Home Blog Page 5264

‘A new growth story’: Creating a conducive investment environment

VIRGIL CAYASA-UNSPLASH

We at Stratbase have always advocated a shift away from consumption-led growth toward investment-driven development. Our experience of COVID-19 — specifically, its economic consequences — emphasized the need to be less vulnerable to external developments and hence be more resilient to external shocks. The lockdowns which restricted people’s movements, and hence consumption and other economic activities, dealt a serious blow not only to businesses, but to the economy as a whole.

When an economy is driven by investments, however, economic shocks do not have as much power to derail growth. Investments also make it easier to recover from disruptions.

But it is one thing to say a shift to investments is ideal. Even our leaders have acknowledged this. It is quite another to actually create an environment and adopt strategies that would, in fact, attract — and keep — investments.

We gathered a small group of economic experts to dissect this topic during a virtual round-table discussion held Feb. 9. The consensus was that infrastructure building through collaboration between the government and the public sector is key, but this has to be balanced with all the other problems hounding the country and our people.

University of the Philippines Professor Emeritus of Economics and former Socio-Economic Planning Secretary Dr. Ernesto Pernia, said infrastructure consists of three aspects: human, social, and physical infrastructure. Resolute action from both the public and private sectors is needed to improve all these.

The human challenges include the health of our children so that they can reach their full potential. Social challenges include schools and medical facilities. Physical infrastructure is costly and would need public-private partnerships, so “it is crucial that the conditions and guarantees imposed by the public sector on private sector partners are fair and sufficiently attractive for them to recover their investment cost and with reasonable returns.”

Mr. Pernia believes that the key strategies to fulfilling the Philippine Development Plan 2023-28 would be maintaining robust macroeconomic fundamentals for rapid economic recovery, keeping in mind that the vitality of the economy is only as good as the country’s health and educational system, and using a whole-of-government/whole-of-society approach in ensuring policy efficacy.

Dr. Alvin Ang, Chair of the Department of Economics of Ateneo de Manila University, said that the Philippines has to attract investments in areas that produce the same kind of productivity that will increase wages like finance, information and communication, and manufacturing.

But there is a gap that needs to be narrowed. The Philippines is not creating enough jobs in the agriculture sector and that most of the jobs being created are in the services sector. Addressing the problems of the agricultural sector will benefit its huge workforce and push down poverty levels.

Former Bangko Sentral Deputy Governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, Diwa Guinigundo, said building the momentum for growth this year would entail addressing large infrastructure gaps. This, in turn, could enhance investment-led growth and appropriate the attraction of investments to the right sectors.

But there are numerous issues that he pointed out, such as the low per-capita GDP, fiscal deficit, public debt, low business and consumer confidence, and inflation.

He aptly cited a publication from the World Economic Forum in January that said what the world needs is a new growth story: “A new approach to sustaining strong and inclusive economic growth.”

The Philippines also needs a new growth story.

Jonathan Ravelas, Managing Director of eManagement for Business and Marketing Services, said that despite challenges like inflation and high interest rates, the Philippines has many advantages including its strategic location.

Investments are a special kind of economic activity, different because they transcend the here and now. They contemplate the future. It’s a commitment: when they come in, they are in for the long haul. They are a crucial tool in increasing a nation’s productivity while also generating employment, providing income security, and alleviating other economic hardships being experienced by millions of Filipinos.

It is impossible for the government to undertake this formidable task on its own. After all, the capital for investments will come from the private sector — big and small alike, foreign and domestic. The crucial role of government is to create a competitive business environment that encourages investors to come, stay, and invest some more. This can only be done through market friendly, consistent and reliable policies and regulations, and good governance — a highly efficient and transparent system of government.

The Philippines needs investments in the right sectors. For example, we believe that the manufacturing sector is an area with great potential. I would go as far as saying that the manufacturing sector that caters to the domestic market, if reinvigorated, could propel our economy to new heights. Renewed attention to domestic manufacturing will significantly narrow our trade deficit because then, there would be less imports for local consumption. It would also create jobs and other opportunities for the population, providing them income security, alleviating poverty, and revitalizing consumer spending.

And, as in any type of investment in any economic sector, the government’s role is definitive. There have to be serious policy and governance reforms to support to domestic investors via incentives, and to address issues such as the unstable supply and high cost of electricity, and ease of doing business.

At both the local and national levels, these uneven bureaucratic and regulatory roadblocks need to be squarely addressed to truly attract — and keep — investments, for a more resilient, sustainable, and most important, an inclusive economy.

 

Victor Andres “Dindo” C. Manhit is the president of the Stratbase ADR Institute.

Why aren’t we all rich yet?

TOWFIQU BARBHUIYA-UNSPLASH

DO YOU WANT to know how to make money in the stock market? In particular, do you want to know what will give you an edge over everyone else? I think you do. And I’m not the first finance writer to think so.

I’m reading the wonderful Invested: How Three Centuries of Stock Market Advice Reshaped Our Money, Markets, and Mind, a magnificent effort from five dedicated academics covering a full 300 years of printed investment advice. That adds up to an awful lot of books. But skim the contents of a few and you will find that under different titles and guises, they mostly give the same rather good advice — advice we are as well to follow today as we were in the 18th century.

The genre was kicked off by Thomas Mortimer in 1761, with his “pioneering” guide to the market, Every Man His Own Broker, which played on the popular idea that experts were rather overrated. (Every Man His Own Broker followed popular publications such as Every Man His Own Doctor and Every Man His Own Lawyer.) He found a very ready audience: The book was a hit “racing through five editions in little more than 12 months,” according to Invested.

Mortimer’s success at opening up what was in retrospect an obvious market (who doesn’t want to know how to get rich?) encouraged a raft of similar publications. Thomas Fortune’s Epitome of the Stocks and Public Funds, for example, first published in 1796 had hit 17 editions by 1856. In the early 1800s, the joint stock boom created a whole new arena for financial writers, and advice pamphlets on mining and railway stocks appeared in impressive numbers in the US and in the UK — A Short Sure Guide to Railway Speculation being a classic of the genre.

Then the volume of publications went nuts — there are now tens of thousands of them. But what Invested makes clear is how very little the genre has changed. From Moses Smith’s Plain Truths About Stock Speculation (1887) and Burton G. Malkiel’s A Random Walk Down Wall Street (1973) to Jim Cramer’s Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich (2006) and Don’t Panic: How to Manage Your Finances and Financial Anxieties During and After the Coronavirus (2020), the basic messages are the same. There is a science and predictability to the markets. You can beat them on a regular basis. Follow the rules and the whole thing is a piece of cake.

So what rules can we pull from these 300 years? What has stood the test of time?

When interest rates are high, you need stock markets less than when rates are low. One interesting dynamic is the surge in advice books when yields are low and investors feel shortchanged on deposits. Think of the late 1800s and early 1900s, when financial journalist Henry Hess noted that his readers had no choice but to “pilot their finances safely between the Scylla of low yield and the Charybdis of great risk.” Think, of course, of the last decade too.

Keep your costs low. From day one, Mortimer was warning that not only was it impossible “for a broker to give any gentleman candid and disinterested advice,” but that their commissions would eat away at any potential returns. Circumventing them, he reckoned, would “save the public half a million per annum.” Today this advice manifests itself in the hundreds of books on passive investing with John Bogle’s Little Book of Common Sense Investing being the must-read on the matter.

Look for value. William Fairman, author of The Stocks Examined and Compared (1795) was keen for his readers to make “real purchases” for example, and Benjamin Graham’s The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing, remains exactly that.

Diversify. Beeton’s Guide to Investing Money (1870) was very clear that bond investors should divide their holdings among Turkish, Italian, Spanish, Egyptian, and Argentine loans (!) rather than focus on just the one. Harry M. Markowitz modernized the idea in his classic Portfolio Selection: Efficient Diversification of Investments.

Finally, think long-term and keep your emotions in check. Here’s Malkiel summing up all 300 years of writing on this bit: “It is not hard to make money in the market. What is hard is the alluring temptation to throw your money away on short get-rich-quick speculative binges. It is an obvious lesson but one frequently ignored.”

But here’s the question: With so much published on the subject and it all seemingly straightforward, why aren’t we all rich?

You might as well ask why have we not all started successful businesses or why are we not all delightfully thin. The answer is neatly given by the title of Richard Oldfield’s investing book Simple But Not Easy.

Books on entrepreneurialism, weight loss, and investing all tell simple truths. Just get started. Change your eating habits. Buy low and sell high. But they don’t offer magic; there is no special pill. To be thin, successful, or rich, we have to do actual work (eat differently, start a business, learn valuation methods), and mostly we don’t do that. Instead, we use finance books in the same way we use self-help books — more as a reminder of possibilities than anything else. Ask a successful financial publisher what he sells, and if he is honest he will say not solutions but “hope.”

The good news is that if you would like to turn that hope into reality, now is as good a time as ever. Two years ago, says GMO’s Ben Inker, global stock markets were (with a few small exceptions) so overpriced that buying in was guaranteeing capital losses. That’s not the case today: Last year, global markets lost around 25% in inflation-adjusted terms, and there are a good many areas where you can safely buy for the medium-term, with Japan, emerging markets, and the UK being the best of the bunch on most valuation measures. (Listen to the Merryn Talks Money podcast with Inker for more on this.)

So follow the basic instructions in just one of the many investment books you have on your shelf, and while you might track the market more than beat the market, you will at least have made a start. And you won’t have to buy any more books.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Amendments to BSP regulations on credit exposure limits

FREEPIK

Just before the close of 2022, the Monetary Board approved the amendments to the provisions of the Manual of Regulations for Banks (MORB) on credit exposure limits to a single borrower as well as the definition of capital for purposes of determining compliance with prudential limits and requirements.

Section 362 of the MORB limits the total amount of loans, credit accommodations, and guarantees that a bank may extend to any person to no more than 25% of the net worth of such a bank, subject to the increase under subsection b thereof. This is also known as the Single Borrower’s Limit (SBL) as it intends to limit or restrict a bank’s risk of exposure to single borrowers by preventing banks from extending large credit accommodations to one borrower or a group of related borrowers. The basis for determining compliance with the SBL is the total credit commitment of the bank to the borrower.

Under Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Circular No. 1164, series of 2023 (the Circular), capital was redefined to refer to unimpaired capital and surplus, combined capital accounts, and net worth, and the total of the unimpaired paid-in capital, including paid-in surplus, retained earnings, and undivided profits. The following are added to capital:

1. Deposits for stock subscription recognized as equity pursuant to Section 123 of the MORB; and,

2. Other instruments that:

a. are paid-in;

b. have a minimum maturity of at least five years;

c. are callable/redeemable at the initiative of the issuer only after a minimum of five years;

d. are subordinated to depositors and general creditors of the bank; and,

e. may be converted to common shares or written off upon the occurrence of a trigger event, which occurs when a bank is considered non-viable as determined by the BSP.

On the other hand, treasury stock, unbooked allowance for probable losses, and total outstanding unsecured credit accommodations, both direct and indirect, to directors, officers, stockholders, and their related interests (DOSRI) granted by the bank proper, among others, are deducted from capital. The Circular also provides that other capital adjustments may be made as may be required by the BSP.

The above revision expands the definition of capital, thereby allowing banks to raise the same and expand their lending and investment activities.

The Circular also amended the rules on credit risk transfer (CRT) arrangements. Under the Circular, a CRT allows a bank to transfer the credit risk associated with its loan or other credit accommodation subject to the following minimum operational requirements:

1. All documentation used for documenting guarantees and credit derivatives must be binding on all parties and legally enforceable in all relevant jurisdictions;

2. Banks must have conducted sufficient legal review to verify such and undertake further review as necessary to ensure continuing enforceability; and,

3. Compliance with the requirements specific to guarantees and credit derivatives as provided under the Circular.

Loans or credit accommodations covered by a CRT arrangement that complies with the above minimum operational requirements will be excluded from the total credit commitment of the bank to a borrower in determining compliance with the SBL, whereas those not covered by an effective CRT arrangement will still form part of the credit commitment of the bank to the borrower in reckoning compliance with the SBL.

The Circular further provides that loans or credit accommodations covered by an effective CRT arrangement in the form of a guarantee or credit derivative will form part of the total credit commitment of the bank to the protection provider (i.e., guarantor in case of guarantees and protection seller in case of credit derivatives) in reckoning compliance with the SBL. This does not, however, apply to guarantees in the form of standby letter of credit, demand guarantee, or counter-guarantee between a bank’s head office and its branch/es or between the bank’s branches that are in different jurisdictions.

The Circular provides for a six-month transitory period which makes the above guidelines effective only on July 1, 2023. Thus, between Jan. 1 2023 until June 30, 2023, banks must still follow the SBL framework as of end of December 2022 for purposes of determining compliance with the SBL.

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

 

Justine A. Navarro is an associate of the Corporate and Special Projects department of the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW).

janavarro@accralaw.com

(632) 8830-8000

TNT, SMB face lowly foes in PBA Governors’ Cup

Games Wednesday
(MOA Arena)
3 p.m. — Blackwater vs TNT
5:45 p.m. — NorthPort vs San Miguel

SUCCESSFUL in its first six games with an explosive wingman, co-leader TNT aims for greater heights in the PBA Governors’ Cup with an inside threat and defensive presence moving forward.

The Tropang Giga, recognizing the need to beef up the interior, brought in former NBA player Rondae Hollis-Jefferson (RHJ) to take over from Jalen Hudson, who led the PLDT franchise to a 5-1 start.

Mr. Hollis-Jefferson, the 23rd overall pick in the 2015 NBA Draft who saw action for Brooklyn, Toronto and Portland, is expected to hit the ground running today as TNT shoots for its fourth straight versus skidding Blackwater (1-5) at the MOA Arena.

“We expect RHJ to improve our defense all over because of his size and length,” Tropang Giga coach Jojo Lastimosa said of Mr. Hollis-Jefferson, who makes his PBA debut at 3 p.m. “He’s more of an all sound game.”

Mr. Hudson, who had glowing averages of 33.8 points, 9.3 rebounds and 4.1 assists, slid to TNT’s injured/reserve list.

The Bossing are also bannered by a high-caliber reinforcement in Troy Williams, who’s good for 47.5 points, 13.5 rebounds and 5.5 assists in his two outings. However, Mr. Williams failed to bring the team out of its skid, currently running at four games.

Meanwhile, San Miguel Beer or SMB (5-1), another joint pacesetter, seeks a quick return to winning against victory-starved NorthPort in the 5:45 p.m. main game.

The Beermen are reeling from their first loss of the tournament, a 107-103 at the hands of fellow leader Converge last Saturday, and are poised to vent their ire on the only winless side of the tournament.

SMB coach Jorge Gallent after their failure to go 6-0. “We just have to bounce back from that loss. Important dito, we’re still tied for No. 1. We just have to go up again.”

To do this, Mr. Gallent said it’s imperative for the Beermen to do better defensively.

“We committed a lot of fouls and gave up 21 free throws in the fourth quarter so we have to learn from that and defend better,” he said.

Among the victims of that fouling spree was six-time MVP June Mar Fajardo, who headed to the exits with about three minutes left. It was the first time for Mr. Fajardo to foul out since April 2019 in the opener of the Philippine Cup semifinals against Phoenix Super LPG. — Olmin Leyba

UST Growling Tigers in massive rebuild under Pido Jarencio, but no SMC yet

PHILIPPINE STAR FILE PHOTO

SAN MIGUEL CORP. (SMC) has not thrown its support to the revamped University of Santo Tomas (UST) — at least for now.

Amidst multiple reports citing the official and long been rumored arrival of SMC — with proud UST son Alfrancis Chua at helm — in España, a high ranking official clarified that nothing has been signed on the dotted line as the Growling Tigers plot the initial phase of a massive rebuild under new coach Pido Jarencio.

“UST is not yet being backed by SMC. We’re still courting coach Al to come on board,” Waiyip Chong, one of the newly-appointed UST team managers, yesterday told The STAR.

Mr. Chua, the architect that weaved SMC’s dominance in the PBA and later on in the NCAA with Colegio de San Juan de Letran was present in a dinner on Monday with UST officials, management and coaching staff after the official contract signing of Mr. Jarencio for three seasons.

His presence in the gathering with the attendance of UST IPEA Director Fr. Rodel Cansancio, O.P., raised speculations of SMC’s tie-up at last with the Growling Tigers, including a rumored appointment of Mr. Chua as Special Assistant to the Rector for Basketball.

It’s similar to his role in Intramuros as Letran’s Special Assistant to the Rector for Sports Development, which in the process towed the Knights to a three-peat in the NCAA.

But Mr. Chong cleared that Mr. Chua attended only in support of Mr. Jarencio in his return to their alma mater 17 years after bringing home UST’s last UAAP title to date. It was also Mr. Jarencio who’s vouching for Mr. Chua to take the role, on a personal basis for now, and not including the SMC yet.

UST and Letran are sister Dominican schools while Messrs. Chua and Jarencio go way back from being former Glowing Goldies in the 80s before serving as vital cogs behind Bonnie Tan, now UST consultant, in Letran’s NCAA dynasty.

And while there have not been any official terms for now, the courting is in the works especially with Messrs. Tan, Chong and Jarencio — who are now all deck in UST — are wooing their good pal Mr. Chua to join on board.

“UST is still trying to convince coach Al for SMC’s blessing. The Growling Tigers are still in the infancy of a long, winding rebuild. The road will not be smooth and easy from here on but rest assured that we’re leaving no stone unturned to bring España back to its ultimate goal — to win in the UAAP,” added Mr. Chong, who also served as manager of Letran. — John Bryan Ulanday

US Sin City Las Vegas betting reputation as sporting party capital on Super Bowl

PHOENIX — Las Vegas will put its reputation as the world’s party capital on the line next year when the United States’s biggest sporting party comes to Sin City with everyone predicting a Super Bowl supernova.

While Las Vegas is no stranger to hosting big events, the bar has been set super high and National Football League commissioner Roger Goodell is not betting against it being a huge success. “I think I would be making a mistake underestimating anything that happens in Vegas and how big it can be,” said Mr. Goodell during his state of the league address.

Even before the Kansas City Chiefs’ 38-35 win over the Philadelphia Eagles in Sunday’s Super Bowl in Glendale, Arizona, plans were already taking shape for next year on the Strip.

Sam Joffray, CEO of the Super Bowl Las Vegas Host Committee told Reuters high expectations come with the territory when you are talking about Las Vegas and because of that they are well aware that they will need to up their game.

The Super Bowl will be held at the $1.9 billion Allegiant Stadium, home of the Las Vegas Raiders, in 2024.

From the selection of the halftime act to more mundane items such as getting people smoothly in and out of the stadium, Las Vegas will be expected to deliver a glitzy Super Bowl that is bigger and better than any before.

“People have high expectations for Vegas on any given weekend,” said Mr. Joffray. “Vegas has no shortage of experience hosting big events but the Super Bowl — we need to up our game.

“Las Vegas is going to be spectacular.” — Reuters

Qatari investors preparing bid for Manchester United

LONDON — Qatari investors are preparing to make a bid to buy Premier League club Manchester United “in the coming days,” Bloomberg reported on Monday, citing sources familiar with the deal.

The report added that the consortium will submit an initial bid for the club by the end of the week, and that officials from the Qatar Investment Authority are helping with preparations for the bid.

Reuters has contacted Manchester United for comment.

Jim Ratcliffe’s company INEOS formally entered the bidding process to buy United last month after the club’s US owners, the Glazer family, said in November they had begun looking at options including new investment or a potential sale.

Earlier this month, the Daily Mail newspaper reported that Qatari investors are planning to make a huge bid to buy Premier League club Manchester United.

The Daily Mail report stated the interested investors are separate from Qatar Sports Investments (QSI), which owns Paris St Germain, and that the money will come from an “individual fund” rather than a sovereign wealth fund.

Manchester United, managed by Erik ten Hag, are third in the league on 46 points after 23 games, two points behind Manchester City and five adrift of leaders Arsenal. — Reuters

‘Major’ moves

Midseason transactions have been tantalizing for many a contender in the National Basketball Association over the years. Those keen on improving their lot are sufficiently enjoined by less-than-stellar showings in the immediate past to push for change — sometimes any change. And then there are those with moist eyes focused on the Larry O-Brien Trophy who believe they’re simply a deal away from making history. It’s why the league has invariably played host to a flurry of activity heading into the trade deadline, catering to both contenders and rebuilders.

That said, not all major moves have worked out well. In fact, longtime habitues of the sport would have to go back to the Rockets’ acquisition of Clyde Drexler from the Blazers in 1995 to find one that led to a championship. The operative word is, of course, “major” — which is to say it involved an incumbent All-Star. The distinction sets aside a handful of other asset swaps subsequently tied to titles at the end of the same season, from where active participants likely get their motivation.

In any case, no eyebrows were raised when the Nets got to field numerous offers for erstwhile foundations Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving. Theirs is a tale of woe; in three-plus years, they fell prey to a series of unfortunate events that had them exchanging their place alongside the league elite with medium-term mediocrity. In letting go of their marquee names, they actually did well to get a leg up on their reboot. But, bottom line, they remain in search of respect and respectability.

Take the Suns and the Mavericks, whose postseason fates remain to be seen. Even with established star-studded rosters, nothing in the playoffs is etched in stone. More so when there is a question on the length of the adjustment required for things to go smoothly on the court and off. For Durant, there’s the indeterminate amount of time he will remain sidelined due to a medial collateral ligament injury. For Irving, there’s the constant possibility of his mercurial predilections being brought to the fore. The hardware’s in sight, though, so they’re all in — for better or for worse.

 

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

Biden to name Fed’s Lael Brainard as top economic adviser – source

OFFICIAL WHITE HOUSE PHOTO BY ADAM SCHULTZ

US President Joe Biden is expected to name Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard to the White House’s top economic policy position as early as Tuesday, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday.

Brainard would replace White House National Economic Council (NEC) Director Brian Deese, who has announced his resignation.

In addition, Biden confidant Jared Bernstein is expected to replace Cecilia Rouse as chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, the source said.

Rouse has announced plans to depart.

The White House declined to comment.

Bloomberg News first reported the changes.

Markets’ response was muted in Asia hours, with bonds and the dollar steady along with US futures, and analysts said the implications of the appointment weren’t very clear.

“We don’t know what to infer from this,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics at Mizuho Bank in Singapore.

“Under normal circumstances, I would have thought that her advice to Biden would be very pro stimulus,” he said.

“(But) the inflation backdrop will probably dampen if not check some of her underlying tendencies…I suspect that a lot of her input may be on the supply side.”

Biden is making over his top economic team as the Fed continues to hike interest rates but the U.S. labor market remains tight, raising the prospect of an unusual recession without significant job losses.

The next NEC director and CEA chair will help shape the Democratic Biden administration’s economic policy, from executive orders to congressional spending bills and raising the debt limit, in the face of a more hostile US House of Representatives, now controlled by Republicans.

Brainard is a Harvard-educated Democrat who has been at the Fed for nearly a decade and served as Treasury’s top international affairs expert under President Barack Obama. She was an economic adviser to then-President Bill Clinton. — Reuters

Storm-battered New Zealand declares national emergency

Building inspectors assess how homes and buildings have fared in recent floods. — Auckland Emergency Management/Facebook

WELLINGTON — New Zealand declared a national state of emergency for only the third time in its history on Tuesday as Cyclone Gabrielle caused widespread flooding, landslides and huge ocean swells, forcing evacuations and stranding people on roof tops.

Canceled flights stranded thousands of people, while hundreds of thousands remained without power.

“The severity and the breadth of the damage that we are seeing has not been experienced in a generation,” Prime Minister Chris Hipkins told a news conference on Tuesday.

Australia and Britain had pledged support, he added.

At 6 p.m. (0500 GMT) Gabrielle had moved southeast of Auckland, near the east coast of the country’s North Island, and was expected to continue moving southeast, roughly parallel to the coast. Weather warnings remained in place for much of the east coast of the North Island and upper South Island.

About 225,000 people were left without electricity, while dozens of supermarkets closed, with Mr. Hipkins urging New Zealanders not to panic-buy supplies.

Architect Lars von Minden, 50, lives in Muriwai, a beach town on the coast west of Auckland.

“I’ve seldom seen anything like it,” he told Reuters by phone. “There are three or four areas where there are just these massive slips, some of them 300 meters (1,000 feet) across, that have come down, taking out houses and roads and everything.”

Kieran McAnulty, minister of emergency management, said that while New Zealand was now through the worst of the storm, more rain and high winds were expected.

The country was suffering from extensive flooding, landslides and damage to roads and infrastructure, he added.

Transmission companies around the country reported damage to substations and power networks.

EVACUATIONS
Authorities have evacuated beach settlements and are urging still more people to leave homes as rivers continue to swell and huge surf inundates beachfront properties.

Roads are closed, mobile phone services down and some towns cut off. Residents in hard-hit areas are being asked to conserve water and food because of fears of shortages. Air New Zealand restarted some flights in and out of Auckland, though many routes remained disrupted.

Helicopter and boat crews were rescuing people trapped by rapidly rising flood water in Hawke’s Bay, southeast of Auckland.

Mr. Hipkins said it was too early to say how many people had been displaced or injured. No deaths have been confirmed.

Media reported one person was missing after a house had slid down a hill in Hawke’s Bay, while the fire and emergency service said a volunteer firefighter was still in a house that had been swept downhill in a landslide.

Local media published photographs and video of people sitting on top of buildings surrounded by flood water, of houses swept to the bottom of hills by landslides and of roads under water.

New Zealand declared national emergencies after an earthquake in 2011 and when the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020. — Reuters

US military says it recovers key sensors from downed Chinese spy balloon

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Pixabay

WASHINGTON — The US military said on Monday it had recovered critical electronics from the suspected Chinese spy balloon downed by a US fighter jet off South Carolina’s coast on Feb. 4, including key sensors presumably used for intelligence gathering.

“Crews have been able to recover significant debris from the site, including all of the priority sensor and electronics pieces identified as well as large sections of the structure,” the US military’s Northern Command said in a statement.

The Chinese balloon, which Beijing denies was a government spy vessel, spent a week flying over the United States and Canada before President Joseph R. Biden ordered it shot down. The episode strained ties between Washington and Beijing, leading America’s top diplomat to postpone a trip to China.

It also led to the US military scouring the skies for other objects that were not being captured by radar, leading to an unprecedented three shootdowns in the three days between Friday and Sunday.

The US military and the Biden administration have acknowledged that much about the most recent, unmanned objects remains unknown, including how they stay aloft, who built them and whether they may have been collecting intelligence.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin sought to calm Americans on Monday about the risks posed by the unidentified objects.

“I want to reassure Americans that these objects do not present a military threat to anyone on the ground,” Mr. Austin said, speaking to reporters as he landed in Brussels for a NATO gathering.

“They do, however, present a risk to civil aviation and potentially an intelligence collection threat.”

The US military has said that targeting the latest objects has been more difficult than shooting down the Chinese spy balloon, given the smaller size and the objects’ lack of a traditional radar signature.

In an example of the difficulty, the latest shootdown of an unidentified object on Sunday by an F-16 fighter jet took two sidewinder missiles — after one of them failed to down the target, a US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Mr. Austin said the US military has not yet recovered any debris from the three most recent objects shot down, one of which fell off the coast of Alaska in ice and snow. Another shootdown occurred over the Yukon territory in Canada.

US officials have declined to connect the incidents.

But Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Monday that the four aerial objects shot down in recent days were somehow connected, without elaborating.

“Obviously there is some sort of pattern in there, the fact we are seeing this in a significant degree over the past week is a cause for interest and close attention,” Mr. Trudeau told reporters in a news conference in Whitehorse, Yukon’s capital. — Reuters

Argentina announces price controls to bring down cost of popular beef cuts

Dalma Food AB/CC BY 3.0/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

ARGENTINA’s economy ministry announced on Monday a price control program to bring down the cost of popular beef cuts amid ongoing high inflation.

During a press conference, an economy ministry official said some popular cuts of meat would see prices drop around 30%.

In a separate statement, the ministry said the program has been applied to seven different types of meat and will be in effect until March 31, when a smaller price cut of 3.2% will come into play until June 30.

“The average price at which supermarkets were selling the (meat) cuts have been lowered by an average of 35%,” it added.

The announcement comes as the South American nation faces one of the highest inflation rates worldwide, which is expected to rise annually near 100% and to top 6% in January alone.

Drought in the country has also forced beef prices up, the ministry noted. — Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT