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SEC issues warning vs 4 ‘investment’ firms

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is advising the public against investing in four companies which have been operating without proper licenses.

The SEC issued advisories against Max4Unlimited Co.; Max4 Unli Corp.; Lion City Finance Group, Inc.; and Hybrid Gamefowl Holdings, Inc., which it identified as groups engaged in the unlicensed solicitation of investments from the public.

It said Max4Unlimited and Max4 Unli are both registered with the SEC as a partnership and as a corporation, respectively, that are supposed to be in the business of trading goods, commodities, wares and merchandise.

However, neither of them have licenses to offer or sell securities. The SEC said the two companies have been collecting investments from the public in exchange of a 50% return on investment every six months.

The SEC also flagged the operations of Lion City, which was found to offer a “pure passive income of 10% interest or more per month.” The investment it collects from the public is supposedly for real estate, foreign exchange, cars and casino financing.

But the SEC noted the Articles of Incorporation of Lion City states it is a financing company that offers credit facilities for industrial, commercial and/or agricultural enterprises. It also showed the company “shall not solicit, accept or take investments/placements from the public (and) neither shall it issue investment contracts.”

Hybrid Gamefowl likewise solicits investments from the public without a license but through a different scheme that involves texas chicken. It entices the public to pay at least P998 for two “Texas chickens,” which will not be delivered to the buyer, who instead will get a return of P3,000 after 90 days.

The SEC said while Hybrid Gamefowl is registered with the Commission, it does not have a license to offer or sell securities, which the government requires from companies that seek to operate as investment firms.

Under Section 8 of the Securities Regulation Code, securities shall not be publicly offered for sale or distribution in the Philippines without a registration statement filed with and approved by the SEC.

The SEC said these companies’ salesmen, brokers, dealers or agents that are found to have been soliciting investments or recruiting investors face a maximum fine of P5 million or a 21-year imprisonment. — Denise A. Valdez

Calabarzon, Davao female farm workers paid more in 2018

SALARY inequality persisted in the agricultural sector between male and female workers except in Southern Luzon and Davao despite a rise in the overall wage rate, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said, citing the findings of a survey.

In a statement Wednesday, PSA said: “The country’s nominal wage rate of agricultural workers in 2018 averaged P306.28 per day. Male farm workers were paid P310.16 per day, higher than the wage rate of female farm workers at P285.51 per day.”

This was a finding of the “2018 Agricultural Wage Rate Survey (AWRS)” study. The survey took in input from 5,582 households which hired farm workers in four major crops: palay, corn, coconut, and sugarcane.

The nominal wage rate of P306.28 was higher compared to the 2017 rate of P280.37 daily but inequality between female and male farm workers’ pay was also evident, with men being paid P284.72 in 2017 compared to the women’s P255.80.

PSA also reported that lower wages for female farm workers was the norm in all regions except Region 4-A (Calabarzon consisting of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon) and Region 11 (Davao Region).

Female Calabarzon farm workers earned P376.84 while men earn P373.82. In the Davao Region, the nominal wage for female farm workers was P328.88 and P293.02 for men. Calabarzon also had the highest recorded nominal wage value for women workers among all the regions.

The lowest wage rate for women in agriculture was P237.14 in Region 7 (Central Visayas), where men earned P269.74.

PSA also reported across out of all the major crops, palay farm workers had the highest wages compared to the other three studied with P324.81 compared to the P264.29 of corn farm workers; P317.27 of coconut farm workers; and P273.38 of sugarcane workers.

Pay rates among the four major crops also reflected gender disparities: In the rice industry, men were paid P329.86 and women P300.36. In the coconut industry, men were paid P317.62 and women P296.98. In the sugarcane industry, men were paid P276.15 and women P256.25. In the corn industry, men were paid were P269.23 and women P249.70. — Gillian M. Cortez

US Fed cuts key rates to boost economy, signals it is on hold

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve on Wednesday cut interest rates for the third time this year to help sustain US growth despite a slowdown in other parts of the world, but signaled there would be no further reductions unless the economy takes a turn for the worse.

“We believe that monetary policy is in a good place,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a news conference after the US central bank announced its decision to cut its key overnight lending rate by a quarter of a percentage point to a target range of between 1.50% and 1.75%.

“We took this step to help keep the economy strong in the face of global developments and to provide some insurance against ongoing risks,” he said. “We see the current stance of monetary policy as likely to remain appropriate as long as incoming information about the economy remains broadly consistent with our outlook.”

Powell’s comments clash with President Donald Trump’s demands that the Fed cut rates even deeper to boost economic growth that ebbed to a 1.9% annual rate in the third quarter, well below the 3% level Trump pledged would flow from a round of tax cuts and other actions nearly two years ago.

But the Fed’s new stance also vouched for both the seeming durability of a US economic expansion that is now the longest on record.

In his news conference, Powell ticked off an extensive list of reasons why he feels the economy is doing well, and likely to continue to do so under the current stance of monetary policy — from robust consumer spending, strengthening home sales, and asset prices he considered healthy but not to a level of excess.

The S&P 500 index closed at another record high on Wednesday.

As well, Powell said, some of the risks that had most unnerved Fed officials, and convinced them lower rates were needed if only as “insurance,” have seemed to abate in recent weeks.

The US-China trade war was “a step closer” to resolution, Powell said, and it looked less likely that Britain would crash out of the European Union.

The outlook for the US economy continues to be for “moderate” growth, a strong labor market and inflation rising back to the Fed’s 2% annual goal, he said, and only “a material reassessment” of that outlook could drive the central bank to cut rates further from here.

DISSENTS
In the statement accompanying its decision to cut rates, the Fed dropped a previous reference that it “will act as appropriate” to sustain the economic expansion — language that was considered a sign for future rate cuts.

Instead, the central bank said it will “monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook as it assesses the appropriate path” of its target interest rate, a less decisive phrase.

Kansas City Fed President Esther George and Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren dissented from the decision. They have opposed all three Fed rate cuts this year as unnecessary.

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, who had dissented in September because he supported a bigger rate cut then, voted with the majority on Wednesday, an indication that views within the Fed may be coalescing around standing pat for now.

The rate cut was widely anticipated by financial markets, but expectations for additional cuts after October have diminished significantly in recent weeks. Contracts tied to the Federal Funds rate indicate an expectation of perhaps one rate cut next year.

While yields on longer-dated bonds showed little reaction, those on shorter-dated maturities that are more closely influenced by Fed policy expectations initially moved higher. The yield on the 2-year note rose to the highest since Oct. 1 at about 1.67% before settling back to earlier levels as Powell spoke.

“It’s pretty much what was expected,” said Jim Powers, director of investment research at Delegate Advisors.

“The more important outcome is they removed the phrase ‘act as appropriate.’ It looks like the market is taking that to mean that there will be a pause in the declining rate path they were on beforehand. That’s what was expected, and that’s generally a good thing,” Powers said.

UNUSUAL JUNCTURE
The central bank and US economy are at an unusual juncture.

Unemployment is near a 50-year low, inflation is moderate, and data earlier on Wednesday showed economic growth in the third quarter slowed but not as sharply as many economists expected and some Fed officials feared.

But parts of the economy, particularly manufacturing, have stuttered in recent months as the global economy slowed. Businesses have pared investment in response to the US-China trade war that both raised tariffs on many goods, and also made the world a riskier place to make long-term commitments.

While that has not had an obvious impact yet on US hiring or consumer spending, Fed officials felt a round of “insurance” rate cuts was appropriate to guard against a worse outcome. The Fed cut rates in July and again in September, and by doing so hoped to encourage businesses and consumers with more affordable borrowing costs.

The approach was successful in the 1990s when risks developed during another prolonged period of economic growth. — Reuters

Horror and alienation at Cinema One Originals World Cinema section

CINEMA ONE Originals brings multitude of new takes on storytelling through its exciting World Cinema section lineup for its 15th year, featuring the films The Lighthouse, The Father, The Invisible Life of Eurice Gusmao, Knives Out, Matthias and Maxime, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, The Truth, and The Two Popes.

Opening the festival on November 7 is the much-awaited sophomore film from The Witch (2015) director Robert Eggers, The Lighthouse, which stars Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson as lighthouse keepers slowly going insane on a black rock. David Sims of The Atlantic commended the film for capturing its audience in its strangeness. He wrote, “It’s a bracing squall of a movie, a briny delight that’s as amusing as it is mesmerizingly strange.”

Thematically kindred in many ways, Fernando Meirelles’ The Two Popes while about the often tenuous relationship between Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis, is also about two men negotiating their estrangements. The Netflix film stars Anthony Hopkins and Jonathan Pryce.

Alienation shadows two other films in the lineup, this time, between parent and offspring, with Kristina Grozeva and Petar Valchanov’s tragicomic road movie The Father centers on a father who takes a trip with his son after their neighbor claims his dead wife has been making phone calls from beyond the grave; and Hirokazu Kore-Eda’s follow-up to his Palme D’Or-winning Shoplifters, and first feature outside his native Japan, The Truth. The film stars Catherine Deneuve as a French movie star whose tumultuous relationship with her daughter gets even more fractious when her revealing memoir goes into publication.

Xavier Dolan’s present day Matthias And Maxine is about two friends who try to reconcile dormant and kindled feelings during a summer abroad; while Celine Sciamma’s period drama Portrait Of A Lady on Fire is about a young painter who falls in love with her subject, may be generations apart in their settings, but both are incisive and poignant evocations of desire. The film won both the Best Screenplay award as well as the Queer Palm at the 2019 Cannes International Film Festival)

Brazilian filmmaker Karim Aïnouz’s describes his sprawling and expansive The Invisible Life of Eurice Gusmao. Based on Martha Batalha’s 2016 novel, is a tropical melodrama with all the emotional upheavals the descriptor suggests. The film won the Un Certain Regard prize at the 2019 Cannes

Rian Johnson’s Knives Out is an Agatha Christie riff that lovingly reconstructs it while cleverly deconstructing it and being fiendishly entertaining in the process. The film stars Daniel Craig, Chris Evans, Ana de Armas, and Jamie Lee Curtis.

The 15th Cinema One Originals opens on Nov. 7 (Thursday), 7 p.m. at the Ayala Malls Manila Bay Cinema 7. The festival runs from November 7 to 17 at Trinoma, Glorietta, Ayala Malls Manila Bay, Gateway, and Powerplant Makati. There will also be screenings at Vista Cinemas in Iloilo and Evia Lifestyle and in Cinema Centenario, Cinema ‘76, Black Maria, UP Cine Adarna, and FDCP Cinematheque Manila. For more information, visit @CinemaOneOriginals on Facebook.

Federal Land to develop condominium in Bay Area

FEDERAL LAND, Inc., the property arm of GT Capital Holdings, Inc., is developing a four-tower condominium in the Bay Area of Pasay City.

Mi Casa is located within Federal Land’s 40-hectare mixed-use development Metro Park.

In a statement, Federal Land said it launched the first tower, Hawaii, which offers 158 units ranging from one-bedroom units to three-bedroom units. Each floor has an average of 14 units.

The unit sizes will be at 45.5 square meters (sq.m.) for a one-bedroom unit, 61.5 sq.m. to 66 sq.m. for a two-bedroom unit, and 113 sq.m. to 137.5 sq.m. for a three-bedroom unit.

The Hawaii tower will feature various indoor amenities, including a lounge area, gym, kids’ play room, a function room with a culinary station, and a movie room.

Mi Casa will have outdoor amenities such as swimming pools and kids’ play areas.

“Mi Casa is set to be a vibrant community that will complement Filipino lifestyles and afford them ample opportunities to learn, thrive, and savor the good things in life,” the statement said.

Federal Land said Mi Casa’s concept and design, which was inspired by the tropical environment of the Bay Area, is a collaborative effort with CallisonRTKL, and Aidea, Inc.

CallisonRTKL is an architecture, planning, and design firm behind the Dubai Creek Harbour in the United Arab Emirates and the Four Seasons Los Angeles Private Residences in California.

Aidea, Inc. is an all-Filipino design firm known for Canvas Boutique Hotel in Palawan and the Marriott Hotel in Pampanga.

The Metro Park estate currently has resort-themed condominiums, offices, shopping and dining centers, entertainment hubs, institutional establishments, and a garden.

The estate is set against Manila Bay, and is close to the area’s malls and convention centers.

The Hawaii tower is targeted to be ready for turnover in 2023. — Jenina P. Ibañez

HR firm sees opportunities for health workers in Japan, UK, Canada

HUMAN RESOURCE firm Q2 HR Solutions said it sees opportunities in the healthcare industry in Japan, the UK, Sweden and Canada due to aging populations there.

Q2 HR, which will celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2020, is a full-service HR company that offers sourcing and HR services, HR outsourcing, managed services, background investigation, organizational consultation and development, assessments, and other bespoke HR solutions.

“The demand right now goes beyond borders. We can do this in Australia, in Japan, in the UK, Sweden, and Canada. So I look at the needs around the world,” Trixie L. Whyte, founder, chairwoman and president of the Philippine-based firm, said during a roundtable discussion with reporters in Makati City Monday.

The company is looking at offering its services to companies in Japan, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Canada beginning 2020.

Ms. Whyte said the company started in 2000 with her late husband Brendan and six people on staff.

Since 2000, the company has deployed over 50,000 workers to clients, including business process outsourcing (BPO) companies.

In 2019, Q2 HR Solutions has over 250 clients in the Philippines, a lineup expected to increase by 20% to 30% by 2020, Ms. Whyte said. “With our expansion, it’s going to be higher,” she added.

This year, the company projects revenue “north of P600 million,” which is “25%” higher than last year, Ms. Whyte said. In 2020, she added, “My aim is really to grow no less than 25%.”

This year, the company will also be adding additional services. “We are looking at payroll outsourcing and benefits administration outsourcing,” Ms. Whyte said.

She also said the company established a presence in Australia early this year through its subsidiary, The People Expert, which deploys healthcare workers. — Arjay L. Balinbin

HBO orders Game of Thrones prequel

HBO HAS given a 10-episode, straight-to-series order to House of the Dragon, a Game of Thrones prequel co-created by George R.R. Martin and Ryan Condal. Miguel Sapochnik and Ryan Condal will partner as showrunners and will also serve as executive producers along with George R.R. Martin and Vince Gerardis.

The announcement was made during the WarnerMedia Day by Casey Bloys President of HBO Programming on October 29.

Based on George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood, the series is set 300 years before the events of Game of Thrones, and tells the story of House Targaryen. Sapochnik will direct the pilot and additional episodes.

“The Game of Thrones universe is so rich with stories,” Bloys said in a release. “We look forward to exploring the origins of House Targaryen and the earlier days of Westeros along with Miguel, Ryan and George.”

Sapochnik previously directed the Game of Thrones episode, Battle of the Bastards, for which he won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series as well as a Director’s Guild of America awards. He won another Emmy — for Best Drama Series for the series’ final season where he served as an executive producer.

HSBC cuts Hong Kong prime rate

HSBC HOLDINGS Plc lowered its Hong Kong prime lending rate for the first time in 11 years, underscoring the economic challenges facing the financial hub.

The London-based bank cut its best lending rate by 12.5 basis points to 5% in Hong Kong. The city’s government is set to release data Thursday that’s expected to show the local economy entered a technical recession in the third quarter, with retail and tourism sectors battered by almost five months of anti-government protests.

Standard Chartered Plc, another major lender in the city, soon followed HSBC’s announcement, reducing its best lending rate by 12.5 basis points to 5.25%.

HSBC’s cut, to take effect Nov. 1, will likely help the Hong Kong economy and companies, George Leung, the bank’s Asia-Pacific adviser, said at a briefing. There’s not much more room for banks in the city to lower further, and the reduction will probably be the last this year, he said.

The move comes after the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) cut its benchmark interest rate Thursday, in line with the city’s currency peg to the dollar following the US Federal Reserve’s reduction in borrowing costs. The HKMA lowered its base rate to 2.00% from 2.25%, hours after the Fed’s quarter-point cut, according to the institution’s page on Bloomberg. As the Hong Kong dollar is linked to the greenback, the territory essentially imports US monetary policy.

“Looking ahead, we expect there’s still downward pressure on the US rate,” Leung said. “This is likely to make the operating environment for banks like HSBC more challenging in the future, but we hope that it will bring some relief to our customers and maybe a little bit of sunshine to the gloomy economic outlook.”

The Hong Kong government has laid out policy support including boosting loans to small businesses and cutting banks’ capital buffers to mitigate an economic downturn through the months-long unrest. It also announced plans this month to help first-time homebuyers break into the world’s least-affordable property market.

“It is hard to say whether the Hong Kong interbank rates may follow the US rate,” HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue had said at a briefing earlier Thursday. “However, the US rate cut does reflect the downward pressure on the global economy, to which Hong Kong is not immune.” — Bloomberg

Duty Free PHL partners with 50 travel agencies

THE Gucci Beauty boutique recently opened at the Duty Free Luxe in Pasay City. — COMPANY HANDOUT

DUTY FREE Philippines (DFP) has partnered with around 50 travel agencies that cater to Filipino international travellers, offering their tour groups additional discounts at the flagship store in Parañaque City.

In a statement, DFP Chief Operating Officer Vicente Pelagio A. Angala said a five percent discount will be given to outbound tour groups who shop at the Fiestamall within 48 hours upon arrival.

The partner-travel agencies will distribute the discount vouchers to the Filipino international travelers before they return to the Philippines.

“We target to increase brand awareness and to encourage Filipino international travelers to shop their pasalubong at DFP instead of buying them abroad by highlighting our price advantage and striking a chord with customers’ sense of nationalism — that for every item bought at Duty Free, they help in the development of the Philippines tourism industry — as we are an attached agency of the Department of Tourism (DoT),” Mr. Angala said.

The DFP chief expects the marketing campaign to increase traffic at the Fiestamall and generate more sales revenues.

DFP is currently renovating the 4,000-square meter Fiestamall, which includes upgrading the facade, lobby, food court and lounge. The renovation is expected to be completed on Nov. 30.

“This is just the phase 1 of this project. The second phase will start by the first quarter of next year which will include improvements in the atrium, building exits, and installation of LED screens,” Mr. Angala said.

Fiestamall contributed about 35% to DFP’s total sales in 2018.

Ford shutters oldest Brazil plant as revival bid faces doubts

SAO PAULO — Ford Motor Co. on Wednesday said it was shutting down its oldest plant in Brazil later in the day as planned, with prospects for saving any of the jobs in doubt as talks with a potential buyer have fallen behind schedule.

The plant, located in the industrial suburb of Sao Bernardo do Campo, produced buses and the Fiesta compact car, which sold poorly. It employed up to 2,800 people earlier this year, although it is unclear how many were still working there as of October.

Ford first announced it would shut down the plant in February, and said it had failed to find a buyer. But then the Sao Paulo government intervened and a local automaker, CAOA, expressed interest.

CAOA, Ford and the Sao Paulo state government announced in September that they had reached a preliminary deal, but needed 45 days to carry out due diligence. That time period has already expired, and neither side has provided an explanation. CAOA declined to comment.

CAOA got its start as a Ford dealership, but expanded into manufacturing with a contract with Hyundai and later bought 50% of Chinese automaker Chery’s operation in Brazil. While Brazil is a base for many multinational automakers, CAOA is the rare manufacturer to be locally owned. — Reuters

The good earth

Biyaya ng Lupa
Directed by Manuel Silos
Citizen Jake vimeo site

(Warning! Plot twists and story details explicitly discussed.)

MANUEL SILOS’ Biyaya ng Lupa (Blessings of the Land, 1959) is one of those films where one is hard-pressed to say why or how it’s great. It’s so understated, so modestly poised, so gracefully proportioned it takes a while — perhaps some time after a screening — before the finer qualities sink in deep enough to plink at the outer fringes of awareness.

The film may also be one of the least known of great films, remembered mostly by those with more than passing familiarity with 1950s Filipino cinema. The few that do remember, however, remember with affection.

The film opens to a tolling church bell, camera craning down to a just-concluded wedding ceremony with celebrations just begun — chorus in full volume, old ladies swaying, dancers and musicians streaming towards the screen. Perhaps the most telling image comes late in the festivities: newlyweds Maria and Jose (Rosa Rosal, Tony Santos, Sr.) look up at the camera while the town elders offer marital advice, the young couples’ faces wide open and receptive not just to their words but (it’s suggested) to whatever life and the world will throw at them.

The couple arrives at their new home and Jose informs Maria of his future plans: a plot of lanzones plantings, to be nurtured and watered for some 20 years before the (hopefully) bountiful harvest.

That’s the setup of course: boundless reward after a near-lifetime — some two decades — of commitment. Maria and Jose are wonderfully carefree as befitting honeymooners (Rosa and Tony look so young!), but already these mute broad-leafed sprouts strike an ominous note: not so much a promise as the promise of a promise challenged, perhaps broken in the sometime future.

The next 20 or so minutes is a beautifully edited and scored précis of life happening to Maria and Jose: they replant the seedlings at properly spaced intervals; water them; plow a nearby field. A child is born, and Jose carves his name (Miguel, to be played by Leroy Salvador) into a coconut tree trunk. Arturo (Carlos Padilla, Jr.) follows; then Angelita (Marita Zobel); then Carmen — who dies early — followed by Lito (Danilo Jurado). A storm wipes out the early lanzones blossoms, delaying harvest and dashing Jose’s hopes to send Arturo and Angelita to Manila for schooling (unspoken: Jose believes deaf-mute Miguel deserves kind treatment but not a proper education — apparently there are limits to the man’s progressive sentiments).

A chunk of story quickly told, and yet carefully paced to match the leisurely tempo of provincial life: never hurried yet relentless, often dreary yet blessed with moments of pleasure (holding one’s beloved in one’s arms; dangling a newborn at the knee; gazing with pride at blooming crops).

Linking event and image are Rosa Rosal’s lovely voice crooning a lullaby to one babe after another, and the lanzones rising from sprout to seedling to sapling, their ample dark-olive leaves spreading an ever more confident canopy. Life is difficult to depict persuasively on the big screen; I submit that countryside life complete with dull spots and everyday highlights is an even thornier challenge to get right. Silos with no apparent effort gets it right.

Enter Bruno (the ever-excellent Joseph de Cordova). Bruno is a widow and rumors say he killed his wife; the problem is no one dares tell him to his face which, as straight shooter Jose immediately points out, is wrong. Doesn’t stop Bruno from resenting Jose when the latter stops the former from pressing his too-ardent attentions on hapless Choleng (Mila Ocampo). Bruno’s damaged reputation is a festering boil that bursts when Choleng trips atop a steep embankment and the townsfolk accuse Bruno; he flees for his life, for some reason fixating on Jose as the cause of his troubles.

Bruno is unjustly treated; does this justify what he does? Jose is also unjustly blamed; does this justify his attempt at revenge on Bruno? Suddenly, with little fuss and comment, the film becomes an unselfconscious treatise on displaced aggression, where logic has no role and those involved become victim or victimizer or both, as dictated by random chance.

A lot like nature, one realizes, remembering the storm that tore down Jose’s blossoms. Could this be the world’s way of displacing aggression onto us? Or — shifting definitions only a little — could life be so meaningless? Bruno — arguably Joseph Cordova’s finest role — is lit and shot like a Hammer Studios creature, scar running like a fault line down one cheek; he might represent the town’s simmering malevolence come back to haunt them, might represent Jose’s dark side — his macho sense of honor demanding retribution — come back to confront him, might represent (this the most horrific of all) nothing: the outlaw as random predator, staging sudden assaults on the vulnerable for no good reason at all.

And different people are tested. Jose first, who because he fails to get at root causes — fails to ask Bruno why he did what he did — is penalized. When Bruno crosses a line and presents his grievance — ignoring a reasonable counter-argument from one of his hired men — he, in turn, is penalized. Then Miguel does the same, looks heavenwards, pleads forgiveness — Miguel realizes the enormity of his actions and is contrite. Will that make a difference? Who knows?

Silos, if anything, is a more modest a stylist than Lamberto Avellana, who in film after film delivered amazing filmmaking when the story called for it. Other than the occasional shock cuts, with Cordova’s scarface looming at the camera, Silos keeps to classic mise-en-scéne till the final assault on Maria’s household (Bruno again, of course) — suddenly stealth is required, and mother and children pantomime a desperate plan; suddenly Silos is producing pure cinema, ratcheting up suspense with minimum effort, the very definition of art.

Here and there along the narrative Silos drops grace notes of visual beauty: a carabao nosing a plow’s yoke onto its shoulders; Miguel and girlfriend sitting under a lean-to, playing out romantic comedy as if in a backyard theater; Jose and Bruno in dramatic confrontation while Miguel prowls unknowingly beneath — the latter an extraordinary image of life playing out in relentless real-time.

A great film? Absolutely. Neglected and little-known? Absolutely. Go, see, enjoy.

(Biyaya ng Lupa is available with English subtitles at Mike de Leon’s Citizen Jake Vimeo website.)

BoJ keeps policy steady

THE BANK of Japan held rates steady on Thursday. — WIKIPEDIA.ORG

TOKYO — The Bank of Japan (BoJ) kept monetary policy steady on Thursday as expected but offered a stronger signal it may cut interest rates in future, underscoring its concern that overseas risks could derail the country’s fragile economic recovery.

The decision came hours after the US Federal Reserve lowered rates again on Wednesday but signaled a pause in further cuts unless the economy took a turn for the worse.

The BoJ, which has far less policy ammunition, kept its short-term rate target at -0.1% and that for the 10-year government bond yield at around 0%.

It also maintained a pledge to buy government bonds so its holdings increase at an annual pace of roughly 80 trillion yen ($736 billion).

But the BoJ modified its forward guidance — a signal central banks give to markets on future policy moves — to indicate more clearly its readiness to cut rates if needed.

“The BoJ expects short- and long-term interest rates to remain at present or lower levels as long as needed to pay close attention to the possibility that the momentum toward achieving its price target will be lost,” the central bank said in a statement announcing its policy decision.

That compared with the previous language that committed to keep “current ultra-low rates for an extended period of time, at least until the spring of 2020.”

“The BoJ wanted to maintain expectations among the market that further easing is still a possibility,” said Masaaki Kanno, chief economist at Sony Financial Holdings.

“This basically means the BoJ would be ready to cut rates if the global environment deteriorates.”

The vote on keeping rates steady was 7-2, while that on changing forward guidance was 8-1.

Data this week showed Japan’s industrial output rebounded in September while retail sales jumped the most in over 5 years, but exports continued to contract and a sales tax hike this month has raised concerns the world’s third-largest economy could tip into recession.

INFLATION FORECASTS CUT
In fresh quarterly projections, the BoJ also cut its inflation forecasts as falling fuel costs and soft household spending weigh on price growth.

Core consumer prices in Tokyo, a leading indicator of nationwide inflation, rose 0.5% in October from a year earlier, staying well away from the bank’s 2% target.

Last month, the BoJ said it would use its October rate review to look more thoroughly at whether overseas risks have heightened enough to derail the path toward achieving its inflation goal, stoking market speculation of immediate action.

“While there had been no further increase in the chance the momentum toward achieving our price target would be lost, it is necessary to keep paying close attention to that possibility,” the BoJ said in the October policy statement.

Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has signaled that deepening negative rates would be the most likely option if the central bank were to ease further.

But analysts have said the hurdle for deepening negative rates is high given the strain ultra-low rates is already inflicting on commercial banks.

S&P Global Ratings warned on Tuesday that Japanese regional banks will see core operating profits fall by 21% if the BoJ deepens negative rates.

Also giving the BoJ more breathing room, the yen has shown some signs of steadying recently. Some analysts have forecast that sharp yen gains, which would further pressure exports, could prod the bank into action.

“The BoJ doesn’t have many tools left to ease policy so it probably wanted to save them for now, particularly with fading expectations of a Fed rate cut seen keeping yen rises at bay,” said Izuru Kato, chief economist at Totan Research.

“If risks do not heighten enough to prod the Fed to ease in December, the BoJ too could hold off on action that month.”

The BoJ’s next rate review is Dec. 18-19. — Reuters