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Guimaras turns to online selling to dispose of mango harvest

By Emme Rose S. Santiagudo
Correspondent

MANGO season in Guimaras finds growers denied their usual markets this year because COVID-19 has restricted tourist movements and cancelled fiestas and trade fairs.

“(Mango farmers) asked for our help because they have a rich supply of mangoes but they find it difficult to sell due to the community quarantine imposed in other provinces,” Lenny S. Gonzaga, economist at the Provincial Economic Development Office (PEDO), said by phone last week.

The island province’s mango growers’ cooperative has 150 members.

Earlier this month, the provincial government banned the entry of tourists and non-essential persons following the COVID-19 outbreak.

Iloilo City, the main gateway to the province, has also been placed under enhanced community quarantine to limit the movement of people.

“It has really had a huge impact on our farmers. Before the crisis, Guimaras mangoes were easy to sell and farmers had sure buyers. Now, many of their transactions were cancelled due to the travel restrictions,” Ms. Gonzaga said.

The Manggahan Festival, a month-long celebration held every May, has been cancelled this year.

“During these times, there were supposed to schedule promotional activities to market the mangoes for the festival,” Ms. Gonzaga added.

To help farmers sell their harvest, the PEDO office used its Facebook page — Choose Guimaras Philippines — to advertise and accept orders with scheduled delivery dates to Iloilo City.

“They can message us directly. Usually, we deliver every two days or depending on the order,” Ms. Gonzaga said.

So far, about 1.6 tons of mangoes, which were intended for the cancelled National Food Fair organized by the Department of Trade and Industry on March 12–15, have been sold.

On Thursday last week, Ms. Gonzaga said PEDO was able to deliver 852 kilograms of mangoes.

The average price has fallen to about P130 per kilo from the usual P200.

“It’s the least that we can do to help our mango growers earn income,” she said.

T-bill rates seen mixed on COVID-19 fears

RATES OF Treasury bills (T-bills) on offer this week will likely end mixed as the escalating coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak and its impact on the economy raise uncertainties.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) will offer P20 billion worth of T-bills on Monday, broken down into P10 billion in 91-day papers and P5 billion each for the 182- and 364-day securities.

On Tuesday, the government will auction off 35-day T-bills to raise P15 billion.

Jose Miguel B. Liboro, head of fixed income at ATRAM Trust Corp., said yields for the short-term papers on offer this week might come in lower as the stimulus measures introduced by the central bank over the past two weeks helped calm down financial markets.

“Yields on the T-bills likely to come in lower — recent BSP actions (liquidity injections via overnight and RRR cuts and limited support on 3yr-7yr rates) have been able to stabilize the market somewhat and may prove an effective backstop against further sharp sell-offs in the GS market,” Mr. Liboro said in an e-mailed response on Friday.

He added that auction results last week showed the government has “flexibility in funding requirements” and could reject bids asking for “unreasonably high” rates.

The BTr rejected the P14.5 billion in bids out up for its P20-billion offer of T-bills last week due to higher rates.

Had it made a full award, the 91-day papers would have fetched an average rate of 3.841%, up from the previous yield of 3.024%.

For the 182-day T-bills, the average rate would have settled at 4.766%, up 136.8 bps, if all P4.12 billion bids were accepted, while yields on the 364-day securities would have reached 5.35%, up 179 bps, if the BTr made a full award of the P2.85 billion in tenders.

At the secondary market on Friday, rates of the one-, three- and six-month papers stood at 3.07%, 3.193% and 3.387%, respectively, while the one-year securities were quoted at 3.803%.

However, for ING Bank N.V.-Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, T-bills on offer this week may fetch higher rates as the rising number of positive cases in the country causes uncertainties in the market.

“In general, we may continue to expect higher yields during the T-bill auction until we may see some definitive turn in the number of cases of COVID-19, which at the moment continue to climb,” Mr. Mapa said in an e-mail on Friday.

Mr. Mapa said the reintroduced 35-day papers might “see some interest from players,” while bids for 91-, 182- and 364-day T-bills could expect subdued demand as investors prefer to hold on to their cash.

While the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) “copious amounts of actions” recently gave relief to the markets, he said “sentiment remains susceptible to quick reversals.”

Offshore, Mr. Mapa said, “we’ve had a bit of a respite of late with the US passing their own fiscal response package but things over the weekend may tip the scales in the other direction.”

The central bank last week agreed to buy P300 billion in securities from the BTr through a repurchase agreement to support the government’s funding needs for its COVID-19 response.

This, on top of the 50-bp cut it delivered earlier this month, the 200-bp reduction in the reserve requirement ratio of universal and commercial banks, the P20 billion in dividends remitted to the Treasury last week, as well as the regulatory relief it gave to the lenders.

On the fiscal front, the economic team earlier this month also rolled out an initial P27.1-billion funding package to finance efforts against COVID-19 while Republic Act No. 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act signed last week will allow the government to realign as much as P275 billion from the national budget and make off-budget outlays.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III has said the government plans to seek $1-2 billion worth of funding support from multilateral agencies.

The Asian Development Bank said another funding package worth at least $1.6 billion will be provided to the Philippines in the coming weeks, on top of the $3 million grant it gave earlier, while the World Bank pledged a $100-million loan to the country.

As of Saturday evening, the country’s confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 1,075, with 68 fatalities and 35 recoveries.

The Treasury has set a P190-billion local borrowing program for April, broken down into P130 billion in T-bills and P60 billion in T-bonds.

The government plans to raise P1.4 trillion this year from local and foreign lenders to plug its budget deficit, which is capped at 3.2% of gross domestic product. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Filipino Food Month activities postponed

PREPARATIONS for Filipino Food Month 2020 have been “temporarily postponed,” the Philippine Culinary Heritage Movement, the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), and Department of Agriculture announced on March 26.

A statement, published on NCCA’s official Facebook page said: “The intention behind this pronouncement is to help prevent the spread of the virus and ensure the utmost safety of the public. This decision was made after an extensive and careful consideration of the current situation, alongside our commitment to cooperate with the government’s efforts to contain the spread of COVID- 19.”

“We assure all concerned that we will still continue to campaign for the appreciation and preservation of indigenous ingredients. And the Filipino culinary tradition through social media promotion subject, however, current situations, and that event will hopefully be held at a later date when the public safety can be assured,” the statement adds.

In April 2018, President Rodrigo Duterte signed Proclamation No. 469 declaring April as National Filipino Food Month. In 2019, the first celebration, which included exhibits, forums, and cooking competitions, was held in various cities nationwide. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Recycling car batteries

‘This is probably one of the main reasons why battery disposal is so neglected — because people do not see the toxic substances seep out. And if it does not have a clear presentation, then it is not easily measured. What can be measured, however, are the years of life lost as a healthy individual, due to an illness or disability caused by lead toxicity.’

By Angel Rivero

A CAR BATTERY is an essential part of a working automobile. It converts chemical energy into electrical energy, and that in turn provides the zap to power the electronics and starter of your vehicle. And depending on your type of car battery and the actual usage, a car battery may remain useful anywhere from nine months to a few years.

The tricky part about car batteries though, is that most of them are wet-cell ones that use lead and sulfuric acid — highly toxic substances that are harmful both to living creatures and the environment. And while people often only think of how to replace their car batteries after they stop working properly, I reckon that many motorists are oblivious about how harmful these used batteries may become. They are after all, classified as “hazardous waste.”

It is difficult to imagine the danger, as the poison itself is hard to track down. After all, it is a lord of disguise. Lead can stick to the ground, linger as vapor (during lead smelting), run in the water, remain in the bodies of fish, or leech into crops that grow out of lead-infected soil. In fact, this is probably one of the main reasons why battery disposal is so neglected — because people do not see the toxic substances seep out. And if it does not have a clear presentation, then it is not easily measured. What can be measured, however, are the years of life lost as a healthy individual, due to an illness or disability caused by lead toxicity.

How then, must used car batteries be handled? First, they must be respected and regarded as dangerous, hazardous waste. As such, they must either be brought to a proper, hazardous waste recycling center, or traded-in for a new car battery. The latter is the easier, more cost-effective option as trading-in your old car battery will usually shave a few extra hundred pesos off the purchase price of a brand-new one. Do not consider storing multiple car batteries in your home, as toxic substances may eventually leak out and pollute your surroundings. Please also do not throw them in your regular trash bins either, as toxic substances may contaminate your local garbage collectors and may be accidentally freed into the environment.

Does 100% of the car battery get recycled? Unfortunately not. But when recycling is properly implemented, the typical, new lead-acid car battery will carry anywhere from 60% to 80% recycled lead and plastic.

Furthermore, the Philippines has a law (RA 6969) that governs the proper collection and disposal of such hazardous waste. Proper enforcement, however, has always been the challenge. Used lead-acid batteries continue to get intercepted by unauthorized junk shops to fuel their backyard “battery recycling” practices wherein the battery packs are crudely smashed by hand to open them — inevitably freeing some lead and sulfuric acid into the surroundings — with these eventually finding their way into canals and rivers after major flooding. More and more amounts of lead are carelessly freed and absorbed into the environment. Laborers who have direct exposure to the lead and other chemicals during handling, without the proper safety equipment, are often the hardest hit.

The best thing we can do? Again, used car batteries are hazardous waste. Handle them with care and do not have a second thought about making sure they get to proper recycling facilities. Do not sell used batteries to the highest bidder. Turn them over to responsible and licensed hazardous waste collectors.

The global oil market Is broken, drowning in crude nobody needs

THE GLOBAL OIL MARKET is broken, overwhelmed by an unmanageable surplus as virus lockdowns cascade through the world’s largest economies.

Onshore tanks in many markets are full, forcing traders to store excess oil in idle supertankers. Refineries are starting to shut down because nobody needs the fuels they produce. In physical oil markets, barrels are already changing hands for less than $10, and in a few landlocked markets producers are paying consumers to take away their crude.

“The physical oil market has seized up,” said Gary Ross, an influential oil watcher and chief investment officer of Black Gold Investors LLC. “The logistics are struggling to cope because we are facing a catastrophic loss of demand.”

Oil traders say it’s likely to get worse this week.

The root cause is an accelerating plunge in consumption that’s without precedent since a steady flow of oil became essential to the global economy more than a century ago. The great crash of 1929, the twin oil shocks of the 1970s and the global financial crisis don’t come close. The world normally uses 100 million barrels of oil day, and traders and analysts reckon as much as a quarter of that has disappeared in just a few weeks.

The global airline industry is grounded, countless businesses and factories are shuttered and billions of people have been forced to stay home.

“Demand clearly is off, in some parts of the world, very dramatically,” Chevron CEO Mike Wirth told Bloomberg TV.

The immediate problem is a lack of storage in the right places. With demand running 20 million barrels a day below supply, the world won’t have enough tanks to store the surplus in two or three months. But the issue is even more pressing because global tank capacity, mostly concentrated in a few hubs like Rotterdam, the Caribbean and Singapore, isn’t available to every producer. For those without access to pipelines and ports, local storage will run out in days, traders and consultants say.

For those with access to the coast, one solution is to use the supertanker fleet as floating storage tanks, and that’s happening at an unprecedented rate. The CEO of the world’s largest tanker owner, Frontline Ltd., said on Friday that he’d never known such demand to hire ships for long-term storage. Traders could put 100 million barrels at sea, he estimated, but even that accounts for just a few days’ oversupply.

In the U.S., one of the largest pipeline companies, Plains All American Pipeline LP, has asked oil producers to voluntarily cut output to avoid overwhelming the network that connects well heads to refineries through thousands of miles of pipelines.

The world is running out of places to put oil because the shutdown of vast swathes of the economy has been catastrophic for demand. The collapse in commercial air travel has cut jet fuel use by up to 75%, or almost 5 million barrels a day.

As for gasoline, American drivers are the single biggest source of demand, using more than 9 million barrels a day, according to the Energy Information Administration. As whole states, including California and New York, have told people to stay home, billions of car journeys have been lost. It’s a pattern repeated in Europe and Asia.

“Demand destruction is unprecedented,” said Ben Luckock, co-head of trading at Trafigura Group, the second-largest independent oil trader. He estimates the hit to consumption will total 22 million barrels a day in April.

Around the world, about 700 refineries turn crude oil into gasoline, diesel and other fuels. They are starting to dial down production and even shut outright because demand for the fuel they produce is so dire. In India, for example, where 1.3 billion people are under lockdown until mid-Aptil, the nation’s biggest refinery has cut processing rates at most plants by as much as 30%.

A small refiner in Italy, the epicenter of Europe’s virus outbreak, shut on Friday because demand for fuel plunged 85%.

As the refining system withers, the crude oil market is suffering. Many crudes, especially sticky, sulfurous grades that refiners find hard to process, trade at hefty discounts to international benchmarks. Western Canadian Select, a tarry blend squeezed from Alberta’s oil sands, reached a record low of $4.51 a barrel on Friday.

In the U.S., Oklahoma Sour is changing hands at $5.75, Nebraska Intermediate at $8, while Wyoming Sweet prices at $3 a barrel.

In one obscure corner of the American crude market, prices have already turned negative. Wyoming Asphalt Sour, a dense oil used mostly to produce paving bitumen, was bid at minus 19 cents a barrel in mid-March by Trading Mercuria Energy Group Ltd.

The surprise, perhaps, is that benchmark futures are still trading as high as they are. Brent, the North Sea grade that sets the price for about two-thirds of the world’s oil, ended last week at $24.93 a barrel, well above the historic low of $9.55 a barrel in 1998.

Luckock at Trafigura says future prices are likely to fall another $10. Black Gold’s Ross also says Brent and the US benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, will be trading in the teens within days.

The next stage of the oil market’s meltdown will be widespread production shutdowns as drillers decide the only option is to leave it in the ground until better days return. There are signs this is starting to happen.

Brazil’s state oil company Petrobras has announced it will reduce output by 100,000 barrels a day this year because of the lack of demand. In Canada, some producers have shut down output, and Glencore Plc., the world’s largest commodity trading house, has shut down its production in Chad.

Many producers are reluctant to shut wells because even though they’re losing money at today’s prices, some cashflow is often better than none at all. But as more refineries idle, the pipeline system grinds to a halt and storage tanks fill to the brim, they will soon have no choice.

“The problem is no one wants to be the first to shut-in,” Black Gold’s Ross said. — Bloomberg

NFA still buying palay; stocks good for 14 days

THE National Food Authority (NFA) said it is still buying palay, or unmilled rice, and could see its procurement budget doubled soon in response to the enhanced community quarantine implemented in Luzon.

It said the current rice inventory is sufficient for Metro Manila, amid fears the supply will be disrupted by movement restrictions due to the COVID-19 lockdown.

The NFA had prepositioned rice stocks for Metro Manila’s projected consumption ahead of the quarantine.

NFA Administrator Judy Carol L. Dansal said the agency’s current rice inventory is 481,800 metric tons (MT), equivalent to a 14-day supply for the Philippines. Other repositories of rice are households and commercial traders.

The rice inventory includes stocks bought from farmers during the last quarter of 2019.

She added that in January and February, NFA bought 86,711 MT of palay from individual farmers, cooperatives, and associations.

“We continue to buy palay from farmers for buffer stocking. For the entire year, NFA targets to buy 15.44 million bags, using its regular P7 billion budget,” Ms. Dansal said.

Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar is seeking to augment the NFA’s palay procurement to increase rice stocks.

“We are proposing to augment the NFA’s palay procurement fund by another P7 billion,” Mr. Dar said.

Mr. Dar has said Metro Manila has enough rice, adding that the Philippines has the equivalent of a 75 day-supply, or 2.661 million MT, including rice held by commercial traders, households, and government agencies.

NFA rice is sold at P25 per kilogram to accredited retailers, government agencies, and local government units.

Meanwhile, the Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultura (SINAG) urged local government units (LGUs) to purchase produce directly from farmers as farmgate prices for agricultural products have dropped below the cost of production due to the farmers’ lack of access to locked-down markets.

In a statement, SINAG Chairman Rosendo O. So said mayors and governors can help farmers by buying directly from them.

“Aside from helping farmers, they can ensure that nutritious food will be given to their frontliners and to the constituents of their respective localities,” Mr. So said.

According to SINAG, the farmgate price for chicken is now at around P40-P50 per kilogram, against the production cost of P70-P75.

The group also said backyard vegetable farmers in Benguet and Nueva Ecija have not been able to deliver their produce due to lack of transportation.

“There is much production at this time in our piggeries, chicken, aquaculture and vegetable farms. But if farmers stop producing due to bankruptcy, what will happen to all of us?” Mr. So said.

SINAG also urged foundations providing food for frontliners to buy directly from farmers, adding that many health workers will appreciate it more if the food they receive comes from the farmers themselves.

“Farmers and all food producers at the farm level need to continuously produce food for us, unhampered and unrestricted. But we must also support them so they continue farming,” Mr. So said.

In a statement, Magsasaka Party-List representative Argel Joseph T. Cabatbat also called for LGUs to include farmers’ produce in the relief packs given to their constituents.

He added that LGUs should buy from farmers to keep food from spoiling because it cannot be transported to market. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Yields on gov’t debt drop

By Lourdes O. Pilar
Researcher

YIELDS ON government securities (GS) ended mixed last week after the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) unveiled a series of monetary stimulus to arrest the economic fallout wreaked by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

GS yields, which move opposite to prices, went down by a week-on-week average of eight basis points (bps), according to the PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates as of March 27 published on the Philippine Dealing System’s website.

“The BSP has engaged in limited bond-buying activities to stabilize the yield curve and investor sentiment,” ATRAM Trust Corp. Head of Fixed Income Jose Miguel B. Liboro said in an e-mail interview.

“Additionally, the announcement of additional liquidity via a 200-bp reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut and only short-end issuances from the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) in April reduced the pressure on longer-tenor yields to move higher,” he added.

Last week, the BSP said it will buy P300 billion worth of government bonds, with a maximum repayment period of six months, to support efforts to cushion the pandemic’s impact on the economy.

Also last week, the central bank said it will cut big banks’ RRR by 200 bps to 12% effective today, unleashing additional liquidity of around P180 billion to P200 billion to support the economy battered by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The BSP slashed big banks’ RRR by a total of 400 bps last year. BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno has committed to reduce the RRR to single-digit level by the end of his term in 2023.

The country’s key interest rates now range from 2.75% to 3.75% after a 50-bp cut implemented earlier this month meant to curb a possible economic slowdown due to COVID-19.

Meanwhile, departing from the usual quarterly program, the Treasury also unveiled last week a P190-billion borrowing plan for April focusing on short-ended terms — even reintroducing a 35-day facility — as risk-averse investors stay away from longer-termed securities amid ongoing uncertainties brought about by the pandemic.

Next month’s borrowing plan will consist of P130 billion in Treasury bills (T-bills) and P60 billion in Treasury bonds (T-bonds).

Latest data from the World Health Organization showed that as of March 28, there are around 575,000 confirmed cases and more than 26,000 fatalities across 201 countries.

There are 1,075 COVID-19 cases in the country, with 68 deaths and 35 recoveries, as of the March 28 tally of the Department of Health.

The short end of the yield curve ended mixed after the end of trading last Friday as yields on 91- and 182-day T-bills dropped 0.6 bps and 3.5 bps, respectively, to 3.193% and 3.387%, while 364-day paper rose 8.2 bps to 3.803%.

At the belly, yields on two- and three-year T-bonds climbed 13.3 bps (4.481%) and 3.2 bps (4.568%). On the other hand, rates of the three-, four-, five-, and seven-year T-bonds decreased by 8.4 bps (4.597%), 18.3 bps (4.614%), and 21.6 bps (4.684%), respectively.

The long end of the curve declined as 10-, 20-, and 25-year debt dropped 7.5 bps (4.865%), 25.5 bps (5.036%), and 26.8 bps (5.033%), respectively.

For this week, Mr. Liboro sees yields to be “stabilized” from recent actions from BSP and BTr.

“We expect these actions to help cap further sell-offs in the market. While we see a lot of value at current levels, yields could consolidate over the short-term as market sentiment remains cautious amid lower trading interest and persisting negative sentiment on the COVID-19 virus,” he said.

Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc., expects a “downward pressure may continue” as the virus spread continues.

“The fiscal measures by the government should provide some support on yields once it is actually rolled out completely,” he said.

The government rolled out an initial P27.1-billion economic stimulus package to help distressed sectors while a recently signed stimulus package law allows the government to realign as much as P275 billion from the national budget and make off-budget outlays for COVID-19 relief measures.

Preliminary estimates from the National Economic and Development Authority showed that the Philippine economy might contract this year by as much as 0.6% due to the fallout brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Palay farmgate prices rise in mid-March

THE average farmgate price of palay, or unmilled rice, rose 0.1% week-on-week to P16.26 per kilogram in the second week of March, with prices down 14.2% year-on-year, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

In its weekly update on palay, rice, and corn prices, the PSA said that both the average wholesale and retail price of well-milled rice (WMR) rose 0.1% week-on-week to P37.09 and P41.14, respectively.

The average wholesale price of regular-milled rice (RMR) rose 0.3% week-on-week to P32.83, while the retail price rose 0.6% to P36.23.

The average farmgate price of yellow corn grain rose 0.5% week-on-week to P12.13.

The average wholesale price of yellow corn grain rose 1.3% to P21.48 per kg while the average retail price was flat at P25 per kg.

The farmgate price of white corn grain fell 0.3% week-on-week to P13.27.

The average wholesale price of white corn grain rose 0.3% week-on-week to P15.33 while the average retail price increased 0.2% to P26.90.

The PSA released two weeks’ worth of data in its latest report. In the first week of March, the average farmgate price of palay rose 0.4% to P16.25. Year-on-year, the price declined 14.6%. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

LVMH says revenue has dropped as much as 20% due to coronavirus

LVMH said revenue for the last quarter dropped 10% to 20%, compared with the same period last year, as its luxury brands temporarily closed stores and shoppers tightened their wallets due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The French luxury-goods maker will disclose first-quarter results on April 16. The company said the outbreak’s full impact “cannot be accurately calculated at this time.”

“In a particularly uncertain environment, the group will maintain a strategy focused on the preservation of the value of its brands,” the company said in a statement Friday.

Several of LVMH’s peers may end up hit equally hard, or worse. Kering SA, which owns labels such as Gucci and Saint Laurent, said last Friday that its first-quarter comparable sales will fall about 15%. Burberry Group Plc. said on March 19 that its comparable retail sales were down between 40% and 50% over the prior six weeks.

Luxury goods struggled to find their footing even during the outbreak’s early days at the beginning of the year, when it spread across China. High-end labels like Louis Vuitton, Celine and Fendi rely on Chinese shoppers to spend both at home and as tourists abroad.

As the crisis grew into a pandemic, upscale boutiques shut thousands of stores around the world, though shopping is starting to pick up once more in certain markets.

Though retailers closed stores by the thousands in the U.S. this month, they’ve managed to reopen some locations in China as shutdown measures are lifted. — Bloomberg

D&L Industries sets aside P100M aid in response to virus

D&L INDUSTRIES, Inc. is allocating P100 million to give out as financial assistance to employees and donations to institutions combating the spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

In a statement over the weekend, the listed manufacturer said the new pledge comes on top of its previously announced commitment to pay employees their full salaries for the period of the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine.

“Despite the various challenges due to the (quarantine), our plants remain operational… This is only possible as our people remain committed in fulfilling their various roles in the organization. Likewise, we are equally committed in taking care of them and providing adequate assistance when they are most vulnerable,” D&L President and Chief Executive Officer Alvin D. Lao was quoted as saying.

The company is also giving added compensation to rank and file employees that are part of its skeletal workforce. A 30% increase in regular rate, 60% increase in overtime rate, meal stubs, shelter and household disinfecting chemicals will be given to them.

Externally, D&L’s Lao Foundation, Inc. donated P15,000 financial assistance to 99 families where the company’s operations are based. It also allocated P5 million to give to institutions in need, on top of personal protective equipment and sanitation chemicals distributed to various hospitals.

“[W]e will remain steadfast in our genuine commitment to keep our people safe and to fulfill our crucial role in the Philippine manufacturing sector,” Mr. Lao said.

D&L is a manufacturer of customized food ingredients and chemicals used in alcohol, disinfectant sprays and sanitizers. In 2019, the company posted P2.62 billion in net earnings, 18% lower from a year ago due to reduced sales. — Denise A. Valdez

Nissan shows how EVs can help fight air pollution

IN ASIA and Oceania, approximately four billion people — 92% of Asia and the Pacific’s population — are exposed to air pollution levels that pose a significant health risk. This was further highlighted with the February 2020 launch of the world’s largest real-time air quality data bank under the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), indicating that much of the region endures “unhealthy” air-quality levels. Air pollution is now globally the fifth leading cause of death among all health risks, with nine percent of deaths attributed to it.

To address this as part of its commitment to reduce CO2 emissions, Nissan, which made the world’s first mass-production electric vehicle Leaf, collected analysis of the impact the vehicle has had worldwide since its 2010 debut. At the same time, there is “compelling data” to demonstrate how electric mobility can be part of solutions to address air pollution levels.

Studies show that just one electric vehicle (EV) can save 4.6 metric tons of greenhouse gases each year — equivalent to planting 209 trees.

More than 460,000 Nissan Leaf owners throughout the world have jointly contributed to saving around 2.1 million metric tons of CO2. More than 81 million trees are needed to process that much CO2 in a year. Over 13 billion emission-free kilometers have been driven by Leaf owners — the distance of driving to the moon more than 33,800 times.

With a 55% reduction in current CO2 emissions needed by 2030 to halt global warming, Nissan says that 2020 could be the “catalyst year” of change for consumers making choices, like switching to EVs, to have a direct impact on air pollution. For more information, visit https://asia.nissannews.com/en/ElectricMobility.

INFOGRAPHIC COURTESY OF NISSAN PHILIPPINES

Peso seen weakening on coronavirus outbreak

THE PESO may weaken against the dollar this week, with more infections of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) reported around the world and amid market volatility due to fears of the outbreak’s economic impact.

The local unit ended trading at P51 versus the dollar on Friday, stronger by seven centavos from its Thursday close of P51.07, according to data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

However, it weakened by three centavos from its P50.97-per-dollar close on March 20.

The peso strengthened on the back of better market sentiment due to the stimulus package in the US, an analyst said.

“Market risk appetite (improved) in view of the passage of the $2-trillion US stimulus package and after Federal Reserve Chairman (Jerome J.) Powell reassured that the Fed will never run out of ammunition in infusing liquidity,” Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a text message.

Last week, the US Senate passed a law which will allot $2 trillion in stimulus package for those unemployed workers as well as industries that will be hit by the pandemic, according to Reuters.

Meanwhile, Mr. Powell said Thursday that the Fed will do whatever possible to support a vigorous rebound in the US economy.

Early last week, the Fed committed to purchase corporate bonds and backstop direct loans to companies. It said that it will also soon roll out a program to provide credit line for small and medium-sized businesses.

For his part, UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said currency volatility is still being observed amid the ongoing pandemic.

“The peso slightly strengthened but the volatility is expected to continue amid the struggles against the COVID-19 pandemic,” he said in a text message.

For this week, Mr. Asuncion said currency markets will continue to track developments related to COVID-19.

“Downward pressure may be expected [this] week as the number of COVID-19 infections worldwide continue to rise and amid lingering uncertainty to global markets,” Mr. Asuncion said.

Infections in the Philippines climbed to 1,075 as of Saturday afternoon, according to the Department of Health. Deaths also rose to 68, while 35 patients have recovered.

Aside from the rise in infections, markets will monitor the government’s response to the pandemic, according to RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort.

“Major catalysts would be any proposed stimulus to fight risks related to COVID-19, especially in terms of increasing government spending,” Mr. Ricafort said.

Last week, Republic Act No. 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act was signed into law, allowing the government to realign as much as P275 billion for its emergency subsidy program to those affected by the pandemic. Prior to this, an initial P27.1-billion stimulus program had already been rolled out by economic managers to aid affected sectors.

UnionBank’s Mr. Asuncion sees the peso moving around the P50.80 to P51.20 while RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast range of P50.75 to P51.15. — L.W.T. Noble with Reuters