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Fury knocked down but beats Ngannou on a split decision

WBC heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury beat former UFC fighter Francis Ngannou on a split decision in a non-title fight in Saudi Arabia on Sunday that almost delivered one of boxing’s biggest upsets.

Mr. Fury, unbeaten holder of one of the sport’s most prestigious belts, narrowly avoided a first defeat at the hands of a 37-year-old opponent who had never boxed professionally before but went through the full 10 rounds with some swagger.

Mr. Ngannou dropped the Briton to the canvas in round three with a left hook and although the 35-year-old self-styled “Gypsy King” was able to see out the round he had no doubts about what he was up against.

“That definitely wasn’t in the script,” said Mr. Fury after two of the judges gave him the win 96-93 and 95-94. The third judge scored it 95-94 in favour of his Cameroon-French opponent. — Reuters

Bulls campaign

Heading into the Bulls’ match against the Pistons yesterday, there was no indication that Zach LaVine would be the first in the National Basketball Association to put up 50 on the scoreboard for the season. In fact, he failed to reach even 20 in his first two outings. The day before, he had just eight in 38 minutes on the floor, managing to hit just three of 14 attempts, including none of six from three-point range. And he was actually a question mark prior to tipoff due to back spasms. As he argued, though, “you know me. I’m going to play.”

LaVine getting his touch back is, to be sure, good news, never mind that his 51 on 33 shots came with zero assists; he had his eyes on iron from the get-go, save for a scoreless second quarter that the Bulls lost by 10. The bad news is that they suffered their second setback in three matches all the same; for all his offensive prowess, he was a telling negative-eight in the 37 minutes he burned rubber. To be fair, only starter Patrick Williams had a favorable plus-minus rating of the 10 who saw significant action.

It’s far from fair to draw conclusions from a mere week’s worth of contests. Between now and April, the Bulls certainly have ample time to get their acts together. And it’s not as if they’re strangers; the core has been around for the last two years. In the other hand, there’s a reason they held a closed-door meeting that excluded head coach Billy Donovan after their opener, and that their lone victory to date came on overtime, and only after the referees botched a couple of calls that should have gone the Raptors’ way in regulation.

Considering that the front office spared no expense in the offseason to retain vital cogs, there must have been something it saw in the Bulls’ 2022-23 campaign that gave it confidence in its decision. Yet, there can be no glossing over the results; they finished 10th in the Eastern Conference, had two fewer triumphs than setbacks, and could not even move past the play-in tournament. In view thereof, it was no surprise to detect a hint of desperation in LaVine’e voice as he surveyed the immediate past. “We talk all the time,” he noted in the aftermath of his virtuoso feat, “but we have to figure out how to make this work.” He couldn’t have understated the obvious any better.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Israel warns of ‘long and hard’ war against Hamas

Smoke rises over Gaza, as seen from Israel’s border with Gaza, in southern Israel Oct. 28, 2023. — REUTERS

JERUSALEM — Israeli forces waged ground operations against Hamas in Gaza on Sunday in what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the second phase of a three-week-old war aimed at crushing the Palestinian militant group.

Gaza’s besieged residents had faced a near-total communications and Internet blackout as Israel’s warplanes dropped bombs and its troops and armor pushed into the Hamas-ruled enclave, with Israeli military chiefs signaling they were gearing up for an expanded ground offensive.

The disruption of communications impacted rescue operations as people hit by Israeli air strikes could not call for help. However, several Palestinian media outlets reported early on Sunday that phone and internet communications were returning gradually in Gaza.

Netanyahu warned Israelis to expect a “long and hard” campaign but stopped short of calling the current incursions an invasion. Some of U.S. President Joe Biden’s aides have advised Israeli counterparts to hold off on an immediate all-out assault, U.S. officials have said.

Even as initial ground operations appeared limited for now, Netanyahu pledged to spare no effort to free the more than 200 hostages, including foreigners, held by Hamas.

“This is the second stage of the war whose goals are clear – to destroy Hamas’ governing and military capabilities and to bring the hostages home,” Netanyahu told a news conference on Saturday.

“We are only at the start,” he said. “We will destroy the enemy above ground and below ground.”

Israel has tightened its blockade and bombarded Gaza for three weeks since the Islamist group Hamas’ devastating Oct. 7 attack. At least 1,400 Israelis were killed in the deadliest day of the nation’s 75-year history, Israeli authorities said.

Western countries have generally backed what they say is Israel’s right to self-defense. But there has been a mounting international outcry over the toll from the bombing and growing calls for a “humanitarian pause” to allow aid to reach Gaza civilians and ease the humanitarian crisis.

Thousands of Gaza residents broke into warehouses and distribution centers of the United Nations Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) grabbing flour and “basic survival items”, the organization said on Sunday.

“This is a worrying sign that civil order is starting to break down after three weeks of war and a tight siege on Gaza,” UNRWA said in a statement.

Medical authorities in the Gaza Strip, which has a population of 2.3 million people, say 7,650 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s campaign to obliterate the Iran-backed militants.

President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Palestinian Authority governs parts of the occupied West Bank while Hamas rules Gaza, said: “Our people in the Gaza Strip are facing a war of genocide and massacres committed by the Israeli occupation forces in full view of the entire world.”

Three Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank overnight, the Palestinian health ministry said on Sunday.

With many buildings in Gaza reduced to rubble and shelter hard to find, residents are short of food, water, fuel and medicines.

“God help anyone under the rubble,” said one Gaza journalist, who spent a terrifying night in a building stairway as bombs fell and Israeli forces appeared to exchange fire with Palestinian fighters.

Israel’s chief military spokesperson declined to say whether Israel had been behind the telecommunications blackout but said it would do what it needed to protect its forces.

Israel sent troops and tanks into Gaza on Friday night, focusing on infrastructure including the extensive tunnel network built by Hamas, the Israeli military said. It provided no details on the size of the deployment.

Netanyahu on Saturday reiterated Israel’s call for Palestinian civilians to evacuate the northern Gaza Strip where Israel was focusing its attack on what it was were Hamas hideouts and other installations.

‘HUMANITARIAN CATASTROPHE’
But Palestinians say nowhere is safe, with bombs also smashing homes in the south of the densely populated territory.

“A humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in front of our eyes,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said. The U.N. Security Council plans to meet on Monday on the Israel-Gaza crisis, diplomats said.

Palestinian officials said around 50,000 people were taking shelter in the Gaza Shifa Hospital and said they were concerned about ongoing Israeli threats to the facility.

Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk offered his SpaceX’s Starlink satellite network to support communications in Gaza for “internationally recognized aid organizations”. Israel responded that it would fight the move, saying Hamas would “use it for terrorist activities”.

Netanyahu, who met with hostages’ families on Saturday, said contacts to secure their release would continue even during a ground offensive and that military pressure on Hamas could help bring them home. He did not elaborate.

Qatar-mediated negotiations between Israel and Hamas continued but at a much slower pace than before Friday’s escalation in Gaza, a source briefed on the talks said.

Hamas’ armed wing said its fighters battled Israeli troops in northeastern and central Gaza. “Al-Qassam Brigades and all Palestinian resistance forces are fully prepared to confront the aggression with full force and thwart the incursions,” it said. — Reuters

As digital nomads flock to Lisbon, Portugal’s youth are leaving in droves

EVERY YEAR almost half of Portugal’s graduates leave in search of better work and living conditions elsewhere in Europe. — BLOOMBERG

FOR A COMPANY that operates from what is regularly dubbed the digital nomad capital of Europe, Banco Comercial Portugues SA is having a surprisingly difficult time recruiting young people with numeracy and tech skills.

Portugal’s biggest publicly traded lender needs engineers, mathematicians and digital marketers to help build out its internet banking platform, but a brain drain in the decade since the country’s sovereign debt crisis has left the country short of young talent. Every year almost 40% of the nation’s graduates leave in search of better work and living conditions elsewhere, according to Business Roundtable Portugal, a group of the country’s biggest private companies.

“It’s not just hard to recruit new employees, there’s also difficulty in retaining people,” Banco Comercial Chairman Nuno Amado said in an interview in Lisbon. “It’s very hard to hire for most areas related to digital.” A spokesperson said separately that the company is recruiting about 100 roles a year in areas including technology and data science.

The irony is that the Portuguese government has been doing a good job in recent years of attracting people from abroad to live in the country, but its policies may have exacerbated the hiring problems. A 20% flat tax for non-habitual residents — combined with the nation’s warm climate and attractive coastline — has made the country a hotspot for remote workers and wealthy retirees, who have helped push up housing costs, making it unattractive for young graduates to stick around. That tax break, given for 10 years to people who hadn’t been resident in the country five years prior, was recently scrapped in a bid to cool property prices.

Although Portugal’s case is extreme, it serves as a warning for other European nations as they battle to retain young talent amid a surge in living costs. Residential housing prices have skyrocketed across the continent’s biggest cities in recent months, exacerbated in many places by an influx of remote workers and government policies aimed at drawing in wealthy individuals.

Employers say it’s getting to a point where they’re becoming critically short of entry-level recruits. Vasco de Mello, chairman of the Jose de Mello Group, a family-owned holding company that runs Portugal’s biggest network of private hospitals, called the situation “demographic hell” in recent comments to Bloomberg, while Antonio Amorim, chief executive of Corticeira Amorim SA, the world’s biggest producer of cork products, warned at a conference in Lisbon earlier this year that companies will have to move elsewhere if the youth drain continues.

Portugal has the eighth highest emigration rate as a proportion of population in the world, with about 25% of its population living abroad, data compiled by the Emigration Observatory in Lisbon shows. Rui Pena Pires, who heads the group, estimates that a person with qualifications is two or three times more likely to leave Portugal than someone without any skills. Most qualified workers go to the UK, Ireland, Belgium and other northern European countries, he said.

“Some of the best students from the top universities in Portugal aren’t interested in job opportunities here,” said Filipa Leite de Castro, a partner at Argo, a Lisbon-based recruitment company. Earlier this year, one of the country’s biggest banks hired Argo to find a data engineer with less than three years of work experience. It took six months to find a suitable candidate, Leite de Castro says.

A major problem is competition from bigger companies based elsewhere in Europe offering higher salaries, clearer career paths and often lower taxes. Portugal operates a progressive tax regime from 14.5% to 48%, but since average salaries are among the lowest in western Europe, skilled workers tend to face steeper tax increases than their counterparts in wealthier parts of the continent. Banco Comercial’s Amado says that when companies raise salaries to try to compete, their workers end up getting stung with a tax hike that wipes out a large chunk of the pay increase.

“It’s extremely difficult to return to Portugal, unfortunately. I’ve tried,” said David Pereira de Castro, 31, a PhD fellow at Copenhagen Business School and chairman of the SPOT Nordic Association, which represents Portuguese researchers and professionals in Nordic countries. The number of Portuguese in Denmark has doubled to 6,000 in the past four years, according to Pereira de Castro. Most are young and qualified, and many work in science-related jobs.

In Copenhagen, Mr. Pereira de Castro earns about €4,200 ($4,400) a month before tax and says he’d be making about half that in Lisbon, with similar outlays for housing. That means he has more left over at the end of each month to put into savings. “I’ve been investing in the place I’m going to move to in Portugal when I retire,” he said.

The government announced measures earlier this month that it hopes will encourage young people with higher education to stay in the country, including increasing income tax breaks on the first five years of graduates’ careers and reimbursing university fees of those who begin their careers in Portugal. Both are due to come into effect next year. Other recent proposals include free childcare, support to pay rent and raising entry-level salaries for public sector workers.

Bank of Portugal Governor Mario Centeno argued in an article published on the central bank’s website in September that the country is not “destined for emigration” and that better-paid jobs are being created. Wages are set to increase 16% by the end of 2025, according to central bank forecasts, and youth unemployment, which surged to about 40% during the euro zone crisis in 2012, has dropped to 17%. Some 500,000 new positions were added in the country between 2015 and 2022, Finance Minister Fernando Medina said in July.

Current students aren’t optimistic that much will have changed by the time they finish university. David Rodrigues, an undergraduate studying aerospace engineering at the University of Lisbon’s prestigious school of engineering and technology, says more than half of his classmates, including himself, plan to look for work elsewhere when they graduate. “If you want to grow you need to leave,” Mr. Rodrigues said.

Catarina Pescada, 18, a first-year undergraduate student at the ISEG Lisbon School of Economics and Management says there’s no incentive to stay because there are no well-paid jobs in Portugal.

“We just need to pack our bags and leave, hoping to save enough money to return to Portugal when we retire,” Mr. Pescada said. — Bloomberg

Former US VP Pence drops out of Republican presidential campaign

MICHAEL RICHARD PENCE — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

LAS VEGAS — Former US Vice President Mike Pence ended his cash-strapped presidential campaign on Saturday, after struggling for months to convince Republican voters he was the best alternative to the man he once served with unswerving loyalty, Donald Trump.

Mr. Pence’s surprise announcement at the Republican Jewish Coalition donor conference in Las Vegas made him the first big-name candidate to drop out. Mr. Trump is the runaway frontrunner in the race.

“Traveling over the country over the past six months, I came here to say it’s become clear to me: This is not my time. So after much prayer and deliberation, I have decided to suspend my campaign for president effective today,” Mr. Pence told the audience to gasps and, later, prolonged claps and cheers of support.

Mr. Pence stopped short of endorsing anyone in his speech but seemed to swipe at his former boss.

“I urge all my fellow Republicans here, give our country a Republican standard bearer that will, as Lincoln said, appeal to the better angels of our nature,” Mr. Pence said, adding it should also be someone who leads the country with “civility.”

A source close to Pence laughed when asked whether he would endorse Trump.

At a rally later on Saturday, Mr. Trump said Mr. Pence should endorse him because he had a “great, successful presidency… I chose him, made him vice president.” But, Mr. Trump added, “people in politics can be very disloyal.”

A spokesperson for Mr. Pence did not immediately respond to a request for comment on his endorsement plans.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and Mr. Trump did not mention Mr. Pence in their speeches at the donor conference. Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, who was Mr. Trump’s ambassador to the U.N., praised Mr. Pence as a fighter for America and Israel.

Mr. DeSantis later posted on social media platform X that Mr. Pence was a “principled man of faith.”

More candidates might soon follow Mr. Pence in dropping out, consolidating the wide field of contenders. With more than a half dozen candidates, donors seeking alternatives to Mr. Trump have been reticent to open their pocketbooks.

Mr. Trump’s lead is so large it may not matter, however, and contenders also might decide to stay in for longer. No clear-cut alternative has emerged since the DeSantis campaign has languished after a disappointing start.

Mr. Pence, 64, publicly broke with Mr. Trump, lambasting the former president for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the US Capitol. Mr. Pence gambled that Republican primary voters would reward him for following the US Constitution rather than Mr. Trump’s instructions to overturn the 2020 election results when as vice president, he held the ceremonial role of president of the Senate.

But Trump’s base of supporters never forgave Pence for overseeing the certification of Democrat Joseph R. Biden’s election.

Mr. Trump has built one of the biggest primary leads in US electoral history, according to opinion polls. They show most Republican voters have embraced, or do not care about, Mr. Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was stolen from him and his efforts to overturn the result.

Pence announced his White House bid in June but has failed to attract enough primary voters and donors to sustain a candidacy that has languished in the low single digits in polls.

A stolid campaigner short on charisma, Mr. Pence was low on cash by October. He failed to catch fire in the first Republican nominating state of Iowa despite spending time and resources there.

Mr. Pence’s third-quarter fundraising totals on Oct. 15 showed his campaign was $620,000 in debt, with only $1.2 million cash on hand. That was far less than several better-performing Republican rivals and insufficient for a White House race.

In several past elections, former vice presidents have succeeded in becoming a major party’s White House nominee, including Republican George H.W. Bush in 1988 and Democrat Al Gore in 2000. Mr. Biden himself was vice president to Barack Obama.

But Mr. Pence could not overcome the political juggernaut of Trump, along with rivals who appealed more to primary voters and donors, including Haley and Mr. DeSantis.

Mr. Pence ran as a traditional social and fiscal conservative, and a foreign policy hawk, calling for increased military aid to Ukraine and cuts in welfare spending. His brand of Republicanism has been eclipsed in the Trump era by full-throated populism and “America First” isolationism. — Reuters

Home countries of major rainforests agree to work together to save them

PHOTO COURTESY OF GREGG H. YAN FOR UNDP BIOFIN

BRAZZAVILLE — Countries that are home to the world’s three major rainforests agreed on Saturday to cooperate to overcome deforestation and safeguard biodiversity but fell short of a concrete alliance to protect the vital carbon sinks.

The announcement came on the final day of the Congo Republic-hosted Three Basins summit, which brought together presidents, NGOs, technical experts, and finance sector officials to strengthen governance and preservation of the Amazon, the Congo basin, and forests in Southeast Asia.

The countries recognized the importance of cooperation and agreed to develop ways to protect the forests in a seven-point plan.

“We’ve realized that joining forces is an absolute necessity, and we’ve recognized that the initiative to unite the three basins is part of an inevitable dynamic,” said Republic of Congo environment minister Arlette Soudan Nonault.

There is an urgent need for action. The basins are home to two thirds of Earth’s biodiversity, but rapid destruction is releasing planet-warming carbon dioxide and imperilling global climate targets.

Deforestation increased 4% worldwide in 2022, according to an October report showing countries went further off track from pledges made at the 2021 U.N. climate talks to halt and reverse loss and degradation by 2030.

Over the three days of the summit in Brazzaville, experts and policymakers from countries with tropical forests discussed shared priorities ahead of the U.N. COP28 climate talks next month. They examined different funding mechanisms to help developing countries preserve their important ecosystems.

On the sidelines, Congo Republic signed a roadmap for a forest partnership with the European Union that aims by 2030 to increase the amount of its protected, restored or sustainably managed forests, create more forest-related jobs, and curb the rate of forest loss.

Environmental organizations said governments must go further than Saturday’s agreement.

“More efforts will be needed to enhance concrete collaboration between the three regions to foster real action to halt deforestation,” the World Wildlife Fund said in a statement. — Reuters

Metrobank’s Q3 profits jump 38.7% to P10.89 billion

BW FILE PHOTO

METROPOLITAN Bank & Trust Co. (Metrobank) announced on Friday that its attributable net income for the third quarter (Q3) rose by 38.7% to P10.89 billion from P7.85 billion in the same period the previous year.

“The sustained growth of the bank shows that we remain strong and resilient despite the unpredictable market conditions. We will continue to work on keeping our sound capital and liquidity positions as we look for more market opportunities,” Metrobank President Fabian S. Dee said in a statement.

The bank’s performance in the third quarter raised its attributable net income for the nine-month period to P31.8 billion, a 35.6% increase from P23.4 billion a year earlier.

Metrobank said this was due to its “asset expansion, improving margins, and healthy non-interest income growth as asset quality continued to improve.”

This translated to a return on average equity of 12.8%, up from the 10% recorded in the same period a year prior.

It also led to a return on average assets of 1.46%, up from 1.19% a year ago.

Meanwhile, its net interest income went up to P26.7 billion in the July to September period from P22.3 billion year on year.

The bank’s net interest margin stood at 3.93% at end-September, up from 3.52% a year prior.

Meanwhile, other income jumped to P8.02 billion in the third quarter from P4.9 billion a year ago.

As a result, the bank’s cost-to-income ratio stood at 51.5% from 54.5% a year ago.

“The robust 21.9% growth in revenues outstripped the 15.1% increase in operating expenses. Higher transaction-related taxes, technology related costs and capacity expansion were the key drivers of cost growth,” Metrobank added.

Metrobank’s total loans grew by 7.1%, driven by the 16.5% rise in consumer loans and 4.8% increase in commercial loans.

Net credit card receivables jumped by 29.5% and auto loans rose by 21.6%.

Its nonperforming loan (NPL) ratio improved to 1.7% from 2.1% a year ago, as the bank “continued to practice prudence to maintain the quality of its portfolio.”

On the funding side, deposits expanded by 14.5% year on year to P2.3 trillion, with low-cost current and savings accounts making up 59.2% of the total.

Metrobank’s total consolidated assets stood at P3 trillion.

Total equity reached P342.2 billion.

Its capital adequacy ratio stood at 18.42%, up from 17.2% a year prior, while its common equity Tier 1 ratio was at 17.59%, also higher than the 16.34% seen last year.

Meanwhile, its liquidity coverage ratio stood at 48.89%.

Metrobank shares closed unchanged at P52 apiece on Friday. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

As baby boomers retire, German businesses turn to robots

REUTERS

BERLIN – At machine parts producer S&D Blech, the head of the grinding unit is retiring. With Germany’s acute labor shortage leaving few candidates to take on the skilled but dirty and hazardous manual work, the company will replace him with a robot.

Other small and medium-sized companies are also turning to automation as the gradual exit from the workplace of Germany’s post-war “baby boom” generation tightens the labor squeeze.

Some 1.7 million German jobs were unfilled in June, official data shows. The German Chambers of Commerce and Industry (DIHK) says more than half of companies are struggling to fill vacancies, at an estimated cost to growth in Europe’s largest economy of nearly 100 billion euros ($109 billion) per year.

Managing director Henning Schloeder cited that trend to explain S&D Blech’s push over several years towards automation and digitalization, saying: “This will further aggravate the already difficult skilled labor situation, particularly in production and crafts.”

Finding a new head of the grinding unit was hard “not only because of all the experience he has, but also because it’s a back-breaking job that no one wants to do any more”, Schloeder told Reuters.

Machine-grinding involves high heat and continuous noise, while the sparks it throws out can be dangerous.

More women working and a surge in immigration have helped compensate for demographic changes in recent years in Germany.

But with baby boomers retiring and a new cohort – much smaller, due to low birth rates – joining the labor force, the Federal Employment Agency expects the pool of workers to shrink by 7 million people by 2035.

With similar shifts affecting other developed economies, the impact of advanced automation technologies from robotics to AI will be widely felt, said Nela Richardson, chief economist at global payrolls and HR services provider ADP.

“Long term, all those innovations are a game-changer for the world of work. Everybody will do their job differently,” she told Reuters.

Heavy investment in automation by car makers and other industrial giants means Germany is already the world’s fourth-biggest market for robots, and the largest in Europe.

But as robots become cheaper and easier to operate, the often family-run Mittelstand companies that are the country’s economic backbone are also using them, from manufacturers like S&D Blech to bakeries, laundries and supermarkets.

According to the International Federation of Robotics around 26,000 units were installed in Germany last year – a figure surpassed only in 2018, before the COVID-19 pandemic slowed what had been an average of 4% annual growth.

“Robots enable the survival of companies that see their future at risk due to staff shortages,” said Ralf Winkelmann, managing director of FANUC Germany, which sells about half its Japanese-made robots to small and medium-sized enterprises.

Ralf Hartdegen, whose consulting firm guides firms through this type of transition, said companies keen to automate but reluctant to fire people were increasingly basing their plans around the shedding of workers through retirement.

Family-run ROLEC, which produces systems to protect industrial electronics and control equipment, bought its first robot last year, to allow production to continue at night. The company has already acquired a second machine and plans to continue investing in automation.

“It is great when you turn on the light in the morning and the parts are in the storage container and have been processed,” CEO Matthias Rose told Reuters.

Increasing automation also reflects the fact that robots have become easier to use, with no programming skills required. Most now come with a Human Machine Interface, a touchscreen similar to a smartphone, said Florian Andre, a co-founder of SHERPA Robotics, a start-up that focuses on companies with between 20 and 100 employees.

Even workers and trade unions, once fearful of job losses, take an increasingly positive view. A survey published by robots marketplace automatica in June found nearly half of German employees see robots as helping to address labor shortages.

ROLEC’s Rose said its initial venture into automation in 2022 had come as a big backlog of orders meant employees had to work overtime and on Saturdays. “It was a good starting situation for our first robot, as it was seen as a helper instead of as competition,” he added.

A spokesperson for Germany’s powerful IG Metall trade union said robots adopted as part of a long-term corporate strategy, rather than to cut costs quickly, can help make work “healthier, more interesting and safer”.

Lorry and bus manufacturer Daimler Truck makes extensive use of robotics, particularly to help with heavy lifting and other challenges to workers’ physical health.

“But there is nothing more flexible than a human,” said Matthias Krust, head of the company’s works council.

“The more complex the production, the more differentiated, the harder it becomes to use robots.” — Reuters

Rising prices seen to influence brand choices as Filipinos boost holiday food spending — Kantar

A couple shops at a supermarket in Makati City. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ RUSSELL PALMA

Filipinos are expected to spend more on food and beverage items again this holiday season despite economic challenges, according to marketing data and analytics company Kantar.

Data from Kantar Philippines, released on Thursday, showed a 7% spending uplift in fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) from December last year to January, versus the rest of the year.

The food and beverage categories saw an 11% and 9% spending increase, respectively, Kantar said in an e-mailed statement. Spending on dairy products also grew by 6%.

“While the Christmas spirit is felt as early as September, Christmas spending in the FMCG segment typically starts in December when Filipinos receive additional disposable income through 13th month bonuses and other incentives,” said Nino C. Nierva, account director at Kantar Philippines Worldpanel Division.

“Despite economic challenges, families will continue with their Noche Buena and Media Noche traditions but with compromises in their brand choices,” he said on persisting value-consciousness among consumers to cope with rising prices and enjoy the celebrations.

Headline inflation accelerated to 6.1% in September from 5.3% in August but slowed from 6.9% in September 2022, preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority showed.

The heavily weighted food and non-alcoholic beverages index rose to a seven-month high of 9.7% in September from 8.1% in August. Food inflation alone soared to 10% from 8.2% a month ago.

“Inflation continues to impact FMCG in terms of pack size and brand choices,” Kantar said. “Household strapped for cash may downsize or buy less quantity of holiday meal staples… and may choose to purchase more affordable brands.”

Mr. Nierva suggested retailers to release holiday promotions or bundle packs, helping consumers save this season.

Kantar noted shopping basket staples that registered growth in December last year, which include spreads (34%), canned fruits (25%), alcoholic beverages (24%), noodles and pasta sauces (21%), lechon sauce (17%), condensed milk (9%), mayonnaise (8%), and all-purpose cream (6%).

On average, Filipinos spend P1,309 per month in sari-sari stores during the holidays, while seven in 10 households spend P1,559 in hyper and supermarkets, Kantar said.

Additionally, Kantar said Christmas baskets or boxes typically include the following FMCG products: pasta, pasta sauce, canned meats, biscuits and other snacks, instant coffee, cheese, canned fruits, sweets and even personal care items like soap.

Kantar Philippines based its findings and analyses on the spending habits of over 5,000 Filipino households. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

Philippine small businesses increasingly turn to marketing automation — study

SNOWING-FREEPIK

There is a growing interest in marketing automation technologies among small businesses in the Philippines, a study by a web hosting and entrepreneurial aid company showed.

The GoDaddy 2023 Data Observatory showed that 56% of Philippine small business respondents embrace marketing automation, which is on par with the 57% global average, it said in its second set of findings released on Thursday.

They used automated tools for reporting and analytics (62%) and customer behavior tracking (59%) to leverage insights for informed decision-making, it added.

For companies that develop or sell marketing automation tools, the data suggests a robust market potential in the Philippines.

“It is clear that respondents believe that having a comprehensive digital marketing strategy is essential for future success,” Selina Bieber, vice president for international markets at GoDaddy, said in an emailed press statement to reporters.

“We encourage them to build a strong online presence to help their business grow,” she added.

The survey found that 65% of Filipino small business owners are keen to sell their products and services online, which is way past the global average of 53%.

It also noted online marketing investments as an increasing priority among respondents, with 85% planning to advertise on social media platforms, 70% seeing to create a responsive website design, and 69% intending to monitor page traffic.

With digitalization efforts ongoing for smaller enterprises, 34% of respondents have mentioned plans to build their own business website in the next three months, while 55% aim to do it next year, the report said.

Benefits of having a website-powered online presence pointed out by respondents included a better showcase of products and services (75%), enhanced visibility (72%), more information about their target audience (72%), exploring new sales channels (71%), and attracting new target audiences (70%), the report said.

The GoDaddy 2023 Data Observatory was conducted globally in March, surveying 4,682 small business owners with one to 50 employees, including the Philippines. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

‘Hot money’ swings to outflow in September

United States one-dollar bills are seen in this Nov. 14, 2014 file photo — REUTERS

More short-term foreign investments exited the Philippines in September, after three straight months of net inflows, as uncertainties in the economy dampened investor sentiment.

Data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), released on Thursday, showed transactions on foreign investments registered with the central bank through authorized agent banks (AABs) posted a net outflow of $698 million in September.

The net outflow during the month was a reversal from the $153.46-million net inflow in August. It was also significantly higher than the $367.3-million net outflow in September 2022. These foreign investments are often called “hot money” because they can easily and quickly enter and exit an economy.

Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces attributed the hot money net outflows in September to market concerns about rising inflation and expected rate hikes from the BSP.

Headline inflation accelerated to 6.1% in September from 5.3% in August. This marked the 18th straight month that inflation exceeded the central bank’s 2-4% target.

Year to date, inflation averaged 6.6%, higher than 5.1% in the same period a year ago and still above the BSP’s recently revised 5.8% forecast for 2023.

The BSP opted to keep the benchmark interest rates unchanged at 6.25% at its September policy meeting. However, markets were already penciling in more rate hikes from the central bank, amid the BSP chief’s hawkish signals and rising inflationary pressures.

Mr. Roces said investors were also worried about the coming third-quarter gross domestic product data, which will be released on Nov. 9.

A resilient US economy and uncertainties in the foreign exchange market also dampened investor sentiment in September, he added.

BSP data showed gross inflows of hot money went down by 0.5% to $887.6 million in September from $891.9 million a year earlier.

The top five investor economies during the month included the United Kingdom, Singapore, the US, Luxembourg, and Switzerland, which accounted for 88.5% of foreign portfolio investment inflow.

Most of the investments went into Philippine Stock Exchange-listed securities of companies involved in banks, holding firms, property, food, and utilities companies. The rest were invested in peso government securities.

Meanwhile, gross outflows rose by 26.2% to $1.59 billion in September from $1.26 billion a year ago.

“The US remains to be the top destination of outflows, receiving $1 billion (or 63.6%) of total outward remittances,” the BSP said.

For the nine months to September, BSP-registered foreign investments yielded a net outflow of $386.79 million, a reversal from the $221.6-million net inflow in the same period last year.

Mr. Roces said the outlook for short-term investments remains “cautious.”

“Persistent inflationary pressures, along with a slowing economy, are likely to maintain a tight monetary policy, that could make the Philippines less attractive for hot money,” he said.

“Additionally, external risks such as fluctuations in global oil prices and geopolitical tensions could further deter short-term inflows,” he added.

The Philippine central bank expects foreign portfolio investments to yield a net inflow of $2 billion in 2023 and $3 billion in 2024. -– Keisha B. Ta-asan

DITO continues winning streak at Opensignal Mobile Network Experience Awards

The fastest-growing telco provider in the country, DITO Telecommunity once again proved its exceptional services as independent mobile analytics company Opensignal awarded DITO with four awards — Games Experience, Upload Speed Experience, Availability and Consistent Quality — October 2023 Philippines Mobile Network Experience Awards* showed.

DITO was declared superior in Games Experience. This award measures how mobile users experience real-time multiplayer mobile gaming on an operator’s network. It also analyzes how mobile network conditions such as latency, packet loss, and jitter affect users’ multiplayer mobile gaming. On this note, DITO scored 63.1 points, dominating the two major telco providers, with Smart scoring 61.7 points and Globe scoring 60.7 points.

DITO also maintained its superior positions on Upload Speed Experience, Availability, and Consistent Quality. On Upload Speed, DITO’s score skyrocketed to 6.3Mbps, beating its previous score of 5.2Mbps. For the Consistent Quality Award, DITO again ranked first with a rating of 57.9%, beating Smart’s and Globe’s scores by 4.1 and 8.2 percentage points, respectively. This award measures how subscribers enjoy seamless standard-definition video streaming, web browsing, email use, and photo-sharing.

In terms of Availability, DITO remained outstanding with 98.6%, providing the most available network connection in various places where people commonly go, thus allowing users to access DITO’s network and stay connected more of the time.

These accolades attest to the company’s continuous efforts in ramping up its 5G infrastructures. Despite being a newcomer in the telco industry, DITO’s presence is indeed highly felt and recognized globally.

The company stays committed to uplifting telecommunities through its affordable, reliable, and high-speed connectivity.

Opensignal is the leading global provider of independent insights and data integrating network experience and market performance across converged, wireless, and broadband operators.

To learn more about DITO, visit https://dito.ph/.

* Opensignal Awards – Philippines: Mobile Network Experience Report October 2023, based on independent analysis of mobile measurements recorded during the period July 1– September 28, 2023 

© 2023 Opensignal Limited.

 


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