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Possession author A.S. Byatt, 87

A-S-Byatt —PENGUIN.CO.UK

LONDON — Booker-prize winning British novelist Antonia Susan Byatt, known most commonly as A.S. Byatt, has died aged 87, her publisher said in a statement on Friday.

Ms. Byatt, whose career spanned nearly 60 years, was best known for her 1990 novel Possession: A Romance. She was the sister of the novelist Margaret Drabble, and the siblings drew parallels with the Brontes, a comparison they tended to spurn.

Her publisher Chatto & Windus, part of Penguin Random House, described her as “one of the most significant writers and critics of our time.”

“She died peacefully at home surrounded by close family,” it said in a statement. “Antonia had a remarkable mind which produced a unique creative vision.”

A mother of three daughters, Ms. Byatt was struck by tragedy when her only son Charles was killed crossing the road in the week of his 11th birthday.

Ms. Byatt was born on Aug. 24, 1936, in the northern English city of Sheffield and was educated at a Quaker school in nearby York. She studied at Cambridge and Oxford before going on to teach English and American Literature in London from 1972.

Her first novel Shadow of a Sun was published in 1964, and told the story of a young girl growing up in the shadow of a dominant father.

More works followed, some of them frantically written in university vacations. Ms. Byatt eventually gave up teaching to write full time in 1983.

Seven years later came her breakthrough with Possession, which became a bestseller and won the coveted Booker Prize for Fiction the same year.

The tale, an academic treasure hunt which pits a wicked US biographer armed with a check book against a downtrodden English scholar, was seen by critics as a move away from the style of her earlier works to a more commercial approach.

Possession was made into a feature film starring Gwyneth Paltrow and her next book, Angels and Insects, also made it to the silver screen.

Ms. Byatt won a number of awards and titles including a CBE (Commander of the British Empire) and DBE (Dame of the British Empire).

She courted controversy in 2003 when she questioned adults reading the hugely successful Harry Potter books by JK Rowling.

“Ms. Rowling’s magic world has no place for the numinous. It is written for people whose imaginative lives are confined to TV cartoons, and the exaggerated … mirror-worlds of soaps, reality TV and celebrity gossip,” she wrote. — Reuters

Inflation comeback in Japan prompts investors to tear up old playbooks

WIKIPEDIA.ORG

LONDON/TOKYO — Global inflationary forces are finally seeping into Japan’s economy after decades of falling prices, forcing investors to radically rethink their Japan bets as the Bank of Japan (BoJ) considers a major policy shift.

International investors, who have long favoured stocks benefiting from Japan’s aging population or a weakening yen, are tearing up their playbooks to focus on expected higher interest rates, more generous dividends and a revival in consumer spending.

The policy switch has been slow in coming but could herald an entirely new way of investing in Japan if a predicted long-term inflation rate of 2% in 2024 really happens.

Japanese shoppers who no longer expect prices to keep falling may make big purchases. If the BoJ pulls interest rates above zero for the first time in years, banks’ lending margins could rise.

Japanese stock markets have already rallied to around their highest since 1990, with consumer and financial stocks outperforming domestic indexes. On the downside, inflation creates a bleak outlook for Japanese government bonds (JGB).

“Interest rate policy is undergoing a historic change,” said Shigeka Koda, chief executive of the $500-million Singapore-based hedge fund Four Seasons Asia Investment.

“Something new is in the offing.”

BANKS UPSTAGE CREMATORIA AND CAKE-MAKING ROBOTS
Japan’s aging demographic has made a Japanese crematorium company one of the top picks for foreign investors, with its shares up almost 700% in five years.

Koda’s top positions have included the crematorium operator — Kosaido Holdings — as well as Rheon Automatic Machinery, which sells cake-making robots to help food manufacturers deal with a shrinking workforce.

But in August, for the first time in the 17-year history of his fund, Koda picked a Japanese bank, Kyushu Financial, as his largest position, because he believes Japanese interest rates will rise.

Steve Donzé, deputy head of investment at Pictet Asset Management in Tokyo, said he had also been buying Japanese bank stocks.

For Junichi Inoue, head of Japanese equities at Janus Henderson, consumer businesses with the pricing power to increase revenues and profits by passing higher energy and food costs on to customers were the focus.

“I do like convenience stores,” he said. “Margins have really been going up, earnings have been good — positively surprising.”

NEW DYNAMIC?
Japanese wages, adjusted for inflation, fell in the 18 consecutive months to September. But big employers are expected to agree bumper pay hikes in the spring.

“You really need to see services inflation come through in order for inflation to be sticky, and that’s driven by wages,” said, James Halse, portfolio manager at Platinum Asset Management in Sydney.

Data out on Friday is expected to show core consumer prices accelerated again in October, staying above target for a 19th straight month.

Global fund managers are the most positive on Japanese stocks since March 2018, a Bank of America survey published on Nov. 14 showed. And Warren Buffett is buying.

Japan’s Topix index, one of the key indexes on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, has jumped 26% this year, helped by corporate governance reforms.

David Hogarty, senior portfolio manager at Dublin-based KBI Global Investors, said he had turned positive on Japan partly because higher inflation would pressure companies to boost dividend payouts.

“Typically, if you increase your dividend in inflationary times, people like that,” he said, noting Japan currently has the highest dividend growth globally at about 20% year on year.

BOND PAIN
Japanese inflation means bond investors could suffer. Rising inflation reduces the appeal of fixed interest-paying bonds.

The BoJ has also long supported the bond market by buying government debt to cap yields and suppress domestic borrowing costs. But investors are cautious about this so-called yield curve control policy ending as the BoJ is forced to tighten monetary policy.

Inflation “probably isn’t transitory” for Japan because it had not been in the United States or Europe, said Jon Day, global bond portfolio manager at Newton Investment Management.

“And of course the bond market isn’t fully priced for it.” The five-year JGB yield is around 0.35%. Even a long-term inflation rate of 1% in Japan would make that a “terrible return,” Mr. Day said.

US Treasuries are facing a third year of hefty price falls after aggressive Federal Reserve tightening took rates to 5.25%-5.5%. At minus 0.1%, the BoJ is the only major central bank with negative rates.

GrÈgoire Pesques, CIO for fixed income at Europe’s largest fund manager Amundi, said he holds a short position on the 10-year JGB as he expects yields to rise from around 0.8% currently, as bond prices fall.

Rising yields could finally lift a battered yen.

The yen, which surged to 133 per dollar in December 2022 when the BoJ hinted it would review yield-curve control, dropped as low as 151.92 last week.

“The direction of travel is clear and away from unsustainably easy (monetary) policy,” Pictet’s Mr. Donzé said, forecasting “a stronger currency as we move into 2024.” — Reuters

PHL startups seen optimistic despite talent, capital hurdles

FREEPIK

MANY STARTUPS in the Philippines remain optimistic about their prospects despite facing talent and capital challenges, according to industry players.

“The startup ecosystem is persisting amid these headwinds,” Katrina R. Chan, executive director at IdeaSpace Investments and QBO Innovation Hub, told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of the Philippine Startup Week 2023 press conference on Tuesday.

“The people and the government are already paying attention, but in times like these, it’s really about synergistic collaboration and executing plans, policies, and incentives,” she added, emphasizing the importance of opening access for all local startups.

Ms. Chan noted strengthening business education, funding mechanisms, mentoring programs, and international exposure opportunities as key ingredients for growing the local industry.

“We want more people driving the future of the economy,” she said, emphasizing the expansion of investors’ valuations and advocating for multiple kalabaw, not just one unicorn.

Startup investment in Southeast Asia declined after an uptick in 2021, as reported by Deal Street Asia and Kickstart Ventures. The first quarter of 2022 recorded about $5 billion in deals, down from a peak of $8 billion in the fourth quarter of 2021.

Startup tech fundraising declined this year due to adverse market conditions, according to Gobi-Core Philippine Fund, which provides early-stage venture capital.

In its Philippine Startup Ecosystem Report, Gobi-Core said that the year-to-date fundraising in the Philippines is running 40% below the year-earlier level.

“It was super high during the pandemic, given the urgent demand for digital solutions,” Ms. Chan said regarding the current decline in investments, causing a conservative stance for investors.

“It has become more level-headed now, and it’s not something to be scared about,” she added.

Gobi-Core identified the five biggest challenges that founders or startup owners face as inadequate infrastructure, talent and manpower shortages, government and regulatory hurdles, access to funding, and cultural challenges.

Ana Yang-Calubad, founder of enterprise software-as-a-service (SAAS) startup Britana, urged the government to make it easy for aspiring and existing startups to run their businesses through streamlined processes and tax incentives.

Dennis Velasco, founder and chief executive officer of the real estate SAAS startup Prosperna, said fostering global partnerships among startups is one of the vital strides the local industry needs to take. “This is going to make the Philippines an exciting [investment] place in the next 10 years.”

Beyond top-down support, Mr. Velasco added the need for bottoms-up initiatives at the local government unit (LGU) level. “We need to help them understand programs and initiatives for business sustainability and give them access to our tools and services.”

Lorena Flores, founder of the digital community hub startup Hey Roomie, said startups should be seen as an opportunity or an extra arm for LGUs to extend their services. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

AIA Philippines selects new CEO as Ang retires

AIA PHILIPPINES has selected a new chief executive officer (CEO) after incumbent CEO Kelvin Ang announced his retirement.

AIA Singapore’s former chief customer and digital officer Melita Teo will replace Mr. Ang starting Jan. 1, subject to regulatory approvals, AIA Philippines said in a statement on Monday. Mr. Ang will stay as advisor to the CEO until Feb. 29.

Ms. Teo has held various positions in strategy and planning, business development, corporate solutions and operations in AIA since joining the group in 2001.

“I’m excited to be joining the AIA Philippines team. These are exciting times for our business. Powered by the legacy of our 76 years in the market and the strength of the AIA Group, we are well positioned to bring Filipinos the best AIA has to offer. Our recent acquisition of Medicard furthers our ability to help more customers address their health and protection needs,” Ms. Teo said.

AIA Philippines in March completed its acquisition of health maintenance organization MediCard Philippines, Inc. after securing all the required regulatory approvals. The company did not disclose the value of the acquisition.

Meanwhile, Mr. Ang will leave the company after 26 years. He previously held leadership positions in AIA in Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, and China.

“It has been quite a journey for me working these past five years alongside our people and partners at AIA Philippines, through the challenges of a worldwide pandemic and back to regaining our footing thereafter. I will leave with a grateful heart knowing that we have done much to bring more focus on the importance of protection…,” he said.

AIA Philippines’ premium income stood at P3.88 billion in the first quarter, Insurance Commission data showed. It posted a net loss of P1.11 billion in the period.

Vista Land sets rates for fixed-rate bonds

VILLAR-LED property developer Vista Land & Lifescapes, Inc. (VLL) has set the interest rates of its bond offering as part of its funding initiatives.

In a regulatory filing on Tuesday, VLL said the interest rate for its peso-denominated fixed-rate bonds is at 7.5426% per annum with a tenor of three years due December 2026 Series F, and a 7.6886% interest rate per annum with a tenor of five years due December 2028 Series G.   

On Nov. 20, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued the VLL’s certificate of permit to offer securities for sale. 

The offering consists of P6 billion with an oversubscription option of up to P4 billion, which is the first tranche of the company’s three-year P35-billion fixed-rate bond offering.

According to VLL, the bonds will be offered from Nov. 21 to 29 and will be issued on Dec. 6. 

The joint issue managers, joint lead underwriters, and joint bookrunners are China Bank Capital Corp., SB Capital Investment Corp., and Union Bank of the Philippines.

Picazo Buyco Tan Fider & Santos serves as VLL’s counsel while Romulo Mabanta Buenaventura Sayoc & de los Angeles serves as counsel to the joint lead underwriters and joint bookrunners.

“VLL has been rated AAA by Credit Rating and Investors Services Philippines, Inc. (CRISP), while the bonds have been rated PRS Aaa by the Philippine Rating Services Corp. (PhilRatings), which are both the highest ratings assigned by PhilRatings and CRISP,” the company said.

VLL is tycoon Manuel B. Villar, Jr.’s listed holding firm engaged in developing residential subdivisions and construction of housing and condominium units.

For the nine months through September, VLL logged a 70% jump in net income to P8.2 billion from P4.82 billion last year as the company’s consolidated revenue rose 18% to P27.4 billion.

“We are delighted with our results, as we remain optimistic with the industry for the rest of the year with the strong gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 5.9% coupled with sustained growth in overseas Filipino remittance and revenge spending from consumers, all of which contributed to the positive performance of the group,” Mr. Villar said.   

Shares of VLL at the local bourse rose two centavos or 1.22% to P1.66 apiece on Tuesday. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Privacy body sheds light on dark patterns

BENJAMIN DAVIES-UNSPLASH

The National Privacy Commission (NPC) recently issued NPC Advisory No. 2023–01 dated Nov. 7 entitled “Guidelines on Deceptive Design Patterns” (Guidelines). The Guidelines serve to apprise data subjects about the use of Deceptive Design Patterns (DDPs), also called Dark Patterns, in order to obtain their consent.

Under the Data Privacy Act (DPA), the processing of personal information is allowed when the data subject has freely given his or her consent. Consent is not freely given when there is an element of pressure, intimidation, the possibility of adverse consequences for refusal to give consent, or any other inability to exercise free will.

DDPs refer to design techniques embedded on an analog (offline point of interaction) or digital interface that aim to manipulate or deceive the data subject to perform a specific act relating to the processing of their personal data. DDPs may force or mislead the data subject to consent to the processing of his or her personal information when in fact he or she does not intend to. The consent given may thus be considered to be vitiated and, therefore, the processing of information is unlawful.

The NPC further categorizes DDPs into either Appearance-Based DDPs or Content-Based DDPs. Appearance-Based DDPs refer to design patterns that manipulate or deceive a data subject through the display or presentation of information. This may take form in the use of an interface that makes it easy for the data subjects to give consent, such as an enormous and bright colored “I Agree” button, while making it hard for them to withdraw their consent, i.e., hidden option to withdraw consent with repeated “Are you sure?” prompts.

Content-Based DDPs, on the other hand, refer to design patterns that manipulate or deceive a data subject through the actual contents, including the language and context, of the information made available to them. An example of this is when data subjects are persuaded to take the “best alternative” which, in fact, is the most prejudicial to their privacy, or those that use ambiguous, complex, or confusing language to obtain their consent.

Children, as well as the elderly, are the most vulnerable to DDPs. In a case before the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) (In the matter of Epic Games, Inc., Docket No. C-4790), the FTC ordered Epic Games, Inc., the maker of the popular Esports game Fortnite, to pay $245 million for its use of DDPs in Fortnite for deceiving consumers (mostly children) to make unintended purchases. Some of the DDPs reported to the FTC include designs where the checkbox and text are too small, leading the consumer to subscribe to continuous transactions instead of limiting the transaction to a single purchase; the game page design where the notification that in-game purchases are incorporated is discreetly positioned way below the page; and the interface where the refund request is placed in the settings menu which is far removed from the purchase menu as well as requiring several unnecessary steps to process refunds, discouraging consumers from pursuing them.

For the processing of personal information based on the data subject’s consent, what is proper is that the consent must be obtained from, and may be withdrawn by, the data subject through a user interface that provides a concise statement in clear, plain, consistent, and straightforward language with respect to the personal data to be processed, nature, purpose, extent, duration, and scope of processing for which consent is used as basis, risks and safeguards involved, the identity of the Personal Information Controller, the existence of data subject’s rights, and how these rights can be exercised.

At the end of the day, even if data protection safeguards are strictly upheld and remedies are readily available, data subjects must always be extra careful of the transactions that require them to provide personal information, whether such information refer to them or to other people.

This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not offered and does not constitute legal advice or legal opinion.

 

Andrew Stephen S. Lota is an associate of the Intellectual Property department of the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW).

aslota@accralaw.com

8830-8000

Shakira reaches deal to avoid $15 million tax fraud trial in Spain

SHAKIRA — WIKIPEDIA

BARCELONA — Colombian pop star Shakira on Monday reached a settlement to avoid a trial in Barcelona over charges she failed to pay €14.5 million ($15.7 million) in Spanish income tax between 2012 and 2014, arguing it was triggered by personal reasons.

As part of the deal, she accepted the charges and a fine of half the amount owed, more than €7.3 million.

She also accepted another fine of €438,000 to avoid a three-year prison sentence, the judge said during the trial’s first hearing.

“This decision to reach a deal responds to personal, emotional and sentimental reasons that have nothing to do with legal (reasons),” Ms. Shakira said in a statement released by her Spanish communication agency, adding she was ready to defend her innocence but decided to prioritize her career and kids.

“I have reached the conclusion that winning is not a victory if the price is that they rob you of so many years of your life,” she said.

“Do you recognize the facts and conform with the new penalties that have been requested?” asked Judge Jose Manuel del Amo Sanchez at the start of the trial.

“Yes,” Ms. Shakira responded softly, wearing a pink suit matching her pink handbag.

She arrived minutes before the start of the trial accompanied by her lawyers, amid a media frenzy and the support of some fans outside.

On Thursday night, Ms. Shakira won two Latin Grammy awards in Seville.

Previously, the “Hips Don’t Lie” singer, who also has a second tax fraud investigation pending with Spanish authorities, had vowed to fight what she called false accusations.

The prosecutor’s office was seeking up to eight years in prison and to claim back the taxes it says she owes.

It alleged that Ms. Shakira spent more than half of each of the years in question in Spain and was therefore ordinarily resident in the country. It also said that a Barcelona property she bought in May 2012 served as a family home.

“It is logically a ruling of conformity that involves a recognition of the facts. But the decision has been motivated by personal issues,” Miriam Company, one of Shakira’s lawyers, told reporters outside the courthouse.

She said the legal team was convinced it could prove Ms. Shakira’s innocence but that the circumstances had changed.

Ms. Shakira, 46, lived with former Barcelona and Spain soccer star Gerard Pique for 11 years and the couple have two children. The singer, whose full name is Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, moved to Miami after their separation.

Spanish authorities have pursued other major celebrities over tax evasion, including soccer players such as Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo, Argentina’s Lionel Messi, and Brazilian-Spanish player Diego Costa. All settled and paid large fines.

Bayer Leverkusen coach Xabi Alonso refused to settle and eventually won a trial against the tax agency. Spain’s Supreme Court last month upheld his acquittal. — Reuters

How PSEi member stocks performed — November 21, 2023

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, November 21, 2023.


Philippines lags in e-mobility readiness list

The Philippines placed 34th out of 35 countries after scoring 28 out of 100 in the 2023 Global Electric Mobility Readiness Index (GEMRIX) by consultancy firm Arthur D. Little. The index assesses a country’s preparedness and progress toward electromobility (e-mobility) or adoption of electric vehicles (EVs). The GEMRIX score ranges from 0 to 100, where 100 means that internal combustion engines and EVs are at the same level in terms of acceptability, affordability, and availability.

 

Philippines lags in e-mobility readiness list

Prices increasing for 152 Christmas-feast items

PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said prices rose for 152 items typically consumed during the Christmas feast, known in the Philippines as the Noche Buena, with cheese products leading the increase.

Assistant Trade Secretary for Consumer Protection Group Amanda F. Nograles said the majority of stock keeping units (SKUs) saw their prices raised by 1-5%.

Some 83 SKUs posted 1-5% increases, while 37 items became 6-10% more costly. The prices of 32 items were raised over 10%.

The DTI posts a price guide in the runup to the holidays, with this year’s edition listing 240 SKUs.

Prices were left unchanged for 34 SKUs, while 21 items recorded a decrease in price.

“It will be difficult to establish a trend because SKUs which had an increase and decrease are seen across all the 12 categories of the price guide,” Ms. Nograles said at a briefing on Tuesday.

“But the largest increase was seen in cheese products… other products that increased include sandwich spread, ham, fruit cocktail, queso de bola (Edam-style cheese), and mayonnaise,” she added.

Ms. Nograles said that the price increases were mainly due to the higher price of raw and packaging materials, as well as increasing power and distribution costs.

Prices were left unchanged for Virginia Brick Ham and Pear Shaped Ham, which had suggested prices of P198 per 500 grams and P345 per kilogram, respectively.

“In the Noche Buena Price Guide 2023, we would like to emphasize that our consumers are given the option for their noche buena meals,” Ms. Nograles said.

“Unlike the previous years, the DTI took a more proactive role this year by actively engaging all manufacturers of noche buena items and asking them to participate in the price guide,” she added.

Earlier this month, the DTI asked manufacturers and retailers of prime commodities to hold off price increases until the end of the year.

“Currently, 63 requests for price adjustments have been filed with the DTI, but we are currently in talks with them and most of them have committed to not raise their prices until Dec. 31,” Ms. Nograles said.

Separately, Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual said the department is currently studying the state of competition in consumer products.

“I want to study to what extent competition in the consumer products market is happening in the Philippines,” he added.

He said that the study will determine whether an amendment to the Price Act is necessary and possibly determine the future of the suggested retail price (SRP) system.

“We want to pursue this study to explore whether the SRP does not promote competition (and to address) the notion that the government is interfering in the workings of the free market,” Mr. Pascual said. — Justine Irish D. Tabile 

GOCC regulator seeks power to levy sanctions via charter amendments

By Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson, Reporter

THE Governance Commission for GOCCs (GCG) said it will propose amendments to its charter next year which would give it the power to sanction the companies it oversees.

“We were created under Republic Act No. 10149 but there’s something missing in our charter. We don’t have coercive power; our powers are mostly advisory,” GCG Chairman Marius P. Corpus told reporters on Monday.

“If there are GOCCs (government-owned and -controlled corporations) that are underperforming and refusing to comply with our regulations, we don’t have any disciplinary authority,” he added.

Mr. Corpus said the amendments will give the GCG power to sanction GOCCs or their officials.

“We also intend to upgrade the positions in the GCG. Our staff is often pirated by other GOCCs. We are constrained as a regular National Government agency; compared to GOCCs, their benefits are better,” he added.

Mr. Corpus said the draft proposal will likely be submitted next year. “Might be too late to get an amendment now from the (current Congress). We’ll go through the process, and if it isn’t finished, we can have it refiled at the next Congress,” he added.

Earlier this year, the GCG proposed to be given the power to consolidate, rationalize, and integrate GOCCs into National Government agencies.

Meanwhile, Mr. Corpus said that the GCG is still studying the proposed merger of Land Bank of the Philippine (LANDBANK) and the Development Bank of the Philippines.

“It’s a big endeavor, very complicated. We tried to consult with the other National Government agencies. They all gave their comments, but considering the enormity of the endeavor, I said let’s be careful on this. They are asking for a timeline but if we give a timeline, that’s not advisable, (better) to be cautious and prudent about it,” he said.

Finance Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno has said that the merger is expected to be completed by the first half of 2024.

“There are pros and cons. There are favorable comments and justifications, but there are also possible problems that may arise if the merger goes through. We are actually (organizing) technical working groups with other agencies concerned,” he added.

The merger, which would leave LANDBANK as the surviving entity, will create the sole authorized government depository bank.

PSEi rebounds after Wall Street climb, BoP data

BW FILE PHOTO

PHILIPPINE SHARES rebounded on Tuesday as investors took cues from US markets’ performance and the release of October external payments data.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index climbed by 25.20 points or 0.4% to finish at 6,208.83 on Tuesday, while the broader all shares index increased by 9.28 points or 0.28% to close at 3,314.60. 

“The index returned above the 6,200 level as a relatively benign market environment, an overnight rally in US shares, and a favorable auction of 20-year US Treasuries spurred bargain hunting in local equities,” China Bank Capital Corp. Managing Director Juan Paolo E. Colet said in a Viber message. 

Wall Street’s three major stock averages closed higher on Monday, with Nasdaq’s 1% rally leading the charge, as heavyweight Microsoft hit a record high after it hired prominent artificial intelligence executives, Reuters reported.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 203.76 points or 0.58% to 35,151.04; the S&P 500 gained 33.36 points or 0.74% at 4,547.38; and the Nasdaq Composite added 159.05 points or 1.13% at 14,284.53.

“The local bourse gained… following the US markets overnight amid the signs of a slowdown in the US inflation. The positive sentiment was further fueled by the recorded surplus in the Philippines’ balance of payments (BoP) in October, indicating potential support for the peso, which has been gaining strength recently against the US dollar,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Research Analyst Claire T. Alviar added in a Viber message. 

The Philippines’ country’s BoP surplus widened to $1.5 billion in October from $711 million in the same month a year ago, data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on Monday showed.

For the first 10 months, the BoP position stood at a $3.2-billion surplus, a turnaround from the $7.1-billion deficit in the same period a year ago.

The BSP expects the country’s BoP position to end the year at a $127-million deficit.

Sectoral indices were mixed on Tuesday. Financials went up by 17.54 points or 1.01% to 1,751.42; industrials climbed by 83.05 points or 0.95% to 8,760.74; and services increased by 14.01 points or 0.93% to 1,507.42.

Meanwhile, property fell 18.64 points or 0.7% to 2,640.56; mining and oil dropped 4.57 points or 0.04% to 9,446.33; and holding firms declined by 1.91 points or 0.03% to 5,939.74. 

Value turnover rose to P3.91 billion on Tuesday with 422.56 million issues changing hands, from the P3.73 billion with 690.86 million issued recorded on Monday. 

Declines edged out advancers, 86 versus 80, while 43 issues closed unchanged.    

Net foreign buying stood at P120.35 million on Tuesday, a turnaround from the P105.9 million in net selling recorded on Monday. 

“The 6,200 to 6,250 area is a strong resistance zone, so we need to see more buying at these levels to build a case for a fresh rally,” Mr. Colet said. — R.M.D. Ochave with Reuters

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