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Monzon eyes stock investment loan restoration

PSE President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Ramon S. Monzon — PRESIDENTIAL PHOTOJOURNALISTS ASSOCIATION (PPA) POOL YUMMIE DINGDING

PHILIPPINE Stock Exchange (PSE) President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Ramon S. Monzon said he is in talks with the country’s primary social insurance providers to revive the stock investment loan program, potentially linking it to the personal equity and retirement account (PERA) to increase participation in the market.

“I talked to the SSS (Social Security System) and GSIS (Government Service Insurance System). I’m trying to convince them to restore the stock investment loan,” he told reporters on Friday last week.

“The way it was structured before was if you bought shares, you had to buy them in the name of SSS,” he said.

Mr. Monzon was referring to the SSS past program called the Stock Investment Loan Program (SILP), where members borrowed funds to buy company stocks. Today, SILP mainly involves the Option to Sell Shares of Stocks Program, where members with unpaid SILP or Privatization Fund Loan Program (PFLP) balances sell shares through SSS-accredited brokers to clear debts.

“We’re trying to see what’s good. We’re trying to see if we can tie this up with PERA, right? You take out a stock loan and put it in PERA,” he added.

PERA is a voluntary retirement savings program that supplements benefits from the SSS, GSIS, and employer-provided plans.

Mr. Monzon described it as beneficial for workers. “We should be pushing all companies to institute PERA for their employees,” he said. “We will be doing that in our next board meeting — I’ll try to get approval for that. It’s good for the employees,” he added.

PERA contributions in the country surged 24% year on year to P491.4 million by end-2024, up from P396.3 million in 2023, according to Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) data.

The number of contributors grew 6.4% to 5,912, with employee contributions dominating at 69.5%, followed by overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and the self-employed.

In September 2023, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued Memorandum Circular No. 14, expanding eligible PERA administrators to include securities brokers, investment houses, and fund managers. DragonFi became the first PERA administrator accredited under this framework in January last year.

Mr. Monzon noted that the program could benefit both employers and employees, particularly under the Capital Markets Efficiency Promotion Act (CMEPA). “CMEPA has made it a game changer. Actually, PERA is very good for companies that have 200 or 300 employees because it is affordable,” he said.

He also cited DragonFi’s co-founder and CEO’s presentation on PERA growth compounding at 6%, matching yields from real estate investment trusts (REITs) and preferred stocks, as a compelling reason for employees. “It became very attractive to us because of that CMEPA,” he said.

“PERA is good for the employees. It is a retention tool and also beneficial for the market,” Mr. Monzon added.

According to DragonFi, a PERA investor contributing P50,000 annually over 30 years could potentially earn P356,000 per year from dividends, assuming an average dividend yield of 5% per year and annual capital appreciation of 3%.

With PERA, DragonFi said Filipinos could invest in a variety of financial products, including stocks, REITs, and unit investment trust funds (UITFs). — Alexandria Grace C. Magno

Erich von Däniken, Swiss author who popularized ancient alien theories, 90

ZURICH — Best-selling Swiss author Erich von Däniken, who built a lucrative career on his argument, rubbished by scientists and archaeologists, that humanity owes much of its development to the intervention of extraterrestrials, has died aged 90.

Swiss media including national broadcaster SRF reported his death, and a note on his website said it occurred on Saturday.

Chariots of the Gods?, published in 1968, sold millions of copies with its thesis that advanced aliens had repeatedly visited Earth, leaving their mark in the form of Inca and Egyptian ruins, cave drawings and other physical monuments.

“It took courage to write this book, and it will take courage to read it,” the work begins.

It acknowledged that scholars would dismiss it as nonsense, but insisted that “the past teemed with unknown gods who visited the primeval earth in manned spaceships.”

SCHOLARS DISMISS THEORIES AS PSEUDOSCIENCE
Academics wrote books refuting his theories, criticizing him as a purveyor of some of the more fantastical notions of pseudoscience. German news magazine Der Spiegel even had a 1973 cover story titled “The Däniken Hoax.”

Nevertheless, legions of fans snapped up his more than 40 books and watched his television specials and documentary films. The over 70 million books that he sold were translated into more than 30 languages.

Mr. Von Däniken spent the early part of his working life managing a hotel in eastern Switzerland, where a fraud conviction landed him in jail for 18 months.

But as his book took off, he emerged from prison as a best-selling author.

Still, he never presented the smoking gun to fulfill astronomer Carl Sagan’s famous adage that “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.”

“He … says that the astonishing astronomical information ancient civilizations, such as the Mayan, had is proof that there were some space travelers around to teach it to them. This fits in with his general questioning of the ability of the Egyptians to build the pyramids, or the Easter Islanders to erect those massive stone heads,” the New York Times wrote in 1974.

“His method is to use a negative — ancient peoples couldn’t have done or thought all the things they did — to prove a positive — that the ancient people were the beneficiaries of some kind of cosmological Point 4 (development assistance) program.”

Such criticism never knocked Mr. Von Däniken off his stride.

“We owe it to our self-respect to be rational and objective,” he wrote. “At some time or other every daring theory seemed to be a Utopia. How many Utopias have long since become everyday realities!”

Television specials about his books made him a well-known figure in Europe and the United States. In 2003 he opened a Mysteries of the World theme park in Interlaken — although it went bust after three years.

PREDICTED ALIEN RETURN
In a treatise on his website, Mr. Von Däniken said he was not an esoteric, and that his work served to debunk “a world of religious and unfortunately often scientific humbugs.”

“From countless old written records I know that these ‘gods’ promised to return. Then we will experience the god shock, a total catastrophe in religion and science. And everything would have been so easy to understand — without this god shock. The evidence speaks a clear language. That is what drives me.”

The release in July 2021 of a watershed US government UFO report that did not rule out extraterrestrial origins gave him hope.

“In the future, anyone who talks about UFOs and extraterrestrials can no longer simply be ridiculed. People will slowly realize that many things are possible that they previously considered impossible,” he told the Neue Zürcher Zeitung newspaper.

“As soon as we are prepared and get used to the idea that we are not alone in the universe, the extraterrestrials will come to us. I expect that to be the case within the next 10 years.” — Reuters

Peso slips vs dollar as markets eye Fed policy path

BW FILE PHOTO

THE PESO slipped against the dollar on Monday as markets keep a close eye on the US Federal Reserve, with data showing it could keep rates steady but with fresh attacks by US President Donald J. Trump on Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell threatening its independence.

The local unit closed at P59.26 versus the greenback, declining by 1.5 centavos from its P59.245 finish on Friday, data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines data showed.

The peso opened Monday’s trading session slightly stronger at P59.22 versus the dollar. Its intraday best was at P59.17, while its weakest showing was at P59.28 against the greenback.

Dollars traded fell to $887.3 million from $1.23 billion on Friday.

“The local currency continued to weaken after the latest US labor reports broadly narrowed the probability of a US rate cut,” a trader said in an e-mail.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics monthly report showed 50,000 workers were added to nonfarm payrolls in December, compared with expectations in a Reuters poll for a rise of 60,000, just above November’s downwardly revised increase of 56,000. The unemployment rate eased, as expected, to 4.4%.

Threats to the Fed’s independence and geopolitical concerns also affected foreign exchange markets, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

For Tuesday, the trader said the peso could depreciate further as US consumer inflation is expected to remain steady for December, which could solidify views that the Fed will hold borrowing costs steady this month.

The trader sees the peso moving between P59.10 and P59.35 per dollar on Tuesday, while Mr. Ricafort expects it to range from P59.15 to P59.35.

The dollar on Monday fell sharply against the euro and the Swiss franc while edging lower versus the Japanese yen after the Trump administration threatened Mr. Powell with a criminal indictment, a move that could endanger the greenback’s safe-haven status.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, was recently 0.37% lower at 98.759, snapping a five-day winning streak.

Some analysts said markets had not yet panicked because they expect Mr. Trump to appoint a credible successor to Mr. Powell and let that person steer policy.

The Swiss franc was the best performer on Monday, rising 0.52% to 0.7968 against the dollar, while the euro continued to benefit as US politics triggered a sell-off in American assets. The single currency rose 0.44% to 1.1688 in its biggest daily rise since Dec. 10.

The dollar advanced in early Asian trade to a one-month high after Friday’s jobs report bolstered expectations that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates steady later this month, while reports of hundreds of deaths during protests in Iran heightened geopolitical tensions and stoked demand for safe-haven assets.

Against the yen, the US dollar was recently 0.1% weaker at 157.80 yen, not far from its highest point in a year.

Geopolitical tensions in Iran “should be positive for the US dollar but we haven’t seen any upside there yet,” said Kyle Rodda, senior market analyst at Capital.com in Melbourne. “The question from here is whether the momentum behind the protest movement continues and whether the regime cracks down even harder, opening the door to some US involvement.”

Mr. Trump said the US might meet Iranian officials and was in contact with the opposition, as he weighed a range of responses including military options.

Financial markets are preparing for a busy data calendar this week, with Tuesday’s release of the US consumer price index for December providing one of the last key economic releases before the Fed’s next monetary policy meeting at the end of January.

A ruling from the US Supreme Court on the legality of Mr. Trump’s emergency tariffs could also be released as soon as Wednesday. The US Treasury has more than adequate funds to pay any tariff refunds ordered if the Supreme Court rules against Trump’s emergency tariffs, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Friday. — A.M.C. Sy with Reuters

Masterplanned golf course communities: Landscapes of play, stewardship, and community

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Bedneyimages from Freepik

GOLF is a sport on which the sun never sets. There are more than 38,000 golf courses across the world, and as such, the sport is played on six continents; with 82% of countries having golf courses, the majority of which are in the United States, followed by Japan, and then the United Kingdom.

The Philippines is home to 111 golf courses, the bulk of which are located in and around Metro Manila. The fringes of Metro Manila are home to numerous communities built around, and anchored by, golf courses.

Golf courses are more than places of sport. They are also living landscapes, carefully shaped terrains where nature, design, and human experience converge. In the Philippines, golf course development has played a quiet but influential role in shaping communities, land use patterns, creating value, and even our understanding of leisure as an essential component of a balanced life.

My experience in 18 golf course planning and development projects has been guided by the belief that these spaces should respond to their climate, topography, hydrology, and culture — not impose itself upon them. This thought process has informed my collaborations with some of the world’s leading golf course designers and has shaped landmark projects such as The Country Club, Sta. Elena Golf & Country Estate, Splendido Taal, Manila Southwoods, and Forest Hills.

COLLABORATION ACROSS DISCIPLINES AND BORDERS
Golf course design is inherently collaborative. While the golf architect shapes strategy, playability, and challenge, the planner and architect must ensure that the course sits harmoniously within a broader vision which considers accessibility, environmental systems, residential integration, and long-term sustainability.

In projects like The Country Club — which was designed in collaboration with Tom Weiskopf — the emphasis was on restraint and purity. The course is situated on rolling terrain with an L-shaped configuration and has fairways peppered with palm trees, with two rivers flanking the whole course, offering a challenging experience for the golfer.

At Sta. Elena — designed in collaboration with Robert Trent Jones, Jr. — the challenge was different. Here, the goal was to create a world-class golf experience that could stand alongside the best in the world, while also serving as an anchor for a low-density residential estate. Many seasoned golfers will note how the course follows the natural contours of the land, with several dogleg holes posing a challenge for the golfer. Hole No. 12 is noted to be a long Par 4, with an elevated green, encouraging golfers to approach it analytically. The course was conceived not merely as an amenity to the community, but as the organizing spine of the community. Homes were oriented to views, breezes, and open space, rather than maximizing frontage. The course is now known to be one of the finest, if not the finest golf club outside of Metro Manila.

GOLF AS A FRAMEWORK FOR COMMUNITY
One of the most misunderstood aspects of golf course development is the assumption that it is an inefficient use of land. In reality, when properly planned, golf courses may function as green infrastructure, providing flood control, groundwater recharge, urban cooling, and biodiversity corridors.

Manila Southwoods was done in collaboration with Jack Nicklaus, and had been developed during a time when large-scale master planning was still finding its footing in the Philippines. The development of golf courses helped preserve vast tracts of open space along the increasingly urbanizing southern corridor of the Calabarzon region. Working alongside foreign designers, we ensured that the courses were woven into a larger framework of roads, villages, and landscape systems. Southwoods demonstrated that leisure-driven development could coexist with environmental responsibility and long-term land value.

Similarly, Splendido Taal, designed alongside Greg Norman, offered a dramatic natural setting, views of Taal Lake, sloping terrain, and cooler climate. The design of the course had to respond to its natural environment, not detract from it — creating a leisure-oriented estate that appealed not only to golfers, but to families seeking respite from the city. In this sense, golf became a gateway to countryside living, instead of an exclusive enclave.

At Forest Hills, the developer brought golf to the eastern fringes of Metro Manila in Antipolo, Rizal. The course was a collaboration between myself and Jack Nicklaus, Jr., and stands out as a fairly large golf course, with 36 holes, rare for the time it was built. The residential community that is built around it is supported not only by golfing facilities, but other sports and recreation amenities for the non-golfing resident.

CLIMATE, CULTURE, AND THE PHILIPPINE CONTEXT
Designing golf courses in the Philippines demands a deep understanding of climate. Heavy rains, intense sun, and rapidly shifting weather patterns require courses that are resilient and adaptable. Drainage, turf selection, and stormwater management are integral to the development of golf courses around the country.

Golf in the Philippines is not only about sport; it is a social, intergenerational, and increasingly inclusive function. Courses must support this by being walkable, welcoming, and integrated with clubhouses and community facilities that encourage interaction rather than exclusivity. Residential neighborhoods situated within golf courses thus offer a perfect backdrop for creating lasting friendships with family and neighbors, with its picturesque sceneries, amenities, and shared love of the sport of golf.

A friend of mine living in one of these communities recounted to me his experience living in one of these communities with his family. He says that as a longtime retiree, he is able to play 18 holes twice a week, on Wednesdays and on weekends with his children and grandchildren — the latter of whom grew up on the sport as a result of repeated visits to his home situated along the fairway, providing his grandchildren access to great golf instructors at the nearby club.

LOOKING FORWARD: GOLF AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
As our cities grow denser and our open spaces shrink, the role of golf courses will continue to evolve. Critics are bound to scrutinize golf courses and seek justification for their role as recreational facilities, and as contributors (positively or negatively) to environmental health and community well-being.

I firmly believe that the future of golf course development lies in multi-functional landscapes — courses that manage water, preserve ecosystems, support active lifestyles, and anchor thoughtfully planned communities. When done right, golf courses can protect land from speculative overdevelopment while creating enduring value to last generations.

The role of public golf courses is also integral to the future of the sport. The Intramuros Golf Course was recently opened to serve as a public park on Sundays, while proposals to convert the entire golf course into a permanent public park has been met with ire from golfers and historic conservation groups. The latter would be a more preferable land use for the course, however barring that, allowing for the course to serve as a multi-functional landscape permits Intramuros Golf Course to meet different needs required by the residents of the city.

In reflecting on projects such as The Country Club, Sta. Elena, Splendido, and Manila Southwoods, I am reminded that good design is ultimately about stewardship. To quote Chief Seattle: we do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children. Golf clubs may have many critics and detractors, but I believe that the benefits of having them outweigh the costs — especially in a country like ours, where open spaces and green lungs are taken for granted and almost nonexistent, the golf course fills this gap.

Golf is, after all, a game that requires a strong will to succeed and amazing precision, all while encouraging deep thought. The same can be said of planning, designing, and maintaining our built environment.

 

Architect Felino “Jun” Palafox, Jr., founder – Palafox Associates and Palafox Architecture Group, Inc. He has 53 years of experience in architecture and 51 years in planning. He was educated at Christ the King Seminary, the University of Santo Tomas, the University of the Philippines, and Harvard University. He founded Palafox Associates and Palafox Architecture and has completed more than 2,000 projects in 41 countries. He has received over 200 awards, including the UAP Dubai Awards First Lifetime Achievement Award in 2023.

A new way to think about power

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Www.Slon.Pics from Freepik

While many are still busy making resolutions for 2026, how about we take a step back and instead do a rethinking for the new year? In particular, perhaps we can revisit how we think about one of the most common, mundane items we often take for granted in today’s modern life: electricity.

For the most part, as ordinary Filipino consumers, we consider ourselves passive, resigned or helpless when it comes to matters concerning electric power. As long our gadgets get charged when we plug them in, or the light turns on when we flip the switch, or the machine starts working when we push the button, we do not really bother ourselves with how everything works behind the plug, switch or button.

Many of us are not even conscious of when and how much we consume in terms of Pesos or kilowatt-hours (kWh)! That is, until the power bill comes a few days after the end of the month — then, for some of us, reality bites. We are then surprised to see the increase in the amounts due compared to last month’s or last year’s bill. A few may get curious (“What goes into my power bill that causes these price movements monthly? How come the power bill in our house in the province is lower [or higher]?”), while some get enraged (“We suffered in the heat because we did not use air-conditioning, and we still get this bill increase! More than half of my monthly income just goes to pay for electricity, there is nothing left for the family’s needs!”).

Let us take a pause here and consider: would you believe that customers today can actually have more control over electricity spending than many realize? This is not about taking to heart those energy saving tips, although that is definitely a good start. No, this is taking control in a more deliberate and long-term measure, one that allows consumers — individuals, business, and organizations alike — greater agency over their energy destiny.

Almost 25 years ago, in June 2001, the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) was passed to restructure, reshape, and re-design the Philippine power sector. Standing on the three pillars of restructuring, privatization, and deregulation, its main goal was to allow consumers the ability to control how they source and spend for their electricity supply under the Retail Competition and Open Access (RCOA) program. Retail Competition paved the way for consumers to contract for and buy electricity on a retail basis, at a price and under terms acceptable to both the consumer and the retail supplier. It is up to the parties to agree, for instance, if they want a fixed price contract, a discounted one, moving or pegged to an index, or any pricing formula. It is not subject to the approval of the distribution utility (DU) or the regulator. Open Access, on the other hand, requires DUs (private DUs and electric cooperatives) to allow the use of their wires and network, subject to the same delivery rate, whether or not it is the DU or the consumer that contracted for the supply.

Meanwhile, seven years after EPIRA, in December 2008, the Renewable Energy Act (RE Act) was enacted to accelerate the use of renewable energy (RE) in our power system. The law is important not just because it granted incentives to attract investors to a sector that, since EPIRA, has been entirely dependent on private funding, but also because it recognized and required regulations for the entry of new, emerging, or smaller RE technologies, such as solar panels or wind turbines, to contribute to the system.

These two laws — EPIRA and the RE Act — are symbiotic in ushering in this new era in the Philippine power sector where consumers have genuine options that allow more control over their power bills as well as the future of the power industry. Let us explore some of these options, from the least disruptive to the most radical, from a consumer’s vantage point:

1. Do you know that electricity costs vary depending on the time of use? For Meralco customers, for example, power consumed from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Mondays to Saturdays — known as the peak hours — is about P2.14/kWh* more expensive than any other hour (off-peak hours) during those days. On Sundays, the peak hours are only from 6 to 8 p.m. In other words, if one can move around their power-consuming activities to the off-peak hours, savings can immediately be realized without any capital investment. Consumers of most private DUs and electric cooperatives can avail of the peak/off-peak pricing programs, subject to prior registration and meter readiness.

2. Consumers who want more savings regardless of the hour of use and are not particular about the generation source (RE or non-RE), as long as it is cheaper than the power supplied by the DU, can source from more than 50 registered retail suppliers operating in Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao under the RCOA program. Consumers, however, who are intentional in sourcing only from RE supply can be served by more than 20 Green Energy Option Program (GEOP) Suppliers providing RE-only supply on a 24/7 basis. Data from the Philippine Electricity Market Corp. (PEMC), as of September 2025, show significant spikes in the number of RCOA participants in January and August of last year. This could be attributed to the lower average generation rates for RCOA and GEOP customers offered by suppliers, as well as the implementation of the enhanced Retail Aggregation Program (RAP) which practically made RCOA available to all consumers regardless of size or average consumption level. Overall, according to the latest PEMC data, RCOA customers realized P19.25 billion estimated savings in power bills for the first three quarters of 2025, while sales to GEOP customers enabled the avoidance of 65,642.77 metric tCO2 (total carbon dioxide) in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for the same period.

3. For those, on the other hand, who want to level things up and be more self-reliant by producing their own power from clean sources, solar panel installations are increasingly more viable, especially if enrolled under the net metering program of the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC). After the surge in electricity rates in 2022 resulting from higher coal and oil prices given global supply disruptions, the ERC recorded an unprecedented 121% increase in net-metering participants from 2022 to 2023. This is tangible proof that more consumers are realizing the value proposition of being prosumers — consumers who are also producers. Today, solar home system providers are already providing panels, with or without battery systems, at competitive prices as well as deferred payment schemes that make this option progressively more viable for consumers.

4. A variant or subset of large prosumers is also emerging in the country, with the recent inauguration of the 4.1MWp (megawatt peak) solar project with 5.5MWh (megawatt-hour) battery storage solution in Balesin, Quezon now supplying 60% of the island’s power requirements, as well as the 6.55MWp solar rooftop-socialized housing project in Cavite. It illustrates one of the innovative solutions still at nascent stages in the Philippines but already with mature and established models seen in micro-grid and community RE projects in Japan and other areas. Proponents argue that decentralized solutions are in fact a better fit for many areas in the country where grid or DU connection is not viable or is rendered unreliable due to frequent typhoons or man-made disasters.

5. Finally, there is also room for those in the extremes: those who want to be directly involved in the sector and those who do not want to be bothered thinking about any of the options above since they do not really mind paying the amounts charged by their DUs every month. What perhaps would appeal to both sets is investing in stocks of power companies (grid operator, DUs, owners of generation plants, retail suppliers). While public participation, in general, remains limited for ownership of these stocks given the EPIRA mandate of listing only a minimum 15% of the shares of DUs and generation companies and 20% of the grid concessionaire, RE companies Alternergy (ALT) and Citicore (CREC) offered and were able to get subscription to around 30% of their respective common shares during their initial public offering (IPOs).

Admittedly, there are more variants and nuances among the options identified above (price hedging, for instance, and direct participation in the wholesale electricity spot market) as well as within each option (e.g., prepaid metering options available already in some areas improving viability of micro-grid set-ups). There are also issues that will take time and discussion to be fully addressed, particularly given the legacy contracts of DUs.

While we continue to challenge premises and push the envelope to make the Philippine energy system become more accessible, inclusive and reliable, today’s consumers can already explore many options available to shape and reshape their energy destiny.

*Based on Meralco’s website, as of Jan. 2, 2026.

 

Monalisa C. Dimalanta is a senior partner at Puyat Jacinto & Santos Law (PJS Law). She was the chairperson and CEO of the Energy Regulatory Commission from 2022 to 2025, and chairperson of the National Renewable Energy Board from 2019 to 2021.

Philippines’ 20 most profitable parent/standalone companies in 2024

How PSEi member stocks performed — January 12, 2026

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, January 12, 2026.


PSEi soars to 6,400 level on BSP rate cut hopes

BW FILE PHOTO

THE MAIN INDEX soared to the 6,400 level on Monday to hit a near six-month high amid growing hopes for another rate cut from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) next month.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) surged by 1.13% or 71.82 points to end at 6,419.96, while the broader all shares index increased by 0.94% or 34.13 points to 3,641.13.

This was the PSEi’s best finish in nearly six months or since it closed at 6,444.16 on July 24.

“Philippine equities have officially risen back to index levels seen prior to the flood control fiasco, driven by the dovish tone sung by the BSP chief, hinting at a high chance of a 25-basis-point (bp) cut this upcoming February meeting,” AP Securities, Inc. said in a market note.

Last week, BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. said a cut remains on the table at the Monetary Board’s Feb. 19 meeting, even as he noted that the policy rate is already “very close” to where they want it to be, signaling an imminent end to their easing cycle.

The Monetary Board has lowered benchmark borrowing costs by a total of 200 bps since its rate cut cycle began in August 2024. In 2025 alone, it delivered a cumulative 125 bps in cuts for five straight meetings to bring the key rate to an over three-year low of 4.5%.

“The PSEi ended in the green, supported by sustained buying momentum throughout the session. Market sentiment further improved following Nomura’s forecast that the BSP could possibly deliver 25-bp rate cuts in both February and April,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a Viber message.

“Expectations of a more accommodative policy stance further encouraged risk-taking among investors,” he said.

Nomura Global Markets Research said in a Jan. 9 report that the BSP may ease its policy stance further this year as the corruption scandal may continue to dampen government spending and economic growth.

Nomura Chief ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Economist Euben Paracuelles and Macroeconomic Research Analyst Yiru Chen said the BSP could deliver one 25-bp cut each at its February and April meetings.

All sectoral indices closed higher on Monday. Mining and oil surged by 5% or 815.87 points to 17,116.43; financials increased by 2.13% or 45.62 points to 2,179.17; property went up by 1.87% or 43.28 points to 2,347.21; industrials climbed by 0.81% or 73.53 points to 9,139.77; holding firms jumped by 0.7% or 34.99 points to 5,026.91; and services increased by 0.33% or 8.53 points to 2,563.17.

Advancers outnumbered decliners, 142 to 80, while 53 names closed unchanged.

Value turnover went up to P6.64 billion on Monday with 1.02 billion shares traded from the P6.11 billion with 1.57 billion issues that changed hands on Friday.

Net foreign buying increased to P534.17 million from P320.68 million. — Alexandria Grace C. Magno

Majority of Filipinos still hopeful, but doubt growing on flood scam justice

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

By Adrian H. Halili, Reporter

FEWER Filipinos have expressed confidence that officials implicated in the multibillion-peso flood control scandal will be punished, according to a December survey by Pulse Asia Research, Inc., reflecting growing public skepticism over the government’s handling of one of the country’s biggest corruption controversies.

In a statement on Monday, Pulse Asia said 59% of Filipinos remain optimistic that those accused in the flood control projects will be held accountable. While still a majority, this marked a sharp drop from the 71% confidence level recorded in September 2025.

“The rest of Filipino adults are either ambivalent on the matter or doubtful that the guilty government officials will be punished,” the pollster said.

Confidence varied sharply by region. Respondents in Mindanao were the most optimistic, with 65% saying they expect accountability, followed by Luzon at 62% and the Visayas at 57%.

In contrast, only 42% of respondents in the National Capital Region said they believed those implicated would face punishment.

The waning confidence reflects frustration over the slow pace of investigations and prosecutions, said Hansley A. Juliano, a political science lecturer at Ateneo de Manila University.

“The slow pace of prosecution, the back and forth on the budget, as well as the unwillingness to crack down on politicians of either camp has once again drained credibility on this,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

The government’s response has fallen short of restoring trust, even if it has helped temper public anger, said Anthony Lawrence A. Borja, an associate political science professor at De La Salle University in Manila.

“The gravity, speed, extent and overall effectiveness of the government’s response was enough to ease discontent but not enough to outweigh generations’ worth of disappointment,” he said via Messenger.

“Many assume that the entire campaign would fail and be selective, and many might end up justified in their lack of optimism,” he added.

The Marcos administration has faced mounting public outrage since senior lawmakers, Department of Public Works and Highways officials and private contractors were accused of siphoning billions of pesos from funds earmarked for flood control infrastructure beginning in 2022.

The anomalies involve overvalued, underbuilt or “ghost” projects in flood-prone areas.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. earlier vowed that all those involved would be jailed before the end of 2025, amid investigations by the Office of the Ombudsman and the Independent Commission for Infrastructure.

Authorities have since filed cases against several officials and initiated administrative proceedings. Critics, however, said these actions have yet to convince the public that accountability will extend to high-ranking political figures.

Mr. Borja said restoring confidence would require structural reforms rather than isolated prosecutions.

“We need the Ombudsman and the Sandiganbayan to be effective, functioning bodies that are developed enough to avoid backlogs, and powerful enough to confront all types of offenders,” he said.

Beyond expectations of punishment, the Pulse Asia survey also gauged broader trust in the justice system. About 44% of Filipinos said they believe the country’s courts can handle high-level corruption cases.

“The plurality sentiment in the country is one of confidence in the ability of the justice system to successfully prosecute high-level corruption cases,” Pulse Asia said.

Still, doubts remain widespread. About 24% of respondents said they were not confident in the justice system’s ability to prosecute those accused of corruption, while 33% said they were undecided.

Views were similarly mixed on the effectiveness of legislative investigations. About 36% of Filipinos said Senate inquiries into anomalous flood control projects sometimes reveal the truth but have limited impact.

About three of 10 respondents said such probes are likely to uncover evidence and hold those involved accountable. Meanwhile, 21% said legislative investigations rarely produce meaningful outcomes.

“For a little more than a tenth of Filipino adults (12%), legislative investigations like those being done by the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee are primarily for show or political theater,” Pulse Asia said.

Most respondents also expressed concern over the influence of powerful officials on judicial outcomes. About 51% of Filipinos said high-ranking officials could use their influence to affect court decisions and avoid conviction.

“The primary factor that will affect court decisions regarding cases involving corrupt government officials is the use of influence of such officials to avoid being convicted,” the pollster said.

This perception was strongest in Luzon, where 57% shared this view, followed by the Visayas at 51%, Metro Manila at 49% and Mindanao at 43%.

The Pulse Asia survey was conducted through face-to-face interviews with 1,200 Filipinos aged 18 and above from Dec. 12 to 15. It has a ±2.8 percentage-point margin of error.

Palace confident Marcos has votes to thwart ouster

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. meets with US President Donald Trump (not pictured), in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, July 22, 2025. — REUTERS/KENT NISHIMURA

MALACAÑANG is confident President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. will have enough support in the House of Representatives to stop any impeachment bid from advancing, while stressing that the chief executive will respect any move by lawmakers to revive impeachment efforts against Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio.

Palace Press Officer Clarissa A. Castro said there is, so far, no impeachment complaint filed against Mr. Marcos, dismissing talk of an ouster bid as premature and speculative.

“There is no complaint yet, so how can the President prepare?” she told a news briefing in Filipino. “If there is one, it will be read and addressed accordingly.”

Ms. Castro said Malacañang is ready to review any complaint should one be formally lodged, adding that the President respects constitutional processes and the separation of powers.

She said reports of an impeachment move stem from efforts by supporters of the Vice-President, citing remarks by a lawmaker who said groups linked to the Duterte camp were seeking to build a case against Mr. Marcos. Ms. Castro did not name the lawmakers involved.

House Senior Deputy Minority Leader Edgar R. Erice on Sunday said the President could face an impeachment complaint anchored on betrayal of public trust, particularly over the administration’s handling of a multibillion-peso corruption scandal involving flood control projects.

He said a group approached him last week to seek his endorsement for such a complaint, which he declined.

Mr. Erice described the government’s response to the scandal as “messy” and lacking direction, amid accusations that officials, contractors and politicians diverted funds intended for flood mitigation in the disaster-prone country.

Under the 1987 Constitution, impeachment may be initiated on grounds including culpable violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes or betrayal of public trust.

Any Filipino citizen may file an impeachment complaint with the House of Representatives. For it to advance, at least one-third of all lawmakers must endorse it, after which the case is transmitted to the Senate, which convenes as an impeachment court.

Ms. Castro rejected claims that Mr. Marcos breached public trust, including accusations linked to his signing of the General Appropriations Act. She added that the President did not steal public funds and had instead ordered investigations into anomalous flood control projects.

“The President respects the Constitution and the process,” she said. “He is ready for all contingencies.”

Malacañang also expressed confidence that Mr. Marcos retains solid backing in Congress, suggesting that any impeachment attempt would struggle to gain the required support.

Ms. Castro cited safeguards in the 2026 national budget, including conditional releases and items flagged for later release, as evidence of the administration’s effort to protect public funds.

“The President protected the budget,” she said, adding that lawmakers who are “principled and upright” would stand for accountability rather than corruption.

Mr. Marcos signed the P6.793-trillion 2026 spending plan on Jan. 5. While he vetoed P95.5 billion in unprogrammed or standby funds, the approved budget still allows for P150.9 billion in such allocations, which he said is the lowest since 2019.

Minority lawmakers have asked the Supreme Court to rule on the legality of unprogrammed appropriations, arguing that they weaken Congress’ power of the purse by authorizing spending without clearly defined projects or assured funding sources.

Unprogrammed funds may be released only if surplus revenues or foreign financing becomes available. Critics, however, have long warned that the mechanism gives the Executive broad discretion and weakens transparency.

Meanwhile, Ms. Castro said Mr. Marcos would respect any decision by lawmakers should they choose to refile an impeachment complaint against Ms. Duterte.

The Vice-President’s impeachment proceedings were halted last year after the Supreme Court ruled that the one-year bar on impeachment had been violated. A fresh complaint may be filed once that prohibition lapses on Feb. 6.

Asked about the apparent shift in the President’s stance — from opposing impeachment moves against Ms. Duterte to saying all those involved must be held accountable — Ms. Castro said the full scope of the issues may not have been clear earlier.

“If the President is now saying that everyone involved must be held accountable, there should be no exemptions,” she said. “If there were offenses committed, then accountability should apply to all.”

She added that at the time, “it may not have been seen how wide-ranging the issues could be.”

Ms. Duterte last year faced impeachment complaints over allegations that she misused confidential and intelligence funds during her stint as Education secretary, charges she has denied.

‘ONLY WITHIN MEDIA’
Meanwhile, Assistant Majority Leader and Bataan Rep. Antonino B. Roman III dismissed impeachment talks against the President, saying no such discussions are taking place among congressmen.

The House of Representatives would rather focus on legislating than dwell on possible impeachment talks, he told reporters.

“There is no whispering among congressmen,” he said in Filipino. The talks are only within the media.”

“The people need to understand what Congress is doing, with how busy we are with the bills we have to pass. Still, that does not prevent anyone from filing an impeachment complaint,” he added.

“The strength of an impeachment complaint rests on evidence,” Mr. Roman said. “Without evidence, the impeachment will go nowhere.”

But a group of minority congressmen said they think there is a basis for Mr. Marcos’ impeachment, arguing that corruption allegations could warrant his removal from office.

“We believe that there are grounds to impeach the President in relation to the massive and systematic plunder of the national budget, the bloated unprogrammed appropriations and the allegations of palace kickbacks involving infrastructure projects,” Party-list Reps. Antonio L. Tinio, Renee Louise M. Co and Sarah Jane Elago said in a joint statement.

In a separate statement, House Deputy Majority Leader and Lanao del Sur Rep. Ziaur-Rahman Alonto Adiong said impeachment talks against Mr. Marcos were aimed at slowing the government’s probe of the flood control mess.

“This… may be an indication of a partisan or politically motivated move in order to slow down any attempt of this current administration to run after those who have been named and those who are being charged with corruption,” he said. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana and Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Marcos leaves for United Arab Emirates to seal trade and defense agreements

REUTERS

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. flew to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Monday for a working visit aimed at deepening the Philippines’ economic and security ties with Abu Dhabi, as Manila seeks broader trade access and stronger defense partnerships beyond its traditional allies.

Malacañang said the President designated Executive Secretary Ralph G. Recto, Agrarian Reform Secretary Conrado M. Estrella III and Social Welfare Secretary Rexlon T. Gatchalian as government caretakers until Jan. 14 while he is overseas.

Mr. Marcos is attending the Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week at the invitation of UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, joining other global leaders to discuss issues spanning energy transition, water management, food security, climate action and sustainable finance.

On the sidelines of the summit, the Philippine leader is expected to witness the signing of two major agreements between Manila and Abu Dhabi: a comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA) and a memorandum of understanding on defense cooperation.

The CEPA would be the Philippines’ first free trade agreement with a Middle Eastern country and is intended to widen market access for Philippine goods and services in the region.

“We were among the first countries offered to conclude this agreement, and finally, we’re doing it,” Philippine Ambassador to the UAE Alfonso Ferdinand A. Ver told Radio Television Malacañang.

The planned defense memorandum will set out a framework for cooperation in developing defense capabilities and technologies, including joint training activities, officer exchanges and information sharing, Mr. Ver said.

He added that the agreement would complement existing cooperation on counterterrorism, transnational crime, illegal drugs and human trafficking.

Mr. Marcos is accompanied by senior Cabinet officials including Foreign Affairs Secretary Ma. Theresa P. Lazaro, Finance Secretary Frederick D. Go, Trade Secretary Ma. Cristina A. Roque, Migrant Workers Secretary Hans Leo J. Cacdac, Communications Secretary Dave M. Gomez and Overseas Workers Welfare Administrator Patricia Yvonne M. Caunan.

Mr. Ver said the President’s meeting with Mr. Al Nahyan would be their second in just over a year, underscoring renewed momentum in bilateral relations after a long gap in top-level engagements.

“This is the second meeting in about 14 months. Before that, it had been 15 years,” the envoy said. “Symbolically and substantively, it’s very significant.”

He said climate resilience is likely to be a key theme of the discussions, noting the Philippines’ exposure to extreme weather and its experience in adaptation efforts.

Emerging areas of cooperation include artificial intelligence, renewable energy and the digital economy, sectors where the Philippines is seeking to build stronger capabilities, Mr. Ver said.

The President is also scheduled to meet members of the Filipino community in the UAE and hold business engagements during the visit.

The Philippines and the UAE established diplomatic relations in 1974. The UAE is Manila’s biggest trading partner in the Gulf Cooperation Council, with non-oil trade reaching $1.85 billion (P110 billion) in 2022, according to UAE data. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

DPWH to start Maharlika rehab

THE PHILIPPINE STAR

THE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said it targets to start the P16‑billion rehabilitation of the Maharlika Highway this year, as part of its broader infrastructure upgrade program for 2026.

“For this year, we will start the construction and completion of the Maharlika Highway. There will be massive rehabilitation starting this year,” Public Works and Highways Secretary Vivencio B. Dizon said during a media briefing on Monday.

The estimate for the rehabilitation of Maharlika Highway is projected to cost at a minimum of P16 billion, Mr. Dizon said, noting that it could be higher given the massive stretch of the road network.

“The Maharlika has not been rehabilitated since it was built; it has not seen major rehabilitation,” he said.

The Maharlika Highway, previously known as the Pan-Philippine Highway, is a road and bridge network linking Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. It is considered the longest road in the country stretching from Ilocos Norte, through Eastern Visayas and to Zamboanga City in Mindanao.

The agency did not provide a specific timeline for the Maharlika Highway upgrade, saying the planned rehabilitation is still under assessment.

DPWH is also targeting the rehabilitation of six additional key highways and bridges, including Circumferential Road 5 (C5) in Metro Manila, Andaya Highway, MacArthur Highway in Apalit, Pampanga, Buot-Taop Bridge in Cebu City, Oyungan Bridge in Iloilo, and Tubod-Nabuna Bridge in Aloran, Misamis Occidental.

“We will also work on C5, we are working on the design. This is the backbone used by trucks, which easily gets damaged. We are designing the rehabilitation of C5,” he said, adding that the rehabilitation work would commence within the first quarter of the year.

At present, the agency is also implementing the ongoing rehabilitation of Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA), which is expected to be fully completed by May.

The DPWH is confident to complete the EDSA rehabilitation by the May 31 target, Mr. Dizon said, adding that DPWH is working double time to finish the project by the deadline.

Meanwhile, the agency will also further strengthen its transparency portal to make machine readable files available online, he said.

Last year, the agency announced that it is ramping efforts to address corruption issues by creating a transparency portal that provides information on the agency’s projects.

Mr. Dizon said that he has also relieved eight regional and district officials from their post as part of the agency’s ongoing investigation into the flood control scandal. The agency has also implemented a major reshuffle among its regional and assistant regional directors.

At the same briefing, Mr. Dizon also announced that Ricardo P. Bernabe III will serve as the spokesperson of the department for all legal matters.

Currently, Mr. Bernabe serves as the undersecretary for the information management service, stakeholders relations service and legislative liaison office. — Ashley Erika O. Jose