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PCC clears AC Logistics acquisition of Air 21 stake

THE Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) has given the green light to the proposed acquisition by Ayala Corp. unit AC Logistics Holdings Corp. of the controlling stake in Air 21 Holdings, Inc.

The agency said in a statement on Wednesday that its mergers and acquisitions (M&A) office deemed that the merging parties would not create a dominant market position and substantial lessening of competition.

In its decision dated May 31, the PCC said it “found that the proposed acquisition does not result in substantial lessening of competition in relevant markets within the logistics sector. This is due to substantial competitive constraints exerted by other market players in this sector nationwide.”

It said customers of the services offered by AC Logistics and Air 21 were determined to also engage with multiple service providers, indicating competition in the industry in terms of price and service quality.

In reaching its decision, the PCC looked into the merger’s effects in the national markets of domestic courier and messengerial services; domestic air, sea, and road freight forwarding; nationwide or regional market for trucking services; general warehousing and storage services in Luzon, and cold storage services in Metro Manila and Southern Luzon, since the operations of AC Logistics and Air 21 overlap in some markets.

The PCC said that its M&A office “found that the merging parties would not result in dominant market position given its resulting market shares in the relevant markets.”

It added that the two parties were deemed to have no increased ability nor incentive to engage in anti-competitive foreclosure such as exclusively supplying its own downstream customers or limiting its services to other downstream markets or players.

The PCC said it “deemed it was unlikely for the transaction to effectively limit access of other players to a significant customer base in the same relevant markets.”

In November last year, AC Logistics’ parent firm Ayala Corp. announced the proposed merger in which its unit entered into an exchange note agreement for conversion shares with Air 21, its owner — former Customs chief Alberto D. Lina, and the eight companies in the network.

The conversion shares will result in at least a 60% stake in Air 21, which in turn controls Airfreight 2100, Inc., Air 2100, Inc., LGC Logistics, Inc., Cargohaus, Inc., U-Freight Phils., Inc., U-Ocean, Inc., Waste & Resources Management, Inc., and Integrated Waste Management, Inc.

The merger is the first transaction submitted for voluntary review by the parties under the Bayanihan To Recover As One Act (Bayanihan II) period with the increased threshold of P50 billion, the PCC said.

“The transaction, however, would have also qualified for regular review under pre-Bayanihan threshold conditions,” it added.

Once the Bayanihan II law expires in September this year, firms whose parent company assets exceed P6 billion and whose M&A transactions exceed P2.4 billion will once again be required to notify the PCC. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Cement group seeks safeguard for local manufacturers

THE proposed extension of safeguard measures is needed to help the recovery of local cement manufacturers, according to the Cement Manufacturers Association of the Philippines (CeMAP).

CeMAP Executive Director Cirilo M. Pestaño II said during a virtual public hearing led by the Tariff Commission (TC) on Wednesday that extending the safeguard measures on the importation of ordinary Portland cement Type 1 and blended cement Type 1P from various countries is “an important support that can be given to the domestic manufacturing industry.”

Mr. Pestaño said manufacturers are just starting to recover after the reopening of the economy.

“But this can all be compromised if the safeguard measures are not extended. This is a real important support that can be given to the domestic manufacturing industry considering the various contributions that we continue to provide to the country,” he said.

According to Mr. Pestaño, the local cement industry has been facing challenges with the rising prices of fuel, which is attributed to the ongoing conflict between Ukraine and Russia. The safeguard measures are set to expire in October this year. “Approximately 70% of the cost of manufacturing cement is accounted for by both fuel and power. And that has been affected by the Ukraine war,” he said.

“It is imperative that the safeguard measure is extended to allow the continuation of advancement plans that have been started by the domestic cement manufacturers and for them to be able to possibly invest more into the Philippines and create more jobs, contribute taxes, and deliver socioeconomic benefits to the particular communities where they operate,” he added.

John Reinier H. Dizon, Republic Cement & Building Materials, Inc. vice-president for strategy and business development, said that removing the safeguard measures would result in a spike in cement importation.

“I believe that if the safeguard measures are not extended, we anticipate an immediate further spike of cement importation into the country, to the detriment of domestic producers. We believe that the Philippines will be quite vulnerable to surge of imports immediately once the current safeguard duty is removed,” Mr. Dizon said.

“The current safeguard duty in place is P200 per ton. We are in the final year of the safeguard measures duty. Removing such duty of P200 per ton will cause an erosion of the prices of cement that we are currently producing. We are today, already in very challenging times,” he added.

Meanwhile, Indonesia Ministry of Trade Director of Trade Events Natan Kambuno said that the current safeguard measures implemented by the Philippines should not be extended.

He added that the Philippines imported 532,000 metric tons of cement from Indonesia from 2019 to 2021, while Vietnam cement imports reached 80% of overall Philippine cement imports.

In December last year, the Philippines’ Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) slapped anti-dumping duties on Vietnam cement imports after an investigation showed that it had caused injury to the local industry.

“The government of Indonesia believes that the existing safeguard measures should not be extended further. The expiring safeguard measures [should] be replaced with a more targeted anti-dumping trade measures so an extension of the safeguard measure will not be necessary or appropriate anymore,” Mr. Kambuno said.

“The government of Indonesia reserves its right to request rate compensation should the existing safeguard measure on imported cement is extended,” he added.

Recently, CeMAP disclosed that cement from Vietnam accounted for 6.466 million metric tons of cement imports out of the 7.107 million metric tons imported by the Philippines last year.

In 2019, the DTI issued Department Administration Order (DAO) 19-13 that implemented a safeguard measure on cement imports for a three-year period after it was found that there is a causal link between higher cement imports and threat of serious injury to the local cement industry. The safeguard duties ranged from P250 per ton in the first year of implementation, down to P200 per ton this year. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

ARQCapital plans to raise P1.5-B capital for SMEs

ARQCAPITAL Partners, Inc. announced on Wednesday that it is planning to raise and deploy P1.5 billion in capital to around 20 to 50 small and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs).

“That’s the vision of ARQ. We are an SME focused investor. Our heart and vision is to serve this segment,” ARQCapital Founding Partner Edmund Solilapsi said in a virtual briefing.

ARQ SME Mezzanine Business Development Co. (ARQ SME BDC) was formed by ARQCapital in 2014, with the goal of being an SME-focused private mezzanine debt investor.

“We customize multi-product investment structures to fully service the critical growth stage of a promising medium enterprise,” Mr. Solilapsi said.

The firm focuses on “smart capital” investments in the private and alternative lending space.

“There are a few ‘smart capital’ investors in the Philippines today and this space has yet to be institutionalized,” he added.

Mr. Solilapsi said that the country’s financing market is dominated by banks and nonbank financial institutions, which are primarily passive capital providers and predominantly asset-backed.

“The private lending space is highly fragmented and is generally yield-driven with no clear thematic approach necessary in providing smart capital and creating an enabling environment for these enterprises,” he said.

“Venture capital firms focus on early-stage startups and tech-driven companies while private equity investors and strategic investors focus on larger investments and more mature enterprises,” he added. “This environment leaves SMEs with more traditional but similarly growing businesses uniquely challenged to find the right capital partner to fuel their growth.”

ARQCapital has invested approximately P1 billion in 33 firms since 2016 through its ARQ SME BDC and through co-investment partners.

For 2022, the company said it plans to fund 10 more mid-sized enterprises by yearend to add to its current portfolio of 22. It is also raising additional capital from development institutions to fund its investments. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

Philjets Aero Services acquires certification as distribution center

PHILJETS Aero Services, Inc. announced on Wednesday that it was appointed by Safran Helicopter Engines as a certified distribution center (CDC) in the country.

“We are thrilled and excited to officially become a CDC and thus work closely with Safran Helicopter Engines, a global engine manufacturer, to further boost proximity support in the Philippines for civilian operators,” Philjets General Manager Reginald J. Arguelles said in a statement.

The certification will allow the company to distribute its complete range of services, alongside spare parts, tooling, training, repair, overhaul, or standard exchanges.

“This partnership will allow Philjets Aero Services and Safran Helicopter Engines to strengthen their relationship to provide seamless support to existing and future civilian operators and owners in the Philippines,” Philjets Sales Supervisor Chressa T. Malicdem said.

Safran Helicopter Engines manufactures helicopter engines, with more than 75,000 produced since being founded. It offers helicopter turboshafts and has more than 2,500 customers in 155 countries.

Philjets is an aviation services company in the Philippines. The company deals with maintenance and support services, serving customers from general aviation, commercial airlines, maintenance and repair organization (MRO) companies, and government agencies.

The firm also has offices in the Philippines, Cambodia, Malaysia, Singapore, and soon in France.

Philjets aims to address and support the “growing needs of helicopters and jets, not only in the Philippines but also the ASEAN region. Its objective is also to raise the bar in delivering its wide-range of services — from aircraft acquisition, sales assistance, fleet management, and maintenance.” — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

Celebrating the local

KULAWONG TALONG

‘There is excellence in our cuisine. We just don’t know about it.’

THE DIAMOND Hotel’s collaboration with Myke “Tatung” Sarthou gives a perfectly good reason to go to a hotel for Filipino food —  even if, by principle, one can always have it at home.

During a lunchtime launch of “Rediscover the Flavors of the Archipelago,” the hotel’s food festival that runs from June 9 to 12, guests were served with delights like balbacua (trotters, tails, and other skin-covered bits in a peanut sauce), pancit pusit (stir-fried noodles in a black squid ink sauce), and kulawong talong (shrimps and eggplant flavored with smoked coconut).

The rest of the menu includes favorites like Pako Salad (fern salad), kinilaw na tuna (raw fish “cooked” in acid) and sinuglaw (like kinilaw, but with grilled meat), sinampalukang manok (chicken cooked in a tamarind-based broth), papaitan soup (meat with a soup flavored with innards) and beef hinalang (a spicy beef broth), callos (tripe in tomato sauce), piyanggang (chicken in a blackened coconut sauce) and beef kulma (a bit like a curry). The carving section will highlight the popular lechon belly roll and roast beef adobo. to end the meal, there are browa, torta bisaya, leche flan, and buco pie.

“The Diamond Hotel is an independently owned Filipino hotel, with an (almost) all-Filipino staff,” said the hotel’s PR Manager, Melanie Pallorina to BusinessWorld. “This is our way of celebrating,” she said.

CELEBRATING THE LOCAL
The menu highlights dishes from all the three major island groups (Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao) of the Philippines. Mr. Sarthou, who won at the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards for two categories: Celebrity Chef – World, and Easy Recipes at Home for his book Simpol Kitchen Secrets, made sure that the menu would include more obscure dishes (for example, save for a less flavorful version of the balbacua, we had yet to encounter any of the three dishes served that day).

The balbacua, made with a peanut and annatto (achuete) broth, might be a version of kare-kare, but it has a thinner broth (in place of the kare-kare’s viscous sauce) and is spiced with sibot which is a mix of traditional Chinese herbs. This tasted quite comforting, especially since the day of the launch was quite rainy.

Another standout was the pancit pusit, which had a citric zing to it, and shrimps added to the squid ink’s oceanic flavor.

The dishes, though unfamiliar, shared similar threads with dishes common to the capital city’s tables. “We use a lot of the ingredients all over,” Mr. Sarthou said, explaining the links that bind the regional cuisines of the Philippines. “It’s the manner of treating the ingredients [that makes the difference].” For example, the Tagalog kulawo mentioned above shares ingredients with Bicol’s tinutong, also made of roasted coconut, which would then tie it up to the piyanggang of Mindanao. “It’s not about exoticizing Filipino food,” the chef said. “These are really like everyday dishes in the other regions.”

He cites that some regions in the Philippines eat things that other regions don’t. In Iloilo, for example, the trunks of banana trees are eaten; in some places, they’re used just for animal feed. “If you’re able to see the food value of products that are wasted in some regions, more people will be able to eat.”

How is it then that some dishes make it to the mainstream, and some stay put? Sisig, for example, was an obscure pickle in Pampanga, which after some modifications by Lucia Cunanan, has reached not only the country’s capital, but also New York, and the TV show of the late gourmand Anthony Bourdain. Who knew that chopped-up pig’s face could have such appeal? “Dapat masarap talaga iyong dish (the dish should really be delicious),” said Mr. Sarthou. “Number two, there should be people promoting it. Food has to have heroes.”

“There is excellence in our cuisine,” he said. “We just don’t know about it.”

The Corniche Lunch and Dinner buffet which will feature the “Rediscover the Flavors of the Archipelago” spread is available  for P3,300 net per person. Guests spending P5,000 net at the Corniche Buffet will get a chance to win roundtrip airline tickets for two persons via Cebu Pacific Air to any local destination of choice at a raffle. —  Joseph L. Garcia

Viber launches free monthly 30-minute calls to mobile, landline in PHL

By Brontë H. Lacsamana, Reporter

MESSAGING PLATFORM Viber is launching a free 30-minute call per user every month to any local mobile line or landline, starting this week. The Philippines is the first country in the world to enjoy this service, being one of the app’s focus markets in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region. The country saw an increase of over 50% in Viber voice calls in 2021.

“We see that, in some parts depending on infrastructure, people just use mobile or landline… and sometimes you may be calling a part of the Philippines that may not have internet infrastructure at all,” said David Tse, Rakuten Viber’s senior director for APAC, in an interview with BusinessWorld.

“Thinking that everyone should have a smartphone — that’s not true. You can’t force everyone [to have one]. Whatever phone they’re using, they just want a simple call,” he added.

The calls will be available to any line and are limited to only 30 minutes. The initiative is a direct response to Filipino users’ needs to contact loved ones across the country.

Because of significant growth in content consumption in different categories like food, entertainment, sports, and even travel, the platform is also working on continuously improving itself as a companion app for businesses, content creators, and merchants.

Mr. Tse explained: “We believe the quality of interaction is more important than the number of features that you have. We will continue to roll out features, but we’ll focus on listening to our users in different categories and how we’re enhancing their benefits.”

In 2021, Viber recorded 33% growth in monthly active users, with an increase of about 54% in business messages.

The Food PH bot, one of Viber’s fastest growing channels, reflects the strength of the app as a helpful tool for brands and businesses, according to Mr. Tse. Meanwhile, Backstage Pass, a project that lets Filipino music artists engage with users in a safe, exclusive channel, shows how the platform can be a very positive space.

“We’re not a food or entertainment company, but at the end of the day, we have a clean and positive environment so that a lot of content creators find us a good companion app where they interact directly with their consumers,” he said.

With the Philippines being a top market, Viber continues to enhance both system and human moderation to ensure there’s no inappropriate content. Two-step authentication and end-to-end encryption are also there to ensure privacy and safety.

“By understanding customers, I’d say we’re getting closer to being more effective in content consumption rather than just being a communication platform,” said Mr. Tse.

Volleyball Nations League for men and women at Big Dome

FIVB Volleyball Nations League 2019 Women’s Tokyo between Japan 3-0 Thailand at Musashino Forest Sport Plaza in Tokyo, Japan. — REUTERS

By Joey Villar

THE world’s best volleyball countries descend to the Philippines when the country hosts Week Two of the Volleyball Nations League (VNL) for women slated for June 14-19 at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

Tokyo Olympics gold medalist and three-time VNL champion United States will spearhead the ultra-powerful cast that also included Asian champion Japan and Southeast Asian (SEA) Games gold winner Thailand.

Asian powerhouse China, Belgium, Bulgaria and Canada are also seeing action in the six-day event.

The country will also host Week Two of the men’s side set June 21-26 that would also be participated in by France, Japan, Slovenia, Argentina. Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and China also at the Big Dome.

Quezon City Vice-Mayor Gian Carlo G. Sotto, representing host Mayor Joy Belmonte, thanked the organizing Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF) for bringing the major event to the city.

“We are here to make sure everything will be safe,” said Mr. Sotto.

The Japanese and the Thais were the first to arrive after flying in on Wednesday.

Japan was riding the crest of its perfect 4-0 performance in the opening week in Shreveport-Bossier City in the US and should be one of the favorites to wow the volleyball-loving Filipino crowd.

Thailand, for its part, has been nothing short of impressive in Week One after a shock five-set win over China.

Interestingly, it was the Chinese’ only defeat in four outings to keep the No. 2 spot with 10 points.

Meanwhile, a revamp is looming over the horizon for the national men and women volleyball teams that failed to take home a medal in the Hanoi SEA Games last month.

Expect the PNVF to lean towards that direction next month as it hopes to strengthen the team that painfully crashed out of medal contention in Hanoi.

The country wound up fourth of five in the women’s division and fifth of seventh in the men’s side.

But first, the Philippine National Teams will play Thailand on Saturday and Japan the next day for the women’s team, and Japan on June 16 and Germany on June 27 for the men’s squad at the Filoil Flying V Arena in San Juan City.

When the ingredients are harder to get, what is a restaurant to do?

MANKI KIM/UNSPLASH

Keeping nimble and having deeper pockets will help food outlets survive

By Joseph L. Garcia, Reporter

SOME food outlets have been announcing shortages of certain items. Mary Grace Cafe announced on a Facebook post in May that “getting your hands on a box or two of your favorite Mary Grace Ensaymadas,” would now be difficult. “Unfortunately, we’re experiencing some global supply issues on a few raw materials, beyond our control.”

Small food chains are not the only ones having problems these days. Even international players have similar issues. On the same day that Mary Grace Cafe posted about its woes, so did LA favorite Randy’s Donuts, which had just opened its BGC branch earlier this year. “Sorry. We ran out of flour before we ran out of queues.” Meanwhile, in a Facebook post from April, McDonald’s Philippines announced: “The supply of our World Famous Fries is limited because of the global freight crisis… all stores will still continue to serve regular fries for your enjoyment.”

FEWER FRIES: FREIGHT ISSUES AND LOCKDOWNS
Adi Hernandez, Corporate Relations Director at McDonald’s Philippines, said in an e-mail to BusinessWorld last week: “The shortage of potato supply due to the global freight crisis is affecting not just McDonald’s in the Philippines, but McDonald’s in other markets.” To better manage their supply and ensure that customers can still enjoy their fries, Ms. Hernandez said, “We temporarily stopped serving our medium and large fries sizes. Our BFF fries size is also available for delivery. We only serve fries that adhere to McDonald’s global quality standards — from where we source our potatoes to how they are prepared and served.”

“Due to the on-going global freight crisis, there is no clarity as to when importation of our fries will normalize,” she said. In the meantime, she said, “We also offer our customers a free swap of fries with our value meals for apple pie or sundae.”

McDonald’s Philippines also attached a letter they had sent Department of Agriculture (DA) Secretary William Dar, which highlighted more reasons for this potato supply chain issue.

The problem, said Margot Torres, Managing Director for Golden Arches Development Corp. which holds the license for McDonald’s in the Philippines, in the letter to Mr. Dar, is not a lack of the kind of potatoes they use — the Russet variety, which they import from the United States, New Zealand, Australia, and China — but how to get them where they have to go.

“Over the past few months, we have been experiencing a delay in the importation of our fries due to the global freight crisis and not the lack of this specific variety of potatoes,” she explained. “It has resulted to us needing to temporarily delist our larger fries sizes to manage inventory so we can still serve our customer fries, even at a limited capacity.”

In the letter, the following factors were given for the importation delays: a “lack of containers, equipment and trucks as global demand increases with economies opening”; the “strict pandemic lockdowns in China which resulted to a bottleneck being a major trading hub”; a “lack of truck drivers in exporting countries due to the same lockdown restrictions,” and “impending labor union strikes in the United States.”

“We are closely working with our global supply chain partners and look forward to the resolution of our fries importation challenges,” the letter said. “We have yet to find clarity as to when importation levels of our fries can be normalized given the worsening of the global freight crisis driven by several factors.”

RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR LEADS TO BREAD PROBLEMS
As for the flour issue, Chito Chavez, former spokesperson and Vice-President of the Philippine Federation of Bakers, as well as founder of Tinapayan Festival bakeshop, said that one of the problems that their industry faced during the pandemic were their repeated closing and reopening, subject to pandemic restrictions. Then there was the cost of ingredients. “Nagtaasan naman ang mga raw materials (the prices of our raw materials increased).”

A BusinessWorld story on June 7 noted that bakers are struggling to keep prices of bread and pastries low amid the spike in flour prices caused by the Russia-Ukraine war and disruptions in the global supply of wheat.

Several bakery told BusinessWorld that prices of flour, depending on the quality, had gone up by around 20% to nearly 50% in recent months.

Ang Ukraine, is a producer ng trigo sa buong mundo na pinakamalaki (Ukraine is one of the world’s biggest wheat producers). Kahit na hindi tayo kumukuha sa Ukraine ng harina, kung siya’y naapektukan, nagkakaepekto sa worldwide supply ng harina (Even if we don’t get our flour from Ukraine, if it’s affected, it affects the worldwide supply of flour),” said Mr. Chavez during a phone interview last week.

The Philippines is a major importer of milling-quality wheat, as it has no commercial production of wheat. It mainly imports wheat from the United States, Australia and Canada, says the story.

While Mr. Chavez said that there isn’t a flour shortage supply yet, “Hindi natin puwedeng alisin ang pangamba na magkaroon ng shortage. So far, wala pang shortage ang industriya ng tinapay, lalo na sa harina. Wala pa naman. (We can’t eliminate the fear that there will be a shortage. So far there isn’t a shortage in the bread industry, especially of flour. Not yet.)” But, he says that as a bakery operator, he has to constantly monitor his stock —  as well as that of his supplier.

INVEST IN FOOD SECURITY
During the launch of a Filipino food festival at the Diamond Hotel, celebrity Chef Myke “Tatung” Sarthou also admitted his own supply chain woes. “Yes, a bit,” he said when asked if he had a hard time sourcing ingredients for his restaurants. This he blames on a food security issue in the country, exacerbated by the quarantine restrictions of the past two years of the pandemic.

“We’re very dependent on foreign supply,” he said. “Potatoes… it’s everything.” He points out that several of the staples in the Philippines are “all imported.” This includes rice, fish, sugar, and vegetables, he said. All those products are produced locally but not in the quantities required to fulfill demand, thus the need for imports.

“Imagine a longer quarantine period where international trade is stuck. Gutom tayong lahat (we’ll all go hungry),” said the chef.

“I don’t think it’s just about restaurants. The global food shortage is something very real. Unless we really look into local food production, and really invest in (this), the time will come that we will run out of things to buy,” he said in a mixture of Tagalog and English.

Tinapayan Festival’s Mr. Chavez believes the same. Some of his products use local crops like camote (sweet potato), carrots, and ube (purple yam), which he says can constitute as much as 20% of bread. As well, he pushes for the development of copra oil for mainstream use. “Ang kanilang tinanim, mabibili na sa bakery (What they plant, the bakery can buy),” he said. In this way, by bolstering the local bread industry with local crops, we can reduce reliance on imported wheat. “At least may food sustainability. Hindi tayo asa nang asa sa imported (We won’t have to depend on imports.”

NOW WHAT?
In the meantime, what can restaurants and other food outlets do in the face of dwindling supplies?

Adolf Aran, a food business coach to SMEs, gave a list of short-term solutions, as we wait for things to unfold.

“Menu re-engineering is a practice that’s done by restaurants in good times and in bad times. In bad times, particularly during raw materials shortage, creativity on substitution of raw materials becomes extremely necessary. Tenderloin is replaced by sirloin. Baby back ribs can be replaced by spare ribs. Chicken cut into six pieces is cut into eight pieces with a unique way of preserving meat to bone ratio. Will quality suffer? That’s when cooking techniques are relearned, and marketing plays a major role in pushing certain proteins, instead of the popular ones,” he said.

“With the looming food shortage, shifts on center of the plate are necessary,” he said. He cited a specific case: “A seafood restaurant painstakingly learned it the hard way when, during the height of a drought, crabs and other shellfish were extremely hard to come by. Fortunately, the menu was reinvented in such an way that other proteins are given the spotlight.”

On that note, he also gave tips to restaurateurs on how to save during these times.

“A certain amount of planning and an attitude of expect(ing) the unexpected will do the trick. Some concepts had to abandon certain established businesses because they no longer enjoy the same profit margin. Some food businesses invested and vertically integrated to have a certain level of stability on farm supplies. Some had to invest in walk-in chillers to extend inventory levels,” he said.

“Embracing uncertainty and disruption is already a way of life. Once the restaurant industry players accept this unpredictability, then there would be less resistance to change, be it in menu, operations, customer expectations, selling price points, and profit margins,” he said.

“No one can prevent the industry from similar shocks in the future. However, there are so many ways to prepare oneself from future crises. It just takes an openness to doing things differently, and it starts with an agile mindset.

“And deeper pockets for the long haul, of course,” he added.

Gov’t imposes sanctions on two electric cooperatives

POOR performance has led to the sanctions imposed by state-led Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM) on two electric cooperatives in Mindanao.

The Department of Finance (DoF) said in a statement on Wednesday that PSALM should stop giving free electricity to Maguindanao Electric Cooperative, Inc. (Magelco) and Lanao del Sur Electric Cooperative, Inc. (Lasureco).

The department said it is not PSALM’s mandate to subsidize electricity costs, neither does it have the budget to do so.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III chairs the PSALM board, which is also composed of some Cabinet secretaries and the president of PSALM.

Magelco will receive a reduction of energy allocation, while Lasureco will be disconnected from the Agus 1 hydroelectric power plant. Both sanctions took effect on May 26. They were ordered by the DoF, to be imposed by PSALM onto the two cooperatives, due to their ballooning debt.

“The poor payment performance of [the two cooperatives] has been a long-standing problem, stemming from both cooperatives’ financial mismanagement and low collection efficiency from consumers,” the DoF said.

Magelco has only paid P45.5 million out of its P147.2-million total power bill from December 2021 to April 2022. In addition, the firm still owes the government P3.8 billion. Lasureco has P12.9 billion in outstanding debts in power bills to PSALM as of April 30, and has not expressed intention to settle the debt, the Finance department said.

Magelco and Lasureco also have unremitted universal charges, which amount to P29 million and P9.5 million, respectively, which they have already collected from electricity consumers, it added.

PSALM has repeatedly demanded that the two entities pay their outstanding debts, with the threat of reducing their energy allocation if they continued to fail to settle their payments.

In late December last year, PSALM was instructed by the DoF to stop taking on additional liabilities from Magelco and Lasureco, also due to their payment delinquencies.

In April 2020, under Republic Act No. 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act, PSALM increased the power allocations to the two cooperatives to ensure stable electricity in southern Mindanao during the height of the pandemic.

PSALM, a government-owned and controlled entity, was created by law to manage the orderly sale and privatization of the government’s power generation assets.

BusinessWorld reached out to the two electricity cooperatives for their side through the e-mail addresses listed in their social media accounts. They have yet to reply as of press time.— Tobias Jared Tomas

Term deposit yields climb on inflation, hawkish BSP

YIELDS on the term deposits offered by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) climbed on Wednesday following the release of data showing faster inflation and hawkish signals from the incoming central bank chief.

Total bids for the central bank’s term deposit facility (TDF) reached P355.58 billion on Wednesday, above the P300-billion offer as well as the P345.386 billion in tenders seen last week.

Broken down, the seven-day papers fetched bids amounting to P144.719 billion, higher than the P140-billion auctioned off by the central bank. However, this was lower than the P168.867 billion in tenders logged in the previous auction.

Banks asked for yields ranging from 2% to 2.5125%, a wider margin compared with the 2% to 2.4% band seen a week ago. This caused the average rate of the one-week paper to rise by 5.36 basis points (bps) to 2.3249% from 2.2713%, central bank data showed.

Meanwhile, demand for the 14-day term deposits amounted to P210.861 billion, higher than the P160-billion offering. This was also higher than the P176.519 billion in tenders recorded a week ago.

Accepted rates for the papers were from 2.245% to 2.550%, narrower than the 2.125% to 2.66% range seen on June 1. With this, the average rate of the two-week paper increased by 10.7 bps to 2.3991% from 2.2921% in the previous week’s auction.

The central bank has not auctioned 28-day term deposits for more than a year to give way to its weekly offerings of securities with the same tenor.

The term deposits and the 28-day bills are used by the BSP to mop up excess liquidity in the financial system and to better guide market rates.

TDF yields climbed due to faster inflation in May, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

He said signals from the incoming BSP chief on further rate hikes to arrest rising inflation also caused term deposit yields to rise.

Inflation quickened to its fastest pace in over three years in May due to higher food and transport costs, preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority released on Tuesday showed.

Headline inflation in May surged by 5.4% year on year from 4.9% in April and 4.1% a year ago. This matched the 5.4% median estimate in a BusinessWorld poll conducted late last week, which was the midpoint of the 5-5.8% outlook range given by the BSP for that month.

May’s headline print was also the fastest since the 6.1% seen in November 2018.

Year to date, inflation has averaged 4.1%. This is lower than the central bank’s 4.6% forecast but above its 2-4% target for the year.

On Tuesday, Monetary Board member and incoming BSP chief Felipe M. Medalla said in a Bloomberg interview that they are “almost” sure to hike at their June 23 meeting and there is also a “90% chance” of another increase at their subsequent review on Aug. 18.

Mr. Medalla said the real question is if an August hike would be the last one for the year and noted decisions beyond this would be data dependent.

Increases worth 25 bps in the Monetary Board’s June and August meetings would bring the benchmark rate to 2.75% from 2.25% currently.

The rise in global oil prices and US yields also affected TDF rates, Mr. Ricafort added.

Brent crude futures for August had risen 59 cents, or 0.48%, to $121.15 a barrel by 0533 GMT after closing on Tuesday at the highest since May 31, Reuters reported.

US West Texas Intermediate crude for July was at $120.09 a barrel, up 66 cents, or 0.55%, after reaching its highest settlement since March 8 in the previous session.

Meanwhile, the US benchmark 10-year yield was 3.003%, having edged down from a four-week high of 3.064% on Tuesday. — K.B. Ta-asan with Reuters

Lady Bulldogs eye sweep against Golden Tigresses

NATIONAL University Lady Bulldogs — THE UAAP

By John Bryan Ulanday

WITH an outright finals berth within its reach, unscathed National University (NU) wants no slip-up in taking care of Santo Tomas as its last hurdle in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) women’s volleyball tournament today at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City.

At 13-0, the Lady Bulldogs aim to get the job done at 4 p.m. versus the Golden Tigresses (9-4) for a big win that would also turn the traditional Final Four into a harder stepladder format for the other teams below them.

Santo Tomas, currently at third, and No. 2 La Salle (10-3) are already in that playoff picture, leaving Adamson (7-6) and reigning champion Ateneo (7-6) in a scramble for the last slot against different opponents.

The Lady Falcons play the Lady Spikers at 12:30 p.m. while the Blue Eagles battle also-ran University of the Philippines (UP) (5-8) at 6:30 p.m. Cellar-dwellers Far Eastern University (FEU) (1-12) and University of the East (UE) (0-13) then go for a graceful exit at 10 a.m.

In case of a tie, Adamson and Ateneo would slug it out in a knockout duel for the last playoff ticket.

For NU, the stakes are higher.

“Hindi pa tapos ang trabaho. Hindi muna namin iniisip ‘yung sweep. As always, we’ll take it one game at a time. Basta ready lang kami. Trabaho lang kung ano ang magiging results,” said NU coach Karl Dimaculangan.

Against the capable Golden Tigresses for that 14-0 sweep bid, the Lady Bulldogs expect no less than an all-out war despite a 25-21, 25-21, 21-25, 25-15 win in the first round.

“Kami ‘yung last game nila so sino ba naman ang ayaw tumalo sa NU? Para magkaroon tayo ng Final Four, we will try our best,” said Santo Tomas deputy Yani Fernandez, who spoke in lieu of head coach Kungfu Reyes.

“Dadaan kami sa butas ng karayom. Para rin ito sa ibang teams kasi malaki ‘yung impact pag na-sweep nila. Mas mahirap ‘yung stepladder, so sana makuha namin ‘yung panalo,” he added.

Tweaks to macroprudential toolkit needed for systemic risk response

THE CENTRAL BANK should expand its macroprudential policy toolkit and establish operational procedures in a more systemic risk-based approach, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in a technical note.

The technical note was crafted under the Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP), a joint program of the IMF and the World Bank that aims to provide a detailed framework to identify vulnerabilities in the system and develop appropriate policy responses.

The IMF highlighted the importance of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)-led Financial Stability Coordination Council and other financial regulators in improving systemic risk monitoring by reducing data gaps.

“Closing the data gap is essential for systemic risk analysis, which cover some key vulnerabilities, such as real estate, non-financial corporations’ condition (the offshore and foreign currency borrowing) and its link to conglomerate groups and banks, that need to be closely monitored,” the IMF said.

The data gaps cited by the IMF include lack of information on granular credit risks, including a fully operational national credit registry, current collateral values and loan-to-value ratios, small and unlisted nonfinancial corporations (NFCs) and household indebtedness and survey, and detailed depositor information due to the bank secrecy.

In another technical note, the IMF said the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an immediate risk to financial stability in the Philippines. The FSAP said it conducted a series of macro-financial analyses to assess the effects of the COVID-19 crisis and related policies.

FSAP models showed Philippine NFCs are likely to experience distress if domestic and global gross domestic product (GDP) contract sharply in the severe baseline.

The shocks are expected to reduce corporate earnings across different sectors, especially in the energy, consumer discretionary, and industrial sectors.

For banks, this could increase nonperforming loans significantly without private and public sector actions or economic recovery. While its impact can be mitigated, the IMF said this may only delay and not prevent eventual bankruptcy if the health crisis lasts longer.

“While banks can withstand the exceptionally severe shocks in the baseline, they could experience a systemic solvency impact if additional downside risks materialize,” the IMF said.

“The BSP should enhance its macro scenario stress testing exercises,” it added.

The IMF said currently, no units or sectors conduct macro-scenario stress testing, which is one of the essential tools for financial stability analysis.

“The BSP should start such exercises. There is no single best practice about how to organize stress testing work. Several units and sectors could work jointly, or different sections could conduct distinct exercises depending on their objective,” the IMF said.

CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS
In another technical note, the IMF said the Philippine economy and in turn, the financial system, is also highly vulnerable to climate change risks.

Simulated scenarios show that disruptions due to extreme typhoons could affect economic growth in the Philippines.

“The paths for GDP show that for both current and future scenarios, typhoons with 10- and 25-year return period give less than one standard deviation shock to GDP, which is also smaller than the shock to the Philippines during the Global Financial Crisis or Asian Financial Crisis episodes,” the IMF said.

“The difference between current and future scenarios is also small. The severity of the GDP impact and the difference between current and future scenarios becomes starker for tail events. In particular, the impact of a 500-year return period typhoon on real GDP is comparable to that of COVID-19.”

These threats from climate change could cause significant risks to financial stability, the multilateral lender said.

“Without other extreme tail events, such as a pandemic, climate change in the future would reduce bank capital ratio visibly only in the tail events once in 500 years,” the IMF added.

Authorities should also conduct more exploratory work to examine the potential impact of climate change. Inter-agency collaboration, including with non-economic agencies such as the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration, Department of Energy and Department of Agriculture, is critical, it said. — K.B. Ta-asan