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Emperador income down 16% as pandemic disrupts business

BRANDY COMPANY Emperador Inc. reported a 16% decline in its first-quarter net income attributable to equity holders to P1.5 billion, citing disruption in its operations caused by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Friday, the company reported a 3% drop in its revenues to P10.7 billion during the three-month period compared with P11 billion in the same period last year.

“Coming from a spirit tax increase, the brandy segment was performing well in the first two months but was cut short particularly in mid-March when the entire Luzon Island was placed under quarantine,” said Emperador President Winston S. Co in a statement.

He said the lockdown coupled with the liquor ban disrupted the company’s operations and flow of products.

“We hope the velocity of sales to resume when the country returns to normal. We know that we will celebrate again soon,” Mr. Co said.

Emperador is the Philippines-listed owner of Emperador Distillers, Inc., Scotch whisky maker Whyte and Mackay Group, and Bodegas Fundador in Spain.

On Friday, shares in Emperador rose 0.50% or P0.04 to close at P8.04 per share. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

GMA Network’s digital TV receiver targets ‘millions’ of customers

Aiming to further expand its reach, GMA Network, Inc. on Friday officially introduced its digital television receiver called the GMA Affordabox.

In a statement, the network said it “aspires to enable every Filipino home to enjoy digital TV viewing experience.”
It said the GMA Affordabox was developed to be made accessible to “millions” of Filipino households nationwide.

“In celebration of this milestone of reaching seven colorful decades in the industry, we are more than grateful for the Filipinos’ continued trust in GMA Network as we reaffirm our commitment to deliver excellence in news and entertainment,” GMA Network Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Felipe L. Gozon was quoted as saying in a news release.

He said the company is offering its “high-quality” and “abot-kayang (affordable)” digital TV receiver in time for the 70th anniversay of the “Kapuso Network.”

The GMA Affordabox allows users to watch GMA, GMA News TV, and other free-to-air digital TV channels available in their communities.

The network said its product comes with a built-in multimedia player, allowing users to play compatible video files, view photos, and listen to music using a USB drive.

GMA Network President and Chief Operating Officer Gilberto R. Duavit, Jr. said: “GMA Affordabox stays true to its name as we make it available in the market at an affordable price, without compromising quality.”

“GMA Network has teamed up with the best product developers and engineers to give you a device built with additional features and high-quality materials at an accessible price. Now, more Filipino homes can start enjoying digital TV viewing,” he added. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Shakey’s taps Unilab unit for workplace safety

Shakey’s Pizza Asia Ventures, Inc. has tied up with a unit of United Laboraties, Inc. to ensure the safety of its employees reporting back to work while the global pandemic persists.

RelianceUnited recently partnered with Century Pacific Food, Inc., an affiliated firm of the pizza chain operator, for the same coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection control program which adopts long-term occupational safety and health measures.

“Our philosophy is that guests must know, feel, and see that they are safe. A crucial component of that is ensuring that our employees are safe as well,” Shakey’s President and Chief Executive Officer Vicente L. Gregorio was quoted as saying in a stock exchange disclosure on Friday.

The comprehensive program by ActiveOne, RelianceUnited’s corporate clinic services provider, offers a telemedicine hotline service to Shakey’s employees, including telephone-based medical consultation and triaging, diagnostic testing, and daily monitoring of employee’s health condition.

Individual testing, medical assessments, and treatment will also be made available, the company said. For high-risk employees, a personal health protection plan will also be provided.

The lockdown measures mounted to arrest the spread of the global coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused the temporary closure of its store chain. This led to a 35% drop in its first-quarter earnings to P114 million.

Resuming operations upon easing of quarantine policies, Shakey’s said its interaction with guests is now “mostly” contactless. It has enforced stringent health and safety protocols set forth by the government and international health bodies in its stores. — Adam J. Ang

Dentsu One Manila prepares for market’s post-pandemic creative needs

Creative and digital-led agency Dentsu One Manila has launched this month to offer business solutions and provide integrated marketing services that meet market needs in time for the post-pandemic period.

“Challenging times give birth to expertise, agility and speed,” it said about Dentsu Aegis Network’s big move to introduce Dentsu One Manila, which is formerly known as ASPAC.

It said the agency was designed to answer the changing needs of clients during the market’s move toward normalcy.
Merlee Jayme, global co-president of dentsumcgarrybowen who also chairs for the country’s creative line, will oversee the business and creative growth of the agency along with sister agency Dentsu Jayme Syfu.

Dentsu One Manila will be led by Ez Abero as chief strategy officer and acting managing director. He is joined by Jerry Hizon as chief creative officer. Rey Leuterio, executive planning and business development director, completes the management team.

Leading the Japanese accounts are Masako Okamura as executive creative director, and Yuki Koga as regional account director.

Dentsu One Manila has a content, activations and design division called DOJO, which offers different skill sets and capabilities. DOJO is headed by Joey Ong as managing director and executive creative director, and Rissa De Guzman as general manager.

Dentsu Jayme Syfu’s former strategic planning director, Mr. Abero has more than 12 years of strategic planning experience across multinational and independent agencies. He played a key role in boosting the agency’s portfolio through significant pitch wins for the Coca-Cola Sparkling business, SariMonde and Nestle Cerelac’s local and regional campaigns.

In 2018, Mr. Abero moved to Ho Chi Minh City to lead Leo Burnett Vietnam’s planning team. His team successfully worked on the agency’s biggest accounts: Samsung Digital & Corporate and Friesland Campina.

Mr. Hizon, chief creative officer, held the role of Dentsu Jayme Syfu ECD since 2016. His 25-year advertising career includes winning various international and local awards for clients like Belo Essentials, Uber Philippines, Jollibee, Unilever, PLDT SME Nation, BPI, Adidas and Gabriela, making him consistently among Adobo Magazine’s top-ranked ECDs of the Philippines.

His training in DDB Amsterdam as an exchange creative gave him a strong digital background.

Last year, he was part of a global creative workshop held in Los Angeles, California for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
“Ez, Jerry and I have been powerful partners. Their thinking and creative work bear strong business results. Their agile work process helps solve business problems efficiently and effectively. The change in leadership from the top aligns with the global vision of providing idea-led, data-driven and tech-enabled creativity in our line of business,” said Ms. Jayme about how they have worked through the years.

JC Catibog, chief executive of Dentsu Aegis Network Philippines, said: “I am thrilled for this new chapter of the agency and I am confident that Ez and Jerry will drive the innovation agenda ingrained in the Dentsu brand, fueled by their proven strategic and creative strengths.”

Alex Syfu, the managing partner who oversees the agency’s transformation, said: “Ez and Jerry’s work disciplines coupled with their strategic and creative capabilities will help them drive Dentsu One Manila’s business growth and creativity.”

Philippine economy may shrink by 3% on lockdown — S&P

The Philippine economy could shrink by 3% this year, the price to pay for having one of the toughest lockdowns in the world, according to S&P Global Ratings.

The latest estimate is much worse than the 0.2% contraction expected by the rating company in April and the 6% growth forecast it gave in December.

“We expect the permanent costs of COVID-19 to be highest in India and the Philippines, due mainly to the severity of lockdowns, and in Thailand given its high exposure to international travel,” S&P said in a note on Friday.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte locked down the main Philippine island of Luzon in mid-March, suspending work, classes and public transportation to contain a novel coronavirus pandemic that has sickened more than 34,000 and killed about 1,200 people in the Philippines. People should stay home except to buy food and other basic goods, he said.

The President extended the so-called enhanced community quarantine twice for the island and thrice for Manila, the capital and nearby cities where infections have been mostly concentrated.

The lockdown in many parts of the country including Metro Manila has since been relaxed, but mass gatherings remained banned.

S&P’s outlook for the country was better than the expected contractions in Thailand this year at 5.1%, India, Singapore and New Zealand at 5% each and Japan at 4.9%.

But it was worse than the expected contractions in Malaysia at 2%, South Korea at 1.5%, and the projected growth in Indonesia at 0.7%, Taiwan at 0.6% and Vietnam at 1.2%. The contraction for the Asia-Pacific region was estimated at 1.3% this year.

The debt watcher noted that despite a strict lockdown, coronavirus infections in the country “remain stubbornly high.”

“Economies that flattened COVID-19 curves quickly (China, Korea, and Taiwan) and launched substantial and well-targeted stimulus (Australia, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore) are expected to escape with less permanent damage, ranging from 0.5% to 3%,” it added.

The local service sector will bear the brunt of the lockdown because it depends on face-to-face interactions, S&P economist Vincent Conti said.

Consumption was expected to suffer because majority of Filipinos are employed in the service sector, he said in an e-mail.

“That nexus between weaker labor markets, balance sheets and consumption will mean a much more difficult return to the economy’s pre-COVID-19 trend level of output,” he added.

The country’s unemployment rate quickened to 17.7% — equivalent to 7.25 million jobless Filipinos and the fastest since 2005 — from 5.1% a year earlier, according to the local statistics agency.

More than 54,000 overseas Filipino workers have come home, which could worsen the joblessness. The country’s consumption-driven economy shrank by 0.2% in the first quarter.

S&P expects the Philippine economy to grow by 9.4% next year as economic activities resume.

“Risks to the recovery path include the persistent spread of the coronavirus and weakened balance sheets in the private sector due to the length and magnitude of the downturn,” according to the report.

Mr. Conti said the depth of this year’s recession provides such a low base that even a gradual reopening of the economy would generate very high growth rates next year. “Growth numbers will hide the fact that the economy will still be operating far below pre-COVID-19 trend levels.” — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Philippine COVID-19 infections top 34,000

The Department of Health (DoH) reported 1,006 new coronavirus infections on Friday, bringing the total to 34,037.

The death toll rose to 1,224 after 12 more patients died, while recoveries rose by 274 to 9,182, it said in a bulletin.

Of the new cases, 788 were reported in the past three days, while 218 were reported late, the agency said.

DoH Director Beverly Lorraine Ho traced the surge to increased testing capacity. Daily testing capacity has reached 16,000 this month from 8,000 in May, she told an online news briefing.

Ms. Ho said Cebu had an infection rate 32.8% compared with 7.2% in Metro Manila and 6.8% nationwide.

The cities of Cebu and Ormoc, and the provinces of Leyte and Samar were considered COVID-19 hotspots due to rising infections, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said on Wednesday.

Ms. Ho asked the public to keep wearing masks because they cut the chances of infection by 85%, and observe physical distancing, which cuts the likelihood of an infection by 80%.

Also on Friday, the presidential palace said restaurants and cafes including those inside hotels would be allowed to increase their capacity under a relaxed lockdown in Manila and nearby cities.

They would be allowed to increase operating hours and serve more clients, presidential spokesman Harry L. Roque, Jr. said at a separate briefing.

An inter-agency task force also recommended that visits to memorial parks be allowed as long as groups don’t exceed 10 members each.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte had yet to approve the endorsement, he said.

Meanwhile, the Senate is open to holding a special session to pass another law giving President Rodrigo R. Duterte special powers in dealing with a coronavirus pandemic.

The Finance department should inform both houses of Congress about the specifics of the measure and save time, Senate Majority Leader Juan Miguel F. Zubiri told reporters on Friday.

The Senate on June 3 approved on second reading a bill that sought to extend the law that expired on June 24. The measure allowed the President to realign the budget for anti-coronavirus measures, among other things.

Senators failed to approve the bill on third reading before it adjourned on June 5 in the absence of a notice from the presidential palace certifying it as urgent. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Nestlé completes delivery of its products to pandemic-hit families

Nestlé Philippines, Inc. has completed the delivery of its “Kasambuhay Kits” for distribution to a million families in a hundred cities and municipalities, it said on Friday.

The kits consisting of Nestlé products will be distributed by local government units and non-government organizations, as well as the Department of Agriculture in Regions 10 and 12. They are part of the company’s P500-million Kasambuhay ng Pamilyang Pilipino program, which is its response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

The distribution of the Kasambuhay Kits is going on in the National Capital Region and other areas in the country, including locations where Nestlé has a presence. The beneficiaries include 10,000 coffee farmers’ families in Bukidnon and Sultan Kudarat under the Nescafé Plan.

Non-profit organization Caritas Manila, which is the lead social service and development ministry of the Catholic Church in the country, is participating in the distribution.

Before launching the program in April, Nestlé Philippines had started providing Nestlé products to various local governments, as well as thousands of healthcare workers and other frontliners.

“We are happy to have Nestlé as an active and responsive corporate citizen of Batangas especially during this difficult time. Nestlé is a true Kasambuhay,” said Hermilando Mandanas, the governor of Batangas where Nestlé has two factories.

Rev. Fr. Antonio Cecilio T. Pascual, executive director of Caritas Manila, said: “We welcome this opportunity to join hands with Nestlé in reaching out to needy families in severely affected communities during this pandemic.”
Nestlé Philippines Chairman and Chief Executive Kais Marzouki said the bond between the company and Filipino families “involves a heritage of trust which goes back 109 years.”

“Nestlé has become part of their daily lives through many generations. We believe it is only fitting that during this challenging period, we have mounted this initiative to share our products with those who are most affected by COVID-19,” he said.

Mr. Marzouki said Nestlé Philippines is committed to ensure that its products remain available to those who need them, “to assure the safety and welfare of our employees, and assist those of our business partners.”

“With the different sectors of our society working together, we will successfully weather the challenges brought about by this pandemic as we strive to build a better future for all Filipinos,” he said.

Duterte asks ASEAN to help ease tensions at sea

President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Friday asked Southeast Asian leaders to avoid tensions in the South China Sea while the world fights a coronavirus pandemic.

“Even as our region struggles to contain the COVID-19, alarming incidents in the South China Sea occurred,” the Philippine leader said at the 36th Association of Southeast Asian Nation (ASEAN) Summit, held virtually.

“We call on parties to refrain from escalating tensions and abide by responsibilities under international law,” Mr. Duterte said in a speech.

He also urged the parties to act in line with their commitment to other international instruments such as the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea.

Mr. Duterte cited the continuing tension between the United States and China, adding that ASEAN member economies should uphold international policies in engaging with the global rivals.

“The Great Powers will continue to draw us into their respective camps,” the President said. “We should continue to nimbly engage them in ways that most benefit us.”

“We must insist on an open and rules-based international order that gives all countries – large or small – not just one voice, but an equal standing,” Mr. Duterte said.

The Philippines this month suspended its decision to end a military pact with the US on the troop deployment for war games due to the heightened tensions in the region and the global pandemic.

Mr. Duterte said parties should think of ways to continue discussions on the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea. The Philippines is the country coordinator for the ASEAN-China dialogue.

“We must find innovative ways and exercise flexibility to achieve our common goals,” he said. “We remain committed to work closely with member states and China toward the early conclusion of an effective and substantive code of conduct in the South China Sea.”

China and ASEAN economies had agreed to a three-year timeline, or until 2022, to complete the code meant to ease tensions at sea. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Thousands of sailors docked in Manila cleared

More than 16,000 FIlipino and foreign sailors from cruise ships anchored at Manila Bay have been cleared of the coronavirus, according to the Bureau of Immigration.

Of the 16,287 seafarers, 11,189 were Filipinos and 5,098 were foreigners, Seaport Operations chief Alnazib Decampong said in a report.

The sailors have left 42 vessels between April 16 and June 15 after being quarantined and tested for the virus. About 2,300 more were awaiting repatriation, Mr. Decampong said.

Meanwhile, an inter-agency task force made up of Cabinet secretaries has agreed to bring home the bodies of 301 Filipinos from Saudi Arabia, about half of whom died after getting the coronavirus, presidential spokesman Harry L. Roque said at a briefing on Friday.

Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III earlier said that of 301 victims, 145 died of the virus, while the rest died of natural causes. The Philippines would send two cargo planes to fetch the bodies, he added.

The coronavirus has sickened 6,114 overseas Filipinos as of June 25, 2,086 of whom were being treated in various hospitals overseas, according to the Foreign Affairs department. It said 3,775 patients have recovered and 253 died. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Charmaine A. Tadalan

Wage subsidy program nears end

The government has paid 99% of wage subsidies for small businesses amid a coronavirus pandemic, with less than 100,000 beneficiaries given until June 28 to claim their payouts, according to the Department of Finance (DoF).

About 41,000 workers for the first tranche and 57,000 under the second one have yet to claim their cash aid and the cutoff date was extended from June 10 to the end of the month, the agency said in a statement on Friday.

“We are calling on these employees who were already notified to claim their subsidies from MLhullier Kwarta Padala to pick them up on or before June 28,” DoF said.

Unclaimed wage subsidies will go back to the state and used in the fight against COVId-19, Finance Assistant Secretary Antonio G. Lambino II said in the statement.

The government has released P45.6 billion in cash aid to about 3.1 million workers of small businesses that registered for the program.

The government allotted P51 billion for the program, which gave workers affected by the lockdown as much as P8,000 pesos a month for two months.

The Social Security System and Bureau of Internal Revenue were the main enforcers of the program.

Meanwhile, SSS wants to fast-track the release of retirement and death benefits by revising the list of required documents.

Basic requirements include the application form, a photo and signature card, savings account and a valid ID.

SSS offers death benefits to members’ dependents either in the form of monthly pension or a lump sum. The amount is based on the member’s paid contributions, years of service and number of dependents. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Jailed de Lima appeals ruling on Senate sessions

A Philippine senator critical of President Rodrigo R. Duterte has asked a trial court to reconsider its decision denying her plea to let her attend Senate online sessions.

Senator Leila M. de Lima on June 1 sought permission to participate in virtual sessions while being detained in a police jail. The court rejected her request on June 17.

“The last word of the Supreme Court on the matter is that so long as the detained legislator is able to perform legislative functions within his or her place of detention, there is nothing in the law that prevents him or her from doing so,” she said in her motion for reconsideration dated June 22.

Ms. de Lima, a staunch critic of Mr. Duterte’s deadly drug war, has been in jail on drug trafficking charges since February 2017.

Revilla, who pushed rights of illegitimate kids, dies at 93

Former senator and action star Ramon Revilla, Sr., who pushed changes to the Family Code to benefit children out of wedlock, passed away on Friday due to heart failure, his son said. He was 93.

“My father is gone,” a tearful Senator Ramon B. Revilla, Jr. said in a short video streamed live on his Facebook page in Filipino.

The elder Mr. Revilla was rushed to the hospital on May 31 due to difficulty in breathing.

He later underwent an angiogram procedure on June 10 and was on his way to recovery. “Daddy is going through a rough time,” his son said in a post on Thursday.

Mr. Revilla was born Jose Acuña Bautista in Imus, Cavite on March 8, 1927. He was a multi-awarded actor known for his fantasy roles involving amulets.

In 1992, he won a seat in the Senate and held the post until 2004. He was known for the Revilla bill, which amended the Family Code for the benefit of illegitimate children.

The measure, signed in February 2004, allowed an illegitimate child to use the surname of his father, with his consent.

Mr. Revilla fathered at least 72 children with at least 16 different women, according to ABS-CBN News. — Charmaine A. Tadalan