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Security Bank raises P2 billion via LTNCDs

SECURITY BANK Corp. has raised P2.07 billion via long-term negotiable certificate of deposits (LTNCDs), which will be used to diversify its funding sources and finance expansion plans.

In a stock filing yesterday, the bank said they upsized the issue from the initial P1-billion offer amid strong demand mainly from retail investors, with total bids reaching P2.07 billion.

The 5.5-year LTNCDs were issued yesterday, Feb. 5 and will mature on Aug. 5, 2025.

The issuance marked the third tranche of the lender’s P20-billion bond program.

Multinational Investment Bancorporation (MIB) served as the sole lead arranger and selling agent, with assistance from Security Bank.

The bank did not respond to queries on the coupon rate for the issuance as of press time.

In December, the bank issued P2.31 billion in LTNCDs, while first drawdown out of the program raised P6.06 billion in September last year via five-and-a-half-year LTNCDs, priced at four percent.

Like regular time deposits offered by banks, LTNCDs offer higher interest rates. However, LTNCDs cannot be pre-terminated but can be sold on the secondary market, making them “negotiable.”

As of end-September 2019, Security Bank ranked as the seventh-largest bank in the country in terms of assets, with total assets of P803.092 billion.

Its shares closed at P176 each on Wednesday, up by P4.10 from the previous day’s close. — Beatrice M. Laforga

How PSEi member stocks performed — February 5, 2020

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Wednesday, February 5, 2020.

 

Grab in-car recording suspended on privacy concerns

PHILSTAR

GRAB Philippines has suspended its pilot selfie verification and in-vehicle video and photo recording processes after the National Privacy Commission (NPC) raised objections over passenger privacy protections.

NPC said in a statement Wednesday said it issued a cease and desist order to Grab for deficiencies in complying with the Data Privacy Act of 2012, after sending the company a notice of deficiencies on Jan. 31.

“Grab PH did not sufficiently identify and assess the risks posed by the data processing systems to the rights and freedoms of data subjects, saying that ‘only the risks faced by the company were taken into account’ in its Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA),” NPC said.

Grab representatives said that photo, video, and audio files are collected on its system for release to the police in case of a dispute, conflict, or compliant. Selfie verification to confirm passenger identity is being piloted across Southeast Asia.

The NPC said the public was not informed of the systems in Grab’s privacy notice and policy.

The commission said that Grab has not communicated to passengers that they can withdraw consent from being recorded.

NPC said that Grab did not inform the commission of the legal basis for collecting data. The commission said that documents submitted by Grab do not show whether the data processing is fit for purpose, whether alternatives were considered, and whether benefits outweigh risks.

“While this Commission believes that the security of passengers and drivers is a primordial concern, their privacy rights must not be disregarded. It must be protected with earnestness by ensuring that the purpose of data processing is clearly stated, the data flow is secured, and the risks are properly identified and mitigated,” NPC said in the CDO.

Grab said in a statement that the features were introduced as a safety measure to protect passengers following “legal criteria for lawful processing of data.”

The company however said it is complying with NPC and suspending data collection.

“We recognize the mandate of the National Privacy Commission (NPC) to protect user privacy. Passenger selfie feature and audio and video recording pilot have been temporarily suspended as we work with NPC to address their concerns.”

“We will fully cooperate with NPC in providing necessary supporting documents to adhere to their standards, implement additional corrective measures, and ensure that NPCs expectations and our approach for safety are mutually understood.”

NPC gave the company 15 days to comply with its remedial measures, stating that the order to cease and desist will apply on each data collection process until Grab fully implements proper controls to address the deficiencies identified by the commission. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Gov’t fund-raising generates nearly P1-T in 2019

THE government raised a total of P995 billion in 2019 from both domestic and external sources, the Department of Finance (DoF) said.

Citing a report from the Bureau of the Treasury, the DoF said 70% of total gross borrowing last year was sourced from domestic lenders, generating P693.8 billion, while the remaining 30% were from external sources.

Of the external sources, P185.7 billion were raised through global bonds, P37.06 billion via project loans and P78.2 billion in program loans.

The government conformed with the target 70:30 borrowing mix, adopted to minimize exposure to external risks while developing the domestic debt market.

“This proactive borrowing strategy took advantage of positive market developments to secure tight pricing for our global bond issuances,” National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon was quoted as saying.

The government kicked off 2019 by issuing $1.5 billion via 10-year dollar-denominated global bonds in January priced at 110 basis points (bps) above benchmark US Treasuries, followed by the 750 million euros raised from the European debt market at 70 bps above benchmark in May.

The Treasury also raised 2.5 billion renminbi via three-year “panda” bonds in May priced at a spread of 32 bps and another 92 billion yen from multi-tranche samurai bonds in August at a weighted average spread of 37 bps.

“We issued in the currencies of our top trading partners and in jurisdictions with abundant savings but low return opportunities, thus preserving the scarcity value of Philippine dollar bonds and the tightness of our sovereign issue spreads,” Ms. de Leon said.

Back home, the Treasury also had its first online offering of retail treasury bonds, which raised P235.8 billion in February with a coupon of 6.25%, amid strong demand.

Also last year, the Treasury launched its maiden issue of “Premyo Bonds” in December, to attract more small investors to invest in government securities, by offering tickets for quarterly raffle draws for every P500 invested, aside from the coupon.

The one-year Premyo bonds raised P4.961 billion, upsized from the initial P3 billion offer.

“Both retail issuances were complemented with regional and provincial roadshows, which included financial literacy sessions for individuals and treasury officers of cooperatives and local government units (LGUs),” Ms. de Leon said.

The government also tapped the global capital market through $225 million worth of catastrophe-linked bonds last year through the World Bank, providing the country protection against damage from earthquakes and typhoons until 2022.

Moving forward, Ms. de Leon said the Treasury is still working on the indemnity insurance program for government strategic assets such as schools and roads, among others, with a maximum premium of P2 billion. This will provide insurance protection against typhoons, earthquakes, storm surges, floods and volcanic eruptions, with the payout based on actual losses.

Despite higher borrowings, the debt to gross domestic product ratio, the share of government debt stock to the economy, still declined to 41.5% last year from 2018’s 41.7%.

Finance department Chief Economist Gil S. Beltran has said the debt ratio could even further decline to as low as 40% by 2022. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Natural gas import projects slow out of the gate — Fitch Solutions

DECLINING PRODUCTION from the Malampaya deepwater gas project has left the Philippines needing to import liquefied natural gas (LNG), but projects to allow the fuel to come in are facing delays, Fitch Solutions Macro Research said.

The lack of emphasis on natural gas, LNG and renewables in the Philippines’ Energy Plan covering 2017-2040 is also a source of concern, added the research unit of UK company Fitch Solutions Group Ltd.

These are among the observation of the firm after the Philippines embarked on a plan to make the country a regional hub for imported LNG under the current political leadership, which is into its fourth year of a six-year term.

“Given clear need for alternative gas sources, the Philippines’ plan to commence LNG imports is making gradual headway, although risks of project delays continue to be prominent,” Fitch Solutions said.

It said the Malampaya field’s output is widely expected to be depleted by 2027 at the latest, based on the projection of the Department of Energy (DoE). The country’s only gas production site accounts for 15% of its electricity. It powers 20% of Luzon island.

“Royal Dutch Shell has submitted a request to extend its current contract for Service Contract (SC) 38, which contains Malampaya, believing it can extend the life of the field to 2030 (15 years), based on recent satellite finds,” it said.

However, the DoE has been reluctant to extend the contract in its current form, it added.

“Simultaneous attempts to boost exploration remains ongoing, although is expected to take time, prompting the Philippines to seek a quicker solution to declining indigenous gas supply through imports,” it said.

It noted that the industry’s response to the Philippines’ latest licensing round, the Philippine Conventional Energy Contracting Program (PCECP) launched in November 2018, had been lukewarm, with only five out of the government’s 14 pre-designated areas awarded to prospective investors.

“A potential joint exploration with China’s CNOOC (China National Offshore Oil Corp.) offshore South China Sea (West Philippine Sea) has also yet to pan out, as talks continue to progress at a gradual pace,” it said.

Fitch Solutions said a number of LNG regasification projects have been proposed by a combination of domestic and foreign private firms in the race to fill an imminent gas deficit.

It said in spite of securing “Energy Projects of National Significance” (EPNS) status in July 2019, progress at Energy World Corp. (EWC)’s Pagbilao LNG project had been “painfully slow, hampered by funding concerns, regulatory hold ups and delays to gaining approval to connect to the national grid.”

“Indeed, the project had originally planned to come online by end-2017, although is not aiming for start-up sometime within 2020,” it said.

Upon commissioning, Pagbilao will enable imports of up to 3 million tons per annum of LNG, mainly to supply gas-fired power generation units of 650 megawatts (MW) in the area, it added.

Sought for comment, an official of the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) said EWC had applied for a certificate of compliance (CoC) in April 2019, showing some progress in its project. The certificate is proof that a power plant complies with the applicable regulations clearing it as safe to switch on and operate.

Wala pa siyang target testing and operation (There is no target for testing and operations). They already applied for a CoC but we will be notified (by EWC) before testing and commissioning. After that, saka kami magi-inspect (that is a point at which we plan to inspect),” Sharon O. Montañer, who heads ERC’s financial and administrative service, when asked about the status of the EWC project.

Other companies with ongoing LNG projects are First Gen Corp., LT Group, Inc., and Phoenix Petroleum Philippines, Inc.

Fitch Solutions said from a price standpoint, “the next few years is likely to prove an opportune time for the Philippines to commence LNG imports” in view of accelerating supply growth and liquefaction capacity increases led by the US, Russia and Asia.

“The Philippines has yet to enter into any LNG supply contracts for its terminals, and as such, will prove an attractive market for the growing legion of LNG suppliers globally. To date, several options have been mulled, mostly centered on shorter-term contracts from portfolio players and existing overseas assets by project developers,” it said.

Fitch Solutions also said “the lack of emphasis on natural gas, LNG and renewables in the Philippines’ Energy Plan (PEP 2017-2040) remains a source of concern.”

“While promoting ‘a low carbon future’ remains one of eight strategic directions outlined in the PEP, the plan does not include specific targets for clean energy development. This creates the risk that strategic pillars such as ‘improving energy security’ and ‘expanding energy access’ that are also outlined in the PEP may not necessarily be achieved by stronger gas off-take, particularly in light of cheaper coal,” it said.

Officials of the Energy department did not immediately reply when asked to comment on Fitch Solutions’ report. — Victor V. Saulon

DoTr to keep Mindanao railway single track, keeps options open

Mindanao rail system

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said it will proceed with a single-track and non-electrified system configuration of the Mindanao Railway Project, overruling appeals from the Davao Regional Development Council to adopt a two-track, electric configuration.

“We have an investment approval. Again, we are an implementing agency. We will implement what has been approved. We will implement it in a manner that makes it as much as possible simpler to upgrade or later on to convert it to a double-track and electrified system. That’s what we will do,” Transportation Undersecretary for Railways Timothy John R. Batan told BusinessWorld in a recent interview.

Single-track means trains have to be directed into sidings to give way to a train coming from the opposite direction. Single-track, however, is faster to build, a likely consideration for a government eager to claim at least partially-completed projects by the time it steps down in 2022.

The Davao Regional Development Council has sent a letter to the Transportation department appealing for a reversion to a two-track electric configuration.

“The decision to keep it as a single-track, non-electrified system is an investment decision made by… the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Board. So we have our parameters; it has to be economically viable. As of now, it’s the single track, non-electrified configuration that was found to be economically viable by the NEDA Board, by the investment coordination committee. Does that mean it is going to be single-track and non-electrified forever? Of course not. It can always be expanded later on and we were factoring that in,” Mr. Batan said.

Assistant Secretary Romeo M. Montenegro of the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) has said that to start the railway project — which will eventually encircle the southern island — with a smaller and less environment-friendly option will affect the design of the other segments.

He said Mindanao stakeholders were hoping changes can still be made.

Mr. Batan said the construction of the first phase (Tagum-Davao-Digos line) of the 830-kilometer Mindanao Railway Project will begin by the second quarter of the year.

“As soon as we finish the procurement process, we will start the construction,” he said.

Phase 1 will establish a 74-kilometer at-grade and 26-kilometer elevated (viaduct) commuter railway from Tagum City in Davao del Norte to Digos City in Davao del Sur. It will have eight stations — Tagum, Carmen, Panabo, Mudiang, Davao, Toril, Sta. Cruz, and Digos.

Mr. Batan said the Tagum-Davao segment is expected to be operational by the last quarter of 2021.

The Tagum-Davao-Digos segment, which will be funded via official development assistance (ODA) provided by China, is the first of the three segments of the P81.686-billion Mindanao Railway Project. — Arjay L. Balinbin

CITIRA seen hurdling Senate committee by next week

THE measure that will eventually lower the corporate income tax to 20% from the current 30% and streamline fiscal incentives is expected to hurdle the Senate Ways and Means Committee next week.

On Wednesday, the panel also began tackling the proposal to simplify the tax structure for financial instruments, in an attempt to meet the Department of Finance’s (DoF) year-end target to pass all tax reform packages.

Senator Pilar Juliana S. Cayetano, who chairs the panel, said during Wednesday’s hearing that she is “close to sponsoring CITIRA (the Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Rationalization Act) on the floor. She noted she is hopes to sponsor the bill by Tuesday next week.

Ms. Cayetano said the report adopted the proposal to lower the CIT within a span of 10 years, similar to the House-approved version to reduce the rate by two percentage points every other year.

“For the first portion, where we will bring down from 30% to 20% our corporate income tax over the span of around 10 years. The other part is rationalization of incentives that have been given over the decades to different sectors and industries,” she said at a briefing Wednesday.

She did not yet disclose the incentives under the proposed reform; but noted it will seek to limit the duration of incentives and will be granted based on the assessment of the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB).

The bill will “indicate very clearly what the incentives are and we will streamline the granting of incentives with the FIRB.”

“There will be clearer parameters, clearer numbers, so that the industries can make their computations. Sunset provisions that end on a particular date new terms are very clearly identified.”

Also on Wednesday, the Finance department held its initial briefing on the proposed Passive Income and Financial Intermediary Act (PIFITA), which Undersecretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said will reduce the number of rates to 36 from the current 80.

Mr. Chua also said the Philippines imposes the highest taxes on passive income in Southeast Asia, reducing the economy’s competitiveness.

“We proposed that the 20% highest withholding tax on interest income, in general, be reduced to 15%,” he said. “To offset this and to keep the rates at a harmonized level, we proposed that the 10% tax on dividends for individuals be increased to 15%.”

The measure will lower the rates on the documentary stamp tax on debt instruments, original shares of stock and debt instruments, and non-life insurance to 0.75%.

Asked whether the Committee can approve all the remaining packages of the tax reform program within the year, Ms. Cayetano said she can at least have it sponsored in the plenary.

Kaya ko siyang ma-sponsor (It’s within my power to sponsor), but as you can see it’s not just my sole decision.”

Mr. Chua also said the proposal will repeal a total of 33 out of 43 special laws, granting passive income and documentary stamp tax exemptions to various sectors. Of this, 19 are “true repeals,” while the remaining 14 repeals represent a “cleaning-up” laws that have likely run their course.

The 10 special laws that will be retained are those concerning the Government Service Insurance System, Social Security System, and PAG-IBIG Fund among others.

The repeal of the 19 special laws, Mr. Chua said, will generate around P11.3 billion.

Senate Minority Leader Franklin M. Drilon said the exemptions call into question the true cost of maintaining government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs).

“Apart from the exemption, they are also given subsidy; so the total cost to the people is at P11 billion. If we remove these exemptions, we really see what kind of subsidy they’re getting rather than the unseen subsidy through tax exemptions.”

“Again, this will be an input as to whether or not these GOCCs should continue to exist.”

Also among the remaining reforms is the proposal to provide a uniform framework for real property valuation and assessment.

The government has so far passed Republic Act No. 10963, which slashed personal income tax rates and increased or added levies on several goods and services — the main component of the tax reform package — RA 11213, which grants estate tax amnesty and amnesty on delinquent accounts left unpaid even after being given final assessment; and RA 11346 and 11467, which increased excise tax on alcohol products and conventional and electronic cigarettes. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

M3 growth accelerates in December after 2019 easing

MONEY SUPPLY growth in December accelerated with the financial system continuing to feel the impact of the easing stance taken by the central bank in 2019.

Domestic liquidity or M3, the broadest measure of money supply, expanded by 11.4% year-on-year to P13 trillion in December, picking up from the 9.8% pace in November, according to preliminary data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) released Wednesday.

Month-on-month, M3 grew 1.6%.

“Demand for credit remained the principal driver of money supply growth,” BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in a statement.

Analysts attributed the acceleration in liquidity growth to the rate cuts as well as the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) reductions ordered by the central bank.

“System liquidity is improving on the back of the RRR cuts, albeit with a lag, as it took time for the financial system to absorb improving money supply.” Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces said in an e-mail.

Mr. Diokno has previously said that RRR reductions may take about nine months before it could fully be felt by the market. With this, he said that monetary policy should be forward-looking.

Meanwhile, Union Bank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion also attributed the expansionary stance of the BSP as the main driver of liquidity growth.

“For the policy rate meeting tomorrow, these numbers will be taken into consideration, but, as the (BSP) Governor Diokno mentioned, both global oil prices and the impact of the nCoV outbreak will play a significant part in the decision to be made by the Monetary Board. Both of these factors point to a cut of 25 basis points (bps) this Thursday,” he said in an e-mail.

Current key policy rates stand at 4% for overnight reverse repurchase, while overnight deposit and lending are at 3.5% and 4.5%, respectively. These settings were arrived at after 75-bps worth of rate cuts in 2019, which partially dialled back the 175-bps worth of rate hikes in 2018 amid high inflation.

Mr. Diokno said last week that monetary authorities are still looking into reducing rates by around 50 bps this year, with a 25-bps cut coming as early as the first quarter if conditions warrant.

After Thursday, the Monetary Board (MB) will also meet on March 19, before the first quarter ends.

The RRR was reduced by 400 bps last year, bringing the reserve requirement for big banks to 14%.

The MB also reduced RRR for non-bank financial institutions with quasi-banking functions to 14%.

According to BSP data, net claims on the central government grew by 24.4% year-on-year in December, quicker than the 13.9% print in November.

Meanwhile, domestic claims, which were mainly supported by the private sector, rose 10.5%, a pickup from the 8.3% logged in November.

“Loans for production activities continued to be driven by lending to key sectors such as real estate activities; financial and insurance activities; electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply; construction; and information and communication,” Mr. Diokno said.

Meanwhile, net foreign assets (NFA) in peso terms rose 8.8% in December after expanding 11.5% a month earlier.

On the other hand, NFAs held by lenders grew 21.8% after rising 18.3% in November.

Bank lending growth also accelerated for the second consecutive month in December, the central bank said.

Outstanding loans by universal and commercial banks rose 10.9% in December from the 10.1% in November. Inclusive of reverse repurchase agreements, bank lending rose 10.9%, up from the 10.2% recorded in the preceding month.

Production loans drove bank loan portfolio growth, accounting for 87.4% of the total. They rose 9.1% in December after rising 8.1% in November.

Loans disbursed for construction activities grew 23.4%, followed by real estate activities (19.7%), financial and insurance activities (17.2%); information and communication (12.9%), and electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply (8.3%).

According to BSP data, credit to other sectors also picked up in December, except community, social and personal activities (-21.7%); mining and quarrying (-11%); scientific and technical activities (-4.6%), and manufacturing (-1.9%).

Bank of the Philippine Islands Lead Economist Emilio S. Neri, Jr. said: “This means the RRR cuts of the BSP over the last two years are working. Banks are lending at double-digit growth rates,” Mr. Neri said in a text message.

“An important implication is that the BSP should consider doing more in 2020. It can take the opportunity to align our RRR with regional standards while inflation is still below the policy rate,” he added.

Mr. Diokno has promised to reduce the RRR for banks to single-digit levels by the end of his term in mid-2023.

The Philippine Statistics Authority reported that inflation picked up to 2.9% in January from 2.5% in December mainly due to an uptick in food prices. Despite this, inflation in the previous month was still well-within the central bank’s target range of 2-4%.

ING Bank-NV Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said that a continued expansionary stance from the BSP could help to spur “investment momentum.”

“The tandem of policy rate cuts and RRR reductions will go a long way to restoring lost investment momentum and we expect further cuts to the policy rate and RRR in 2020,” he said in an e-mail. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

A closer look at IFRIC 23 and the challenges that lie ahead

(Second of two parts)

In last week’s article, we laid down the foundation of the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee 23 (IFRIC 23) by discussing the key requirements of recognizing uncertain income tax treatments. The initial application of a new accounting standard often poses questions and challenges. Today, we take a closer look at concrete applications of IFRIC 23, as well as the challenges and key considerations it entails.

INHERENT CHALLENGES AND CONSIDERATIONS
Suppose an entity elects, as its tax practice moving forward, the deduction of expenses regardless if these were subjected to the corresponding withholding taxes. And based on the entity’s assessment, this tax practice is considered an uncertain tax treatment within the scope of IFRIC 23.

The Tax Code provides that a deduction be allowed if it is shown that the tax required to be withheld has been paid to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). However, under Revenue Regulations (RR) No. 6-2018 issued by the BIR, in case the tax was not withheld, a deduction will be allowed if the withholding agent pays the tax, including the applicable penalties due to the late payment, at the time of audit/investigation or reinvestigation/reconsideration.

Since the expenses may ultimately be allowed as deductions upon payment of the deficiency withholding taxes and penalties, this tax treatment could be interpreted as acceptable to the taxation authority. For consistency, the same tax treatment must be applied in valuing or measuring all related income tax accounts, including deferred taxes.

Recall that IFRIC 23 is to be applied retrospectively upon initial application — i.e., as if the tax treatment has been applied by the entity even in prior years. If the entity’s practice is to defer the deduction of outstanding accrued expenses until such time that they are subjected to withholding tax in the year of payment, the entity may need to quantify the potential restatement of accounts reported in prior years to comply with the transition requirement.

For an entity that has substantial outstanding year-end accruals, such potential restatement may be significant.

The entity may also need to consider amending previously filed returns so that the amounts reflected for tax purposes would be consistent with those reported in the financial statements. In a tax environment such as the Philippines, however, amendments restart the three-year prescriptive period for the BIR to assess deficiency taxes. Hence, the downside of an amendment is that it may expose an entity to certain risks, such as payment of interest and penalty.

With these implications, it may be paramount for an entity to evaluate the overall potential impact of IFRIC 23.

Note that income tax computation is a combination of tax treatments applied by an entity. As an evaluative measure, an entity may classify all of its tax treatments and identify which may be considered uncertain. Coordination among accounting, finance, tax, and legal functions is essential for a holistic and efficient assessment.

INTRICACIES AND IMPLICATIONS OF IFRIC 23 FOR FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
There may also be industry-specific tax treatments within the scope of IFRIC 23. Thus, it may be advisable to also consider perspectives from an industry standpoint for additional guidance.

Take for instance the case of banks and other financial institutions (OFIs). Their taxation is different when compared to other types of taxpayers due to the promulgation of RR 4-2011.

While the BIR issued RR 4-2011 which required banks and OFIs to identify or allocate expenses between their income streams (i.e., tax-exempt, tax-paid or those subjected to final taxes and taxable, i.e., subject to regular corporate taxes), lack of clear guidance and/or illustrations as to its application gave rise to differing interpretations. Banks and OFIs, to a certain extent, had their distinct method of identifying and allocating expenses to compute for the taxable income subject to income tax.

Consequently, the BIR challenged the method employed by banks and OFIs by issuing tax assessments. Due to the industry-wide implications of RR 4-2011, several banks filed a petition for declaratory relief before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) in April 2015. For a time, the BIR was precluded from issuing tax assessments relating to RR 4-2011 due to a temporary restraining order on the enforcement of the regulations.

In May 2018, the RTC declared RR 4-2011 null and void for having been issued beyond the authority of the Secretary of Finance and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. In response, the BIR elevated the case to the Supreme Court (SC), where the resolution remains pending to date.

Given the status, questions arise as banks and OFIs endeavor to adopt IFRIC 23. With the lingering issue on how the petition will be decided, should banks and OFIs consider their method of allocation of expenses an uncertain tax treatment? If it is, then the requirements of IFRIC 23 must be taken into account.

Taking the issue a step further, should they still comply with the provisions of RR 4-2011?

Suppose, as a matter of electing a tax position, the banks or OFIs stopped their allocation of expenses (i.e., all expenses were claimed as deductions against income subject to regular corporate taxes). First, there is a need to establish under tax law that it is probable that the BIR and tax courts (i.e., taxation authority) will accept its tax treatment of not allocating expenses.

Second, since IFRIC 23 requires retrospective application, banks or OFIs may be required to re-compute their income tax due and payable to value and measure the related tax accounts for the comparative periods presented in the 2019 financial statements. Compliance may pose a challenge, especially if the amount of the transition adjustment is significant. Lastly, the amendment of previously filed income tax returns may need to be considered with caution for potential penalty risks.

In contrast, if the banks or OFIs decided to continue their practice of allocating expenses, there is a need to establish that the taxation authority will accept: (1) the tax treatment; and (2) the method employed.

Admittedly, there may be other considerations and challenges not discussed here that could arise as entities endeavor to adopt IFRIC 23. Thus, it is necessary to assess the interpretation’s overall implications and address the issues early on.

While taxation is often criticized for its complexities, the thrill of life (in accounting and tax, at least) can ironically come from the uncertainties driven by the imperfect interactions between taxpayers, taxing authorities, and their environment.

The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.

 

Gabriel Eroy is a Manager at the Tax Services Department of Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the PwC network.

(02) 8845-27 28

gabriel.eroy@pwc.com

The two words every central banker wants to hear

By Daniel Moss

FOR CENTRAL bankers around the world, acting locally now means thinking about China.

The spread of the coronavirus will likely hit mainland growth hard enough to warrant a global monetary-policy response. That means cuts in interest rates to follow last year’s easing steps. To do otherwise would be tantamount to denying the enormous role China plays in international commerce relative to 2003, the last time an epidemic dented the country’s expansion. At that point, global growth barely missed a beat. This time, it will suffer, and quickly. Central banks moved decisively as the trade war unfolded and global sentiment soured; discarding such a useful template would be a waste.

It makes sense that neighborhood cops would be the first-line of defense. The People’s Bank of China flooded the financial system with liquidity and pushed rates down within minutes of markets reopening Monday after an extended break. The Reserve Bank of Australia said Tuesday that the virus is having a “significant effect” on the country’s biggest trading partner. Though it kept rates on hold, many expect at least one cut is likely in coming months. The Philippines, which sets borrowing costs Thursday, is expected to trim. In India, the virus could be another factor that pressures the central bank to resume cuts, after aggressive reductions in 2019.

While all this is encouraging, policy action in Asia is necessary but insufficient. For a true global response, the Federal Reserve needs to come off the sidelines. This isn’t such a leap, despite the central bank’s preference to hold its benchmark rate after three cuts last year. Officials made clear since December that, in the event rates are nudged around, any move is more likely to be down than up. Stubbornly low inflation was troublesome well before the world’s attention turned to Wuhan.

Bond investors are starting to place bets on a Fed rescue. They are right to do so. In each of the three central-bank statements that announced cuts last year, the world’s challenges came first, inflation second: “In light of the implications of global developments for the economic outlook as well as muted inflation pressures, the committee decided to lower the target range for the federal funds rate to…” Last Friday, Vice-Chairman Richard Clarida called the virus a “wild card.”

Should the Fed wish to take out some insurance against a Wuhan-driven, worst-case scenario, it’s already laid the groundwork. Policymakers’ shift in tone and language shows how far we’ve come from the days when the world’s most powerful monetary agency barely looked beyond America’s shores. In more than 700 pages of transcripts from the Federal Open Market Committee meetings from the first half of 2003, SARS was mentioned 33 times and China, 19. That compares with 123 for Japan, which was in its second decade of economic funk. The Fed made its sole cut that year in June.

Whatever the Fed’s response, it won’t change the fact that China now accounts for 40% of growth in global gross domestic product. Beijing policymakers responded a lot more quickly than their American counterparts as the mainland economy began cooling in 2018, which was only exacerbated by the trade war. When the Fed eventually cut rates last July, that merely gave Asia’s regional central banks cover to continue on their path: Chairman Jerome Powell was an accelerator, not a catalyst.

That the US wasn’t the first mover is a historic shift. The dollar’s dominant role in finance means the Fed will remain the world’s most important central bank, but it’s no longer the only driver.

Now, everyone has a stake in China’s prosperity and its misfortune. Central bankers showed they understood that in 2019. They would be well-served to remember this lesson.

 

BLOOMBERG OPINION

How business firms perpetuate economic inequality

Our Constitution says that all economic agents, including corporations, shall contribute to the common good in order to achieve our country’s vision of a rising quality of life for all. More than 30 years after the ratification of the fundamental law, easily one-third of Filipinos are poor despite the official poverty rate now falling below 20% and healthy economic growth at nearly 6%. The World Bank reports that the country has one of the most persistent poverty problems in the region. And the concentration of wealth among the very rich continues to worsen every year.

A major aspect of the problem that almost never gets close attention is the role of business management practices in causing and perpetuating the economic gap. While entrepreneurship is an important option for some people, a big chunk of Filipinos hope to improve their lives by working in companies. But troubling questions need to be answered. How can people who work full-time in organizations that are growing and profitable still be poor? Why has the massive economic growth fueled by corporate value creation left so many behind?

The problem is rooted in prevailing management myths and non-inclusive management practices. The first myth is that organizations are essentially driven by a concern for greater efficiency. The notion that markets are efficient has been debunked by many studies. Still, companies often justify the vast differences between the pay packages of top managers and ordinary workers by claiming that there is a neutral market for talent.

The second myth is that organizations operate based on merit; that is, the way people advance and get rewards is based on capabilities and performance rather than connections, seniority, class, and other personal characteristics people are born with. This is far from the reality. For example, a professional service firm may emphasize high university grades as a reason for hiring one individual over another. However, the cultural and social capital that led to gaining acceptance in the university, provided access to advantageous internship opportunities, and allowed the applicant to identify with interviewers through shared interests are usually powerful reasons why the applicant was accepted.

MACROVECTOR AND FREEPIK

These myths support non-inclusive management practices especially in hiring, promotion, and compensation. Hiring determines who gains access to business organizations and the benefits in them. The most important, and recurring, hiring mechanism that reproduces inequality is when managers hire people based mainly on cultural similarity. When business leaders hire people who look and talk like them, know the same people, or have had similar lives and cultural experiences, they effectively lock out diverse individuals who can bring in needed talent and ideas while improving their own lives.

Even inside a business organization, unequal access to opportunities for promotion can be an important source of inequality. When this happens, moving up an organization is no longer a simple matter of performance. The help of mentors, powerful networks, and a display of the “right” behaviors all come into play in who gets to advance. In family-controlled businesses, for example, gaining the trust of key family members is often more important than performance itself. Jack Welch, the famed former Chairman and CEO of General Electric under whom the company’s share price rose by 4,000%, started as a junior engineer in the company in 1960 and became CEO 20 years later. How many Philippine companies can offer this possibility to those who start at the bottom?

Probably the worst non-inclusive business practices is in the area of compensation. Pay is the biggest income source for most employed Filipinos. However, some companies compensate senior management — through salary, bonuses, and equity — hundreds of times more than low-level workers. How can a company, no matter how financially successful, claim that its CEO creates 300 times more value than an average worker who directly serves paying customers? The market argument is conveniently used to support this practice when, in fact, senior positions are often not subjected to free market competition. Thus, the compensation structure in some companies resembles a feudal system, where workers toil at the bottom while the very few at the top enjoy the lion’s share of the fruits.

Professional managers have a role in making businesses more inclusive. They can hire people from more diverse backgrounds based on capabilities and the drive to contribute. They can make development opportunities and merit-based promotion available to all. Finally, they can make the gap between the compensation of senior management and that of the majority of workers smaller while enabling more workers to own equity.

This is what management for the common good looks like.

 

Dr. Benito L. Teehankee is the Jose E. Cuisia Professor of Business Ethics and Head of the Business for Human Development Network at De La Salle University.

benito.teehankee@dlsu.edu.ph

Sense of others

I worry that we are leaving our children, and their children, a world far worse than what we inherited from our predecessors. There is no doubt in my mind that there will be a tipping point at some time. When, where, and how, no one can predict. But, going by what is currently happening around us, it seems that point is nearing.

We are failing as stewards of the environment, and as vanguards of what is right and just. We are squandering what we have inherited from our ancestors, and, sadly, there appears to be little opportunity for our redemption. We must urgently endeavor not to completely fail our children and their descendants, and strive harder to make them better than us.

It is in this regard that I support the House of Representatives’ approval of the bill seeking to revive the Good Manners and Right Conduct (GMRC) subject in the grade school curriculum. The Philippine Star had reported that Congress had voted unanimously to pass House Bill 5829, on requiring GMRC as a separate subject from Kindergarten to Grade 3.

I support the bill not because it is a comprehensive solution, but because it is a start, an initiative to move in the right direction. And, also because it seems that many households, particularly in the urban areas, have already abdicated to schools the education of their children with respect to values and how to best conduct themselves particularly in public.

HB 5829 defines GMRC as “basic social values and etiquette,” and notes the need “to develop the character of the youth by making them recognize their intrinsic human value, enabling them to cultivate their ability to make excellent choices for themselves in relation to the greater community, thereby creating a culture of respect and love for oneself, for others and the country.”

I believe school instruction of GMRC should be supplemental. It is there mainly to complement what should be taught primarily at home. But, if it tends to contradict what is actually practiced in households, then it has the dual purpose of introducing the child to “good practices” — all in the hope that seeds of change can be planted in their young minds.

Instructing the young on “basic social values and etiquette” should be taken as a challenge by barangay leaders in particular, who can be more useful and relevant to their constituents by providing venues and opportunities for people to know more about GMRC at the grassroots level. People are never too old to be taught, or to learn, GMRC and its benefits.

People can be incentivized to attend instructional sessions and to practice the ideas conveyed. Compliance can be tied to assistance or welfare programs. Competitions can be hosted among barangays, and prizes can be offered as rewards for examples of good behavior. Awards for “friendliest,” or most “respectful,” or most “courteous” communities can be developed.

I recall a time when broadcast stations ran advertisements on radio and television related to good behavior, and the social values that Filipinos were supposedly known for. The advertisements were part of a major campaign supported by the state-run Development Bank of the Philippines. And then there was also the Ministry of Energy campaign regarding energy conservation, highlighted by the use of the Asyong Aksaya caricature by the late cartoonist Larry Alcala.

No man is an island, it is said. We all live in communities that we share with other people. Yes, there are inequities. This seems to be inevitable in any societal structure. However, living in communities necessitates the ability to live with others. GMRC plays an important role in this regard. To live peacefully with others requires mutual respect and a strong sense of others.

In more developed communities, particularly in urban areas, we have people living right next to each other for years but do not even know each other. New residents do not bother to introduce themselves to their neighbors, nor do older residents bother to welcome the new neighbors as they move in. People pretty much keep to themselves.

Even technology has had a heavy impact on how we deal with each other, as we can opt to socialize constantly on “electronic communities” but decline to spend more than a minute with other people face-to-face. If people lack strong social values strengthened by additional GMRC instruction, then their use of technology can also pose dangers to their ability to interact socially with others.

To be expected by society to behave a certain way, or to conform to certain norms, should not be seen as a limitation on freedom, or free will, or free expression. It is simply the appreciation that one does not live alone or in a vacuum, and that exercising freedom, free will, or free expression entails the responsibility of recognizing and understanding that such exercise can also affect others.

GMRC is not just about being right or wrong, or being proper or improper, or practicing socially acceptable behavior. People are always free to be “anti-social” if they choose to do so. But this should not, in any way, diminish their sense of others. GMRC is primarily about learning to respect one another, and recognizing that we live with others, and that we should also be mindful of them and not just ourselves. It is all about being a considerate human being. Now, pray tell, what will be the harm in teaching our children that?

 

Marvin Tort is a former managing editor of BusinessWorld, and a former chairman of the Philippines Press Council.

matort@yahoo.com