. From there, the top two will battle for the championship in a best-of-three Finals series at the Araneta Coliseum, with the organizing Sports Vision targeting an April 28 conclusion.

PVL Notes: The Philippine National Volleyball Federation, with the help of the Philippine Sports Commission and Philippine Olympic Committee, will host Week 2 of the Women’s Volleyball Nations League from June 17 to 21 that will have Japan, Italy, the United States, Serbia, Dominican Republic and Czechia. — Joey Villar

Djokovic through to Australian Open semifinals after Musetti injury; Pegula sees off Anisimova

MELBOURNE — Novak Djokovic’s quest for a record Grand Slam title continued in dramatic circumstances after fifth seed Lorenzo Musetti quit their Australian Open quarterfinal match with an injury after taking a two-set lead at Melbourne Park on Wednesday.

Musetti’s retirement when leading 6-4, 6-3, 1-3 meant Djokovic pulled off a great escape at his most successful hunting ground, with the 10-time champion’s bid for a standalone 25th major to break the tie with Margaret Court still alive.

“I don’t know what to say, except that I feel really sorry for him and he was a far better player,” Djokovic said.

“I was on my way home tonight. These things happen in sport and it’s happened to me a few times, but being in quarterfinals of a Grand Slam, two sets to love up and being in full control, I mean it’s so unfortunate.

“I wish him a speedy recovery and he should have been the winner today, there’s no doubt.”

The 38-year-old Serb returned to action after an extended break following fourth-round opponent Jakub Mensik’s walkover on Sunday, and his freshness showed during a sharp start where he brought plenty of variety and grabbed an early break.

LOOSE POINTS
But some loose points thereafter allowed Musetti to level at 2-2 and the Italian then surged past Djokovic for the first time in the contest with an overhead shot before comfortably wrapping up the opening set on serve.

“My strategy worked very well for the first couple of games and then it changed completely,” Djokovic said.

“I had four winners in the first two games and no unforced errors and then the rest of the match I had another four winners and probably 40 errors. That’s what Lorenzo does to you, makes you play when you think the point is finished.

“When you attack him you don’t know what to expect, whether it’s going to be a passing shot, a crosscourt or a short slice, or if he’s going to go full flat in your body or hit a looping ball to my weakest shot, which is overhead.

“I tried my best… I wasn’t feeling the ball today the first couple of sets but that’s also due to his quality and his variety in the game. I’m extremely lucky to get to get through this one.”

Fiery winners from both flanks helped Musetti break in the opening game of the next set, and though the 23-year-old let the advantage slip immediately, he edged in front again and soon doubled his lead in the match, to leave Djokovic on the ropes.

INJURY TROUBLES
Djokovic soldiered on following treatment for a foot blister and went 2-1 up with a break in the third, when it was Musetti’s turn to call the trainer to the court for what appeared like a right thigh issue.

Musetti looked to manage the problem and play on but he was far from 100% and threw in the towel a game later to gasps from the Rod Laver Arena crowd, handing Djokovic his 103rd match win at the tournament to eclipse Roger Federer’s mark.

Djokovic faces the winner of the quarterfinal between defending champion Jannik Sinner and Ben Shelton.

“I’m going to double my prayers tonight, for sure, and show gratitude to God for giving me this opportunity,” Djokovic said.

“I’m going to do my best in a couple of days to use it… Today I wasn’t happy with my performance but it’s another day in the office and hopefully in a couple of days, I can come out and be at my best, because that’s what’s needed.”

PEGULA SEES OFF FELLOW AMERICAN ANISIMOVA
Jessica Pegula moved into the semifinals of the Australian Open for the first time in her career on Wednesday, with a 6-3, 7-6(1) win over fellow American and fourth seed Amanda Anisimova at Melbourne Park.

The sixth seed, who exited the competition at the quarterfinals stage in 2021, 2022 and 2023, will take on Elena Rybakina for a place in Saturday’s final after the Kazakh defeated Iga Swiatek earlier in the day.

“It’s awesome,” Pegula said of her progress to the last four. “I’ve been able to go deeper in the US Open in the last couple of years, but here was the first slam that I broke through at.

“I was the three- and then four-time quarterfinalist. I was, ‘It’s got to be coming, I’ve got to get to the semis.’

“I feel like I play some good tennis here, I like the conditions and even matches I’ve lost here I’ve played well in so I’ve been waiting for the time when I could break through.”

Pegula raced into a 4-1 lead as a clearly frustrated Anisimova struggled in the early exchanges, surrendering two breaks of serve inside the opening five games to allow her compatriot to go on and claim the first set in 30 minutes.

Anisimova had shown signs of regaining her composure late in the opening set and built on those improvements to put Pegula under pressure, breaking her serve to go 5-3 up in the set only to double-fault in the next game to squander that advantage.

The pair traded breaks to take the second set to a tiebreak, where Pegula kept her cool to prevail over an increasingly agitated Anisimova.

SWIATEK CALLS FOR PLAYER PRIVACY
World number two Swiatek joined a growing chorus of players demanding more privacy off the courts at the Australian Open after cameras captured Coco Gauff in a post-match meltdown that the American said should have been a personal moment.

The incident occurred after Gauff’s 59-minute quarterfinal defeat by Elina Svitolina, when the American retreated behind a wall near the match call area deep in the bowels of the stadium to repeatedly smash her racquet on the ground.

Unbeknownst to the third seed, cameras recorded her every move and the video was broadcast to viewers around the world, with Gauff saying she was unhappy that there was no privacy anywhere except the locker room.

“The question is, are we tennis players or are we animals in the zoo, where they are observed even when they poop?” Swiatek told reporters after she lost 7-5, 6-1 to Rybakina in the quarterfinals on Wednesday.

“Okay, that was exaggerating obviously, but it would be nice to have some privacy. It would be nice also to have your own process and not always be observed.”

Anisimova also said she knew players did not have much privacy at Melbourne Park, adding that she “kept my head down” until she reached the locker room.

“There are good moments obviously that people see and that’s fun. Then, when you lose, there are probably not-so-good moments,” Anisimova said. — Reuters

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s 29 leads Thunder past Pelicans

SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER scored 29 to lead the Oklahoma City Thunder to a 104-95 home win over the New Orleans Pelicans on Tuesday to snap a two-game losing streak.

The loss halted the Pelicans’ two-game winning streak.

Chet Holmgren helped the Thunder create some separation in the third quarter, scoring 14 of his 20 points and pulling down seven of his 14 rebounds in the quarter.

Ten of Oklahoma City’s 31 third-quarter points came on second chances.

The Thunder had just two offensive rebounds in the first half but had 11 after the break, helping lead to 21 second-chance points.

After being outrebounded by 11 in the first half, Oklahoma City won the second-half rebounding battle, 30-20.

Holmgren also finished with five blocks and three assists.

The Thunder extended their lead to 17 early in the fourth quarter, but New Orleans responded with a 13-4 run to cut the deficit to six with less than six minutes remaining.

Jeremiah Fears, who starred at nearby Oklahoma last year as a freshman before making the leap to the NBA, helped fuel the Pelicans’ run, with four quick points to start the stretch, the second basket after his own steal.

Fears had another steal late in the run, leading to a Herbert Jones 3-pointer.

The rookie then drained another 3-pointer with just more than five minutes remaining to cut the deficit to five.

But New Orleans couldn’t get any closer.

The Thunder won despite shooting just 40.2% from the field, their fourth-lowest shooting performance of the season and their worst in a win.

The Pelicans were just 34.3% from the field, their second lowest of the season.

Isaiah Joe added 17 points off the bench in the win, while Jaylin Williams pulled down 10 rebounds.

Zion Williamson had 21 points and 11 rebounds for New Orleans, going eight of 11 from the floor.

But the rest of the Pelicans’ starters were just 14 of 59.

Gilgeous-Alexander had a rough start, missing his first five shots and not connecting from the field until early in the second quarter.- — Reuters

A year into Trump presidency, ‘pivot to China’ gathers pace

REUTERS

BEIJING/HONG KONG — When US President Donald J. Trump took office a year ago with an “America First” agenda, many saw trouble for China’s sluggish economy, but Beijing has thawed frosty relationships with other trade partners to post a record trade surplus.

While Mr. Trump’s policies have strained ties with traditional US allies, China has turned its focus to fostering ties with key partners, including Canada and India, analysts say.

As a result, the world’s second-largest economy’s trade surplus hit a record $1.2 trillion in 2025, monthly foreign exchange (forex) inflows touched $100 billion, the largest ever, and the global usage of China’s currency, the yuan, has expanded.

When British Prime Minister Keir Starmer lands in China on Wednesday evening hoping to reinvigorate recently strained business ties, analysts and experts say Beijing is expected to further expand its global political and economic influence.

Backed by its $20-trillion economy and $45 trillion worth of stock and bond markets, China is emerging as a “steady partner” for many countries, said Aleksandar Tomic, economics professor at Boston College.

“I think China has done a good job and rightly so to position itself as the reliable and stable trade partner,” said Derrick Irwin, co-head of intrinsic emerging markets equity at Allspring Global Investments.

“They basically said, look, you’ve got a massive trade partner in the US that’s become a little more uncertain. We can offer predictability and certainty. And I think that’s very fair.”

Mr. Starmer’s four-day visit to China will be the first by a British prime minister since 2018 and follows that of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney earlier this month, the first Canadian prime minister to visit Beijing since 2017.

During Mr. Carney’s visit, the two nations signed an economic deal to tear down trade barriers and forge a new strategic relationship. Mr. Carney described China as “a more predictable and reliable partner.”

But China is not alone in eyeing new trade pacts to de-risk from the United States. India and the European Union (EU) struck a long‑delayed trade deal on Tuesday that will slash tariffs on most goods, boosting two‑way trade to potentially double European exports to the South Asian country by 2032.

CHINA ECONOMY RESILIENT
While the world’s two largest economies have been locked in geopolitical disputes for the past few years, Mr. Trump’s return to the White House in January 2025 sharply escalated tensions on multiple fronts, including trade and technology.

Mr. Trump raised tariffs on China to over 100% in April, before partially reversing and settling for a temporary truce, while Beijing boosted its exports to non-US markets and rolled out support measures for its private enterprises and markets.

Chinese shipments to the US fell 20% in 2025, but rose 25.8% to Africa, 7.4% to Latin America, 13.4% to Southeast Asia and 8.4% to the EU last year.

“Many countries previously have not been China-friendly are now kind of pivoting to China… because the United States is becoming a lot less predictable,” Mr. Tomic said. “The more the US gets difficult to deal with, the more it opens up for China.”

Despite the trade tensions with the US, China’s economy, under deflationary pressure at home due to weak domestic consumption and a long-term property sector slump, has met the government’s target of 5% growth in 2025.

In recent months China has taken a raft of measures to boost foreign investment, including pilot programs in Beijing, Shanghai and other regions to expand market access in services such as telecoms, healthcare and education.

The country recorded the largest-ever monthly forex inflows of $100.1 billion in December, according to bank settlement data from its forex regulator. Its official forex reserves hit a 10-year high of $3.36 trillion.

Its financial market has emerged robust from trade disputes with the Shanghai index climbing 27% over the past year, outperforming US equities, the market turnover hitting a record high and the yuan expanding its global usage.

With the dollar becoming less appealing to investors due to Mr. Trump’s erratic approach to trade and international diplomacy, Beijing is also pushing ahead with its ambition to bolster the global usage of yuan, said bankers with knowledge of the matter.

Some of the big global banks are scrambling to boost yuan liquidity in offshore hubs and put in place frameworks for faster payment settlements in yuan in trade corridors of China and Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, they added.

“We have seen quite a few cycles of China trying to internationalize yuan and then pulling back,” said a banker at a global bank with China presence. “This time it’s different… Trump policies are very conducive for boosting yuan usage.”

More than half of China’s cross-border transactions are now settled in yuan, from almost none 15 years ago, while nearly half of China’s overseas bank lending is now in renminbi, according to the latest data from the PBOC and SAFE.

CHINA CAUTION
But some foreign policy analysts caution against China’s new, friendlier economic and political playbook.

Despite the new trade pacts, Patricia Kim, a foreign policy fellow at Washington-based Brookings Institution, said distrust of the US does not translate into trust in Beijing for US allies and partners.

“Many of these countries harbor deep concerns about China’s approach to trade, its use of economic coercion, and unresolved maritime and historical disputes,” Ms. Kim said.

“In the current moment, China may appear more restrained or pragmatic when compared with the Trump administration’s extreme rhetoric and actions. But Beijing’s actual behavior has not been especially reassuring.” — Reuters

South Korea court sentences former first lady to jail term for bribery

SOUTH KOREA’s former first lady Kim Keon Hee arrives at the special prosecutor’s office in Seoul, South Korea, Aug. 6. — REUTERS/KIM HONG-JI

SEOUL — A South Korean court sentenced former first lady Kim Keon Hee on Wednesday to one year and eight months in jail after finding her guilty of accepting Chanel bags and a diamond pendant from Unification Church officials in return for political favors.

The court cleared Ms. Kim, the wife of ex-President Yoon Suk Yeol who was ousted from office last year, on charges of stock price manipulation and violating the political funds act.

Prosecutors will appeal against the two not-guilty verdicts, media reports said.

The ruling, which can also be appealed by the former first lady, comes amid a series of trials following investigations into Mr. Yoon’s brief imposition of martial law in 2024 and related scandals involving the once-powerful couple.

The position of first lady does not come with any formal power allowing involvement in state affairs, but she is a symbolic figure representing the country, the lead judge of a three-justice bench said.

“A person who was in such a position might not always be a role model, but the person must not be a bad example to the public,” he said in the ruling.

The court ordered her to pay a 12.8 million won ($8,990) fine and ordered the confiscation of the diamond necklace. Ms. Kim has been held in detention since August while she was being investigated by a team led by a special prosecutor.

Prosecutors had demanded 15 years in jail and fines of 2.9 billion won over all the accusations she faced.

The court cleared Ms. Kim on charges of manipulating stock prices and violating political funding laws.

Ms. Kim had denied all the charges. Her lawyer said the team would review the ruling and decide whether to appeal the bribery conviction.

Ms. Kim, clad in a dark suit and wearing a face mask, was escorted by guards into the courtroom at the Seoul Central District Court and sat quietly while the verdict was delivered.

Supporters of Mr. Yoon and Ms. Kim, who braved freezing temperatures outside the court compound, cheered after the not-guilty verdicts on two of the charges were delivered.

The Unification Church said the gifts were delivered to her without expecting anything. Its leader Han Hak-ja, who is also on trial, has denied that she directed it to bribe Ms. Kim.

SHAMAN, POLITICAL BROKER
Ms. Kim had drawn intense public scrutiny even before her husband was elected president in 2022 over questions about her academic records and lingering suspicion that she had been long involved in manipulating stock prices.

Her alleged association with a political broker and a person known as a shaman also drew public criticism that the two may be unduly influencing the former first couple.

Mr. Yoon, who was ousted from power last April, also faces eight trials on charges including insurrection, after his failed bid to impose martial law in December 2024.

He has appealed against a five-year jail term handed to him this month for obstructing attempts to arrest him after his martial law decree.

At a separate trial this month, prosecutors have sought the death penalty for  Mr. Yoon on the charge of masterminding an insurrection. The court will rule on the case on February 19.

Mr. Yoon has argued it was within his powers as president to declare martial law and that the action was aimed at sounding the alarm over the obstruction of government by opposition parties. — Reuters

US calls Taiwan ‘vital partner’ after high-level tech and AI talks

PEOPLE AND CARS can be seen passing Taipei 101 in Taipei, Taiwan, April 17, 2025. — REUTERS/ANN WANG

TAIPEI — Senior Taiwanese and US officials discussed cooperation in artificial intelligence (AI), tech and drones at a high-level forum begun during the first Trump administration, with the US State Department praising Taipei as a “vital partner.”

The US is Taiwan’s most important international backer and arms supplier despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties. The US-Taiwan Economic Prosperity Partnership Dialogue first took place in November 2020.

In a statement on Tuesday, the State Department said the sixth round of talks took place, led by Under Secretary for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg and Taiwan Economy Minister Kung Ming-hsin, who is visiting the US.

The two sides signed statements on the Pax Silica Declaration — a US-led initiative to secure AI and semiconductor supply chains — and US-Taiwan cooperation on economic security, the State Department said.

“Taiwan is a vital partner on these and other important economic initiatives, and its advanced manufacturing sector plays a key role in fueling the AI revolution,” it added.

The talks also featured exchanges on supply chain security, including how it relates to AI, certification on drone components and cooperation on critical minerals, the State Department said.

“Discussions focused on highlighting progress in responding to economic coercion, pursuing mutual cooperation in third countries and addressing tax-related barriers to increase investment between the United States and Taiwan,” it said.

Taiwan, a major producer of advanced semiconductors that power AI, has long pushed for an agreement to avoid double taxation, saying it would boost bilateral investment.

In a separate statement, Taiwan’s economy ministry said both sides agreed that peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait are “crucial to global economic security and prosperity.”

Taiwan and the US also discussed undersea cable security, low Earth orbit satellite cooperation and the training of high-tech talent, it added.

Taiwan has accused China of being involved in damaging undersea telecom and internet cables, which Beijing denies, and is expanding the use of low Earth orbit satellites for backup communications should China sever the cables during an attack on the island.

Taiwan and the US earlier this month reached a deal to cut tariffs on Taiwan’s exports to the US and boost Taiwanese investment in semiconductors and other sectors in the country.

China routinely objects to any interactions between Taiwanese and US officials, saying Taiwan is an internal affair and a red line that Washington should not cross.

Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only the island’s people can decide their future. — Reuters

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