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Cebu Landmasters expands in 4 more cities in Visayas, Mindanao

Cebu Landmasters, Inc. (CLI) is expanding its economic housing brand to four more cities in the Visayas and Mindanao, after seeing a spike in demand amid the pandemic.

The listed real estate developer told the stock exchange it is launching a Casa Mira community in Dumaguete this month. Casa Mira communities will also be built in Ormoc, Puerto Princesa, and Davao City within the year.

“Many new residential seekers met that need by purchasing Casa Mira homes. As demand in other parts of the region continues to be largely unmet, we’ve made it our mission to roll out more Casa Mira projects in more VisMin cities to fill that gap,” CLI chief executive officer Jose R. Soberano III said in a statement on Friday.

The Casa Mira brand made up for 69% of CLI’s record reservation sales worth P14.23 billion during the height of the health crisis last year, higher than its usual contribution of 30%.

“We believe that an expansive mood and lessons learned from the pandemic–where homes in well-planned communities provided a safe haven–will drive Casa Mira forward for the balance of the year,” Mr. Soberano added.

Casa Mira communities include a clubhouse with multi-purpose halls, a chapel, a swimming pool, a basketball court, and a children’s playground.

There are currently ten Casa Mira communities with a combined development cost of P10.24 billion in in Cebu, Bacolod, Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo, and Negros Oriental.

Cebu Landmasters shares rose by 2.97% at the stock exchange on Friday, closing at P5.5 apiece. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

Cebu Pacific taps local banks for P16-B loan

Cebu Air, Inc., operator of budget carrier Cebu Pacific, on Friday said its board approved a P16-billio, ten-year loan from local banks.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Friday, the company said that its board of directors approved the loan from state banks Development Bank of the Philippines and Land Bank of the Philippines, in partnership with private banks.

The private banks include Asia United Bank Corporation, Bank of the Philippines Islands, Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company, and Union Bank of the Philippines.

The loan will be used to fund the firm’s capital expenditures and other general corporate purposes.

“The loan will also provide a cushion against unexpected working capital requirements that may stem from fuel price and foreign exchange rate volatility,” Cebu Air said.

The commercial airline industry was hit hard by the pandemic. Cebu Pacific currently operates less than a quarter of its pre-pandemic network at 32 domestic destinations as it runs half of its 73 aircraft.

The budget carrier said that it sustained severe revenue declines during the pandemic, but its net debt-to-equity ratio was still at 2.34x as of the end of September.

“Cebu Pacific remains focused on its business transformation to reduce its unit cost so as to continue to offer affordable flights,” Cebu Air President and Chief Executive Officer Lance Y. Gokongwei said.

The company swung to a net loss of P14.69 billion for the first nine months of 2020 from the P6.77-billion profit in the same period a year earlier.

The fundraising adds to the company’s convertible preferred shares offering, where it plans to raise around P12.5 billion, Cebu Pacific Director for Financial Analytics and Investor Relations Trina E. Asuncion said on Wednesday.

Shares in Cebu Air went up 1.01% or 45 centavos to close at P45 each on Friday. — Jenina P. Ibañez

BHI ends partnership with Revolution Precrafted on Cavite project

Boulevard Holdings, Inc. (BHI) is ending its partnership with embattled start-up Revolution Precrafted Philippines, Inc. for a project in Cavite.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, BHI said its board of directors on Thursday approved the cancellation of its deal with Revolution Precrafted to jointly develop a resort and residential complex in Ternate, Cavite.

No reason was given for the cancellation of the deal.

However, a representative from the legal counsel of Revolution Precrafted said the company’s chief executive officer Jose Roberto “Robbie” R. Antonio will settle his obligations with those involved in the deal.

“As far as Robbie is concerned, we are not abandoning the buyers or those that have made reservations,” a member of Mr. Antonio’s legal counsel said on a phone call with BusinessWorld on Friday afternoon.

Mr. Antonio previously left his role as a co-managing director at Century Properties Group, Inc. to resolve complaints made by suppliers and other parties against Revolution Precrafted Philippines and its subsidiaries. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

Mega Global expands operations in Zamboanga

Sardines manufacturer Mega Global Corporation launched its newest headquarters and plants as it expands its Zamboanga operations.

The company recently launched its Cawit-based headquarters and ice plant, along with a can-making plant in Talisayan.

The new ice plant will increase the company’s production capacity to 450 tons per day from 300, while the can-making plant will double its capacity to 1.5 million cans a day from 750,000, the company said in a press release on Friday.

“As we gear up for our expanded operations in Luzon with the opening of the Mega Manufacturing Plant in 2022, we are also making efforts to modernize our central operations in Zamboanga with the goal of becoming an employer of choice in the city,” Mega Global Chief Operating Officer Michelle Tiu Lim Chan said.

Mega Global last year announced its investment in a P1-billion manufacturing plant in Batangas to meet a spike in demand for canned goods.

The Cawit office opening coincides with the lifting of a three-month sardine fishing ban in the Zamboanga peninsula. The annual closed fishing season has been implemented by the government since 2011 as a marine conservation measure to allow fish in the area to spawn.

“We remain committed to the innovation of our fishing business and processes to provide the highest quality of sardines to the market and to help boost the local economy of Zamboanga and ultimately, the Philippines,” Mega Global Chief Technology Officer Malcolm Tiu Lim said.

The Zamboanga peninsula accounts for almost half of the country’s sardine production, government data showed. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Isuzu warns against unauthorized selling

Isuzu Philippines Corporation (IPC) is warning the public against buying and selling Isuzu-branded cars without authorization.

The company in a notice said that it found individuals and entities selling Isuzu-branded cars, adding that those found infringing the trademark will be prosecuted.

“All violators must cease and desist from conducting unlawful acts, which includes unauthorized sale, offering for sale, distribution, importation, advertising, and other preparatory steps necessary to carry out the sale of goods or services,” IPC said.

IPC is the only authorized Philippine distributor and assembler of Japanese car manufacturer Isuzu Motors Limited (IML), which owns the Isuzu trademark in the Philippines and globally.

“IPC’s brand-new vehicles strictly follow specifications of IML in Japan, are fitted with genuine Isuzu parts, and comes with after sales services,” the company said.

IPC added that it cannot guarantee the “best” maintenance services and latest components to new vehicles bought through other channels.

The company is working with law firm Ortega Bacorro Odulio Calma & Carbonell.

The company recently launched its newest D-Max pick-up truck. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Rice tariff collections surge to P2.04 billion in January

Rice import tariffs collected by the Bureau of Customs (BoC) jumped to P2.04 billion in January as it improved its valuation system for inbound shipments.

The January total was 58% higher than the P1.29 billion logged a year earlier, a statement from the Department of Finance (DoF) on Friday said.

Customs Commissioner Rey Leonardo B. Guerrero said the average valuation of rice imports improved 11.5% based on the bureau’s electronic-to-mobile system data.

Preliminary data showed the duties were collected from 287,957 metric tons of imported rice, which climbed 29% from the 223,278 metric tons logged in January 2020.

The month also saw the average value of rice imports increase 11.5% to P20,262 per metric ton from P18,177 per metric ton a year earlier.

“Improvements made by the BoC to help ensure the proper classification, quantity and weight of rice stocks brought into the country under the Rice Tariffication Law (RTL) led to the increase in the average value of imported rice, which, in turn, meant higher revenues for the government from the duties collected from these imports,” the DoF said.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III earlier told the BoC to tighten its guard and check on the possible undervaluation of rice imports by private traders.

Republic Act 11203 or the Rice Tariffication Law mandated the creation of the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund where P10 billion of annual rice tariff revenues are allocated to finance programs on modernizing rice farming in the country.

Meanwhile, collections in excess of the P10 billion will be included in the national budget for the following year and programmed for financial assistance for palay farmers, titling of agricultural lands, an expanded crop insurance program on rice, and crop diversification. — LWTN

Plaridel expansion set to open in April

WIDENING WORKS at Plaridel Bypass in Bulacan will be completed by the end of the month in time for an April launch, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said.

More than two kilometers (km) of the 24.61km Arterial (Plaridel) Bypass road is being widened to four from two lanes.

“The added two more lanes for the 2.22-kilometer portion of existing bypass road is ready for inauguration anytime this April 2021 and motorists will soon be able to freely use this section,” the department said in a press release on Friday.

Under this project, the widening of a 1-km road and the construction of two bridges will be done by the end of March, DPWH Undersecretary for Unified Project Management Office (UPMO) Operations Emil K. Sadain said.

DPWH said the widening should cut the average travel time of 15,000 motorists travelling between Burol, Batangas to Maasim, San Rafael in Bulacan to 24 minutes from 69 minutes.

The project has funding support from the Japan International Cooperation Agency.

The expansion is expected to address traffic diverted from Maharlika Highway. — Jenina P. Ibañez

DoST-funded app taps citizens to monitor Manila Bay, other areas

A NEW Department of Science and Technology (DoST)-funded mobile app aims to monitor Manila Bay and its surroundings by letting citizens report environmental issues via the platform, its developers said on Friday.

The MASDAN app, which would be available to Android users soon, is part of the P10-million Project MapABLE, one of the four components of the IM4ManilaBay Program.

The IM4ManilaBay Program aims to use geospatial technology and citizen science in monitoring the water quality in Manila Bay, and its linked environments.

The MASDAN app is managed by the DoST-Philippine Council for Industry, Energy and Emerging Technology Research and Development (PCIEERD).

“The goal of this mobile application is to crowd source or look for reports on various environmental issues in different portions of Manila Bay or the entire country… Citizens can report issues on algal blooms, fish kills, water hyacinth growth, and water pollution using the platform,” MASDAN app development team leader Jommer M. Medina said in Filipino during the app’s virtual launch on Friday.

He added that the public can also report about ongoing reclamation efforts and solid waste management issues affecting water quality in Manila Bay.

Using the app, citizens can record the location of the environmental issue and submit photos along with their reports.

“Government agencies would be able to see the places where these reports are distributed. These would prove to be useful later on when looking for hotspots or whether the government should embark on a more intensive program (in a certain area),” Mr. Medina said.

He said the mobile app was developed to benefit environmental monitoring agencies, local government units, environmental volunteers and organizations, and the public.

The MASDAN app is currently on its first version and while it can accommodate pictures, it has yet to allow the uploading of videos, backend developer Dominic C. Fargas, Jr. said.

“We understand that this platform can be used by stakeholders and citizens from the different sectors to report environmental concerns…This app is envisioned to promote citizen participation in monitoring and managing Manila Bay and its linked environments,” PCIEERD executive director Enrico C. Paringit said during the event. — Angelica Y. Yang

Stocks decline as inflation quickens to 25-month high

STOCKS closed in the red on Friday following the release of the February inflation report, which showed that the rise in prices surged to a 25-month high last month.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) went down by 1.12 points or 0.01% to finish at 6,881.37 on Friday, while the broader all shares index decreased by 4.68 points or 0.11% to close at 4,158.54.

“Selling pressures weighed on the market amid worries over inflation following the 4.7% February print,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Senior Research Analyst Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said in a Viber message.

“Local shares closed relatively flat as the February inflation print came in within expectations,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said via Viber.

Inflation picked up for the fifth straight month in February to log its fastest pace in 25 months, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Friday.

Preliminary data from the PSA showed headline inflation was at 4.7% last month, picking up from 4.2% in January 2021 and 2.6% in February 2020.

Last month’s result marked the fastest pace in 25 months or since the 5.1% in December 2018.

Sentiment was also affected by comments from the US central bank chief that their monetary policy stance would remain supportive of the continued recovery of the world’s largest economy.

“Sentiment was rather cautious throughout most of trading but turned into bargain hunting as investors assessed the statement of Fed Chair Jerome Powell,” Mr. Limlingan said.

Sectoral indices were split on Friday. Services went up by 15.26 points or 1.05% to 1,464.63; financials rose by 3.93 points or 0.26% to 1,477.62; and property inched up by 2.19 points or 0.06% to 3,479.81.

Meanwhile, mining and oil fell by 222.43 points or 2.45% to finish at 8,854.46; industrials dropped 47.37 points or 0.53% to 8,786.68; and holding firms declined by 24.25 points or 0.34% to 7,059.23.

Value turnover dropped to P7.73 billion on Friday with nearly P4 billion shares switching hands from the P7.11 billion with 2.7 billion shares seen the previous day.

Decliners outnumbered advancers, 135 versus 87, while 45 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling slowed to P595.70 million on Friday from the P627.63 million logged on Thursday. — K.C.G. Valmonte

China’s parliament to delay Hong Kong legislative vote, overhaul electoral system

HONG KONG — Elections for Hong Kong’s legislature will likely be deferred for a second year to September 2022 as Beijing plans a major overhaul of the city’s electoral system, a severe blow to remaining hopes of democracy in the global financial hub.

The delay, which the South China Morning Post and other local media reported on Friday, citing unnamed sources, would be in line with a new effort by Beijing to ensure “patriots” are in charge of all public institutions in the former British colony.

The National People’s Congress, China’s rubber-stamp parliament, will pass the changes at its annual session which opened on Friday and will last a week.

Senior Chinese lawmaker Wang Chen said China will change the size, composition, and formation method of an electoral committee that chooses Hong Kong’s leader and give it powers to pick many of the city’s legislators as well.

The changes follow mass anti-government protests in 2019 and a subsequent crackdown that has left most high-profile pro-democracy politicians and activists either in jail or in exile, along with the imposition of a sweeping national security law.

Still, Beijing is keen to eliminate any possibility of the opposition affecting the outcome of elections in Hong Kong, whose return to Chinese rule came with a promise of a high degree of autonomy.

Hong Kong Secretary for Mainland and Constitutional Affairs Erick Tsang has defined patriotism as “holistic love” for China, including the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party.

Riding high on the back of the 2019 protests, the democratic camp had some slim hopes of winning an unprecedented legislative majority in 2020 elections, which the government postponed, citing the coronavirus.

But with some political parties disbanding and pro-democracy politicians in jail, it is unclear what shape any future opposition will take in Hong Kong and how its message could fit with the patriotic loyalty demanded by the Communist Party.

Beijing had promised universal suffrage as an ultimate goal for Hong Kong in its mini-constitution, the Basic Law.

“This is more than going backwards, it’s getting close to the opposite extreme, moving further away from universal suffrage,” said Ivan Choy, senior lecturer at Chinese University of Hong Kong’s department of government and public administration, referring to the planned changes.

TAKING CONTROL

Local media said the electoral overhaul would include increasing the size of the electoral committee from 1,200 to 1,500, and the city’s legislature from 70 to 90 seats.

Currently half of the 70 seats in the Legislative Council, known as LegCo are directly elected, a proportion which will shrink with the extra seats picked by the electoral committee. The other half represents industries, unions, and professions and is largely stacked with pro-Beijing figures.

The representation of community-level district council officials in both the election committee and LegCo is likely to be scrapped, media said.

District councils are the city’s only fully democratic institution, and almost 90% of the 452 district seats are controlled by the democratic camp after it humiliated the establishment in a 2019 vote. They mostly deal with mundane issues such as bus stops and garbage collection.

Overall, the moves will reduce democratic representation in both LegCo and the election committee, which must convene before Chief Executive Carrie Lam’s five-year term ends in July 2022.

A broader use of patriotic pledges is also expected to enforce loyalty. Such oaths have already been used to disqualify some democratic politicians from LegCo and are likely to be used to oust many of the district councillors.

While critics see the new security law as a tool to crush dissent and curb freedoms, authorities say it was vital to end the 2019 violence and fend off manipulating “foreign forces.”

In a statement on Friday, Hong Kong leader Ms. Lam backed the planned changes, saying “it is a natural requirement that Hong Kong must be governed by patriots” and that the changes will “restore law and order.” —  Clare Jim and Marius Zaharia/Reuters

Australia asks European Commission to review Italy’s vaccine block

CANBERRA — Australia has asked the European Commission to review a decision by Italy to block a shipment of AstraZeneca’s coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine, while stressing on Friday the missing doses would not affect the rollout of Australia’s inoculation program.

Italy, supported by the European Commission, barred the planned export of around 250,000 doses of AstraZeneca’s vaccine after the drug manufacturer failed to meet its European Union contract commitments.

“Australia has raised the issue with the European Commission through multiple channels, and in particular we have asked the European Commission to review this decision,” Australian Health Minister Greg Hunt told reporters in Melbourne.

Mr. Hunt said Australia had already received 300,000 doses of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine, which would last until local production of the vaccine ramps up.

Australia began its inoculation program two weeks ago, vaccinating frontline health staff and senior citizens with Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine though doses of that vaccine are limited amid tight global supplies.

AstraZeneca did not immediately reply to a request for comment. AstraZeneca did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

While seeking the European Commission’s intervention, Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he could understand reasons for Italy’s objection.

“In Italy, people are dying at the rate of 300 a day. And so I can certainly understand the high level of anxiety that would exist in Italy and in many countries across Europe,” Mr. Morrison told reporters in Sydney.

Italy’s move came just days after Prime Minister Mario Draghi, who took office last month, told fellow EU leaders that the bloc needed to speed up vaccinations and crack down on pharma companies that failed to deliver on promised supplies.

EU countries started inoculations at the end of December, but are moving at a far slower pace than many other nations, with officials blaming the slow progress in part on supply problems with key manufacturers.

Australian officials on Friday administered the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine, to a doctor.

Australia has ordered 53.8 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, which was developed in conjunction with the University of Oxford. Local pharmaceutical company CSL Ltd has secured the rights to manufacture 50 million of those doses in Australia and expects to release the first batch near the end of March.

The locally produced doses will provide the backbone of Australia’s inoculation programme, which officials hope to complete by October.

Australia is under less pressure than many other countries, having recorded just under 29,000 COVID-19 cases and 909 deaths. The lower infection and death tallies have been helped by strict lockdowns, speedy tracking systems and border closures. — Colin Packham/Reuters

Amid shortage, US suppliers to Chinese chip giant SMIC struggle to get export licenses

The US government has been slow to approve licenses for American companies like Lam Research Corp and Applied Materials Inc. to sell chipmaking equipment to China semiconductor giant SMIC, sources said, as the impact of a global chip shortage spreads.

Many licenses for US suppliers to ship an estimated $5 billion dollars’ worth of equipment and materials have not come through, according to more than half a dozen industry sources, though numerous companies submitted applications soon after the Chinese company was blacklisted in December. Certain licenses have been granted, including for small numbers of expensive equipment in recent days.

As policy shifts under President Joseph R. Biden, Jr., who took over from Donald J. Trump in January, US government agencies led by new appointees still have not completely decided what should be sold to Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC), which produces chips for Qualcomm Inc. and other American companies.

The Trump administration placed SMIC on the US Department of Commerce’s entity list over concerns of SMIC aiding China’s military.

The listing, which requires US suppliers to obtain a license before shipping goods to SMIC, is unusual because it says most products should be granted on a case-by-case basis. However, equipment that can be used to make only the most advanced, 10-nanometer and smaller chips is likely to be denied licenses.

The administration is supposed to make decisions on license applications within a month, but follow-up questions stop the clock.

“Lam Research is still in the application process and has not yet received a response,” a Fremont, California, company spokeswoman said on Wednesday.

Applied Materials’ chief financial officer said in a Feb. 18 earnings call its forecast did not assume licenses would come through. A spokesman for the Santa Clara, California-based company declined further comment on the licenses this week.

SMIC did not respond to requests for comment, but the company has said it provides services solely for civilian and commercial end-users and that it has no ties to the Chinese military.

Decisions on licenses have been held up as officials ask follow-up questions about applications in part to determine whether the parts or components could be diverted for use in producing items 10 nm or smaller, sources said.

Washington trade lawyer Giovanna Cinelli said many license applications have resulted in “a lot of back and forth, which has elongated the period of review.”

In a statement, a Commerce Department official dismissed the possibility that curbs on SMIC could contribute to the chip shortage, noting that the shortfall was tied to older technologies while SMIC restrictions relate to leading-edge technology. The statement did not address the potential impact of delays in licenses for older technology.

SMIC, the largest foundry in mainland China, is an important player in the global semiconductor supply chain, which is under pressure as pandemic lockdowns drive up demand for electronics such as laptops and phones. Last month, it said it could not meet customer demands for certain technologies and its plants have been running “fully loaded” for several quarters.

SMIC’s technological capabilities lag far behind cutting-edge foundries like industry leader Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., according to industry sources.

Companies like Applied Materials and Lam Research, two key suppliers of production equipment, submitted numerous license applications to sell to the company. The bulk have not yet been acted on, industry sources said.

A spokeswoman for Entegris Inc., an advanced materials supplier, said the Massachusetts-based company had submitted 10 applications to sell to SMIC and received its first license in the past week.

Other companies that ship to SMIC include California’s KLA Corp and Massachusetts-based Axcelis Technologies Inc. A KLA spokeswoman declined to comment on any licenses and, while Axcelis’ CEO spoke of “uncertainty” related to its licenses on Feb. 11, a company spokeswoman declined to provide an update.

Cymer, a San Diego company that makes deep ultraviolet light sources, is also among suppliers that need licenses to send parts to SMIC. A spokeswoman for ASML, the Dutch chip equipment maker that owns Cymer, declined to comment on the licenses, saying she could not discuss customer-specific information.

Qualcomm, which uses the Chinese foundry to produce chips with decades-old technology, put in applications for tools SMIC needs to produce the chips, just in case equipment makers do not get their licenses for the tools, an industry source said. But they have not come through yet, the source added.

In September, SEMI, a worldwide industry group, said in a draft letter seen by Reuters that SMIC accounts for as much as $5 billion in annual U.S. sales. — Karen Freifeld and Alexandra Alper/Reuters