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New Olympic dateGames now happening from July 23 to Aug. 8, 2021

TOKYO — The postponed Olympic Games will now begin on July 23 next year and run until Aug. 8, the head of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee said on Monday, as the coronavirus pandemic made it impossible to plan and prepare for them properly this year.

The Games were postponed last week — the first such delay in the 124-year history of the modern Olympics. The move was a huge blow for Japan, which invested $13 billion in the run-up to the event and raised $3 billion from domestic sponsors.

Yoshiro Mori, the head of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee, confirmed the new dates after he made the decision with the International Olympic Committee. Mori said the Paralympic Games would run from Aug. 24–Sept. 5.

“The Tokyo Olympics Games and the successful delivery of these Games will be how we overcome all the problems that the world is facing and that the Olympics could be a symbol for this,” Mori said. “These Games are going to have great historical significance.”

Earlier on Monday, the Games’ chief executive, Toshiro Muto, said the committee was moving “in the direction” of honoring tickets bought for the 2020 Games at the rescheduled event, or providing refunds in case of scheduling changes.

“We want to honor the hopes of all those who purchased the tickets amid high demand,” Muto told a news conference.

It was too early to say what the additional costs of the delay would be, Muto said.

The IOC and Japanese government succumbed to intense pressure from athletes and sporting bodies around the world last Tuesday by agreeing to push back the Games because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The pandemic had already led to many sporting events around the world being delayed or canceled. After weeks of insisting the Olympics would go ahead, organizers bowed to what many said was the inevitable and delayed what is the world’s premier sporting gathering.

Sporting bodies including the World Athletics association, the International Triathlon Union, and FINA, the international swimming federation, all followed up with statements of support for the delay.

The postponement “gives our athletes the time they need to get back into training and competition,” World Athletics said. The association is also working on new dates in 2022 for the World Athletics Championships, it said.

The Athletics and Swimming world championships were scheduled to take place next summer around the new Olympics dates, presenting organizers with potential clashes in timing.

And problems have already arisen in planning for venues for next year, although organizers have yet to be told that they cannot use any facilities, Muto said at the news conference announcing the new date.

The Tokyo 2020 Olympics must acknowledge the coronavirus crisis which forced their postponement and incorporate it into next year’s opening ceremony, executive producer Marco Balich told Reuters from his home in Milan.

More than 720,000 people have been infected around the world with about 34,000 deaths and governments are taking ever tougher measures such as lockdowns to try to halt the outbreak and support overburdened medical infrastructure. — Reuters

Mark Magsayo excited to turn a new leaf with MP Promotions

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

HAD HIS flourishing boxing career halted at one point for a year and a half because of contract dispute with his former handlers, undefeated Filipino boxer Mark “Magnifico” Magsayo is now excited to turn a new leaf after signing a deal to be part of MP Promotions last month.

Mr. Magsayo, 24, and a native of Tagbilaran, Bohol, is now girding to have his career humming anew, banking on the leverage that his newly inked partnership with boxing legend Manny Pacquiao and his group would provide.

“I am really excited and thankful for this opportunity that was given to me by my idol Manny (Pacquiao) and sir Sean Gibbons. I want to prove I am worthy of this chance. I will do my best,” said Mr. Magsayo (20-0) in an online correspondence.

Under his deal with MP Promotions, Mr. Magsayo gets to secure fights in the United States with top promoters, including Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions promotion which also handles Mr. Pacquiao’s fights.

He hopes that through it his goal of being a world champion is fast-tracked.

Formerly an ALA Promotions stalwart who held World Boxing Organization and International Boxing Federation titles, Mr. Magsayo said he considered other promotions to be part in after his falling out with ALA but decided to go with MP Promotions, seeing the latter as providing better opportunities for him.

Mr. Magsayo made his return to the ring in April last year following a year-and-a-half hiatus stemming from his contract dispute with ALA.

He defeated Indonesian fighter Erick Deztroyer by way of a fourth-round knockout in said fight before winning over Thai Panya Uthok by unanimous decision in August in Bohol to bag the WBC Asia featherweight championship.

“Me and my team considered other promotions as this time we want the best for me and we wanted to be careful with the terms of the contract. It is a big factor especially I look up to Senator Manny a lot since I started boxing. Having several world champions under his wing as well, I wanted to be one of them. That is my dream. I trust idol Manny and sir Sean can lead me to that,” said Mr. Magsayo, who joins world champions Jerwin Ancajas (IBF Super Flyweight World Champion), John Riel Casimero (WBO Bantamweight World Champion) and Pedro Taduran (IBF Minimumweight World Champion) in MP Promotions.

His first fight with his new group was supposedly on May 16 but because of the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) it had been moved along with other preparations for it.

“I was supposed to be back in LA (Los Angeles) for camp but now I am running two days on one day off like what Coach Freddie (Roach) told me before I went back here. I do shadow-boxing, skipping rope and sit-ups,” said Mr. Magsayo, who was at the Wild Card Gym in LA early this year.

“I am also careful with my food to make sure my weight doesn’t go up that much,” he added.

The Filipino fighter went on to say that what he had gone through in the last few years is helping him in this time of lull because of COVID-19.

“Mentally, honestly the things that happened to me before are helping me during this time of COVID-19 because I learned how to adapt to situations like this. I just have to keep my focus and my discipline to keep training,” he said.

Mr. Magsayo also encouraged his fellow athletes not to lose hope and keep the faith that everything about COVID-19 will soon end and stay with their training regimen despite the obstacles at hand.

“Make the best out of this situation. Train at home and just keep moving. This is only a trial for us and we can beat it together.”

NBA planning players-only NBA 2K tourney

THE NATIONAL Basketball Association has plans for a players-only NBA 2K video game tournament to be shown on ESPN, Yahoo Sports reported Monday evening.

Per the report, the league hopes to launch the event Friday and involve some big-name players. Each team is expected to have a representative, the report added.

The NBA regular season was suspended on March 11 after Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert tested positive for COVID-19. Almost every other sport in the United States — and many across the world — have been shut down and are expected to remained shut down for some time.

Various esports have continued across the United States, with many moving planned live events into a virtual format. The NBA 2K League — which features 23 teams, including 22 who are affiliated with NBA franchises — has postponed its own season, which was scheduled to start March 24.

The Lakers’ Anthony Davis was chosen for the cover of the latest edition of the game, NBA 2K20, after Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo was on the cover for 2K19. Other recent cover athletes include Kyrie Irving, Paul George, Stephen Curry, James Harden, Kevin Durant and LeBron James.

Making its presence felt

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has effectively shuttered all sporting activities in the country but the sports community is finding ways to make its presence felt, stepping up and doing its share in the fight against the pandemic.

Three weeks since the government saw the need to call for an enhanced community quarantine to limit the spread of COVID-19 and declare a state of public health emergency, various sectors in the country have been chipping in to help alleviate the effects of the respiratory disease, including the land’s sportsmen and women.

Local sports body Philippine Sports Commission, for one, has been very active in the fight against COVID-19, harnessing its resources to help in its own way.

Apart from continuing in its duty of looking after the safety and welfare of the country’s national athletes, the PSC recently offered to open its Rizal Memorial Sports Complex and PhilSports Complex facilities in Manila and Pasig, respectively, to house COVID-19-hit individuals for quarantine to somehow ease congestion in different hospitals.

It also provided more than 200 mattresses for different health facilities in the country to help accommodate more patients.

Collegiate leagues University Athletic Association of the Philippines and National Collegiate Athletic Association have also been active with member schools opening their doors and providing temporary shelter to the homeless amid the ongoing battle with COVID-19.

UAAP and NCAA athletes, too, have been doing their share in providing food packs for their respective schools’ surrounding areas.

Bounty Agro Ventures Inc., parent of Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League supporter and local 3×3 basketball proponent Chooks-to-Go, meanwhile, has been throwing aid to the country’s frontliners — medical workers, law enforcement personnel and other volunteers — by way of food packs.

And it is not only organized sporting bodies which are making things happen as individual athletes themselves have taken their own initiatives, using their celebrity and influence, to help.

Volleyball star Jia Morado, who plays for Creamline in the Premier Volleyball League, auctioned off her jerseys to raise funds in support of the frontliners.

Joining Morado in her cause are Ara Galang (F2 Logistics) and members of the Sta. Lucia Lady Realtors in the Philippine Superliga and collegiate stars Eya Laure and Imee Hernandez of the University of Santo Tomas.

Former Ateneo stars Bea De Leon and Matt and Mike Nieto have thrown assists to their respective communities of Marikina and Cainta with various relief goods that people could use.

The Philippine women’s softball team, for its part, has donated relief goods and food to our frontliners.

In the Philippine Basketball Association, Alaska coach Jeff Cariaso led a fund-raising to help cushion the effects of the COVID-19-induced community quarantine on the livelihood of game-day personnel of the league.

A number of PBA players have contributed to the gathering of funds. This is apart from what the PBA is doing to help its workers.

Some PBA players, too, have used their other passions to make a difference.

Esports enthusiasts June Mar Fajardo of San Miguel, Marc Pingris of Magnolia, Kiefer Ravena of NLEX and Japeth Aguilar of Barangay Ginebra are taking part in a tournament organized by Mineski to raise funds for the UP Medical Foundation in its push against COVID-19.

Other support from the sporting community is coming in the form of words of encouragement and support for the frontliners and the country in general through various social media platforms.

In a battle like the one currently being waged against COVID-19, any support will go a long way and to see the sporting community come on board is truly a welcome sight.

The buzz in sporting arenas and other venues is temporarily put in the back seat, and rightfully so as the bigger noise of fighting the pandemic deserves all the attention right now.

Salute to the local sporting community for what it has done to date and will still be doing. May this push be sustained. Stay strong, Philippines!

 

Michael Angelo S. Murillo has been a columnist since 2003. He is a BusinessWorld Senior reporter covering the Sports beat.

msmurillo@bworldonline.com

Information is power

There can be no discounting the power of celebrity when it comes to raising awareness for a cause. It was certainly on display over the weekend, when the Warriors’ Stephen Curry went on Instagram Live for the better part of half an hour to talk about the new coronavirus. It helped, of course, that he had Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, by his side. “Information is power,” he noted, and promptly discussed the importance of taking preventive measures with the key member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force.

Curry turned out to be an ideal host because he was quite informed about the issue. Perhaps it was because he needed to know more about it beforehand; he suffered from influenza in early March, and the Warriors were concerned enough about his condition to monitor him closely. In recalling the circumstances, coach Steve Kerr told NBC Bay Area’s Logan Murdoch that “when he came down, I felt somewhat responsible because I invited him to take part in the Oakland festivities.” The bench tactician was referring to a peace walk from East Oakland Youth Development Center to Allen Temple Baptist Church that they took part in to celebrate the drop of gun violence in the city.

In any case, the session was a hit, drawing a high of 50,000 followers, including former United States President Barack Obama, and generating an aggregate 93,000 hours of watch time across 146 countries. The number translates to a whopping 10.6 years, with one- to two-fifths of viewers under the age of 35. That the demographic kept abreast is significant, and not just because it tends to lose interest faster and becomes inclined to surf through alternative sources of information or entertainment. It’s also more predisposed to cling to a false sense of security and, therefore, resist community quarantine measures in place to arrest the pandemic. As Fauci pointed out, “what we are starting to see is that there are some people who are younger … healthy, vigorous, who don’t have any underlying conditions who are getting seriously ill. It’s still a very, very small minority, but it doesn’t mean that young people should say ‘I’m completely exempt from any risk of getting seriously ill.’”

Significantly, Curry had the foresight to preserve the enlightening interview. Those who missed it can simply turn to his Twitter account to see it in its entirety. There are certainly worse ways to spend time in self-isolation than to know best practices and make informed assessments of the future. After all, the virus isn’t going away anytime soon. “There’s a dichotomy between people who are frightened to death and people who don’t even believe it,” Fauci noted. “It’s not convenient to lock yourself in … but we’re going through a time when we have to pull together … and do the kinds of things that can put an end to it.” Indeed.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994.

alcuaycong@bworldonline.com

Singapore shares Covid-19 contact tracing technology with global developer community

The Singapore government is making the code for a new mobile application open-source, thereby enabling it to be used and modified by developers worldwide to trace individuals infected with Covid-19.

TraceTogether was launched on March 20, 2020 to support ongoing contact tracing efforts amid the outbreak in Singapore. It was developed by the Government Technology Agency (GovTech) in collaboration with the Ministry of Health (MOH) and can be downloaded by anyone with a Singaporean mobile number and a bluetooth-enabled smartphone. By downloading the app and consenting to participate, users are able to “proactively help” in the tracing and identifying of infected individuals – an important step in winning the war against the coronavirus pandemic.

A supplementary tool to facilitate contact tracing

Contact tracing – or the process of identifying those who have had close contact with Covid-19 positive individuals – currently relies on the memories of those being interviewed. TraceTogether is described as a supplementary tool to facilitate these efforts. “The faster the contact tracing process can be initiated and can identify the people at risk, the faster we can intervene and impose quarantine if necessary and limit spread locally,” said Dr Janil Puthucheary, Minister-in-Charge of GovTech, at a press conference.

The app is built on a combination of centralized and decentralized models of contact tracing with a technology called the BlueTrace protocol. As per BlueTrace’s spokesperson in a CNBC interview, its technology is being used at present to complement existing contact tracing methods and support nationwide efforts to combat COVID-19. “There are no plans to extend the use of TraceTogether for non-contact tracing purposes.” 

Phones with the app exchange short-distance bluetooth signals to detect other app users who are two to five meters apart for 30 minutes. Records of these encounters are stored in their phones for 21 days. Location data is not collected; nor is the user’s phone contact list accessed. Users will only be asked to share these records when contacted by the MOH as part of contact tracing investigations. Those who refuse may be prosecuted under Singapore’s Infectious Diseases Act.

Trace Together is available on the Google Play Store and iOS App Store in Singapore. More new apps from different governments and countries are expected to be released as a result of the Singapore government opening access to its source code.  The Quint notes that the app can also be tweaked to trace individuals afflicted with any other disease for any other possible outbreak in the future.

Meralco assures public of 24/7 service during the enhanced community quarantine period

The Manila Electric Company (MERALCO) today assured the public that it will keep the lights on and continue to serve its customers, operating 24/7 to ensure uninterrupted distribution of power during the 30-day community quarantine (15 March to 14 April 2020) and enable business continuity amid the lockdown.
Prior to the implementation of the enhanced community quarantine, the distribution utility readied its business continuity plan and stated that it has taken all precautions to preserve the safety and health of its employees while also sustaining its continuous operations in the franchise area.

Meralco again reiterated that it will defer its earlier scheduled maintenance activities during the community quarantine period except for those deemed as critically loaded areas, as approved by the Department of Energy (DOE). The distribution utility reassured the public that aside from these crucial maintenance activities, which affected only a small number of customers for a short period of time, there has been close to zero interruptions experienced in the franchise area as a whole.

Meralco SVP & Head of Networks Engr. Ronnie L. Aperocho said “During these challenging times, Meralco remains always ready and will continue working with the energy sector so as to ensure that electric power services remain uninterrupted. Meralco is implementing its business continuity plan and emergency measures to distribute power around the clock, especially to crucial installations such as hospitals. At the same time, we are one with the power sector in our total compliance with the directives of the DOH in order to arrest the COVID 19 situation. Our customers can rest assured that safety is also of paramount concern to us and we will continue to cooperate with the government in ensuring that we will provide the best level of service expected from us.”

Engr. Aperocho continued by explaining how Meralco’s “triple-redundancy of its Control Center ensures continuous real-time visibility 24/7 of the entire distribution network, even in the midst of the enhanced community quarantine. This flexibility affords us to spread deployment of personnel critical to our business operations, not only to assure their well-being, but more importantly, to ensure that power across our franchise is uninterrupted during these critical times.”

Among Meralco’s operational highlights during the lockdown include installations in Cavite City Hall and Maynilad facilities in Cavite last March 21, as well as the March 23 installations in the Manila Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office and the completion of the service application of Urban Homes on the same day, which will provide free lodging to health workers at St. Luke’s Medical Center in BGC, and the energization last March 25 of Quezon City’s COVID-19 regional evacuation center. The distribution utility reassured its customers that many more facilities ensuring continuous public service by the national government, LGUs, and utilities are being attended to by the company’s dispatch of crews with the utmost top priority.

Meralco President and CEO Ray C. Espinosa also assured the public that “all hands are on deck to ensure Meralco runs like clockwork. Our company continues to keep up the good fight and sustain our mission to keep the lights on for each and every single customer in our franchise area. Going beyond the power and light we deliver, this current crisis that our country faces calls for us to be a beacon of reliability and hope. We are keeping the lights on for our customers as we also provision for the safety and comfort of our employees.”

For the safety and health of its customers during the community quarantine, Meralco also continues to offer its Meralco Online service for all updates and transactions.

Customers may download the Meralco Mobile App at http://onelink.to/meralcomobile or check out other online options at bit.ly/MeralcoPaymentPartners.
Regular updates will also be provided through the following official channels, and customers may reach out to these touchpoints for concerns:

Meralco Website: www.meralco.com.ph
Meralco FB page: www.facebook.com/meralco
Meralco Twitter Account: @meralco

Call Center: 16211

SMS Messaging:
0920-9716211 ( SMART )
0917-5516211 ( GLOBE )
0925-7716211 ( SUN )

Beyond the Outbreak

It is around this time of the year when our farmers would harvest the produce they have tirelessly worked hard on for months. Instead of a full table and an income that would support their family until the next harvest season, they are left with uncertainty and instability due to the COVID-19 outbreak that none of us expected.

Focusing on protecting people from COVID-19, the local and national government declared lockdowns and community quarantines in many cities and municipalities across the nation. This severely curtailed movement and public gatherings that made the operations of microfinance institutions untenable. In response, microfinance institutions declared a suspension of operations in their covered areas, including moratorium on loan payments while the community quarantine is in effect. Many of these institutions are members of APPEND and MCPI whose combined outreach is nine million poor and low-income families served by more than 50,000 staff and an estimated P70-B loan portfolio.

With the expected decrease in business activities, the reprieve will allow clients to channel their budget to basic needs. Even so, an unsettling voice still lingers: is the delay in the collection of loan payments ever enough to sustain their needs after all of this is over?

The bigger picture

With significant experience in community development, microfinance institutions (MFIs) have seen poverty-stricken families rise above poverty through access to and ownership of financial and non-financial services. Because of the COVID-19 outbreak, all of this could potentially go down the drain. The low-income sector, who are mostly clients of MFIs, are greatly distressed by the effects of the pandemic and the necessary measures imposed by the government.

Since main bank branches of CARD Mutually Reinforcing Institutions (CARD MRI) nationwide are still open for services like withdrawals and remittances, our skeleton workforce still has interactions with our clients. Field staff have also remained connected with clients through cell phones and/or social media that enabled them to communicate to management what was happening to their communities. Our Regional Directors have reported that many of the clients are experiencing devastating effects on their livelihoods. Most of them have products to sell but are restricted by the physical barriers of community quarantine, severely affecting their income to support their own families. For example, in the National Capital Region and elsewhere, in order to implement social distancing, marketing hours were imposed, compelling many small eateries and stalls in the public markets to close.

Microentrepreneurs in the agriculture sector also have a crucial role in society. Most of our farmer-clients in Luzon end up selling their produce at bargain prices, or giving them away to neighbors, or worse, leaving them to rot because they could not travel to the market due to strict rules on movement being implemented. In Masbate and Marinduque, our clients can neither send their seafood products to key cities nor let their wholesale buyers come because seagoing vessels are no longer allowed to leave or enter their ports.

Come post-quarantine, enough capital would be needed by these farmers to buy inputs such as seeds and fertilizers. But given the situation we have today, transporting and selling their produce becomes a challenge. If they cannot sell their products, then they would not be able to farm again. Ultimately, it is not only the farmers who would face the consequences. We might be dealing with a possible food shortage if our supply is not enough to meet our country’s demands.

Some of these microentrepreneurs also employ other members of the community, therefore contributing to the enrichment of the local economy. While the success of one microentrepreneur has proven to affect a community positively, its downfall can also ripple to many families and eventually, to the whole community.

Post-quarantine dilemma

With all these challenges faced by microentrepreneurs, the microfinance industry anticipates reduced capacity of clients to pay after the outbreak. Even with the high risk of low repayment, MFIs continue to provide financial and non-financial services to the low-income sector during the period of quarantine. In fact, industry leaders continuously think of ways that could still support the economic activity of these microentrepreneurs.

However, we recognize that we could not do it alone. Expecting negative effects on liquidity, MFIs are seeking for potential interventions to continue its business of eradicating poverty in the country.

MFIs are looking for support from organizations and institutions who can provide additional credit facilities and funding to support its cause in helping people improve their lives while facing this global health emergency. We are also convening partners and industry leaders to discuss this pressing issue to mitigate the effect of the pandemic in the industry.

Most importantly, the support from the government is most crucial at this time. The Philippines has proven to be a conducive environment to implement microfinance. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has repeatedly recognized MFIs as champions for financial inclusion. Further, laws such as RA 10693 or the Microfinance NGOs Act, which was signed in November 2015, enables Microfinance NGOs to expand outreach to a greater number of poor people especially in the hard-to-reach areas and implement community development programs funded by tax incentives. These programs include medical missions, scholarships, and livelihood training, among others.

We encourage you to think about the low-income sector; the landless farm workers, the small farmers, the fisherfolks, the maglalako, the sari-sari store owners, and other microentrepreneurs. The lockdown and community quarantine may end soon but if we do not act now, their sufferings will worsen even after the outbreak. Because health protection and financial inclusion goes hand in hand, may we not forget to balance the scale in favor of one over the other. Let’s ensure no one gets left behind.

As a Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest blog concludes: “It seems likely that without significant support and concerted action, many MFIs are at risk in the coming storm. The question is: what steps can we take now to ensure the industry survives and can contribute to the eventual economic recovery? Without taking on hard questions and beginning to put plans in place for COVID-19, it won’t be poverty that is in a museum, but potentially the modern microfinance movement.”
__________

Dr. Jaime Aristotle B. Alip is the founder and chairman emeritus of CARD Mutually Reinforcing Institutions, a group of 23 institutions that envisions to eradicate poverty in the Philippines. He is the recipient of the 2019 Ramon V. del Rosario Award for Nation Building.

Philippines has greatest percentage of women traders in global eToro list

Data from multi-asset investment platform eToro shows Filipino women are leading the way in terms of inclusivity within financial services. Globally, female investors account for nearly 13% of eToro’s 12 million registered users. In the Philippines, women account for over 26% of investors in the region.

Filipino women are outdoing their Asian peers with 18.09% of registered users in Taiwan being female, 17.15% in Hong Kong, 16.29% in Singapore, and 13.24%% in Malaysia. Comparatively, Asian women are better represented on eToro than their European counterparts, who on average make up 11.18% of registered users.

“Filipina traders are shattering gender stereotypes with their active participation in the investment scene, proving that investing is a viable path for economic mobility,” said Paul Familiaran, Head of Southeast Asia Business for eToro. “We are optimistic about the sustained upward trend in the number of registered female traders in the coming years, especially since more women joined the ranks of Popular Investors on the eToro platform.”

Popular Investors are traders that eToro users can choose to copy trade, based on their public portfolio, historical returns, risk level, and other key metrics. Popular Investors earn from two income streams – first, from their own trades, and second, from being followed and copied by other users on the platform.

Fehl Dungo, a Filipina Popular Investor on eToro, shared her insight on breaking the stereotypes in the finance sector. “Most people assume professionals in financial services are men, but as a Popular Investor on eToro, I’m bucking this trend. People can copy my investment strategy on the platform for free and I am currently responsible for over $50,000 of other people’s money—as well as investing my own,” said Dungo, who joined eToro’s Popular Investor program in June 2019.

Aside from being a prolific investor on eToro, Fehl Dungo also founded DailyPik, a blog site that offers in-depth information on stock trading, mutual funds, and trading on the eToro platform. She shares her daily stock picks as well, or the stocks that are performing well on the market at the time being, as part of her campaign to promote investing to fellow Filipinos.

Dungo also gives tips on investing and trading activity updates to her copy traders and followers on eToro’s social trading community.

“eToro is committed to empowering any investor by giving them access to financial markets. Our proprietary technology enables investors to take control of their investment decision on their own or for those who lack the time to manage a full portfolio or are just beginning to invest, can copy techniques and investment decisions of top traders on eToro,” Familiaran said.

LGUs obtain more funds to fight virus

AT least P130 billion could be freed up from local government units’ (LGU) budgets to help them address the growing fallout from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) after the National Government allowed them to use their development funds.

This, after some officials of LGUs expressed concern that their funds meant to respond to the pandemic might be depleted soon.

LGUs can now use 20% of their annual Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) on COVID-19-related expenses according to Joint Memorandum Circular (JMC) No. 2020-001 issued by the Departments of Budget and Management (DBM) and Interior and Local Government (DILG).

Out of the P4.1-trillion spending plan for this year, LGUs were automatically allotted P648.921 billion in IRA, or their share in government revenues equivalent to 40% of national taxes collected three years before the current fiscal year. From their share, which is computed based on land area, population and type of LGU, local governments must allocate at least 20% for development projects or P129.784 billion in total for 2020.

DBM confirmed that P130 billion is the minimum amount LGUs should have allocated for their development fund this year.

It is up to the LGUs how much they are willing to use from the fund to finance their efforts against COVID-19, Budget Secretary Wendel E. Avisado said in a mobile phone message

Initially, this share could only be used for priority development projects under LGU’s approved local development plans and annual investment plan, which are programmed for socioeconomic and environmental development.

The coverage was expanded through the JMC dated March 27 to include COVID-19-related expenses, including the purchase of personal protective equipment, testing kits, medicines, vitamins, hospital tools and supplies, disinfectants, sprayers and other disinfecting supplies and equipment.

The fund can also be used on food, transportation and other expenses of health workers and other personnel involved in COVID-19 response, as well as on relief goods for affected families, construction of additional buildings to house the patients and those being monitored, mobile testing laboratories and temporary shelters for homeless and training of personnel for emergency response, among others.

“It is the responsibility of every local chief executive to ensure that the leeway and flexibility afforded on the utilization of the 20% development fund be optimally utilized for the benefit and welfare of constituent communities supporting measures and initiatives to provide basic needs of affected individuals and arrest the spread of COVID-19,” the circular posted yesterday.

But according to the circular, the funds should not be used for personnel service expenditures such as salaries, overtime pay and other benefits, for administrative and travel expenses, registration and participation fees for trainings and seminars, payment for furniture, equipment and appliances of administrative offices, as well as to buy or repair vehicles.

It said using the development fund for disallowed purposes, “whether wilfully or through negligence…shall be subject to the sanctions” under related laws.

DILG Undersecretary Jonathan E. Malaya first announced this move at a televised briefing on Saturday after the circular was signed by DILG Secretary Eduardo M. Año and DBM’s Mr. Avisado.

Mr. Malaya said there were reports that some mayors were worried that their quick response funds would get depleted soon.

LGUs were already given the go signal to use the P16-billion calamity fund to respond to the pandemic when the whole country was placed under a state of national calamity for six months.

The government rolled out an initial P27.1-billion economic funding package to help distressed sectors, while Republic Act No. 11469 or the “Bayanihan to Heal as One Act” signed last week allows the government to realign as much as P275 billion from the national budget and make off-budget outlays for COVID-19 relief measures. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Economy may shrink by as much as 1.9% — Nomura

THE Philippine economy may contract by as much as 1.9% this year if the Luzon-wide lockdown is expanded nationwide and lasts until May, according to a report by Nomura Global Research.

In a note sent to reporters on Monday, Nomura said it has downgraded its 2020 gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecast for the Philippines to 1.6% from the initial 5.6%, amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak. This was its lowest forecast for the Philippines since the 2009 global financial crisis.

It also expects a 3% growth for the Philippines in a “good” case scenario, and a contraction of 1.9% in a “bad” case scenario.

Nomura said the 1.6% growth outlook assumes the Luzon-wide lockdown is lifted by mid-April, although economic activity is not likely to immediately normalize. It also took into account the sharp decline in global growth, especially in the country’s largest trading partners including China, the United States and Europe.

“This will also hurt overseas worker remittances more significantly than we previously thought, as worker deployment likely will be at a standstill, and worse, job losses especially among contract workers and seafarers (particularly those in cruise ships) will increase sharply,” the report said, adding this would put “significant downward pressure” on household consumption, which accounts for 68% of GDP.

“In addition, we believe President [Rodrigo R.] Duterte’s decision to place Manila and the entire island of Luzon under a lockdown will prove highly disruptive to overall economic activity, because Manila is the economic center and Luzon accounts for nearly 70% of GDP,” it said, citing continued supply chain challenges due to travel restrictions.

In its “bad” case scenario, Nomura assumes that fallout from the coronavirus pandemic will be “much more amplified,” pushing the Philippine economy into negative territory.

“Our assumption here, in addition to the external factors, is that social distancing measures locally are extended over Q2, with the lockdown lasting until May and expanded nationwide. The disruption in economic activity will be much more widespread, and nonlinear effects will kick in as a result of a combination of massive job losses, more insolvency problems particularly for SMEs, asset quality concerns of banks, which in turn will lead to tighter lending standards, and some bouts of social unrest,” Nomura said.

For this scenario, Nomura said it expects the government to widen the fiscal deficit to 5-6% of GDP, and an additional 50 basis points (bps) in policy rate cuts by the central bank. Another 200 bps in reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cuts is also seen.

On the other hand, the “good” case scenario shows GDP growth at 3%, assuming the lockdown is lifted as scheduled and a shallow recovery is seen in the second half.

The Philippines is bracing for a slowdown this year, amid the growing economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. Last year, the economy grew by 5.9%.

The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) said last week that GDP growth is estimated at 4.3% to -0.6%, depending if the pandemic is contained.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin E. Diokno has also said the economy could contract or settle at a 1% growth. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Big fund managers buy PHL stocks in ‘mega sale’

BIG Philippine money managers are cautiously plowing back money into the nation’s equities, seeing cheapened valuations as an opportunity they have been waiting for, although the market has yet to bottom out.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index climbed 10% last week, the most since 2009 and briefly entering what’s defined as bull territory on Friday, when gains from an eight-year low extended to 22%. The surge came as the nation unleashed monetary stimulus and fiscal spending packages of P775 billion ($15.2 billion) to avert a potential recession. The benchmark sank 2.6% on Monday, extending this year’s slump to more than 34%, one of the worst in the world.

The companies in the Philippine index now trade about 10 times earnings estimated in the next year, near the lowest level since 2009, data compiled by Bloomberg show. BDO Unibank, Inc., the biggest local private fund manager that has $20 billion in assets, favors companies that benefit from the epidemic and those that will quickly bounce back once the economy normalizes such as banks.

“This is the mega sale we have been waiting for,” said Fritz Ocampo, who manages $20 billion as chief investment officer at BDO. “Long-term investors look at this as a good time to accumulate their favored stocks. While infections will still rise, the market is now more forward looking after steps taken by the government.”

While the market’s recovery indicates a return of some confidence, fear remains high as the spread of the coronavirus continues and its economic toll has yet to be quantified, according to BDO, and PhilEquity Fund, one of the nation’s oldest mutual funds.

“We could reach levels that technically qualify as a bull market, but it’s hard to say we have already hit bottom,” Mr. Ocampo said. “Business and consumer confidence haven’t been restored yet, while the real economy is still struggling.”

Amid the caution, Mr. Ocampo likes telecom stocks on expectation that data demand is picking up as people stay home, and retailers that benefit from continued purchases of basic goods and will further gain when consumer demand recovers once the outbreak is contained.

Local buyers are driving the market’s rebound from its recent low as foreigners have been selling Philippine shares at the fastest pace since 1999, when Bloomberg began tracking the data. Except for two sessions, overseas funds pulled out money every day this month, bringing this year’s withdrawals to over $633 million.

“Those willing to overlook bad economic numbers in the short term are slowly coming in,” said Wilson Sy, a fund manager and founder of PhilEquity Fund, which started in 1994.

Mr. Sy favors the biggest companies in the index. “Some are anticipating a V-shaped recovery when the stimulus kicks in. The drop was sharp and quick so the bounce is bound to be the same.” — Bloomberg

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