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Farm output marks biggest fall in 3 years

FARM PRODUCTION contracted for the first time in three quarters in April-June, marking its biggest drop in three years on a steep fall in crop output and signalling that the sector weighed on overall economic performance scheduled to be reported on Thursday morning ahead of the central bank’s fifth monetary policy review for the year.

The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Wednesday that value of agriculture production contracted by 1.27% year-on-year to P98.496 billion last quarter, compared to a downward-revised 0.64% increase in January-March and an upward-revised 0.12% increment in the second quarter last year.

It was agriculture’s biggest quarterly contraction since a 2.21% output drop recorded in the second quarter of 2016.

The sector — which accounts for about a fourth of the country’s jobs but just a tenth of national output due to low productivity — is thus expected to have weighed on second-quarter gross domestic product, together with residual effects of the four-month delay in enactment of the P3.662-trillion national budget that left new projects unfunded in the first quarter and the 45-day ban on public works ahead of the May 13 midterm elections.

The latest data brought last semester’s farm performance to a 0.24% contraction, compared to a 0.63% increment in last year’s first half. That compares to a 2.5-3.5% target range for farm output growth under the 2017-2022 Philippine Development Plan.

“I was hoping it wouldn’t be that sharp kasi ’yung iba namang (because the other) produce positive naman, pero (but) apparently that was not enough. There is really a big challenge in bringing agriculture back on track,” Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) Research Fellow Roehlano M. Briones said in a telephone interview.

For Rolando T. Dy, executive director of Center for Food and Agri-Business of University of Asia and the Pacific, “[t]he negative growth is within my radar of negative one percent… 2019 will likely post flat record.”

“The government must push cash transfers to rice farmers in the next two to three seasons to revive production. DA and DSWD can work out the solution,” Mr. Dy said in a mobile phone reply when sought for comment, referring to the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Social Welfare and Development, respectively.

The PSA said in a report that a 5.7% second-quarter drop (compared to a 2.03% fall a year ago) in production of crops — which contributed 47.42% to total agricultural output last quarter — offset increases in livestock, poultry and fisheries. The drop in crop production increased to 3.16% last semester from 0.38% in last year’s first half.

Production of palay — which had the single biggest contribution to total value of farm production at 16.47% — fell 5.82% annually (compared to a 1.44% year-ago drop) in volume to 3.852 million metric tons (MMT), causing a 5.1% reduction in output last semester to 8.269 MMT.

The report blamed the El Niño-induced dry spell “that brought down production” in the MIMAROPA Region, consisting of Occidental and Oriental Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon and Palawan; and Bicol and Western Visayas “due to inadequate water supply/rainfall during the planting months in the first quarter of 2019.”

Production of corn — which contributed 3.84% to the sector’s total value of production — dropped 8.73% annually (compared to a 3.42% year-ago fall) in volume to 1.172 MMT, taking last semester’s output to 3.597 MMT that was down 4.35% the past year (which recorded a 1.75% increase). The report also blamed the dry spell for “decreases in harvested areas and yields in most of the regions…”

OTHER SUBSECTORS IMPROVE
Livestock production, which accounted for 17.41% of total value of farm output, increased by 3.22% in the second quarter (compared to 1.87% a year ago) and by 2.24% last semester (from 1.94% a year ago), as output of hogs — which had the second single biggest contribution after palay of 14.9% — grew volume by 4.1% (compared to 2.81% the past year) to 580,110 MT.

Poultry production, which accounted for 17.75% of total value of farm output, increased by 4.14% in the second quarter and by 4.73% last semester, as chicken — which had the third-biggest contribution at 13.42% — grew volume by 3.11% (compared to 4.55% a year ago) to 477,110 MT.

Growth of fisheries production picked up to 1.9% in the second quarter from a nearly flat 0.09% a year ago, making last semester turn around to a 1.51% increment from the year-ago 2.06% drop. Milkfish production which had the biggest contribution in this subsector to total farm production at 2.93%, saw volume go down by 1.42% to 104,600MT (compared to a 3.45% drop a year ago), but this was offset by increases of 33.35% for yellowfin tuna, 10.71% for roundscad, 4.64% for tiger prawn and 0.62% for tilapia.

Farmers got lower prices for their produce last quarter, with average farmgate prices dropping 3.98%, against a year-ago 5.58% increase. That took last semester’s average down 4.02% against the year-ago 6.56% rise.

Notably, average farmgate price of rice fell by 18.22%, compared to a 10.83% increase the past year. Last semester saw average rice farmgate price fall 12.58%, compared to a 10.51% increase in 2018’s first half.

Republic Act No. 11023 liberalized rice importation when it was enacted in February.

But while it succeeded in bringing down prices of the staple and, in turn, overall inflation, the same law has been blamed for discouraging farmers from planting the grain.

“I am hoping for a quick turn around,” PIDS’ Mr. Briones said.

“Again, this has a lot to do with the price and the physical environment, so there’s really not much we can do whether as policy makers or other stakeholders with respect to the rest of the year,” he added.

“But certainly, with the change in the secretary there might be new sets of programs in place, so that, in the medium-term, we will be able to address this mediocre performance of agriculture.”

President Rodrigo R. Duterte earlier this week appointed William D. Dar as the acting Agriculture secretary. In a briefing on Tuesday, Mr. Dar said he will focus on achieving food security by improving output to outpace population growth, while also boosting earnings of farmers and fisherfolk. “Let’s start with two percent. After one year, go to three percent [and] by the end of the third year, four percent,” he had said of targeted farm growth. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

June trade deficit smallest in 15 months on import decline

THE COUNTRY’s trade-in-goods gap in June shrank to its smallest amount in 15 months as imports declined by a double-digit rate while exports rode bigger earnings from electronic products.

Preliminary Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed merchandise exports grew 1.5% to $6.008 billion in June, faster than the one-percent growth in May but slower than the 3.7% growth in June 2018.

On the other hand, the merchandise import bill fell by 10.4% to $8.48 billion in June from $9.469 billion in the same month in 2018.

Philippine trade year-on-year performance (June 2019)

June marked the third straight month of expansion and decline in exports and imports, respectively.

These flows brought the country’s trade deficit to $2.473 billion in June, 30.4% less than the $3.553 billion shortfall in June 2018. June’s deficit was the narrowest in 15 months or since the $2.34-billion trade gap in March 2018.

Year-to-date, merchandise exports were down 0.8% to $34.114 billion from $34.397 billion in 2018’s comparable six months.

That compares to the downward-revised two-percent growth target set by the Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC) for 2019.

Meanwhile, year-to-date merchandise imports dipped by a percent to $53.117 billion from $53.632 billion, against the DBCC’s downward-revised seven percent projection for the year.

Cumulatively, the trade deficit declined 1.2% to $19.004 billion from $19.235 billion.

By major category, manufactured items — which make up 84.4% of the country’s total export goods — grew 1.4% year-on-year in June to $5.07 billion.

Electronics, which made up more than two-thirds of manufactured goods and more than half of the country’s exported goods, grew by 4.3% to $3.543 billion in June, with semiconductors contributing $2.631 billion, up 4.1% from $2.529 billion a year ago.

Agro-based products (8.3%), forest products (41%) and mineral products (19.1%) grew as well.

While exports of petroleum products fell 94.9%, they made up just 0.05% at $2.813 million.

Imports of raw materials and intermediate goods, which accounted for 36.5% of the total, recorded the steepest decline among the major types of imports at 16.5% to $3.093 billion from $3.704 billion in June 2018.

Imports of capital goods and consumer goods were fell 3.4% and 12.8%, respectively, to $2.904 billion and $1.360 billion.

Imports of mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials posted a seven-percent decline to $1.066 billion from $1.147 billion.

A statement of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) quoted its director general, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, as attributing the trade performance partly to “ongoing trade disputes, Brexit-related uncertainties and rising geopolitical tensions.”

“Despite the challenging external environment, the Philippines has shown resilience in its trade performance. The Philippines is among the countries in Asia with positive export growth.”

NEDA said only Vietnam and the Philippines managed to register export earnings in June among other Asian economies like China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.

GDP IMPACT
For UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. chief economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, the “improving” trade deficit observed in June “is not really the kind of ‘narrowing’… that a growing economy like the Philippines would want.”

“Although it has been positive, export performance has been weak and the sentiment of the external environment on the protracted US-China trade tussle has been largely the culprit,” Mr. Asuncion said in an e-mail.

“On the other hand, import performance has been slowing, compared to the same period last year, as a direct result of the slow government spending that originally propped up imports in the last three years.”

For Security Bank Corp. Treasury Group assistant vice-president and chief economist Robert Dan J. Roces, the sluggish import performance can be traced to the 2019 national budget’s nearly four-month delay in enactment “as orders for imported raw materials for the [infrastructure] program were curbed.”

“Better supply-side conditions in food — notably rice due to liberalization — also caused a slowing of imports in this category as inventory levels were in surplus and caused inflation to decline as well,” Mr. Roces said.

For exports, Mr. Roces noted the positive contribution of the “ever-reliable” electronics sector even as its growth is tempered by the effects of the ongoing trade war.

ING Bank NV Manila senior economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, likewise noted the growth in electronics exports lifting the sector. “[G]iven how reliant the Philippine is on the electronics subsector, the fate of the overall portfolio rests almost solely on the fortunes of this sector amidst the simmering trade conflict between the US and China. Going forward, we continue to hope for true reform in this sector if we hope to see a true export renaissance,” Mr. Mapa said.

Despite the narrowing trade gap in June and the rest of the second quarter, economists said that this may not necessarily be a positive for the economy.

The PSA will report the official second-quarter GDP data on Thursday morning, hours before the central bank holds if fifth monetary policy review for the year.

“The relatively less severe trade gap could be one factor for the peso’s improved performance for the month, although the contraction in capital imports could take off even more shine from the [second-quarter] GDP growth print,” ING Bank’s Mr. Mapa said.

Mr. Mapa noted the sharp drop in the imports of raw materials such as iron, steel and other metal products which may translate to a contraction in construction activity.

“Further worrisome was the 12.8% drop in consumer goods as durable goods for households cratered by 15.8%… passenger cars and home appliances were down, adding to expectations for a weak [second-quarter] GDP growth print,” he said.

“The budget delay and still elevated borrowing costs have likely hit capital formation with the import numbers showcasing this development…”

UnionBank’s Mr. Asuncion shared this view, saying that weak growth in exports and declining imports “may not bode well” for economic expansion.

For Security Bank’s Mr. Roces, the trade deficit will contribute to “lackluster” second-quarter GDP growth.

“Moving forward, we expect imports to get better in the second half as infrastructure projects and spending get underway. We also think that exports shall still be driven by the electronics sector in the near-term, and could improve if the sector becomes a conduit between the two warring nations in the trade war,” Security Bank’s Mr. Roces said.

For UnionBank’s Mr. Asuncion, the uncertainty on the protracted US-China trade war “will continue to hamper demand prospects for Philippine export products.”

“On the other hand, imports growth is expected to improve with the full implementation of the 2019 national budget that was initially delayed due to political issues,” he said. — Lourdes O. Pilar

Philippine trade year-on-year performance (June 2019)

THE COUNTRY’s trade-in-goods gap in June shrank to its smallest amount in 15 months as imports declined by double-digit rate while exports rode bigger earnings from electronic products.Read the full story.

Philippine trade year-on-year performance (June 2019)

Dec. 15 2020 budget enactment targeted

THE SENATE finance committee will hold parallel hearings on the proposed P4.1-trillion national budget for 2020 in a bid to send it to President Rodrigo R. Duterte for signing by Dec. 15, ahead of adjournment on Dec. 20.

“We will be observing the practice of holding parallel hearings so that when the House-approved GAB (general appropriations bill) will arrive here in October or first week of November, we are done with the exhaustive review of agency budgets at the committee level,” Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara, who chairs the committee, said in a Wednesday release.

“The fighting target is to have it signed on or before Dec. 15. What is important is that the nation will greet the new year with a new national budget.”

The House of Representatives had earlier said it targets third reading approval of the 2020 GAB by Oct. 5 before Congress takes a month-long break.

Congress is again scheduled to adjourn on Dec. 20 and is set to resume sessions on Jan. 20, 2020.

Mr. Duterte and his Cabinet on Monday approved the 2020 National Expenditure Program (NEP). The Department of Budget and Management has until Aug. 21 to transmit the NEP to both houses of Congress.

The 1987 Constitution provided the President shall submit its spending plan to Congress within thirty days from the opening of every regular session, which in this case, started last July 22.

Moreover, Mr. Angara maintained his commitment to ensure the timely approval of the budget, following the four-month delay in the enactment of the 2019 national budget.

“I have always taken the position that a reenacted budget must be avoided like a plague,” Mr. Angara said.

An impasse between the House of Representatives and the Department of Budget and Management, and later with the Senate had forced the government to operate under a reenacted budget for nearly four months as this year began, leaving new projects unfunded in that period.

President Duterte signed the 2019 spending plan on April 15, vetoing some P95.3-billion appropriations, which reduced it to a total of P3.662-trillion.

This delay prompted the Development Budget Coordination Committee in a meeting in March to slash gross domestic product (GDP) expansion targets for this year to 6-7% from 7-8% originally. — C. A. Tadalan

SM Investments nets P23 billion in 1st 6 months

SM INVESTMENTS Corp. (SMIC) delivered a 27% increase in earnings for the first half of 2019, on the back of its banking unit’s strong performance and higher sales from the residential business.

In a statement Wednesday, the Sy-led conglomerate said net income rose to P23 billion in the first six months of the year, from P18.1 billion in the same period a year ago. Consolidated revenues were also up 14% to P233.7 billion.

“We delivered a strong first half, underpinned by remarkable bank earnings and robust residential take-up. Our retail business continues to do well and we are pleased with the rapid expansion of our mini-mart footprint through Alfamart,” SMIC President and Chief Executive Officer Frederic C. DyBuncio said in a statement.

Property accounted for 41% of the company’s net income, followed by banking and retail at 41% and 19%, respectively.

Under the property segment, SM Prime Holdings, Inc. grew its net income by 16% to P19.3 billion following a 15% increase in revenues to P57 billion.

Mall revenues, which account for 55% of its business, grew 8% to P31.1 billion. This was driven by the 7% rise in mall rental revenues to P26.2 billion. SM Prime ended the first half with 72 malls in the Philippines and seven in China covering 9.7 million square meters in gross floor area.

Meanwhile, the residential group posted 26% higher revenues at P21.4 billion, benefiting from the launch of several high-rise projects in Metro Manila from 2016 to 2018.

SM Prime’s commercial properties group and hotels and convention centers also grew its revenues by 13% to P4.6 billion in the first half.

For BDO Unibank, Inc., net income surged 54% to P20.2 billion due to the recurring income of its core units and higher fee income. Net interest income also rose by 24% to P56.9 billion, while consumer loans were up by 7% to P2 trillion.

SM Retail, Inc also reported strong growth with a 13% increase in revenues to P169.8 billion. Net income stood at P5.7 billion.

About a quarter of revenues came from specialty retail stores at P42.6 billion, 15% higher year on year.

The retail business currently has 2,600 stores, consisting of 63 The SM Stores, 1,548 specialty stores, 57 SM Supermarkets, 52 SM Hypermarkets, 197 Savemore stores, 55 Waltermart stores, and 628 Alfamart stores. The gross selling area of all department stores alone covers 795,864 sq.m.

SMIC continues to expand its businesses in the country, committing to spend P98 billion in capital expenditures in 2019. Bulk of the budget or P80 billion will go to SM Prime, while about P9-12 billion will be for the banking units. SM Retail cornered about P5 billion.

Shares in SMIC jumped 3.13% or P30 to close at P990 each at the stock exchange on Wednesday. — Arra B. Francia

Megaworld Q2 profit up on strong revenues

MEGAWORLD Corp.’s attributable profit jumped 15% to P4.5 billion in the April to June period of 2019, driven by the growth of its residential, commercial, and hotel businesses.

The property firm of tycoon Andrew L. Tan said Wednesday that the second quarter’s net income attributable to the parent was higher than the P3.9 billion booked in the same period a year ago. This followed a 20% surge in consolidated revenues to P16.8 billion.

On a six-month basis, Megaworld’s attributable profit was up by 16% to P8.3 billion, while consolidated revenues climbed 18% to P31.7 billion.

The residential business, which generated about 63% of total revenues for the semester, booked P20.2 billion in sales, 11% higher than the P18.1 billion seen in the same period last year.

The listed firm benefited from the launch of P39 billion worth of new inventory in the first half. Sales reservations stood at P80 billion.

“Interest rates are on a downtrend, which is a very positive news for our residential business,” Megaworld Chief Strategy Officer Kevin Andrew L. Tan said in a statement.

For the rental business, leasing revenues grew by a fifth or 20% to P8.1 billion following the continued expansion of its malls. The company looks to complete over 230,000 square meters (sq.m.) of leasable spaces from its office and mall units by yearend.

“Vacancies in both office and commercial segments are on an all-time low, and we don’t see this changing in the near future due to the robust sign-ups we are seeing from big companies and business owners,” Mr. Tan said.

Megaworld remains bullish on the mall business, as it recently announced the opening of eight new malls and commercial centers in the provinces in the next three years. The company is spending P10 billion for the expansion that will add about 200,000 sq.m worth of retail inventory until 2022.

Meanwhile, the Megaworld Hotels brand saw an 80% increase in revenues to P1.3 billion, from P715 million in the same period in 2018. It will add another 1,000 rooms with the opening of Belmont Hotel Boracay and Savoy Hotel Mactan Newtown before the year ends.

The company currently operates eight hotels in the country, namely Richmonde Hotel Ortigas, Eastwood Richmonde Hotel, Richmonde Hotel, Savoy Hotel Manila, Savoy Hotel Boracay, Belmont Hotel Manila, Hotel Lucky Chinatown, and Twin Lakes Hotel.

Megaworld is banking on the growth of the tourism industry to boost hotel operations moving forward.

Shares in Megaworld climbed 2.17% or 13 centavos to close at P6.11 each at the stock exchange on Wednesday. — Arra B. Francia

After ‘weak’ Q2, DNL expects lower earnings this year

By Arra B. Francia, Senior Reporter

LISTED chemicals and plastics manufacturer D&L Industries, Inc. (DNL) may book a two percent decline in earnings for full year 2019, following a slowdown in sales volume seen during the first semester.

In a presentation Wednesday, the Lao-led company reported a net income of P665 million in the April to June period, 15% lower than the P784 million it posted in the same period a year ago. Revenues also fell 25% to P5.16 billion.

This brought DNL’s first half earnings to P1.41 billion, 7.5% lower year on year, following a 17% decrease in revenues to P11.04 billion.

“We really saw a weak second quarter…Volume was down over 10%, so overall first half volume was down by 9%,” DNL President and Chief Executive Officer Alvin D. Lao said in a press briefing in Makati yesterday.

DNL’s business is divided into food ingredients, oleochemicals and other specialty chemicals under the Chemrez group, specialty plastics, and aerosols. Food ingredients and Chemrez generate about 85% of the company’s revenues.

Mr. Lao downplayed the slump in sales for the period, explaining that this is due to lower prices of raw materials that is passed on to customers. Prices of coconut oil and palm oil, which accounts for about two-thirds of their raw materials, were down by 40% and 19%, respectively.

As a result, costs also went down by 29% to P3.996 billion for the second quarter and 21% to P8.64 billion for the first half.

Mr. Lao noted that the timing of the Easter holiday also affected their performance, since Easter was in April this year compared to March in 2018.

Revenues from exports also fell by 25% to P2.1 billion in the first half, reducing its contribution to total revenue to 19% from 21% in the same period a year ago. The company attributed this to lingering uncertainties in the trade war.

Sought for his outlook for the second half, Mr. Lao said he doesn’t expect volumes to “get much worse.”

“We’re going to try our best to do what we can. But if the second half is flat, that means for full year 2019 we’ll be down by roughly 2% from the previous year,” Mr. Lao said.

The company is banking on lower inflation, expectations of a more accommodative monetary policy, and the ramp up in government spending to help lift its performance moving forward.

Shares in DNL fell 5.5% or 55 centavos to close at P9.45 each at the stock exchange on Wednesday.

Google pledges carbon-neutral device shipping, recycled plastic

SAN FRANCISCO — Alphabet Inc.’s Google on Monday announced that it would neutralize carbon emissions from delivering consumer hardware by next year and include recycled plastic in each of its products by 2022.

The new commitments step up the competition among tech companies aiming to show consumers and governments that they are curbing the environmental toll from their widening arrays of gadgets.

Anna Meegan, head of sustainability for Google’s devices and services unit, said in an interview that the company’s transport-related carbon emissions per unit fell 40% last year compared to 2017 by relying more on ships instead of planes to move phones, speakers, laptops and other gadgets from factories to customers across the world.

The company will offset remaining emissions by purchasing carbon credits, Meegan said.

Three out of nine Google products for which the company has detailed disclosures online contain recycled plastic, ranging from 20% to 42% in the casings for its Google Home speakers and Chromecast streaming dongles.

In a blog post, Google committed to introducing some recycled plastic to 100% of products by 2022.

Meegan acknowledged that Google’s 3-year-old hardware business trails far larger hardware rival Apple Inc. in some sustainability efforts.

Apple, which in 2017 committed to “one day” only using recycled and renewable materials, has at least 50% recycled plastic in some parts of several products, recycled tin in at least 11 products and recycled aluminum in at least two.

But sustainability standards are now a part of Google’s hardware planning, Meegan said. Devices cannot clear the second checkpoint in the company’s design process unless they show that sustainable packaging and materials and ease of repair have been considered.

“We are fundamentally looking to build sustainability into everything we do,” she said. “It’s going to take us time to demonstrate progress.” — Reuters

Smart inks deal with common tower providers

By Denise A. Valdez, Reporter

PLDT, Inc. wireless unit Smart Communications, Inc. said Wednesday it has joined other network providers in signing deals with common tower companies.

Smart Vice-President for Legal and Regulatory Affairs Roy Cecil D. Ibay said the company has tapped edotco Group Sdn. Bhd. and ISOC Infrastructure, Inc. to provide common towers.

“Smart Communications has also already signed MoUs with two common tower companies, namely edotco and ISOC. We’re also in negotiations now with Aboitiz (InfraCapital, Inc.) and several others,” he said at a common tower stakeholders’ meeting in Quezon City.

Mr. Ibay was not able to provide details on the deals when asked by reporters.

Last week, PLDT-Smart Chief Revenue Officer Alfredo S. Panlilio said the company continues to talk with tower providers and the government on the common tower initiative. “Similarly with Globe (Telecom, Inc.), we have said that we are very open to do common towers,” he told reporters Thursday.

Globe had earlier signed two deals with two tandems of tower providers: the joint venture of ISOC Infrastructure, Inc. and edotco Group Sdn. Bhd.; and of Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc. and Frontier Tower Associates Philippines.

This covers the construction of 150 towers in the Calabarzon area for ISOC and edotco, and about the same number of towers in undisclosed locations with Aboitiz and Frontier Tower.

In June, Now Telecom Co., Inc. also signed an agreement with ALT Global Solutions, Inc. to put up approximately 50 towers across the country. ALT Global said it targets to build 1,000 towers within the next three years.

The signing of agreements by telcos with tower providers will allow the independent tower companies to receive assistance from the government in securing permits for building telco infrastructure. This is expected to expedite the roll out of shareable towers that any of the telcos may lease.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

GrabFood now 24/7 in Metro Manila and Cebu

WWW.GRAB.COM/PH/FOOD

THE ONLINE food delivery platform of ride-hailing app Grab has announced 24/7 operations in select cities in the Philippines in a bid to serve the demands of the company’s growing segment.

“Since the end of March to where we are currently right now, [we haven’t] formally announced our 24/7 services [but] the number of orders that happened between midnight and 5 a.m. has increased 13 times,” Edward Joseph dela Vega, GrabFood country head, said during the launch on Aug. 1 at the Grab offices in Makati City.

Mr. Dela Vega said that their 24/7 operations cover “over 1,000 registered restaurants in Metro Manila and Cebu,” including McDonald’s and Pizza Hut.

The 24/7 service, he said is targeted towards people with a “non-9 to 5 lifestyles” like employees of the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry.

GrabFood, Mr. Dela Vega said is the company’s fastest-growing segment, with orders having grown 44 times in 2019. The service currently serves 8,000 restaurants and branches in 20 locations around the country.

Aside from its core ride-hailing and food delivery services, Grab also provides digital wallet services via GrabPay, delivery service via Grab Express, mobile phone loading, and hotel booking services.

To aid in the extended hours of service, he said that they are “actively activating or bringing people online to the platform, but only as necessary.”

“It’s not about having the biggest fleet or the biggest number of delivery partners, it’s more about having the correct number of delivery partners… we don’t want to dilute too much of the demand or supply,” Mr. Dela Vega explained.

But those ordering during the wee hours of the day may find increased delivery fees to “help keep delivery partners during those times.”

“[We’re] focused on reliability [so] if and when we have different delivery fees, it’s really more to make sure that the system is reliable,” he said.

Aside from the 24/7 service, Mr. Dela Vega said they are planning to integrate their digital wallet as a mode of payment for food delivery services as currently the only mode of payment accepted is cash. — Zsarlene B. Chua

SMFB’s consolidated income falls 5% as costs rise

SAN MIGUEL Food and Beverage, Inc. (SMFB) saw its consolidated earnings drop by 5% in the first six months of the year, weighed down by higher costs amid a double-digit increase in revenues.

In a statement issued Wednesday, the listed food and beverage company said consolidated net income fell to P14.7 billion due to “cost and pricing pressures from the food group.”

The rise in costs dampened the 10% uptick in revenues to P151 billion.

San Miguel Brewery, Inc., which sells brands such as Red Horse and San Miguel Pale Pilsen, saw revenues climb by 12% to P70.3 billion after volumes also rose by 10%. The unit’s net income accordingly gained 12.4% to P13.3 billion.

For hard liquor manufacturer Ginebra San Miguel, Inc. (GSMI), revenues grew by a fifth or 20% to P14.7 billion. The company said marketing efforts helped increase volumes by 17% for the period, most of which came from flagship brand Ginebra.

With this, GSMI’s net income grew by 94% to P980 million.

The food group, composed of brands such as Magnolia, Purefoods, Star, and Magnolia, reported a 5% uptick in revenues to P66.1 billion. The company did not disclose the segment’s net income, but noted that the poultry business was feeling the impact of an industry-wide oversupply since late 2018.

“Despite challenges impacting some of our businesses, we remain positive about the company’s overall growth prospects given our unique position to capture the opportunities directly linked to our fast-growing economy,” SMFB President and Chief Executive Officer Ramon S. Ang said in a statement.

Shares in SMFB added 0.96% or P1 to close at P105 each at the stock exchange on Wednesday. — Arra B. Francia

Singapore’s historic Raffles Hotel reopens after restoration

AN ICON of Singapore’s history has been restored and is now open again.

The Raffles Hotel, which first opened in 1887 and was declared a National Monument by the government a century later, has reopened after an extensive renovation that started two and a half years ago, according to a statement from the hotel.

The Raffles, known for its Long Bar where the Singapore Sling cocktail was invented and peanut shells tossed on the floor, now offers 115 suites in nine categories including Grand Hotel Suites and Presidential Suites. The Long Bar has been refreshed and will still sling its reddish-pink gin-based drink.

“The newly restored Raffles will provide an experience like no other,” said Christian Westbeld, the hotel’s general manager. “There are few hotels in the world whose names have become virtually synonymous with the cities in which they are located — and none more so than the Raffles Hotel in Singapore.”

A search on the hotel’s website for an upcoming Saturday night showed prices starting at S$869 ($632) a night for one guest in the hotel’s cheapest suite option. At the higher end, a two-bed President Suite for one night in October was going for S$11,899 ($8,650).

The newly restored hotel also features restaurant collaborations with chef Anne-Sophie Pic, of the three-Michelin star Maison Pic in Valence, France; French master chef Alain Ducasse; and chef Jereme Leung, who is known for his innovative Chinese cooking.

The restoration, led by acclaimed interior designer Alexandra Champalimaud, was also supported by Aedas, a leading global architecture and design firm. Raffles Hotel Singapore is the flagship property of Raffles Hotels & Resorts, a part of French hospitality firm Accor SA. The hotel itself is owned by Qatar-based Katara Hospitality, a global hotel owner, developer and operator based in Qatar. — Bloomberg