BusinessMirror December 18, 2015

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Thursday 18, 2014 Vol. No. 40 Friday, December 18,102015 Vol. 11 No. 71

nn

BSP HOLDS RATES IN OWN VOTE OF CONFIDENCE FOR ECONOMY

‘Fed liftoff should not impact on PHL’s cost of borrowing’

T

he country’s borrowing costs were seen cheaper and should not widen or become more expensive next year, even though interest rates in the US have just been adjusted upward, according to the Department of Finance.

INSIDE

all-new Elantra

At the same time, inflation, or the rate of change in prices, were to remain below target this year, even as the same

motoring

c1

isuzu 4x4 roadfest

motoring

c3

DEFECTORS GIVE BACK

sports

A12

were to move up only marginally higher next year and only begin to ramp up significantly by 2017, according to the

INVESTORS CHEER YELLEN STATEMENT ON U.S. ECONOMY

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). These developments were to proceed from the decision early Thursday by the US Federal Reserve (the Fed), still the world’s most influential central bank, lifting its borrowing rate a quarter-point higher to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent, from near-zero borrowing rates the past seven years. “As we have long watched this development closely, today’s liftoff will not change our financing Continued on A2

Palace approves ₧19-B fund for El Niño impact mitigation T he President has approved a budget of P19 billion for the government’s mitigation measures to combat the ill effects of El Niño, Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan said. Some P6.6 billion has already been included in the government’s budget for this year, while the remaining P12.4 billion will be sourced from government savings and spent for El Niño-related programs next year. “We have the money already for this, identified by our budget secretary. Roughly P6.6 billion is in the current budget and the rest will be sourced from the savings, [such as] savings from bids or projects that have been bid [out] and [were] cheaper than the initial amount,” Balisacan said. Apart from the budget, Balisacan also said the El Niño Task Force has recommended the additional importation of 300,000 metric tons (MT) to 400,000 MT of rice in the second quarter. The government is already expecting the arrival of 500,000 MT of rice in the first quarter. However, El Niño has the potential to cut the country’s rice production next year. Balisacan said El Niño is expected to peak between March and May next year. This makes the importation of rice necessary since, apart from the actual rice requirements, the government

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Security Bank wins ‘Bank of the Year-Philippines’ award for the second time Security Bank Corp. (SBC) President and CEO Alfonso L.

Salcedo (center) receives the 2015 Bank of the Year-Philippines award from The Banker, the international banking and finance magazine of the Financial Times Ltd. SBC first received this recognition in 2012. The Bank of the Year Awards is regarded as the “Oscars of the global banking industry” and is the world’s longest-running international banking title. Only one bank is selected per country based on overall banking excellence, citing strong management, sound business model and prudent risk-management approach. With Salcedo are BBC broadcast journalist Michael Buerk and Asia editor of The Banker Stefania Palma during the awards dinner in London.

F

ederal Reserve (the Fed) Chairman Janet Yellen delivered a two-pronged message that stock-market investors cheered: The US economy is performing well and the central bank is in no rush to raise interest rates again. She told a news conference that the central bank had put itself in a position to nurture the six-and-a-half-year-old expansion by raising rates a bit now to avoid having to increase them a lot later. That will enable the Fed to tighten policy gradually, moving rates up in fits and starts to keep the economy on track. While US exports had been hurt by weaker overseas growth and a stronger dollar, Yellen said these headwinds were being offset by a solid expansion in domestic spending. “Americans should realize that the Fed’s decision today reflects our confidence in the US economy,” Yellen said. “While things may be uneven across regions of the country and different industrial sectors, we see an economy that is on a path of sustainable improvement.” Equity prices rallied in response, with the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of US stocks rising 1.5 percent to 2,073.07 in New York. Bond prices fell on the prospects of higher short-term interest rates, though yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note remained below levels seen last month.

‘True leadership’

“She has managed to pull it all together,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist with Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in See “Investors,” A2

See “El Niño,” A2

PESO exchange rates n US 47.3240

n japan 0.3873 n UK 71.0144 n HK 6.1066 n CHINA 7.3107 n singapore 33.6013 n australia 34.0877 n EU 51.6258 n SAUDI arabia 12.6147

Source: BSP (17 December 2015)


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