Home Blog Page 6174

Pag-IBIG Fund releases record-high P44B home loans in H1 2021, up 113%

Despite the pandemic, Pag-IBIG Fund achieved another record by releasing over P44 billion in home loans in the first half of 2021, top officials announced on Friday (July 9).

From January to June, the agency released home loans worth P44.34 billion – the highest amount ever released during the first half of the year – and more than double the P20.80 billion it released during the same period in 2020.

Compared with the P37.07 billion released during the pre-pandemic period of January to June 2019, when strict community quarantines in Metro Manila and parts of Luzon had yet to be implemented, disbursement in the first half of 2021 is higher by nearly 20%.

“This is an indication that the number of Filipino workers who are able to become homeowners via the Pag-IBIG home loan programs continues to grow. In these tough times, we remain steadfast in our commitment to answer President Rodrigo Duterte’s call for government agencies to provide social benefits to more Filipinos,” said Secretary Eduardo D. del Rosario, who heads the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) and the 11-member Pag-IBIG Fund Board of Trustees.

Meanwhile, Pag-IBIG Fund Chief Executive Officer Acmad Rizaldy P. Moti said that the P44.34 billion released in the first half of 2021 enabled 43,573 members to acquire their own homes. Out of the total amount, P4.66 billion was released to finance the acquisition of socialized housing. Of the total number of members who benefited from the agency’s home loan programs in the first half of the year, 10,640 or 24% belong to the minimum-wage and low-income sectors.

He added that with its home loan disbursement reaching a record high over the past six months, he expects to exceed by yearend the P86.74 billion home loans released in 2019, which is the highest amount ever released by the agency in a single year.

“With the way things are going, I’m very optimistic that by the end of 2021, we will surpass the total home loan releases of 2019, which is our best year yet. The P44.34 billion disbursed is especially important because we achieved higher figures this year compared to the same period before the pandemic happened. On average, we released over P7 billion in home loans every month in the first half of the year. If this trend holds and succeeding monthly releases remain higher than usual, home loan releases by the end of the year will likely breach the P90 billion mark and may even reach P100 billion. This translates to another ‘best year ever’ for us and, more importantly, even more members having a home of their own where they can be safe as the health emergency continues,” Moti said.

 

Join us on Viber to get more updates from BusinessWorld: https://bit.ly/3hv6bLA

Caseloads climb as Southeast Asia feels force of Delta variant

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

Having escaped the worst when the coronavirus pandemic erupted last year, Southeast Asia is now suffering record rises in deaths and cases, while vaccination shortfalls and highly contagious variants have derailed containment efforts. 

As countries like Britain, Germany and France prepare to remove most remaining restrictions after devastating outbreaks, governments in Southeast Asia have been tightening measures, hoping targeted lockdowns will act as circuit-breakers in arresting dramatic spikes after cases started rising in May. 

Indonesia, the region’s hardest hit and most populous country, recorded 38,391 cases on Thursday, six times the number a month earlier, in a week when it’s daily death toll as much as doubled from the start of July. 

Hospitals on the most populous island Java are being pushed to the limit, oxygen supplies are low, and four of five designated coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) burial grounds in the capital Jakarta are close to full. 

Record deaths were reported on Thursday in Malaysia, and in Thailand, where authorities proposed internal travel curbs as the Delta variant wreaking havoc in Indonesia spread quickly in and around Bangkok. A new terminal at the Thai capital’s airport is being turned into a 5,000-bed field hospital. 

Neighboring Myanmar saw more than 4,000 new cases for the first time on Thursday and one of its deadliest days, while Cambodia has seen its highest number of cases and deaths in the past nine days. 

Health experts say a low level of testing in the region’s most populous countries Indonesia and the Philippines is also likely disguising the full extent of outbreaks, while Myanmar has seen a collapse in testing since February’s military coup. 

PANIC-BUYING 

Vietnam’s reputation as a coronavirus success story is under threat, with more cases in the past three days than during the first 13 months of the pandemic, although the record 1,314 cases on Thursday were a fraction of those in Indonesia. 

Fears of a lockdown prompted supermarket panic-buying this week in the epicenter Ho Chi Minh City, and a 4% plunge in its main stock index on Tuesday. 

The capital Hanoi halted public transport from places with infection clusters, to insulate itself from the outbreak in the southern commercial hub, where some of the country’s tightest restrictions were in force from Friday. 

Dicky Budiman, an epidemiologist at Griffith University, said the region was struggling to cope with the Delta variant and were paying for inconsistencies in strategy and messaging, and enforcement of protocols. 

He also cited the need to broaden the range of vaccines to better protect populations, noting the dominance of the Sinovac vaccine, owing to China’s vaccine diplomacy when western brands were unavailable. 

“There’s definitely benefits to the vaccine, but there’s also the weak sides of it. Why? In handling the pandemic at a bigger scale … vaccines can’t stand alone,” he said. “Vaccines need to be diversified. Resources need to be diversified.” 

Vaccination rates remain low, with 5.4% of Indonesia’s 270 million population fully inoculated, about 2.7% of people in the Philippines and 4.7% of the population in Thailand. 

Malaysia has vaccinated 9.3% of its 32 million people and has introduced an enhanced lockdown in its capital and industrial belt. 

Indonesia and Thailand are considering booster shots with mRNA vaccines, like those of Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech/Comirnaty, for medical workers who have mostly received the Chinese-made inactivated virus vaccines of Sinovac, amid concerns about their resistance to variants. 

Singapore is among the few bright spots, with authorities expected to further ease restrictions imposed when the Delta variant was detected, and complete the immunization of half of the population later this month. 

The city-state plans to allow fully vaccinated residents to attend larger gatherings like concerts, conferences and sports events.  Martin Petty and Stanley Widianto/Reuters 

Five years after South China Sea ruling, China’s presence around Philippines only growing

CATO, Philippines – Filipino fisherman Randy Megu has often braved the storms that spring up in the South China Sea, but these days he has a greater fear: seeing a Chinese maritime enforcement vessel on the horizon.

Five years after a landmark international arbitration court ruling repudiated China’s claims to the waters where Megu fishes, the 48-year-old complains that his encounters with Chinese boats are more frequent than ever.

“I was so scared,” said Megu, describing how a Chinese vessel had tracked his wooden outrigger boat for three hours some 140 nautical miles (260 km) from the coast in May.

He said other fishermen had reported being rammed or blasted with water cannons while working in what they considered their historic fishing grounds – which they had hoped to secure after the ruling in The Hague in 2016.

China rejected the ruling and has stood by its claim to most of the waters within a so-called Nine Dash Line, which is also contested by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.

China’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In just one incident in March, the Philippines complained of incursions by what it said were more than 200 Chinese militia vessels into the exclusive economic zone (EEZ), which extends 200 nautical miles from its coast.

Chinese diplomats said the boats were sheltering from rough seas and no militia were aboard.

“The data here is very clear,” said Greg Poling of Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies. “Chinese Coast Guard ships and the militia are in the Philippines’ EEZ more than they were five years ago.”

A July 2020 opinion poll showed that 70% of Filipinos want the government to assert its claim in the South China Sea.

“We firmly reject attempts to undermine it; nay, even erase it from law, history and our collective memories,” Foreign Minister Teodoro Locsin said in a statement last month.

The country has made 128 diplomatic protests over China’s activities in contested waters since 2016, and coast guard and bureau of fisheries vessels have conducted “sovereign” patrols in the Philippines’ EEZ.

But the Philippines has done little else to press its claim under firebrand President Rodrigo Duterte, who has made the relationship with China a plan of his foreign policy and said it is “inutile” to try to challenge its vastly bigger neighbour.

After some of his cabinet stepped up rhetoric over the waters early this year, Duterte barred them from speaking out.

“China is more in control. The only thing the Duterte government can point to is they haven’t had a major incident,” Poling said. “If you just keep surrendering to the bully, of course there won’t be a fight.”

The Philippine coast guard and ministry of defence did not respond to requests for comment.

China’s presence has also grown elsewhere in the South China Sea. It has continued to strengthen artificial islands equipped with secured ports, airstrips and surface-to-air-missiles.

Confrontations with Vietnam have set back energy projects. Malaysia has complained about the actions of Chinese vessels. Their presence have also drawn concern in Indonesia – even though it is not technically a claimant state.

Occasional freedom of navigation operations by the U.S. Navy have challenged China’s claims but show no sign of discouraging Beijing from deploying vessels around the Philippines or elsewhere.

Before his election in 2016, Duterte had said he would stand up for his country’s claims in the South China Sea.

He is due to step down at the end of his single six-year term next year, but talk that he could be vice president or be succeeded by his daughter have raised doubts that policies will change.

The fishermen of Pangasinan see little hope of a challenge to the Chinese vessels that now dictate their movements.

“Now, it is as if we are the ones stealing from our own backyard,” said 51-year old fisherman Christopher de Vera. — Reuters

Southeast Asia is world’s fastest-growing mobile wallet market 

Image via grab.com

Southeast Asia is the world’s fastest-growing region for mobile wallets, followed by Latin America and Africa & Middle East, research from London-based fintech company Boku Inc. shows. 

The number of mobile wallets in use will grow 311% from 2020 to almost 440 million by 2025 across Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, reflecting an e-commerce boom, according to a global study on the industry, which was published on Thursday in partnership with Juniper Research Ltd. The usage in Latin America is set to expand 166% during the same period, while that in Africa and Middle East will grow 147%. 

Mobile wallets overtook credit cards to become the most widely used payment type globally in 2019, according to the report, and adoption accelerated during the pandemic. There were more than 2.8 billion mobile wallets in use at the end of 2020, and that’s projected to increase 74% to 4.8 billion by the end of 2025. 

The study found there are two distinct types of mobile wallets in the world. One is card-based mobile wallets like Apple Pay and Google Pay, which are more popular in developed markets. The other is stored value mobile wallets like China’s AliPay and Grab Holding Inc.’s GrabPay, popular in emerging markets where credit-card usage is lower. 

In 2020, there were 55 stored value mobile wallets that processed more than $1 billion in annual transactions. Pakistan’s SadaPay is projected to be the fastest-growing mobile wallet in the world in the five years to 2025, followed by Mercado Pago and PicPay in Brazil. 

Chinese wallets are likely to have limited impact outside their home market, the study said. That’s despite Ant Group Co.’s Alipay taking stakes in international companies including mobile money platform bKash Ltd., and Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat Pay getting approval for use in Indonesia in 2020. 

“It seems unlikely that they will conquer emerging Asian markets as many once thought,” the report said, adding that their usage overseas was mostly limited to Chinese tourists.  Yoolim Lee/Bloomberg

Duterte ponders play for power as political exit looms

PHILSTAR

MANILA – Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte might be barred from a second term in office, but don’t be surprised if he’s still running the country after a presidential election next year.

The popular Duterte gave the strongest hint yet that he might seek the vice presidency, saying on Wednesday that he was “sold to the idea” and thinking seriously about running for the largely ceremonial number two post.

For Christian Monsod, a lawyer and one of the framers of the 1987 constitution, Duterte’s real intent is clear.

“There is a plan to use a backdoor approach to stay in power,” he said.

Duterte, 76, is trying to circumvent the single-six year term limit, set by the constitution to stop power from being abused, said Monsod, a former election commission chief.

He suspects Duterte was asked by allies to choose a running mate to campaign with to help the candidate win the presidency. That president would then step down, allowing Duterte to reassume the post.

Duterte’s spokesman and his legal counsel did not respond to requests for comment.

Duterte, who has portrayed himself as a reluctant president with no desire for power, says he wants his media-shy longtime aide Christopher “Bong” Go to be his successor.

His endorsement in 2019 helped Go to become a senator, a job he combines with being Duterte’s personal assistant. Go says he is not interested.

Duterte’s daughter, Davao mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio has outshone Go in opinion polls as possible presidential contenders. But Sara and her father are against the idea of her running.

Temario Rivera, head of the Center for People Empowerment in Governance, said Duterte’s motivation to remain in power is obvious – to avoid jail and courtrooms.

Political vendettas are common in the Philippines and former leaders, minus their immunity of office, have been prosecuted and even jailed after changes in power.

“The question facing him is what is the best strategy to deal with that existential problem,” Rivera said.

Duterte has repeatedly baited the International Criminal Court (ICC) and dared it to put him on trial for crimes against humanity. The ICC’s prosecutor has since sought the go-ahead to launch a formal investigation into the drugs war killings.

“The strategy for Duterte is to make sure that the opposition does not win,” Rivera said.

“The ICC can now proceed with their investigation in a clearer manner if you have an opposition president in power.” — Reuters

PHL exports, imports grow in May

THE COUNTRY’S TRADE in merchandise goods continued to rebound in May as both exports and imports grew, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported this morning.

Preliminary PSA data showed merchandise exports during the month went up by 29.8% year on year to $5.89 billion. This was slower than the revised 74.1% expansion in April but marked a turnaround from the 26.7% decline in May 2020.

Meanwhile, merchandise imports expanded by 47.7% to $8.65 billion, compared with a revised 152.8% surge in April and the 40.5% fall last year.

May marked the third and fourth consecutive month of growth for exports and imports, respectively.

The trade deficit stood at $2.76 billion in May. This was smaller than the $3.08-billion shortfall in April but was bigger than the $1.31-billion gap in May 2020.

Year to date, the trade balance widened to a $14.18-billion deficit, wider than the $9.95-billion trade gap in last year’s comparable five months.

For the same five-month period, exports and imports grew by an annual 21.4% (to $29.35 billion) and 27.6% (to $43.53 billion), respectively. Both figures surpassed the Development Budget Coordination Committee’s revised growth targets for export and imports at 8% and 12% for the year. — Lourdes O. Pilar

Suzuki Philippines reveals new and improved Ciaz

Move up in life and enjoy the refined experience offered by the New Suzuki Ciaz

Suzuki Philippines, Inc. (SPH), the country’s pioneer compact car distributor, announces the launch of an upgraded version of its Ciaz to the market. The New Ciaz offers its patrons the opportunity of an enhanced driver and passenger experience. Staying true to the Ciaz’s theme of “Up Your Game,” Suzuki ups its game by providing numerous improvements to its previous models in all the forms that matter — from its newly designed exterior to refurbished interior with the same reliable driving performance.

Sleek and Elegant Exterior Design

New Chrome Grille

The new version of the Suzuki Ciaz creates an instant impression with its newly revamped and polished exterior. Some improvements made to the previous designs include a new stylish chrome grille as well as a new bumper design showing off a vibe sportier than ever. Dazzling LED lamps and newly designed fog lamps with chrome accents surround the New Ciaz as well, adding even more sophistication to its facade.

New Bumper

Plush and Refined Interior

In addition to its superb exterior, the New Ciaz offers just as much inside as it does on the outside. They say it’s not about the destination, it’s about the ride — and with Suzuki’s new plush interior, it offers a drive like no other.

Elegant fabric seats, a refined instrument panel, and a black interior with silver accents greets the driver once its doors open. Ergonomically designed seats and its roomy cabin ensure that you get to share and enjoy a comfortable experience with others as well.

Elegant Fabric Seats

Additionally, the New Ciaz offers an upgraded infotainment system. The now 8-inch infotainment system is equipped with a soft-touch button and an added compatibility of Apple Car Play and Android Auto functions. Users will get to connect their smartphones via Bluetooth or a USB cable to use their apps through the Ciaz’s intuitive display.

Redefined Instrument Panel

Unparalleled Performance

The New Suzuki Ciaz goes above and beyond to offer the performance needed for its users to drive to the next level. The Ciaz’s powerful 1.4L petrol engine offers exceptional driving performance which can help you cruise faster and smoother to your next destination with a maximum output of 91HP at 6,000RPM.

Along with the exceptional performance, the New Ciaz comes with an improved safety features as well — which include a reverse camera, dual airbags, and lastly, an anti-lock braking system (ABS) with an electronic brakeforce distribution (EBD) to ensure that its wheels do not lock under heavy breaking and that both wheels get the right amount of braking force.

The New Suzuki Ciaz is set to join the market on July 9 in 3 different colors — Mineral Gray Metallic, Pure White Pearl, and Super Black Pearl. To top it all off, the New Ciaz, which will be available in GL 4-speed AT variant only, is priced at P888,000.

Like Suzuki Philippines on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/SuzukiAutoPh to know more about the New Ciaz.

For more information about Suzuki Philippines and its automobile lineup, please visit our online showroom at www.suzuki.com.ph, like on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SuzukiAutoPH, and follow on Instagram at @suzukiautoph.

SM Foundation ensures holistic approach for its School Building program

SM Foundation (SMFI) understands the importance of executing a holistic approach for its School Building program and that its commitment to providing a conducive learning environment for Filipino learners does not end on the turnover of SM school buildings to grassroots communities.

As an active partner of the Department of Education’s (DepEd) Adopt-A-School program, SM Foundation helps address the classroom shortage in the country through its School Building program. The program intends to address overcrowding in schools since SMFI believes that this is one of the biggest challenges that our public education faces today. That class size reduction in the early grade helps students achieve because there is a greater opportunity for individual interaction between student and teacher in a small class—allowing Filipino learners to reach their fullest potentials. To date, SMFI has built and refurbished more than 270 school buildings in grassroots communities nationwide.

As a sustainability strategy, SMFI involves various SM Business units in its social good programs – such as the SM Engineering Design and Development (EDD) which is the architectural and engineering arm of the retail and mall properties of SM. Equipped with the modern engineering expertise of SM EDD, SM Foundation regularly conduct visits to previously donated school buildings to take note of repairs needed to be undertaken—ensuring that each SM School building nationwide are in excellent condition.

For the year 2021, the school buildings that were donated in 2016 were repaired. These are the Bakod Bayan Integrated School in Cabanatuan City; San Francisco Elementary School in Concepcion, Tarlac; Lucban Elementary School in Baguio City; Jugan Elementary School in Consolacion, Cebu; and Northern Tacloban National High School in Tacloban City.

Meanwhile, repairs at the Ibajay National High School in Ibajay, Aklan are underway. The school building, which was the 73rd SM school building was donated by SM Prime through Foundation in partnership with BDO Foundation. The said school building is currently undergoing roof and ceiling replacement and is expected to be completed by mid-July.

Sustaining the Philippine mining industry under balanced interests

In photo during the BUSINESSWORLD Insights (clockwise, from top left) are moderator Victor V. Saulon of BusinessWorld; and panelists Atty. Ronald S. Recidoro, executive director of the Chamber of Mines of the Philippines; Engr. Eulalio B. Austin, Jr., president and chief executive officer of Philex Mining Corporation; and Atty. Dante R. Bravo, president of Global Ferronickel Holdings, Inc. (FNI) and president of Philippine Nickel Industry Association (PNIA).

Opportunities can be maximized if miners are backed by improved policies, mining industry leaders agree

By Adrian Paul B. Conoza, Special Features Assistant Editor

Amid a gradual move towards economic recovery in the ‘now normal’, as well as a greater call for sustainability among businesses, how does the mining industry aim to move forward and further harness the country’s mineral riches?

Last July 7, during a BusinessWorld Insights forum, themed “Philippine Mining: Balancing Environmental and Economic Interests,” representatives from private mining players and organizations shared how the industry can help in stabilizing the economy through further maximizing the country’s mineral resources while ensuring sustainability in the environments and communities they work in.

Atty. Ronald S. Recidoro, executive director of the Chamber of Mines of the Philippines (COMP), stressed that the Philippines has a great mining potential, which can yield large revenues if properly developed.

Mining companies have shown themselves to be pandemic-resilient, able to operate with minimal risk of infection and under self-contained environments, Mr. Recidoro noted. “Mining did not just survive during the pandemic; it thrived,” he said.

Among mining’s potential, COMP’s executive director shared, are creating raw materials needed for future industrialization as well as its indispensability to a green future.

“Electronic vehicles, batteries, solar panels, wind turbines, all these green technologies will require space-age materials and metals which can only be extracted through mining,” he explained.

Mr. Recidoro also shared estimates from Mines and Geosciences Bureau which states that the country’s mineral endowment for copper, gold, nickel, chromite is at around US$ 1.4 trillion or over P60 trillion; while over US$ 5 billion were gained in exports in 2020, equivalent to over 6% of the country’s total exports. Miners also paid over P25 billion in taxes, fees, and royalties.

“If [our minerals stay] underground, it has very little value,” he reiterated. “It’s better if we extract it responsibly and use the benefits and revenues of mining to leapfrog our economy forward.”

In addition, Atty. Dante R. Bravo, president of Global Ferronickel Holdings, Inc. (FNI) and president of Philippine Nickel Industry Association (PNIA), shared that the Philippine nickel industry posted 4% production growth and 18% increase in export value year-on-year amid the current pandemic.

“Looking at the broader performance of the industry, the members of the PNIA supply approximately half of the 2020 nickel production and 31% of total production from January to March 2021,” he added.

The PNIA president noted that new mining projects, once rolled out, can promote employment, as well as contributions in tax and exports, which together can help boost the economy.

“The mining industry definitely can be one of the important drivers of the economy, and they can provide a lot of employment and taxes to the government without sacrificing the environment,” Mr. Bravo said.

Engr. Eulalio B. Austin, Jr., president and chief executive officer of Philex Mining Corporation, spotted the growth of demand for copper and gold since the pandemic. “We would be losing out in a voluminal opportunity if we do not hinge ourselves to this bandwagon,” he said.

He added that products such as copper cathode and copper concentrates, which Philex Mining’s Silangan project produce, will be delivered overseas, contributing to the country’s exports and so translates to revenue for the country.

In light of these potentials, however, where does sustainability fit in? Mr. Austin noted that mining does include environmental interest in the picture.

“Contrary to popular belief, balancing economic, environmental, and social interests in mining is not a difficult task,” the Philex Mining CEO said. “In fact, there shouldn’t be much of a balancing act at all because they are all one and the same.”

Concerns on IPs, environment

On addressing issues concerning indigenous peoples (IPs) living in communities where mining projects take place, the panel noted that the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act or IPRA Law, together with corresponding guidelines from the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, should be sufficient in protecting the rights of such residents.

“Under that law, indigenous peoples have primary rights over mineral resources under their ancestral domains, which means mining can’t take place without their free and prior informed consent,” Mr. Recidoro of COMP reminded, adding that the law gives them the guarantee to have a share in mining revenues as well as the power to enumerate projects they would like the mining company to provide them in their communities.

IPs, he continued, should be “capacitated on how they can better take advantage of their royalties” so that the benefits they receive would be enough to ensure the health and welfare of their communities even after the mines within their premises have closed.

In addition, Mr. Bravo of PNIA suggested that there should be “extra effort in determining which are considered ancestral domains.”

In terms of serving environmental interests, Mr. Bravo notes that existing legislation, particularly the Mining Law, provides safeguards to protect the environment, among them undertaking environmental protection and enhancement programs and creating a mine rehabilitation fund. There are also best practices, accrediting measures, and framework improvement efforts being initiated by COMP.

“It’s not an overnight process, we expect this to continue developing and improve,” he said.

Policy changes

A key agreement from the panelists is that while recent regulations such as Executive Order (EO) 130 are commendable, there must be key policy changes.

EO 130 was signed last April 14, lifting the nine-year moratorium on new mineral agreements and allowing the government to review existing mining deals for possible renegotiation.

“The passage of EO 130 is the right policy, and if it’s going to be coupled with policies that are supportive of this one, it’s the right direction,” Mr. Bravo said.

The PNIA president suggested that the government has to be open in giving incentives to major mining projects. “The incentive has to be stable and cannot be changed midway since it is going to affect the viability of the project,” he said.

For Mr. Recidoro, meanwhile, there should be a “clear and consistent mineral development policy from the government, much more than just the lifting of the moratorium that EO 130 provides”, as this will help stimulate growth in the sector.

“Local government units (LGU) must toe the line by harmonizing national laws and recognizing mining permits issued by the DENR (Department of Natural Resources). The fiscal regime for mining must also be finalized… to assure investors of a safe regulatory and fiscal regime. Environmental, social, and governance standards for operating mines must also be improved and implemented,” he explained.

Agreeing with the COMP chief, Mr. Austin of Philex Mining has harmonizing national laws with LGU ordinances among his recommendations. “While the national law allows mining, there are LGUs that issue resolutions saying no to mining in their provinces,” he observed.

Mr. Austin also recommends harmonizing IPRA Law with the Mining Law, as there are existing “conditions there that are not prudent or acceptable to both IPs and operators”, as well as lifting the constitutional provision to restrict foreign ownership on mining in order to attract more investors.

Connecting mining and manufacturing

The panel also pointed out that much has to be done to connect mining and manufacturing industries, which can bring further potential once it is done.

To enable such connection, Mr. Austin said, downstream industries of mining should be developed. “[Copper cathodes] should not be shipped out. It should be used in the country to generate copper wires and other copper products,” he explained as an example.

Mr. Recidoro also observes a lack of domestic markets for mining products. Apart from the central bank, he explained there are no domestic markets for the volume of gold that the country can produce. There are also no local steel manufacturers that can take up nickel ore and convert it to metal.

While a copper smelter in Leyte exists, he added, most copper concentrates are exported overseas. “On the other hand, our copper cable manufacturers import their copper overseas, and the steel manufacturing plants in Iligan and Bulacan would mostly rely mostly on imports and recycled iron to make their steel bars.”

Once mining and manufacturing get connected, the country can expect to gain more value from the minerals that it produces, Mr. Recidoro pointed out.

This session of #BUSINESSWORLDINSIGHTS is supported by Nickel Asia Corp.; partner organizations British Chamber of Commerce Philippines, Bank Marketing Association of the Philippines, Management Association of the Philippines, Philippine Association of National Advertisers, and Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry; with media partner The Philippine STAR.

Banks’ bad loans hit 13-year high

REUTERS
A Philippines Peso note is seen in this picture illustration June 2, 2017. — REUTERS/THOMAS WHITE

By Luz Wendy T. Noble, Reporter

NONPERFORMING LOANS (NPLs) held by Philippine banks continued to rise in May, bringing the industry’s NPL ratio to the highest in 13 years amid the prolonged pandemic.

Data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on Thursday showed that gross NPLs surged by 83% to P479.481 billion in May from P262 billion a year earlier. Bad loans also increased by 3.4% from the P463.659 billion in April.

This brought the industry’s gross NPL ratio to 4.49% in May, from 2.43% during the same month last year and the 4.35% in April.

The NPL ratio matched the 4.49% recorded in June 2008 and is the highest since the 4.61% in May 2008 amid the global financial crisis.

Loans are considered nonperforming once they are left unpaid for at least 30 days beyond the due date. These are considered a risk to banks’ asset quality as borrowers are likely to default on these debts.

Analysts said the continued rise of bad loans reflect the huge impact of the pandemic on borrowers.

“They [borrowers] may have the capacity to pay at the time of the loan approval but because of the continued uncertainties and risks to income capacities, the likelihood of default is relatively higher,” Asian Institute of Management economist John Paolo R. Rivera said in an e-mail.

Bad loans will likely continue to increase in the next months amid the elevated unemployment rate and muted economic activities, ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said.

“The fate of the banks’ balance sheets rests on how quickly we can get economic activity back on its feet as this would ensure rising incomes that would in turn be used to make these loan payments on time,” Mr. Mapa said in an e-mail.

Meanwhile, the banking industry’s loan portfolio shrank by 1.2% to P10.669 trillion in May, as lenders remained risk averse as the crisis continued. Month on month, the loan portfolio inched up by 0.18% from the P10.649 trillion in April.

In May, past due loans reached P593.346 billion, rising by 5.2% to P563.761 billion from a year ago. These loans made up 5.56% of the total loan portfolio versus 5.22% a year ago.

Restructured loans surged by 447% to P263.514 billion in May, from P48.09 billion a year ago. With this, the ratio rose to 2.47% from 0.45% last year.

As bad loans piled up, lenders beefed up their loan loss reserves by 50% to P383.389 billion in May, from P254.945 billion last year. This brought the ratio to 3.59% from 2.36% a year ago.

However, lenders’ NPL coverage ratio — a gauge of allowance for potential losses due to soured loans — slumped to 79.96% from 97.31% in May 2020.

Analysts noted banks may start to lend more once the economy fully reopens, although this would depend on the pace of the vaccine rollout.

“The only way banks will be less risk averse to take on more loans is through speeding up the national vaccination program so the economy can be opened allowing for more sustained income-generating capacities for both firms and consumers,” Mr. Rivera said.

Bank lending continued to decline for the sixth straight month by 4.5% in May, although slower than the 5% fall in April. This, as lenders tightened their credit standards to guard against the rise in bad loans while borrowers shied away from credit activities during the crisis.

Meanwhile, Mr. Mapa said the Financial Institutions Strategic Transfer (FIST) Law may not be able to provide “immediate help” for banks. In this regard, he said keeping policy rates at record lows will be more helpful for both banks and borrowers.

“This highlights the need for BSP to retain its accommodative stance as any tightening of monetary policy may result in even higher NPL ratios and an even slower recovery in bank lending,” Mr. Mapa said.

Republic Act 11523 or the FIST Law will allow lenders to offload their nonperforming assets to FIST corporations. The BSP earlier said they expect at least P152 billion in bad assets will be sold by financial institutions to take advantage of the law, but there have yet to be a FIST corporation to purchase these assets thus far since the law was legislated in February.

The central bank has kept its key policy rate at a record low of 2% to support the economy while the coronavirus remains a threat.

PHL manufacturing output’s rebound continues in May

REUTERS

THE COUNTRY’S factory output continued to rebound in May as demand for manufactured goods grew amid the reopening of external markets coupled with low base effects.

Preliminary results of the Philippine Statistics Authority’s (PSA) latest Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries showed factory output, as measured by the volume of production index, surged to 265% year on year in May. This was faster than the revised 155.6% annual increase recorded in April and a reversal of the 73.2% drop in May 2020.   

The May result marked the second straight month of growth in manufacturing output following the 13 straight months of contraction.

Philippine factory output continues rebound in May (2021)

So far, factory output growth averaged 1.1% this year.

Eighteen out of 22 industry divisions posted year-on-year growth in May, nine of which were in triple digits. Leading the recovery was the manufacture of coke and refined petroleum products, which saw its volume of production grew by 14.7 times in May from the same month last year. 

Other sectors that saw robust growth were wood, bamboo, cane, rattan articles, and related products (301%); fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment (275.6%); leather and related products, including footwear (155.9%); basic metals (138.3%); transport equipment (130.2%); wearing apparel (126.5%); furniture (118.7%); and other non-metallic mineral products (103.3%).

On the other hand, the PSA reported annual declines in the manufacture of tobacco products (-68.7%); printing and reproduction of recorded media (-43.5%); chemical and chemical products (-3%); and basic pharmaceutical products and pharmaceutical preparations (-2.9%).

Capacity utilization — the extent to which industry resources are used in producing goods — averaged at 66.1% in May, up from the average of 64% recorded in the previous month. 

Eighteen out of 22 industry divisions averaged a capacity use rate of at least 50% in May, led by the manufacture of furniture (83%), other non-metallic mineral products (79.6%), and machinery and equipment except electrical (74.2%).

“The faster triple-digit year-on-year growth in manufacturing volume of production magnified [the] further reopening of the economy… on top of the low base a year ago, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in an e-mail.

Quarantine restrictions were eased starting May, as new daily coronavirus infections dropped from the peak in April.

Mr. Ricafort also noted the sharp growth in manufacturing was consistent with the recovery in exports and imports as more economies start to recover.

Latest PSA trade data showed an annual growth of 72.1% for exports and 140.9% for imports in April – the fastest recorded rates since at least 1991. Exports of manufactured goods grew by 88.1% and accounted for more than 80% of total export sales that month.

In a phone interview, Philippine Exporters Confederation, Inc. President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr. ascribed the rebound to the reopening of markets abroad. He noted, in particular, the increased demand in manufactured goods in China due to “revenge spending” or the phenomenon characterized as a buying spree to make up for missed shopping during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Mr. Ortiz-Luis said that factory output should continuously improve barring accidents or the local transmission of new COVID-19 variants. Still, he cited risks to this outlook such as space and container shortages which cause freight rate surges and shipment delays and losses.

“Until now, the problem has not been solved and the situation may be worsening,” he said.

For RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort, the massive annual growth in manufacturing “could still continue” until around July to August due to base effects but would taper off thereafter around September “as the low base [effect] fizzles out and starts to rise sharply by then.”

Mr. Ricafort said other growth drivers in the coming months such as the further reopening of the economy amid increased vaccine rollouts, the increase in infrastructure spending, the reduced corporate tax rates brought by the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) law, the sustained low interest rates, and the increase in expenditures attributed to the May 2022 elections that would benefit manufacturing industries that are part of the supply chain.

“However, offsetting risk factors locally and globally are the more contagious coronavirus variants such as the Delta and Lambda variants that entail risks of further lockdowns and travel restrictions that could have adverse effects on manufacturing activities, going forward,” the economist added. — Nadine Mae A. Bo

Underspending, poor implementation hounded ADB-backed project in PHL

AN AGRARIAN reform project aimed at reducing poverty in rural areas in the Philippines was deemed “less than successful” due to underspending and poor implementation, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said.

In an assessment report, the multilateral lender said the Agrarian Reform Communities Project II was unable to address delays and policy roadblocks, and “less than efficient” in using the funds.

“The project completion report rated the project less than effective although it was not possible to assess the project outcome targets due to the lack of reliable data,” the ADB said.

While the ADB-backed project was aligned with the government’s medium-term plan, it noted this was not aligned with the cost-sharing policy of local government units (LGUs) for rural infrastructure.

The target to implement 537 sub-projects across 19 provinces was too ambitious according to the ADB, since LGUs were only able to shoulder 10-20% of the total cost. This is far from the 50% share required of LGUs under the revised cost-sharing policy with the National Government.

Issues over the increase in equity requirement were not sufficiently addressed and heavily affected the outcome of the project.

The ADB also cited the “incomplete and inconsistent guidelines” for the LGUs to gain access to the performance-based grant system.

Underspending and inefficient use of funds also hounded the project’s implementation.

The $208.4-million project was implemented from 2009 to 2017. The ADB lent $70 million for the project, the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID) granted $30 million while the remaining $108 million were sourced from the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR, $52.4 million) and through equity by LGUs ($56 million).

However, only 57% or $118.7 million were actually spent: $21.8 million or 31.1% of ADB’s loan; $12.8 million or 18.3% of OFID loan; while the government released $64.75 million, or 60% of its estimated share.

“The project spent 70% of its approved budget on rural infrastructure and delivered only 40% of FMRs (farm-to-market roads) and rehabilitated 38% of irrigation schemes,” the ADB said.

The ADB noted there was 33% overspending on project implementation and management, as well as implementation delays.

The project’s development impact was likewise rated as “less than satisfactory” even after 161 agrarian reform communities directly benefited versus the target of 152 communities, since capacity-building for local organizations fell short.

The target to expand crop gross margins and yield positive returns for businesses was “partially achieved,” but the project failed to provide improved land titles to 22,000 agrarian reform beneficiaries since only 10.3% received their titles.

Around 770 kilometers of farm-to-market roads were constructed and 4,649 hectares of small-scale irrigations were established, making up 40% and 38% of the targets, respectively.

The ADB recommended better collaboration among state offices in implementing projects, especially during the design and planning phase.

“Where LGUs are key to a project, a thorough assessment of technical, administrative, and financial capacity should be completed in advance,” the ADB said.

BusinessWorld sought DAR for comment on Thursday but did not get a response by the paper’s deadline.

The ADB has set a $3.9-billion lending program for the Philippines this year, slightly lower than the $4.24 billion it lent to the country in 2020. — Beatrice M. Laforga