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Arts & Culture (01/14/26)


PPO opens the year with Preludi

THE Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra (PPO) is scheduled to present PPO Concert V: Preludi on Jan. 16, 7:30 p.m., at the Samsung Performing Arts Theater in Circuit, Makati. Under the baton of PPO music conductor and principal conductor Grzegorz Nowak, the program will feature soprano Andion Fernandez and pianist Szymon Nehring. Tickets are available via https://premier.ticketworld.com.ph/shows/show.aspx?sh=PPOCON526.


Talk on PHL clothing and craftsmanship

DR. STEPHANIE COO is set to discuss how clothing becomes a tool of power and resistance in colonial Philippines in the talk “Threads of Empire: Fashion, Power, and Resistance in Colonial Philippines.” The event is open to all curious and interested in Philippine material culture, craftsmanship, and the living histories embedded in art and clothing design. It will take place on Jan. 21, 2 p.m., at the National Museum of Fine Arts’ auditorium. Pre-registration is required through https://forms.gle/QBXQaYwWB1waXoFu9.


MSO holds benefit concert at Proscenium Theater

THE Manila Symphony Orchestra (MSO) is having a special benefit concert titled Legacy, featuring two pianists — Carmen Sipin-Aspiras and Inna Montesclaros — under the baton of Darrel Ang. It is slated for Jan. 25, 7:30 p.m., at the Proscenium Theater, Rockwell, Makati. The special evening will feature works of Johannes Brahms and Frederick Chopin. It is for the benefit of the MSO Foundation’s Basilio Manalo Scholarship Program, supporting the next generation of young Filipino musicians. Tickets are available via TicketWorld.


Poklong Anading showcases artist-run initiatives

FILIPINO contemporary artist Poklong Anading is presenting a collection of unrealized and abandoned ideas in #AVoidWork. The project showcases his interviews with key individuals in artist-run initiatives and self-organized models, namely Surrounded by Water, Big Sky Mind, Green Papaya, Junk Shop, Future Prospects, Lost Frames, Spare Bedroom, Art School Now Salon, Golden Cargo Gallery, Bastards of Misrepresentation, and the Museum of Mental Objects. #AVoidWork will be on view from Jan. 28 to Jan. 30, 12 p.m., at the Ideation Room at The Atrium @ Benilde of MCAD, 1040 Arellano Ave. corner Ayala St., Malate, Manila. Interested participants may e-mail mcad@benilde.edu.ph.


Bagets The Musical opening week cast schedule revealed

NEWPORT WORLD RESORTS has released the cast performance schedule for shows from Jan. 23 to Feb. 1, giving audiences a heads up on who they will be seeing on stage. Andres Muhlach as Adie, Ethan David as Arnel, Milo Cruz as Tonton, Jeff Moses as Topee, and Tomas Rodriguez as Gilbert are performing on Jan. 23 at 8 p.m., Jan. 25 at 3 p.m., and Jan. 31 at 3 and 8 p.m. Mico Chua takes on the role of Adie alongside KD Estrada as Arnel, Migo Valid as Tonton, Sam Shoaf as Topee, and Noel Comia, Jr. as Gilbert in performances set for Jan. 24 at 3 and 8 p.m., Jan. 30 at 8 p.m., and Feb. 1 at 3 p.m.. The production’s gala night performance on Jan. 29 at 8 p.m. features Mr. Muhlach, Mr. Estrada, Mr. Cruz, Mr. Moses, and Mr. Rodriguez.


Imelda Cajipe Endaya exhibit opens at Silverlens

THIS MONTH, Imelda Cajipe Endaya has an exhibition at Silverlens. Titled Kahapon Muli Bukas, the show situates her work Filipina DH alongside more recent mixed media works, which tackle issues ranging from the struggle against religious oppression to the catastrophic effects of climate change in the Philippines. The pieces on display center on women across the country’s history. It is ongoing until Feb. 14 at Silverlens, 2263 Chino Roces Ave., Makati.


Jessica Zafra brings book club back

THE Jessica Zafra Book Club, a literary club moderated by Palanca-winning author and columnist Jessica Zafra, has returned. The annual project is back thanks to a partnership with bookstore Fully Booked. It is set to take place once every other month from February to December, from 4 to 6 p.m. at Fully Booked BGC’s U-View. The reading schedule is as follows: Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë on Feb. 7, El Filibusterismo by Jose Rizal on April 4, The Odyssey by Homer on June 6, Short Stories by Ted Chiang (Stories of Your Life and Others, and Exhalation) on Aug. 1, and Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez on Oct. 3. The book for December has yet to be revealed. Registration is required online.


ALT Collective goes to SMX MOA

ALT ART is set to mount its biggest edition yet with expanded exhibitions at a new venue, the SMX Convention Center, Mall of Asia (MOA) Complex in Pasay. It will open to the public on Feb. 13 to 15, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., and feature nine of the country’s top galleries: Artinformal, Blanc, The Drawing Room, Galleria Duemila, Finale Art File, MO_Space, Underground, Vinyl on Vinyl, and West Gallery. The fourth edition of the fair will have twice the floor area of its 2024 iteration and have sections like “Special Projects” and “Discoveries” dedicated to artists pushing conceptual possibilities and offering fresh perspectives in art. Tickets, available onsite, will be priced at P500 for the general public and P250 for students.


Manila Metropolitan Theater offers free guided tours

THE Manila Metropolitan Theater now offers free guided tours of its facilities. Taking place every third Sunday of the month, a guide from the National Commission on Culture and the Arts will take guests through the theater’s indoor and outdoor facilities. Social media posts from the Metropolitan Theater page will have a link for tour registration, with slots available on a first-come, first-served basis. Only 100 participants are allowed per batch. The January tours are fully booked, so stay tuned for next month’s batch.

10 reasons for removing VAT on electricity

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Macrovector_official from Freepik

Halfway into his term, President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. faces the weakest political position of his presidency. Approval ratings are at historic lows. Trust has collapsed. Disapproval now outweighs support in every major survey.

Filipinos are angry — and rightly so. Massive corruption scandals, the rising cost of living, especially food, the spate of disasters, excessive politicking, broken promises of reform. Filipinos wonder why should they continue to pay tax when corruption is so brazen and massive?

In short, in today’s Philippines, trust in government is the scarcest public good of all.

One way to recover that trust is to do one thing that people can see and feel immediately — by removing the 12% VAT on electricity. Marcos’ technocrats will push back — loss of tax revenue, it is regressive, broad-based VAT is more efficient, it undermines credit rating, targeting is better, and many more explanations. But they miss the real point. When your house is on fire, aanhin pa ang damo kung patay na ang kabayo*? We studied this issue and below are 10 reasons why Congress should remove VAT on electricity now.

1. The focus on headline revenue loss misses the real economic picture. Technocrats will likely argue that VAT removal will lead to a significant revenue loss for the government: the gross VAT revenue foregone — around P110 billion a year. That number is real — but it is not the whole story.

Removing VAT on electricity transfers that P110 billion back to households and firms as purchasing power. Much of that money will be spent, reinvested, and circulated through the economy by factor of about 1.3 times. Some returns will come through higher consumption, higher output, more competitive industries, and downstream tax collection.

The policy may not fully pay for itself — but it meaningfully reduces its own net cost. Treating VAT removal as money simply “lost” ignores these dynamics and leads to distorted fiscal judgments. It is good political optics for sure, but it is also good economics.

2. Concerns about regressivity are solvable through design. Technocrats will argue that VAT removal is regressive because higher-income households consume more electricity in absolute terms. But electricity is embedded in the price of everything, so lower power costs benefit poorer households indirectly as well.

Congress can make the policy explicitly progressive by exempting only a basic “lifeline” block of consumption from VAT. Poor design is not an argument against action — it is an argument for better legislation.

3. Broad based VAT is efficient. Economists will argue that a broad-based VAT is more efficient. That argument is weak when the taxed good is an inelastic necessity — like electricity — that underpins the entire economy. Households cannot meaningfully reduce consumption without sacrificing their welfare. Small businesses cannot substitute away from power without cutting output or jobs. A 12% VAT on electricity functions less like a neutral consumption tax and more like a penalty on living and working.

4. Philippine electricity is already expensive — VAT compounds an existing disadvantage. Filipino households and firms pay power prices comparable to Singapore and significantly higher than many Southeast Asian neighbors whose electricity is subsidized by their governments. In that context, VAT is not neutral. It compounds an existing competitiveness problem. It raises costs for manufacturers, service firms, and exporters before they even begin competing.

Power prices reflect many structural constraints — but VAT is not one of them. It is a policy choice, and one Congress can reverse immediately.

5. Better than ayuda** — no intermediaries, no discretion, no delay. Unlike cash transfers or subsidies that must be identified, approved, and distributed, VAT removal is automatic. Every household and every business sees it directly on their bill. In a moment when trust is badly damaged, that matters. This is precisely why it works politically and administratively: VAT removal cannot be captured, politicized, or quietly delayed. Moreover, ayuda is only for poor households. Struggling lower middle income households need as much relief as lower income households.

6. VAT removal lowers inflation where it hurts. Electricity enters inflation directly through household bills and indirectly through transport, food storage, retail, and services. Lower power costs reduce cost-push pressure across supply chains.

Even when headline inflation moderates, households still feel squeezed if bills remain high. People experience inflation through electricity statements, not through statistical averages.

7. Fiscal discipline and VAT removal are not mutually exclusive. This is not a binary choice between keeping VAT forever and blowing a permanent hole in the budget. Congress can design VAT removal responsibly: time-bound, with automatic reinstatement triggers tied to inflation or electricity prices, and with lifeline thresholds that protect basic household consumption while retaining VAT on higher usage. The Department of Finance will argue that VAT removal can undermine the country’s creditworthiness. This may be partly true but creditworthiness depends on credibility and design, not on rigid adherence to technocratic orthodoxy. A temporary, targeted, well-signaled reform does not threaten fiscal stability.

8. Universal relief restores tax morale better than selective subsidies. When citizens see corruption scandals and wasteful spending while necessities remain heavily taxed, compliance erodes. Filipinos rightfully ask why should they pay taxes that goes to the corrupt?

Removing VAT on electricity sends a powerful signal: the state will not balance its books on a basic need while citizens suffer from massive corruption. Over time, that perception of fairness strengthens voluntary compliance — the most valuable foundation of any tax system.

9. It shows the government understands the cost-of-living crisis. When trust in government is at rock bottom and citizens feel the government is manhid (numb), removing VAT shows empathy to their daily struggles. Any reduction in the cost of electricity is felt immediately and repeatedly. Few policies touch daily life as directly or as predictably. VAT removal is one of the few levers that can be pulled now, while longer-term fixes work through the system.

10. Aanhin pa ang damo kung patay na ang kabayo? Economists have an argument when they say that removing VAT leads to a loss of P110 billion in government revenues; it is regressive and there are better alternatives; it could lead to a credit downgrade, broad-based VAT is more efficient, etc. Well taken but none of these arguments matter when your house is on fire. Ask the Batangueño: “aanhin pa ang damo kung patay na ang kabayo?”

*A traditional Filipino saying — Why harvest hay when the horse is dead?

** Ayuda — assistance — referring to money or help doled out by the government or politicians.

 

Eduardo Araral, PhD is an associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore (NUS). This op-ed is written in his personal capacity. Dianne Araral was a teaching assistant at NUS and independent researcher and fellow at Terra.do.

MPower to supply power for Makati office tower under CREM

In photo are (L-R) Meralco Vice-President and MPower Retail Sales Head Eddie John V. Adug, Meralco Senior Vice-President and MPower Head Redel M. Domingo, Burgundy Corporate Tower Building Engineer Jorfel Lozano, and Burgundy Corporate Tower Property Manager Bernardo Ortiz-Luis.

MPOWER, the retail electricity supplier of Manila Electric Co. (Meralco), is set to provide the power supply requirements of a 38-storey office condominium in Makati City.

In a statement on Tuesday, MPower said it has signed power supply agreements with Burgundy Realty Corp. and Burgundy Corporate Towers Office Owners Association, Inc. to energize the property.

With the agreements, the building becomes the first customer to join the competitive retail electricity market (CREM) following the lowering of the eligibility threshold in June.

Last year, the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) approved lowering the minimum threshold for the retail market to 100 kilowatts (kW) from 500 kW.

“By joining CREM, we can explore cost saving options without requiring additional funding. Participating in this program and partnering with MPower will deliver meaningful cost savings for the building, making it a strategic and beneficial decision,” Burgundy Corporate Tower Property Manager Bernard T. Ortiz-Luis said.

With the planned transition, MPower said the establishment paves the way for other developments exploring smarter and more strategic energy solutions under the ERC’s new threshold.

“The lowering of the contestability threshold is a major step in expanding access to CREM, giving businesses greater flexibility and control over their strategies,” Meralco Senior Vice-President and Head of MPower Redel M. Domingo said.

“I’m thrilled that Burgundy Corporate Tower is leading the way as a pioneer, setting a strong example of forward-looking energy management while fully leveraging the benefits of increased market competition,” he added.

MPower serves contestable customers, including large corporations within Meralco’s franchise area, and currently holds more than a 25% share of the CREM within Meralco’s coverage.

Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Peso weakens further on geopolitical risks

BW FILE PHOTO

THE PESO weakened further on Tuesday to end near its record low following fresh tariff threats from US President Donald J. Trump and rising political risk in Japan.

The local unit closed at P59.341 versus the greenback, declining by 8.1 centavos from its P59.26 finish on Monday, data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines data showed.

This was its worst showing in nearly a week or since its all-time low close of P59.355 per dollar recorded on Jan. 7.

The peso opened Tuesday’s trading session slightly weaker at P59.28 versus the dollar. Its intraday best was at P59.26, while it dropped to as low as P59.36 against the greenback.

Dollars traded increased to $999.22 million from $887.3 million on Monday.

“The dollar-peso closed higher mainly due to geopolitical concerns after Trump said that any country that does business with Iran will get a 25% tariff,” a trader said in a phone interview.

The peso was also dragged by a weaker yen after signals from the camp of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi on a possible snap election next month, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

For Wednesday, the trader said the peso could weaken further and even test the P59.50 level as heightening geopolitical tensions may lead to safe-haven demand for the greenback.

For Wednesday, the trader expects the peso to move between P59.10 and P59.50 per dollar, while Mr. Ricafort sees it ranging from P59.20 to P59.40. — Aaron Michael C. Sy

HitPay, Primer partner to expand cross-border payments for MSMEs

STOCK PHOTO | Image by David Dvořáček from Unsplash

HITPAY, a Singapore-based payment platform, has partnered with payment infrastructure firm Primer to help Filipino micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) tap overseas markets by making cross-border transactions easier to manage.

Under the partnership, HitPay merchants can accept payments from customers in major markets such as the US and Europe using Primer’s global infrastructure. HitPay will continue to manage payment processing, compliance and settlement for merchants operating in the Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam and Malaysia.

HitPay is regulated by multiple authorities including the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, Monetary Authority of Singapore, Bank Negara Malaysia, Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre and the US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, giving merchants regulatory coverage across key markets.

MSMEs account for about 99% of businesses in the Philippines, but payment complexity has long limited their ability to sell abroad. HitPay said local firms have often treated overseas expansion as a lower priority due to fragmented payment systems and compliance hurdles.

“The Philippines is at a tipping point,” HitPay said in a statement, adding that simplifying access to international payments could help smaller businesses compete beyond the domestic market.

Across Southeast Asia, MSMEs represent about 97% of all businesses. The region’s cross-border e-commerce market is projected to exceed $76 billion (P4.5 trillion) by 2030 as merchants seek customers outside their home countries.

HitPay said the partnership lets merchants accept multiple currencies beyond Southeast Asia, while keeping payment performance aligned with local market conditions.

For sellers, this reduces the need to manage multiple payment service providers and navigate complex licensing requirements, which often slow expansion.

“Pairing HitPay’s regional depth with Primer’s global infrastructure creates a two-way expansion model,” Primer co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Gabriel Le Roux said. “It connects Southeast Asian merchants to the world, and global merchants to Southeast Asia.”

The deal also brings HitPay into the Primer for Partners Program, launched in December 2025. The program allows payment providers to build and manage their own integrations on Primer’s platform, making their services available to Primer’s merchant network while tracking performance across markets.

Primer said the partnership gives its merchants access to Southeast Asia’s fragmented payment landscape without the need for additional integrations. — B.M.D. Cruz

Foreign investments reach $642 million in October

NET INFLOWS of foreign direct investments (FDI) into the Philippines plunged nearly 40% year on year in October, as foreigners’ net investments in debt instruments slumped. Read the full story.

Paramount sues Warner Bros. for Netflix deal details, plans proxy fight

PARAMOUNT SKYDANCE on Monday sued Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) for more information on a rival $82.7-billion deal with Netflix, escalating a battle to take control of one of the most storied Hollywood studios.

The David Ellison-led company also said it planned to nominate directors to Warner Bros.’ board, in one of its most aggressive steps to convince investors that its $108.7-billion all-cash bid is superior to Netflix’s cash-and-stock deal.

Paramount and Netflix have been in a heated battle for Warner Bros., its prized film and television studios and its extensive content library, which includes Harry Potter and the DC Comics universe.

Warner Bros. last week rejected Paramount’s latest offer, advising shareholders to vote in favor of the Netflix deal.

In a letter to shareholders, Paramount also said it would propose an amendment to Warner Bros.’ bylaws that would require shareholder approval for any separation of the media giant’s cable TV business, which is key to the Netflix deal.

Paramount’s argument is that its all-cash bid of $30 per share for the whole of Warner Bros. is superior to Netflix’s cash-and-stock offer of $27.75 per share for the studios and streaming assets and will more easily clear regulatory hurdles.

Paramount filed the lawsuit in the Delaware Court of Chancery, seeking to force disclosure of the financial analysis behind the Warner Bros. board’s support for the Netflix merger.

‘RAISE THE BID. MONEY TALKS’
The CBS parent said last week the value of Warner Bros.’ cable spinoff was virtually worthless and reiterated its amended bid after another rejection from Warner Bros.’ board. With Monday’s lawsuit, Paramount has escalated its actions, but it has not yet increased the price it is willing to pay.

“I don’t think the lawsuit matters much. It would take ages to get through the court system if they full-on go that route,” Craig Huber, analyst at Huber Research Partners, said. “If they want Warner Bros. bad enough, raise the bid. Money talks.”

Warner Bros. has also said it will owe Netflix a $2.8-billion termination fee if it walks away from the agreement, part of $4.7 billion in extra costs to end the deal.

The amended proposal had included $40 billion in equity personally guaranteed by Oracle’s co-founder Larry Ellison, the father of Paramount Chief Executive Officer (CEO) David Ellison, and $54 billion in debt.

“WBD has provided increasingly novel reasons for avoiding a transaction with Paramount, but what it has never said, because it cannot, is that the Netflix transaction is financially superior to our actual offer,” Paramount wrote in the investor letter.

“Unless the WBD board of directors decides to exercise its right to engage with us under the Netflix merger agreement, this will likely come down to your vote at a shareholder meeting,” it added.

Paramount argued that the disclosure of Warner Bros.’ financial analysis is crucial for investors weighing whether to tender their shares to Paramount before the offer — which can be extended — expires on Jan. 21.

“Time is of the essence,” Paramount said in the lawsuit against Warner Bros., CEO David Zaslav, and key investor John Malone, among others. “Any decision concerning an extension will depend, in part, on the number of shares tendered.”

Warner Bros. said in a statement that the lawsuit was “meritless,” adding that Paramount had yet to “raise the price or address the numerous and obvious deficiencies of its offer.”

Netflix did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Shares of Warner Bros. were down 1.6% on Monday, while Netflix was flat and Paramount up 0.4%. — Reuters

Japan is right to rethink its immigration approach

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Fabrikasimf from Freepik

By Gearoid Reidy

THE WORLD can’t get enough of Japan. The feeling isn’t exactly mutual.

Amid a surge in arrivals of both migrants and tourists, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has made rethinking the agenda around foreign nationals one of her top priorities. A full plan will be announced this month, set to include stricter conditions for permanent residency and citizenship, pricier visa renewals, a tougher review of property purchases, and a higher departure charge.1

Since the issue first reared its head in last year’s elections, when a fringe party espousing “Japanese First” policies captured headlines, there have been cries that a country that once shut itself off to the outside world for centuries is retreating to xenophobia.

But Takaichi’s approach, far from cutting Japan off, is a necessary step to a future in which foreign labor will only become more important. By acknowledging now the reality of public unease over change, and formalizing systems that are far too ad-hoc, the country can avoid the divisive about-faces on immigration that have caused ructions in many Western countries.

Japan has an image as a place that’s nigh on impossible to move to. But in reality, its approach is often incredibly lax. Until last year, “business manager” visas allowing multi-year stays required seekers to have just $30,000 in capital. Naturalization applications are almost always granted, with just 5% rejected in 2024. There is no requirement to speak the native language to become a citizen or permanent resident; to naturalize in the US, you must not only pass an English test but also be able to answer questions including the date income taxes must be filed by and the names of the original 13 states.

This didn’t matter much when absolute numbers were low. But in the past decade, arrivals have surged as the population ages. The number of foreigners has doubled since 2012 to top 4 million. While it’s still just 3% of the population overall, in some municipalities it’s above 10%.

The issue has come to a head post-pandemic as, combined with increased numbers of tourists, the public began to notice the change. And with arrivals only likely to increase — some suggest that one in 10 of the population could be foreign-born by 2040 — this is a chance to discuss how the country should look.

The slowly-does-it approach has allowed Japan to observe the mistakes of other countries that flew headlong into mass migration and are now having to reverse course. The UK’s Labor government has been forced to adopt far more aggressive language than Takaichi in an attempt to head off the threat of Nigel Farage’s Reform party. Germany, too, has been tightening its immigration framework in the face of the electoral threat from AfD, while the European Union recently adopted a stance on illegal immigration closer to what was once the province of the far-right. A decade ago, Japan was frequently criticized for “pulling up the drawbridge” by declining to accept large numbers of asylum seekers. Now, many of those same critics say that global refugee system itself must be scrapped. Mass migration has also not proved a panacea for declining fertility rates.2

The reality is that large-scale immigration is rarely popular with the electorate. A recent NHK poll found 70% approved of Takaichi’s steps. The prime minister has a chance to reshape policies to avoid a whiplash of an overly loose approach followed by a stringent crackdown.

Japan undoubtedly needs workers from abroad. I myself am an immigrant to the country, and recognize the need to supplement labor shortfalls; I also want to see it welcome more tourists — while charging them appropriately.

It’s reasonable to ask that immigrants obey the law, and set some limits to long-term residence in a wealthy country. Parties like the UK’s Reform may cynically exploit public unease, but not every policy that increases friction to immigration should be immediately labeled as racist. Higher visa fees are in line with peers, and a tool for a government that needs to raise more revenue. Takaichi is smart to acknowledge public concern on the subject given voters in other parts of the world, disenchanted with dawdling centrist politicians, have drifted toward far-right parties promising tougher measures.

At the same time, Takaichi’s policy bundle must include efforts to make it easier for foreigners to assimilate into society. It’s all well and good to link language requirements to longer visas, but the other side of the ledger must include Japanese training and schooling.

Foreigners in Japan often find they are exempt from many of its unwritten societal rules. But as the makeup of the country changes, it’s no harm to codify things a little more clearly.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

1The group in charge has the somewhat dystopian title of the Ministerial Council on the Acceptance of Foreign Nationals and the Realization of a Society of Well-Ordered and Harmonious Coexistence.

2Some studies suggest it may even worsen it.

How PSEi member stocks performed — January 13, 2026

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, January 13, 2026.


Stocks go down on profit taking before US data

REUTERS

PHILIPPINE STOCKS ended lower on Tuesday as investors pocketed their gains following the market’s three-day climb and awaited the release of key US data that could affect the US Federal Reserve’s policy decision this month.

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) went down by 0.17% or 11.20 points to close at 6,408.76, while the broader all shares index slipped by 0.07% or 2.75 points to finish at 3,638.38.

“The local market retreated ever so slightly after the three-day win streak, as investors await fresh leads,” AP Securities, Inc. said in a market note.

“The local market pulled back as investors took profits following three days of rallying. The market digested the Philippines’ October foreign direct investments (FDI) data, which posted a 40% decline in net inflows,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Research Manager Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said in a Viber message.

FDI net inflows dropped by 39.8% to $642 million in October from $1.067 billion in the same month in 2024, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported late on Monday.

For the first 10 months, net inflows fell by 24.5% to $6.179 billion from $8.184 billion in the comparable year-ago period.

“Investors are also waiting for the US December consumer price index (CPI) data, which is expected to provide clues on the Federal Reserve’s policy outlook,” Mr. Tantiangco added.

US consumer prices likely accelerated in December as some of the distortions related to the government shutdown that had artificially lowered inflation in November unwound, which would cement expectations of the US Federal Reserve leaving interest rates unchanged this month, Reuters reported.

The CPI likely increased by 0.3% last month amid higher food and energy prices, mostly electricity because of data centers, a Reuters survey of economists predicted. In the 12 months through December, the CPI is forecast to have increased 2.7%, matching November’s gain.

The Fed tracks the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price indexes for its 2% inflation target. The US central bank is expected to keep its benchmark overnight interest rate in the 3.5%-3.75% range at its Jan. 27-28 meeting.

Back home, most sectoral indices closed lower on Tuesday. Industrials fell by 0.55% or 50.97 points to 9,088.80; property decreased by 0.44% or 10.44 points to 2,336.77; financials went down by 0.21% or 4.60 points to 2,174.57; and holding firms retreated by 0.16% or 8.51 points to 5,018.4.

Meanwhile, mining and oil jumped by 2.09% or 359.21 points to 17,475.64; and services increased by 0.47% or 12.26 points to 2,575.43.

Advancers outnumbered decliners, 104 to 94, while 70 names closed unchanged.

Value turnover rose to P6.75 billion on Tuesday with 1.26 billion shares traded from the P6.64 billion with 1.02 billion issues that changed hands on Monday.

Net foreign buying decreased to P506.15 million from P534.17 million. — Alexandria Grace C. Magno with Reuters

Philippines: Chinese ships harassed fishing boat near Scarborough Shoal

A Philippine Coast Guard photo of the fishing boat allegedly harassed by Chinese vessels. — PCG

A PHILIPPINE fishing vessel was harassed by Chinese navy and coast guard ships near the disputed Scarborough Shoal on Monday, underscoring rising tensions in the South China Sea as Beijing asserts tighter control over contested waters.

A People’s Liberation Army Navy ship with bow number 621 and a China Coast Guard vessel approached the fishing boat at close range, within 30 meters, while blaring sirens in an apparent attempt to block its route toward fishing grounds west of the shoal, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) said in a statement on Tuesday.

The boat’s captain diverted southeast to avoid the ships but reported being closely trailed by the China Coast Guard vessel.

The PCG dispatched the multirole vessel BRP Cape San Agustin, which supplied the fishing boat with diesel, allowing it to continue its operations and head to Scarborough Shoal.

China’s Embassy in Manila did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Scarborough Shoal, known locally as Panatag, is claimed by both the Philippines and China. It is valued for its rich marine resources and strategic location near key shipping lanes.

China seized control of the shoal in 2012 after a standoff with Philippine forces, and has since maintained a presence through coast guard ships and fishing vessels, restricting Filipino access despite a 2016 United Nations-backed arbitral ruling that affirmed the area as traditional Philippine fishing grounds.

Rear Admiral Roy Vincent T. Trinidad, a Philippine Navy spokesman, described the incident as part of China’s “coercive and aggressive actions” meant to discourage Filipino fishermen. “These actions are designed to destroy the will to fish of our fishermen,” he said in a media briefing.

Admiral Ronnie Gil L. Gavan, PCG commandant, said the coast guard would continue safeguarding Filipino fishers. “We remain steadfast in defending the safety and maritime rights of our fishermen, in full accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS),” he said in the statement.

Mr. Trinidad said the Philippine Navy monitored 41 Chinese vessels across four disputed features during the first week of January.

At Scarborough Shoal, the navy spotted two Chinese warships, three coast guard ships and three maritime militia boats.

At Second Thomas Shoal, six coast guard vessels and eight militia ships were observed. At Sabina Shoal, three warships, six coast guard vessels, and four militia boats were present, while at Thitu Island, there were four coast guard and two militia vessels.

He noted that while the Chinese presence is significant, it remains within the normal range monitored by Manila.

“They are not yet threatening… these are still within the normal numbers that we track,” he said. He predicted that activity in 2026 would likely increase, reflecting a trend of growing Chinese deployment near contested features.

The Philippine National Maritime Council on Monday accused China of “persistent illegal, coercive, aggressive and deceptive activities” within Philippine waters.

“Filipino fishers are civilians lawfully pursuing their livelihoods,” the council said. “Protecting them is the responsibility of the state, not an act of escalation.”

In response, Beijing accused Manila of provoking tensions. Deputy Spokesperson Wei Guo said the Philippines “has time and again provoked trouble in an attempt to change the status quo,” misrepresenting Chinese activities as illegal.

He rejected the Philippine concept of a “maritime zone,” noting that the UNCLOS recognizes only territorial seas and exclusive economic zones (EEZ).

“For a long time, the Philippines has deliberately blurred the distinction between the territorial sea and EEZ, and has distorted China’s normal activities in waters claimed as EEZ by both countries as ‘illegal patrols,’” Mr. Wei said.

He added that China acted to safeguard its sovereignty while exercising restraint and remains open to dialogue with Manila.

Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam also have claims to portions of the vital waterway. Despite a 2016 UN-backed ruling voiding China’s sweeping claims, Beijing has steadily expanded its maritime presence, sometimes leading to confrontations at sea.

Manila has strengthened maritime cooperation with allies and rolled out support schemes for its fishermen, including fuel subsidies, food and equipment to encourage their presence in disputed waters.

Officials say these measures are crucial to uphold Filipino fishing rights and deter Chinese coercion while maintaining safety in the strategic waterway. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio and Adrian H. Halili

Philippines seeks legal paths to bring flood scam suspect back from Portugal

MISAMIS OCCIDENTAL PROVINCIAL POLICE

By Chloe Mari A. Hufana, Reporter

THE Philippines is examining all legal options to bring home one of the alleged masterminds behind a multibillion-peso flood control scandal, as a formal extradition bid is unlikely without a treaty with Portugal, Interior Secretary Juanito Victor C. Remulla said on Tuesday.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has ordered government agencies to study alternative avenues to repatriate former Party-list Rep. Elizaldy S. Co, Mr. Remulla said, citing approaches that could avoid the lengthy process of negotiating an extradition agreement with Lisbon.

“We are studying it because the situation is complicated,” he told reporters via teleconference in mixed English and Filipino. “We don’t have an extradition treaty with Portugal.”

Among the options being explored are coordination with international bodies such as the International Criminal Police Organization, or Interpol, and the United Nations, he said.

Negotiating an extradition treaty is not being prioritized, Mr. Remulla added, noting that such agreements typically take years to conclude and ratify.

“A treaty will take too long,” he said. “That’s why the instruction is to study other ways to do this.”

Mr. Co, who used to head the House of Representatives appropriations committee, has been linked to irregularities in government-funded flood control projects.

Investigators have flagged, among others, a P289.5-million flood control project in Oriental Mindoro implemented by the Department of Public Works and Highways.

Authorities have issued a warrant of arrest against Mr. Co for graft and malversation of public funds.

Mr. Remulla said officials are reviewing all possible mechanisms, including repatriation, while acknowledging that returning a suspect from a country without an extradition framework poses significant legal challenges.

“We will look at all avenues — and when we say all, we mean all — to make this happen,” he said.

Asked whether the case could mirror the return of former Negros Oriental Congressman Arnolfo A. Teves, Jr. from Timor-Leste, Mr. Remulla said that outcome hinged on a special accommodation by Timor-Leste’s president following direct talks with Mr. Marcos.

He said he was not aware of any comparable understanding between Manila and Lisbon.

“Extradition is almost impossible because we don’t have a treaty,” he said. “But there are other avenues we are studying so we can get him.”

The government’s focus is securing Mr. Co’s return rather than pursuing a formal extradition process, he added.

Josue Raphael J. Cortez, a diplomacy lecturer at the De La Salle-College of St. Benilde’s School of Diplomacy and Governance, said extradition requires a formal treaty and cannot rely solely on goodwill between states.

Extradition requires a treaty between countries that share common interests in combating similar crimes, he said in a Facebook Messenger chat. Acts must be criminal in both jurisdictions to qualify, while political and religious offenses are excluded under international law, he added.

Mr. Cortez said treaty negotiations typically begin with presidential approval and often take years, as governments work to balance legal standards and national interests.

“After rigorous negotiations and back-and-forth discussions on the provisions, in the case of the Philippines, we will have to secure the concurrence of the Legislature, particularly a two-thirds majority of the Senate, for such a treaty to take effect,” he said.

The case adds pressure on the Marcos administration to show progress in holding officials accountable for alleged misuse of public funds, particularly as flood control spending has come under heightened scrutiny following last year’s corruption revelations.

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