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Uplifting the country’s SMEs and homegrown brands

In photo (L-R) are Lucien C. Dy Tioco, executive vice-president of PhilSTAR Media Group; Ramon M. Lopez, Secretary of the Department of Trade and Industry; host RJ Ledesma; Ara Mina of Hazelberry Café; Carrie Nakpil of Paymongo; Tim Yap of Yaparazzi; James Gasara of Rush Technologies; and Miguel G. Belmonte, president and chief executive officer of PhilSTAR Media Group, during the launch of “Nakakalocal: Love Local, Grow Global” at Casa Buenas in Newport City last June 15.

PhilSTAR Media Group launches ‘Nakakalocal’ initiative

By Josielyn Luna-Manuel, Special Features Editor

With the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) comprising 99.51% of the Philippines’ business enterprises which also employ about 63% of the country’s workforce, MSMEs are considered the backbone of the Philippine economy.

Aiming to put the spotlight on the country’s SMEs and proudly-made Filipino products, PhilSTAR Media Group (composed of The Philippine STAR, BusinessWorld, The Freeman, and Pilipino Star Ngayon) officially launched last June 15 its year-long advocacy program dubbed as “Nakakalocal: Love Local, Grow Global.”

“The COVID-19 pandemic greatly challenged almost all industries including the SME segment. But with determination, creativity and diskarte, Filipino SMEs have been striving to rise above the crisis and continue to keep their businesses alive and serve their customers in the best way they know,” said Lucien C. Dy Tioco, PhilSTAR Media Group’s executive vice-president.

He added, “As the country’s biggest print-based multimedia company, we in the PhilSTAR Media Group believe in the power of local SMEs to drive our economy forward and continue building our nation. We value the important role they play, we are so inspired by their extreme passion even amid a crisis, and we are in awe of their unmatched resilience. Through Nakakalocal, we are honored to use our multimedia platforms to give back to our SMEs, to empower them, to help them grow further, and to lead them to doors of many possibilities.”

This June and in the coming months, the PhilSTAR Media Group has prepared an exciting lineup of events that will encourage everyone to support the country’s SMEs and homegrown businesses, and provide learning opportunities for them. These include online features, fun bazaars, enriching talks, e-convention, and business pitching and mentoring, among others.

Department of Trade and Industry Secretary Mr. Ramon M. Lopez also graced the event and expressed support to the Nakakalocal initiative. He shared that there are 2.3 million registered and an estimated seven million unregistered MSMEs in the country and projects like DTI’s Go Lokal! and PhilSTAR Media Group’s Nakakalocal will definitely boost the Filipino MSMEs.

“Micro [enterprises] should not remain micro forever. Let’s help them grow bigger. There’s bayanihan now especially during the pandemic,” Mr. Lopez said, adding that private-partnership is really vital to help MSMEs bounce back from the challenges brought by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Celebrity entrepreneurs Tim Yap, founder of Yaparazzi Event + PR; and Ara Mina, founder of Hazelberry Café; as well as Carrie Nakpil, relations manager of fintech startup Paymongo; and James Gasara, chief growth officer of loyalty and eCommerce software service company Rush Technologies, participated in a panel discussion moderated by entrepreneur and host RJ Ledesma.

Panelists shared their entrepreneurship journey and gave pieces of advice for aspiring and current entrepreneurs.

“Always be curious and identify opportunities. It’s not going to be smooth-sailing and perfect all the time. Roadblocks are just a hump, learn from the lessons,” Tim Yap shared.

For Ms. Ara Mina, passion and confidence are keys to succeed in business. “Don’t be afraid of failure and don’t be shy to ask questions. Research, develop and always improve your products,” she advised.

Mr. Gasara said that it’s okay to change the direction of your plans if needed and to embrace change. Meanwhile, Ms. Nakpil emphasized the value of grit and perseverance, more than talent, to achieve goals.

The PhilSTAR Media Group is also looking for “STAR36 SMES” which they will help in promoting their businesses. To be part of this, the applicant SME should be a registered business, with products that present a unique value, has a strong and patriotic vision, supports sustainability, and is ethical and socially responsible.

A STAR SMES Product Exhibit, led by PhilSTAR Media Group President and Chief Executive Officer Miguel G. Belmonte, Secretary Lopez, and Mr. Dy Tioco, was also unveiled featuring five of the already selected STAR SMEs.

These include LivClean PH, a brand of natural, eco-friendly surface cleaners that are free from harmful and toxic chemicals, and advocates for the Philippine agriculture industry by using Calamansi; FIRST for WOMEN/FIRST for MEN, a brand of natural skincare products that celebrates clean beauty, sustainably made with plant-powered ingredients from the Philippines and Swiss bioactives; Renegade Folk, a brand that creates comfortable leather footwear that is designed and handcrafted by local artisans of Marikina; Everyday Coffee, an e-commerce coffee company that offers various high-quality green bean coffee sourced all over the world, roasted upon order, and delivered right to your doorstep; and De Kalidad Kesong Puti, a food business that started in the midst of the pandemic and aims to promote the local cheese industry and support local farmers.

Mr. Dy Tioco also held a contract signing with representatives of some of the Nakakalocal partners.

Nakakalocal is presented by The Philippine STAR Media Group, in cooperation with Ortigas Malls, Robinsons Malls, SM Supermalls, Vistamall, Coffee Project, AllHome, AllDay Supermarket, Converge and RCBC Diskartech; with the support of San Miguel Corp., Trimotors Technology Corp., Bajaj Philippines, SGV and Entrego; with partner organizations DTI Philippines, Go Negosyo, Ayala Enterprise Circle, Pili Lokal, Rush and Yabang Pinoy, with media partners ABS-CBN, GMA and OneNews.

Last Mile, Inc: Delivering valuable digital logistics services

By Chelsey Keith P. Ignacio, Special Features Writer

Delivery services are integral part of online shopping, allowing customers to receive their purchase right at their doorsteps. Hence, amid the COVID-19 lockdowns and safety concerns, e-commerce has grown its relevance. Although the restrictions have begun to ease, many still make purchases in the digital space.

With consumers continuing to shop online, more deliveries for businesses are expected.

“Before the pandemic, most businesses tended to look at delivery services as just an extra revenue stream. Nowadays, most recognize that it is a potent tool not just to survive but thrive,” Jeff Sarmiento, co-founder and head of business of Last Mile, Inc. (LMI), told BusinessWorld.

Mr. Sarmiento also observed that customers now also have higher expectations of their delivery experience. “Everyone is so used to instant deliveries so much so that anything less is perceived as subpar,” he said. “In fact, sometimes, no matter how good your product is, you lose customers out of bad delivery service.”

“Logistics just can’t be ignored.”

But delivery operations could be complicated, especially when businesses handle numerous deliveries in a day while trying to meet customers’ delivery expectations.

“Operational visibility, access to third-party delivery service providers, and availability of in-house delivery assets are key factors that a business has to look into in order to remain competitive in the market — all these while keeping delivery costs in check,” Mr. Sarmiento said.

These three factors are what Last Mile, Inc. aimed to address through its products Fleet.ph, Deliveries.ph, and Riders.ph. The journey of LMI, a digital logistics service innovation company seeking to deal with the core issues of last-mile operations, started in 2017.

LMI began with Fleet.ph, a product it developed when a client wanted to gain visibility in their last-mile delivery operations. After doing proof of operation with the client, the company realized the value of such software, as well as the complexity of the issue.

“From those learnings, we’ve drawn out the blueprint of what products and services Last Mile, Inc. has now, which addresses complex issues in last-mile deliveries including the automation of order-to-fulfillment processes, setting up operational visibility, instant access to third-party delivery services whether on-demand or standard next-day shipping, and even the supply of contract delivery personnel,” Mr. Sarmiento said.

Fleet.ph is now a full-fledged fleet management software, providing last-mile operations visibility and enabling businesses to plan, dispatch, and track riders in real-time. And with such visibility of their operations, they could understand how to enhance their overall performance.

Meanwhile, Deliveries.ph connects businesses to their preferred logistics providers in the Deliveries.ph Provider Network.This on-demand fulfillment service platform is especially helpful as the number of orders to be delivered could vary; so even a business has in-house delivery staff, outsourcing from third parties could help when needed. Hence, this could also support businesses that completely depend on third parties for deliveries.

LMI also offers centralized sourcing and deployment management platform with Riders.ph to attend to businesses looking for help to fill up their in-house delivery staffing requirements. LMI works with reliable manpower agencies to bring in on-demand warm bodies to businesses.

“When used together, all three products create intuitive and seamless last-mile delivery operations. Most of our customers use at least two of our products. From our perspective, we feel that this is a validation of our assumptions from way back when we were designing the blueprint,” Mr. Sarmiento said.

LMI’s platforms have operated a little over 100,000 last-mile deliveries in 2020 and reached 300,000 transactions in 2021. This year, it seeks to accomplish one million deliveries.

The company also plans to make product improvements involving deeper automation, expand its network of third-party delivery service providers, and improve user experience.

“At the end of the day, we’re here to help businesses with their last-mile delivery operations through our platforms — of course, without breaking the bank,” Mr. Sarmiento said.

Israel builds bridges of innovation with Filipino startups

The Embassy of Israel in the Philippines, in partnership with IdeaSpace-QBO Innovation Hub (QBO), hosted a Qlitan Networking night to motivate and uplift the startup industry in the Philippines.

“Israel is known as the startup nation with over 6,000 active startups. We have built a strong ecosystem joined by various innovation key players. We are even shifting from start-up nation to building a smart-up nation to sustain innovation and prepare in addressing future challenges,” Ambassador Ilan Fluss said in his opening remarks.

“We would like to share the success story of Israel as a startup nation and create partnerships with the innovation community in the Philippines. We have to build bridges of innovation between our countries to contribute to addressing the development challenges of the Philippines,” Ambassador Fluss added.

Around 50 Filipino founders of startup companies and investors in the Philippines participated in the networking night. The event aimed to connect Filipino startups and key players of the innovation community and to come up with a collaboration between Filipino and Israeli startups. The night also featured a net café session wherein Philippine start-up founders engaged with Israeli businessmen and officials to exchange views and best practices in the industry as well as find ways to work together.

“We need to build a bridge between our two countries so that startups can benefit and gain business,” Butch Meily, president of IdeaSpace Foundation and QBO said. QBO is the Philippines’ first public-private partnership platform for Filipino startups led by the IdeaSpace Foundation and supported by JP Morgan Foundation, the Philippine Department of Science and Technology (DoST) and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). It connects and develops the local startup ecosystem.

Benny Schlick, founder and managing director of Innovation without Border, joined the networking night via Zoom and shared the Israeli innovation ecosystem’s recipe.

Ambassador Ilan Fluss also announced during the event that Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Secretary Ramon Lopez signed an agreement with the chairman of the Israeli innovation authority to cooperate in technological innovation and research and development. “With this, we are opening more bridges to partner with you and build a stronger startup industry,” Ambassador Fluss shared.

The Qlitan Networking night was held on June 7 at QBO Innovation Hub.

Medical Doctors, Inc. to conduct annual meeting of stockholders via remote communication on July 19

 


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BSP may go for up to 50-bp hike — poll

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN
Latest data from the Department of Energy showed prices of gasoline, diesel, and kerosene increased by P28.70, P41.14, and P37.95 per liter respectively since the start of the year. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

By Keisha B. Ta-asan

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) is widely expected to raise interest rates on Thursday, with several analysts now forecasting a 50-basis-point (bp) increase after the aggressive tightening by the US Federal Reserve last week.   

A BusinessWorld poll last week showed 15 out of 16 analysts anticipate the Monetary Board increasing its benchmark interest rate at its June 23 meeting. However, analysts appear divided on the pace of tightening, with nine analysts seeing a hike of 25 bps while six analysts anticipate an increase of 50 bps.

“Considering the current volatility of the economy, where inflation rate is at its highest since 2018 at 5.4% (in May) and expectations are high that this will further erode and may breach the government target… coupled with the US Federal Reserve decision to increase their policy rate to 75 bps, it is expected that local policy rate to likewise increase by another 25 bps,” Colegio de San Juan de Letran Graduate School Associate Professor Emmanuel J. Lopez said in an e-mail.

Analysts’ expectations on policy rates (June 23)

Inflation rose to 5.4% in May, the highest in three and a half years and above the BSP’s 2-4% target range. The BSP last month raised its average inflation estimate to 4.6% this year, higher than the previous estimate of 4.3%.

Makoto Tsuchiya, an economist at Oxford Economics, said the BSP will likely put more focus on elevated prices than economic growth at the next meeting, citing the stronger-than-expected gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the first quarter.

“We think the BSP will be wary of stifling the recovery and will continue to tread carefully between maintaining growth momentum and containing inflationary pressures,” Mr. Tsuchiya said.

The Philippine economy already surpassed pre-pandemic levels in the first quarter, with GDP expanding by 8.3%.

Economic managers are targeting a 7-8% GDP growth this year.

China Banking Corp. Chief Economist Domini S. Velasquez said a more measured monetary tightening cycle is ideal for the Philippines.

“We think that continued moderate hikes by the BSP will allow the economy to absorb interest rate increases at a more measured pace. In this time of uncertainty, it also provides time for the BSP to assess the impact of monetary tightening on our growth recovery,” she said.

In a June 14 roundtable with BusinessWorld editors, incoming BSP governor and current Monetary Board member Felipe M. Medalla signaled the pace of subsequent tightening will be gradual, ruling out rate hikes of more than 25 bps.

However, Mr. Medalla’s statement was made a day before the US Federal Reserve approved a 75-bp interest rate hike, its biggest since 1994.

The aggressive monetary tightening by the US Federal Reserve may spur capital outflows and put more downward pressure on the peso, some analysts said. This may prompt the Monetary Board to consider a 50-bp rate hike, they said.

Philippine National Bank economist Alvin Joseph A. Arogo said he now expects a 50-bp increase by the BSP after the Fed’s latest rate hike and the peso breaching the P53-$1 level.

The peso closed at P53.75 per dollar on Friday, weaker by 28 centavos from its P53.47 finish on Thursday, based on Bankers Association of the Philippines data.

It also shed 75 centavos from its P53 close a week earlier. This was the peso’s weakest close in over three and a half years or since its P53.80 finish against the greenback on Oct. 25, 2018.

“A 50-bp bump in June will let the BSP balance growth recovery and manage inflation, while getting ahead of the Fed’s pace. This should also help temper the peso’s weakness with the current account deficit projected at $19.1 billion this year,” Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces said in an e-mail.

Some analysts expect the BSP’s policy normalization to be gradual as inflation is expected to return to the 2-4% target range by 2023.

The Monetary Board kicked off its tightening cycle on May 19 by raising the yield on the BSP’s overnight reverse repurchase facility by 25 bps to 2.25%. Interest rates on the overnight deposit and lending facilities were also hiked to 1.75% and 2.75%, respectively.

This was the first increase in borrowing costs since 2018 and followed cuts worth 200 bps in 2020 as the BSP moved to support the economy amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“As things stand, we expect only two more interest rate hikes next year, taking the rate to 3%, implying that a full reversal of the COVID-era cuts is unlikely to take place until after 2023,” Pantheon Chief Emerging Asia Economist Miguel Chanco said.

Moody’s Analytics analyst Sonia Zhu said the central bank may increase rates three more times, with the policy rate seen at 3% and above by end-2022.

Oxford Economics’ Mr. Tsuchiya said the BSP is likely to hike the policy rate by 100 bps this year.

“We expect the BSP to gradually continue tightening beyond this year, and unwind all the 200 bps cuts implemented at the onset of the pandemic by early 2024,” he said.

However, for ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, the BSP should “not simply be in ‘normalization mode’ but it should assume a tightening stance” to curb red-hot inflation.

“We have the BSP back at 4% by early next year,” he added.

After Thursday, there are four more Monetary Board meetings scheduled this year — Aug. 18, Sept. 22, Nov. 11, and Dec. 15.

PHL needs to ratify RCEP, says Balisacan

Vendors unpack sacks of vegetables in Balintawak market, Jan. 27, 2021. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE PHILIPPINES stands to lose potential foreign investments if it fails to ratify its membership in the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), incoming Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan said.

In a June 16 roundtable with BusinessWorld editors, Mr. Balisacan said membership in RCEP would send the signal to investors that the Philippines is “open for business.”

“We want to be part of [the] global value chains. If investors [and] international traders don’t see us as a key player in those value chains, then we could not expect investors to think about us. That is important and I think that we need to ratify the RCEP,” he said.

The Senate failed to give its concurrence to the RCEP before it adjourned sine die on June 1, despite appeals from economic managers and business groups.

The RCEP, which entered into force on Jan. 1, is a major trade agreement involving Australia, China, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Representing about 30% of the global gross domestic product (GDP), the RCEP allows for zero or reduced tariffs in trade between the members of ASEAN and its free trade agreement partners.

Hesitation over the ratification of the RCEP comes from concern that local farmers will be negatively impacted by imports from other RCEP members. Some senators also cited the lack of safeguards for the agriculture sector.

“We can never really protect and do justice to our agriculture if our means of protecting our agriculture is inhibit competition, prevent competition,” Mr. Balisacan said.

The incumbent Philippine Competition Commission chairman said the main problem of low agricultural productivity has nothing to do with trade.

“It is the lack of public investments, the lack of institutional support… bad governance in the sector. I’m talking about infrastructure, research and innovation for agriculture. Our productivity, yield per hectare or production per hectare, is so low compared to our neighbors,” he added.

Mr. Balisacan said the government should raise the budget for agriculture research and development (R&D), which is around 0.3% of the country’s GDP compared with other countries that allocate around 1-2% of their GDP.

“We have very little regard for science and even more for agricultural sciences… Investing 2% of your GDP in R&D, you are likely to grow fast with productivity likely to go up,” he added.

“So we have to reset our priorities, go back to the basics, and address the key sources of productivity growth.”

Agriculture typically makes up around 10% of overall economic output, and a fourth of the country’s jobs.

President-elect Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. previously said he wants a review of the RCEP to determine if the agriculture sector is not unduly disavantaged by the trade deal.

Mr. Marcos would have to endorse the trade agreement to the 19th Congress when sessions open in late July.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte signed the trade deal on Sept. 2, 2021.

A video of the roundtable with Mr. Balisacan will be shown on BusinessWorld’s Facebook page on June 27. — Diego Gabriel C. Robles

Incoming BSP governor not keen on cryptocurrency

Representations of virtual currency Bitcoin are placed on US dollar banknotes in this illustration taken on May 26, 2020. — REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION

INCOMING Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Felipe M. Medalla is not keen on regulating cryptocurrency, dismissing the virtual asset as based on the “greater fool theory.”

“Every Bitcoin buyer that I know does not use (cryptocurrency) for anything… The only reason you’re using this is you think somebody else will buy it from you at a higher price. That’s a very scary investment,” Mr. Medalla said during a virtual roundtable discussion with BusinessWorld editors on June 14.

Mr. Medalla, currently a member of the Monetary Board, said cryptocurrency is based on the “greater fool theory.” The theory goes that a market player can make money buying overpriced items if there is a “greater fool” that wants to purchase it at an even higher price.

Billionaire Bill Gates also cited the same theory in criticizing cryptocurrency at a TechCruch event last week.

“The value of crypto is what some other person decides someone else will pay for it, so not adding to society like other investments,” Mr. Gates was quoted as saying.

Mr. Medalla noted that cryptocurrency is valuable for people who want to hide their money from the government.

“This is a new tool that adds to the ability to do that. There are plenty of people who want to hide their money from the government,” he said.

The BSP does not regulate cryptocurrency itself but has guidelines on virtual asset service providers. Under the rules, entities that engage with virtual assets are required to secure a license from the BSP.

Cryptocurrencies in the Philippines are classified as digital or virtual assets.

“My view is the moment you cross from the virtual world to the fiat and physical world, you have to have KYC (Know Your Customer) policies… and apply the same anti-money laundering policy,” Mr. Medalla said.

KYC refers to the process that institutions use to verify identities of their clients and ascertain fraud risks they may pose. This can keep money laundering, terrorism financing, and other types of unlawful financial activities in check.

BSP data showed transactions in virtual currency, including cryptocurrency, surged by 71% to P105.93 billion in the first semester of 2021.

The cryptocurrency industry has suffered significant losses in recent weeks amid problems with stablecoins such as TerraUSD and cryptocurrency lending company Celsius Network. Bitcoin, the biggest cryptocurrency, dropped below the $20,000 level on Saturday.

The BSP is currently working on a pilot project that will test the use of wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) for large-value financial transactions among selected financial institutions.

“The pilot project covers the experimentation of the CBDC’s use to transfer large-value financial transactions on a 24 [hours] by 7 [days] basis, across a limited number of financial institutions but possibly covering both banks and nonbank institutions,” BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in April.

Project CBDCPH is a major step for the country’s central bank and the finance industry to understand the opportunities and risks of wholesale CBDCs.

The BSP chose to focus on the wholesale aspect of CBDCs as it assessed that it will have a bigger impact compared with retail use cases. — K.B.Ta-asan

‘Trading from home’ is the new normal as PSE set to close trading floor

BW FILE PHOTO

By Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson, Reporter

AS THE Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) is poised to permanently shut its trading floor on Friday, traders said there will be little impact as many are now used to “trading from home” during the coronavirus pandemic.

“The pandemic brought out and proved the possibility of floorless trading was efficient and viable. It was imminent but it would not have been that fast, the pandemic was a catalyst that accelerated the move to go floorless,” R.S. Lim and Company, Inc. nominee and former PSE director Alejandro T. Yu said in a phone interview.

In an advisory on June 10, the PSE announced that it will shift to floorless trading, citing the technological advancements have made this trading setup “efficient and responsive to the needs of the investing public.”

The last day of trading on the floor will be June 24 (Friday).

PSE President and Chief Executive Officer Ramon S. Monzon has said only a third of brokers renewed their lease on the trading floor amid the pandemic.

“We had about 85 brokers that were trading on the floor but since the pandemic, when the time for lease renewal came up, only 29 renewed their leases. And of the 29, every day there are about nine to 10 participants that use the floor. Obviously, it has reflected the fact that we don’t need a trading floor,” Mr. Monzon told ANC.

He pointed out that the Philippines is the only stock market in the ASEAN that still operates a trading floor.

“We are able to prove during the pandemic we can go on floorless trading,” he said.

When the coronavirus pandemic struck in 2020, Mr. Yu said that traders learned to set up shop from home.

“We can work from home, trade from whenever. The writing became clearer on the wall that the floor has become redundant. After the Omicron surge, that drove the final nail in the coffin,” he said, referring to the strict lockdown implemented in January to combat the Omicron-led surge in coronavirus cases.

Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said that the shift to “floorless trading” will have a minimal impact as traders have gotten used to trading from home.

“It was during the pandemic that traders shifted to trading online and have already gotten used to this setup,” he added.

Marc Kebinson L. Lood, head of online trading at Timson Securities, Inc., said that the pandemic has accelerated the push to digitalize all sectors, including the capital market.

“The majority of our neighboring markets do not have a trading floor and operate entirely digitally. During the lockdown, it only took a few days for the PSE to transition to floorless trading, and trading is relatively seamless even when the trading floor is not able to operate,” Mr. Lood said in a Viber message.

“Investors are still taking direction from the fundamentals of the company and the market as a whole, and they are unworried about the trading floor’s closure.”

First Metro Investment Corp. Head of Research Cristina S. Ulang said the trading floor’s closure is a reflection of the increasingly digital world.

“It’s a new ecosystem emerging for the capital markets where brick and mortar could become more muted and subdued. Just look at e-commerce which is now competing with brick-and-mortar shopping,” she said in a Viber message.

The pandemic also encouraged more retail investors to enter the stock market.

Online stock market accounts rose by 23.8% to 1.16 million in 2021, PSE data showed. These made up over 70% of the total stock market accounts. Online investors also accounted for 74.7% of total trades in 2021.

“Innovations are the order of the day. It is on the horizon as people are gradually shifting this move. I think PSE should be a strong forefront of this and develop platforms and applications that will make trading online easier,” Mr. Yu said.

For his part, Mr. Monzon said the trading floor will likely be used as office space or as an events venue.

“I want to assure you our trading floor is going to remain open because we will continue to have a lot of bell ringing ceremonies,” he said.

Supermarkets say commodity prices to further rise 

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

By Revin Mikhael D. Ochave, Reporter

THE prices of commodities are expected to increase in the coming months amid the challenges faced by manufacturers, according to the Philippine Amalgamated Supermarkets Association, Inc. (Pagasa).

Pagasa President Steven T. Cua said in a mobile phone interview with BusinessWorld that prices are seen to go higher due to global and local events.

“Given the circumstances such as the Ukraine-Russia conflict, continuous lack of supply of imported raw materials, fuel, and grains, increasing peso-dollar exchange rate, slight surges in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) count both here in the Philippines and abroad, expected disarray or birth pains in a new administration, I would expect prices to be on the upside in the coming months,” Mr. Cua said.

He made the projection after the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) recently said that the prices of basic necessities and prime commodities (BNPCs) included in its suggested retail price (SRP) list are expected to be stable in the next two to three months.

“At least for those that are in our SRP list, we can assure the consumers that we see that these will be stable at least probably the next two, three months,” Trade Assistant Secretary Ann Claire C. Cabochan said during a June 16 television interview in The Chiefs on One News Channel.

According to Mr. Cua, the industry group does not share the same view with the DTI in terms of expected price increases.

“Pagasa does not totally agree with the DTI’s prognosis of stable prices for the next few months. By the middle of June, more than 30 manufacturers have increased prices on some of their commodities. This ‘parade/march’ of increases by suppliers has been ongoing since last year,” Mr. Cua said.

“The good thing is, not all suppliers chose to increase all their products at the same time and some did it on a staggered basis,” he added.

The DTI said earlier that it had received price increase requests from manufacturers of products such as bread and canned sardines due to rising production costs of wheat, fish, tin, and logistics. It added that it was studying the requests, which usually take four to six weeks to process.

In the latest SRP list issued on May 11, the DTI approved the price increases of 82 BNPCs while keeping unchanged the prices of 136 others.

The price increases vary from 2% to 10% for products such as bread, canned fish, potable water in bottles and containers, processed milk, locally manufactured instant noodles, coffee, salt, laundry soap, detergent, candles, flour, processed and canned pork, processed and canned beef, vinegar, fish sauce (patis), soy sauce, toilet soap, and batteries.

SM makes going green easier

IN the past, if one wanted more sustainable finds to place in the home or wardrobe, one needed to go to some obscure little shop run by some free spirit. This means that living sustainability, now a bit of an urgency, would have been inaccessible to many. SM Retail, Inc., the retail arm of SM Investments Corp., is now making sustainable living easier to achieve with SM Green Finds.

Like charity, sustainability begins at home, so on June 10, media guests were taken on a tour of SM Retail’s new headquarters in the Mall of Asia complex. The new building boasts of lighting automation, centralized air, recycled water, energy-saving glass, and waste management programs.

The tour ended with a display of their green products. One can expect to see wooden bowls and woven grass baskets and such in a store like Kultura, SM’s Filipiniana store, but apparently, SM’s green initiatives extend to other parts of the home. Watsons, and other beauty brands, for example, boasted bottles of lotion and conditioner in recycled (and recyclable) plastic, made with natural and biodegradable ingredients. Catherine Ileto, Vice-President for Corporate Communications for SM Retail, pointed to baby toys made with silica (no plastic), and bedsheets made with bamboo fibers (bamboo uses less water and resources to grow), packaged in cardboard bundlers instead of plastic. Selections from their own stocks have also done away with a lot of plastic, using paper bags and paper packaging in stores.

They’ve also been partnering with a lot of micro, small to medium enterprises (MSMEs) for sourcing products made with sustainable materials, consulting with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

Speaking about mainstreaming sustainability, Ms. Ileto said, “That’s really the intent: to make all of these green finds accessible.”

Still, it’s a business, and businesses need to make profit. In the long run, does SM see green in going green?

In response to a question about sustainability translating into profitability, SM Retail, Inc. President and CEO Ponciano C. Manalo, Jr., said in an interview, “It will have to be. We’ll have to be able to find the right scale among our local producers to be able to make it really profitable and make it sustainable for them. But for us, it’s also (for) our suppliers.

“When we give them work to do, and we feature their products, what happens is people buy it, and there’s a ripple effect,” said Mr. Manalo in a mixture of English and Filipino. “We have a lot of MSMEs that we partner with, and we help them. Over time, that should build itself up.

“The question is not: ‘is it expensive?’ The question is, ‘is it a good investment?’ As an investment, what it does is it pays out in the end.”

He says that the Filipino mindset has always been geared towards sustainability, or at least recycling. He points out how our elders used to keep and pack away packaging for future use, among other practices. “It’s now aligned with what is now being a global phenomenon.”

According to the SM Investments Corp. website, as of the fiscal year ending 2020, SM Retail operates 66 SM Stores, 59 SM Supermarkets, 52 SM Hypermarkets, 209 Savemore stores, 71 WalterMart stores, 1,012 Alfamarts, and 1,550 specialty stores scattered over several brands. Its sister, SM Prime Holdings, is the largest mall operator in the Philippines.

On a related note, both sources said that SM Malls have sustainability measures in place, such as using LED lighting, water efficiency measures, among other green building initiatives.

Asked why sustainability measures have become so important to SM, Ms. Ileto said, “We’re the largest retail brand in the Philippines. We can really launch this at scale. We can advocate being the brand that advocates for green lifestyles. There’s really an awakening for the consumer now —  even in the little choices they make.”

“Sustainability is a growing phenomenon in the world. It’s not just SM. Everybody in the world is looking at sustainability,” said Mr. Ponciano. “I think my generation, probably, we’re part of the modern generation where we waste everything. But younger people… they’re becoming more conscious.

“It’s because of you. It’s your future. We can just make money and forget about everything else. I’m being very candid, or almost joking, in a way,” he said.

“But we understand what it’s all about. It’s a big word. It’s education, it’s social, it’s economic; it’s everything that you can think of. You can put all the labels that you want. At the end of the day, we know it’s important. It’s for the generation that’s coming. We know that. The earlier that we’re able to get people to be aware and conscious: that’s our part to play.” — Joseph L. Garcia

Common tower providers see no threat from satellite firms

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Senior Reporter

SOME telecommunication tower companies operating in the Philippines said the entry of satellite firms into the local scene poses no threat to their business or to that of traditional telco providers, as the technology complements terrestrial connectivity, which does not reach many of the country’s remote areas.

“If you look at the geographical situation in the Philippines, some areas will be best served by satellite technology,” edotco Group Chief Executive Officer Adlan Tajudin told BusinessWorld in a recent interview.

“They complement us. We still need towers. It’s just that instead of transmitting the signal through microwave or through fiber, they transmit through satellite. I think it really, really complements us,” he added.

“Typically, that solution is for the rural areas. It helps in terms of accelerating rural coverage.”

Rahul Singh, country manager of Singapore-based iSON Tower Ltd. Inc., which is set to build digital infrastructure in the Philippines, said in an e-mailed reply to questions: “Well, the Philippines as a country needs 50,000 towers, fiber connectivity, high-speed voice and internet, and all telecom ecosystem players together are addressing these needs.”

“Typically, satellite connectivity companies coexist with traditional MNOs (mobile network operators)/tower companies, and are not considered to be a threat to traditional telecommunications operators as the service will serve roughly 3% to 4% of the customers that traditional providers find most difficult to reach,” he added.

“From ISON Tower perspective, we are committed to working with mobile network operators enabling voice and high-speed broadband internet for Philippine consumers.”

He noted that the company is rolling out tower sites in Mindanao and the Visayas to enable voice and high-speed internet along with telecom operators.

Alliance Towers Corp. President and Chief Operating Officer Alvin D. Tolentino said the entry of foreign satellite companies into the Philippines will be “good for the economy,” as local telecommunications providers will be forced to keep up.

“It’s a question of scale. If you are just serving one barangay on a remote island, it doesn’t make sense for you to invest in a submarine cable… just to connect one barangay. In that sense, it’s cheaper to do satellite,” he said.

“But if you’re looking at Cebu or places where you can get more users, I think the traditional (connectivity) is still more economical,” he added.

The National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) recently approved the registration of Starlink Internet Services Philippines, Inc. as a value-added service provider (VAS). Starlink is a subsidiary of Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp.

The agency expects more foreign satellite broadband providers to enter the Philippines because of the amended Public Service Act, which eases the restrictions on full foreign ownership of businesses in key sectors such as telecommunications, shipping, airlines, railways, and subways.

Starlink’s registration as a VAS provider allows it to directly access satellite systems, as well as build and operate broadband facilities to offer internet services in the country. The company’s certificate of registration is valid until April 14, 2023. It is expected to cover villages in urban and suburban areas and rural areas that remain unserved or underserved with internet access services.

“The service is expected to bring cost-effective internet access in these areas,” the NTC said in a statement.

Bandage made with coconut wins Good Design Awards 2022

A WOUND dressing made from nata de coco (coco cellulose) bagged several major awards at the second Good Design Awards on June 14, held at the Ayala Museum in Makati City.

The Good Design Award Philippines is a national design excellence recognition program initiated by the Design Center of the Philippines — an attached agency of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), and mandated to promote design as a tool for Philippine product quality, competitiveness, and branding.

Launched in 2019, the Good Design Award Philippines as described in a briefer as seeking “to discover local artists, designers, and businesses with outstanding designs that embody the universal design values of form, function, innovation, plus the Philippine value of malasakit (compassion).”

The program is held bi-annually in partnership with the United Nations Development Program in the Philippines (UNDP Philippines), the ASEAN Japan Center, and the Japan Institute of Design Promotion.

The competition highlights malasakit as “the heart of good design” and “its ability to improve lives and to address social, economic, and environmental sustainability.”

This year, the Good Design Jury was tasked to evaluate 161 entries. Out of 150 entries, 45 were shortlisted among the following categories: object-making (two); image-making (16); place-making (16); and systems/services design (11).

The entries were evaluated according to form, functionality, innovativeness, and malasakit  which were all given equal weight.

This year’s competition jury was composed of by architect Royal Pineda of BUDJI+ROYAL Architecture + Design who chaired the jury, architect Joey Yupangco, creative director Jowee Alviar, entrepreneur Reese Fernandez-Ruiz, industrial designer Kenneth Cobonpue, and jewelry designer Bea Valdes.

Out of the shortlisted entries, 11 finalists received awards.

THE WINNING DESIGNS
The awards are classified into Red, Gold, Green, and Malasakit Award Grand Prix. The Red Award “entails that an idea showcased good design with innovation and function in mind”; the Gold Award: Best in Show, “exemplifies the best application in each design category”; the Green Award (Special Award), is “a special award for outstanding entries that address the United Nation’s Sustainability and Development Goals (UN SDGs) related to the environment and sustainability”; and the Malasakit Award Gran Prix, is “the highest form of recognition for the best entry exemplifying design excellence and having the most impact in addressing the UN SDGs.”

The winners of the Red Award for Image-making (advertising) are the Macho Choir by the DDB Tribal Worldwide Philippines; Tubbataha Coral Rip by the TBWA\Santiago Mangada Puno Advertising, Inc.; Boysen, This Is a Tree by TBWA\Santiago Mangada Puno Advertising, Inc.; and the CCP Baybayan by TBWA\Santiago Mangada Puno Advertising, Inc. In Place-making, the winners are Streetlight Tagpuro by Leandro V. Locsin Partners; and Museo Ni Jesse Robredo by GPAD Studio. In Services and Systems Design, the winner is the Mechanical Water Kiosk by Alternative Indigenous Development Foundation, Inc.

The Gold Award winners in Object-making are the Nata De Coco Wound Dressing by Patchmed Cosmetic Trading; and Tumindig by Komiket, Inc. In Place-Making, the winner is MLR Polo Pavilion by Sangay Architects; while sakay.ph by Sakay Mobility Philippines, Corp. won for Service/Systems Design.

The Green Award and Malasakit Gran Prix Award were both given to the Nata De Coco Wound Dressing by Patchmed Cosmetic Trading.

Winners received the Arturo Luz Tribute trophy. Winners also get the lifetime use of the Good Design Award seal of excellence, and an appearance in the Good Design Award Philippines Yearbook and Winners gallery.

COCONUT DRESSING
“I had the idea (for the product) when I was still working at the Philippine General Hospital (PGH). Every time I see a patient in PGH, nakaka-awa (it’s pitiful). They don’t have money for the treatment,” Malasakit Award Gran Prix winner Denver O. Chicano said in his acceptance speech.

“Care is very important. Everything that we do is service…Care is creativity, attentiveness, resourcefulness, and enthusiasm,” he said of his profession as a nurse.

After resigning from the PGH, Mr. Chicano and his wife (who is a cosmetic surgeon) set up a wound clinic that catered to patients who cannot afford treatment in hospitals.

It was also at this time that Mr. Chicano began developing the coconut cellulose wound dressing called CocoPatch through PatchMed Cosmetic Trading, a pioneering biotechnology company focused on wound care and bio-engineered coco cellulose technology. Mr. Chicano is the company’s managing director.

The CocoPatch’s active ingredient, monolaurin is also derived from coconuts. According to the CocoPatch Facebook page, monolaurin is “a monoester formed from lauric acid and derived from virgin coconut oil, has profound antibacterial, antiviral, and anti-fungal properties.” Mr. Chicano said that it has a shelf life of two years, and can last three days on a wound before needing to be changed.

“There was a German company [Lohmann & Rauscher] who went here to buy the technology from me pero hindi ko siya binenta (but I did not sell it),” Mr. Chicano said. “Kailangan makilala ang Filipino with the product (The Filipino needs to be recognized with the product).”

PatchMed also provides products for cosmetic and industrial application of coconut cellulose. They have partners abroad and export to other countries.

“I invented it to provide availability of wound dressing specializing our coconuts,” Mr. Chicano told BusinessWorld before the awarding ceremony.

“Information dissemination that the product exists would really help. Right now, we are supported by the Department of Science and Technology (DoST) in continuing to improve the product,” he said. 

WHAT’S NEXT FOR THE AWARDEES
Executive Director of the Design Center of the Philippines Rhea Matute says that this year, the Good Design Award winners will participate at the ASEAN Japan Center’s Good Design Selection.

“ASEAN Japan Center will help find buying agents, and trade networks to make it a sustainable business opportunity for the winners of the Good Design Awards,” Ms. Matute told BusinessWorld, shortly after the ceremony.

“Since 2017, we’ve been trying to get a way to connect Good Design Philippines with [Japan’s seal of excellence for quality design] G-Mark,” Ms. Matute said. “Today, when they formalized that there will be a network established between Good Design Philippines, and bring all these new awardees, we need to prepare them so that it will be communicated with the Japanese jurors.”

Earning the G-Mark Seal of distinction, Ms. Matute said, “… commands a premium and earns a trust of Japanese consumers.”

The judging period will be in August, while the awarding is slated around the yearend. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman