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Cebu Landmasters reservation sales up 14% to P19B

AN architect’s perspective of an aerial shot of Casa Mira Towers Palawan.

CEBU Landmasters, Inc. (CLI) posted a 13.6% increase in higher reservation sales last year to P18.8 billion, with mid-market residential projects driving sales, the Visayas-Mindanao property developer said on Tuesday.

In a disclosure to the stock market, the company said sales in its mid-market residential projects surged by 95% to P8.83 billion, accounting for 47% of the total reservation sales last year.

“Our numbers tell us that CLI made the most of the post-pandemic growth surge and we are very grateful. The new residential units that we launched were immediately absorbed by the market as shown by our record high sales velocity,” said Chief Operating Officer Jose Franco B. Soberano.

Up to 73% of the booked “record-high” reservation sales came from newly launched development. The rest came from demand for ongoing projects.

Mr. Soberano said that several of the new projects of the company were sold out in a matter of days.

CLI’s Calle 104 in Cebu City was fully taken up in three days, while its East Village project in Davao Global Township was sold out in four days. Casa Mira Towers Palawan was sold out in less than a week.

In 2022, the company launched around 5,000 units in its 16 projects worth P28.4 billion, 74% of which were sold by the end of the year.

Its ongoing projects booked an overall take-up rate of 91%, while 97% of its completed projects have been fully taken up.

The company said it is planning to launch 17 more residential projects as part of its plan of expanding to more areas in the Visayas and Mindanao region.

“We foresee an even more productive 2023 as we bring our residential brands to more and new areas in the VisMin region. We are also further expanding our portfolio by opening more hotels, launching more mixed-use and townships, and by introducing new product lines,” Mr. Soberano said.

Since the company’s initial public offering year in 2017, cumulative reservation sales have reached almost P80 billion, CLI said.

On Tuesday, shares in the company rose 1.93% to finish at P2.64 apiece. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

SM Retail taps global firm for order management system

BW FILE PHOTO

SM RETAIL, Inc. said on Tuesday that it had tapped global software company Fluent Commerce for a distributed order management system.

“As one of the largest retailers in the Philippines, ensuring the best customer experience in each one of our stores is paramount,” Camila Lopez Lala-an, senior associate vice-president of SM Retail’s ShopSM, said in a media release.

SM Retail said Fluent Commerce’s system will manage orders, inventory and fulfillment for both in-store and online to make customers’ shopping experience more seamless.

The order management system will also include the “Click & Collect” and home delivery features. The Click & Collect option allows customers to pick up online purchases at selected SM store branches.

Ms. Lopez Lala-an said Fluent Commerce’s order management, which is implemented in partnership with Merkle, an international customer experience management company, will bring flexibility and options to customers on how they would choose to shop.

“By implementing Fluent Order Management, we are giving our customers the flexibility to choose how they want to shop, at a time that suits them,” Ms. Lopez Lala-an added.

In 2020, SM Retail also started using a hybrid shopping platform called “Call to Deliver,” which allows customers to shop at any SM store branch with the help of a personal shopper.

“Multi-brand inventory is complex, but ultimately, it will provide SM Retail with much more control over their stock and the most efficient way to get that stock into the hands of its customers,” said Pranatharthi Haran, managing director of Fluent Commerce for Asia-Pacific. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Prime Infra spends over P134M on sustainability

RAZON-Led Prime Infrastructure Capital, Inc. (Prime Infra) said on Tuesday that it had spent about P134.5 million on various access to clean water and sanitation projects for marginalized communities.

“Across our businesses in the water, energy and waste management sectors, we are driven by our commitment to build better lives and resilient economies—whether in the development of critical infrastructure or through the social projects we implement with our partner communities,” Prime Infra President and Chief Executive Officer Guillaume Lucci, said in a media release.

Manila Water Co., Inc. also led by Enrique K. Razon, Jr., through Manila Water Foundation, said that it had spent over P100 million for access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene facilities in marginalized communities and public institutions.

In 2022, Manila Water Foundation said it served over 2.54 million beneficiaries in 117 locations.

Prime Infra also said that its programs and initiatives focusing on socio-cultural preservation, capacity building, and health and disaster resilience are distributed with its units, WawaJVCo Inc., Ahunan Power Inc.; and Prime Integrated Waste Solutions Inc. (PWS).

Prime Infra has interests in developing assets related to energy, water and waste management and infrastructure.

“Our goal is to continue to work in partnership with our project’s host local governments and communities as they lead and ultimately deliver the much-needed socio-economic benefits that will uplift their lives,” Mr. Lucci said.

Prime Infra added that its waste solutions company, PWS, continues to conduct its information drive to educate the public on waste management.

Last month, PWS announced that it had fully acquired ARN Central Waste Management, Inc., a Cebu-based waste management company that offers treatment services and air purification. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Sansó’s images of Brittany

A Timeless Tranquility by Juvenal Sansó

For 24 summers, the Le Dantec family, publishers of Ouest France, the largest newspaper in France at that time, invited Filipino-Spanish artist Juvenal Sansó to visit them at their house in Brittany, a peninsula situated in the northwest of France. Because of his visits, Mr. Sansó painted scenes of Brittany from the 1960s to the 2000s.

A collection of “Sansó’s Brittany” paintings, including never before seen works, is currently on view until Feb. 11 at Galerie Joaquin at Power Plant Mall in Makati City.

The artist’s visits to Brittany were the result of his friendship with the Rouault family — Yves le Dantec was a son in law of Georges Rouault.

“For over 22 years, I would go to their house on the coast and they helped me ever so gently but efficiently to feel and understand a world so different from my visual past.  It took me two years of just staring at the sea and the changing tides, and the rose granite rocks,” Mr. Sansó wrote in an essay about his Brittany experience.

“I simply could not paint. I had to digest it first and filter it. If the friendship faltered or ceased, I would have developed an inner path to Brittany. This landscape was so beautiful. I felt I did not deserve it. I had no language to express it yet,” he added.

The exhibit shows the transition from the early stages of the Brittany series to his most recent. The collection was acquired by Galerie Joaquin during its two-decade partnership with the artist since 2003.

PROGRESSIONS
Among highlights are 12 works from 1960s sketchbooks which Mr. Sansó classified as “AA” (“really good”). The series shows close paintings of waves crashing on the rocks.

“He would sketch details on how the water crashed against the rocks, how the wind affects the waves, how the light changes as the time goes by,” Fundacion Sansó curator and director Ricky Francisco told BusinessWorld at the exhibition opening on Feb. 3.

Painted in olive and brown, the landscapes done in the 1970s and 1980s were the more popular of the Brittany series.

Mr. Francisco said that it was in this period when Mr. Sanso started exploring and “making his own imaginary landscape” and included the breadth of the coast in his paintings.

Then in the 1990s and 2000s, the works evolved to be more imaginary, with a combination of yellow and green rocks with vegetation, and the sea at the background.

“Brittany was his expression of gratitude to the Le Dantec [family]… Aside from being a place where he healed himself from the trauma of war, it was a [place of] human interaction between [the artist and] Le Dantec,” Mr. Francisco said.

“Sansó’s Brittany” is on display until Feb. 11 at Galerie Joaquin Rockwell. For more information, visit www.galeriejoaquin.com. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Spectrum to power Aficionado, Takoyatea

MSPECTRUM, Inc. (Spectrum) is set to energize perfume label Aficionado and Japanese food house Takoyatea with solar power, the renewable energy company said on Tuesday.

In a statement, Spectrum said it would install solar rooftop photovoltaic (PV) systems with a combined capacity of 89.82-kilowatt-peak (kWp) in Aficionado’s manufacturing plant and warehouse in Meycauayan, Bulacan, and its main office in Manila, as well as Takoyatea’s commissary, which is in Manila.

Last year, Spectrum installed a 12.74-kWp solar project for the Takoyatea commissary. The renewable energy company said that the installation of the solar rooftop project generated savings of P99,000 and cut the commissary’s carbon emissions by six tons from June 2022 to January 2023.

The solar rooftop project is expected to help the two brands save about P951,000 yearly and help its carbon footprint reduction by 87.34 tons, which translates to planting about 4,020 trees or reducing 348,000 in car travel, according to Manila Electric Co.(Meralco)

Spectrum, a wholly owned subsidiary of Meralco, provides tailor-fit solutions for industrial, commercial, and residential customers through an in-depth understanding of energy consumption behavior. It is backed by Meralco’s energy expertise and proven safety track record.

“Apart from being empowered to achieve sustainability and financial goals, our partners are also assured of good quality and reliable service. Through our end-to-end solar solutions, Aficionado and Takoyatea are certain to get the necessary support they will need from Spectrum as they continue to move forward towards becoming sustainable business,” Spectrum President and Chief Executive Officer Ferdinand O. Geluz said.

In a separate statement, Meralco said it received recognition from the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) for being compliant with Republic Act No. 7920 or the New Electrical Engineering Law.

Meralco said the recognition gives the assurance that its facilities and buildings are “fully maintained by an adequate number of highly qualified professional and registered electrical engineers, and registered master electricians for safe operations.”

“Meralco’s commitment to safety as an integral part of its operations is highlighted with its full compliance to the Electrical Engineering Law. We hope that this serves as an inspiration to other distribution utilities to follow suit,” PRC Chairman for Professional Regulatory Board of Electrical Engineering Francis V. Mapile said in a media release.

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. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

NCCA celebrates National Arts Month with onsite and online activities

THE NATIONAL Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) celebrates this year’s National Arts Month (NAM) with both online and physical activities from February to March.

Themed “Ani ng Sining, Bunga ng Galing,” this year’s celebration aims “to immerse Filipinos in diverse cultural expressions and celebrate the bountiful harvest from the Filipino imagination,” a press release stated.

NCCA Executive Director Oscar G. Casaysay noted the word “galing” which refers to excellence in the arts as both a source of bounty despite challenging times, and a product of the passion of Filipino artists and cultural workers.

“It also underscores the capacity of the arts to heal, reveal, and restore in a post pandemic setting,” Mr. Casaysay said in a speech at a press conference announcing the activities on Feb. 1 at the Metropolitan Theater in Manila.

“[The arts allow] us to preserve and collect stories. It can be a personal story, story of a community, or story of a nation and presented in an art form that is allowed to be appreciated no matter if that person is from that community or not, whether they went through that experience or not,” beauty queen and NCCA Arts ambassador Catriona Gray said.

During the height of the coronavirus pandemic, the NCCA was able to give 10,212 affected freelance artists and cultural workers financial assistance.

“They (the artists) are back into creating works and many of that we will harvest during this National Arts Month celebration. Kaya ang ating mga events ay dadalhin natin sa iba’t ibang probinsya para ma-showcase iyung ating mga artists (Our activities will be brought to various provinces to showcase our artists) who continue to create works in the different art forms,” NCCA Deputy Executive Director Marichu Tellano said.

The festivities will kick off with an opening ceremony on Feb. 12 at the Rizal Park Open-Air Auditorium showcasing various performances, workshops, a poem and story reading, and film excerpts. There will be a walking tour and workshops on visual arts, action-song for theater, dance, indigenous music, short film making using smartphone, and spoken word performances from 2 to 4 p.m. From 6-8 p.m., there will be performances by singer Joey Ayala, Kalinga Music, spoken word poetry, classical guitar, a rondalla, and a theater performance, among others.

THE ACTIVITIES
The architecture and allied arts committee will host a hybrid-webinar series called Saan Ka Lulugar 2023: Resiliency in the Built and Design Environment which will discuss how interior and exterior spaces changed in the new normal. It will include hybrid webinars, an exhibition, and walking tours that highlight the history and significance of selected sites in the context of their communities and how they have stood the test of time attesting to their resilience. It will be held on Feb. 27 at the Metropolitan Theater, and March 3 in Cebu City.

The committee on cinema will host the 15th Cinema Rehiyon, a festival that promote films that tell stories rooted in the culture of the regions. It will provide an opportunity for regional filmmakers — first-timers, veterans, amateurs, professionals — to show their films to a wider audience and to provide an opportunity for regional filmmakers to build networks. It will be held in various venues in Baguio City on March, with onsite and online activities such as film talks with an online component, and on ground screenings, talkbacks and round table discussions. The schedule will be announced on the NCC Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/nccancc).

The dance committee’s Sayaw Pinoy festival will host a show on Feb. 19 at Manila’s Rizal Park, with more performances on Feb. 23 to 24 in Kalibo, Aklan, Feb. 27 in San Fernando and Mabalacat, Pampanga, and March 29 to 30 in Bacolod. Founded by artistic director Dr. Shirley Halili-Cruz, Sayaw Pinoy aims to provide venue for established and upcoming dance groups to interact, exchange choreographic ideas, discover more groups from the regions and provide them with opportunities to showcase their works.

The 17th TANGHAL under the dramatic arts committee will consist of two components — regional live theater performances in in-person festivals in each island cluster, and a national online festival wherein the performances at the regional festivals will be videoed, edited, uploaded, and disseminated through online platforms. The schedule of activities will be announced later.

The National Committee on Literary Arts (NCLA) will conduct Panitikan ng Panumduman, an on-site conference that will delve into the “literature of memory” within and along the strands of Klima (Climate), Kuwerpo (Body), and Kronika (Chronicle). The two-day public plenary event will have National Artists Resil Mojares and Jimmy Abad as the keynote speakers. There will be a tribute to the literary stalwarts of Pangasinan like the late National Artist F. Sionil Jose, Carlos Bulosan, and Maria Magsano, as well as a launch of four literary publications by the NCLA. The schedule of activities will be announced on the NCLA Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/NCCANCLA).

Musikapuluan: Mga Bagong Tugtugin Natin is the project of the National Committee on Music (NCM) with the aim to provide a venue for different music forms and genres from Luzon, Visayas, Mindanao and the National Capital Region to showcase their works. The program will enable different musicians, choirs, symphonic bands and orchestras, and production teams to be innovative in these uncertain times. To provide more space for artistic expressions, newly created works and music will be showcased through a four-weekend program. The schedule of activities is to be announced at a later date.

The committee on visual arts will present the Bagong Biswal festival which is composed of three sections: Sineng Sining, Sining Sinag, and Sining Biswal. Sineng Sining features videos from artists/groups with in-community art engagements related to visual arts activities such as art therapy workshops, public performance art, new media or video engagements, street art initiatives, art residency programs, and art education campaigns. “Sining Sinag” is a physical art exhibit which will include artist’s talks and fellowship activities. Sining Biswal Scene is an introduction of artists and their works, with discussions on a variety of topics including copyright, production and praxis, return to the native, ageless artmaking, street art now, new media, and exploration of possible solutions. The schedule of activities is to be announced on the NCVA Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/bagongbiswal2022).

This year, the NCCA will also host the Ani ng Dangal awarding ceremony which recognizes artists, cultural workers and works that have earned international awards and accolades during the past year. Details for this year’s Ani ng Dangal have yet to be announced.

For more information, visit the NCCA Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/NCCAOfficial). — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

GMA Network reaches 78-M local viewership, widens reach to 95 stations

BW FILE PHOTO

GMA Network, Inc. said its combined people net reach reached 96% or 78 million viewers in 2022 based on Nielsen TV Audience Measurement data.

The media giant’s channels: GMA, GTV, I Heart Movies, Heart of Asia, and Hallypop were said to register a combined people audience share of 59.5%.

GMA, the network’s main channel, reached 42.7% people audience share in 2022, while its second free-to-air channel, GTV, logged a 10.5% share.

The network said it secured 28 spots in the top 30 programs during the period, with GMA sweeping the top 12 spots.

Its series, Lolong, took the first spot, followed by 24 Oras, Kapuso Mo, Jessica Soho, First Lady, Maria Clara at Ibarra, Running Man PH, Happy ToGetHer, Bolera, The World Between Us, I Left My Heart in Sorsogon, Magpakailanman, and Jose & Maria’s Bonggang Villa.

The network also said that it has widened its reach to a total of 95 TV stations nationwide, including its new Ilocos Norte station.

GMA’s flagship AM and FM radio stations, Super Radyo DZBB and Barangay LS 97.1, recorded an audience share of  37.4% and 38.5%, respectively. This translates to 1.4 million listeners for DZBB and 6.6 million listeners for the FM station.

The network was also able to strengthen its viewership in cities outside Metro Manila, with a 99% audience share in Metro Dagupan, 93% in Metro Cebu, and 96% in Metro Davao.

GMA said it will be bringing new primetime shows this year namely: Voltes V: Legacy, Mga Lihim ni Urduja, Luv Is: Caught In His Arms, Hearts on Ice, Lady Boxer, Royal Blood, and Love, Die, Repeat.

On the stock market on Tuesday, shares in GMA climbed by six centavos or 0.48% to P12.46 apiece. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Salman Rushdie releases new novel six months after stabbing attack

NEW YORK — Salman Rushdie’s new novel Victory City will be published on Tuesday, nearly six months after a man repeatedly stabbed the writer onstage during a lecture in New York state in what was widely condemned as an attack on freedom of expression.

Mr. Rushdie, 75, was blinded in his right eye and his left hand was badly injured by the stabbing, which happened more than three decades after Iran instructed Muslims to kill Mr. Rushdie because of what religious leaders said was blasphemy in his 1988 novel, The Satanic Verses.

Mr. Rushdie’s upcoming 15th novel will be published by Penguin Random House and takes the form of a translation of a mythical epic originally written in Sanskrit about the Vijayanagara Empire that ruled over much of the southern end of the Indian subcontinent in the 14th century.

Since the attack, Mr. Rushdie has struggled to write and has suffered nightmares, he told the New Yorker magazine in an interview published this week. He called the man charged with his attempted murder, Hadi Matar, an idiot in the interview.

“All I’ve seen is his idiotic interview in the New York Post,” said Mr. Rushdie, who was born in Bombay, now Mumbai, and raised in a Muslim family. “Which only an idiot would do.”

Mr. Matar, 25, told the Post in a jailhouse interview shortly after the stabbing that he thought Mr. Rushdie had insulted Islam.

After Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, then Iran’s supreme leader, pronounced a fatwa, or religious edict, calling for Mr. Rushdie’s death, the writer spent years in hiding under the protection of British police. But in recent years he lived more openly and was often seen in New York City.

Mr. Matar has pleaded not guilty to second-degree attempted murder and second-degree assault. He remains jailed pending trial, which is not expected to begin for several months.

Mr. Rushdie spent six weeks recuperating in hospital and still requires regular medical visits, he told the New Yorker. He said he hoped the attack would not overshadow the novel.

“I’ve always thought that my books are more interesting than my life,” he told the magazine. “Unfortunately, the world appears to disagree.” — Reuters

Chevron Philippines says 28 new stations opened in 2022

CHEVRON Philippines Inc. further expanded its network by opening 28 more Caltex retail stations in the country in 2022, the company announced on Tuesday.

In a media release, Chevron Philippines Country Chairman Billy Liu said the company targets to open more stations every year to make its products and services more accessible to its customers.

Chevron Philippines markets the Caltex brand of fuels and lubricants.

The new retail sites are in Metro Manila, Isabela, Bataan, Bulacan, Pampanga, Laguna, Cavite, Batangas, and Palawan in Luzon. New Caltex retail stations also opened in Visayas and Mindanao.

Chevron said it opened a new Caltex retail station in Isabela; four in Pampanga — three in Angeles City and one in Magalang, Pampanga.

Caltex also opened a new site in Bataan, which the company considers as a key economic contributor to Luzon’s overall activity because it is located near industries, freeport and manufacturing zones.

In Metro Manila, the new Caltex sites are located in Quezon City and Ortigas.

Other new Caltex stations in Luzon are in Sta. Rita, Bulacan; Molino and Tirona in Bacoor, Cavite; Sta. Rita, San Nicolas and San Pablo in Laguna; Malvar in Batangas; Puerto Princesa City, Brooke’s Point, and Roxas in Palawan.

Chevron said two new retail stations opened in Bohol in the Visayas, and several stations in Cagayan de Oro, Zamboanga City, and Davao City in Mindanao.

According to Chevron’s website, the company has nearly 600 Caltex service stations and 20 supply facilities in the Philippines.

Meanwhile, Chevron said that it had expanded its partnerships last year by renewing its fuel supply agreement with Quezon Power Philippines, Ltd., Co. for the latter’s 460-megawatt net-coal power plant in Mauban, Quezon.

In August last year, Chevron also announced that it had signed a deal with Aboitiz Power Corp. to supply nine power generation plants.

“2022 was a great year for Chevron. We are grateful for all the accomplishments that we were blessed to have this year. We are even more thankful for the opportunity to give back to our loyal customers. None of this would have been possible without their unceasing trust and support,” Mr. Liu said. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Health technology to help improve service — Doctors Without Borders

MARAWI TENT CITY — UNHCR.ORG

By Patricia B. Mirasol, Reporter

PHILIPPINE local health authorities should use technology such as telemedicine to better serve communities, according to a manager from Geneva-based humanitarian group Médecins Sans Frontières or MSF (Doctors Without Borders).

“One thing any agency should invest on in terms of advancing and changing their approaches is the integration of technology, such as in mental healthcare [delivery],” Al Madale, an MSF manager who worked with victims of the 2017 Marawi terror attack, said in a Zoom interview.

From traveling an hour to nearby Iligan City in Southern Philippines to provide psychiatric consultation to a single patient, the civic group started using telemedicine to deliver the service to patients who need not leave Marawi, the capital of Lanao del Sur.

Capacity building, cohort monitoring, community work and supply management were the most important components of the Marawi project, Mr. Madale said.

Five years have passed since militants linked to Islamic State laid siege to Marawi, displacing 98% of the city’s 200,000 population. In December 2022, MSF closed its project and handed over management to local health authorities.

The five-year project shifted focus over time, Mr. Madale said. In July 2017, MSF staff provided clean water and psychological first aid to the city’s residents. The group later expanded its focus to include health education and the treatment of noncommunicable diseases.

The top causes of death in Marawi are all noncommunicable, though upper respiratory tract infections, dengue and skin diseases at temporary shelters also a concern.

MSF has worked to narrow medicine supply gaps by managing patient groups. This had allowed the project’s team members to determine how many medicines were needed so orders could be placed on time.

“We always monitored the morbidities that were arriving in our clinics,” David Lorenzo, a coordinator for the Marawi project, said. “Based on that, we could realize whether we needed to change our strategy, or focus on a more specific disease.”

Community health workers play a key role in providing support, Mr. Madale said, adding that they need all the support that they can get.

“They are the key factor in advocating and promoting health in the community,” he said. Thanks to these frontline workers, residents now have access to the right health information. “We can now fight false information that is going around.”

There were about 9,000 outpatient consultations in 2022 for both primary healthcare and concerns about noncommunicable diseases, up from 2,300 in 2018, MSF said in an e-mail.

Marawi stakeholders appreciated that workers from Doctors Without Borders do not take sides in any conflict, Mr. Lorenzo said.

“Neutrality is the only way we can access many populations in the world,” he said. “For us, this is essential to have access to communities.”

Marawi’s local government officials were likewise “very supportive.” “This is not so common in many other countries,” he said. “In Marawi, they were participative and cooperative. It was a really nice partnership experience.”

Inflation rates in the Philippines

HEADLINE INFLATION accelerated to a fresh 14-year high in January as food prices continued to surge, fueling bets of further interest rate hikes to anchor expectations. Read the full story.

inflation rates in the Philippines

PHL banks see continued growth

STOCK PHOTO | Image Dmitry Berdnyk from Unsplash

By Keisha B. Ta-asan, Reporter

THREE Philippine banks expect their income and loans to continue growing this year, but slowing consumer demand amid record-high interest rates and inflation may affect their operations.

Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) President and Chief Executive Officer Jose Teodoro K. Limcaoco said he expects BPI to grow further this year as it targets to expand its customer base.

“This year, we should see an improvement on these numbers and our growth will come from new customers, better products, and better customer service,” Mr. Limcaoco told reporters during the launch of the bank’s partnership with Lazada last week.

He added that the bank aims to increase the number of their account holders by partnering with existing business clients that will serve as agents to onboard more Filipinos into the financial system. 

BPI was the country’s third-largest bank in asset terms at end-September 2022 with P2.52 trillion.

It booked a net income of P39.6 billion in 2022, up 66% from a year prior, driven by strong loan growth, higher net interest margins and lower provisions.

Meanwhile, China Banking Corp. (China Bank) sees sustained asset and profitability growth and is looking to focus on its core businesses, cross-selling, cost management, and maximizing their distribution network while expanding their digital services, its Chief Finance Officer Patrick D. Cheng said.

“We expect to maintain a low-teens loan growth, both in consumer and corporate segments. We remain committed to grow our high-yielding consumer loan portfolio which will help rebalance our loan portfolio, while balancing asset quality concerns on this segment,” Mr. Cheng said.

He said China Bank will prioritize improving its consumer loan portfolio while balancing asset quality concerns this year.

On the funding side, the bank will focus on low-cost deposits to manage rising costs and “will work closely with the conglomerates and emerging conglomerates in terms of capital market transactions or allow them to access our balance sheet, as needed.”

The bank will also continue to boost its digital capabilities, Mr. Cheng said.

“We believe that digital payments will sustain its growth momentum over the medium-term because digital channels remain as the convenient and efficient banking alternatives for clients, as seen during the pandemic,” he said. 

“Our data show sustained growth in the number of active users and the volume of transactions via our digital channels. The share of digital and e-channel transactions also increased, reflecting a shift in customer behavior,” he added.

“We are also keen on supporting the financing needs of companies with growth potential like in the sectors of logistics and renewable energy,” he added.

China Bank posted P1.22 trillion in assets at end-September 2022, making it the fifth-largest lender in the country.

Its net income increased by 17% year on year to P4.6 billion in the third quarter of 2022, driven by higher revenues and core fee earnings.

For its part, Security Bank Corp. expects its retail loans to continue expanding this year.

“Our expectation for 2023 is that the growth in our retail loan portfolio will accelerate. This is after our retail loans accelerated to 12% year-on-year growth in the first nine months of 2022 from 6% earlier in the first six months, with the growth mainly coming from home loans and credit cards,” Security Bank said in an e-mail. 

“Our corporate clients have been a key driver of loan growth in the first nine months of 2022. While we expect continued growth in 2023, it will be a bit more tempered given the higher base and market competition. We likewise hope to accelerate growth for the commercial clients,” it said.

For this year, Security Bank said it will continue to increase its resources to boost its retail, commercial and corporate loan portfolios, as well as its deposit, foreign exchange, capital markets and investment solutions.

“In support of our vision to become the most customer-centric bank in the Philippines, we continue to invest in five priority areas to enhance customer experience. These include: our employees, our data and digital infrastructure, cybersecurity, our core technology infrastructure, and continued process excellence and automation,” it said.

The lender added that it will continue to invest in digitalization and accelerate the growth of its branch network.

Security Bank booked an attributable net income of P2.31 billion in the third quarter of 2022, up by 35% year on year, on the back of improved performance of its core businesses. This brought its profit for the first nine months to P8.56 billion, 77.2% higher from the same period the year prior.

The lender was the 10th largest lender in asset terms as of September 2022 with P838.799 billion.

VOLATILE YEAR SEEN
Security Bank said the Philippine banking sector will see continued volatility this year.

“This year will be characterized by volatility, with macroeconomic and geopolitical issues remaining a concern,” it said.

“Inflation will need to be controlled; otherwise, we may continue to see higher interest rates and leverage. Higher interest rates imply higher debt service cost. And with higher debt service cost, we may see borrowers default,” it added.

China Bank’s Mr. Cheng said the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) continued tightening amid elevated inflation could cause the banking sector’s credit growth to slow.

“The rise in rates could, in turn, pressure our margins, particularly funding costs. Hopefully, oil and supply-side shocks do not return, as this will further put pressure on cost side inflation,” he said.

“Persistent high inflation will further squeeze incomes and savings of ordinary Filipinos and impact consumer spending, such as shifting from non-essential spending to essentials, looking for cheaper/non-branded products, deferring vacations, and borrowing activities such as auto and housing loans,” Mr. Cheng said.

Firms could also delay their expansion plans, and higher production costs could also squeeze their profits, he added.

Headline inflation accelerated to a new 14-year high of 8.7% in January as food prices continued to surge, fueling bets of further hikes in interest rates to anchor expectations.

The country’s consumer price index (CPI) was faster than the 8.1% print in December 2022 and 3% in the same month last year, and was the quickest since the 9.1% logged in November 2008.

This was also higher than the 7.6% median estimate in a BusinessWorld poll conducted last week and the 7.5% to 8.3% forecast range given by the central bank for the month, and marked the 10th consecutive month that inflation was above the BSP’s 2-4% target for the year.

The central bank sees headline inflation averaging 4.5% this year, lower than the 5.8% recorded in 2022.   

BSP Governor Felipe M. Medalla last week said the central bank will focus on managing inflation expectations in its policy review on Feb. 16, even as the US Federal Reserve delivered a smaller rate hike at its own meeting.

He previously said the BSP could hike borrowing costs by 25 or 50 basis points (bps) at this month’s policy meeting.

The Monetary Board last year raised interest rates by 350 bps, bringing its key rate to 5.5%, to tame inflation.

Meanwhile, the US central bank hiked its fed funds rate by 25 bps last week to a range between 4.5% and 4.75%, bringing total increases since March 2022 to 450 bps.