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SM Prime sets rates for initial tranche of P100B bond offering

SM Prime Holdings Inc. has set interest rates for the initial tranche of the P100 billion shelf registration approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The approved shelf registration will be offered for a period of three years.

In a statement on Monday, the listed company said the first tranche will consist of peso-denominated Series K and L, 5-year and 7-year fixed rate bonds. The initial offering is P15 billion, with the option to issue additional amounts up to P5 billion.

The interest rates for the Series K and Series L bonds have been set at 4.8643% per annum and 5.0583% per annum, respectively. The bonds are set to be issued on March 25.

“SM Prime is set to establish further integrated property developments in various developing provincial cities in the Philippines. The proceeds from the retail bond will enable the Company to pursue it expansions plans for its core businesses, primarily of its malls projects, which is one of the main growth drivers of the Company,” SM Prime President Jeffrey C. Lim said.

The SM Prime bonds are due in 2025 and 2027. The offering is the company’s seventh peso-denominated retail bonds to the public.

In an earlier statement, the SEC said SM Prime was expected to net P14.79 billion from the issuance, and an added P4.94 billion if the oversubscription option is used.

The Philippine Rating Services Corporation (Philratings) has given the SM Prime’s Series K and L bonds its highest rating of PRS Aaa.

“This rating is given to long-term debt securities with the smallest degree of investment risk. This also indicates SM Prime’s strong capability to meet its financial commitment,” SM Prime’s statement said.

BDO Capital & Investment Corp. and China Bank Capital Corp. were tapped to be the bonds’ joint issue managers.

They also serve as joint lead underwriters and joint bookrunners, along with BPI Capital Corp., EastWest Banking Corp., First Metro Investment Corp., RCBC Capital Corp. and SB Capital Investment Corp.

SM Prime Holdings, Inc.’s earnings for 2019 rose 18% to P38.1 billion after the growth of its mall and residential network nationwide. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Gov’t upsizes Treasury bill award as rates decline amid virus fears

THE GOVERNMENT upsized the volume of Treasury bills (T-bills) it awarded on Monday as rates mostly continued to decline on investors’ continued flight to safe-haven assets.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised P23.2 billion of T-bills yesterday, P3.2 billion bigger than its initial offer of P20 billion as the short-term papers attracted bids worth P60.4 billion.

Broken down, the BTr fully awarded P6 billion in 91-day T-bills out of total tenders worth P12.813 billion. The average rate for three-month papers moved sideways, inching up by one basis point (bp) to 3.013% from 3.003% fetched in the auction last week.

Another P6 billion was raised as planned via the 182-day papers with bids totaling P14.498 billion. The papers were awarded at an average rate of 3.324%, down by 4.1 bps from the previous week’s yield of 3.365%.

For the 364-day T-bills, the BTr upsized the award to P11.2 billion from the original P8-billion program as total tenders for the tenor reached P33.06 billion. The one-year securities fetched a lower average rate of 3.684% against the 3.787% quoted previously.

Prior to the auction, the 91-, 182- and 364-day T-bills fetched rates of 3.093%, 3.402% and 3.777%, respectively at the secondary market on Monday.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said the lower rates for the T-bills were due to the rising concerns over the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) as well as hints of further monetary policy easing from the central bank.

“The narrative continues: because of the lingering adverse impact of the virus outbreak. And then of course we also have the assurance of the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) Governor that the policy easing will continue to be able to support and stimulate the economy,” Ms. De Leon told reporters after the auction.

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said last week that another 25-bp rate cut is possible this year and that he will not “rule out” cuts worth 50-75 bps as the government seeks to cushion the economy from the adverse impact of the COVID-19 outbreak.

The Monetary Board on Feb. 6 trimmed key policy rates by 25 bps, bringing the rate on the BSP’s reverse repurchase, overnight deposit and lending facilities to 3.75%, 3.25% and 4.25%, respectively.

“All these also provided the push to the market in terms of the monetary stance continue to be very accommodating. And there’s still enough liquidity. Of course, everything is still on a wait and see mode also on the impact now that the effect of coronavirus continues to even expand now,” Ms. De Leon said.

Meanwhile, she said they decided to accept more than what was planned for the one-year papers to accommodate lower rates and strong demand, as the tenor was almost four times oversubscribed.

“Under our guidelines we can double it kasi (because) four times ’yung…ng non-competitive (bids) eh. So we accepted, basically because it is also lower than the current rates,” she said.

Sought for comment, a bond trader said the lower rates were within market expectations.

“For the lower rates, one is tracking the movement of global yields na (which are) lower because of generally risk-off sentiment due to the coronavirus,” the trader said via telephone.

Reuters reported that rising concerns on the COVID-19 outbreak drove rates on US government bonds to record lows.

The virus has killed more than 2,900 and infected over 85,000 people across the globe, with majority of which in China.

The World Health Organization recently placed the risk and impact of the new disease, which has yet to have an antidote or vaccine, at a “very high” global level

Today, the Treasury will offer P30 billion via five-year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) with a remaining life of four years and seven months.

“We still that market continues to be liquid and we also expect (lower) rates even for tomorrow’s auction would possible…than the secondary trading levels,” Ms. De Leon said.

She added that the BTr is still monitoring other markets for possible offshore issuances to see if there is still appetite since the virus outbreak has caused risk-off sentiment.

The Treasury has set a P420-billion local borrowing program this quarter, broken down into P240 billion in T-bills and P180 billion via T-bonds.

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

Reality show merges travel, love

DATING CAN be a daunting proposition for many people but not for the people who are in Travel for Love, a reality lifestyle show from TLC Southeast Asia, featuring five “hopefuls” who will try and find love while travelling through the region.

The show, which airs on Fridays until April 17, follows self-professed Filipina “island girl” Samantha who flies to Kuala Lumpur for a change of scenery, while Parisian fashion designer Honey flies to Bohol for an island adventure.

Also part of the show is Violet Lim, founder of Lunch Actually, a 16-year-old dating service which started in Singapore and aims to deal with the complexity in finding love.

“I found Samantha very attractive because she’s a confident woman who is not afraid to speak her mind. She is also very family-oriented, which is a trait that Asians tend to look out for,” Ms. Lim told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview. (See related story)

As a woman whose company has arranged dates for more than 120,000 people, Ms. Lim said that she had a lot of fun being part of the show and seeing the cast make connections and dates.

“I do realize as I’m watching the show is that, on dates, people may do or say certain things that, as a pure third party, we would be wondering ‘huh? Why did he/she do or say that? Or even like, oh, they shouldn’t have done that!’ But I think — what we see for our own clients as well — sometimes they don’t realize they’re doing it. And that’s why date coaching is very valuable as well, because just by having a neutral party point it out, and help them make small tweaks, it can make a huge difference,” she said.

Beyond the show, Ms. Lim pointed out that “every generation has their own challenge when it comes to finding a long-lasting and meaningful relationship.”

“In the past, it might be the challenge of choosing your own partner as your parents insist on an arranged marriage, or, just a decade ago, it would be the opportunity to meet up with enough people. Today, with dating apps, it is no longer difficult to meet up with many potential candidates. The challenge is choosing the right one. And some are also reluctant to settle down and choose when there are so many more choices out there,” she said.

“My advice for singles is — know who you are, love yourself first, know what makes you happy. Do not look for love in search of finding someone who will complete you. You need to be complete first. When you are comfortable in your own skin and you know what you want, it is much easier to know who the right fit is when he or she comes along,” she added.

Travel for Love airs every Friday at 9:25 p.m. until April 17 on TLC (Sky Cable CH 32/Cignal TV CH 64/Destiny Cable CH 62 ). Visit the TLC Facebook page for more information and content. — Z.B. Chua

Euro Towers’ Vivaldi Davao ready for turnover by Q4

DAVAO CITY — Euro Towers International, Inc. is in the finishing stage for its first condominium project here and is eyeing to start the turnover of units by the fourth quarter.

Grade T. de Leon, Vivaldi Residences Davao head of sales, told media after a walk-through of the project Friday that the building is structurally 100% complete.

The 36-storey Vivaldi Residences Davao, the company’s first venture outside Metro Manila, has a combined 883 units of studio, one bedroom, and two bedrooms.

“The start of physical turnover to the buyers is by batches. Usually we turn over the lowest floor and we go up,” she said.

The project is about 80% taken, Ms. De Leon said, and they are aiming to have the remaining residential units as well as parking lots and storage units sold by the end of the year.

“We have a mixed market. They are not just end-users but also investors. We have international clients as well. Among the common reasons for investing is we are very near the Ateneo de Davao University,” she said.

Currently the highest building in the city, Ms. De Leon said Vivaldi Residences has been certified by third party consultants as structurally stable after the series of earthquakes in Mindanao last year.

The company said Vivaldi Residences could withstand earthquakes with magnitude 7 to 8.4 as the structural designers computed for safety factors that are higher than the standards set under the National Structural Code of the Philippines.

“Every earthquake, our structural engineers do inspections and they certified us. If there are cracks, those were only hairline cracks and in terms of structural, we don’t have major damages,” Ms. De Leon said. — Maya M. Padillo

SC ‘sticks to facts’ in Iloilo utility dispute

THE Supreme Court (SC) maintained that it sticks to the facts and the law in coming up with a decision, following a call of a congressman to President Rodrigo R. Duterte to intervene in the case between the Razon-led MORE Power and Electric Corp. and Panay Electric Co. (PECO).

Abang-Lingkod Partylist Rep. Joseph Stephen S. Paduano on Sunday claimed that the High Court is biased to MORE after judges inhibited in the case in the lower court.

SC Public Information Chief Brian Keith F. Hosaka noted that the voting at the Supreme Court is based on the majority votes of the members of the en banc or of a division.

“As I said before in previous interviews, decisions of the Supreme Court are always founded on facts, applicable laws, and current jurisprudence,” he told reporters in a mobile-phone message.

“That is how the Supreme Court acts as mandated by our Constitution, and that is why it will always be objective and independent. In the meantime, let us wait for the final resolution of the pending cases,” Mr. Hosaka added.

Mr. Paduano cited the “unusual inhibitions” by four trial court judges handling the expropriation case.

MORE on Friday started taking over PECO’s assets after the decision of Judge Emerald Requina-Contreras of Regional Trial Court Branch 23.

PECO legal counsel Estrella C. Elamparo, on the other hand, claimed that the takeover was “highly irregularly” due to the pending case at the Supreme Court questioning the constitutionality of some provisions in the franchise or MORE.

MORE was granted franchise to supply power to Iloilo City, which was served by PECO for 95 years. PECO’s last franchise for 25 years was granted in 1994. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Consunjis’ Semirara business reports 21% slump in income

CONSUNJI-LED Semirara Mining and Power Corp. (SMPC) reported a 20.7% decrease in income last year to P9.6 billion after its coal business segment recorded a profit decline while one of its power plants recorded lower sales.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, the integrated energy company said its coal output hit a record high of 15.2 million metric tons (MT) last year after registering a 17% growth.

“The record high production is a combination of higher capacities and good weather condition in the current year,” said SMPC, the vertically integrated power producer that mines its own fuel source, allowing it to generate affordable baseload power.

Coal sales also reached record at 15.6 million MT, up 35% from the previous year. Of last year’s coal sales, 34% were sold to domestic users while 66% are sold overseas.

The company said the decline in domestic sales was largely because of the low off-take of its own power units, namely units 1 and 2 of Sem-Calaca Power Corp. (SCPC), which embarked on a “life-extension” program.

“The depressed coal prices brought down average selling price per MT by 22%. The negative impact of the decline in coal prices was mitigated by the record high coal shipment performance,” the company said.

Gross coal revenue rose by 5% to P32.3 billion, although the coal business segment booked lower profits of P7.4 billion, or down by 23%.

Meanwhile, SCPC registered a 54% decline in gross generation to 1,519 gigawatt-hours (GWh) after its two power generation units underwent a life extension program last year.

Unit 1 was shut down on Dec. 30, 2018 and was back online in September 2019. Unit 2 was shut down in October 2019 to give way for its life-extension program, although even when it was operating, its load was de-rated to 200 megawatts (MW) because of condenser issues.

As a result, SCPC’s sales volume fell by 45% to 1,848 GWh. Last year’s composite average price of energy sold went down by 8%, contributing to the 51% decrease in gross energy sales to P7 billion.

Meanwhile, Southwest Luzon Power Generation Corp. (SLPGC) recorded a 51% rise in gross generation to 2,070 GWh. Its plant availability last year was at 83% with a combined average load of 286 MW.

SLPGC’s two units registered an improvement in its capacity factor at 52% last year. In 2018, its unit 1 was shut down because of an accident that resulted in a crack in the rotor starting March 6. During that year, it was down for around six months.

The unit went back to normal operation on the last week of September 2018, after a successful repair of the rotor.

“The insurance claim for material damage and business interruption was already fully paid in 2019,” SMPC said.

Around 76% of the plant’s saleable energy was traded at the spot market as its power supply agreements expired in 2018. SLPGC benefited from the higher market prices last year.

Volume of energy sold went up by 45% to 1,854 GWh, while gross energy revenue climbed by 61% to P8.1 billion with the “significant increase” in volume sold and higher prices at the wholesale electricity spot market.

SCPC core profits fell 161% to negative P758 million. In contrast, SLPGC’s core profits jumped by 182% to P2.8 billion.

Net of eliminations, the business segments coal, SCPC and SLPGC contributed P6.2 billion, P58.9 million and P3.5 billion, respectively, in 2019.

BPI looking to raise P5B from offering of bonds

BANK OF THE Philippine Islands started offering the bonds on Monday. — BW FILE PHOTO

BANK OF THE Philippine Islands (BPI) is targeting to raise P5 billion from the issue of peso fixed-rate bonds, which will mark its second issuance for the year.

In a filing with the local bourse on Monday, BPI said it has the option to upsize the bond issue.

The bonds will mature in one and a half years and carry an interest 4.05% per annum to be paid quarterly.

“This offering is aligned with our strategy to grow and diversify our funding sources,” BPI Treasurer Dino R. Gasmen said in the statement. “We will continue to explore similar opportunities to further increase our capacity to deliver relevant financial services to more Filipinos.”

BPI started offering the bonds yesterday, with the public offer period set to run until March 17. The listing date is on March 27. The bank, however, said it may adjust this schedule as it sees fit.

Minimum investment for the bonds is at P1 million and in additional increments of P100,000 thereafter.

The joint lead arrangers for the offering are BPI Capital Corp. and ING Bank N.V.-Manila Branch. BPI Capital is likewise the sole selling agent for the bonds while ING is a participating selling agent.

In January, BPI sold P15.3 billion worth of peso-denominated bonds, oversubscribed by more than five times its initial offer of P3 billion.

The bonds have a tenor of two years and carry an interest rate of 4.2423% per annum to be paid quarterly.

The Ayala-led lender’s net income climbed by 24% to P28.8 billion in 2019, backed by bigger revenues.

For the fourth quarter alone, the bank’s net income grew by 11.6% year on year to P6.77 billion.

BPI’s shares ended trading at P75.50 apiece on Monday, up by P1.40 or 1.89% from its previous close. — L.W.T. Noble

One-stop-dating-shop

IN AN AGE where online dating is de rigueur, the “paradox of choice” can create and ruin chances of having a romantic connection, thus there may be a need for more tailored and personal experiences like what Violet Lim and her company, Lunch Actually, offers.

Lunch Actually (lunchactually.com) is a dating company that started in Singapore in 2004 and matches people through lunch dates.

“Lunch dates were short, sweet, and simple — long enough to know someone, yet not too long that it would become awkward. And after all, no matter how busy work gets, everyone needs to have lunch, right?” Ms. Lim told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview.

As a dating service, the company provides its members “personalized service, safety, privacy and it saves you time so you can focus on things that matter to you most.”

“No need to spend hours browsing online profiles, writing introductory messages and making efforts arranging a date when your match may or may not turn up,” she said.

Sixteen years in the business and Lunch Actually is already in five markets — Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, and Thailand — and has arranged “over 120,000 first dates and 4,000 marriages” that they know of, as Ms. Lim pointed out that not all of their matches come back and tell them that they are getting married.

“Our BHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal) which I have taken in to be my personal mission as well, is to create 1 million happy marriages through our work at Lunch Actually!” she said.

MAKINGS OF A MATCHMAKER
Before starting Lunch Actually, Ms. Lim confessed that it wasn’t her childhood dream to become a matchmaker.

“In fact, I was set to have the typical Asian ‘route of success’ of studying hard, going to an excellent university, and then getting a good job,” she said before adding that she read law at the University of Manchester and has a Masters degree in Personnel Management at the London School of Economics.

“I did a summer internship at a law firm, and I was handling a case between this divorced couple. I remember feeling really sad that they could not even manage to communicate [with] each other directly and they had to go through the lawyers to talk about a very simple thing like who’s going to pick up the kids from school. I soon realized that as much as I loved law, it was not my calling,” she said.

Ms. Lim then started working at Citibank as a management associate and was surprised that many of her “eligible and attractive colleagues were single.”

“I would have imagined that people who worked in banking would be extremely eligible and sought after, but yet, my colleagues weren’t even dating — they were all busy and virtually married to their jobs. At the same time, many of my friends who were about the same age as my colleagues were getting engaged, married, or even having kids. I discovered that most of them met actually their future partners at school, or at university. I met my husband Jamie at university as well,” she said.

“It seemed to me that after graduation, the chances of meeting a partner while building up your career were getting slimmer and slimmer, especially when you are working long hours,” Ms. Lim added.

After becoming jaded and disillusioned with her profession and not being able to see herself work the same job for 10 years, Ms. Lim decided to combine her passion for helping others “find their lifelong happiness” and creating a successful business.

Thus, Lunch Actually was born.

DATING OVER LUNCH
While not disregarding the benefits of online dating, as there are many couples who do find each other online, Ms. Lim said that what Lunch Actually offers is a service where members are screened and verified in person before being signed to the service and set up for dates.

“We also help in handpicking the most suitable match for each client so you don’t waste a lot of time and effort screening through unsuitable matches like you would in other online dating services,” she explained.

Lunch Actually, therefore, takes all the complexities out of looking for a date and getting a date without the fear of being catfished (where people pretend to be another person online to scam or trick another person).

“We had a lawyer that joined us, and if you know, lawyers are paid by the hour. Imagine the amount of hours he has been spending on dating apps, and how he could have saved himself not just money, but his time and energy — by working with professionals and experts who have access to the right matches and also able to guide him along the process,” Ms. Lim said.

Dating services, she added, also add to character building as dating consultants can help point out dating blindspots, give advice to “ace your date,” and build dating confidence.

The company handles everything — arranging the date, book the restaurant, etc. — once a match is made and both parties agree to meet. All the members need to do is turn up for the date.

All this for a price, of course.

In Singapore, being a member of Lunch Actually starts at S$2,500. They also have a high-end matchmaking service for C-suite professionals called Peerage, and a free online dating app called LunchClick.

People who sign up with a service such as theirs are people who want to use their time more effectively, Ms. Lim said.

“It’s not about not having the time to find dates themselves — but it’s more like making use of their time more effectively. Rather than spending time swiping or chatting on apps, or going on dates with people who are not compatible with you, they come to us and we will do all the filtering and verification and matching. All they have to do is show up on the date and get to know their match,” she explained. — Zsarlene B. Chua

Federal Land taps Inax for ‘spalets’

FEDERAL LAND, Inc. is bringing a new standard of Japanese-inspired luxury living with The Seasons Residences in Bonifacio Global City.

The property developer has tapped Japanese brand Inax to provide bathroom fixtures for units at The Seasons Residences’ remaining residential towers — Natsu, Aki, and Fuyu.

“This partnership aims to provide the residents of The Seasons with a Japanese-inspired lifestyle experience through impeccable Japanese innovations meant to elevate the standards of comfort, convenience, and functionality,” Sunshine Fort North Bonifacio Realty Development Corp. (SFNBRDC) President Catherine Ko said in a statement.

The Seasons Residences is developed by SFNBRDC, a joint venture between Federal Land, Inc. and Japanese firms, Nomura Real Estate Development Co., and Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings.

Inax, distributed by Lixil Philippines, is known for its innovative toilet designs.

“We at Lixil Philippines are excited to deliver a distinct Japanese cutting-edge shower toilet to the Japanese-inspired The Seasons Residences. We share the vision of the developer to build homes of excellent quality inspired by the best aspects of Japan and the Philippines. We look forward to enhancing the residential units with the installation of our automated and manual spalets which ensure hands-free and hygienic bathroom visits,” Lixil Philippines General Manager Alpha Ang said.

Inax’s flagship products include the spalets — a combination of spa and toilet — which are designed to provide an overall experience of comfort. It features including a non-scratch and self-cleansing surface powered by Aquaceramic technology, and Air Shield Deodorizer and Room Refresh functions that eliminate odors, as well as a hands-free, easy-to-use remote control.

The Seasons Residences is a four-tower residential complex that boast of Japanese-standard elements such as earthquake vibration control technology, smart storage solutions, a below-floor drainage system (sunken slab), and specialized toilets called “spalets.” — Bjorn Biel M. Beltran

Fed ready to cut rates despite doubt they can offset virus hit

THE FEDERAL RESERVE is now prepared to reduce interest rates this month even though it recognizes monetary policy cannot completely shelter a US economy increasingly threatened by the coronavirus.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell opened the door to a rate-cut at the Fed’s March 17-18 meeting by issuing a rare statement Friday pledging to “act as appropriate” to support the economy.

He was pushed into making that assurance by spectacular losses in US stocks as investors turned fearful that the spreading virus would significantly damage the American and global economies.

Traders and a string of Wall Street banks now expect the Fed to lower rates in the coming weeks. Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. economists said on Sunday the Fed may even act before its official gathering and perhaps in coordination with other central banks.

In doubt though is how much effect rate cuts will actually have amid a health emergency that threatens to reduce both supply and demand in the economy. No matter what the Fed does, factories can’t churn out goods if they can’t get needed materials from abroad. Consumers are also unlikely to spend if scared to leave their homes.

But cheaper credit can still help drive an economic rebound and restore confidence once the virus is controlled. And while it doesn’t like to be depicted as racing to the rescue of markets, the Fed can limit the damage from tighter financial conditions on the economy.

“Monetary policy certainly can’t meaningfully affect how the virus spreads,” former Fed Governor Laurence Meyer said. “But that doesn’t mean you do nothing. You still do what you can.”

Powell’s intervention 90 minutes before the stock market’s close on Friday marked a sharp pivot from the previous message of policy makers that it was way too soon to judge the economic impact of the China-borne epidemic. It also called into question the Fed’s hopes that it could hold policy steady in 2020 after cutting rates three times last year.

STOCK ROUT
Driving the rethink was the worst week for US stocks since the 2008 financial crisis.

“They didn’t want to have a continued free fall,” said Peter Hooper, a former Fed official who is now global head of economic research for Deutsche Bank AG. “They know that the one thing that monetary policy can do is to give risk assets a bit of a lift.”

Stock prices bounced up in the wake of the Powell statement. The S&P 500 index ended 0.8% lower on Friday, rallying back in the final 15 minutes of trading from losses that topped 3%. For the week, the index lost 11%. But in the wake of a series of worrying virus-related headlines on Saturday, investors are on edge again.

Hooper expects the Fed to cut rates by a quarter percentage point in March and April. His counterparts at Bank of America Corp. predict a half-point cut this month.

Those at Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. see reductions totaling 50 basis points by March 18 and a total of 100 basis through June.

They also see cuts coming, perhaps in tandem, from the euro area, Canada and the UK among others. Central banks last delivered coordinated rate cuts in 2008.

“Global central bankers are intensely focused on the downside risks from the virus,” the Goldman economists said in a report. “We suspect that they view the impact of a coordinated move on confidence as greater than the sum of the impacts of each individual move.”

The US’s first fatality from the coronavirus was a man in his 50s, Washington State health officials said on Saturday. President Donald Trump, briefing reporters at the White House after the news, renewed his public attacks on the central bank and said it was “about time” the Fed acted like a “leader” and lowered rates.

In trying to figure out what to do, policy makers are pondering the same imponderables that investors are. Their initial thought was that the contagion would be contained mostly to China and that the impact on the US economy would be small and fleeting.

NOT IF BUT WHEN
That assumption was thrown into question as the virus spread from China to the rest of the world, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention saying it’s not a question of if but when it affects the US

“We’re going to get infections here and there for quite a while,” said former International Monetary Fund chief economist Olivier Blanchard, who is now with the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. “The economic cost may be large.”

In a report released on Friday, Goldman Sachs economists led by Jan Hatzius said they anticipate the virus will inflict a “short-lived global contraction” on the world economy that stops short of an outright recession.

Such concern will have mounted over the weekend with news Saturday that Chinese manufacturing activity contracted sharply in February with an official gauge hitting a record low.

SUPPLY SHOCK
Mr. Blanchard questioned though how much good a Fed rate cut would do in the face of what he called “an unusual supply shock,” where factories are forced to curtail production because they can’t get parts from abroad.

“Decreasing the policy rate by 25 basis points in that context doesn’t feel quite useful,” Mr. Blanchard said.

What’s more important, he said, is ensuring that credit keeps flowing to small and medium-sized companies that may face a liquidity squeeze due to supply chain disruptions from the virus.

Fed officials seem alert to the importance of maintaining the supply of credit.

“The first way I’m going to think about this is whether or not lending behavior is adversely influenced,” Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said on Feb. 27 in laying out his thinking on the potential for looser monetary policy.

POLICY SUPPORT
With rates at a target range of 1.5% to 1.75%, Fed officials reckon that monetary policy is already accommodative and providing support to the economy.

Some of the dangers the committee was worried about last year have also diminished with the signing of a phase one US-China trade and ebbing risks of the UK crashing out of the European Union.

All things equal, Fed watchers says the central bank would probably prefer to stay on the sidelines during a US election year. — Bloomberg

The Invisible Man brings Universal’s monster movies back from the grave

EARLY ON in Universal Pictures’ new remake of The Invisible Man, the movie’s protagonist Cecilia Kass, played by Elisabeth Moss, learns that her ex-boyfriend, an abusive technology executive, has committed suicide and left her $5 million. There’s one catch: If she’s ruled mentally incompetent, she’ll lose the money.

Pretty soon, weird things start to happen around her house. She begins to suspect that her ex-boyfriend is still alive and stalking her with the aid of some stealthy, high-tech wearables that render him invisible. Her friends think she has gone crazy.

The suspenseful film, which opened in US theaters on Feb. 28, is based on the 1897 novel by H.G. Wells. But it feels freshly drawn from the particular anxieties of 2020, channeling everything from the unnerving entitlement of tech bros, to the stubborn tendency of the criminal justice system to look blindly past the abusive behavior of powerful men, to the technology-assisted destruction of privacy. “That’s a different approach to a monster movie,” said Jason Blum, the film’s producer.

Thanks to a sharp script by director Leigh Whannell and a strong performance from Moss, the film has a 91% rating on movie aggregator Rotten Tomatoes and is on track to be the first horror breakout of 2020.

“It’s looking very promising,” said Donna Langley, chairman of Universal Filmed Entertainment, who describes the movie as a throwback to 1990s films about women in jeopardy who ultimately find their own power and strength. “The marketing is resonating with women as well as men.”

Including rebates, the movie cost just $7 million to produce, a pittance compared with most action-packed theatrical releases from major studios. Credit Blum’s company, Blumhouse Productions. “He can make films at a low price point, but at a level of execution that is worthy of a theatrical release,” Langley said.

Universal has a lot more riding on the film than a few million dollars. If The Invisible Man succeeds, it will go a long way toward validating the studio’s revamped strategy for developing new entertainment franchises from aging monsters.

In May 2017, Universal announced a plan to revive classic monsters Dr. Jekyll, Frankenstein, and The Mummy in a new series of movies called the Dark Universe. The name was a nod to Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe, a web of interconnected superhero tales that have dominated the box office in recent years.

But Universal’s first attempt at establishing the franchise, The Mummy, starring Tom Cruise and Russell Crowe, was a bomb, losing a reported $95 million. Goodbye, Dark Universe.

Universal Pictures president Peter Cramer gathered his deputies to discuss a new strategy. Rather than build a slate of films around one central storyline, they would ask their best filmmakers to pitch distinct ideas to revive any monster character in the portfolio, using whatever approach they felt would do the job most effectively.

In a meeting with Blumhouse Productions, Universal asked Whannell about The Invisible Man. Whannell hadn’t thought much about the character, but he had just finished the movie Upgrade and was eager to dive into a new project. “They Jedi mind-tricked me into doing it,” he said. “I walked out of that room like, ‘Yes, I must do this.’”

Whannell has made seven movies with Blum, starting in 2010 with Insidious, which he wrote. Blum later gave Whannell his first shot as a director on Insidious 3. “Leigh is one of the most important filmmakers to our company, and under-appreciated as a director,” Blum said. “That’s about to change.”

If the forecasts hold, the movie should erase any lingering concerns about Universal’s ability to resuscitate old monster movies and help usher in a fresh slate of remakes. So far, the studio has commissioned a movie about Dracula’s assistant, as well as a film called Invisible Woman to be directed by Elizabeth Banks, and an undisclosed project from Paul Feig, the director of Bridesmaids. None are in production yet.

“There is a certain mode of thinking in Hollywood that to make a movie that succeeds on a global level and packs theaters, you need movie stars to be pampered, effects need to be huge,” Whannell said. “Jason just sidesteps all of that.” — Bloomberg

Abu Dhabi luxury hotels allow some guests to leave after coronavirus scare

DUBAI — Two luxury hotels in Abu Dhabi, which had been in lockdown amid concerns about the coronavirus during a professional cycling event, allowed some guests to leave on Sunday after they tested negative for the disease, company spokespersons said.

The W Abu Dhabi and the Crowne Plaza Abu Dhabi had been placed under lockdown on Friday as authorities screened all guests, including scores of professional cyclists. There were concerns they might have interacted with two Italian cyclists who were suspected of contracting the disease.

The guests at the two hotels, on Yas Island in the United Arab Emirates’ capital, included 140 professional cyclists participating in the final two stages of the UAE Tour, which was also cancelled after the tests.

“No cases have been confirmed at the Crowne Plaza Abu Dhabi Yas Island. We are working closely with the local authorities to facilitate the departure of remaining guests,” a spokeswoman of the hotel said.

W Abu Dhabi said some guests at the hotel were cleared to leave the property following their screening results.

“All other guests (will) remain in the hotel pending their screening results and clearance from authorities,” a spokeswoman said. “We will resume normal operations as soon we have clearance from the authorities.”

The Abu Dhabi government did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Some guests, including professional cyclists, took to Twitter to say they were allowed to leave on Sunday after they tested negative for the virus.

The UAE, a regional business hub and major transit point for passengers travelling to China and other destinations in Asia, has reported 21 cases of the coronavirus so far but no fatalities. Five of those people have now recovered.

The Gulf state’s education ministry announced the suspension of nursery school classes while Dubai’s Emirates Group asked staff to take paid and unpaid leave over coronavirus scare, according to an internal e-mail seen by Reuters.

The majority of infections in the Gulf Arab countries have been linked to visits to Iran or involve people who have come into contact with people who had been there. — Reuters