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HK property market proves resilient

A CONTROVERSIAL security law that threatens to upend Hong Kong’s status as an Asian financial hub hasn’t slowed the world’s most expensive real estate market.

Dozens of would-be buyers lined up in the rain last week for a chance to bid on 94 apartments in The Campton project in central Kowloon, with prices starting at HK$6.8 million ($872,400) for a one-bedroom condo. All but one of the units were snapped up in eight hours, bringing in HK$880 million for the developer, China Vanke Co.

“When the political system and economy are unstable, cash depreciates quickly,” said a woman named Li, who joined the line in the Tsim Sha Tsui neighborhood. Ms. Li only wanted her surname used discussing the security law as the matter is sensitive. “I want to use up the money for an apartment to preserve value.”

On the surface, it doesn’t seem like the best time to buy a property in Hong Kong. The future of the former British colony is clouded by China’s introduction of the security bill, prompting the US to threaten removal of Hong Kong’s special status.

The legislation is triggering concerns about capital outflow, sparking renewed pro-democracy protests and increasing tensions in a city trying to recover from the pandemic. The economy is expected to see a record 7% contraction this year.

For some residents, the political and economic turmoil make real estate a better bet than other assets. Last month, Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. sold 97% of its 298 apartments worth almost HK$2 billion in one day, according to the developer.

Ms. Li, a housewife in her 40s, believes the housing market can withstand a deteriorating economy because the supply of homes will never catch up to demand.

“Hong Kong is a very small place,” she said outside the Vanke project sales center. “If you look at home prices 20 years ago and now, properties bought then are all making huge profits.”

The numbers back her up. Property prices have surged 230% since 2000, data from Centaline Property Agency Ltd. show, bolstering the view of many Hong Kong residents that property will always be a haven. Despite a contracting economy, existing home prices have risen 1.2% this year, and are the highest since November, based on the Centaline index.

Even as prices and sales have dropped in many global markets such as London and Singapore, Hong Kong recorded 6,885 property deals in May, a 12-month high as the city eases pandemic measures. The average price citywide stands at HK$$15,589 per square foot, according to Midland Realty, making it the world’s least affordable market.

HOUSING BURDEN
“Prices have proved remarkably resilient, especially if you consider that the Hong Kong market has become a byword for unaffordability,” said Simon Smith, head of research and consultancy at Savills Plc. Mr. Smith cites persistently low real interest rates and the city’s relatively successful handling of the pandemic to explain the market’s resilience.

In the long-run, limited supply, high demand stemming from a low rate of home ownership and close-to-zero interest rates will support the market, according to a Morgan Stanley report dated May 26 by analysts including Praveen Choudhary.

That’s not to say the property market isn’t without risks. Businesses are shutting down and unemployment is at its highest in a decade. While job losses have mostly been in low-skilled sectors such as retail and catering, the spread of unemployment to professionals will affect their ability to repay mortgages. Savills expects residential home prices to drop 5% in 2020.

The recession and plunging retail sales have also taken their toll on real estate stocks, though they rallied last week. The Hong Kong Hang Seng Properties Index, which includes the city’s biggest developers, has declined 18% this year versus a 12% drop in the benchmark. Developers focusing on residential real estate such as Sun Hung Kai Properties have fared better than commercial landlords.

The doubts about Hong Kong’s future has already prompted some residents to plot emigration to avoid the tightening grip from China. Non-resident bank deposits surged to a record in Singapore last week, an early sign that some people in Hong Kong are moving their money.

For now, home buyers seem willing to look past the risks.

“Hong Kong is one of the most livable cities in China, if not Asia,” said Mr. Smith. “If it maintains its status as a global first-tier city, a gateway to China and an international financial center, there is no reason why both the commercial and residential markets shouldn’t continue to thrive.” — Bloomberg

AboitizPower unit sends P20-M to host communities

A RENEWABLES unit of Aboitiz Power Corp. has remitted a total of P20.1 million of its electrification shares to its host local government units to aid in their pandemic response.

In a statement on Monday, the power firm said Hedcor, Inc., which operates a run-of-river hydropower plant in northern Luzon and Mindanao, relayed the amount under the Energy Regulations (ER) 1-94, which sets aside for host communities a one centavo per kilowatt-hour take from total electricity sales.

The fund will benefit over 12 barangays, four cities, and municipalities in Mindanao, as well as the provinces of Davao del Sur and Bukidnon. It will also be utilized by some barangays in Benguet, Mt. Province, and Ilocos Sur.

The Department of Energy (DoE) in April ordered the use of the electrification funds for the COVID-19 response of local governments, including the procurement of testing kits and medical supplies. This is done in compliance with Republic Act. No. 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal As One Law.

Meanwhile, AboitizPower said in a stock exchange disclosure that the fine imposed by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources-Pollution Adjudication Board against Hedcor over its alleged pollution of Chico River had already been settled.

The pollution board had found the power company to have illegally dumped soil in the river system during the construction of its Sabangan, Mt. Province hydro-electric power plant.

Hedcor’s contractor Sta. Clara International paid the P200,000 fine for the alleged violation of Republic Act No. 9275 or the Clean Water Act, fulfilling its contractual obligation and liability for the “care of water” during the construction of the plant.

Hedcor and Hedcor Sabangan, Inc. are both owned by Aboitiz Renewables, Inc., a holding company of AboitizPower for its renewable energy portfolio. — Adam J. Ang

Gov’t raises P28B via T-bills on strong demand

THE GOVERNMENT upsized the amount of Treasury bills (T-bills) it accepted on Monday and even opened the tap facility as rates continued to slide amid strong demand for state debt.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) awarded P28 billion in T-bills yesterday, up from the programmed P20 billion, as total tenders reached P96.026 billion or nearly five times the initial offer.

The BTr also opened the tap facility to offer another P10 billion in one-year instruments.

Broken down, the government hiked to P7 billion its award of 91-day T-bills, from the programmed P5 billion and out of tenders worth P21.751 billion. The three-month papers fetched an average rate of 2.038%, down 0.8 basis point (bp) from the 2.046% seen in the auction last week.

It raised another P7 billion via 182-day papers, up from the programmed offer of P5 billion, as total bids reached P19.375 billion or almost four times the amount on the auction block. The average rate for the six-month papers also declined 1.9 bps to 2.099% from 2.118% previously.

The government likewise increased to P14 billion the volume of 364-day securities it awarded from the P10-billion plan as its average yield went down to 2.378% from the 2.42% fetched last week. The one-year papers attracted bids worth P54.9 billion, prompting the Treasury to offer another P10 billion via its tap facility.

Following the auction, National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said government bond yields are still within the level of the headline inflation rate, which slowed to 2.1% in May.

Ms. De Leon said rates of the short-term papers continue to go down as investors’ “bias towards safe haven prevails.”

A bond trader also attributed the decline in rates to cautiousness in the market over the growth outlook for the Philippines this year, as the economy is expected to contract by 2-3.4%.

The trader said they do not expect affected businesses to have a “bullish mindset” on the domestic economy over the near term after bearing the brunt of a stalling economy, “especially if there are no clear plans of government support.”

The government plans to borrow P170 billion from the local market in June: P110 billion via weekly T-bill auctions and the remaining P60 billion in Treasury bonds to be offered fortnightly.

PREMYO BONDS
Meanwhile, Ms. De Leon yesterday said the BTr will finally push through with its first and second quarterly raffle draws for its Premyo Bonds on June 18 following their postponement in March due to the government’s quarantine measures due to the coronavirus pandemic.

“The long wait is over. We will raffle not one (P1 million) but P2 million, and two house and lot on June 18,” she told reporters.

Launched in December, the BTr raised nearly P5 billion via the one-year Premyo bonds. Bondholders were given raffle tickets to participate in the quarterly draws to win prizes worth P4.5 million in total.

The BTr is supposed to conduct one raffle draw per quarter to pick some 116 winners, with one winning the grand prize of P1 million, 15 people receiving P100,000 each and 100 winners of P20,000 billion.

Apart from the cash rewards, the quarterly raffle prize pool will also include condominiums and houses and lots, all net of taxes, fees and charges. — Beatrice M. Laforga

How vulnerable is the Philippines to the health and humanitarian impacts of COVID-19?

How vulnerable is the Philippines to the health and humanitarian impacts of COVID-19?

How PSEi member stocks performed — June 8, 2020

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, June 8, 2020.


Drop in US unemployment lifts Philippine stocks

By Denise A. Valdez, Reporter

LOCAL SHARES bounced back on Monday as investors reacted to the unexpected rise in jobs in the United States in May.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) gained 48.87 points or 0.75% to close at 6,514.00. The broader all shares index added 54.12 points or 1.43% to 3,827.40.

“The local market rallied…on the back of the unexpected 2.5 million job increase in the US last May. The employment data became a source of hope for investors as it pointed towards the recovery of the US economy which in turn could spill over to the rest of the globe,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Senior Research Analyst Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said in a text message.

The US ended last week with a report that its economy had started to rebound in May, generating jobs that reduced its unemployment rate to 13.3%. This is an improvement from the record 20.5 million jobs the country lost in April due to lockdowns triggered by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

The report resulted in a rally in Wall Street on Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite indices climbing 3.15%, 2.62% and 2.06%, respectively.

The improvement in US markets spilled over to the Philippines on Monday, as Mr. Tantiangco said this spurred optimism that other economies may soon recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, too.

Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan pointed to the same driver for the PSEi’s performance. He said the drop in US unemployment in May similarly resulted in lower gold prices and higher oil prices.

“Here at home, investors also remained optimistic with respect to our local economy amid the relaxed quarantine measures especially in key economic areas such as Metro Manila,” Mr. Tantiangco said.

Five of six sectoral indices were gainers at the close of session: mining and oil surged 427.11 points or 8.63% to 5,374.11; industrials rose 198.32 points or 2.54% to 8,003.07; property added 45.33 points or 1.39% to 3,304.81; holding firms improved 78.69 points or 1.19% to 6,690.40; and services increased 7.16 points or 0.51% to 1,404.07.

The sole declining index was financials, which lost 20.73 points or 1.52% to 1,340.46 at the end of trading.

Value turnover stood at P9.63 billion on Monday from P9.11 billion at the end of Friday’s session. Some 1.18 million issues switched hands.

“Net value turnover today posted P8.96 billion, higher than the year-to-date average of P5.81 billion, implying that the rally had conviction,” Mr. Tantiangco said.

Advancers beat decliners, 157 against 58, while 35 names ended unchanged.

Foreign investors ended up as net sellers, with net outflows amounting to P147.43 million from net inflows of P476.37 million on Friday.

Peso weakens on US jobs data, oil production cuts

THE PESO weakened on Monday as sentiment favored the greenback after data on US jobs as well as the extension of oil production cuts.

The local unit finished trading at P49.90 per dollar on Monday, depreciating by 10 centavos from its close of P49.80 on Friday, according to data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened Monday’s session at P49.83 per dollar. Its weakest showing was at P49.97 while its intraday best was at P49.80 against the greenback.

Dollars traded dropped to $651.3 million on Monday from the $1.011 billion seen on Friday.

A trader said market sentiment for the peso dimmed after major oil exporters opted to continue production cuts.

“The production cuts in May gave way to some price recoveries so we expect oil prices will continue to be pushed upwards by this move, which may have given that risk-off factor for the peso,” the trader said in a phone call.

Reuters reported that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)together with Russia and allies decided to extend oil production cuts until end-July.

“Demand is returning as big oil-consuming economies emerge from pandemic lockdown. But we are not out of the woods yet and challenges ahead remain,” Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman told the video conference of OPEC+ ministers.

The group also called on other countries that have gone beyond their production quotas in May and June such as Nigeria and Iraq to compensate through extra cuts from July to September.

Meanwhile, another trader attributed the peso’s weakness to better US jobs data released late last week.

“The peso weakened following the surprising rebound in US nonfarm payrolls data which reflected new 2.5 million jobs last month,” the second trader said in an e-mail.

The US Labor department reported on Friday that nonfarm payrolls grew by 2.509 million jobs in May after a record decline of 20.7 million in April.

With this, the unemployment rate fell to 13.3% from the post World War II high of 14.7% in April.

The first trader expects the peso to move between the P49.75 to P50 band versus the dollar while the second trader sees the peso moving between the P49.85 to 50.05 levels this Tuesday. — L.W.T. Noble with Reuters

Physical classes banned without COVID-19 vaccine, DepEd says

FACE-TO-FACE school classes won’t open until a vaccine for the coronavirus that has sickened more than 22,000 and killed about a thousand in the Philippines is found, according to the Department of Education (DepEd).

“We will comply with the President’s directive to postpone face-to-face classes until a vaccine is available,” Education Secretary Leonor Briones said in a statement on Monday, taking her cue from President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

The President last month said he would only allow classes once a vaccine for the COVID-19 virus has become available, citing the risk of an outbreak in schools.

Mr. Duterte locked down the entire Luzon island in mid-March, suspending work, classes and public transportation to contain the pandemic. People should stay home except to buy food and other basic goods, he said.

He extended the quarantine for the island twice and thrice for the capital region. The lockdown in Metro Manila has since been eased, but mass gatherings across the nation remain banned.

The Philippines has four levels of lockdowns — enhanced, modified enhanced, general and modified general community quarantine.

Under the so-called new normal, restrictions will be eased and minimum health standards should be observed.

In a taped address aired on Friday, Mr. Duterte again said classes should not be allowed without a vaccine. He also said he doubted the country’s readiness for distance learning.

“Indeed, it is a challenging task for us at the Department of Education to prepare our schools in a different setup but we are committed to our duty to make education available and thriving, even in the most difficult time,” Ms. Briones said.

She also told an online news briefing yesterday he would ask Mr. Duterte to allow face-to-face classes in places that are coronavirus-free.

The Department of Health reported 579 new coronavirus infections yesterday, bringing the total to 22,474.

The death toll rose to 1,011 after eight more patients died, while 107 more patients have gotten well, raising the total recoveries to 4,637, it said in a bulletin.

Of the new cases, 331 were reported in the past three days, while 248 were reported late, DoH said.

Ms. Briones said schools that would be allowed to hold physical classes must follow minimum health standards including reduced class size, she added.

She said the agency has prepared learning programs and modules that will be used online or delivered to students starting August.

Ms. Briones said they were ready to enforce distance learning amid criticism that the country was not ready for this. “We have been doing distance and blended learning for decades,” she said.

The Education chief said DepEd could enforce blended learning, which involves the use of the Internet, printed or digital modules, radio and television.

The agency was also training teachers for the new platform, Ms. Briones said, adding that they have been working with education experts and partners from the private sector to develop, acquire and deploy learning resources.

As of Monday morning, about 6.4 million students have enrolled in public and private schools nationwide, according to data provided by DepEd.

More than 27 million students enrolled in public and private schools, state universities and colleges in the past school year.

Students have until the end of the month to enroll in public schools for the school year that will start on Aug. 24. — Gillian M. Cortez and Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Duterte told to seize China assets for reef damage in waterway

THE Philippines should seize China-owned assets in the country as payment for reef damage caused by its island-building activities in the South China Sea, a former top diplomat said on Monday.

“Philippine authorities have the right to seize assets and properties owned by the Chinese state here in the Philippines to satisfy Chinese debt to the Filipino people,” former Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert F. del Rosario said at an online forum.

Among these assets are China’s shares in the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) and DITO Telecommunity Corp.

The State Grid Corp. of China has a 40% stake each in NGCP and China Telecommunications Corp., which partially owns DITO with Udenna Corp. and Chelsea Logistics and Infrastructure Holdings Corp.

“We have to take China accountable for the ecological damage in the West Philippine Sea,” Senator Risa N. Hontiveros-Baraquel, who hosted yesterday’s forum said, referring to the part of the South China Sea within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone.

“We need to comprehensively audit this damage, now estimated at P200 billion and demand payment,” she added.

Ms. Baraquel in April asked the government of President Rodrigo R. Duterte to exert legal and diplomatic pressure on China to cease destructive activities in the disputed sea, and pay damages that the Southeast Asian nation could use in the fight against a novel coronavirus pandemic.

Based on a 2012 Ecosystem Services study, the reef damage was about P33 billion annually or P200 billion for the past six years.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila earlier called the senator’s move as “ridiculously absurd and irresponsible.”

The United Nations Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Haque favored the Philippines in a lawsuit filed by ex-President Benigno S.C. Aquino III against China in 2016, rejecting its claim to most parts of the South China Sea based on a nine-dash line.

Unlike his predecessor, Mr. Duterte has sought closer investment and trade ties with China, offering a joint exploration of the disputed waterway for energy resources.

Former Supreme Court Justice Antonio T. Carpio said China refuses to recognize the ruling. “If the Chinese government today accepts the arbitral ruling, the Chinese people will consider their leaders and the Chinese government as traitors,” he said at the same forum.

“The Chinese government is stuck with the nine-dash line claim even as the whole world, except China, is laughing at this ridiculous claim,” he added. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

35,000 Filipino sailors to come home amid global health crisis

AS MANY as 35,000 Filipino seafarers are expected to come home after being displaced by a novel coronavirus pandemic, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said on Monday.

However, some land-based workers in countries that have restarted their economies no longer desire to return after finding new jobs there, Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Sarah Lou Y. Arriola said an online news briefing.

The agency has helped repatriate 36,731 overseas Filipinos — 22,198 sea-based and 14,533 land-based workers.

Ms. Arriola said DFA holds repatriations twice a week with a limit of 1,200 Filipino workers daily at Manila’s international airport and 600 at the Clark International Airport in Pampanga.

The last reported batch of returning Filipino workers included 150 Filipino seafarers of bulk and cargo vessels from Norway who arrived on Sunday.

The pandemic has infected 7.1 million and killed more than 400,000 people worldwide, according to the Worldometers website, citing various sources including data from the World Health Organization.

DFA said 5,392 Filipinos abroad have been infected — 2,791 patients were being treated, 2,231 have recovered, and 370 have died. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

8,000 local jobs available to OFWs, DoLE says

About 8,000 local jobs will be made available to returning overseas Filipino workers who lost their jobs amid a global health crisis, according to the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE).

At least two companies have reached out to the Bureau of Local Employment to offer jobs to the displaced workers, the agency said in a statement on Monday.

The companies were Optum Global Solutions and EMS Group of Companies. Optum is an information technology that provides healthcare solutions, while EMS is a subcontracting group that offers electronic and manufacturing services, according to their websites.

Optum has about 4,000 job openings for nurse case management specialists, clinical operation specialists and customer service specialists. EMS also has about 4,000 job openings at its technoparks in Laguna and Batangas provinces including production operators and assembly workers, DoLE said.

More than 300,000 OFWs have lost their jobs and the number could balloon to a million by 2021, agency officials told a House of Representatives hearing last week. — Gillian M. Cortez

#COVID-19 Regional updates (06/08/20)

Quarantine rules likely to be further eased by June 16 for some areas

QUARANTINE rules are likely to be further eased in areas under the general community quarantine (GCQ) category by June 16, but the capital Metro Manila is still subject to closer scrutiny being the center of the coronavirus outbreak in the country. Palace Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, in a briefing on Monday, said the overall trend in most areas is a decrease in cases. “Kung ang pagbabasehan po ay iyong onset of illness, kailan nagkaroon ng unang sintomas, eh malinaw na malinaw po ang trend, pababa na po tayo ng trend (If we base it on the date of the onset of illness, on when the initial symptoms were, it’s clear that the trend is already going downward),” he said. For Metro Manila, he said the national task force will assess data when they make the decision this week. A GCQ is in effect in the National Capital Region and several major urban areas from June 1 to 15, while the rest of the country has been allowed less restrictions. Under the GCQ in Metro Manila, public transportation is limited, with jeepneys still not allowed to operate. Mr. Roque said the Palace will be looking for funds to help distressed jeepney drivers and operators, who have been without livelihood since the lockdown started March 15. — Gillian M. Cortez

Immigration main office closed starting Monday for disinfection

THE Bureau of Immigration (BI) main office in Manila was closed on Monday for disinfection after one employee tested positive for coronavirus. “We have decided to temporarily close our main office to protect not only our employees but that of the transacting public as well against this deadly virus,” Commissioner Jaime H. Morente said in a statement. Those who have scheduled appointments will be notified of their new schedules. Mr. Morente said the office will immediately resume operations once disinfection is completed. Satellites and extension offices in Metro Manila remain open. Melvin P. Mabulac, immigration acting spokesperson, said he tested positive for coronavirus and his co-workers will undergo mandatory testing. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

San Juan mayor, entourage still facing legal case for Baguio health protocol breach despite apology

SAN JUAN City Mayor Francisco Javier M. Zamora and his entourage on a trip to Baguio City, which included family members and police escorts, are still facing legal action for breaching health safety protocols despite a public apology. “Complaints have already been lodged and the PNP (Philippine National Police) hierarchy has directed a formal investigation, purposely to determine culpability, based on our complaint. This is due process that we are all duty-bound to abide by, for the process to take its full course. Let them prove their innocence, as they have manifested before us, before the proper judicial or quasi-judicial bodies,” Baguio Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong said in a statement on Monday. “Indeed, we have accepted the apologies of Mayor Zamora, no doubt conveyed in sincerity. But in my talk with him, I emphasized that it is to the people of Baguio, not I, who deserve to do that… In any case, we should not lose sight of the fact that his conveyed apology, no matter how profuse, does not mean that he and his group are now freed of any legal consequences for their actions,” said Mr. Magalong, a former police officer. At the same time, the Baguio mayor appealed to local residents “to exercise greater discernment and restraint in prejudging.” He said, “We share everyone’s reaction that an incident of this nature, done in utter violation of border controls, took place at all. Let us however bear in mind that the full appreciation of facts and the proper evaluation of evidence at hand are best left to our courts or the rightful quasi-judicial bodies. This is how justice works.” An online petition has been launched calling on the city council to declare Mr. Zamora persona non grata in Baguio, citing that, “By ignoring protocols and initiatives of the City of Baguio, one of the cities in the country that serves as a model in the fight against the spread of COVID-19 thanks to the discipline and genuine concern of its citizens and the city’s current leadership, San Juan City Mayor Zamora, arrogantly and selfishly, spat in the face of every Baguio citizen who’s sacrificed so much to keep the city safer.” — MSJ

Davao transport terminal faces at least P2M monthly loss

THE Davao City Overland Transport Terminal (DCOTT), a local government economic enterprise, is facing more than P5 million in lost income just in the first two and a half months of the lockdown imposed to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus. Aisa Yusop, DCOTT head, said in a virtual presser last week that the facility generates at least P2 million a month from fees for buses and vans, and rental from food stalls and ambulant vendors. DCOTT reopened last week under partial operations. “As of now, the advice is on the start of the trips of the provincial buses, but with regards to the reopening of the stalls and return of the porters and peddlers, no advice yet,” she said. The provincial buses allowed to operate are also still limited to within the Davao Region. — Maya M. Padillo