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Filinvest Land raises P8B from bonds

By Denise A. Valdez, Senior Reporter

FILINVEST Land, Inc. (FLI) has generated P8.1 billion from a recent bond offering which will support its pipeline of projects for the coming years.

The company listed its bonds at the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. (PDEx) through a virtual ceremony on Wednesday.

“We have tapped the long-term bond market to match our funding source with our project horizons,” Filinvest President and CEO L. Josephine G. Yap said in the program.

“We are thankful for the continued trust of our investors that drove the demand for the FLI bonds, which resulted in an oversubscription of P1.35 billion over the base amount of P6.75 billion, a remarkable feat during this challenging time of the pandemic,” she added.

The bonds FLI sold are composed of three-year and 5.5-year fixed-rate bonds, which have a final rate of 3.3353% per annum and 4.1838% per annum, respectively.

The proceeds from the offering will be used to expand the company’s recurring income portfolio, which now contributes nearly half of FLI’s net income against 29% in 2013.

“FLI is now venturing in developing logistics and innovation parks to be the third leg of its recurring income base. We envision to be the preferred location of logistics, e-commerce hubs, light manufacturing and storage operations at New Clark City and Calamba,” Ms. Yap said.

She also said the company is seeing a V-shaped recovery in its residential sales take-up since coronavirus-related quarantine measures were relaxed.

“FLI remains true to its core competency of affordable and mid-income housing meeting the needs of the majority of the population. Furthermore, we will be launching residential developments alongside mixed-use projects within integrated townships to further showcase the dynamic synergies within our company and its affiliates,” Ms. Yap added.

FLI tapped BDO Capital and Investment Corp., BPI Capital Corp., China Bank Capital Corp., East West Bank, and SB Capital Investment Corp. as the joint lead underwriters and bookrunners for the offering.

First Metro Investment Corp. served as the co-lead underwriter, while China Banking Corp.—Trust and Asset Management Group served as the trustee.

In the first nine months of 2020, FLI booked an attributable net income of P2.63 billion, down 40% from a year ago due to challenges in its residential business brought by the weakened economy.

Shares in FLI at the stock exchange dipped one centavo or 0.96% to close at P1.03 apiece on Wednesday.

Grab readies platform’s new safety and security features

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Senior Reporter

SINGAPOREAN multinational ride-hailing company Grab Holdings, Inc. is adding new safety and security features to its platform, including gesture-less verification, crash-detection, and unusual-ride termination features, a company official said.

Grab Head of Integrity Wui Ngiap Foo said at an online briefing on Thursday that the company intends to introduce the platform’s new safety and security features into the Philippine market “as soon as possible.”

A Grab journey, according to Mr. Foo, has three steps, namely: pre-trip, on-trip, and post-trip. He said Grab has developed safety solutions for each step.

For pre-trip, Grab has developed artificial intelligence or AI-powered facial authentication for driver-partners.

“Driver-partners must take a real-time selfie before they can go online and receive jobs,” Mr. Foo said, adding that a selfie is compared against the driver’s registration photo in Grab’s database.

There is also an authentication feature for passengers before the trip “to protect Grab’s driver-partners.”

The Philippine government has suspended Grab’s selfie verification, audio, and video recording systems.

In February, the National Privacy Commission issued a cease and desist order against such data processing systems, citing the Data Privacy Act of 2012.

Mr. Foo noted that Grab “takes personal data protection very seriously.”

“Passenger selfies are securely stored and not shared with anyone, including drivers,” he added.

For the coronavirus pandemic period, Grab also developed a selfie feature for face-mask verification.

NEW FEATURES
Soon to come are gesture-less verification and GrabChat filter pre-trip features of the platform, according to Mr. Foo.

The gesture-less verification feature allows “faster detection and liveliness check without requiring gestures,” Mr. Foo said.

The GrabChat filter aims to “maintain a safe chat environment for both passengers and drive-partners,” he added.

Also soon to be introduced are the crash-detection, unusual-ride termination, and driver-partner notification on-trip features of the platform.

Grab is also stepping up the platform’s personally identifiable information (PII) protection, Mr. Foo said.

The protection features include detection if driver-partners are taking screenshots that contain PII, hiding trip details after a trip, offering a voice over internet protocol or VOIP, and number-masking “so that driver-partners and passengers can contact each other without revealing phone number,” Mr. Foo explained.

Grab platform’s post-trip capabilities include a driving behavior analysis feature using telematics.

“We send drivers safety reports with safety scores to increase awareness of unsafe driving behavior and incentivize drivers to adopt safer driving behavior,” Mr. Foo explained.

“Drivers with a bad driving safety track record will be required to undergo trainings or otherwise removed from the platform,” he added.

Mr. Foo said further that Grab is also addressing fraud attacks.

“Fraudsters are leveraging social media campaigns and sophisticated websites to trick Grab users into surrendering their one-time passwords,” he noted.

Grab’s strategies, Mr. Foo said, include: campaigns and outreach to educate users about phishing scams and ways to increase security of their accounts; secure payment methods and advanced authentication methods; shaping tighter regulations and laws and assisting police investigations; and the use of data-driven algorithms which detect anomalies in users’ actions.

Ayala energy arm sets tender offer, new notes offering

AC ENERGY, Inc. has called on investors on Wednesday to tap into the Ayala-led company’s senior green bonds under its recently upsized $2-billion medium-term note program.

In a stock market disclosure, its parent company Ayala Corp. said the energy arm had mandated a number of financial institutions as global coordinator, lead managers and bookrunners of a series of fixed-income investor calls on Nov. 18.

It said the dollar-denominated, senior green, fixed-for-life, perpetual notes will be issued and guaranteed by AC Energy unit AC Energy Finance International Ltd. The drawdown from the note program is via Regulation S, or offers often used for securities issued outside of the United States.

The issuer also announced a tender offer of $400-million senior fixed-for-life green undated notes and a capped tender offer of its existing $360-million senior unsecured green notes due 2024.

The combined tender offer will expire at 4:00 p.m., London time, on Nov. 26, 2020. The offer, according to the firm, is “subject to market conditions.”

AC Energy has more than $1 billion of invested and committed equity in renewable and thermal energy projects in the Philippines and in the region. It aims to exceed 5 gigawatt of attributable capacity and generate at least 50% of the energy from renewables by 2025.

For Wednesday’s investor call, AC Energy tapped BPI Capital Corp. as its sole global coordinator, joint lead manager and joint bookrunner for the new notes and tender offering.

The other joint lead managers and joint bookrunners are Credit Suisse (Hong Kong) Ltd., The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd., and UBS AG Singapore Branch.

Shares in Ayala Corp. on Wednesday climbed 2.06% to close at P865.50 each. Its unit AC Energy Philippines, Inc., which accounts for the group’s local energy projects, saw its share price surge by 8.35% to close at P4.93 apiece. — Angelica Y. Yang

Local airlines to transport tourists to Bohol soon

LOCAL airlines will soon start operating flights between Manila and Bohol, as the island-province reopens its doors to tourists beginning Nov. 15.

“Our Manila-Tagbilaran-Manila service will resume on Nov. 22,  twice weekly. That is the plan,” Philippine Airlines Spokesperson Cielo C. Villaluna told BusinessWorld in a phone message on Wednesday.

In a statement, Philippines AirAsia said it would resume flights each way from Manila to Bohol beginning Dec. 1.

“AirAsia is offering 50% off on all flights from Manila to Bohol for this week only… for travels between 1 December and 30 October 2021,” it added.

Philippines AirAsia Chief Executive Officer Ricardo P. Isla said, “We hope that the resumption of connectivity between both regions will further assist local businesses and enterprises in Bohol.”

“AirAsia will continue to support the national and local governments in their efforts to  jumpstart the travel and tourism industries in the Philippines,” he added.

Candice A. Iyog, Cebu Pacific vice-president for marketing and customer experience, said in a separate phone message that the budget carrier currently operates flights between Manila and Bohol for locally stranded individuals, returning overseas Filipino workers, and authorized persons outside residence.

“We are more than happy with Bohol reopening for tourists and we look forward to other domestic destinations following suit. We intend to keep operating flights from Manila to Bohol and vice versa thrice weekly (every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday), and hope to increase to daily operations by December,” Ms. Iyog said.

Ms. Iyog reminded tourists to secure a negative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) swab test result taken within 72 hours before flight departure, as well as a confirmed booking at a hotel accredited by the Department of Tourism or the provincial government of Bohol.

“They will also need to register through the Bohol Tourist Registration portal via https://tourism.bohol.gov.ph/ and save a digital or printed copy of the QR code, which will be scanned upon entry and exit of establishments and sites,” she added. — Arjay L. Balinbin

How a deli opened in the middle of a pandemic

IF there’s anything good that came out of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic it’s that more people decided to try out their hand at businesses centered around something they love or enjoy doing. In the case of Bettina Sandiego, it’s deli meats.

“I’ve always loved deli since I was young. There would always be some sort of deli product in the fridge — ham, bacon, hotdogs, sausages. It’s convenient and it tastes delicious,” Ms. Sandiego told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview on Nov. 17.

She recalled a conversation she had with her family over sausages and how hard it was to look for top-quality deli items while under community quarantine. That single conversation led her to create her own deli business, Delizioso.

“I’m very picky when it comes to my wine and deli, and during this pandemic, I couldn’t go out to personally handpick what I want. There’s also a lack of affordable premium wine and deli options online. Most of the choices are from specialty stores, which don’t come cheap,” she explained.

And because a “good business always offers solutions,” Ms. Sandiego decided to create a business (and partnered with a manufacturer) offering “affordable premium wine and deli products” which can be delivered to their customers’ homes on the same day in some locations.

“For us, premium does not mean expensive. We know the value of money, especially in a recession, so we want our clients to get the best out of their hard-earned money,” Ms. Sandiego said, before adding that none of their products costs more than P1,000.

Delizioso, because of its price point, caters to “young professionals looking for convenient food options, wives and moms making yummy meals, wine and deli lovers looking to have their own wine nights at home.”  “It’s a pretty broad market, but our communications remain universal: your happiness is on us,” she explained.

Delizioso offers a variety of sausages including bratwurst, kielbasa, and schublig for P275 per half kilo, a selection of wines (some of their Spanish wine cost P350 per bottle), cold cuts (their Jamon Serrano is P275/100 grams), and cheeses (their Manchego Trufado is P375/100 g).

She plans to expand the selection with other Italian and Filipino deli products by 2021, and since Christmas is coming up, Delizioso is currently offering holiday Deli Kits and do-it-yourself wine and deli kits for those who want to create their own charcuterie or grazing tables for the holidays.

Their DIY Deli Kit lets customers choose what wine, cheese, cold cuts, and sausages they want, as well as add-ons including nuts, fruits, and crostini. Customers can even choose their own packaging if they want to give the kits as gifts, from boxes to clear PVC tote bags.

Delizioso provides same-day delivery within Metro Manila and nearby provinces from 10 a.m.- 8 p.m., with pick-up points in Quezon City and Valenzuela. For orders, send them a message on their social accounts (Delizioso Premium Deli on both Facebook and Instagram)  or e-mail deliziosopremiumdeli@gmail.com. — Z.B. Chua

New data center to protect users from internet outage — Converge

CONVERGE ICT Solutions, Inc. will put up another data center to protect its subscribers from internet outages in the future, its top official said.

“We decided last night, the management team, to create another data center, para hindi na maulit (to prevent this from happening in the future),” Converge Founder and Chief Executive Officer Dennis Anthony H. Uy told BusinessWorld in a phone interview on Wednesday.

On Tuesday afternoon, the company announced that it experienced issues in its data center affecting its subscribers nationwide.

Mr. Uy said the problem was power-related. “So we immediately laid down 45 million of new cables to bypass this route, para maayos agad yan (to fix it immediately),” he added.

Converge, Mr. Uy also said, will need to create within 30 days the new small data center, “a redundancy site so that we are prepared in the event this problem occurs again.”

“Hopefully before Christmas… Our long term solution is to provide protection and redundancy to all the networks, so we have an action plan already,” he explained further.

On Wednesday morning, the company announced that its service had been restored for residential and enterprise clients across all its areas. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Want to see singing cooks? Turn on the TV

FILIPINOS are known for their love (and talent) for both singing and cooking and so it seemed a no-brainer for the Kapamilya Foundation and Phoenix Super LPG to concoct a show that combines both with Kalderoke: The Singing and Cooking Showdown.

The show, which started airing on Nov. 14 on the Kapamilya Channel, is hosted by comedian Wacky Kiray and singer Sheryn Regis.

Kalderoke pits 16 contestants — four people each coming from the National Capital Region, Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao — against each other in singing and cooking at the same time.

“It’s a feel-good and one-of-a-kind show. We all know that Pinoys are great singers and we love to eat. Combining these two is a perfect recipe for a great show. Viewers will also learn new recipes and become conscious of their food’s nutritional values — all while being entertained,” Paul Vincent Mercado, marketing head of ABS-CBN Foundation, said in a release.

The contestants are judged by chef Rolando “Chef Lau” Laudico; actress, comedian, and singer Tuesday Vargas; Star Music composer and songwriter Jonathan Manalo; and Phoenix’s category marketing manager, Marc Salboro.

The audience will also have the chance to vote for their favorite contestants by downloading the Limitless mobile application from the App Store or Google Play and  register.

“We are overwhelmed by the amount of support and entries we got from talented Filipino singing chefs and home cooks nationwide. Everyone has something to offer, but just like any competition, there can  only be one winner,” Ma. Celina Matias, Phoenix Petroleum Philippines vice-president for integrated marketing and strategies, said in the release.

“Over a hundred singing cooks” joined the online audition process in July, according to the release, when they sent recorded audition pieces (some via YouTube) and these were trimmed down during digital cookoff rounds on the Phoenix Super LPG and ABS-CBN Foundation’s Facebook pages. The 16 who are now competing in the show will be trimmed down to two finalists who will compete for the P100,000 cash prize.

Kalderoke: The Singing and Cooking Showdown airs every Saturday, 8:30 a.m., on the Kapamilya Channel, with online replays on iWant TFC at 10:30 a.m. on Saturdays and Kapamilya Online Live on YouTube at 7:10 a.m. on Sundays. The shows can also be viewed on the Facebook pages of Phoenix Super LPG, the ABS-CBN Foundation, and on ABS-CBN Entertainment YouTube page. — ZBC

TDF yields mixed ahead of BSP review

YIELDS ON term deposits offered by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) ended mixed on Wednesday as the market awaited for the central bank’s latest policy decision.

Bids for the central bank’s term deposit facility (TDF) amounted to P645.585 billion on Wednesday, higher than the P500-billion offering as well as the P622.436 billion in tenders seen a week ago.

Broken down, the seven-day papers attracted tenders worth P230.855 billion, surpassing the BSP’s P190-billion offering as well as the P225.195 billion in bids logged a week ago for the P180 billion on the auction block.

Accepted yields for the one-week deposits ranged from 1.945% to 2.0095%, a slimmer band compared to the 1.9% to 2.027% margin recorded in the previous auction. This caused the average rate of the tenor to settle at 1.9813%, rising by 0.93 basis point (bp) from the 1.972% logged last week.

Meanwhile, demand for the two-week term deposits reached P414.73 billion yesterday, above the P310 billion auctioned off on Wednesday as well as the P397.241 billion worth of tenders seen for the P300-billion offering a week ago.

Banks asked for yields ranging from 1.9% to 2.0455%, a narrower margin against the 1.875% to 2.084% band logged at last week’s auction. This brought the 14-day paper’s average rate to 1.9984%, down by 1.54 bps from the 2.0138% seen on Nov. 11.

For the sixth week in a row, the BSP did not offer 28-day term deposits. This follows the start of the central bank’s weekly auctions of its own bills with the same tenor.

The TDF and the BSP’s securities are among regulator’s main tools to gather excess liquidity in the financial system and to better guide market interest rates.

TDF yields were mixed ahead of the central bank’s sixth policy meeting on Thursday, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in an e-mail on Wednesday.

Benchmark interest rates will likely be maintained by the BSP on Thursday, with the financial system seeing excess liquidity and an anticipated pickup in state spending, analysts said.

In a BusinessWorld poll held last week, 11 out of 16 analysts said the Monetary Board (MB) will likely continue the “prudent pause” at its sixth policy meeting on Nov. 19.

The BSP has slashed rates by 175 bps so far this year, bringing the rates of its overnight reverse repurchase, lending, and deposit facilities to record lows of 2.25%, 2.75%, and 1.75%, respectively.

“The mixed TDF auction results also came after the recent typhoon damage that could lead to some temporary rise in inflation amid damage to some agriculture supplies and other damage to property and infrastructure,” Mr. Ricafort added.

Crop damage due to Typhoon Ulysses (international name: Vamco) reached P3.84 billion, the Agriculture department said on Wednesday.

Headline inflation stood at 2.5% in October, picking up from the 2.3% pace the month before.

The October inflation result marked the fastest pace in three months or since the 2.7% reading in July 2020.

Year to date, inflation settled at 2.5%, still within the BSP’s 2-4% target this year, but above the 2.3% forecast for the entire year. — L.W.T. Noble

San Miguel to build 200-MW solar farm to energize Bulacan airport

SAN MIGUEL Corp. (SMC) plans to construct a 200-megawatt (MW) solar farm in Bulacan to power its New Manila International Airport project, the firm said in a press release on Wednesday.

SMC is looking to build the renewables farm on its 2,500 hectare-lot in Bulacan.

The solar farm will house a battery energy storage facility that can stockpile and release power based on the P740-billion airport’s energy demands, SMC President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon S. Ang said in a statement.

“This battery storage will be a viable solution to balancing electricity loads and storing unstable energy supply coming from the sun and other renewable sources of energy, which we are looking to utilize for the airport,” Mr. Ang said.

This, according to him, is part of the company’s approach in shifting to technologies that will help in transitioning to cleaner fuels, while helping SMC balance the power demands of the economy. Mr. Ang added that the company also had “significant investments” in battery storage technology across the country.

Last month, the Senate approved the franchise bill for the construction and operation of SMC’s airport in Bulakan Town, Bulacan province. The firm earlier said the groundbreaking for the airport is scheduled to happen “by the end of the year.”

The project is seen to “give the economy a major boost” by contributing around 9% to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP), the firm said.

SMC’s energy portfolio includes a mixture of coal, hydro, natural gas, and LNG power plants.

SMC shares on Wednesday inched up by 0.88% to P114.50 apiece. — Angelica Y. Yang

Celebrating the holidays with Jim Beam

TO CELEBRATE the holidays, Jim Beam has introduced a special tin pack available at S&R for P1,438. The pack consists of the tin as well as two one-liter bottles of Jim Beam, the world’s No. 1 bourbon. The tin itself can be used as an ice bucket while the lid can be used as a garnish tray.

“My family has been bringing people together with our bourbon for generations, so now is the perfect time to raise a glass to our extended family — the fans who have been enjoying Jim Beam with us along the way,” said Fred Noe, Jim Beam’s 7th generation master distiller, in a statement.

The tin pack is an ideal starter kit to make your own Jim Beam Highball; a pleasantly refreshing drink made with Jim Beam bourbon, soda, ice, and ingredients of your choice. The Classic Jim Beam Highball, for example, is made with Jim Beam, soda water, ice, and lemon (recipe below). A festive spin on the iconic drink is the Apple Cinnamon Jim Beam Highball. Aside from lemon juice, it’s made with muddled red apples for tartness and sweetened with cinnamon syrup before adding the Jim Beam bourbon into the mix.

The Jim Beam tin pack is available throughout the holiday season at all S&R branches nationwide and at the official Lazada shop at www.lazada.com.ph/shop/beam-suntory. — JLG


Jim Beam Citrus Highball

INGREDIENTS

45 ml Jim Beam White

20 ml fresh lemon juice

Soda water

Crushed ice

Slice of lemon

Sprig of rosemary

Pour 45ml of Jim Beam White over a packed glass of ice.

Add 20ml of fresh lemon juice.

Top with cold soda water.

Stir with a long spoon; garnish with a lemon slice and a sprig of rosemary.

Tip: for a holiday-themed drink, add muddled red apples and cinnamon syrup before topping off with the bourbon.

‘More power than traditional media’: Facebook, Twitter policies attacked by senators

WASHINGTON — Republican senators on Tuesday attacked the chief executives of Facebook and Twitter for what they called censorship of President Trump and his allies during the US election while Democrats bemoaned the spread of misinformation on social media.

The CEOs, Jack Dorsey of Twitter and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, defended their content moderation practices at a congressional hearing scheduled after the platforms decided to block stories from the New York Post that made claims about the son of then-Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.

The move incited uproar among Republican lawmakers who have consistently accused the companies of anti-conservative bias.

In his opening remarks, Judiciary Committee chairman Lindsey Graham asked: “What I want to try to find out is if you’re not a newspaper at Twitter or Facebook, then why do you have editorial control over the New York Post?”

He said he did not think articles on Hunter Biden, refuted by the Biden campaign, needed to be flagged or excluded from distribution.

Democrats focused on the spread of misinformation by Trump, a Republican, and his supporters. They pushed the companies to limit the spread of false and misleading content ahead of elections in Georgia, where two Republican incumbent senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, are facing run-offs against well-funded Democratic opponents—contests that will likely determine which party controls the Senate.

Zuckerberg and Dorsey admitted the companies have made some mistakes, but mostly defended their policies.

However, broader problems with their content moderation decisions, especially around violent speech, became evident when Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat, asked Facebook’s Zuckerberg if he would commit to taking down the account of former Trump White House adviser Steve Bannon after he suggested the beheading of two senior US officials.

Zuckerberg refused. “Senator, no. That’s not what our policies would suggest that we should do in this case,” he said.

Reuters reported last week that Zuckerberg told an all-staff meeting that Bannon had not violated enough of Facebook’s policies to justify his suspension.

Blumenthal also noted that Alphabet, Inc.’s Google, which owns YouTube, had been given a “pass” from the hearing, saying that the company was being rewarded for its “timidity” in content moderation.

Zuckerberg and Dorsey also fielded several pointed questions on whether they act as publishers, which the CEOs said they were not.

Upset over the companies’ decision on what to leave on the platform and what to take down, many Republican lawmakers and Trump have threatened to take away protections for internet companies under a federal law called Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. The law protects companies from being sued over material users post on their platforms.

Graham also said he hopes Section 230 is changed.

“When you have companies that have the power of government, have far more power than traditional media outlets, something has to give,” he said.

President-elect Biden has also said he favors repealing Section 230. Congressional Democrats, however, prefer a more deliberate approach to reforming the law.

Zuckerberg and Dorsey said they would be open to some reforms to the law.

At an October hearing, Twitter’s Dorsey said eroding Section 230 could significantly hurt how people communicate online. Zuckerberg said he supports changing the law but also said tech platforms were likely to censor more to avoid legal risks if the law is repealed. — Reuters

Negative rate risk, QE overload may push central banks towards yield caps

CENTRAL BANKS are looking into using yield curve control to keep borrowing costs down as economies hope to rebound from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. — REUTERS

LONDON — Central banks are delving further into their tool kits to help economies recover from the coronavirus — cue yield curve control (YCC), a form of pinning down borrowing costs that more countries might need to embrace in the months and years ahead.

Because government bond yields are used as reference rates for business and consumer lending, controlling them can influence the price of credit in the broader economy.

Of course, all major central banks are already holding down yields, via 0% or sub-zero interest rates and aggressive bond buying or quantitative easing (QE). But explicit yield curve control involves imposing a cap on part of the curve — say five years — then defending that by buying bonds of that maturity when needed.

Proponents increasingly believe this is the path central banks will adopt in order to anchor borrowing costs for governments, particularly those such as the Federal Reserve and Bank of England (BoE) which are not keen on negative interest rates.

“If yields spiral higher, we would actually expect to see central banks step back in and control the bond market, whether through more bond buying or yield curve control,” said Craig Inches, head of rates and cash at Royal London Asset Management (RLAM).

Just how quickly yields can climb if the economic outlook appears to brighten even slightly became evident last week when Pfizer’s vaccine update drove a 14 basis-point leap in US Treasury yields, the biggest daily rise since March.

A rebound in economic activity next year might well send yields higher, which could then threaten that recovery which is still fragile. And merely expanding already-large bond-buying schemes may not resolve the problem.

“The benefit of YCC is that you can provide an implicit guarantee about the cost of funding the real economy, some certainty to businesses that they can invest at pre-determined rates,” said Thomas Costerg, senior economist at Pictet Wealth Management.

For instance, Australian banks and companies usually borrow in the three-year space so the central bank uses its purchases to keep that rate around 0.1%.

OLD POLICY, NEW RISKS
The Fed isn’t a stranger to YCC, having used it in the 1940s to cap wartime borrowing costs. The Bank of Japan adopted it in 2016 and Australia followed in March 2020.

The Fed and BoE have discussed but not endorsed the policy, the former describing it as providing “only modest benefits” at present.

Indeed in Japan, YCC is a double-edged sword. It has tamped down borrowing costs for the economy but the success has come at banks’ expense.

Others question the need for YCC at central banks such as the Fed which already efficiently control rates via forward guidance.

In Australia, central bank bond buying focused on the three-year tenor has drained liquidity without really helping credit conditions, said Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s head of fixed income and currency strategy, Martin Whetton.

For all that, a powerful argument in favour of YCC has emerged in recent months — in a world where central banks own a record high proportion of government debt, targeted purchases could ease a deepening bond market squeeze.

Concentrating purchases in one part of the market can ensure an adequate supply of securities for other buyers, in particular pension funds.

“Potentially yield curve control will keep the 0-10 year (yields) capped, while longer yields rise slightly thanks to the expectation of better economic growth ahead. That’s a good scenario for pension funds and could be in the mindset of central banks,” Mr. Inches at RLAM said.

WHEN?
The catalyst for YCC adoption might be an abrupt rise in longer-dated yields — a so-called curve steepening.

The Fed anchors short-dated yields near 0% but markets watch 10-year yields — the main reference rate for US mortgage borrowing, corporate and municipal debt.

Pictet’s Costerg expects the Fed to act if 10-year US yields approach 1.5% — they are currently around 0.9%.

It gets more complicated in the 19-member euro area, though many would argue the European Central Bank’s (ECB) focus on spreads — the gap between German and southern European yields — is effectively a form of YCC.

Gilles Moec, chief economist at Axa Investment Partners, is among those who believe YCC is more likely, noting ECB chief Christine Lagarde’s calls for a continued, powerful and targeted response to the crisis and her emphasis on fiscal policy.

“I think we are going in that direction if the ECB is now saying openly ‘we have governments’ back’ and we will make sure that they can fund deficits easily,” Moec said. — Reuters