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Peso sinks on renewed US-China tensions

THE PESO dropped further against the dollar on Friday as the market’s risk appetite waned following escalating trade tensions between China and the United States.

The local unit ended the week at P51.43 versus the greenback, down 23 centavos from its P51.20-per-dollar finish on Thursday.

The peso traded weaker the whole day, opening the session at P51.32 per dollar. It slipped to as low as P51.48, while its intraday high stood at P51.27 against the US currency.

Trading volume climbed to $1.268 billion from the $984.36 million the changed hands the previous day.

“The peso weakened after US President Donald Trump imposed new 10% tariffs on $300 billion worth of Chinese goods effective Sept. 1, 2019,” a trader said in an email.

Mr. Trump announced on Twitter he will impose another round of tariffs on Chinese goods, virtually taxing all of China’s imports to the US.

“We thought we had a deal with China three months ago, but sadly, China decided to re-negotiate the deal prior to signing. More recently, China agreed to…buy agricultural product from the US in large quantities but did not do so,” Mr. Trump said in a series of tweets, noting that trade negotiations will still push through.

Mr. Trump met with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on the sidelines of G20 summit in Osaka, Japan in late June wherein both countries agreed to resume trade talks.

The new round of tariffs comes after the world’s two biggest economies met in Shanghai earlier this week, which yielded no result.

In response, China’s spokesperson at the foreign ministry Hua Chunying said Beijing would take retaliatory actions if Washington is committed to slap more tariffs, Reuters reported.

“(The renewed trade tensions) triggered a risk off sentiment in the market. There was already risk off sentiment throughout the day, but it just added more fuel to the flame,” another trader said. — K.A.N. Vidal

Milestone Ayala North Exchange is the new gateway to Makati CBD

Ayala Land, Inc. (ALI) marked yet another milestone as it officially opened the Ayala North Exchange — the newest gateway to the Makati central business district. Ayala North Exchange is a signature mixed-use development seen to revitalize and strengthen Makati’s position as the premier business capital of the Philippines.

Located along the northern portion of Ayala Avenue, Ayala North Exchange is a twin tower, mixed-use development with a combined gross leasable area of approximately 96,000 square meters.

The two office towers stand above a three-level retail podium with approximately 8,000 square meters of restaurants and shopping spaces. Located in one office tower is the Seda Residences Makati, the first serviced apartment and the 10th property in the Philippines under the Seda Hotels brand.

Ayala North Exchange is a mixed-used development with offices, a retail podium and serviced apartments by Seda.

The development also features a 2,600-square-meter civic space connected to Makati’s elevated walkway for increased connectivity and pedestrian mobility.

The Ayala North Exchange is one of the latest additions to the portfolio of AyalaLand Offices, the country’s leader in the office real estate sector with over 1.1 million square meters of leasable space in key cities nationwide. AyalaLand Offices offers a comprehensive line of prime office real estate solutions found in strategic sites with large populations or central business districts.

“We take into account the varying needs of our clientele, among whom are leading multinational corporations and BPOs, and develop our properties according to global standards complemented by amenities and reliable facilities management,” said Ayala Land Offices Head Carol Mills.

Office properties form a significant part of ALI’s growth strategy as the company recently announced plans to take part in Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) with prime commercial office assets in Makati.

PHL factory gain strongest in 6 months

BUSINESS for manufacturers marked July with the strongest improvement in six months — though still described as “moderate” — on the back of sales and job growth, according to results of the latest survey IHS Markit conducted for Nikkei, Inc., keeping the country in third place behind Myanmar and Vietnam among seven tracked Southeast Asian economies.

The IHS Markit Philippines Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) logged 52.1 in July compared to June’s 51.3 and the year-ago 50.9, marking the strongest improvement in six months or the 52.3 recorded in January.

ASEAN manufacturing purchasing managers’ index, July (2019)

A PMI reading above 50 indicates improvement in business conditions from the preceding month, while a score below that point signals deterioration.

The manufacturing PMI consists of five sub-indices, with new orders having the heaviest weight at 30%, followed by output with 25%, employment with 20%, suppliers’ delivery times with 15% and stocks of purchases with 10%.

“New order growth was up notably in July, easing some worries in recent months that the manufacturing environment was facing a slowdown,” IHS Markit Economist David Owen said in a press statement.

“Output… increased at a solid rate, albeit one that was weaker-than-average for the Filipino goods-producing sector.”

The press release noted that manufacturers faced higher demand, reflecting customers’ higher spending power. Noting that household consumption contributes about 70% to national output, the Philippine government cut personal income tax rates in January last year — while increasing or adding levies on several goods and services — in hopes of spurring spending.

According to the statement, “the increase in demand was largely domestic,” as new export orders marked the second successive monthly reduction. “A number of firms reported a lack of orders from foreign clients, although the overall rate of decline was slightly softer than in June,” the press release read.

Production “increased solidly,” though at a “softer” pace than in June.

Employment increased, marking the first rise in jobs since February. “Companies often expanded their work forces to meet higher output requirements, whereas others saw employment reduced due to resignations and decreased hiring…” the statement read.

Selling prices rose at the softest rate in over two years, with only three percent of respondents reporting an uptick.

Input cost inflation was also “soft” despite picking up “marginally” from June, as a stronger peso helped ease input costs.

“Despite the sudden uplift in demand, price pressures appeared unaffected. Input prices rose at only a modest pace, with an improvement in the exchange rate with the US dollar helping to ease the impact of higher raw material prices. This fed through into the softest increase in selling prices at manufacturers since June 2017. Overall, this should help to maintain strong sales growth if demand conditions remain elevated,” Mr. Owen said.

In the face of strong output and sales growth, manufacturers remained bullish on future prospects.

Regionwide, the Philippines remained third behind Myanmar (52.9 from 53 in June) and Vietnam (52.6 from 52.5) for the second straight month, but was still stronger than Southeast Asia’s 49.5 reading in July that was down from the preceding month’s 49.7.

Mr. Owen noted that the region’s “rate of deterioration was the steepest in two years, driven by lower output and employment.”

“Firms were led to reduce production levels on the back of only marginal increases in new orders in recent months.” — BML

ASEAN manufacturing purchasing managers’ index, July (2019)

BUSINESS for manufacturers marked July with the strongest improvement in six months — though still described as “moderate” — on the back of sales and job growth, according to results of the latest survey IHS Markit conducted for Nikkei, Inc., keeping the country in third place behind Myanmar and Vietnam among seven tracked Southeast Asian economies. Read the full story.

ASEAN manufacturing purchasing managers’ index, July (2019)

Manufacturing pain spreads through Asia; more stimulus seen

HONG KONG — Asian factory activity contracted further in July, fueling worries that a Sino-US trade war and a slowdown in China could tilt the world towards a global recession, which central banks will have to fight with depleted ammunition.

Purchasing Managers’ Indexes (PMI) showed manufacturing activity contracting in China for a second consecutive month, while export driven economies in North Asia — Japan, South Korea and Taiwan — have been in pain for longer.

Among the emerging market economies of Southeast Asia, Indonesia registered a contraction, but others have benefited from a redirection of trade flows away from China.

Data later in the day is likely to show European manufacturing shrinking as well, while US factories are expected to maintain a modest pace of expansion.

The Federal Reserve cut interest rates on Wednesday, but, reflecting the relative strength of the US economy, Chairman Jerome Powell said the move may not be the start of a lengthy easing campaign. He signalled, however, that the Fed could cut further.

The Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank have flagged their readiness to ease policy in the past week, despite having far less room than the Fed to do so.

“The numbers have been bad for a couple of months already,” said Irene Cheung, Asia strategist at ANZ.

“Things seem to be stabilizing a little bit, but they’re not recovering, the trade tensions are still there. We don’t see good news on the growth front yet. We expect (more) interest rate cuts in the region.”

ASIA’S CENTER OF GRAVITY
In China, Asia’s economic center of gravity, the Caixin/Markit Manufacturing PMI for July rose to 49.9 from 49.4 in June, remaining below the neutral 50-mark dividing expansion from contraction on a monthly basis.

The readings were largely in line with an official gauge that showed factory activity last month shrank at a slower-than-expected pace.

Analysts said the numbers reflected some impact of recent stimulus by Chinese authorities, but the manufacturing outlook remained a source of concern as a trade conflict with the United States was expected to drag on.

China’s manufacturing sector may have lost 5 million jobs over the last 12 months, including possibly as many as 1.8-1.9 million due to the trade war, investment bank China International Capital Corp. said in a report last month.

US and Chinese negotiators ended a brief round of trade talks on Wednesday with little sign of progress and agreed to meet again in September.

The White House and China’s Commerce Ministry each described the meetings in Shanghai as constructive, but neither announced any agreements or goodwill gestures that might have cleared the path to more substantive future talks.

The International Monetary Fund has warned that the trade dispute will shave 0.2% off global output.

Many economists say any escalation could lead to a global recession.

“We expect that this downward trend in manufacturing will continue in 2019 until the trade and technology negotiations make some progress,” said Iris Pang, Greater China economist at ING.

While more stimulus from Chinese policy makers is expected down the line, the People’s Bank of China gave no sign of whether it will immediately follow the Federal Reserve’s rate cut, as it has done on occasion.

TRADE WAR FALLOUT
Elsewhere in Asia, Japanese manufacturing deteriorated for a third month in July, while South Korea’s factory activity contracted further with new export orders shrinking at its fastest pace in nearly six years.

South Korea’s exports, a bellwether for global trade, tumbled for an eighth straight month in July as an escalating political and economic dispute with neighboring Japan painted an increasingly gloomy picture for Asia’s fourth-largest economy.

Early in July, Japan tightened restrictions on exports to South Korea of key materials used to make memory chips and display panels. Economists say the curbs could shave 0.4 percentage point off South Korea’s gross domestic product this year.

In Taiwan, the streak of contraction reached its 10th month, while Indonesia saw its first below-50 number in six months.

Vietnam, Philippines and Thailand saw mildly positive growth.

In India, where the economy relies more on domestic demand, manufacturing growth accelerated slightly.

In Hong Kong, the central bank cut its base rate for the first time in a decade, as its currency peg to the US dollar forces the monetary authority to move in lock-step with the Fed.

The financial hub’s economy grew by a less than expected 0.6% in the second quarter from a year earlier, mainly affected by slower global trade. An increasingly violent cycle of pro-democracy protests in the Chinese-ruled city, however, is beginning to take a heavy toll on retail and tourism and could bring the economy to a halt in coming quarters.

“Eight consecutive weeks of mass protests since early June have already brought immediate disruption to inbound tourist arrivals, retails sales and the property market,” BofA Merrill Lynch analysts said in a note. “We expect to see more evidence of adverse impact in the third quarter,” they said, adding they revised their full-year growth forecasts to 0.8% in 2019 and 0.7% in 2020, from previous estimates of 2.2% and 2.7%, respectively. — Reuters

ASEAN manufacturing purchasing managers’ index, July (2019)

Competition body speeds up PPP project checks

THE PHILIPPINE Competition Commission (PCC) has streamlined merger rules for solicited projects under public-private partnership (PPP), which is one of the financing modes for major infrastructure development.

Under PCC Memorandum Circular No. 19001, signed on July 2 and published on Thursday in newspapers, the watchdog now enables prospective private sector partners in PPP projects to meet the requirements of Republic Act No. 10667, or the Philippine Competition Act, and RA 6957, as amended by RA 7718 or the build-operate-transfer law, early on in the project phase. The circular takes effect on Aug. 16.

“This track enables the PCC to inject the necessary competition safeguards early on and pave the way for faster roll-out of these priority infrastructure projects,” a PCC statement quoted its chairman, Arsenio M. Balisacan, as saying. “The measure embodies efficiency of processes by the implementing agency, the PPP Center and the PCC, while remaining steadfast to our respective mandates.”

The circular provides that agencies implementing PPP projects may seek exemption “on behalf of their solicited projects’ prospective bidders” from compulsory notification to the PCC about their joint ventures. Such applications should be made prior to project development stage.

Hence, early on, the PCC can provide inputs on solicited projects’ terms of reference, as well as evaluate pre-qualification and bidding documents, draft PPP contracts and other documents.

Winning bidders are issued a Certificate of Project Exemption from the PCC.

Hence, the competition watchdog’s involvement “will be front loaded prior to bidding to address competition concerns that may arise from the project, its bidding process and bidders,” the PCC said in its statement.

“In effect, the review already screens firms for competition concerns and removes the prospect of delays,” it added. “This has the dual effect of allowing early detection of potential competition concerns and facilitation of delivery of PPP projects.” — DAV

SEC issues more rules for smaller corporations

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) logo

THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission (SEC) will now allow at least two people to form a corporation, in line with amendments in Republic Act No. 11232, otherwise known as the Revised Corporation Code.

According to Memorandum Circular No. 16 posted on the commission’s Web site, two or more persons, but not more than 15, may organize themselves as a corporation. This is opposed to the old corporation code, or Batas Pambansa Blg. 68, which allowed a group of not less than five but not more than 15 to form a company.

Incorporators are defined as “those stockholders or members mentioned in the Articles of Incorporation as originally forming and composing the corporation, and who are signatories thereof.”

The SEC noted that only one-person corporations (OPC) may have a single stockholder and a sole director. Such entities must comply with separate guidelines for OPCs.

“The guidelines were released for uniformity of interpretation of the Revised Corporation Code,” Armando A. Pan, SEC officer-in-charge for the Office of the Commission Secretary said in a text message when asked for an explanation.

Section 3 of the circular outlines the qualifications of incorporators, stating that each incorporator of a stock corporation “must own, or be a subscriber to, at least one share of the capital stock.”

Meanwhile, each incorporator of a nonstock corporation must be a member of the corporation.

Incorporators must also be natural persons of legal age, and must be a signatory to the articles of incorporation or bylaws.

Partnerships that would like to register as incorporators are required to submit a partners’ affidavit signed by all partners. This should indicate that they have authorized the partnership to invest in the corporation about to be formed.

Domestic corporations or associations are allowed to become incorporators, as long as they have been approved by a majority of the board of directors or trustees, and ratified by stockholders representing at least two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock.

For foreign corporations, a copy of a document such as a board resolution, director’s certificate, secretary’s certificate, or its equivalent, must be authenticated by a Philippine Consulate. This will give the foreign entity authority to invest in the corporation being formed.

Section 7 covers requirements for signatories of a corporation’s articles of incorporation.

The corporation must also specify the taxpayer identification number (TIN) of its principal.

“No application for incorporation shall be accepted unless the registration documents reflect the TIN or passport number of all its foreign investors other than foreign corporations which have not yet been issued a TIN,” according to the rules.

All foreign investors must secure a TIN upon incorporation, which should be included in all documents filed with the SEC thereafter. Documents with no TIN from foreign investors will not be accepted.

In addition, banks, banking and quasi-banking institutions, preneed, insurance and trust companies, non-stock savings and loan associations, pawnshops, and other financial intermediaries must obtain a favorable recommendation from the appropriate government agency for their articles of incorporation to be approved. — ABF

Philex seeking partners for Silangan

PHILEX Mining Corp. is looking for partners for the long-delayed Silangan mine project, which it hopes to begin operations by mid-2022.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, Philex said it has completed the definitive feasibility study for the first phase of the mine site in Surigao del Norte.

The company said the study showed significantly higher mineral resource estimates of 571 million tons for the Boyongan, Bayugo and Kalayaan ore deposits of the Silangan mine, 43% higher than the previously declared level of 398 million tons in 2011.

Philex said it is allocating $750 million for the development of the Boyongan deposit, which is the first phase of the project. To raise funds for the project, it has appointed JPMorgan for equity investment and Japan’s Mizuho for project financing.

The Silangan project was originally set to begin production in 2018, but was affected by the government’s ban on new open-pit mining in 2017.

“I think sometime in second quarter next year, financing for the project will be closed. However, the board decided that the preliminary works, the design of the plant, certain pre-construction work, the board authorized that starting this month, capex of up to $14 million to get the project construction started. Actual construction work will start sometime middle of next year,” Philex Mining Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan said during a briefing on Thursday.

The development of Boyongan is expected to take two and a half years, with commercial production to begin by the second half of 2022.

“The first phase of the Boyongan deposit has an initial estimated mine life of 22 years. For this initial stage, Silangan is expected to yield high grade mineable ore grades of 0.63% for copper and 1.20 grams per tonne for gold,” Philex said, adding it will adopt underground sub-level cave mining for ore extraction.

For the second phase, which involves the Bayugo deposit, will undergo preliminary feasibility study for underground sub-level cave mining within the year.

“Bayugo is expected to be mine-ready as early as the fifth year from the start of Boyongan’s commercial operations. The remaining substantial mineral resource and inventory including Kalayaan and the remnants of Boyongan will be subjected to future studies,” Philex said.

For the first half, Philex’s attributable income dropped by 29% to P391.39 million, from P551.66 million a year ago. It recorded a core net loss of P19.035 million during the first six months of 2019, versus a core net income of P646.31 million a year ago.

Philex reported its attributable net income stood at P184.89 million during the second quarter, but did not provide comparable figures.

“The Company is optimistic that global interest for mineral products will stay robust in the long-term with consistent growth from Asia particularly from China, led by its power and infrastructure sectors. Also, notable advancements in electric vehicle technology and renewable energy will also serve as demand catalysts to drive usage for copper materials,” Philex said.

Philex Mining is one of the three local units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the two other being PLDT, Inc. and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. Hastings Holdings, Inc. — a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. — maintains interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — V.M.P.Galang

Woodstock 50 is off

THE ORGANIZERS of the Woodstock 50th-anniversary festival canceled the event a week after its relocation to Maryland led many of the acts to back out.

“We are saddened that a series of unforeseen setbacks has made it impossible to put on the festival we imagined,” the group said Wednesday in a statement.

The organizers ran up against daunting obstacles. They scrambled to save the festival after their main financier withdrew and local officials in upstate New York refused to approve a permit. Attempts to move it to different spots in the state — home of the original 1969 concert — also failed.

They settled last week on Aug. 16 through Aug. 18 at the Merriweather Post Pavilion, an outdoor amphitheater in Columbia, Maryland. The venue could accommodate about 32,000 people.

But changing locations meant artists including Jay-Z, Miley Cyrus and Halsey were no longer obligated to perform.

“Due to conflicting radius issues in the D.C. area many acts were unable to participate and others passed for their own reasons,” the group said.

The original festival attracted hundreds of thousands of people to a dairy farm in Bethel, New York. A who’s who of rock stars performed, including the Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, the Who and Jimi Hendrix. A logistical disaster, it became synonymous with the hippie movement. — Bloomberg

BPI net earnings climb 47% in the 2nd quarter

BANK OF THE Philippine Islands (BPI) reported higher net earnings in the second quarter on the back of strong interest and non-interest income growth.

In a regulatory filing Thursday, the Ayala-led lender said it posted a P7.01-billion net income in the April-June period, surging by 46.8% from the comparable year-ago period.

This brought BPI’s bottom line for the first semester to P13.74 billion, up 24.6% from the P11.03 billion booked in the same period last year.

The bank’s total revenues for the first half climbed 23.3% to P45.9 billion, brought by the 24.1% year-on-year growth in net interest income, which reached P32.36 billion.

Total loans reached P1.35 trillion as of end-June, 10.8% higher from P1.22 trillion logged last year. This was boosted by corporate and consumer loans, which grew 11.6% and 10.3%, respectively.

BPI noted that within the consumer segment, credit card loans continued to grow 25.8% in the first half.

Non-performing loans ratio stood at 1.86%, flat from end-2018 level.

On the funding side, total deposits climbed eight percent to reach P1.66 trillion in the first semester. Its current and savings account ratio stood at 68.3%, while loan-to-deposit ratio was at 81.7%.

Meanwhile, non-interest income reached P13.54 billion in the first half, up 21.5% from the comparative year-ago period, on the back of increases in securities trading gains and fee-based income.

BPI’s securities position was at P404.22 billion, up by 33.4% from last year’s level. Fees, commissions and other income climbed 16.1%, brought by credit cards, deposit products, insurance, transaction banking, leasing, retail loans and electronic channels.

Operating expenses stood at P24.28 billion in the January-June period, up 14.4% year-on-year due to the bank’s continued investments in technology, rollout of new microfinance branches, and one-time manpower expenses related to collective bargaining agreements.

The lender’s cost-to-income ratio stood at 52.9% for the first half, coming from 57% in the same period last year.

Provision for loan losses was at P3.48 billion, including specific reserves for its exposure to Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction (HHIC) Philippines.

This brought BPI’s loss coverage ratio to 100.7%.

BPI is one of five domestic banks — with the others being the Land Bank of the Philippines, BDO Unibank, Inc., Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. and Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. — that have exposure to the troubled HHIC-Philippines at $52 million.

“Total equity reached P259.88 billion, providing a strong capital position to deliver future growth,” BPI said.

The bank’s common equity Tier 1 ratio stood at 15.55%, while capital adequacy ratio was at 16.44%. Overall, assets grew 12.3% to P2.13 trillion from the P1.9 trillion booked as of June 2018. Return on assets was at 1.34%.

BPI shares closed at P91.50 apiece on Thursday, up P1.50 or 1.67%. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

MPIC income drops 10% in 2nd quarter

By Arra B. Francia, Senior Reporter

EARNINGS of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) went down by 9.8% in the second quarter of 2019, as the infrastructure conglomerate incurred foreign exchange losses in the period.

MPIC Chief Finance Officer David J. Nicol said the company recorded a net profit of P4.6 billion in the second quarter of 2019, lower than the P5.1 billion it posted in the same period a year ago.

“The reason for the difference is strangely compared to most companies here when the peso was weakening, we were getting foreign exchange gains. And now that the peso has turned around, on the foreign currency deposit of Meralco (Manila Electric Co.) and some of associates outside the country, that has conduced that,” Mr. Nicol said in a press briefing in Makati Thursday.

“So we went from a gain last year to a translation loss this year.”

With this, MPIC’s net income for the first half reached P12.799 billion, three percent lower than the P13.259 million seen in the same period a year ago. This came amid an 11% uptick in operating revenues to P44.62 billion.

MPIC President and Chief Executive Officer Jose Ma. K. Lim noted that the growth of the company has been affected by financing costs for its continuous expansion.

“Because we are heavily investing in tollways and then we’re starting construction of LRT-1 (Light Rail Transit Line 1 Cavite extension). So these are leading to rising financing costs,” Mr. Lim said.

Asked when it expects to turn around its earnings performance, Mr. Lim said results are “somewhat plateauing now,” adding that the company would have to wait until the new investments generate revenues.

MPIC’s power business accounted for P6.1 billion of core net income in the first half, four percent higher year on year — thanks to higher energy sales in Meralco, despite the slowdown in Global Business Power Corp.’s contribution.

For Meralco alone, the higher temperatures during summer and contributions from new connections led to a 10% increase in total revenues to P165 billion.

The tollroads business through Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) generated P2.4 billion in core profit, six percent higher year on year, following increased traffic from its domestic roads. Average daily vehicle entries for three of its tollways systems, including the North Luzon Expressway, Cavite Expressway, and Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway, firmed up eight percent.

In contrast, toll roads outside the Philippines declined by eight percent, due to lower traffic volumes in Bangkok and Indonesia due to construction and road integration in their concession areas.

Meanwhile, Maynilad Water Services, Inc grew its core net income by nine percent in the first half to P4.6 billion, driven by an 11% uptick in revenues to P12.2 billion. The west zone concessionaire benefited from a three percent increase in volumes, alongside inflation-linked tariff increases in October 2018 and last January.

Metro Pacific Hospital Holdings, Inc. (MPHHI) also reported a 21% increase in core income for the period, as both outpatient visits and inpatient admissions improved by 10% and six percent, respectively.

MPIC’s rail business through Light Rail Manila Corp. (LRMC) contributed P168 million to its core income, although the amount is fully reinvested to improve train operations. LRMC operates and maintains LRT-1, and is undertaking the project extending the existing train line from Baclaran to Bacoor, Cavite.

The logistics group under Metropac Movers, Inc. has yet to contribute to the company’s core net income, as the company focuses on establishing its footprint in the distribution center space first.

MPIC is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being PLDT, Inc. and Philex Mining Corp. Hastings Holdings, Inc. — a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. —maintains interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

Shares in MPIC slipped 0.42% or two centavos to close at P4.78 each at the stock exchange on Thursday.

Rak on!

By Giselle P. Kasilag

Theater Review
Rak of Aegis
Presented by PETA
Ongoing until Sept. 29
PETA Theater Center, #5 Eymard Drive,
New Manila, QC

BARANGAY VENEZIA is still underwater three months after the last typhoon hit. It has affected every aspect of their lives. The children and the elderly are getting sick. Their livelihood has been threatened. The simple act of moving from one street to the next would require a boat ride. Its residents, frustrated by the inaction of the local government, realized that the massive flooding began only after a subdivision for the affluent was built near their impoverished community.

Tired of their situation, Aileen (Shaira Opsimar) came up with a plan to help her family rise from poverty while making her dream to become a famous singer come true. She would record a video singing “Basang-basa sa Ulan” in the midst of the floodwaters and upload it on YouTube. With luck, she would garner enough likes that would bring it to the attention of US television host Ellen De Generes. This, she hoped, would catapult her to global fame and allow her to give her parents the creature comforts that they deserve.

(A bit of trivia: the most popular Aegis song, and one which is the heart of the musical, “Basang-Basa sa Ulan” is not an Aegis original. It was first sung by Nonoy Zuñiga.)

After overcoming some glitches, it seemed that Aileen’s plan was working. Or maybe it was working too well, sparking a fresh flood of problems from her newfound fame.

One of the Philippine Educational Theater Association’s (PETA) most successful original musicals, Rak of Aegis has literally and figuratively taken the country by storm since its first run in 2014. While using the very popular music of The Aegis Band may have contributed to its popularity, the longevity of the musical lies in the storytelling itself — creatively weaving the well-chosen songs into the narrative. There is a healthy balance of how the songs are used — some in ways that are predictable and others that are very unexpected. More importantly, the writers knew when to stop and walk away. They did not succumb to the “jukebox musical” curse of packing in every single hit song though having no purpose in the story.

While continuously updating the material to reflect the times, the performance of Rak of Aegis remained consistent. The ensemble in the latest iteration was clearly a well-oiled machine — each one knowing exactly what they and their fellow performers are doing at any moment in the show. The vocal arrangement was well-crafted and the voices of all the performers blended wonderfully — even the guest cast members performing only for special shows.

What is most refreshing to note about Rak of Aegis is the creative use of both simple and complex technology to mount the show. The flood was clearly a major challenge. They have actual water on the set (water on the ground for the flood and falling from the ceiling for the rain) which could result in hefty lawsuits had it not been done right. They did it right, complete with assurances to the audience that the water is clean and chlorinated. On top of that, the plants around the set were chosen to ward off mosquitoes and other critters.

Without spoiling the surprise, the use of bubbles, sunflowers, lighted umbrellas, and an actual boat all add to the drama, proving that simple solutions can be very effective when used creatively.

The central character of the show — Aileen — was not an easy character to present. She is fresh-faced, a bit naïve, idealistic, but has experienced enough hardships in life to drive her to aspire for greatness. Shaira Opsimar delivered all that and more. She would sing through the most difficult notes without breaking a sweat. Her acting was equally on point. One scene that featured her moving in slow motion with boyfriend Kenny (Poppert Bernadas) could be a case study for a theater master class on movement. Her stamina served her well. She was consistent from beginning to end — delivering the same quality of performance show after show.

Pepe Herrera was ideal as the chill “gondola” boatman Tolits. He had perfect comic timing, delivering his lines in a suave but hilarious manner. That, along with his exaggerated reactions, made his presence on stage — with or without lines — very exciting. While many elements of the show were loud, he stood out by projecting an air of calm and quiet — responding with his facial expressions and low voice. Really, he stole the show.

This particular run of Rak of Aegis was produced in partnership with the Organisasyon ng mga Pilipinong Mang-aawit (OPM) and The PhilPop MusicFest Foundation (Philpop). Thus, it included new cast members better known in the concert and recording scene than theater. For this performance, OPM legends Noel Cabangon and Bayang Barrios joined the cast as Kiel and Mary Jane.

While Cabangon was clearly not an actor, it was evident that he made the extra effort to get into character. Kiel is a known hothead — the polar opposite to Cabangon’s very chill nature. Cabangon’s singing has always been very mellow but the arrangement demanded Kiel belt a number of songs. Cabangon rose to the occasion — giving a soulful rendition of the song “Mary Jane” among others, while hitting the high notes. His duet with Bayang Barrios should have been recorded. Based on the enthusiastic response, members of the audience would happily buy a CD.

Barrios, however, had a rough start. Whether it was a case of nerves or not enough rehearsals, she kept forgetting her lines and missing her cues in the beginning of the show. By the second half, she appeared more composed and delivered her lines with no major mishap. She made up for it when singing and her duet with Shaira in the song “Halik” was both funny and mind-blowing.

A stand-out scene for the entire ensemble which also captured the challenge of a divided nation was the rendition of “Gumising Na Tayo.” In this scene, everyone was calling on each other to wake up to the problems of the community — to stand up and do something about the flood. But with many voices come many views. And while everyone is hoping to wake everyone up, they all have different ideas on how to move forward. Furthermore, each one is forcefully defending and pushing for their point of view without truly listening to the other’s perspective. It felt like a Facebook thread come to life.

And there lies the strength of Rak of Aegis. It is the proverbial mirror of Boy Abunda forcing us to look and come to terms with what we see. After the laughter and the singing, the audience is left to contemplate on what they have seen, what they have listened to, and what they did not look at, and what they refused to hear. In the end, this community is just trying its best to survive the hand it was dealt. The call to action, however, is to go beyond survival but to dare to dream and flourish, and do so while “rakking” it out.