Home Blog Page 9482

How we broke the world

Greed and globalization set us up for disaster

By Thomas L. Friedman

IF RECENT WEEKS have shown us anything, it’s that the world is not just flat. It’s fragile.

And we’re the ones who made it that way with our own hands. Just look around. Over the past 20 years, we’ve been steadily removing man-made and natural buffers, redundancies, regulations and norms that provide resilience and protection when big systems — be they ecological, geopolitical, or financial — get stressed. We’ve been recklessly removing these buffers out of an obsession with short-term efficiency and growth, or without thinking at all.

At the same time, we’ve been behaving in extreme ways — pushing against, and breaching, common-sense political, financial, and planetary boundaries.

And, all the while, we’ve taken the world technologically from connected to interconnected to interdependent — by removing more friction and installing more grease in global markets, telecommunications systems, the internet, and travel. In doing so, we’ve made globalization faster, deeper, cheaper, and tighter than ever before. Who knew that there were regular direct flights from Wuhan, China, to America?

Put all three of these trends together and what you have is a world more easily prone to shocks and extreme behaviors — but with fewer buffers to cushion those shocks — and many more networked companies and people to convey them globally.

This, of course, was revealed clearly in the latest world-spanning crisis — the coronavirus pandemic. But this trend of more frequent destabilizing crises has been building over the past 20 years: 9/11, the Great Recession of 2008, COVID-19, and climate change. Pandemics are no longer just biological — they are now geopolitical, financial, and atmospheric, too. And we will suffer increasing consequences unless we start behaving differently and treating Mother Earth differently.

Note the pattern: Before each crisis I mentioned, we first experienced what could be called a “mild” heart attack, alerting us that we had gone to extremes and stripped away buffers that had protected us from catastrophic failure. In each case, though, we did not take that warning seriously enough — and in each case the result was a full global coronary.

“We created globalized networks because they could make us more efficient and productive and our lives more convenient,” explained Gautam Mukunda, the author of Indispensable: When Leaders Really Matter. “But when you steadily remove their buffers, backup capacities and surge protectors in pursuit of short-term efficiency or just greed, you ensure that these systems are not only less resistant to shocks, but that we spread those shocks everywhere.”

SEPT. 11, 2001
Let’s start with 9/11. You could view Al Qaeda and its leader, Osama bin Laden, as political pathogens that emerged out of the Middle East after 1979. “Islam lost its brakes in 1979” — its resistance to extremism was badly compromised — said Mamoun Fandy, an expert on Arab politics.

That was the year that Saudi Arabia lurched backward, after Islamist extremists took over the Grand Mosque in Mecca and an Islamic revolution in Iran brought Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to power. Those events set up a competition between Shiite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia over who was the real leader of the Muslim world. That battle coincided with a surge in oil prices that gave both fundamentalist regimes the resources to propagate their brands of puritanical Islam, through mosques and schools, across the globe.

In doing so, they together weakened any emerging trends toward religious and political pluralism — and strengthened austere fundamentalism and its violent fringes.

Remember: The Muslim world was probably at its most influential, culturally, scientifically, and economically, in the Middle Ages, when it was a rich and diverse polyculture in Moorish Spain.

Diverse ecosystems, in nature and in politics, are always more resilient than monocultures. Monocultures in agriculture are enormously susceptible to disease — one virus or germ can wipe out an entire crop. Monocultures in politics are enormously susceptible to diseased ideas.

Thanks to Iran and Saudi Arabia, the Arab-Muslim world became much more of a monoculture after 1979. And the idea that violent Islamist jihadism would be the engine of Islam’s revival — and that purging the region of foreign influences, particularly American, was its necessary first step — gained much wider currency.

This ideological pathogen spread — through mosques, cassette tapes, and then the internet — to Pakistan, North Africa, Europe, India and Indonesia.

The warning bell that this idea could destabilize even America rang on Feb. 26, 1993, at 12:18 p.m., when a rental van packed with explosives blew up in the parking garage below the 1 World Trade Center building in Manhattan. The bomb failed to bring down the building as intended, but it badly damaged the main structure, killing six people and injuring more than 1,000.

The mastermind of the attack, Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, a Pakistani, later told FBI agents that his only regret was that the 110-story tower did not collapse into its twin and kill thousands.

What happened next we all know: The direct hits on both twin towers on Sept. 11, 2001, which set off a global economic and geopolitical crisis that ended with the United States spending several trillion dollars trying to immunize America against violent Islamic extremism — via a massive government-directed surveillance system, renditions, and airport metal detectors — and by invading the Middle East.

The United States and its allies toppled the dictators in Iraq and Afghanistan, hoping to stimulate more political pluralism, gender pluralism, and religious and educational pluralism — antibodies to fanaticism and authoritarianism. Unfortunately, we didn’t really know how to do this in such distant lands, and we botched it; the natural pluralistic antibodies in the region also proved to be weak.

Either way — as in biology, so, too, in geopolitics — the virus of Al Qaeda mutated, picking up new elements from its hosts in Iraq and Afghanistan. As a result, violent Islamic extremism became even more virulent, thanks to subtle changes in its genome that transformed it into ISIS, or the Islamic State.

This emergence of ISIS, and parallel mutations in the Taliban, forced the United States to remain in the area to just manage the outbreaks, but nothing more.

THE GREAT RECESSION
The 2008 global banking crisis played out in similar ways. The warning was delivered by a virus known by the initials LTCM — Long-Term Capital Management.

LTCM was a hedge fund set up in 1994 by the investment banker John Meriweather, who assembled a team of mathematicians, industry veterans, and two Nobel Prize winners. The fund used mathematical models to predict prices and tons of leverage to amplify its founding capital of $1.25 billion to make massive, and massively profitable, arbitrage bets.

It all worked — until it didn’t.

“In August 1998,” recalled Business Insider, “Russia defaulted on its debt. Three days later, markets all over the world started sinking. Investors began pulling out left and right. Swap spreads were at unbelievable levels. Everything was plummeting. In one day, Long-Term lost $553 million, 15% of its capital. In one month it lost almost $2 billion.”

Hedge funds lose money all the time, default, and go extinct. But LTCM was different.

The firm had leveraged its bets with so much capital from so many different big global banks — with no trading transparency, so none of its counterparties had a picture of LTCM’s total exposure — that if it were allowed to go bankrupt and default, it would have exacted huge losses on dozens of investments houses and banks on Wall Street and abroad.

More than $1 trillion was at risk. It took a $3.65 billion bailout package from the Federal Reserve to create herd immunity from LTCM for the Wall Street bulls.

The crisis was contained and the lesson was clear: Don’t let anyone make such big, and in some ways extreme, bets with such tremendous leverage in a global banking system where there is no transparency as to how much a single player has borrowed from many different sources.

A decade later, the lesson was forgotten, and we got the full financial disaster of 2008.

This time we were all in the casino. There were four main financial vehicles (that became financial pathogens) that interacted to create the global crisis of 2008. They were called subprime mortgages, adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs), commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).

Banks and less-regulated financial institutions engaged in extremely reckless subprime and adjustable rate mortgage lending, and then they and others bundled these mortgages into mortgage-backed securities. Meanwhile, rating agencies classified these bonds as much less risky than they really were.

The whole system depended on housing prices endlessly rising. When the housing bubble burst — and many homeowners could not pay their mortgages — the financial contagion infected huge numbers of global banks and insurance companies, not to mention millions of mom-and-pops.

We had breached the boundaries of financial common sense. With the world’s financial system more hyper-connected and leveraged than ever, only huge bailouts by central banks prevented a full-on economic pandemic and depression caused by failing commercial banks and stock markets.

In 2010, we tried to immunize the banking system against a repeat with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in America and with the Basel III new capital and liquidity standards adopted by banking systems around the world. But ever since then, and particularly under the Trump administration, financial services companies have been lobbying, often successfully, to weaken these buffers, threatening a new financial contagion down the road.

This one could be even more dangerous because computerized trading now makes up more than half of stock trading volume globally. These traders use algorithms and computer networks that process data at a thousandth or millionth of a second to buy and sell stocks, bonds or commodities.

Alas, there is no herd immunity to greed.

COVID-19
I don’t think that I need to spend much time on the COVID-19 pandemic, except to say that the warning sign was also there. It appeared in late 2002 in the Guangdong province of southern China. It was a viral respiratory illness caused by a coronavirus — SARS-CoV — known for short as SARS.

As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website notes, “Over the next few months, the illness spread to more than two dozen countries in North America, South America, Europe, and Asia” before it was contained. More than 8,000 people worldwide became sick, including close to 800 who died. The United States had eight confirmed cases of infection and no deaths.

The coronavirus that caused SARS was hosted by bats and palm civets. It jumped to humans because we had been pushing and pushing high-density urban population centers more deeply into wilderness areas, destroying that natural buffer and replacing it with monoculture crops and concrete.

When you simultaneously accelerate development in ways that destroy more and more natural habitats and then hunt for more wildlife there, “the natural balance of species collapses due to loss of top predators and other iconic species, leading to an abundance of more generalized species adapted to live in human-dominated habitats,” Johan Rockstrom, the chief scientist at Conservation International, explained to me.

These include rats, bats, palm civets, and some primates, which together host a majority of all known viruses that can be passed on to humans. And when these animals are then hunted, trapped, and taken to markets — in particular in China, Central Africa, and Vietnam, where they are sold for food, traditional medicine, potions, and pets — they endanger humans, who did not evolve with these viruses.

SARS jumped from mainland China to Hong Kong in February 2003, when a visiting professor, Dr. Liu Jianlun, who unknowingly had SARS, checked into Room 911 at Hong Kong’s Metropole Hotel.

Yup, Room 9-1-1. I am not making that up.

“By the time he checked out,” The Washington Post reported, “Liu had spread a deadly virus directly to at least eight guests. They would unknowingly take it with them to Singapore, Toronto, Hong Kong, and Hanoi, where the virus would continue to spread. Of more than 7,700 cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome tallied so far worldwide, the World Health Organization estimates that more than 4,000 can be traced to Liu’s stay on the ninth floor of the Metropole Hotel.”

It is important to note, though, that SARS was contained by July 2003 before becoming a full-fledged pandemic — thanks in large part to rapid quarantines and tight global cooperation among public health authorities in many countries. Collaborative multinational governance proved to be a good buffer.

Alas, that was then. The latest coronavirus is aptly named SARS-CoV-2 — with emphasis on the number 2. We don’t yet know for sure where this coronavirus that causes the disease COVID-19 came from, but it is widely suspected to have jumped to a human from a wild animal, maybe a bat, in Wuhan, China. Similar jumps are bound to happen more and more as we keep stripping away nature’s natural biodiversity and buffers.

“The more simplified and less diverse ecological systems become, especially in huge and ever-expanding urban areas, the more we will become the targets of these emerging pests, unbuffered by the vast array of other species in a healthy ecosystem,” explained Russ Mittermeier, the head of Global Wildlife Conservation and one of the world’s top experts on primates.

What we know for sure, though, is that some five months after this coronavirus jumped into a human in Wuhan, more than 100,000 Americans were dead and more than 40 million unemployed.

While the coronavirus arrived in the US via both Europe and Asia, most Americans probably don’t realize just how easy it was for this pathogen to get here. From December through March, when the pandemic was launching, there were some 3,200 flights from China to major US cities, according to a study by ABC News. Among those were 50 direct flights from Wuhan. From Wuhan! How many Americans had even heard of Wuhan?

The vastly expanded global network of planes, trains, and ships, combined with far too few buffers of global cooperation and governance, combined with the fact that there are almost eight billion people on the planet today (compared with 1.8 billion when the 1918 flu pandemic hit), enabled this coronavirus to spread globally in the blink of an eye.

CLIMATE CATASTROPHE
You have to be in total denial not to see all of this as one giant flashing warning signal for our looming — and potentially worst — global disaster, climate change.

I don’t like the term climate change to describe what’s coming. I much prefer “global weirding,” because the weather getting weird is what is actually happening. The frequency, intensity and cost of extreme weather events all increase. The wets get wetter, the hots get hotter, the dry periods get drier, the snows get heavier, the hurricanes get stronger.

Weather is too complex to attribute any single event to climate change, but the fact that extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and more expensive — especially in a world of crowded cities like Houston and New Orleans — is indisputable.

The wise thing would be for us to get busy preserving all of the ecological buffers that nature endowed us with, so we could manage what are now the unavoidable effects of climate change and focus on avoiding what would be unmanageable consequences.

Because, unlike biological pandemics like COVID-19, climate change does not “peak.” Once we deforest the Amazon or melt the Greenland ice sheet, it’s gone — and we will have to live with whatever extreme weather that unleashes.

One tiny example: The Washington Post noted that the Edenville Dam that burst in Midland, Mich., this month, forcing 11,000 people out of their homes after unusually heavy spring rains, “took some residents by surprise, but it didn’t come as such a shock to hydrologists and civil engineers, who have warned that climate change and increased runoff from development is putting more pressure on poorly maintained dams, many of them built — like those in Midland — to generate power early in the 20th century.”

But unlike the COVID-19 pandemic, we have all the antibodies we need to both live with and limit climate change. We can have herd immunity if we just preserve and enhance the buffers that we know give us resilience. That means reducing CO₂ emissions, protecting forests that store carbon and filter water and the ecosystems and species diversity that keep them healthy, protecting mangroves that buffer storm surges and, more generally, coordinating global governmental responses that set goals and limits and monitor performance.

As I look back over the last 20 years, what all four of these global calamities have in common is that they are all “black elephants,” a term coined by the environmentalist Adam Sweidan. A black elephant is a cross between “a black swan” — an unlikely, unexpected event with enormous ramifications — and the “elephant in the room” — a looming disaster that is visible to everyone, yet no one wants to address.

In other words, this journey I have taken you on may sound rather mechanistic and inevitable. It was not. It was all about different choices, and different values, that humans and their leaders brought to bear at different times in our globalizing age — or didn’t.

Technically speaking, globalization is inevitable. How we shape it is not.

Or, as Nick Hanauer, the venture capitalist and political economist, remarked to me the other day: “Pathogens are inevitable, but that they turn into pandemics is not.’’

We decided to remove buffers in the name of efficiency; we decided to let capitalism run wild and shrink our government’s capacities when we needed them most; we decided not to cooperate with one another in a pandemic; we decided to deforest the Amazon; we decided to invade pristine ecosystems and hunt their wildlife. Facebook decided not to restrict any of President Trump’s incendiary posts; Twitter did. And too many Muslim clerics decided to let the past bury the future, not the future bury the past.

That’s the uber lesson here: As the world gets more deeply intertwined, everyone’s behavior — the values that each of us bring to this interdependent world — matters more than ever. And, therefore, so does the “Golden Rule.” It’s never been more important.

Do unto others as you wish them to do unto you, because more people in more places in more ways on more days can now do unto you and you unto them like never before.

NEW YORK TIMES

Copyright or copywrong?

Within just two months, the way we lived our lives has immensely changed. Essentially everything is now done within the confines of one’s home, be it work, exercise, or hobbies. For the privileged, the daily routine includes time for binge-watching different series, movies, or vlogs. As of late, foreign series and movies have been circulating and made available on different on-line streaming platforms. Understandably, not all viewers will be able to fully comprehend what foreign actors and actresses are saying. Unless one is a polyglot, a viewer would necessarily have to rely on subtitles or “subs” for them to fully appreciate a particular show.

Subtitles are the text version of characters’ dialogs, written in a specific language (e.g., English, Filipino, etc.), and are usually displayed at the bottom part of a video screen. Interestingly, these subs may or may not have been prepared by the producers or owners of the videos on which they are used. Subs prepared by other parties, such as “fansubs,” are not commissioned by the video producers or owners, making them the subject of several legal disputes in various jurisdictions.

In 2017, a Swedish court ruled against Undertexter.se citing that its distribution of subtitles constituted copyright infringement. The defense claimed that subtitles were creative works which are separate from the movies themselves. They argued that movies were composed of both video and audio; and that the subtitles were merely supplementary. Founder Eugene Archy claimed that the subtitles were “creative works in their own right.” Unfortunately, the court found otherwise and ruled that the subtitles were part of the movies themselves and thus, the unauthorized distribution of subtitles resulted in infringement.

Meanwhile in the Netherlands, “fansubbing” has been declared illegal. The Dutch court ruled that subtitles may be distributed only with the consent of the copyright holder. Otherwise, the distribution will constitute copyright infringement. In Australia, certain groups from the entertainment industry sought a court injunction ordering certain internet service providers to block websites offering copyrighted material, including those which distribute “fansubs.”

Consistently in all these disputes, subtitles were subject to copyright infringement cases. Would this be the case under Philippine law? To date, there has been no case involving the issue of whether or not the creation and distribution of subtitles and fansubs constitutes infringement.

Under Philippine law, copyright infringement refers to the violation of any of the economic or moral rights to which a copyright holder is entitled. Under Republic Act No. 8293, otherwise known as the Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines (IP Code), a copyright holder has the exclusive right to carry-out, authorize, or prevent, among others, the reproduction of the work; the dramatization, translation, or other transformation of the work; and other communications of the work to the public.

Will the creation and subsequent distribution of subtitles result in the reproduction, dramatization, translation or other communication of a “work” to the public and thus give rise to copyright infringement? It seems that the matter is arguable either way.

On the one hand, subtitles may very well be considered as a translation and communication of a “work”, i.e., the movie, to the public. The subtitles translate the dialogue into a particular language and its inclusion in the movie, even as a mere text, results in a form of communication to the public.

The defense’s argument in the Undertexter.se case that subtitles are separate works seems to be the basis for a viable contrary argument. It may be said that subtitles are treated as separate works from the movies and may even be considered as copyrightable material in themselves. Hence, the creation and distribution of these subtitles do not refer to the reproduction, dramatization, translation or other communication of a “work.”

Under the IP Code, copyright protection pertains to either original literary and artistic works and to some derivative works. While literary and artistic works refer to intellectual creations in the literary and artistic domain protected from the moment of creation, derivative works are those which are either: dramatizations, translations, adaptations, abridgments, arrangements, and other alterations of literary or artistic works; and collections of literary, scholarly or artistic works, and compilations of data and other materials which are original by reason of the selection or coordination or arrangement of their contents.

The subtitles may be considered as the translator’s (sometimes termed as a “subber”) own creative work and would necessarily require a separate creative process for their conception — while the dialogue’s direct English translation is “it’s better to be safe than sorry,” the subber may instead use the idiom “look before you leap.” The subtitles may also be considered as an original compilation by reason of the selection or coordination or arrangement of the words chosen by the subber. As a form of derivative work, a subtitle may be considered as an entirely separate work placing its creation and distribution beyond the ambit of copyright infringement.

Until such time that these issues and arguments are raised in an actual case in court, we can only surmise on the legality or illegality of the creation and distribution of these non-commissioned subtitles or fansubs. In the meantime, enjoy binge-watching responsibly and always keep safe and healthy!

This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and not offered as, and does not constitute, legal advice or legal opinion.

 

Josemaria Carlo F. Magsino is an Associate of the Intellectual Property Department of the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW).

8830-8000

jfmagsino@accralaw.com

Thousands in Masbate get food relief packs from mining firm

Thousands of homes, specifically 21,329 families, in Masbate province and in Aroroy town, have received relief packs from the  Phil. Gold Refining & Processing Corp. (PGPRC), which had earlier earmarked P16.8 million to support the anti-COVID19 efforts of the province and the municipality which hosts PGPRC’s mining site.

The firm also turned over an ambulance unit to the Masbate Provincial Health Office through the Office of the Governor, and another unit is set to be delivered in the next few weeks.

PGPRC owns and operates the processing plant of the Masbate Gold Project located in the municipality of Aroroy, which has stimulated the local economies and has created jobs for people in Masbate, particularly in Aroroy.

PGPRC had already disbursed P12 million (from the P16.8 million), specifically for funding support directed at Aroroy’s rural health units and including medical frontliners, which received weekly food packs, plus food relief pack 6,398 families in eight impact barangays, and 14,931 families from 33 neighboring barangays.

PGPRC president  Dan Moore said that in the context of the “worldwide health and economic crisis that we are experiencing, we all have to do our part in working together to protect and provide not only for ourselves and our families but also for the community as a whole.”

Since March 15, the gold firm has been working with Masbate Governor Antonio Kho, Aroroy Mayor Art Virtucio, and local line agencies to provide Aroroy’s rural health unit quarantine tents with health amenities, gallons of rubbing alcohol, N95 masks, and food packs. Some 500 sacks of rice were donated to the provincial government for distribution to marginalized constituents in other municipalities.

  In April, PGPRC and the municipal government of Aroroy distributed food packs for the eight impact barangays and 33 neighboring barangays. This effort covered rice subsidies of all of Aroroy’s 41 barangays. PGPRC has sustained its continuing support programs, such as providing meals to the enforcement frontliners of Aroroy who man the check points and quarantine areas.

The donations came from PGPRC’s realigned Social Development Program (SDMP) fund. Aside from the funds sourced from PGPRC’s SDMP funds, the firm also donated five million pesos to the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction Management Office (PDRRMO).
He cited the provincial and municipal governments for providing these services, saying: “It is good that the government is providing all these services and relief to the community; so we in the private sector, as well as private individuals, should take on the challenge and do our share to make sure the communities and their people around us stay afloat.”

PGPRC is a wholly-owned firm by Vancouver-based B2 Gold Corporation, a 13-year old  low cost, international senior gold producer, which has operations in Mali and Namibia and numerous exploration and development projects in various countries like Colombia, Burkina Faso, and the Philppines.

Recently, PGPRC was cited by the Department of Finance as one of the top 20 of the corporations who paid their income tax ahead of the deferred payment deadline. “This was meant to help the government sustain in its current efforts against coronavirus, and to bolster its economic recovery programs,” Company officials said.

SafePass and SafeForm envision a safe next normal

Earlier in May, Regtech startup UNAWA launched two digital solutions to aid businesses reopen and operate safely post-lockdown. SafePass and SafeForm are envisioned to help SMEs and large enterprises ensure the safety of their physical locations as well as their businesses’ digital data.

SafePass

SafePass is an all-digital, contact-free authorizing, scheduling, and contact tracing platform. The system aims to help companies better manage their physical locations by allowing them to control the number of people in their premises, and by providing contact tracing capacities, notifying their customers should an incident arise from their location.

Among the platforms features are:

 – Scheduling and capacity management – for better implementation of physical distancing rules;
 – Guest reservation – for a more predictable visit for everyone;
 – Visitor health questionnaire – for the collection of health information from every visitor in an all-digital and contact-free way; and
 – Contact tracing analytics – for an improved incident management experience.

SafePass asserts they claim no ownership over the data they process. This information volunteered by users is to be used by the businesses only for contact tracing purposes.

Given the example of a grocery store using this system, UNAWA explains the user experience as follows:

End-users, whether customers (shoppers) or employees, will need to sign up for a SafePass QR from the establishment first. SafePass has a feature called Guest Reservation that will enable end-users (based on the Business’ subscription plan) to “reserve” his / her access to a specific establishment.

The grocery will need not email a health questionnaire, as this feature is built into the SafePass app. The questions include three specific questions related to: having fever over 37.5, experiencing symptoms (e.g. cough, vomiting), and contact with someone that has confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 or travel to another country.

You will not need to send a SMS to inform them of your preferred shopping time slot, nor will the grocery revert with a confirmation SMS.

Under the Guest Reservation feature, the user will be able to select the time slot to gain access / entry to the grocery, based on the time slots provided by the business. SafePass also allows admin operators (or those who will manage SafePass) to set the capacity per slot that it will define in its settings.

This Capacity Planning feature will help to minimize foot traffic and ease crowds. Scheduling and Capacity Management also help to make business more predictable.

If someone in the facility turns out to be COVID-19 positive or has confirmed diagnosis of COVID19, the system allows businesses to contact those who were in contact with said person provided that the information given is sufficient to trace the contact.

SafePass will be web-based, so will not need to be downloaded. Access via web browser is all that is needed. Once he/she receives a SafePass QR from a specific establishment, they may already be granted access to enter said establishment, given they meet the minimum health criteria.

SafeForm

The firm’s second offering, SafeForm, helps companies “take that next step in digital transformation” by enabling business owners to create digital forms or convert their analog forms to digital platforms. It allows for securing company data and contact-free transactions and processes through:

 – Digitization – transformation of analog forms and information into digital data;
 – Protection – protection of data and compliance with Philippine Data Privacy laws; and
 – Transaction – creation of e-signatures, etc. to make forms legally binding.

As with SafePass, SafeForm will likewise not own any consumer data.

The realities of the next normal

These two systems were born out of the health concerns, mobility restrictions, and the necessary shift to the digital economy. With both platforms, UNAWA aims to enable entrepreneurs to operate effectively in the next normal.

Winston Damarillo, Chief Strategy Officer of UNAWA and Executive Chairman of Amihan Global Strategies, said, “Gusto nating bigyan ng lakas ng loob ang ating mga negosyo para magbukas, at gusto nating bigyan ng tiwala ang ating mga consumers at pumunta at [tangkilikin ang] ating mga businesses.”

[“We want to give our entrepreneurs the courage to reopen, and we want to give our consumers the confidence to go and patronize these businesses.”]

The entry level plan for SafePass is free for one establishment. Scan the QR codes below to book a free demo for either system or email una@unawa.asia.

FHMoms, serving and empowering the nation’s working mothers

MK Bertulfo had had enough of her daily grind as a working mother. Caught between rush hours for a call center job that barely paid the bills and tending to a baby that would cry whenever she left the door, she knew she needed to find a new way to support her family.

One inspired night, she decided to respond to an online job listing from a Canadian tattoo shop looking for email support. To her surprise, she got called for an interview a few hours later. It was the first of many similar, well-paying jobs she would end up taking—jobs she could do from home, earning her the time for her family and financial freedom that she, and so many women in her position, yearned for.

In 2017, one of her friends, who had also worked at a call center, had a baby. Bertulfo knew she had an entire playbook of tips she could share to help her friend out. But, realizing that this struggle they shared was a universal one, she decided to create a Facebook group to share those strategies with all her mommy friends. The small group quickly ballooned to encompass more than 195,000 members from all over the country, all looking to Bertulfo for career advice.

Before long, she was flying out from Metro Manila to as far as Zamboanga every week, holding seminars, with her baby in tow. She even started conducting online training sessions for mothers who lived in far-flung areas.

In the span of two years, Bertulfo ‘s online support group grew into a full-fledged business: Filipina Homebased Moms (FHMoms).

Tailor-fitted learning

Today, FHMoms has expanded beyond a simple support group, now offering market research services for brands looking for insights from working mothers. They also offer recruitment services, partnering with a BPO looking for call center agents among the group’s members.

But staying true to its original purpose, FHMoms is still primarily an e-learning platform for mothers, offering courses including:

– social media marketing,
– local and international e-commerce,
– photo and video editing,
– writing
– and basic SEO.

“We wanted them to choose the online course that they like,” Bertulfo said. “The idea is like it’s school where you only focus on one field, unlike other e-learning platforms that offer courses in bundles.”

“Our trainers are also mommies, so it’s more personal and they can relate [to their students],” said Bertulfo. “And our courses and platform are designed for busy moms… That’s why they like [the courses], because once they’re done with their chores at home, for example, they’re more encouraged to study.”

For those unable to take advantage of their online courses, FHMoms also does on-site training sessions.

Keeping mommies at heart

But beyond new revenue streams and the better lifestyles that come with it, Bertulfo shared that it’s the sense of pride and dignity that the members of her community—many of whom were never able to finish school—have really come to appreciate. For one member, a single mother and PWD, her life changed when she was able to secure a post as a virtual assistant. For another, her nine-year stretch of unemployment finally came to an end with a writing gig she secured through the community.

“When I started this, all I had in mind then was my officemates, my friends,” said Bertulfo, believing her personal connection with her community has been instrumental to her success. “Because of that, I was able to create a culture and environment for the community that was more genuine, that wasn’t too focused on business and money.”

“It was such a big help that my market represents who I really am. So it wasn’t hard to solve the problems because I understood them, I had experienced them, and I was able to come up with these solutions myself.”

Factory activity slide eases in May

The Philippines manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) saw a softer decline in operating conditions in May, according to IHS Markit. — REUTERS

FACTORY activity remained in contraction for a third straight month in May, but at slower pace than April’s crash, as the lockdown continued to disrupt manufacturing firms’ operations.

IHS Markit on Monday said the Philippines manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) improved to 40.1 last month from April’s record low of 31.6, as “easing of measures in some regions helped the rate of contraction in production soften from April.”

“Despite the improvement, the reading still pointed to a sharp deterioration in operating conditions across the manufacturing sector, the third in as many months,” IHS Markit said in a statement.

A PMI reading below 50 signals deterioration in operating conditions compared to the preceding month, while a reading above 50 denotes improvement.

The headline PMI measures manufacturing conditions through the weighted average of five indices: new orders (30%), output (25%), employment (20%), suppliers’ delivery times (15%) and stocks of purchases (10%).

Manufacturing purchasing managers’ index of select ASEAN economies, May (2020)

Manufacturing conditions in countries across the region all rebounded in May from the record lows recorded in April, but still remained below 50. Malaysia reported a marked improvement to 45.6 last month from 29 in April, followed by Vietnam’s 42.7, Thailand’s 41.6 and Myanmar’s 38.9.

As of press time, data for Indonesia and Singapore are not yet available.

IHS Markit attributed the muted production levels in the Philippines to lockdown measures that continued through May in some parts of the country, including Metro Manila and Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon). Other provinces shifted to a more relaxed quarantine, which allowed more businesses to reopen.

“Yet conditions have still not recovered, with restrictions in the capital and other cities broadly the same since April, in part leading to another sharp fall in new order volumes,” David Owen, an economist at IHS Markit, was quoted as saying.

“Only the lifting of measures in rural areas helped to slow the decline. Employment continued to drop amid excess capacity, further hampering demand conditions,” he added.

IHS Markit said capacity of factories was still “lower than normal” in May as companies implemented physical distancing measures. Companies were also reluctant to increase output as new orders remained weak.

“Demand for manufactured goods continued to fall during the month, with the latest decrease softer than that seen in April but still the second-sharpest since the series began in January 2016,” it said.

Firms reported weaker sales here and abroad due to the lockdown, forcing companies to cut back buying activities and reduce inventories.

“That said, the drop in inventories of raw materials and semi-finished items eased as some manufacturers raised holdings in anticipation of a nationwide lifting of lockdown measures,” IHS Markit said.

With travel bans and checkpoints around the country, deliveries of materials continue to be delayed with lead times rising “substantially and for the tenth month running.”

Employment fell for the fourth time in five months in May, as companies operated with only skeletal workforce.

“The fall in new orders meant that capacity to complete backlogs remained sufficient, although outstanding work dropped only marginally and at the softest pace in over four years,” it added.

IHS Markit noted the manufacturers reported a rise in input costs in May due to more expensive raw materials, although lower fuel prices cushioned the impact.

“Price pressures began to inflate in May after marked decreases during March and April. Raw material prices rose slightly as reductions in global supply started to outweigh weaker demand and lead to difficulties in acquiring inputs,” Mr. Owen said. “Output prices also increased, but firms tried to keep charge inflation low, hoping this would encourage an improvement in sales once demand conditions have returned to normal.”

IHS Markit said it saw improvement on the “degree of sentiment regarding output in a year’s time” as firms were encouraged on partial lifting of lockdown and cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) “being kept under control.”

“Firms hoped that the introduction of new products would also drive activity higher,” it said.

According to think tank Capital Economics, the PMI readings across Emerging Asia, which includes the Philippines, may “not accurately reflect the change in industry conditions last month, but they are still indicative of the fact that output remains very depressed.”

Meanwhile, Capital Economics said in a note that conditions in the manufacturing sector “worsened from April to May” as readings were below 50.

“While PMI readings are unusually hard to interpret this month, the bigger picture remains the same — the region’s manufacturing sector is in a deep recession. Industry is likely to have seen an initial jump from the easing of lockdown restrictions. And things are likely to continue improving very gradually over the coming months as external demand recovers,” the think tank’s economist Alex Holmes said.

ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said the improvement in factory activity in May is still a “welcome sign” that output and new orders rebounded from the low April levels, which could signal a “start of the recovery and one step towards expansion.”

“With some parts of the country allowed to restart limited manufacturing in mid-May, output improved from April’s lows where almost 70% of the economy was shuttered as we sheltered in place. New orders also picked up, offering us clear indications that June activity will post a second month of improvement as lockdown measures were eased in NCR, hopefully in expansion territory as we look to salvage the year,” Mr. Mapa said via e-mail.

Capital Economics said output will likely still settle below normal levels “for many months to come” as demand both locally and globally will remain “very depressed.” — Beatrice M. Laforga

Manufacturing purchasing managers’ index of select ASEAN economies, May (2020)

FACTORY activity remained in contraction for a third straight month in May, but at slower pace than April’s crash, as the lockdown continued to disrupt manufacturing firms’ operations. Read the full story.

Manufacturing purchasing managers’ index of select ASEAN economies, May (2020)

Gov’t adds more stations to Metro Manila subway

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter

THE Metro Manila subway will now have 17 stations, after the Transportation department decided to expand the original plan to include more stations.

Transportation Assistant Secretary Goddes Hope O. Libiran told BusinessWorld the new stations will be located in East Valenzuela, Lawton, Senate, Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3 and Bicutan.

She said the Lawton and Senate stations have replaced the Cayetano Boulevard station, located in Taguig, in the initial plan. The new Senate complex, located in Fort Bonifacio, is expected to be completed by July 2021.

The East Valenzuela station will be located at the subway’s depot site in Barangay Ugong, Valenzuela, Ms. Libiran said.

Bicutan will be the location of a “common station” for both the Metro Manila Subway and the proposed Philippine National Railways Calamba line under the North-South Commuter Railway, she said.

The subway project’s existing stations include Quirino Highway, Tandang Sora, North Avenue, Quezon Avenue, East Avenue, Anonas, Katipunan, Ortigas (previously called Ortigas North), Shaw (previously called Ortigas South), Kalayaan Avenue, Bonifacio Global City, and FTI.

Asked if the added stations will need the approval of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA), Ms. Libiran said: “We’re going back to NEDA after the JICA (Japan International Cooperation Agency) Design Team finishes the updated designs and cost.”

Ms. Libiran said the NAIA Terminal 3 station will no longer require the go signal from the NEDA because when its board approved the subway project in September 2017, “one of the conditions was to include an airport station.”

The Metro Manila subway is one of the administration’s flagship projects funded by official development assistance (ODA) from Japan.

As the coronavirus pandemic disrupted all economic activity, the government extended the deadline for submission of bids for the contracts to provide train sets, electrical and mechanical (E&M) systems and track works that are part of the subway project’s phase 1.

The first phase also covers the first three underground stations, tunnels and depot construction, depot equipment and buildings.

According to a general bid bulletin from the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM-PS) posted on the Transportation department’s website, the bids submission deadline for the rolling stock package has been extended to June 30 from March 17.

Bids for the train sets should be submitted along with a ¥600-million bid security at the DBM-PS office in Manila.

For the E&M systems and track works, the new deadline for submission of bids, along with an ¥800-million bid security, has been moved to July 17 from March 24.

In January, Transportation Undersecretary for Railways Timothy John R. Batan said the contracts will be awarded to the winning bidders “by the middle of this year.”

The government broke ground for the first three stations in February last year after the Transportation department signed a P51-billion deal with the Shimizu Joint Venture, which consists of Shimizu Corp., Fujita Corp., Takenaka Civil Engineering Company Ltd. and EEI Corp.

The Philippines and Japan signed in March 2018 the first tranche of the P355.6-billion loan for the project.

In February, BusinessWorld reported four Japanese firms, namely: Sumitomo Corp., Mitsubishi Corp., Mitsui & Co. Ltd., and Marubeni Corp., purchased bidding documents for the contract to provide E&M systems and track works.

Two Philippine-based firms — construction giant D.M. Consunji, Inc. and KDDI Philippines Corp. — also bought bidding documents for the E&M systems and track works contract package.

Hitachi Ltd., along with Sumitomo and Mitsubishi, bought bid documents for the design, execution and completion of 30 train sets consisting of eight electric multiple units or a total of 240 train cars.

Sumitomo is one of the maintenance service providers of Metro Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT-3), along with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Engineering, Ltd. and TES Philippines, Inc.

D.M. Consunji has been involved in various railway projects in the country, which include the Light Rail Transit (LRT) Line 1 North Extension, North-South Commuter Railway (NSCR), and LRT Line 2 East Extension with Marubeni.

Marubeni’s other projects in the country include the improvement and modernization of Commuter Line South Project and the first and second phases of the LRT-1 capacity expansion project.

The contracts for the E&M systems, track works and rolling stock will go through international competitive bidding in accordance with JICA procedures.

Based on the Special Terms for Economic Partnership of Japanese ODA Loans, the primary contractor should be from Japan, while sub-contractors can be from other countries.

The government unveiled in February parts of the Japanese-supplied tunnel boring machines which will be used to build the country’s first subway line.

The Transportation department targets to begin tunneling works within the year.

While the public will have to wait until 2025 for full operations of the 17-station subway, the government targets partial operations — covering the first three stations — by 2022.

Big business scrambles for revival plan as coronavirus rewrites its future

By Denise A. Valdez, Reporter

WHILE the economic consequences of the global coronavirus crisis remain unclear, this black swan is shaking up both corporate and consumer behavior in a big way. It has precipitated massive changes across industries, showing that not even the world’s corporate giants are immune to the pandemic.

In the Philippines, a number of blue-chip companies have cut capital spending and suspended expansion plans this year, some of them laying off workers to stay afloat. Some of these big companies were forced to shift their focus to their main businesses, ruling out investments in new ventures.

While big companies make up less than 1% of Philippine enterprises, they provide about 3.33 million jobs, or more than a third of the country’s workforce, based on 2018 data.

“I think it is best to be financially prudent,” Manuel V. Pangilinan, chairman of the MVP Group of Companies that has interests in water, power, telecommunications, tollways and healthcare, said at an online media briefing last month.

“We believe that the focus of management has got to be on the existing operations and existing business portfolio of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC),” he said, adding that MPIC had “no energy” to invest in new projects, especially overseas.

MPIC, the listed investment company of the MVP Group, is halving its 2020 capital expenditure to P80 billion as it cuts investments in new ventures such as hospitality and logistics. Earnings plunged by 47% in the first quarter from a year earlier to P1.9 billion after the main Philippine island of Luzon was locked down in mid-March to contain the pandemic.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte suspended work, classes and public transportation, ordering Filipinos to stay home except to buy food. He extended the strict quarantine twice for the island and thrice for Metro Manila, where infections are mostly concentrated.

The metro lockdown has been relaxed since June 1 and some businesses have been allowed to reopen with minimal workforce.

“We all say let’s get to the next few months and see where things shake out, because the whole world is second-guessing what recovery may look like,” MPIC Chief Finance Officer David J. Nicol said by telephone on May 24. “Everybody talked of V-shaped and U-shaped recovery, and now I see people talking about a long L. You know, none of us know.”

Fastfood giant Jollibee Foods Corp., which has given McDonald’s Corp. a run for its money in the Philippines, is cutting capital spending to P5 billion from P14 billion.

Property developer Ayala Land, Inc. told stockholders on April 22 it was reducing spending to P70 billion from P110 billion, while port operator International Container Terminal Services, Inc. told the stock exchange on April 24 it was trimming its capex to $100 million from $400 million.

“One thing that we’ve realized during this crisis after some quick self-reflection is, it is very difficult to plan long-term in an environment like this,” Ayala Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala told stockholders at a virtual meeting on April 24.

NO PLAYBOOK
Earnings of Ayala Corp., the parent company of Ayala Land that has interests in property, banking, telecommunications and water utility dropped by 17% to P6.7 billion in the first quarter after profit at its property, banking and industrial segments fell.

“There is no existing playbook for this kind of situation,” Mr. Zobel said. “We will be monitoring consumer behavior, market behavior, industry regulatory issues and just make an assessment of how the world has changed for us.”

Cebu Air, Inc., which was forced to stop operating budget carrier Cebu Pacific on March 19 due to travel restrictions worldwide, is likewise preparing for a new environment once the situation stabilizes and lockdown measures are eased.

“We are assessing our recovery plan, as the situation remains fluid,” Alexander G. Lao, vice- president for commercial planning at Cebu Air, said in an e-mail. “For now, we are planning for a gradual introduction of our network, but it depends on how things progress.”

He said one key challenge is how travel patterns would change after the quarantine. “While we believe leisure travel will rebound, some other segments will change. Business travel will probably be less as people get used to online meetings.”

The airline operator posted a net loss of P1.18 billion in the first quarter after making a profit of P3.36 billion a year earlier. Passenger revenue went down by more than a quarter to P11.39 billion.

The airline industry has sought support from the government through emergency credit lines, waiver of fees and wage subsidy. Lawmakers have drafted measures including capital infusion to support some industries such as airlines and tourism.

Cebu Air parent JG Summit Holdings, Inc. cut its capital spending this year to P58 billion from P82 billion.

During a stockholders’ meeting on May 14, JG Summit President and CEO Lance Y. Gokongwei said Cebu Air was renegotiating payment and delivery schedules for its aircraft orders. Before the pandemic, the company had planned to replace its older aircraft and expand its fleet to 83 aircraft by 2022 from 75 last year.

Meanwhile, Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc. has also cut its spending to P47 billion from P73 billion.

“During the Asian financial crisis, our decision to remain financially prudent (we did not hold any debt) bid well for the company,” said Sabin M. Aboitiz, president and CEO at the listed holding company that has interests in power, banking, food, infrastructure, property and construction.

“We expect the same approach to benefit us as we face the COVID-19 crisis,” he said in an e-mail.

NEW NORMAL
Aboitiz Equity’s net income fell by 42% to P2 billion last quarter, dragged by a 43% drop in contributions from its power unit.

During the pandemic that has sickened more than 18,000 and killed almost a thousand people in the Philippines and in which as many as 10 million people could get laid off, workers at bigger companies are more likely to keep their jobs, Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. said in a May 21 e-mail.

“Since these companies are huge and well-capitalized, they are poised to overcome the challenges of an economic crisis due to the pandemic, and they can even lend direct support to government efforts directly related to the containment of the virus,” he added.

Cutting capital spending may be the only way for companies to stay afloat, Jervin S. de Celis, a trader at Timson Securities, Inc. said in a mobile phone message. “While this may negatively affect the labor and employment conditions in the country for now, these companies have to survive so they can hire back people when the pandemic is over.”

Talks of a “new normal” have never left boardrooms, but Mr. Asuncion thinks some sectors will find it difficult to adjust until a COVID-19 vaccine is found.

Those offering essential goods and services are expected to recover within months, while nonessential ones such as travel and tourism may take longer.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) has remained volatile, trading between 5,400 and 5,900 since April.

The bourse has since recovered after falling to a record 4,623.42 points on March 19, but foreign investors have been net sellers for 49 out of 52 days from March 12 to May 29.

“The stock market has not digested the full information and may have to wait until earnings results come out,” Mr. Asuncion said. “It will have to adjust soon enough, taking into account potential losses, spending and earnings decline,” he added.

The stock index is likely to end the year at 6,200 to 6,600 points, according to estimates from brokerages BPI Securities Corp. and First Metro Investments Corp.

Mr. Nicol of MPIC said it might take a while before the company goes back to the level it was at when the year started.

“There could be a very sharp contraction in the second quarter,” he said. “The third and fourth quarters will still be below where we were last year. But there will be a distinct uptick trajectory each quarter.”

House passes P1.3-trillion stimulus bill on 2nd reading

By Genshen L. Espedido, Reporter

THE House of Representatives on Monday approved on second reading a P1.3-trillion stimulus package that the government hopes will boost economic growth amid the coronavirus crisis.

Under House Bill 6815 or the Philippine Economic Stimulus Act (PESA), P568 billion will be allocated in 2020 for mass testing (P10 billion); wage subsidies (P110 billion), cash-for-work program (P30 billion); assistance to students (P15 billion); loans for micro, small and medium enterprises or MSMEs (P50 billion); zero interest loans by Land Bank of the Philippines and Development Bank of the Philippines (P50 billion) and loan guarantees (P40 billion).

This year’s allocation also includes assistance to various sectors such as MSMEs (P10 billion); tourism (P58 billion); industry and services (P44 billion); transportation (P70 billion); and agri-fishery (P56 billion) and funding for the National Development Corp (P25 billion) to “minimize permanent damage to the economy.”

For 2021, P80 billion will be allocated for further mass testing (P10 billion), loans for MSMEs (P25 billion), loan guarantees (P20 billion) and additional funding for the National Development Corp. (P25 billion).

Meanwhile, a P650-billion budget for the “Build, Build, Build” program will be spread over three years starting 2021 covering infrastructure projects supporting universal health care, education, and food security.

An estimated 4.1 million employees from the MSMEs are expected to benefit under the economic stimulus package.

The bill also requires the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) to submit to Congress a long-term plan for building economic resilience within six months after the lifting of the various forms of quarantine. It also creates an Economic Stimulus Board (ESB) to identify the components of the fiscal stimulus package, and monitor the delivery of each intervention.

A joint Congressional oversight committee will be created to monitor the implementation of the stimulus package. The committee will be comprised of the co-chairpersons of the House economic stimulus cluster, and chairpersons of the Senate committees of Economic Affairs, Ways and Means and Finance.

The bill also authorizes the President to reallocate and realign the General Appropriations Acts of 2019 and 2020, and allocate cash, funds and investments held by any government-owned or -controlled corporations or any national government agency to provide funding support.

The Secretary of Finance is also authorized to direct the National Treasurer to borrow in the form of bonds and loans to fund the provisions of the bill.

“What we badly need is fiscal stimulus to ensure that liquidity is not trapped. With more government spending, business confidence can return, animal spirits are awakened, and bullish markets can eventually return. Kailangang kumilos ang gobyerno para siguradong makautang ang maliliit na negosyo at gamitin ang utang sa tamang paraan (The government has to act to ensure that small businesses can get loans and use these in the right way),” Marikina Rep. and co-chair of the Defeat COVID-19 Committee’s economic stimulus cluster Stella Luz A. Quimbo said during her sponsorship speech on May 27.

During the House plenary, the measure was amended to require the government to give preference to products, materials and supplies made in the Philippines when making procurements to implement relevant provisions of the bill.

The bill was also amended to define mass testing as “testing of all individuals…who are at high-risk of contracting COVID-19 infections.”

The bill will still have to be approved on third reading, before it will be transmitted to the Senate.

Meanwhile, the Joint Foreign Chambers of the Philippines (JFC) urged Congress to approve the PESA bill as soon as possible.

“We encourage the House plenary to approve the historical measure on 2nd Reading on June 1 and 3rd Reading on June 4 before its scheduled recess. The Senate is considering six stimulus bills given the very large amounts being considered and the forthcoming recess we ask the Congress to approve the final legislation soon after resuming session in late July to provide very needed funds for economic recovery,” the JFC said in a statement.

The statement was signed by the American Chamber of Commerce of the Phils., Inc., Australian-New Zealand Chamber of Commerce Phils., Inc., Canadian Chamber of Commerce of the Phils., Inc., European Chamber of Commerce of the Phils., Inc., Japanese Chamber of Commerce & Industry of the Phils., Inc., Korean Chamber of Commerce of the Phils., Inc. and the Philippine Association of Multinational Companies Regional Headquarters, Inc.

Meanwhile, the House of Representatives also approved on 2nd reading House Bill 6865 which seeks baseline COVID-19 testing for the vulnerable members of society.

It also approved on third and final reading House Bill 6505 which seeks to grant full insurance coverage to all qualified agrarian reform beneficiaries of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program.

Phoenix swings to loss in volatile market

By Adam J. Ang

PHOENIX Petroleum Philippines, Inc. (Phoenix) reported a P215 million net loss in the first quarter, reversing its P415 million net income recorded in the same period in 2019, as overall revenues and volume declined on volatility in the oil market.

In the first three months of 2020, the fuel company saw its total volumes down 5% despite “strong” growth in its retail and liquified petroleum gas (LPG) segments, while its overall revenues went down by 9% as average selling prices followed that of the decline in global oil prices.

“We were not spared but we were able to navigate the downturn better because of our earlier investments in strategic, higher-margin areas such as retail and LPG,” Phoenix Petroleum Chief Executive Officer Dennis A. Uy said in a statement.

The listed independent oil firm noted a 39% increase in LPG volumes in the January-March period, while its retail volume also went up by 9%, building on the progress of its network expansion last year.

“Our portfolio today is more diversified, with LPG particularly thriving in this pandemic. From a non-essential item in the kitchen, LPG became an essential household product, especially during the Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ),” Mr. Uy said.

“Despite the healthy performance of its LPG and Retail segments, the downturn in Commercial business and the unfavorable global oil environment pushed [Phoenix] into reporting a loss of P-215mn for the quarter,” Luis A. Limlingan, head of sales at Regina Capital Development Corp., said in a Viber message.

By March, Phoenix runs 660 fuel stations in the country.

The oil company’s first-quarter performance was “challenged” by the Taal Volcano eruption in January and the global coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, along with the government’s lockdown measures, according to Philstocks Financial, Inc. Senior Research Analyst Japhet Louis Tantiangco.

“The said factors have led to lower oil demand as seen in the decline in the sales volume of the company. This, coupled with the lower average selling prices, led to a 9% decline in consolidated revenues,” he said.

The company has kept its inventory levels to half of terminal capacity, alleviating the burden on its working capital.

It has cut cash requirements by P2.3 billion this year, P1.5 billion of which is from capital expenditure reduction and the remaining P800 million is from savings from marketing, advertising, and travel, as it shifted to digital channels.

During Phoenix’s annual stockholders’ meeting last Friday, shareholders approved the company’s initial P57 million capital provision for its upcoming road transport business unit.

They also supported its P4.9-billion investment in Duta, Inc., Phoenix’s property holding subsidiary, over the next three years.

“Moving forward, with the longer quarantine periods in the [second] quarter, together with the depressed international oil prices including the plunge in April, we may see further weakness in [Phoenix’s] upcoming financial results,” Mr. Tantiagco said.

Separately on Monday, Phoenix named Henry Albert R. Fadullon as its new president, a position previously held by the company’s founder Mr. Uy.

Mr. Fadullon has served as Phoenix’s chief operating officer since 2017. Mr. Uy will become the chairman of the board and chief strategy officer.

Phoenix also sought to amend its corporate term to a perpetual existence from 50 years previously.

On Monday, shares in Phoenix fell by 1.91% to close at P11.28 each.

House panels want Lopez in ABS-CBN franchise hearings

By Genshen L. Espedido, Reporter

TWO panels at the House of Representatives are calling on ABS-CBN Corp.’s Chairman Emeritus Eugenio Gabriel L. Lopez III to attend the next hearings on the franchise renewal of the media network.

“I saw the agenda and I think we will discuss the issue of citizenship. I think there are questions that are personal to him. I would not know how to deal with this, Mr. Chair, if he is not present,” Deputy Speaker Rodante D. Marcoleta said during the joint hearing of the House committees on legislative franchises, and good government and public accountability on Monday.

After Mr. Marcoleta’s manifestation, Palawan Rep. and House committee on legislative franchises chair Franz E. Alvarez ordered the secretariat to send an invitation to Mr. Lopez. The two committees will convene again on Wednesday morning to resume their deliberations on the network’s franchise.

ABS-CBN Chief Executive Officer Carlo Joaquin Tadeo L. Katigbak said that Mr. Lopez is a natural born Filipino citizen given that his parents are both Filipinos.

Totoo po na may US passport si Mr. Lopez. Ito ay dahil ipinanganak siya sa America, at sa batas ng America, kahit hindi Amerikano ang magulang mo, kapag ipinanganak ka sa US, automatic po na may hawak ka rin na American citizenship,” he said during the joint hearing.

(It’s true Mr. Lopez has a US passport. This is because he was born in America, and under its laws, even if your parents are not American, if you’re born in the US, you automatically hold American citizenship.)

“The fact that he holds a US passport does not negate in any way his Filipino citizenship from birth,” Mr. Katigbak added.

Meanwhile, Solicitor General Jose C. Calida said he was not at “loggerheads” with Congress on the issue of the media network’s franchise.

“I only cautioned the NTC (National Telecommunications Commission) of its possible encroachment on the legislative power in issuing a provisional authority without a law authorizing such action. I never mentioned the name of Speaker (Alan Peter S.) Cayetano and any congressman in my advisory letter to the NTC or in any of my subsequent press releases,” he said.

The two House panels called on Mr. Calida last week to join the hearings on ABS-CBN’s franchise, noting that they would “resort to compulsory processes” if he failed to join the succeeding meetings.

During the hearing of the House committee on legislative franchises on March 10, the NTC told lawmakers that it would issue a provisional authority allowing ABS-CBN to operate while Congress hears its franchise renewal.

On May 5, the commission issued a cease-and-desist order against the media network instead, forcing ABS-CBN to stop its broadcast operations.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT