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Make-or-break moment in virus fight could happen this week

THE world’s ability to check the coronavirus contagion and fully recover from the worst peacetime recession since the Great Depression may depend on what international economic policy makers decide this week.

With emerging markets and developing nations facing health emergencies, collapsing demand and cash crunches, the guardians of the global economy are under the gun to ease the strains at this week’s videoconferenced meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

“It’s a make-or-break moment,” said former IMF chief economist Maury Obstfeld. “This may be the greatest global crisis we’ve faced in the postwar period.”

Having all taken steps to support their individual economies, failure by the leading Group of 20 (G20) countries to act now together could consign the world to “reservoirs of disease” and trigger outward migration from poor countries on “a biblical scale,” said Mr. Obstfeld, now a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

A lack of forceful action could set the stage for damaging debt defaults and throw a roadblock in the way of any sort of robust recovery of the world economy. The dollar’s surge has been particularly painful for countries that ran up borrowing in greenbacks and which will now struggle to cover the loans, especially as their exports tumble.

OUTFLOWS TSUNAMI
If the emerging markets lag behind, “it means more of a U-shaped or an L-shaped kind of recovery for the US and global economies,” said Nathan Sheets, a former US Treasury official who’s now chief economist for PGIM Fixed Income.

While the US, Europe and Japan have opened up the monetary and budgetary spigots to fight COVID-19 and its economic after-effects, many emerging economies lack the scope to do so.

Morgan Stanley economists predict that emerging markets, excluding China, will shrink 4.1% in the current quarter, a deeper dive than the 3.1% of the first quarter of 2009 when the world was last in crisis, though shallower than what’s expected in richer economies. They also estimated in an April 3 report that the peak rate of growth during the recovery for those economies will be 6% in the second quarter of 2021 versus 7.7% in the same period of 2010.

The problem is even more acute in the poorest nations, where many denizens can’t easily practice the social distancing and regular hand washing that has become de-rigueur in rich countries.

Such an environment leaves the IMF reckoning that emerging markets and developing countries will need trillions of dollars in external financing to fight the virus, only part of which they can cover on their own, leaving gaps of hundreds of billions of dollars. Half of the international lending organization’s 189 members are already looking to it for aid.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva is trying to rally the world into a unified display of support at the Fund’s semi-annual meeting, which starts Tuesday as a virtual gathering after the typical spring gathering in Washington was re-imagined.

“Today we are confronted with a crisis like no other,” Ms. Georgieva said in an April 9 speech. “The actions we take now will determine the speed and strength of our recovery.”

There are questions, though, about whether the Fund has enough to counter the crisis, especially if it proves protracted.

While the IMF says it has a $1-trillion war chest, Ted Truman of the Peterson Institute for International Economics calculates that the maximum amount available for new lending is $787 billion, after taking into account existing commitments and other factors. “The IMF will need more” from the US and the rest of the G20, he said.

And it’s not just the amount of resources that are at issue. It’s what kind they are.

The crisis has exposed a gaping hole at the center of the global economy. There’s no ultimate lender of last resort who can provide the liquidity that’s demanded in a financial emergency.

FUNDS PULLED
Some $62 billion was yanked out of emerging markets in the first quarter in a global dash for cash by investors, twice the size of outflows at the peak of the world financial crisis, according to the Institute of International Finance (IIF).

While there are signs that pressure is easing — Indonesia, for example, sold $4.3 billion of dollar bonds last week to help finance virus relief measures — there are risks the outflows could resume as the hit to emerging market growth becomes more evident, IIF analysts said.

The Federal Reserve has moved to partly fill the void, including opening up dollar liquidity swap lines with Brazil, South Korea and Mexico. Mr. Sheets said it should do the same with India, Indonesia and Chile.

The IMF also has to step up and be willing to set aside its traditional playbook for dealing with countries in trouble, in which it demands economic reforms in return for financial assistance.

“This is much more of an exogenous shock,” said former US Treasury official Mark Sobel, now at the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, a think tank focused on economic policy and central banking. “There needs to be some recalibration by the IMF to provide far more liberal and fast liquidity to members.”

The fund seems to be trying to do just that.

It’s looking at the use of precautionary short-term loans to get cash to countries, as well as other funding options like the increased use of reserve assets called special drawing rights, steps that would require the approval of rich nations.

One problem with the IMF stepping up, said ex-IMF official Taimur Baig: Many countries don’t like turning to the organization because they fear being tarred as a nation in trouble.

REPAYMENT PAUSE
“Drawing on to IMF resources has an element of stigma and it is still seen as the last resort of a crisis-hit nation,” said Mr. Baig, who’s now chief economist at DBS Bank in Singapore.

As for the poorest countries, a plan championed by Ms. Georgieva and World Bank President David Malpass calls on wealthy governments to place a temporary pause on debt repayments. The World Bank in March estimated that $14 billion in service payments are due this year.

In the 2008-09 crisis, the G20 banded together to come up with an action plan.

That’s been more difficult this time for a group riven by rivalries — the US and China over trade, Saudi Arabia and Russia over oil, and the UK and the European Union over Brexit.

IIF President Tim Adams said the G-20 must rise to the occasion, nonetheless.

“There will be enormous attention and enormous expectations” focused on this week’s gatherings, he said. “Not meeting them could be detrimental for markets and for confidence.” — Bloomberg

Pangilinan says groups’ jobs safe

By Arjay L. Balinbin
Reporter

BUSINESSMAN Manuel V. Pangilinan on Sunday assured employees of the companies he leads under the so-called MVP Group of Companies that their jobs are safe, noting that their balance sheets are strong and cash flows are more than sufficient even during a prolonged period of pandemic.

In his Easter Sunday message, Mr. Pangilinan said that during the pandemic, the MVP Group has been focusing on protecting and supporting its employees, continuing to serve its customers, and working with all levels of government in lifting the welfare of the broader community.

“It is important that we keep our businesses going as best as we can. We must keep the lights on, people connected, water flowing, and care for those infected by the virus,” he added.

Mr. Pangilinan is at the driver’s seat of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC); PLDT, Inc.; MediaQuest Holdings, Inc.; Philex Mining Corp.; Manila Electric Co. (Meralco); and Maynilad Water Services, Inc., among others.

“A number of you have asked me if this scourge has put your jobs at risk. The answer is — No,” he said.

He added: “I am pleased to tell you that our Balance Sheets are strong and Cash Flows even under a prolonged period of the pandemic are more than sufficient to carry us through.”

Mr. Pangilinan likewise noted that the group’s profit “has temporarily taken a back seat to cash.”

“Not that it is no longer important — our marching orders are in fact to preserve as much as we have originally budgeted,” he said.

“You have steady hands on the tiller, and the ship itself is sturdy. So I assure all of you: our companies are safe, your jobs are safe, and you and your families are safe,” the businessman said further.

MPIC’s tollways unit Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. alone had about 4,000 employees as of 2019 while PLDT had 17,222 employees as of 2018.

Maynilad’s total number of employees in 2018 was 2,204 while Meralco had 5,602.

Mr. Pangilinan said it will take time for businesses to return to normal.

“It will take time for us to overcome our fear of joining social gatherings or business meetings. It will take time for malls, hotels, and restaurants to recover their trade. It will take time for our Tollways and Light Rail to regain their previous traffic. It will take time for all of us — individuals and businesses — to rebuild and heal,” he said.

The government announced on Tuesday last week the extension of the lockdown on Luzon island until the end of April, as the country has yet to contain the spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

“And when we do reach that summit, hopefully by end April or early May, I am sure we will all be relieved because it is the beginning of the end. I am sorry to say this but realistically, we should not expect to see the pandemic to end as quickly as it started… This could take a few more weeks, or a few more months,” Mr. Pangilinan said.

Also on Sunday, PLDT announced that it is providing its Smart, TNT and Sun subscribers with free access to StaySafe.ph, a COVID-19 emergency-response website developed by Multisys Technologies Corp.

StaySafe.ph is a website that allows its users to protect their loved ones and community by voluntarily answering a series of questions about their health status without disclosing their personal identity. Based on the users’ responses, the online platform classifies individuals as being in good health, or experiencing mild symptoms or severe conditions,” PLDT said.

PLDT added that data from this website will help local governments and private sector organizations to assist individuals with COVID-related concerns and guide authorities in making their decisions.

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

JLL says lockdown prompting real estate companies to go digital

By Denise A. Valdez
Reporter

THE current enhanced community quarantine in Luzon and other select areas across the country is pushing the real estate sector to accelerate the digitalization of operations.

In a recent report by property services firm JLL Philippines, it said real estate players will have to adapt faster to the market’s changing demand as the quarantine poses new needs from emerging work environments.

“There could be greater impetus and increased urgency for real estate players to accelerate their digitization efforts and incorporate technology in their existing and future workflows,” it said.

“Many real estate firms have leveraged on technology and online platforms to keep their business afloat and remain connected to employees and clients during this period. These companies may be inclined to incorporate applications that prove helpful during the outbreak in their operations and may be more open to embrace new ones moving forward,” it added.

JLL noted the real estate sector — across industries — has recorded declines in the past weeks due to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

Since the implementation of an enhanced community quarantine in Luzon mid-March, demand for office space in Metro Manila has slumped, particularly from the online gaming and information technology-business process management (IT-BPM) sectors.

The residential segment likewise saw clients pulling out of their spaces, proven by the reopening of condominium units in different residential projects. JLL said this resulted in an increased use of online platforms to seal new transactions, and in worse cases, developers planning to postpone project launches.

The retail segment is also challenged by the situation, not just by the lack of foot traffic in malls, but also by rent condonation for tenants. Shopping activity has now shifted to online stores that are using social media to support their businesses.

The pandemic also forced some players in the hospitality segment to temporarily close because of massive drops in bookings from the tourism market. JLL said occupancy levels for hotels in Metro Manila are now declining to around 20-30% so far.

The industrial segment is not immune from the pandemic either, as the disruption in the supply chain due to travel restrictions has resulted in reduced capacity of 50% or lower for some contract logistics providers.

As the landscape changes, JLL said it is important for the real estate sector to adapt to the shift in customer activity to online and study how to grow in the new environment.

“Developers and property managers may bolster their existing applications and virtual functionality by introducing new and/or expanding the roster of processes and systems migrated online… Similarly, retail players may continue to strengthen their omni-channels and increase their in-house capability and/or expand their logistics network,” it said.

The work-from-home scheme currently implemented by most companies, as forced by the lockdown, also pushes the real estate sector to evaluate how to remain relevant when the setup becomes more widely accepted.

“There may be increased reception towards adopting flexible work arrangements and explore alternative workplace strategies that may influence future space requirements and design… [T]hose that found effective setups may be more open to employ similar schemes that may affect their physical space moving forward,” JLL said.

The firm also expects there would be increased attention to health and wellness as part of real estate design, as buyers would be more conscious of these concerns due to the virus outbreak. “Building owners and property managers may also revisit their building ventilation designs and air filtration systems, as well as consider the application of new cleaning technologies to enhance health and safety measures within their buildings,” it said.

The crisis may also give birth to new opportunities for real estate in Visayas and Mindanao, as JLL said companies may consider setting up sites outside Luzon as part of their business continuity plans. It noted recent calamities and the current quarantine are all in the Luzon region, which might make Visayas and Mindanao more attractive from here forward.

“This may translate to increased demand for both traditional office and flexible workspaces in established and growing markets such as Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Bacolod, and Cagayan de Oro City, among others” it said.

MPTC waives emergency towing fees

METRO PACIFIC Tollways Corp. (MPTC) announced over the weekend that it was waiving the fees for emergency towing services during the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) period.

“Aside from providing free toll to all medical frontliners, North Luzon and Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressways (NLEx-SCTEx) are now waiving the fees for emergency towing services for the duration of the enhanced community quarantine,” MPTC said in a statement.

“As a vital component of the country’s supply chain, NLEx-SCTEx is committed to supporting the government’s call for the expressways to promote the unhampered flow of cargoes, essential food supplies and medical equipment during the ECQ lockdown to combat the present crisis,” it added.

MPTC said the free emergency towing services began on April 10.

The government announced on Tuesday last week the extension of the lockdown on Luzon island until the end of April, as the country has yet to contain the spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

MPTC recently delivered food donations, including rice, canned goods, and noodles, to at least 220 villages within its expressway network such as NLEx, SCTEx, Manila-Cavite Expressway (CAVITEx), and Cavite-Laguna Expressway (CALAx).

The areas covered were Quezon City, Caloocan City, Malabon City, Navotas City, Valenzuela City, Paranaque City, Pasay City, Las Piñas City, Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Bataan, Cavite and Laguna.

MPTC President Rodrigo E. Franco was quoted as saying: “With these urgent donations, MPTC hopes to support ongoing LGU relief efforts and somewhat ease the worries of families in these barangays, especially those who reside within the immediate vicinity of our network of expressways.”

MPTC announced previously that NLEx, SCTEx, CAVITEx, and CALAx would be toll-free for medical frontliners “in recognition of their dedication and commitment to provide essential services as the country fights COVID-19.”

“We hope that through these programs, we are able to help and give back to our heroes fighting the COVID-19,” Mr. Franco said.

MPTC is the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp., one of the three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.

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

A few minutes of exercise can help decrease quarantine stress

By Zsarlene B. Chua
Reporter

MUCH of Luzon has been under community quarantine for a month now and since everyone was thrust into a situation where staying at home is paramount in order to beat the virus, adjusting to living within the four walls of their homes is a challenge not only for physical fitness but also mental health. Fitness educators and trainers are suggesting that the act of moving, whether doing chores or simple workouts, for a few minutes can do wonders to help the quarantine pass easier.

“In terms of feeling less stress, I think movement on its own just makes your body… release hormones that make you feel good. So once your body moves, it feels productive, you automatically get a lightened spirit,” Rica Rodriguez, co-founder and master trainer at Dynamic Duo, Inc., told BusinessWorld in an online interview on April 6.

Dynamic Duo is a company that trains fitness trainers and was founded by Ms. Rodriguez and Diane Masinsin. Ms. Rodriguez and Ms. Masinsin are in the early weeks of quarantine in Hanoi, Vietnam, and in Dubai, United Arab Emirates respectively.

In the past few weeks since much of the world has ordered to undertake some form of social distancing and quarantines, Dinah Salonga, managing director of yoga studio Yoga Plus, noted that this “[broke] down our compartmentalized life and roles and suddenly merged them into one!”

“Before we could be a corporate executive from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., a wife and/or mother when we get home. Now we have to work and take care of our kids at the same time!” Ms. Salonga told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview on April 8.

“It is driving a lot of people crazy! It is important that we keep our minds focused so we can work when we need to… Physical activity is important to keep us healthy and strengthen our immunity. Movement is also a good way to exercise our brain and take our mind off our worries and cares for a few minutes a day,” she added.

For some, keeping focused means following a strict routine every day, but the women behind both Dynamic Duo and Yoga Plus noted that keeping a routine should only be done if a person functions better by sticking to a routine.

“Instead of an actual routine, create a checklist that can change day by day like one day you’re allowed to do this, and the next day you do something else… because if you put it on a routine it’s can be stressful if you miss an activity in your routine,” Ms. Masinsin said, before adding that making a checklist makes adjustments, depending on time and how one is feeling at a particular moment, easier.

But for those who want to be more active even after quarantine ends, setting a specific time each day to work out or meditate can help one keep the behavior long-term.

“I believe that each person has his/her own way of keeping balance. If you are a person who works best with an established routine, then it is something you also need to be able to do while working from home. Routine helps when we are trying to create a new pattern of behavior. An example could be a physical workout or a meditation practice. Doing it at the same time during the day will help in building a new habit,” Ms. Salonga said.

For those who live a more sedentary lifestyle, Ms. Masinsin noted that working or moving even just for five minutes a day can do wonders for one’s mental health.

“It doesn’t have to be 30 minutes every day. A little movement is better than none… especially for people who haven’t moved before or haven’t been in a strict exercise regimen, you want to make them see that it’s not actually hard to start,” said Ms. Rodriguez.

Yoga, for Ms. Salonga, is something she recommends people to do because she thinks it’s the “best movement practice you can do at home.”

“You can do it with just a blanket or carpet if you don’t have a mat. You can even just use the chair,” she said, and 15 minutes, preferably every day, can do “wonders for your body and for your mental and emotional state.”

The trainers also suggested that being stuck at home doesn’t mean that you have to eat unhealthy food if you have the option to eat healthier food.

“Practice healthy snacking, popping your own popcorn is a good healthy snack,” Ms. Rodriguez said. Ms. Salonga said to eat more whole foods than processed foods if it’s available.

“If they can still get fresh produce (vegetables, fruits, beans, grains), this is still the best. Fermented foods like kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha, kefir will help boost the immune system,” she explained.

QUARANTINE CHANGING THE FITNESS INDUSTRY
Most gyms and fitness centers have been closed during quarantine so many fitness studios and trainers have taken to live streaming their classes for clients and for those who are looking for someone to guide them through a workout session. This has changed the way trainers look at the industry.

“At first it was kind of weird because you’re used to talking to people and getting instant feedback and smelling the room, and now you’re not even seeing people’s reaction unless I look at the chat box,” Ms. Rodriguez said.

Ms. Rodriguez conducts livestream workout sessions every Wednesday and Saturday at 8 p.m. on the Dynamic Duo-Rica & Divine Facebook page.

And it’s not just them as Yoga Plus also conducts virtual yoga classes regularly via the YogaPlus Facebook page. Their last class before Holy Week was on April 8 and classes will resume after Holy Week.

“Everyone’s doing a great job trying to keep people moving in their homes and [we’re] seeing more neophytes joining the sessions,” Ms. Rodriguez said.

“It changed how people are looking at exercise because now they can do the workouts in the safety of their homes if they want to,” she added.

Dynamic Duo has also seen people from other countries joining their online workouts.

“That just means that everyone’s at home and looking for something to do, so maybe if this didn’t happen, those without gym memberships wouldn’t be able to do this, So it opened the market a lot more… it made working out more accessible,” Ms. Rodriguez said.

With the proliferation of online workouts, she mused that “even gym and fitness facilities would have a different way of approaching the market now.”

Dynamic Duo and Yoga Plus’ previous workouts can be accessed via their Facebook pages at facebook.com/pg/dynamicduoricadivine and https://www.facebook.com/yogaplusph/.

Online fitness classes can go beyond yoga. Here are some other resources for online fitness that include ballet and boxing.

Ballet may be graceful, but it also makes for a tough workout. The New York City Public Ballet released a number of fitness videos back in 2006 by PALM, and they are still available on YouTube at PALM’s channel (youtu.be/RSTQz5a_tDI). And for a touch of NYC glamor, they’re introduced by New Yorker Sarah Jessica Parker. The videos feature the ballet company’s daily fitness routine, meant to enhance muscle tone, flexibility, and improve one’s posture. They are narrated by the soothing voice of their former Ballet Master, Peter Martins. A disclaimer at the beginning of the workout notess that it’s designed for people who are in good health, and not intended as a substitute for qualified medical counselling. Volume 1 (there are two volumes) lasts a little over an hour. It’s deceptively simple, beginning with a light warmup that just has you moving your body airily and gracefully, like miming ballet. It then evolves into floor barre exercises and into pliés and dégagés, accompanied by classical music. The light soothing music ignores your gasps and urges you to do the workouts as gracefully as possible, even if your face has already gone red. After the workout, you’re left catching your breath, and with renewed respect for the work and gifts of a dancer.

A bit closer to home, Ballet Manila has released a series of videos called “Ballet Minute with Lisa Macuja” (it is now on Episode 12) in which the ballet company’s artistic director discusses and demonstrates exercises focusing on balance, stability, how to hold the neck, etc. These classes are more for intermediate and advanced students. But there is also a Ballet for Fitness video that is focused on children and adults who are beginners. The 30-minute class, and the Ballet Minute videos can be found at the Ballet Manila Facebook page.

Meanwhile, the Philippine arm of Spartan obstacle races, known for its intense outdoor activities, is releasing virtual workouts every day on its official instagram page (@spartanraceph), led by its own ambassadors. The schedule is usually announced the day before. A recent virtual workout involved burpees, squats, kicks, and tucks.

Finally, the BGC boxing gym Flyweight Boxing is also offering virtual workouts on its Instagram page (@flyweight.ph), from upper and lower body conditioning to dynamic stretching. They’re also offered on Instagram Live, but the workout instructions and some videos are also saved to the timeline. — with Joseph L. Garcia

SEC expects strong capital market rebound after pandemic

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is hopeful that the country’s capital market will have a strong comeback once the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is over.

In an embargoed statement, the corporate regulator said it anticipates a strong recovery for both the stock market and the bond market, evidenced by sustained interest from investors while the COVID-19 crisis is ongoing.

“We are optimistic that the Philippine capital market will make a strong recovery from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,” SEC Chairperson Emilio B. Aquino said in the statement.

“We take the success of recent fundraising activities as one indication of the investing public’s continued confidence in the strength and resilience of our corporate sector, capital market and economy as a whole, especially with the reinforcements coming from the government,” he added.

The SEC cited several examples that prove continued trust from investors while the outbreak is ongoing: the successful offering of P15-billion bonds by SM Prime Holdings, Inc. on March 25; strong investor demand that pushed Bank of the Philippine Islands to announce a P33.9-billion bond issuance on March 27; and oversubscribed offering of Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. to raise P7.05 billion on April 7.

It added Aboitiz Power Corp. is planning to issue within the next two quarters the fourth tranche of its P30-billion fixed-rate bonds composed of P9.55-billion bonds.

“We are hopeful that the Philippine capital market will come out stronger and even more resilient in the end. As such, it can better contribute to the promotion of financial inclusion and wealth democratization toward the fulfillment of our shared aspiration for a secure, comfortable life for Filipinos,” Mr. Aquino said.

Declining investor sentiment due to the COVID-19 pandemic has pushed the stock market to enter bear territory on March 9. The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) is now at 5,510.83 as of Wednesday, down 34.5% from its 52-week high of 8,419.59.

As much as P1.16 trillion have been wiped out from the market at one point, when trading resumed after two days of shutdown due to the government’s Luzon-wide lockdown to contain the virus.

But Mr. Aquino noted the decline of the PSEi is no different from what’s being observed around the world. He added it is “crucial” at such a time like this to keep the capital market operating efficiently and reliably amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The regulator has rolled out several initiatives to support the market as it operates under unique conditions. Some of these are immediately approving off-site trading protocols and relaxing disclosure requirements for listed companies.

“The SEC will continue monitoring developments in the capital market and remain proactive in supporting trading participants, issuers and investors in seeing through the uncertainties brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic,” Mr. Aquino said. — Denise A. Valdez

Being creative with skincare during lockdown

DURING the first days of quarantine, my skin cleared up despite the high stress levels I was under. And now, a month into quarantine, my skin has changed and unlike before when I had a multitude of options at my disposal to adapt to the changes, quarantine has forced me to be creative.

When life was still normal, I had on rotation about a dozen products I used depending on how my skin felt day-to-day and I did have a separate routine in the morning and in the evening. But since quarantine closed many of the online stores selling the products I use, I had to stick with what I have. Here are the products that I have been making work this quarantine.

(NOTE: Since it’s summer, my is more normal-to-dry instead of the usual dry-to-drier.)

Let’s start with cleansing, I ran out of my Avene Extremely Gentle Milk Cleanser (200 ml for P1,280 in Watsons) so I switched to the ever reliable Cetaphil Gentle Cleanser (250 ml for P462 in Lazada) as my morning cleanser, then at night I currently use Palmer’s Skin Therapy Cleansing Oil (150 ml for P595 in Rustans) because my favorite, Calmia Oatmeal Therapy Cleansing Oil (200 ml for P570 in Althea Korea), ran out. The Palmer’s cleanser has a more waxy scent because of its cocoa butter and vitamin E — neither oils are known for being fragrant — so those who don’t like that kind of scent, please stay away. It also has a thicker texture than Calmia but Palmer’s rinses away faster, which blew my mind. And since I double cleanse, I currently use Senka Perfect Whip Moist Cleansing Foam (120 g for P279 in Lazada) which thankfully I haven’t run out of yet. If there’s one product I’m scared of running out of, it’s the Senka, because I wasn’t able to buy any more — I have no extras and no substitutes.

For toner, I am using Hada Labo Hydrating Lotion (170 ml for P685 in Lazada). It’s a thick, almost gel-like toner with hyaluronic acid that I rarely use in the morning because I prefer lighter toners like my recently used-up Goodal Camellia Moisture Barrier Toner (200 ml for P1,000 in Zalora) but since those under quarantine can’t be choosers, I had to use the Hada Labo in the mornings. The trade-off is I rarely use moisturizers now — both in the morning and at night — because I get all my moisture from Goodal Camellia Moisture Barrier Ampoule (200 ml for P1,450 in Zalora). The Goodal Camellia line has ceramides that protect the skin from pollutants and retain moisture. This is such a good line that I’ll be buying some more once everything is over.

On top of the ampoule, I use my Kiehl’s serums: the Midnight Recovery Concentrate (30 ml for P2,950 in Kiehl’s website) that has squalane and evening primrose oil for the evenings, and the Powerful-Strength Line-Reducing Concentrate (50 ml for P3,900 in Kiehl’s) that has 12.5% vitamin C to brighten skin and has antioxidant properties. Both serums have been mainstays in my routine for years.

This brings me down to just four products in the mornings and six products at night. I just ran out of my AHC The Pure Real Eye Cream for the Face (30 ml for P920 in Watsons) so no more eye creams for me for now.

But what I did learn from this toned-down routine is my skin probably doesn’t need as many products as I usually use and it can still function perfectly with less products. Does this exercise make me think of making this my real, everyday routine? It depends because my skin is probably behaving so well because I’m indoors all the time and my skin is not being damaged by pollution or the sun as much. Let’s re-evaluate once we get our normal lives back.

And has it stopped me from loading my cart with skincare products and placing an order expecting delivery after quarantine? Nope, because skincare for me is self-care and therapy. It’s an expensive hobby but it does make me feel like I have my life together even as a pandemic rages just outside the front door. — Zsarlene B. Chua

AboitizPower clinches top credit rating for retail bonds

ABOITIZ Power Corp. (AboitizPower) received the highest issue credit rating for its fourth tranche of fixed-rate retail bonds out of the P30-billion bonds registered in 2017 under the shelf registration program of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The Aboitiz-led power firm over the weekend said that the Philippine Rating Services Corp. (PRS) gave the company offering bonds up to P9.55 billion a rating of PRS Aaa, meaning the company has a “very strong” capacity to meet its financial obligations.

Also, it was given a stable outlook, which denotes the firm is unlikely to change in the next 12 months.

The bonds, initially worth P5 billion and which can be oversubscribed up to P4.55 billion, are expected to roll out by the second or third quarter of 2020 in one to three series with tenors ranging from two, five and seven years.

AboitizPower earlier told the stock exchange that it plans to use the proceeds from the bonds to reimburse equity infusions and fund succeeding infusions into AA Thermal, Inc., as well as to invest in Therma Power, Inc. for the construction of two units of the 668-megawatt supercritical coal-fired power plant of GNPower Dinginin Ltd. Co.

The energy company engaged BDO Capital & Investment Corp. and First Metro Investment Corp. as joint issue managers, as well as joint lead underwriters, along with China Bank Capital Corp. It also tapped the BDO Unibank, Inc. Trust & Investments Group as its trustee.

The company issued the first tranche of the retail bonds worth P3 billion on July 3, 2017. The second tranche was out on Oct. 25, 2018, amounting to P10.2 billion, and the third, which is worth P7.25 billion, on Oct. 14, 2019.

PhilRatings also maintained the PRS Aaa credit rating and a stable outlook for the company’s outstanding P30.45-billion bonds.

Ratings by the local debt watcher are based on available information and projections at the time that the rating review was performed.

In 2019, AboitizPower reported a 21% drop in net income to P20.2 billion from P25.4 billion in 2018, brought down by the decline in operating revenues and an increase in operating and interest expenses.

It recorded an attributable net sellable capacity of 3,455 megawatts (MW) in the year with a plan to add 935.2 MW. The power company aims to have 4,000 MW attributable net sellable capacity this year.

This year, over half of the P73-billion capital expenditures of its parent Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc., or P41 billion was allotted to AboitizPower. — Adam J. Ang

Doing Good: stepping up during a lockdown

THE battle with COVID-19 rages on as Luzon and other parts of the country enter their fourth week in quarantine and frontliners need all the help they can get to win the war. Here is another list of those who are supporting the frontliners.

DIAGEO
British alcoholic beverage company Diageo has pledged to donate 60,000 liters of 96%-strength ethyl alcohol to governments and local manufacturers in the Philippines, Vietnam, and Myanmar. The alcohol, typically used to produce alcoholic beverages, can be used to produce “over a million bottles of sanitizers or disinfecting agents where necessary,” according to a company statement. The company had previously pledged to donate alcohol to the UK, Ireland, Italy, the US, Brazil, Kenya, India, and Australia, to create a total of 8 million hand sanitizers for frontline medical workers.

eBET
Asian mobile i-gaming supplier eBET has donated 9,800 sets of personal protective equipment (PPE) to the Makati Medical Center (MMC) “in response to the call of health workers for protection against the highly infectious coronavirus disease,” said a company statement.

The company said they chose to donate to MMC because “it is one of the hospitals that has experienced a surge of patients since the start of the pandemic in the country.”

“We hope that these protective personal equipment will enable our health workers to perform their duties with a sense of security,” eBET CEO Evan Spytma said in the release.

DE LA SALLE-COLLEGE OF SAINT BENILDE
De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde (DLS-CSB) has opened its doors to approximately 60 professionals and health workers from the Philippine General Hospital. The project, called Safe Shelter, saw some facilities in the campus converted into temporary shelters “to provide hospitality and relief to its guests in need of rest and recuperation,” the school said in a statement.

The college added that it is utilizing decontamination booths and strictly abides by safety and hygiene protocols.

“Even as we each try to do our part in stemming the spread of the COVID-19, there are those on the frontlines who, by virtue of their calling, are doing even more. These doctors, nurses, and providers of support services are today’s heroes, who confirm their heroism repeatedly, every day that they choose to come to work and stand by those entrusted to their care,” Benilde President Br. Edmundo “Dodo” Fernandez, FSC, said in the statement.

In a separate program, industrial design students and faculty of DLS-CSB and the University of Santo Tomas came together to produce 3D-printed face shields. They have so far produced 300 masks and are creating more. Several other programs are ongoing to produce PPEs in collaboration with De La Salle University and other DLS-CSB departments.

VILLAR GROUP
The Villar Group has donated and installed disinfecting tunnels in a number of hospitals to aid “health care workers, staff and everyone visiting the hospital get disinfected, as they go in and out of the facility, to curb the spread of the virus,” according to a release.

The tunnels are equipped with sensors that automatically spray a disinfectant mist when people enter it.

The hospitals given the tunnels are the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, Las Piñas General Hospital, Don Jose N. Rodriguez Memorial Hospital, Rizal Medical Center, Quirino Medical Center, the Philippine Heart Center, the Lung Center of the Philippines, San Lazaro Hospital, and Santa Ana Hospital. — ZBC

IATF approves unrestricted movement for agri workers

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) has obtained approval to remove restrictions on food production activities, including the movements of farmers and fishermen who have been caught up in local quarantine orders during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak.

Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said that workers in the agriculture and fisheries sectors play a crucial part in sustaining the food supply as the country deals with disruptions during COVID-19.

“We are heartened that during the 21st teleconference of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID), we approved ‘that all agriculture and fishery stakeholders must be considered frontliners and their movements shall remain unhampered’,” Mr. Dar said.

IATF recently approved the DA’s so-called Plant, Plant, Plant program which aims to increase agricultural production and more efficient food marketing and distribution to major markets.

Under the Rice Resiliency Project of the program, DA aims to achieve rice self-sufficiency to 93% by the end of the year. Self-sufficiency targets for rice were effectively abandoned under the Rice Tariffication Law, which eased restrictions on imports.

“We aim to boost palay production to 22.12 million metric tons (MT), equivalent to 13.51 million MT of rice or 93% of the country’s total rice demand at 14.46 million MT,” Mr. Dar said.

He added that the National Food Authority (NFA) is committed to maintain rice buffer stock levels by rice milling and procurement of the domestic harvest of rice farmers and cooperatives.

“We will see to it that the price of rice in the market will be guided by the prices before the enhanced community quarantine started,” Mr. Dar said.

Mr. Dar also advised the consuming public and local government units (LGUs) to proceed with the usual trade and only purchase food that they need for their weekly requirements to maintain balance in the food supply chain.

“We have our DA regional field offices moving around provinces, ensuring the movement of food supply from production areas to the markets. We are seeing to it that trucking is not impeded and that basic food items remain affordable,” Mr. Dar said. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Johnson & Johnson’s sets timeline for COVID-19 vaccine

By Vann Marlo Villegas
Reporter

JOHNSON & Johnson’s is developing a vaccine against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) that is expected to be available for emergency use in 2021.

Paul Stoffels, Johnson & Johnson’s chief scientific officer, said the company plans to start Phase 1 clinical study of the vaccine in September this year and the clinical data and efficacy of the vaccine will also be available by the end of the year.

“It is anticipated that the first batches of a COVID-19 vaccine could be available for emergency use authorization in early 2021,” Mr. Stoffels told BusinessWorld in an e-mail response.

“We will continue to work with local and international health authorities, governments, regulators and NGOs (non-government organizations) to ensure that if development is successful and products approved, we achieve broad and timely access to our healthcare solutions,” he added.

The company is targeting to provide a global supply of more than one billion vaccine doses and expand global manufacturing capacity by establishing new manufacturing capacity in the United States, Europe, and/or Asia.

Mr. Stoffels, vice-chairman of the executive committee, said vaccine development usually takes five to seven years before it is ready for market use but the company is expediting the timeline of the vaccine against COVID-19.

“This could allow vaccine availability for emergency use in early 2021,” he said, adding that the company “is well positioned through our combination of scientific expertise, operational scale and financial strength to bring our resources in collaboration with others to accelerate the fight against this pandemic.”

Mr. Stoffels said that the vaccine program for COVID-19 uses Johnson & Johnson’s-owned Janssen Pharmaceutical, Inc.’s technologies, AdVac® and PER.C6®, used for rapid development of vaccine candidates.

These technologies were also used to manufacture the company’s ebola vaccine and develop Zika, RSV (respiratory syncytial virus), and HIV vaccine candidates, which are currently in Phase 2 or Phase 3 of clinical development stages.

The company has identified a lead vaccine and has two back-ups but Mr. Stoffels said the focus is on the production of the lead candidate and “will assess any additional needs” as testing continues.

The company has expanded its partnership with the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), part of the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response at the US Department of Health & Human Services to speed up the vaccine research program.

Mr. Stoffels said that the company and BARDA committed more than $1 billion investment to co-fund the vaccine research, development and clinical testing. They have also provided additional funding separately for the expansion of the work in identifying potential antiviral treatments against COVID-19.

The World Health Organization said globally, the COVID-19 pandemic has infected more than 1.6 million individuals and killed 99,690.

The Department of Health said there are 4,428 confirmed cases in the country with 247 deaths and 157 recoveries.

Learn at home, with style

YOU might be taking some online classes here and there during this quarantine, but we’re pretty sure you haven’t attended one by Spanish luxury fashion house Loewe.

As large slices of the world population are urged to #stayhome, Loewe Creative Director Jonathan Anderson created the concept Loewe en Casa, turning a forcedly shared situation into an occasion of actual and factual enrichment. Loewe en Casa unfolds as a series of online events, talks, and workshops taking place through Instagram Live for everyone to enjoy in the domesticity of their own space. Paced in regular appointments throughout the week, it celebrates craft, innovation, and artistic expression exploring the words and the work of collaborators involved in the Loewe cultural projects and the finalists of the Loewe Craft Prize.

The range of subjects runs from metalwork, weaving, ikebana (Japanese art of flower arrangement), goldsmithing and ceramics to furniture-making, woodcraft, metalsmithing and textile making. The project merges the theoretical and practical in talks that include studio tours, craft demonstrations, and interactions with artists and designers. The ongoing list of involved personalities includes: Tokyo metalsmith Koichi Io; designer Sophie Rowley; ceramics artist Irina Razumovskaya; weaving artist Idoia Cuesta; artist and woodworker Julian Watts; metal artist Adi Toch, who’ll be showing the temporary make-shift studio she’s built in her home to allow her to keep working; furniture designers Jim Partridge and Liz Walmsley in conversations about working and living together; Giovanni Corvaja holding a tour of his home laboratory-style studio where he combines ancient ideas of alchemy with cutting edge technology; Ikebana artist Watarai demonstrating the Japanese art form, working with flowers, twigs, branches and plants to create unique pieces. Adi Toch’s demonstration is scheduled next Sunday at 4 p.m. CET (10 p.m. in Manila).

In the Philippines, Loewe is exclusively distributed by Stores Specialists, Inc., and is located at Shangri-La Plaza Mall East Wing. Visit www.ssilife.com.ph or follow @ssilifeph on Instagram for more information.