Home Blog Page 9828

Live-streaming platform KUMU joins fight against human trafficking

Modern slavery, technically defined as human trafficking, remains to be one of the biggest problems facing the world, with powerful entities playing key roles in cross-border trafficking rings. In the Philippines, a source country for such activities, social media has become the new frontlines, with digital traffickers exploiting young victims online.

Joining the fight against exploitation, live-streaming platform KUMU joins the fray with their new partnership with NGO Voice of the Free.

Internet-mediated sex tourism

According to the American Journal of Psychiatry, social media has “amplified age-old pressures for teenage girls to conform to certain sexualized narratives.”

Locally, the sex tourism trade has widely become internet-mediated, with social media sites being the preferred avenue for prostitution transactions preying on women and minors. In 2018 alone, the number of victims rose to 784,000, placing the Philippines in 12th place in the list of countries with the highest incidences of modern-day slavery.

The KUMU team recently visited the Voice of the Free shelter to formalize a partnership that aims to keep livestreaming spaces safe, as well as cement the app as a wholesome and exploitation-free platform.

“KUMU’s partnership with Voice of the Free, an anti-human trafficking institution that we truly believe in, allows us to disseminate useful information to our Kumunities about the dangers of human trafficking,” says the app’s Chief of Staff and Head of Community James Rumohr. “By sharing Voice of the Free’s Sundance short films on the platform, we can raise awareness and engage both local and international users in relevant discussions on this sensitive subject and teach them how they can spot red flags when they go online.”

KUMU is taking the next steps to push the fight to the country’s colleges and universities by livestreaming Voice of the Free’s iFight events on the app. They hope to draw support and encourage volunteerism among users for their forthcoming sustainable programs for rescued victims. “We believe that social media should be an avenue that promotes camaraderie, creativity, and community instead of exploitation,” says Rumohr.

Voice of the Free has been in the fight against human trafficking since 1991. It continues to empower women and children in the country by opening up income-generating opportunities and lobbying laws that put an end to child labor and further strengthen the resolve against human trade. “We are so glad and grateful to be partnering with Kumu Philippines in the fight against human trafficking and modern slavery,” says Voice of the Free Executive Director Sherryl Loseno. “Today, slavery has mutated completely and has penetrated the internet. Everyone is vulnerable, especially the youth and the present generation.”

EDC bags top honors at 55th Anvil Awards

Towards growth and progress for all

By Bjorn Biel M. Beltran

One of the most biting criticisms of capitalism is the resulting inequality of urbanization and globalization. Typically, rural provinces receive limited growth opportunities compared to those of urban cities. In worst cases, rural communities even bear the brunt of urban development, losing out on valuable land and natural resources to monied corporations. So it is a reassuring thing when corporations strive to give back to those communities.

Recently, Lopez-led geothermal leader Energy Development Corporation (EDC) was awarded the Grand Anvil top prize at the 55th Anvil Awards of the Public Relations Society of the Philippines (PRSP), along with 12 other trophies for communication excellence in its PR, marketing, stakeholder engagement, and sustainability programs.

EDC’s entry “Baslay Coffee: Brewing a Better Life for Kaingeros” received a Gold Anvil and was subsequently deemed the most outstanding among all other recipients, earning it the highest Grand Anvil distinction.

As a corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiative of EDC’s team in Negros Island, the 30-year old Baslay coffee program aimed to educate and transform slash-and-burn farmers in the mountains of Baslay in Dauin, Negros Oriental into forest stewards by providing them alternative and lucrative coffee farming methods, effectively turning them away from their former environmentally destructive practices.

As a leader in sustainable energy, EDC entered Negros Island with a vision of environmental protection. Through a thorough process of community organizing, social education, financial management training, and the transfer of agroforestry technology, the company collaborated with the community to enact on its principle of social forestry as a sustainable watershed management tool.

Seeing the growth opportunity in the coffee industry, EDC organized the Baslay Farmers Association (BFA), which communally owns a 220-hectare organic coffee forest mostly planted with Robusta (80%) and Arabica (20%). This allowed the community to transition from their previous environmentally-destructive farming practices and narrow the gap between demand and supply of coffee in the area, contributing to the resilience of farmers to price fluctuations, and enhancing the farmers’ capacity for environmental sustainability.

The Baslay Farmers’ Association‘s female members delicately pick the coffee cherries, a crucial step in producing one of the country’s best coffee.

Moreover, working with the local government units (LGUs), academe, and other regional and provincial agencies were also established, the BFA became recognized as the first farmers’ association in Negros Oriental to produce premium and quality organic coffee. BFA has since opened their coffee shop in 2018 near the Baslay Hot Springs, in close consultation with EDC where foreign backpackers frequent.

Formerly ‘kaingeros’, the Baslay farmers are now masters of a growing coffee business and stewards of a forest that is now refuge to 113 species of local birds.

“Ours was a long journey towards becoming forest stewards with sustainable livelihood and we have EDC to thank for our transformation and better life,” said Ruel Perez, BFA’s community leader.

EDC also won various other Gold and Silver Anvils in both PR program and PR tool categories for its projects advocating for clean and sustainable energy. As a leader in renewable energy in the Philippines, the company has a diversified renewable energy portfolio through investments in hydropower, solar power and wind energy projects in the country.

Such campaigns include the Positive Energy Negros Facebook page, the #MaketheShift geothermal energy advocacy, BINHI national greening legacy program, GeoSkwela youth dialogue on sustainability, OMGeo eco-tourism vlog series, and CSR initiatives under the Mt. Apo Foundation Inc. (MAFI) as well as the organization’s 25th anniversary coffee table book.

Held annually by the Philippine public relations industry, the Anvil Awards seeks to recognize exemplary, effective and innovative PR and communications programs and tools by companies, organizations, and agencies, as decided by select PR professionals and a distinguished multi-sectoral jury.

“We believe that just as important as the implementation and positive impact of our various CSR and stakeholder relations programs is the way they are communicated,” said EDC CSR — PR head Atty. Allan Barcena. “We proudly share the awards we garnered with our partner organizations and the people who have made our work successful and those who continuously help us attain our vision of a clean energy future for the country.”

EDC is a pioneer in the geothermal energy industry and the world’s largest vertically integrated geothermal developer, generating 1,457.8 megawatts of clean, stable, and truly sustainable energy for the country.

Geothermal energy, produced by the natural heat of the earth, is among the cleanest sources of energy available. Geothermal plants generate power by separating the steam from the brine that is extracted from 3 kilometers deep. The steam then turns the turbines and converts it to electricity that is transmitted to the electric consumers or cooperatives through the grid. To make this cycle more clean and renewable, the water or brine that was separated from the steam is injected back to the ground.

With over 40 years of expertly and sustainably generating geothermal energy, EDC aims to deliver the benefits of sustainable geothermal development to communities around the world as it ventures into Latin America and Indonesia.

Asia to take major FDI hit from global coronavirus outbreak

THE OUTBREAK of coronavirus, formally known as Covid-19 is expected to dampen foreign direct investment (FDI) activity, with significant effects largely concentrated in China, East Asia and Southeast Asia.

According to a study from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) released Friday, the global downside impact on FDI will be between 5% to 15% relative to earlier forecasts.

“The impact on FDI will be concentrated in those countries that are most severely hit by the epidemic, although negative demand shocks and the economic impact of supply chain disruptions will affect investment prospects in other countries,” the report said.

The 2019 world investment report had earlier predicted a 5% increase in global FDI flows in 2020-2021.

The Covid-19 impact on investments is expected to be concentrated in countries that have needed to take significant measures to contain the virus. The outbreak, the report said, will slow capital expenditure by multinationals and their foreign affiliates.

“Production locations that are closed or that operate at lower capacity will temporarily halt new investment in physical assets and delay expansions.”

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a mobile message Sunday that FDI flows are likely to slow in Asian countries, as the coronavirus adds to existing adverse effects of the US-China trade tensions.

“However, there could be further redistribution of FDI flows to other ASEAN/Asian countries such as the Philippines, in a more positive context, as part of the process to further and better hedge the supply chains of some global/multinational companies.”

He said that the companies may redirect FDI to avoid disruptions to global supply chains in the future, as concentration in a few Asian countries leads to more vulnerability.

The report said greenfield investment projects will also be affected, but the immediate impact on existing investments will more likely be limited.

New greenfield investment and mergers and acquisition activity could see delays.

Covid-19 is expected to affect market-, efficiency-, and resource-seeking investments. The immediate market demand effect is in China, with the report citing a 70% drop in Toyota sales in China in February.

FDI projects in extractive industries could also see delays globally, alongside impacts on tourism and retail.

In terms of efficiency-seeking investment, the initial effects will show up in China and East and Southeast Asia production facilities . But the report said this could rapidly spread outside the continent through the global value chain.

Lower profits by foreign affiliates of multinational enterprises (MNE) will also translate to lower reinvested earnings.

Top MNEs have reported earnings downgrades caused by Covid-19, with the biggest impact seen in automobiles and auto parts (44% average earnings revision), as well as airlines (42%).

“The most significant negative revisions in the automotive industry come from parts producers based in the most affected areas in South East Asia.”

Basic materials and energy companies also have issued average earnings revisions of 13%.

Mr. Ricafort said that the passage of the tax reform bill lowering corporate income tax and rationalizing fiscal incentives, as well as moves to ease foreign ownership limits, will help make the Philippines more attractive to FDI.

The UNCTAD report said that the negative impact on FDI will be driven by delayed investment after the initial global demand shock, with significant impact also seen on industries dependent on the global value chain.

“As such, the Covid-19 outbreak will potentially accelerate existing trends of decoupling… and reshoring driven by the desire on the part of MNEs to make supply chains more resilient.”

Union Bank of the Philippines chief economist Ruben Carlo Asuncion said in a mobile message Sunday that the Philippines should be ready to receive redirected FDI.

“Reforms should continue to help the Philippines to be ready. FDI will move where they think they will have (an) advantage. Covid-19 is an opportunity as companies realize their over-concentration in China,” he said.

“Government should continue to initiate and get our act together during these extraordinary times.” — Jenina P. Ibañez

Banks may face risks from virus

BANKS with large exposure to industries such as tourism may face risks amid the prolonged spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), according to an official of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

“The BSP recognizes that it can potentially impact banks, particularly those with significant exposures to certain industries such as, for instance, tourism,” Lyn I. Javier, BSP managing director for policy and specialized supervision, said in an e-mailed response to BusinessWorld on Friday.

“Banks may also face operational risks due to potential disruption in operations resulting from quarantine procedures for employees, temporary closure of certain offices with affected personnel, or possible supply shortages,” she said.

The BSP official said the assessment of the risks of the COVID-19 outbreak for banks is still in progress.

Ms. Javier noted that the central bank is closely monitoring developments related to the spread of COVID-19 in the country and how these can affect the banking industry. “BSP is also coordinating with the industry on measures that may be implemented,” she added.

The Department of Health on Saturday announced the first case of transmission of COVID-19 in the country, a 62-year-old Filipino who has not traveled abroad. His wife has also contracted the disease. This brought confirmed cases in the Philippines to six.

The National Economic and Development Authority estimated foregone revenues worth P22.7 billion per month in the tourism sector amid the COVID-19 outbreak.

Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia last week said the economy could take an even bigger hit if the outbreak persists until yearend, estimating a one-percentage point reduction in 2020 gross domestic product (GDP) growth.

The NEDA chief said the assessments were made based on a scenario where there won’t be inbound Chinese tourists and foreign tourist arrivals will be reduced by 10%, while trade will be “drastically reduced” and there could be indirect effects on other industries.

The government is targeting 6.5-7.5% GDP growth this year.

Ms. Javier said banks have sufficient safeguards against unforeseen events that may disrupt their business.

“The BSP has earlier required banks to have a sound business continuity plan and to provide sufficient financial and human resources associated with business continuity initiatives,” Ms. Javier said.

“In this light, we believe that banks have adopted measures in preparation for cases that may potentially disrupt their operations,” she said.

Ms. Javier added that the central bank has already granted regulatory relief packages to banks and quasi-banks affected by the COVID-19 and the African Swine Fever outbreak, even though this assistance was previously only available to those hit by calamities.

These relief packages come in the form of staggered booking of allowance for credit losses, non-imposition of penalties on legal reserve deficiencies, and non-recognition of certain defaulted accounts as past due, among others. The BSP said it will evaluate banks applying for the measures on a case-by-case basis.

BAD LOANS MAY RISE
Sought for comment, credit raters said banks’ nonperforming loans could see an uptick due to the spread, with some sectors expected to be worse off than others.

“We expect bad loans to rise but the quantum of the impact will depend on the duration of the outbreak,” Tamma Febrian, associate director of the Financial Institution Group of Fitch Ratings, said in an e-mail.

“Should the outbreak be contained within the next few months, we believe that the direct impact on the banks would be manageable as hospitality/tourism sector accounts for less than 2% of the banks’ loan portfolios,” Mr. Febrian said.

Mr. Febrian also said other sectors “vulnerable” to the virus outbreak are the manufacturing and transportation industries.

“The real estate sector could also be impacted as Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs), which are largely fueled by Chinese operators and customers, have been a key driver of demand in the sector,” he said.

Tengfu Li, an analyst at the Financial Institutions Group of Moody’s Investors Service, also said bad loans may rise if the outbreak persists. He, however, noted that banks’ larger exposure to local conglomerates can offset the effects of the virus.

“A prolonged outbreak will lead to a rise in bad loans but at this stage, we expect the impact on banks to be muted because the banks are largely exposed to the domestic conglomerates that are able to withstand short-term negative pressure on revenues,” Mr. Li said in an e-mail.

Likewise, Mr. Li pointed out that local banks are more equipped in terms of loan-loss buffers compared with their regional counterparts.

“The strong buffers are driven by the implementation of PFRS 9 (Philippine Financial Reporting Standards 9) — which leads to higher loan-loss coverage — and regulatory capital requirements that are higher than international norms,” he said.

Last month, the central bank implemented tighter capital requirements for smaller standalone rural and thrift banks in a move to strengthen their guard against possible losses.

Under the new rules approved by the policy-making Monetary Board, standalone thrift, rural and cooperative banks must provide for minimum capital ratios including a common equity Tier 1 ratio of 6%, a Tier 1 ratio of 7.5% and a capital conservation buffer of 2.5%, which used to be only applied to universal and commercial banks.

Such requirements are aside from the minimum capital adequacy ratio of 10%. The local bank rules are at par with international standards under Basel 3. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Supply chain disruption likely to cause price spikes — DoF

THE PRICES of goods may spike, amid the disruption of global supply chains due to the continued spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the Finance department (DoF) said on Sunday.

“The disruption of global supply chains will tend to push prices up. Domestic producers will need to look for alternative supply sources to avoid production cuts,” the DoF said in its economic bulletin on Sunday.

Citing initial data from the Customs bureau, the DoF said imports from China dropped by 34.7% in terms of volume in February. China is the country’s biggest trading partner.

Inflation eased at a slower-than-expected 2.6% in February on softer price increases of food, transport and utilities, from 2.9% in January. This brought year-to-date inflation to 2.8%, well within the central bank’s 2-4% target for the whole year.

However, the DoF said “benign global oil prices will pull down inflation going forward.”

Oil prices have plunged to multi-year lows as demand was hit by economic fallout from the coronavirus. Virus fears, travel bans and other precautionary measures have dampened global economic activity.

For inflation rate to settle within the 2-4% target range, the DoF said the “month-on-month price change should be at most 0.3% per month.”

ASSESSING THE IMPACT
President Rodrigo R. Duterte is set to declare on Monday a public health emergency to help contain the spread of COVID-19, after the country recorded its first case of local transmission. There are six confirmed COVID-19 cases in the country as of Sunday.

Government economic managers are set to meet on Tuesday to further assess the virus outbreak’s impact on the economy following a rise in the number of confirmed cases in the country.

“Right now, what we see on the impact of COVID-19 is essentially on tourism and that’s very clear. What is not so clear is the impact on the productive capacity of our trading partners and the supply chain, and also the demand for our products — that’s quite unclear at the moment,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told reporters on Friday.

Meanwhile, government officials said public infrastructure projects are not facing delays due to a shortage in raw materials and equipment, mainly from China.

“Right now we’re not seeing any effects yet, but we have to closely monitor that and then see the effects… on China, which supplies all of these construction materials, heavy equipment, for the entire world will be affected by this,” Vivencio B. Dizon, presidential adviser for flagship programs, said a press conference on Friday.

Mr. Dominguez said any slowdown will not be immediately seen as businesses typically have two or three months worth of inventory.

“You won’t see an immediate effect if there’s a slowdown because there’s inventory here. Let’s say they keep three months’ inventory, the slowdown started in, let’s say mid-February… It’s only in May that you’ll see the slowdown, if there is a slowdown at all,” Mr. Dominguez said. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Credit cards face adversity in country where cash is king

By Beatrice M. Laforga
Reporter

MA. VICTORIA M. DIOQUINO, 33, switched to using electronic wallets a year ago to pay her electricity and phone bills.

“Mobile payments are much more convenient and user-friendly than credit cards,” the bank employee from Parañaque City said in an interview.

The space for credit card growth in the Philippines is rapidly shrinking with the rise of mobile payments.

In the early days of online shopping, credit cards offered a convenient way to shop, but new mobile technologies and apps now offer a more seamless shopping experience with faster checkouts and the option of in-app payments.

The World Bank said 5% of Filipino borrowers surveyed had electronic wallets in 2017, slightly higher than the 4% global average.

Aside from electronic wallets, the credit card industry also has had to contend with fraud.

People still need to be educated about the risks and benefits of credit, Alex G. Ilagan, executive director of the Credit Card Association of the Philippines, said in an interview.

About 10 million credit cards have been issued in the Philippines, and the regular cardholder probably uses two credit cards, he said. That’s a big jump from just 200,000 cards two decades ago.

“In terms of spending, the total amount of credit card billings in the first nine months of 2019 was P866.9 billion,” Mr. Ilagan said. “That is equivalent to an average amount of about P87,000 per card, or close to P10,000 a month per card.”

World Bank data put credit card ownership in the Philippines lower at 2% in 2017, behind its peers in East Asia and the Pacific region where ownership was 22%.

The credit card industry has been doubling efforts to educate the market about data security, managing debt and maximizing credit.

“Financial discipline and awareness of security including fraud are very important,” Mr. Ilagan said.

One such victim was 22-year-old Neil Aronn S. Diamzon, a first-time credit card user.

Not so long ago, he received what he thought was just another sales call from a bank. He gave away personal information to the caller, who promised perks such as double credit limit and waived annual fees for a lifetime.

“It was too good to be true, but I was naive and took their offer anyway,” Mr. Diamzon, a software engineer, said in an interview.

A few minutes later, he received another call from his bank informing him of an online purchase worth P20,000 he knew he never made.

Banks are the most conservative when it comes to ensuring that transactions are secure, so they tend to invest in the latest technology, Mr. Ilagan said.

Banks are also working with regulators such as the National Privacy Commission and Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to ensure their data remained secure.

The central bank advises consumers on its website to sign their credit cards as soon as they receive them, avoid giving out personal and financial information requested via e-mail, and transact only with secure websites.

Credit card companies have also been using integrated circuit card technology to prevent counterfeiting. It’s much harder to steal the information from chip credit cards or to clone them.

Mr. Ilagan said cardholders in the Philippines tend not to maximize their use of credit and CCAP is trying to change that.

“You can use credit to your benefit as long as you don’t abuse it,” he pointed out.

Thea Sy Bautista, who hosts a YouTube channel about financial management, said she has received a number of requests to upload videos on budgeting, credit cards, savings and investment.

“I am most comfortable talking about credit cards because of my overall experience working for a bank and managing my credit cards,” she said in an interview. “I wanted to use my platform to help more people.”

A credit card holder herself, the YouTube blogger said it’s important to “swipe only if I can fully pay the total charges, not just the minimum amount, before they become due to avoid bank charges.”

Despite the small penetration rate, Mr. Ilagan said the credit card industry’s delinquency rate had gone down to 4% from 8% five years ago.

He said the credit card industry needs to work harder to gain more believers.

Aside from e-wallets and fraud, the fact remains that cash is still king in most parts of the world, including the Philippines.

World Bank data showed that 53% of Filipinos paid their utility bills in the past year with cash, compared with the global average of 57%.

Mr. Diamzon has not been deterred by credit card fraud. His experience taught him to become aware of the risks and be more responsible about personal data, he said.

“Weeks later, I received a new credit card and since then, I have been very cautious about anonymous calls and credit card transactions,” he said.

Where the world’s wealthy live

THE PRICES of goods may spike, amid the disruption of global supply chains due to the continued spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the Finance department (DoF) said on Sunday. Read the full story.

Where the world’s wealthy live

Measure amending AMLA still being drafted at Senate

THE HEAD of the Senate economic affairs committee is still drafting a measure that seeks to strengthen the Anti-Money Laundering Act (AMLA), as Congress faces pressure to pass the bill before October to help the country avoid sanctions by the global anti-money laundering watchdog.

Senator Imee R. Marcos said in a statement on Sunday that she is considering several AMLA amendments, such as allowing the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) to investigate suspicious transactions without facing restraining orders from lower courts.

Another proposed amendment to the AMLA is the inclusion of real estate developers and brokers under the list of persons covered by AMLC’s monitoring. At present, the list includes banks and nonbank institutions, pawnshops, insurance companies, securities and jewelry dealers among others.

Also, the Senate bill being drafted by Ms. Marcos will consider tax crimes and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and its financing as among the predicate offenses to money laundering.

Ms. Marcos said the measure is expected to be filed within the next two weeks.

The country is currently under observation of the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which gave it until October to strengthen its anti-money laundering law.

Ms. Marcos said failure to amend the law before the deadline puts the Philippines at risk of being included in the FATF’s list as a “non-cooperative country” or “high-risk jurisdiction.”

“If the Philippines fails to pass FATF scrutiny and is marked as a threat to the international financial system, banking sanctions may again be imposed on OFW (Overseas Filipino Workers) remittances and slow down their crucial contribution to the country’s foreign currency reserves,” she said.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had also recommended that the Philippines include tax evasion in the list of predicate crimes, improve customer due diligence, and relax the bank secrecy law.

At present, a bill seeking to amend the AMLA is pending at the House committee on banks and financial intermediaries.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor and AMLC Chairman Benjamin E. Diokno recently made the same call for Congress to pass the AMLC amendments as well as the proposed Anti-Terror law before October.

The Senate on Feb. 26 passed the measure strengthening government response to terrorism on third and final reading; while its counterpart House measure is still awaiting panel deliberation.

On top of those provided in Ms. Marcos’s draft bill, the BSP also sought to give AMLC the authority to implement targeted financial transactions, preserve assets subject of freeze orders or retain forfeited assets.

The central bank also pushed to expand AMLC’s investigative power to include subpoena and contempt powers. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Treasury bill rates may decline on appetite for shorter tenors

THE RATES on the Treasury bills (T-bills) on offer today may inch lower amid continued appetite for short-term papers, with investors seen searching for higher returns on longer tenors amid falling interest rates.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) is looking to raise P20 billion via T-bills on Monday: P6 billion each for the 91- and 182-day papers and P8 billion for 364-day securities.

A bond trader said on Friday that “yields for the T-bills auction might move sideways with a downward bias as it seems like appetite for T-bills has lessened,” with rates on three- and six-month papers seen moving sideways and a decline of five basis points (bps) seen for the yield on one-year securities.

Another bond trader, however, said rates may go down by five to 10 bps as investors continue to “crowd short-term papers amid growing concerns about the global economic impact of the coronavirus.”

“US yields also trading at lows after the US Fed delivered a 50-bp emergency cut last week to combat the virus,” the second trader said in a Viber message on Sunday.

Offshore, yields on the 10-year US Treasuries were below the one-percent level at 0.74%, while the 30-year tenor was quoted at 1.25% as of March 6, according to the US Treasury’s website.

During the T-bills auction last week, the government upsized the volume it accepted to P23.2 billion from its initial P20-billion offer amid total bids of P60.4 billion.

Broken down, it fully awarded P6 billion in 91-day T-bills out of total tenders worth P12.813 billion. The average rate for three-month papers inched up by one basis point to 3.013% from the 3.003% fetched in the previous auction on Feb. 24.

Another P6 billion was raised as planned via the 182-day papers at an average rate of 3.324%, down by 4.1 bps from the previous yield of 3.365%.

For the 364-day T-bills, the BTr upsized the award to P11.2 billion from the original P8-billion program as total tenders for the tenor reached P33.06 billion. The one-year securities fetched a lower average rate of 3.684% against the 3.787% quoted previously.

At the secondary market on Friday, the 91-, 182- and 364-day T-bills fetched rates of 3.058%, 3.367% and 3.719%, respectively.

The trader said appetite for shorter tenors might decline as “traders and investors want to lock in higher interest rates for longer periods as interest rates are falling.”

The BTr made full awards of the government securities it offered for the past auctions, even opening its tap facility amid lower rates.

The first trader said yield movements might change amid developments in the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak, as the situation is very fluid.

The Department of Health (DoH) reported on Saturday the first case of local transmission in the country after records showed the fifth person to have officially contracted the disease does not have recent travel history outside the Philippines.

The total number of confirmed cases in the country were at six as of Saturday evening.

The DoH also raised its alert system for the disease to code red sub-level one on Saturday as a “preemptive call” to ensure that both national and local governments as well as all health care providers could prepare in case suspected and confirmed cases will rise further.

The administration’s economic team is set to meet on Tuesday to asses the potential impact of COVID-19 on the economy and various sectors.

The Treasury has set a P420-billion local borrowing program this quarter, broken down into P240 billion in T-bills and P180 billion via Treasury bonds.

The government plans to raise P1.4 trillion this year from local and foreign lenders to plug its budget deficit, which is expected to widen to as much as 3.2% of gross domestic product. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Stories in thread and cloth

AMID A climate emergency, a possible pandemic, and all the great and small battles we all fight everyday, the world continued to spin for the designers of Paris. Two designers at the shows in the first week of March showed a nostalgia for days gone by, one designer opted for the arts as a palliative, while one maison refuses to go down without a fight.

BALMAIN
(Video of the fashion show can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QxkIrfhsoQ)

Olivier Rousteing’s FW 2020-2021 collection for Balmain opened with a line of navy pea coats. Another line showed something reminiscent of desert landscapes with beige and white capes, and the suggestion feels like a call to spend the season somewhere dry and hot. But then, the next few lines show a leaning towards classics of French design — think the safari suits by Yves Saint Laurent, combined with the beige and black piping, and the quilted details of Chanel. One can also see hints of Dior in the strong shoulders in suiting, or maybe in the solid, hard material (possibly plastic) draped on a model like fabric. Rich Baroque prints also dominate some other designs, perhaps reflective of some of the fashion capital’s sights. The whole collection reads like a love letter to the great names of Paris, albeit one that is less florid; colder, bolder, and more urgent (which can sometimes have an even better effect).

CELINE
(Video of the fashion show can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WJ5E_rg6Gg)

Hedi Slimane’s Celine show was dedicated A Ma Mère (to my mother). The collection is just as much a love letter to the past of Paris as the Balmain show was, but this time with wider references. See, while Balmain’s show was about extolling the virtues of Paris as seen through design, Celine’s vision was a lot more mainstream. By this we mean that the collection is interpreted not through the lens of upper-class wearers, but someone more normal, a little more middle-class. The collection opened with a black shapeless dress that screamed bohemian chic in its flowy skirt, invisible bosom, and long sleeves. It’s accessorized with a necklace with a gold fringe that called the 1970s to mind, and paired with a bowler hat. It looks like what French New Wave cinema said was the type of girl every intellectual wanted to be, or have. Next came a swinging sequined rose gold dress, a black slim-cut men’s suit with a polka-dot foulard neck. We also saw a python-print shirtwaist dress, styled with a slim belt, chic but wild, as if a celebrity had stepped off a jet while off-duty. Feminine tuxedos are also key: we saw another slim-cut suit with a large floppy bow tie with a tuxedo shirt with blown-up ruffles. These pantsuits call back to the Le Smoking tuxedo for women by Yves Saint Laurent, born approximately in the period where Slimane’s mother might have worn them (Hedi Slimane was born in the late 1960s). It thus becomes an homage to bohemian Parisian chic in that period, which saw Youthquake, and the student riots of May ’68.

HERMÈS
(Video of the fashion show can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSf58Yqxx0s)

Hermès opened with a collection of white and red coats appearing in a landscape reminiscent of the paintings of Piet Mondrian, had the artist made his primary-color blocks as trees and tubes. The collection of coats and layers follow the same clean lines as the paintings, and if they hadn’t been accented with leather and the bright pops of color, they would have had this too-cold, too-clinical chic. Several prints reflect other artworks of the same school of abstraction, thus awakening one’s own sensitivity to art. We do remember that the maison’s specialty is leather, so we saw full-length leather high-necked trenches, pleated leather skirts. We can only imagine the difficulty in treating a leather so it becomes almost as fluid as water, or stiff enough to hold pleats yet still move. We also like the clever little details such as what appears to be jacket lapels actually serving as closures meant to be belted shut.

DIOR
(Video of the fashion show can be seen at https://www.Dior.com/en_int/womens-fashion/ready-to-wear-shows/autumn-winter-2020-2021-ready-to-wear-show)

When Dior started in the postwar period, it dressed women very lavishly, trying to shake off the lean privations of war with rich fabrics and generous, corseted silhouettes. It was a bit of an affront to the humiliated Chanel (rumored to have collaborated with the Nazi enemy), who championed clean lines, ease of movement in dress, and her career was devoted to liberating women from the straitlaces of corsets. In the maison’s 69-year history, Maria Grazia Chiuri is the first woman to lead the important label. In her capacity, she seems to place the focus back on the women who wear the clothes. Her runway for her FW 2020-2021 collection was lit with lights spelling out slogans that may read like a woman’s innermost thoughts, when she feels that the male-dominated world turns against her: “Women’s love is unpaid labor,” “When women strike the world stops,” and “Consent.” In the same week that Ms. Chiuri presented her show, former Hollywood boss Harvey Weinstein was convicted of criminal sexual assault and rape in the third degree.

Ms. Chiuri opened her show with a black pantsuit with Dior’s signature Bar jacket. The Bar jacket, though masculine in design, flares at the hips seemingly to emphasize femininity. From the male gaze of her predecessors, it might show a hint of sex; but from Ms. Chiuri’s feminist perspective, it becomes a celebration of the female power of reproduction (or so we think). Neckties and decidedly masculine suit elements in strict black are also seen throughout the runway, as are shirtwaist dresses in checked prints that are profuse in this collection. White, loose fitting suits seemed to point back to the menocore trend of a few years back, which called to mind a nice retirement at the beach. There’s also a lot to think about in the context of dresses made with fringe, done as if in raw thread, as if they had been shredded before. As they moved down the runway, they predictably showed bits of skin from the threads hanging loosely about the model’s body, while the words “Consent,” in capital letters, floated above her. — Joseph L. Garcia

Metro Pacific studies pullout from NAIA rehab consortium

By Arjay L. Balinbin
Reporter

METRO PACIFIC Investments Corp. (MPIC) is considering pulling out of the so-called “super consortium” that is proposing to rehabilitate the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) amid issues on the draft concession deal, its top official said.

“It’s gonna be a tough one — tough one for us to join,” MPIC Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan told reporters last week when asked for an update on the consortium.

Asked if there is a possibility for MPIC to withdraw from the consortium, he said: “We are thinking about it.”

He said the reasons include the unresolved issue on the real property tax (RPT) payments.

“RPTs, mga ganun-ganun (things like that),” Mr. Pangilinan said, adding that MPIC will have to make a final decision on the matter “soon.”

Siyempre (Of course) it’s unfair naman to make the consortium wait for us. Hindi naman fair ‘yun kasi (It wouldn’t be fair because) they have the right [to know] whether we are in or out,” he continued.

His comments come after Ruben S. Reinoso, Jr., Department of Transportation undersecretary for planning and project development, told reporters on Feb. 24 that the government and the NAIA consortium would have to renegotiate certain parts of the draft concession agreement.

These parts include the plan to lay off airport workers, the use of a bus rapid transit (BRT) system to transport passengers within the airport complex, and the RPT.

Mr. Reinoso said the consortium had suggested that the Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA), which is the primary grantor, should take part in RPT payments.

Nuong una, ang argument nila it’s on net present value, which means that the real property tax payment is part of the inflows to the government per se, pero sabi ko hindi ganun ang agreement natin kasi you will not be keeping MIAA whole [in that case]. Binawas mo pa ‘yung income nila, magagalit ang MIAA sa atin niyan,” he said.

(At first, their argument was that it’s on net present value, which means that the real property tax payment is part of the inflows to the government per se, but I said that was not our agreement because you will not be keeping MIAA whole in that case. Then you also took out their income, MIAA will be angry with us because of that.)

“MIAA should be kept whole, kasi if that is the case, as a corporate, magsa-suffer naman ang MIAA, hindi kami papayag doon and that was the agreement… Pumayag na sila na hindi nila ibabawas sa payment sa gobyerno ‘yun,” he added.

(MIAA should be kept whole because if that is the case, as a corporate, it will suffer. We will not allow that and that was the agreement. They already consented that they will not take it out of the payment to the government.)

Mr. Reinoso said further that the consortium is now defining the boundaries of the property and that they may also start negotiating on the RPT payments with the local government unit (LGU).

Kasi LGU ang nangongolekta niyan, hindi naman kami (It’s the LGU that collects that, not us),” he noted.

Mr. Reinoso also said the government was hoping that concerns regarding the concession agreement would be settled by this month.

The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) board approved in November last year the unsolicited P102-billion proposal from a consortium composed of the country’s top conglomerates to rehabilitate the country’s main gateway.

The so-called NAIA super consortium is composed of Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc; AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp.; Alliance Global Group, Inc.; Asia’s Emerging Dragon Corp.; Filinvest Development Corp.; JG Summit Holdings, Inc.; and Mr. Pangilinan’s MPIC.

“After we have concluded the negotiation, we will go back to the NEDA Board to report on the results of the negotiation and get confirmation,” Mr. Reinoso said.

After which, MIAA will submit the draft agreement to the Office of the Solicitor General and the Department of Finance for comment, he added.

Since it is an unsolicited proposal, the NAIA rehabilitation project will still be subjected to a Swiss challenge.

The Swiss challenge is the competitive bidding process where third-party companies are invited to submit counterproposals to a project, which the original proponent has the right to match.

The rehabilitation of the NAIA, whose main terminal opened in 1981, is expected to increase its capacity to 47 million passengers a year in the first two years and further expand this to 65 million passengers after four years.

The NAIA, which has four terminals, has been operating beyond its 30.5 million passenger capacity. It recorded 45.3 million passengers in 2018.

MPIC is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being PLDT, Inc. and Philex Mining Corp. Hastings Holdings, Inc. — a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. — maintains interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

Agriculture dep’t asked to tag upland areas in Davao City for coffee production

THERE ARE about 17,000 hectares in upland areas in Davao City that are ideal for coffee farming, but development needs a push from government, according to the Davao City Coffee Council (DC3).

Ian B. Asilo, DC3 chairman, said the Department of Agriculture’s (DA) Davao regional office, together with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the National Commission on Indigenous People, has to identify the areas for coffee production and set up an assistance program to encourage farmers.

“There are 17,000 hectares in the part of Toril going to Marilog where you can plant coffee… but the coffee farms were converted into cacao and banana plantations,” Mr. Asilo said during last week’s Habi at Kape forum.

He noted that these areas used to have more coffee growers, particularly indigenous people (IP) communities, who switched crops in the 1990s following a drop in market prices.

Once the DA has tagged the area, he said, private and social enterprises can also step in to help the IPs and other small-scale growers.

“The private sector, like our organization, can come in because the IP cannot produce in big volume,” Mr. Asilo said.

He said that no coffee farmers in the city can produce 180 kilos of coffee beans, one of the requirements for joining the Philippine Coffee Quality Competition (PCQC).

“All that is needed is some push from the DA,” he said.

Davao City is hosting this year’s Philippine Coffee Expo and the PCQC, set on April 2–3.

The expo is jointly organized by the DA, Department of Trade and Industry, Barista Coffee Academy of Asia, and the Agricultural Cooperative Development International and Volunteers in Overseas Cooperative Assistance (ACDI/VOCA). — Maya M. Padillo