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Tarlac, Rio Chico Bridge sections of CLLEX completed – DPWH

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said Friday that two major sections of the P14.94-billion Phase 1 of the Central Luzon Link Expressway (CLLEX) project are now complete.

In a statement, Public Works and Highways Secretary Mark A. Villar said the two contract packages that were completed are the 4.1-kilometer Tarlac Section and the 6.4-kilometer Rio Chico River Bridge Section of the project.

“The completed sections form part of the 30-kilometer, four-lane expressway project to connect and improve access between… Tarlac City and Cabanatuan City,” Mr. Villar added.

The department said the two remaining contract packages “will be delivered to full completion by April 2021.”

The remaining contract packages cover the construction of the 9.2-kilometer Aliaga section and the 10.3-kilometer Cabanatuan section.

“An additional 4.8-kilometer component of the expressway project from the junction of Carmen-Cabanatuan Road is the Zaragoza Interchange section, which comprises a 2.8-kilometer access free road and a two-kilometer interchange ramp that will cross over the embankment of CLLEX main expressway by an overpass,” the department said.

“Upon full completion of the entire alignment, CLLEX Phase 1 will cut travel time between Tarlac City and Cabanatuan City from 70 minutes to just 20 minutes,” it added.

It also said more than 11,000 motorists and commuters are expected to use CLLEX daily. The project is expected to ease traffic on the Maharlika Highway by 48%, ity added.

The P12.61-billion second phase of CLLEX is a 35.7-kilometer extension of the first phase, connecting Nueva Ecija’s Cabanatuan City and San Jose City. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Worst case for continuing with PHL coal projects seen at P372-B in long-term costs

The Philippines could sustain up to P372 billion in economic losses under a worst-case scenario of proceeding with all nine gigawatts of pending coal-fired power plants (CFPPs), the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) said in a report.

CREA, in its “Air Quality & Health Impacts of Coal-Fired Power in the Philippines” report, also claimed that full implementation of the pending projects, in addition to the coal-fired plants currently in service with capacity of 10 GW, will lead to the premature deaths of over 26,000 people over 40 years, assuming all the new capacity becomes operational by 2024.

“In a scenario where all nine gigawatts (GW) of the proposed CFPPs are commercialized by 2024….these new plants would cause approximately 26,300 premature deaths over 40 years. The cumulative economic cost over such time is estimated at P372 billion,” according to the report’s authors, Lauri Myllyvirta and Isabella Suarez,

The Energy Department recently declared a moratorium on all new coal-fired projects, which will allow those in the construction stage to proceed. The authors based their 9GW capacity estimate on data compiled by the group said, citing data from Global Energy Monitor.

The authors calculated that the deterioration in air quality caused by the addition of new coal capacity would cause the Philippines to incur P317 billion in
extra costs in treating non-communicable diseases such as lower respiratory infections.

CREA, which was founded in Helsinki and employs analysts based in Europe and Asia, claims that the 10 GW of coal-fired capacity currently in service was behind about 630 air pollution-related deaths this year.

“The total annual cost borne by the public is estimated at $165 million (P8.5 billion),” according to the report.

It estimated that the annual deaths will rise to 1,000 a year if the new nine GW worth of capacity is commissioned, while economic costs will rise to $264 million (P14 billion) a year from $165 currently.

At the launch of the report on Friday, CREA Southeast Asia analyst Isabella Suarez said that there were around 45.3 air pollution-related deaths for every 100,000 people in the Philippines, citing 2018 data from the World Health Organization.

Although there is no evidence yet that links air pollution to the worsening of the global health crisis, she noted that there were emerging studies linking ambient air pollution to higher susceptibility to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

“There are emerging studies that show that long-term exposure to air pollution increases vulnerability to the virus. This is because air pollution increases the risk of many pre-existing conditions that are also linked to increased vulnerability to COVID-19,” Ms. Suarez said.

The authors acknowledged the input of organizations like Greenpeace Philippines, the Center for Energy, Ecology, and Development, and the Philippine Movement for Climate Justice in preparing the report. — Angelica Y. Yang

Stocks close higher on vaccine optimism; volume declines

SHARE prices closed higher Friday with investors upbeat after a series of developments on the vaccine front, which hold out the prospect of normalizing the economy after the pandemic.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) rose 91.73 points or 1.28% to 7,246.16, while the broader all-shares index was up 47.81 points or 1.12% at 4,318.73.

China Bank Securities Research Director Rastine Mackie D. Mercado said investor optimism was likely due to the start of the vaccine rollout in some countries.

“The strength of the market may be attributable to a risk-on stance stemming from investor optimism following vaccine developments (such as) FDA panel endorsement of emergency use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine (and) more countries preparing for vaccine rollout,” Mr. Mercado told BusinessWorld in an email.

Other sources of market buoyancy include improved consumer and business confidence as revealed by the central bank’s fourth quarter business and consumer expectations survey, he said.

He noted that the market could be ”choppy” in the coming weeks because shares have hit “lofty valuations.”

“Downside risks such as continuing delays in US stimulus talks, and the possibility of a no-trade deal Brexit may dampen investor sentiment, leading to possible declines,” Mr. Mercado said.

Timson Securities, Inc. Head of Online Trading Darren Blaine T. Pangan said that the market was hoping that the wider distribution of COVID-19 vaccines will help the economy recover faster.

“Investor sentiment may be described as optimistic, since market participants seem to be okay holding on to their positions over the weekend,” he told BusinessWorld in a Viber message.

The Philippine market ran against the grain of the US indices. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 Index both recorded losses. Asian stocks were mixed, with the Nikkei 225, China’s CSI 300, the S&P/ASX 200 and the MSCI AC Asia Pacific falling.

In the Philippine market, financials rose 12.36 points or 0.84% to 1,486.60. Industrials were up 22.47 or 0.24% at 9,420.92. Holding firms rose 86.28 points or 1.17% to 7,455.87. Services were up 3.82 points or 0.25% at 1,533.56. Mining and Oil rose 166.49 points or 1.82% to 9,305.97. Property was up 98.61 points or 2.72% at 3,719.23.

Advancers led decliners 155 to 77, with 40 unchanged.

Value traded on Friday was P9.8 billion on volume of 75.92 billion shares. On Thursday the correponding totals were P7.64 billion and 150.03 billion shares. — Angelica Y. Yang

UAAP cancels Season 83

Putting above all else the health and safety of student-athletes and those involved in the operations of the competitions, the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) has decided to cancel its Season 83.

The league in a statement said after a series of discussions, its Board of Trustees came to the tough decision to move for the cancellation of its 83rd season amid the uncertainty still prevailing because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The UAAP was not able to finish its Season 82 early this year as the pandemic started to make its presence felt, and mass gatherings like sporting events were prohibited.

It was angling to return to action either in the first or second quarter next year, albeit in a modified setting to conform with the conditions related to the pandemic, including the possibility of holding a “bubble,” where participants will be confined in a particular area for a duration of time to guard against the spread of the coronavirus.

But the league admitted that with face-to-face classes still not allowed staging competitions was made all the more difficult.

In making its decision, the UAAP is hoping that member-schools will use the time to plan their activities for the remainder of the academic year, as well as their athletic programs for next season.

It went on to say that both the Board of Trustees and Board of Managing Directors will further discuss the implications of the cancellation for stakeholders to be guided.

De La Salle University is the host for UAAP Seasons 83 and 84 with Cignal TV and its affiliate TV5 the new broadcast partners of the league. – Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Clark to host games for third window of FIBA Asia Cup qualifiers

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo

After the Philippine Basketball Association, Clark, Pampanga, will again host a hoops tournament, this time the third and final window of the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers.

In an announcement on Friday, world governing body FIBA said the Philippines is one of the sites serving as hosts for Asia Cup qualifying matches, along with Japan, Bahrain and Qatar.

Clark will be the venue for matches in Groups A and C, slated for Feb. 18 to 22.

Group A has the Philippines (3-0), Korea (2-0), Indonesia (1-2) and Thailand (0-4) while Group C is composed of New Zealand (2-0) Australia (1-1), Guam (0-1) and Hong Kong (0-1).

The decision to have Clark as one of the hosts came after the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas Inc. offered the venue, touting, among other things, how the PBA successfully staged its “bubble” tournament there under strict health and safety protocols to guard against the spread of the coronavirus from October up to early this week when a champion was crowned in the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings.

“The Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas is honored and humbled to be chosen as one of the hosts for the last round of the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers this coming February,” SBP president Al Panlilio said in a statement.

“We are thankful for FIBA’s trust in our capacity to host not just a successful tournament but, more importantly, a safe one. We’re glad to have met their health standards and we are looking forward to welcoming Korea, Indonesia and Thailand as well as Australia, New Zealand, Guam and Hong Kong from Group C in our country,” he added.

The SBP president went on to share that they will also show the Filipinos’ trademark hospitality notwithstanding the prevailing difficult conditions brought about by the pandemic.

Mr. Panlilio thanked as well the PBA for sharing its best practices in staging a successful bubble, where participants were holed up in a contained environment for the duration of its tournament.

The SBP is looking forward to working with the PBA, pertinent government agencies and other basketball stakeholders in the country for the successful staging of the February window of the qualifiers.

In the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers, the Philippines has remained unscathed, boosted by a sweep of Thailand in their two games in the second window last month in Manama, Bahrain.

For the other hosts, Tokyo will have Group B, Manama has Groups D and F, and Doha Group E.
The exact schedule of games will be confirmed at a later stage.

As per tournament format, the top two teams in the grouping at the end of the qualifiers advance outright to the FIBA Asia Cup set for August next year.

E-scooter and bicycle-sharing and app to launch in BGC

Moovr PH, an e-scooter and bicycle-sharing mobile app, will launch this December with Bonifacio Global City (BGC) as its pioneer location. 

To rent one of the 200 single speed bicycles and 20 Segway Ninebot Pro Max e-scooters spread across Moovr PH’s initial 14 bike hubs, users can download the personal mobility device-sharing app, load credits to their e-wallets, and scan the bike or e-scooter’s QR code to unlock it. 

Vehicles can be rented for a maximum of 24 hours and the e-scooters, which have a typical range of 65 kilometers, must be returned if the battery runs below 15%. 

There are 14 Moovr bike hubs in Bonifacio Global City. — Image courtesy of Moovr PH

Rides can be parked and locked back in the nearest hub to complete one’s journey. Each custom-made vehicle has an alarm and will not move outside the designated service area, which protects the fleet against theft. 


Moovr PH chose Bonifacio Global City (BGC) as its pioneer location. This map gives you an idea of where the hubs are.

All vehicles will be regularly disinfected and sanitized to protect the health of users. 

Rental rates for the bikes start at P15 for 15 minutes, or P60 per hour. Rental rates for the Segway e-scooters, meanwhile, are P50 for every 20 minutes, or P150 per hour. GCash, credit cards, and debit cards can be used to top up one’s account. 

Developed by the same company behind storage app Keepr Storage PH, Moovr PH is an alternative means to beat city traffic. “It’s looking at the pain points of our everyday lives and coming up with solutions,” said Anna Moncupa, founder and CEO of Keepr Storage PH. “The challenge is localizing it and making it a perfect fit for the Philippines.” 

Moovr, which plans to cover more locations in the metro, invested in the same system and technology being used in The Hague, Netherlands, a city known for its well-developed cycling network and infrastructure. 

BGC was chosen as the app’s pilot location because the city already has existing champions for green and sustainable solutions. “It was an easy choice for us. Most BGC citizens are passionate and want to contribute to the city,” said Ms. Moncupa. “This is exactly the type of partner we are looking for.”

Bike lanes weren’t part of the BGC’s original master plan, but the city launched lanes after seeing a growing need for them. “In BGC, the number of bikers grew 800% since we installed these bike lanes. I’m sure people will start realizing it’s better for them to just use their bikes,” said Jay Teodoro, chief operations officer of Fort Bonifacio Development Corporation, who added that the city has been trying to establish a bicycle-sharing program “for a long time.”

Ads can be placed and printed in Moovr’s bikes and e-scooters for brands looking to advertise. Digital options are also available as pop-up and banner displays on the mobile app, which will be available for download in both the Apple App Store and Google Play. — Patricia B. Mirasol

MORE Power’s 1st major investment in Iloilo City comes to life

Striving towards improving the efficiency of Iloilo City’s power sector, MORE Power has embarked on its first major investment critical to the modernization of its distribution system.

This was stressed by Enrique K. Razon, Jr., chairman, and president of Prime Strategic Holdings, Inc., a major shareholder of MORE Power, following the energization of the 10MVA mobile substation over the weekend at Iloilo Business Park at Megaworld in Mandurriao District here.

“The 10MVA mobile substation is not only a behemoth power-provider on wheels, it is also the answer to the ever-present danger of overloading of the Mandurriao substation,” he said.

In recent months, despite having completed the comprehensive preventive maintenance on all its five substations, MORE Power has had to deal with trying to prevent overloading of its substations. Time and again it had warned of the Mandurriao substation working at critical levels reaching up to 90-95%.

With the mobile substation, the Mandurriao substation is expected to perform at a safer 70% capacity.

“The mobile substation will increase the capacity of the Megaworld area–one of Iloilo’s fastest-growing areas–by 6-8 megawatts. Moreover, it will decongest the Mandurriao substation, whose usage has gone beyond safe levels, and will result in fewer outages,” Razon said, adding that the powering on of the mobile substation is the utility’s first major step towards doubling Iloilo City’s power capacity within the next five years.

“This, indeed, is a considerable investment on the part of MORE Power, but it is an investment needed to enable the utility to adapt to new challenges and maintain its system resiliency and reliability,” he said.

Scoring the “decrepit and antiquated” distribution grid of Iloilo City under the city’s previous distribution utility, Panay Electric Company, Razon vowed that MORE Power will modernize the system to give Iloilo City a world-class power distribution network.

“Decades of neglect and mismanagement have led to this, but we will give Iloilo City a stable, safe, reliable, and economical power supply,” he said.

Describing Iloilo City as one of the country’s leading destinations for investments with its robust economy, demographic growth, and resilient institutions focused on strengthening infrastructure and employment, Razon said the city is seen as an attractive destination for long-term investments and therefore requires sufficient availability of power and an equally resilient distribution system for economic development.

“We need to focus on further improving and modernizing the distribution system to energize the city’s economic growth and support the local government’s agenda to attract investments, drive up job creation, as well as improve the living conditions of its residents,” he said.

Razon also disclosed that MORE Power will allocate around P2 Billion as an emergency capital budget to further upgrade the distribution system here.

“Within the next five years MORE Power will be embarking on a ‘stream of capacity expansion’ that will see the addition of a 30MVA mobile substation, a new 50MVA substation at another end of Iloilo Business Park, and new substations in Arevalo District and Diversion area as well as the expansion of the City Proper and Jaro substations,” Razon declared.

Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi, during the inauguration recently stressed that the mobile substation is a significant addition in the rehabilitation and upgrading of Iloilo City’s distribution system.

“We aspire that the inauguration of your new mobile station serves as another opportunity to calibrate your strategies towards a better served Iloilo City. Rest assured that DOE is always your partner in the energy distribution development. You can always count on our support in your future endeavors,” Cusi said adding, “We acknowledge your efforts to upgrade the facilities and equipment in your franchise area as well as your ongoing programs to minimize power interruptions, reduce systems loss, and for keeping the consumers promptly informed through its social media, radio advisories, recorida, press releases and other public service programs.”

Iloilo City Mayor Jerry Treñas, meanwhile, said the 10MVA substation will not only provide the Megaworld with a larger capacity to service its power needs but also ‘breathing space’ for two substations: the Mandurriao substation and to some extent, the Molo substation.

“We are grateful for MORE Power’s dedication to provide the best quality of service for the Ilonggos. Let us continue to be more understanding, and soon, Iloilo City will have the best supply of electricity for all,” he said.

For his part, Roland Tiongson, first vice president of Megaworld Premier Offices, hailed MORE Power’s installation of the mobile station at the Megaworld area stating, “This is a major and welcome development at Iloilo Business Park to ensure stability in its power supply requirements. As we open more BPO companies in the township, we expect a continuing surge in the demand for 24/7 power for our office towers aside from the current requirements of the already existing mall, hotels, and residential condominiums in the area.”

Stratbase Albert del Rosario Institute holds Pilipinas Conference

Ayala Corp. Chairman and CEO Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala said fostering investments from the private sector and government is key to fast recovery.

“To jump-start this economy, we all have to move to an investment-led push, and hopefully it turns more societal as more jobs get created, there’s more spending power, and then we start to get this cycle of people getting an economy that is beginning to reawaken,” Mr. Zobel de Ayala said during the recent Pilipinas Conference on the “Key Role of the Business Sector” hosted by the Stratbase Albert del Rosario Institute.

“The whole investment-led component of our economic equation of our country has to be jump-started. The private sector has a role and the public sector have a role, so all of us have to use whatever balance sheets we have, matched up, with the changing nature of demand, which will increase again, to start re-allocating resources and building new jobs and getting that cycle moving again,”

He said, “The public sector as well have their own balance sheet, their own spending, and we would hope that they would also be catalysts to jumpstart spending at a time like this to get infrastructure moving. This is a symbiotic relationship.”

“It’s not only FDI, but we hope that we can create that kind of structure that will be internationally accepted as an attractive framework for people to come in and invest in our country. We should all be encouraging that, but at the same time, local capital formation where private sector companies begin to move forward in terms of capital, and the public sector as well, to start to reallocate to jumpstart the economy,” Mr. Zobel de Ayala said.

“In the same forum, Edgar O. Chua, chairman of Makati Business Club said, “Business activities themselves support national development, thru production or provision of food, water, housing, power, telco, transport, education, banking and finance, healthcare and other services. Yes, business makes money from these, but they are essential to national development, to improving standards of living.

“Government should provide the enabling environment and the needed regulation to ensure laws and contracts are obeyed, both those that restrict businesses and those that protect them.”

Rizalina G. Mantaring, former president and current chair of the Committee on National Issues, Management Association of the Philippines, said, “We will see more partnership with government because the magnitude of the issues we see today requires a  whole of society approach.”

“We need to balance economic and social sustainability. This consciousness has actually been growing for years but the pandemic just highlighted it, that you can’t just be taking care of yourself because if the community around you suffer, you may not be sustainable.”

“Amb. Benedicto Yujuico, president, Philippine Chamber of Commerce, Inc., said, “Government cannot do everything alone, it needs active support of all stakeholders of society to be able to effectively nurse our economy back to health. Solidarity of the highest order, that is the “Bayanihan” spirit that is the whole of society approach.”

Stratbase ADRI President Prof. Dindo Manhit acknowledged the country’s top business groups for swiftly and aggressively responding to the immediate needs of the most vulnerable members of society amid the pandemic.

“Not only did they help in keeping the economy afloat, but they also made significant contributions in investing in necessary safety measures and COVID-19 testing. Some companies even committed to continue paying their employees despite revenue losses during the lockdown,” Manhit said.

FDI net inflows slide in September

Net inflows of foreign direct investments shrank in September, after four straight months of double-digit annual growth. — PHILIPPINE STAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

FOREIGN DIRECT investments (FDI) to the Philippines slumped in September after four straight months of year-on-year growth, as uncertainty over the coronavirus disease pandemic weighed on investor sentiment.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) data showed net inflows of FDI stood at $523 million in September, dropping by 12.3% from $596 million in the same month in 2019. This was also 17% lower than the $637 million in FDI net inflows logged in August.

“The two-week Modified Enhanced Community Quarantine (MECQ) in Metro Manila and surrounding areas in the first half of August may have dampened investor sentiment on prospects of the economy’s re-opening,” the central bank said in a statement on Thursday.

To recall, Metro Manila and nearby provinces were once again placed under a MECQ to curb a sharp rise in COVID-19 infections.

FDI net inflows in the nine months to September was down 8.6% to $4.832 billion from $5.289 billion in the same period of 2019.

“The decline in FDI inflows reflected the worldwide cautious investment climate, following the continued effects of the prolonged COVID-19 health crisis on the global economic outlook,” the BSP said.

The central bank expects FDI inflows to reach $5.6 billion this year.

Under normal circumstances, the so-called “ber” months are “quite productive” periods for the economy, said John Paolo R. Rivera, an economist at the Asian Institute of Management.

“The decline in September reveals how slowly (but surely) the economy is moving again relative to other economies that are showing more stable and tangible recovery even in the short to medium run, thereby attracting more FDIs,” Mr. Rivera said in a Viber message.

In September, only equity other than reinvestment of earnings grew among FDI components, up  2.5% to $99 million from $96 million a year ago. Placements slipped 8.6% to $114 million and withdrawals plummeted 46.5% to $15 million.

The BSP said a big chunk of the placements came from Japan, the Netherlands, the US, and Singapore and were funneled into industries such as manufacturing, real estate, and financial and insurance businesses.

Meanwhile, reinvestment of earnings saw the largest drop as it slid 19.7% year on year to $62 million in September.

Net investments in debt instruments declined 14.3% to $362 million, while inflows that went into equity and investment fund shares also slipped 7.3% to $161 million.  Luz Wendy T. Noble

Philippines to be SE Asia’s worst performer this year

THE PHILIPPINES is seen to post the worst economic performance in Southeast Asia this year, according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB) which slashed its growth forecast anew as household consumption and investments remained sluggish amid the coronavirus pandemic.

In its Asian Development Outlook (ADO) Supplement report released Thursday, the ADB now expects Philippine gross domestic product  (GDP) to contract by 8.5% from -7.3% penciled in September. The revised forecast was at the lower end of the 8.5-9.5% slump projected by the Philippine government’s economic team.

“The GDP forecast for 2020 is downgraded to 8.5% contraction because household consumption and investment have fallen more than expected,” the multilateral lender said.

The Philippines will likely see the sharpest annual GDP drop in Southeast Asia, behind Thailand (-7.8%), Singapore (-6.2%), Malaysia (-6%), and Indonesia (-2.2%). Only Vietnam is expected to grow this year with 2.3% GDP, revised upward from the original 1.8% forecast.

Aside from the Philippines, the ADB also downgraded the outlook for Indonesia (-2.2% from -1%, previously) and Malaysia (-6% from -5%), as pandemic containment efforts continued to hamper economic recovery.

“The Philippine economy contracted by 10.0% in January–September 2020, reflecting muted consumer and business activity and confidence under the pandemic,” the ADB noted.

Localized lockdowns or formally referred to as community quarantines are still being imposed across the Philippines, which has the second-highest number of coronavirus infections in Southeast Asia after Indonesia. As of Thursday, the number of coronavirus infections in the country hit 445,540, while the death toll stood at 8,701.

Developing Asia, a group of 45 nations in the Asia-Pacific, will likely shrink by 0.4% this year, less than the 0.7% contraction forecast in September, the ADB said. Growth will rebound to 6.8% in 2021, but the ADB noted “prospects diverge within the region.”

“A prolonged pandemic remains the primary risk, but recent developments on the vaccine front are tempering this. Safe, effective, and timely vaccine delivery in developing economies will be critical to support the reopening of economies and the recovery of growth in the region,” ADB Chief Economist Yasuyuki Sawada said in a statement.

The worsening tension between the United States and China over trade and technology was also flagged as a risk to the growth outlook for the region.

For Southeast Asia, the ADB also lowered its GDP forecast this year to -4.4% from the previous -3.8% forecast. It also cut Southeast Asia’s growth outlook for 2021 to 5.2% from the previous 5.5%.

The ADB retained its 6.5% growth forecast for the Philippines in 2021, “assuming that public investment picks up and the global economy recovers.”

This is the second-fastest estimated growth among Southeast Asian countries next year, behind Malaysia’s 7%.

Meanwhile, the ADB raised its 2020 inflation forecast for the Philippines to 2.5% from the 2.4% it gave in September, and retained the 2.6% outlook for 2021.

If realized, the estimate for this year will match the average inflation seen last year.

Headline inflation quickened to 3.3% in November from 2.5% in October and 1.3% in the same month last year. This brought the 11-month average to 2.5%, still within the central bank’s 2-4% target.

The ADB raised its inflation outlook for Southeast Asia this year to 1.2% from 1%, previously, but tempered the forecast for next year to 2.2% from 2.3%. Headline inflation averaged at 2.1% for Southeast Asian countries in 2019. — Beatrice M. Laforga

ADB further downgrades economic outlook for Philippines in 2020

ADB further downgrades economic outlook for Philippines in 2020

THE PHILIPPINES is seen to post the worst economic performance in Southeast Asia this year, according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB) which slashed its growth forecast anew as household consumption and investments remained sluggish amid the coronavirus pandemic. Read the full story.

ADB further downgrades economic outlook for Philippines in 2020

Foreign trade decline continues in October

PHILIPPINE international trade performance shrank once again in October as imports declined for the 18th straight month and exports returned to negative territory.

Preliminary data by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed merchandise exports in October contracted by 2.2% year on year to $6.202 billion, compared with a revised 2.9% growth in September and a flat 0.5% growth in October 2019. Prior to that, the export growth in September marked the first expansion in seven months.

Meanwhile, merchandise imports shrank for the 18th straight month in October by 19.5% to $7.979 billion. This was worse compared with the 15.3% and 7.6% contractions logged in September 2020 and October 2019, respectively.

Trade deficit for the month stood at $1.777 billion, lower than $1.783 billion in September 2020 and $3.573 billion in October 2019.

The country’s total external trade in goods — or the sum of export and import goods — was $14.181 billion in October, down 12.8% from $16.256 billion last year. This brought the total trade in the 10-month period to $122.151 billion, 20.2% lower than $153.159 billion a year ago.

For the 10 months to October, exports fell by 12.5% to $52.113 billion compared with the Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC) projection of a 16% fall for the year.

Meanwhile, imports in the January-October period amounted to $70.038 billion, lower by 25.2% from last year’s $93.605 billion. This exceeded the DBCC’s revised target of a 20% contraction for 2020.

Year to date, the trade balance amounted to a $17.924-billion deficit, narrower than the $34.052-billion trade gap in 2019’s comparable 10 months.

Manufactured goods, which made up 84.5% of total export sales in October, fell by two percent to $5.238 billion.

Exports of electronic products fell by a flat 0.3% to $3.584 billion in October, with semiconductors contributing $2.637 billion, down one percent. Electronic products made up almost 70% of manufactured goods exports and more than half of total exported goods.

Exports of agro-based products declined by 21.7% to $358.417 million, followed by petroleum products with an 89.5% year-on-year decline to $5.591 million.

Bucking the trend were exports of mineral and forest products, which rose by 48.4% and 22.9%, respectively, to $448.951 million and $36.829 million.

On the import side, purchases of raw materials and intermediate goods slipped by 9.6% to $3.223 billion in October from last year’s $3.565 billion. These goods account for 40% of the country’s import goods that month.

Capital goods, comprising 34.3% of the total, fell by 19.1% to $2.736 billion from $3.383 billion.

Imports of consumer goods decreased by 21.8% to $1.355 billion. Purchases of mineral fuels, lubricant and related materials were also down by 50% to $580.329 million.

In a statement, Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua cited some positive takeaways from the trade data despite declines posted in October.

For instance, he noted businesses have been responding to the government’s approach for a targeted and gradual reopening of the economy as shown in the increase of capital goods imports in October when compared with the previous month. Moreover, exports to leading regional trading partners such as China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have also grown by double digits.

China was the third-largest market for Philippine goods in October, accounting for 15.2% of total exports or $944.78 million. Exports to this market posted a 12.7% increase year on year. The other top two markets were the United States (16.3% share or $1.008 billion) and Japan (15.6% share or $965.28 million), albeit year-on-year sales to these countries were down by 6.6% and 1.4%, respectively.

On the other hand, China was the country’s top source for foreign goods with a 24.4% share or $1.950 billion, followed by Japan (11% share or $876.46 million) and the United States (eight percent share or $639.76 million).

Meanwhile, exports to ASEAN grew by 10.4% to $1.026 billion in October, but down 7.8% year to date at $8.305 billion.

In a note to reporters, ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said the “fast-fading domestic demand” along with negative investment sentiment led to imports falling by double digits for a ninth straight month, citing the sustained drop in capital goods.

“With inbound shipments of capital machinery fading fast, we forecast a slow and arduous recovery for the Philippine economy given the likely hit on potential output,” he said.

Mr. Mapa expects “anemic exports and free falling imports to carry into early 2021” as both external and domestic demand are expected to be lackluster at the start of the year, adding the deployment of the vaccine “will not be instantaneous.”

“The absence of vaccines and its projected slow rollout (3-5 years per official government estimates) will weigh on domestic economic activity and curtail any potential recovery in investment appetite. Thus, we expect import demand to recover but at a very shallow trajectory leading to a very gradual and slow recovery for the Philippines as it operates with diminished productive capacity,” he said.

UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion expects exports to be positive, while the decline in imports to soften in the remaining months of the year. He forecast the end-2020 decline in exports and imports to respectively reach 9.1% and 23% versus the year-to-date declines of 12.5% and 25.2%.

“It is very important that the rebound in the country’s external trade comes through for better GDP performance results in 2021. Both production for exports and imports are crucial for job creation and recovery in consumer incomes,” Mr. Asuncion said, even as he clarified that recovery in household consumption will still have the biggest impact on GDP performance.

In a separate e-mail, Asian Institute of Management Economist John Paolo R. Rivera said recovery in trade will depend on how fast the country’s productive capacity could recover from the damage caused by typhoons.

“[The trade sector] was on the way for a rebound, but were hampered by calamities,” he said.

In a phone interview, Philippine Exporters Confederation, Inc. (Philexport) President and Chief Executive Officer Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr. said the decline may be a question of cut-off dates and not less orders.

“The -2.2% (in exports) is still for adjustment… I think it will improve since the orders from China are coming in,” he said.

“We expect the dichotomy of strong exports and suppressed imports to continue in (first half of 2021), implying another (albeit smaller) current account surplus in 2021,” JPMorgan Research Analyst Milo Gunasinghe said in a note sent to reporters.

“Looking ahead, considering slow economic revival, we think a material widening of the trade deficit will likely be pushed further down the line to (second half of 2021). This means that the (current account) will likely remain in surplus, albeit a smaller one, next year as well,” he said.

Meanwhile, NEDA’s Mr. Chua said improving the communication infrastructure to entice investments in digital solutions and enacting logistics reforms such as rationalizing the freight system, establishing strategic warehousing, and cold chain systems to bring down costs will “play a key role” in the rebound of the country’s trade sector. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman with inputs from Beatrice M. Laforga