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Megaworld and DLSU team up to set up data science institute

MEGAWORLD Corp. is teaming up with De La Salle University (DLSU) to establish a data science institute, which will offer research-based graduate and undergraduate programs as well as training and professional courses.

Named after the listed property company’s chairman and chief executive, the Dr. Andrew L. Tan Data Science Institute (ALTDSI) aims to “train the next generation work force of data scientists, particularly professionals in the BPO (business process outsourcing) industry.”

DLSU said in a Facebook post on Monday that the institute was launched via a virtual ceremony on July 21.

Megaworld Chief Strategy Officer Kevin Andrew L. Tan was quoted as saying: “There is a huge demand for knowledge outsource professionals who can help businesses and industries grow exponentially. This partnership with DLSU to build the ALTDSI is just the first step in tapping into this huge potential.”

Megaworld officers joined members of the DLSU Board of Trustees, school administrators, and other university personalities.

Aside from a signed memorandum of agreement, DLSU President Raymundo B. Suplido and Megaworld Chairman Mr. Tan exchanged glass plaques “to formalize the agreement.”

The ALTDSI will be located at Megaworld’s McKinley Hill Cyberpark development in Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City. Megaworld will be donating the facilities for the institute, while DLSU faculty-researchers and visiting professors will be heading the program.

ALTDSI will be offering programs focused on “human capacity building” and “value creation.”

The goal of the institute is to contribute to the growth of different business sectors to help the country become the ASEAN region’s leading data science hub.

Meanwhile, shares of Megaworld at the stock exchange on Wednesday declined by 3.67% or 11 centavos to close at P2.89 each. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

Roasted sweet potato and rosemary soup

Roasted Sweet Potato and Rosemary Soup
Roasted Sweet Potato and Rosemary Soup

(Recipe from Breville)

Ingredients

250 grams sweet potato (camote)

1 carrot

1 white onion, sliced

3 garlic cloves, minced

2 cups chicken stock

1 tsp sea salt

0.3 tsp dried ginger, ground

1 fresh rosemary sprig

4 tbsp olive oil

Garnish

1 tbsp cooking cream

1 tbsp mixed nuts (cashew, almond, peanut)

1 tsp olive oil

Procedure:

Preheat a Breville Smart Oven Air Fryer to 175 degrees centigrade.

In a baking rack, place the diced sweet potatoes and carrots and drizzle with 2 tbsp of olive oil.

Roast for 12 minutes under 175 * C.

In a preheated pan, drizzle olive oil and sauté minced onions for two minutes under low heat.

Add minced garlic, salt, and ground ginger, then sauté for another three minutes.

Once the sweet potatoes are cooked, transfer it into the pan with sautéed garlic and onions.

Add the chicken stock into the pan and simmer for 5 minutes.

Transfer everything into the Breville blender, and process until smooth.

To assemble: Transfer the soup into a bowl and garnish it with chopped mixed nuts, fresh rosemary leaves and drizzle with cooking cream and remaining olive oil.

Converge offers home entertainment service

CONVERGE ICT SOLUTIONS INC./YOUTUBE

CONVERGE ICT Solutions, Inc. announced on Wednesday its new add-on service called Vision that provides new and existing subscribers with access to local and international television channels.

“In partnership with Pacific Kabelnet Holding Co. Inc. (PKN), an affiliate cable company, this latest offering gives new and existing Converge subscribers access to local and international TV channels and binge-watch shows from exclusive channels like USA Today News, USA Today Sports, Pocketwatch, and Ryan and Friends, using fiber technology,” Converge said in a statement.

Converge said Vision comes with a set-to-box called Xperience Box, a full Android, all-in-one entertainment device that allows subscribers to experience multi-genre TV programs and shows.

The device “does not require connectivity to any cable TV line and also allows easy connection to a mouse, gamepad, keypad, and other devices,” Converge noted.

“This easy-to-set-up service comes with reliable security features and an enhanced artificial intelligence that provides a quick, one-click access to channels, Google apps, online games, and OTT apps like HBO Go, Amazon Prime, YouTube and Spotify,” it added.

Converge Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer Dennis Anthony H. Uy said, “Vision is just the first of many additional services we plan to bring to enhance Filipinos’ digital experience as we build our digital highway.”

“With our recent data capacity upgrade of our metro backbone, we have more than enough bandwidth to provide entertainment content on a streaming platform and other applications,” he added.

Converge ICT shares closed 0.85% lower at P23.20 apiece on Wednesday. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Yields on term deposits mixed on concerns over Delta variant

BW FILE PHOTO

YIELDS ON THE central bank’s term deposits were mixed on Wednesday, with investors preferring safe assets due to escalating concerns over the impact of the Delta variant and a possible tightening of restrictions on the economy.

Demand for the term deposit facility (TDF) of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reached P613.267 billion on Wednesday, higher than the P570 billion on offer but failing to beat the P741.811 billion in tenders logged last week.

Broken down, the seven-day papers fetched bids worth P181.371 billion, more than the P170 billion auctioned off by the BSP but lower than the P230.57 billion in tenders recorded a week ago.

Banks asked for yields ranging from 1.65% to 2.05%, a wider band compared with the 1.65% to 1.7075% margin logged in the previous auction. This caused the average rate of the one-week term deposits to increase by 1.62 basis points (bps) to 1.7154% from the 1.6992% quoted for the tenor last week.

Meanwhile, tenders for the 14-day deposits amounted to P431.896 billion, surpassing the P400 billion on the auction block but falling below the P511.241 billion in bids seen on July 21.

Accepted rates for the tenor ranged from 1.72% to 1.7695%, narrower than the 1.7295% to 1.779% band seen last week. With this, the average rate of the two-week papers declined by 1.68 bps to 1.7486% from the 1.7654% recorded in the previous week’s auction.

The central bank did not offer 28-day term deposits for the 40th straight auction to give way to its weekly offerings of bills with the same tenor.

The BSP uses the TDF and its short-term bills to gather excess liquidity in the financial system and to better guide market rates.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said TDF yields ended mixed amid worries over the local transmission of the highly infectious Delta variant of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

“This (transmission) could lead to tighter quarantine restrictions that could, in turn, slow down economic recovery prospects,” Mr. Ricafort said in a text message.

COVID-19 infections rose by 7,186 to bring active cases to 56,477 on Tuesday, based on data from the Department of Health. This was the highest daily tally in over a month or since June 13 when daily cases increased by 7,302.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire on Tuesday said infections in Metro Manila could reach about 11,000 daily under the assumption that the Delta variant is 60% more transmissible, citing projections from a surveillance tool developed by the Ateneo de Manila University. She asked local government units to strictly implement protocols urged people to get vaccinated and adhere to minimum health standards.

There were 119 Delta variant cases in the Philippines as of Sunday.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Monday warned a lockdown is possible if the Delta variant’s spread in the Philippines becomes “really dangerous.”

Business leaders in an online forum on Wednesday said they will support a strict lockdown by the second or third week of August, but asked for time to prepare. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Filipinos less open to digital payments vs regional peers

REUTERS

MORE THAN three-fourths of Filipino consumers are open to tapping digital payments, but they remain more reluctant compared to those in other Southeast Asian countries, a study showed.

A study by US-based VMWare, Inc. showed 76% of Filipino respondents are open to the idea of digital payments. However, this is smaller than those in Singapore (88%), Malaysia (87%), Indonesia (90%), and Thailand (85%).

“Digital-first financial services firms have a huge opportunity in the Philippines as the pandemic last year has significantly changed the way Filipinos engage with brands digitally,” Walter So, Country Manager, VMware Philippines, said in a statement.

In December, the central bank released its digital banking framework, which set apart these lenders that offer financial services online from commercial, rural, thrift, and Islamic banks that have physical branches.

Based on the study, more than half (55%) of Filipino respondents now prefer doing banking services through apps over branch transactions.

Filipinos also found themselves benefiting from digital engagements, with 62% saying it saved them time, which they can use on other priorities. Based on the study, 63% of Filipino consumers believe their phones are more important than their wallets for their financial transactions.

The study also found that Filipino respondents have growing trust in technologies tapped by financial firms such as artificial intelligence (75%).

Meanwhile, more than a third (36%) are willing to use an app when making investment decisions versus asking for advice from a banker.

Among selected concerns related to digital services, the study showed Filipinos focus on high level of security and protection of consumer data (63%); faster speed of service (52%); ease-of-use across all devices (36%); and applications that deliver services simply and effectively (36%).

More than six in 10 Filipinos (64%) also said they could switch brands if their digital experience with a company falls below their expectations.

“Beyond accelerating innovations and driving competitive advantages for digital banks, harnessing frontier technologies such as Cloud, facial recognition and 5G can also help reduce barriers that hinder financial access and close the financial inclusion gap in the Philippines,” Mr. So said.

Meanwhile, the study found that a quarter of Filipino respondents are of the view that financial services firms have failed to adapt to the changing market.

About 51.2 million adult Filipinos remained unbanked as of 2019 as only 29% of the adult population owned a formal financial account, based on data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

By 2023, the BSP targets to bring 70% of adult Filipinos into the banked population and have 50% of payments done online. — L.W.T. Noble

Feline okay? The app that tells you if your cat is happy

ALICIA A. HERRERA

CAT owners who love to take pictures of their furry friends now have a new excuse to pull out their smartphones and take a snapshot: it may actually help the cat.

A Calgary, Alberta, animal health technology company, Sylvester.ai, has developed an app called Tably that uses the phone’s camera to tell whether a feline is feeling pain.

The app looks at ear and head position, eye-narrowing, muzzle tension, and how whiskers change, to detect distress. A 2019 study published in peer-reviewed journal Scientific Reports found that the so-called “feline grimace scale,” or FGS, is a valid and reliable tool for acute pain assessment in cats.

“It helps human cat owners know if their cat is in pain or not,” said Miche Priest, Sylvester.ai’s venture lead. “We were able to train a machine using machine learning and a series of images.”

The app could help young veterinarians, said Dr. Liz Ruelle of the Wild Rose Cat Clinic in Calgary, where developers trained the algorithm.

“I love working with cats, have always grown up with cats,” she said. “For other colleagues, new grads, who maybe have not had quite so much experience, it can be very daunting to know — is your patient painful?”

An app that learns patterns from images of cat faces can be helpful but cat owners should also look at their pet’s whole body, including the tail, for clues about their well-being, said Alice Potter from British animal charity the RSPCA.

“Cats that are worried or scared will hold that tail really tight and tense to them. And then aside from that, there’s also just thinking about their behavior in terms of are they eating, drinking, toileting, sleeping like they usually do?”  Reuters

Apple says global chip shortage to affect iPhone; growth forecast slows

UNSPLASH

APPLE, Inc. said on Tuesday that a global chip shortage that has bit into its ability to sell Macs and iPads will start to affect iPhone production and forecasted slowing revenue growth, sending its shares lower.

Apple executives said revenue for the current fiscal fourth quarter will grow by double-digits but be below the 36.4% growth rate in the just-ended third quarter. Growth will also slow in Apple’s closely watched services business, they said.

In a conference call with investors, Apple executives also said that while the impact of the chip shortage was less severe than feared in the third quarter, it will get worse in the fourth, extending to iPhone production.

Shares of Apple, whose valuation has more than doubled in about three years to nearly $2.5 trillion, were down 1.7% to $144.24 in after hours trading after the call.

Earlier in the day, Apple reported third-quarter sales and profits that beat analyst expectations as consumers bought premium versions of its fifth-generation (5G) iPhones and signed up for its subscription services. China sales grew 58% to $14.76 billion in the quarter, which ended June 26.

Driven by the better-than-expected iPhone sales, total revenue hit $81.43 billion, above analyst expectations of $73.30 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. Apple’s profits were $21.74 billion, or $1.30 per share, above estimates of $1.01 per share, according to Refinitiv.

During the investor call, Chief Executive Tim Cook said that chips affected by the shortages are made with older technology but are still needed as supporting parts to make the company’s flagship device, the iPhone.

“We do have some shortages,” Mr. Cook said, “where the demand has been so great and so beyond our own expectation that it’s difficult to get the entire set of parts within the lead times that we try to get those.”

Mr. Cook declined to predict whether the shortages would last into Apple’s fiscal first quarter, when it typically sees its biggest iPhone sales. Angelo Zino, an analyst with research firm CFRA, said Apple could be stockpiling chips for its next generation of phones to the detriment of current models.

“Apple will want as many chips as it can get its hands on,” Mr. Zino said. “But when you couple that with the existing supply constraints, Apple is likely going to have a more difficult time meeting demand this year.”

Apple had told investors last quarter that the chip shortage could hold back sales by $3 billion to $4 billion.

In an interview on Tuesday, Mr. Cook told Reuters that the hit to overall revenue in the third quarter was “lower than the low end” of its previously forecasted range.

CHINA, 5G
Apple’s strongest sales growth came from China, where Mr. Cook told Reuters that customers are buying up accessories such as the Apple Watch to pair with their iPhones.

“It wasn’t just iPhone. We set a new quarterly record for Mac, for wearables, home and accessories, and for services” in China, Mr. Cook said. “It was our strongest geography.”

Upgrading for 5G appeared to be driving a better buying cycle for iPhones than many analysts expected. Apple said iPhone sales were $39.57 billion, up nearly 50% from a year earlier and above analyst expectations of $34 billion.

Mr. Cook told Reuters that Apple’s iPhone 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max, the premium tier of the device, were strong sellers. That helped pushed gross margins to 43.3%, above estimates of 41.9%, according to Refinitiv.

On the conference call, he said 5G adoption is in its early stages of deployment in many countries around the world. Some analysts wondered whether that means the boom in 5G iPhone sales won’t last — consumers may buy a phone ahead of time and keep it until the service rolls out. Other analysts believe that means Apple can keep riding the boom.

“The low 5G penetration is a reminder that the best is yet to come for the company’s 5G iPhones,” said Tom Forte, an analyst at D.A. Davidson & Co.

The other major driver of Apple’s results was its services business, which includes paid subscriptions for television and music as well as its App Store. Services revenue reached a record high of $17.49 billion, up by a third from a year earlier and above analyst expectations of $16.33 billion. Mr. Cook told Reuters that Apple now has 700 million subscribers on its various platforms, up from 660 million a quarter earlier.

Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri told investors that services growth will slow, however.

“We expect still-significant growth in services but not to the level that we’ve seen in June,” he said on the call.

Cook said Apple set quarterly sales records in many of its first-party services, including its AppleCare hardware insurance plans, which had slowed somewhat during the pandemic when many of the company’s retail locations were closed.

Sales of iPads and Macs were $7.37 billion and $8.24 billion, compared with analyst expectations of $7.15 billion and $8.07 billion, according to Refinitiv data. — Reuters

PHL AirAsia sees better performance in Q2

MALAYSIA-BASED AirAsia Group Berhad announced on Wednesday that its Philippine unit, Philippines AirAsia, Inc., saw a 2% increase in passengers carried in the second quarter of the year.

“AirAsia Philippines’ strong rebound seen in 1Q2021 (first quarter) further increased in 2Q2021 (second quarter), posting a 2% higher number of passengers carried quarter-on-quarter and 4 percentage points higher load factor to record a solid 78%,” AirAsia Group Berhad said in an e-mailed statement.

“Monthly breakdown showed that load factor was as high as 83% in June 2021, boosted by active capacity management,” the airline group noted.

“This was despite running a limited number of charter and passenger flights due to community quarantine restrictions and despite flying only from its Manila hub,” it added.

AirAsia also said that expectation of high vaccination rates in Southeast Asian countries by the end of 2021 is lending confidence on upcoming recovery, supported by its “robust short-haul model in addition to leaner and more stabilized operations.”

The group has said it expects domestic operations in the Philippines to be below 25% of pre-pandemic levels until at least September while the population awaits widespread vaccination against the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

Philippines AirAsia announced last week its plan to restore its hub in Clark by the fourth quarter of the year.

AirAsia said it started its Philippine operations in Clark in March 2012.

“Pre-pandemic, Philippines AirAsia flew to 10 domestic and three international destinations from Clark namely, Cagayan de Oro, Caticlan, Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Puerto Princesa, Tacloban, Incheon, Kaohsiung, and Taipei,” it said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

US sells ‘Pharma Bro’ Shkreli’s Wu-Tang Clan album

Cover of Wu-Tang Clan’s album Once Upon A Time In Shaolin — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG
Cover of Wu-Tang Clan’s album Once Upon A Time In Shaolin — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

NEW YORK —  The US government said it sold imprisoned drug company executive Martin Shkreli’s one-of-a-kind album by Wu-Tang Clan to pay off the $7.36 million he was ordered to forfeit after being convicted of fraud.

In a letter to US District Judge Kiyo Matsumoto, who oversaw Mr. Shkreli’s 2017 trial in Brooklyn, prosecutors said the forfeiture amount has been fully satisfied following the sale of the album, Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, and other asset sales.

The sale price and buyer were not disclosed because of a confidentiality provision in the contract, prosecutors said.

Mr. Shkreli, 38, paid $2 million for Wu-Tang Clan’s only copy of Shaolin at an auction by the hip-hop group. He later bragged that he did not plan to listen to the album and purchased it to “keep it from the people.”

Benjamin Brafman, a lawyer for Mr. Shkreli, in an e-mail said he was pleased the forfeiture obligation was satisfied, and said the album’s sale price was “substantially more” than what Mr. Shkreli paid.

Nicknamed “Pharma Bro,” Mr. Shkreli remains widely vilified for hiking the price of Daraprim, which treated a potentially fatal infection, by more than 4,000% overnight when he led Turing Pharmaceuticals, now known as Phoenixus AG.

He has served more than half of a seven-year prison sentence for cheating investors in two hedge funds and trying to prop up the stock price of another drug company he led, Retrophin, Inc. His release date is Oct. 11, 2022, prison records show.

Prosecutors said they still possess two other Shkreli assets, a Phoenixus stake and a Pablo Picasso engraving, that could be applied toward a $2.6 million judgment against him in a separate Manhattan civil case.

Brianne Murphy, a lawyer for Mr. Shkreli in the Manhattan case, in an e-mail said Mr. Shkreli told her he was “pleased with the sale price and RIP ODB,” an apparent reference to late Wu-Tang Clan co-founder Ol’ Dirty Bastard.

In January, Matsumoto rejected Shkreli’s request to be freed from prison, rejecting his claim that his deteriorating mental health justified “compassionate” release. —  Reuters

Facebook and tech giants to target attacker manifestos, militias in database

A COUNTERTERRORISM organization formed by some of the biggest US tech companies including Facebook and Microsoft is significantly expanding the types of extremist content shared between firms in a key database, aiming to crack down on material from white supremacists and far-right militias, the group told Reuters.

Until now, the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism’s (GIFCT) database has focused on videos and images from terrorist groups on a United Nations list and so has largely consisted of content from Islamist extremist organizations such as Islamic State, Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Over the next few months, the group will add attacker manifestos — often shared by sympathizers after white supremacist violence — and other publications and links flagged by UN initiative Tech Against Terrorism. It will use lists from intelligence-sharing group Five Eyes, adding URLs and PDFs from more groups, including the Proud Boys, the Three Percenters and neo-Nazis.

The firms, which include Twitter and Alphabet, Inc.’s YouTube, share “hashes,” unique numerical representations of original pieces of content that have been removed from their services. Other platforms use these to identify the same content on their own sites in order to review or remove it.

While the project reduces the amount of extremist content on mainstream platforms, groups can still post violent images and rhetoric on many other sites and parts of the internet.

The tech group wants to combat a wider range of threats, said GIFCT’s Executive Director Nicholas Rasmussen in an interview with Reuters.

“Anyone looking at the terrorism or extremism landscape has to appreciate that there are other parts… that are demanding attention right now,” Mr. Rasmussen said, citing the threats of far-right or racially motivated violent extremism.

The tech platforms have long been criticized for failing to police violent extremist content, though they also face concerns over censorship. The issue of domestic extremism, including white supremacy and militia groups, took on renewed urgency following the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the US Capitol.

Fourteen companies can access the GIFCT database, including Reddit, Snapchat-owner Snap, Facebook-owned Instagram, Verizon Media, Microsoft’s LinkedIn and file-sharing service Dropbox.

GIFCT, which is now an independent organization, was created in 2017 under pressure from US and European governments after a series of deadly attacks in Paris and Brussels. Its database mostly contains digital fingerprints of videos and images related to groups on the UN Security Council’s consolidated sanctions list and a few specific live-streamed attacks, such as the 2019 mosque shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand.

GIFCT has faced criticism and concerns from some human and digital rights groups over centralized or over-broad censorship.

“Overachievement in this takes you in the direction of violating someone’s rights on the internet to engage in free expression,” said Mr. Rasmussen.

Emma Llanso, director of Free Expression at the Center for Democracy & Technology, said in a statement: “This expansion of the GIFCT hash database only intensifies the need for GIFCT to improve the transparency and accountability of these content-blocking resources.”

“As the database expands, the risks of mistaken takedown only increase,” she added.

The group wants to continue to broaden its database to include hashes of audio files or certain symbols and grow its membership. It recently added home-rental giant Airbnb and e-mail marketing company Mailchimp as members. — Reuters

Meralco average rates down 3% in first half

BW FILE PHOTO

POWER distributor Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) reported that average retail rates declined by around 3% in the six months to June as generation charges fell.

Meralco registered an average retail rate of P7.92 per kilowatt hour (kWh) in the first half, a P0.27 per kWh drop from the P8.19 per kWh year on year, said its First Vice-President and Regulatory Management Head Jose Ronald V. Valles in a statement issued on Wednesday.

Generation charges, which made up more than half or 57% of the total retail price during the period, decreased by 1.3% to P4.5 per kWh due to a decline in charges from the spot market, lower fuel prices and the local currency’s appreciation.

Transmission charges, which accounted for 9% of the total retail price in the first half, fell by 7.5% to P0.73 per kWh as the firm implemented a refund of its transmission over-recoveries between January and April.

Meralco explained that lower ancillary service charges also led to a decline in transmission rates.

System losses, which took up 3% of the retail price, went down by 6% to P0.28 per kWh in the first half.

“Distribution charges, on the other hand, inched up by only 0.1% as residential sales continued to increase brought about by the imposition of enhanced community quarantine,” the company said.

The continued rollout of the firm’s P13.9-billion distribution rate true-up refund tempered retail rates as well, according to the distribution utility. The refund was implemented beginning March.

In the six months ending June, subsidies, taxes and universal charges were lower by 5.8% to P0.85 per kWh year on year due to lower effective taxes.

However, the feed-in tariff allowance (FiT-All), which comprised 1% of the retail rate, rose by 61% due to a FiT-All rate hike of P0.0488 per kWh starting January.

The FiT-All is a uniform charge included in the bills of electricity customers. It is collected by distribution utilities, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines, and retail electricity suppliers, while the payments are remitted to the FiT-All fund held by the National Transmission Corp.

The country’s largest private sector distribution utility previously reported that its core net income rose by 8% to P11.4 billion in the first half year on year after registering higher revenues from its joint venture project San Buenaventura Power Ltd.

Shares in Meralco shed 1.84% or P5 to close at P267 apiece on Wednesday. — Angelica Y. Yang

BSP tells lenders to stop transacting with LYKA

BW FILE PHOTO

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) told banks and other financial institutions to stop making transactions with the social media platform LYKA as it remains unregistered as an operator of payment system (OPS).

BSP Deputy Governor Mamerto E. Tangonan issued Circular Letter No. CL-2021-060 dated July 27 informing BSP-supervised financial institutions of its previous directive to LYKA or Things I Like Co., Ltd. to stop from operating as a payment system in the country.

Banks and other financial institutions should only deal with registered OPS and nonbank electronic money issuers, the BSP said.

The Monetary Board last week ordered LYKA to suspend its payment system activities, saying it has not registered as an OPS with the central bank.

It also asked Digital Spring Marketing and Advertising, Inc. to stop providing LYKA its cash-in service, merchant accreditation and settlement process, among others, while the platform is not yet registered with the BSP. The regulator also canceled the provisional registration of Digital Spring.

LYKA is a social media platform by a Hong Kong-based company granting users rewards through gift cards in electronic mode or GEMs based on the number of activities or posts they like and share. These GEMs can then be used to pay for goods and services in partner stores.

The BSP earlier said the platform has expressed willingness to register with the regulator.

BSP Circular 1049 requires all OPS to register with the central bank as provided under

Republic Act No. 11127 or the National Payment Systems Act mandates all OPS to register with the BSP before they can operate. Examples of OPS include cash-in providers, merchant acquirers, payment facilitators, payment gateways, platform providers, bills payment service providers and other entities facilitating payments for goods and services. — B.M. Laforga