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Asean+6: Trade bloc slated for next year
BusinessMirror Editor: Max V. de Leon • Thursday, November 26, 2015 B2-1
Asean-EU Perspective
HENRY J. SCHUMACHER
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HE Asean+6 grouping is expected to declare the outcome of freetrade talks under the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) at the Asean Summit in Kuala Lumpur from November 19 to 22. The joint declaration will pave the way for the China-led trade bloc to become enforced next year. A total of 16 RCEP members tentatively agreed at the 10th meeting of negotiation teams from October 12 to 16 in Busan, South Korea, to eliminate tariffs on 65 percent of all goods, amounting to 8 to 9,000 items, under the RCEP plans. Of the 35 percent of total products not included in the initial agreement, RCEP members are expected to gradually cut tariffs to zero within 10 years after 2017 for 20 percent, while further talks are needed for the other 15 percent of products, which are mostly sensitive items. The RCEP was launched in November 2012, with the aim of establishing deeper economic cooperation between the 10 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) members and Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea, with a focus on trade in goods, services and investments. If signed, the agreement will create an economic block with a combined population of 3.5 billion and a trade volume of $10.7 trillion, accounting for nearly 30 percent of the world’s trade. China has been seen as the key driver of the regional trade pact, which is viewed as an alternative to the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), from which the world’s second-biggest economy was excluded. Within the RCEP, seven countries—Australia, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, Vietnam and Brunei Darussalam—are part of the 12-nation TPP. Thailand is taking these new RCEP activities seriously and believes that they will benefit more from RCEP than from Asean or TPP. The Thai government plans to introduce more measures to tempt investment in 10 targeted industries: n Next-generation cars n Smart electronics n Affluent, medical and wellness tourism n Agriculture and biotechnology n Food n Robotics for industry n Logistics and aviation n Biofuels and biochemical n Digital sector n Medical sector Similar to the Philippines, Thailand is developing road maps; the study reported that if Thailand seriously promoted the 10 industries, GDP growth could reach 5 percent to 6 percent a year based on private investment, which is expected to increase by 10 percent in 2016. The study also suggested Thailand to support other incentives such as corporate income-tax limit of not more than 15 percent, a personal incometax limit for foreign experts of not more than 15 percent and facilitation of their work permits (Philippines watch out!). Foreign investors should also be allowed to hold 100 percent of the first stage of research and development projects and the leasehold for land plots for 99 years before selling them back to the government once due.
Malaysia’s ruling party faces trust deficit, minister says
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ALAYSIA’S biggest political party faces a trust deficit, a government minister warned, highlighting the impact of a months long political scandal surrounding Prime Minister Najib Razak. Members are losing their connection to the United Malays National Organization (UMNO), which leads the ruling coalition, Hishammuddin Hussein—one of the party’s vice presidents—told reporters on Tuesday in Kuala Lumpur. Hishammuddin, who called for unity, is also the defense minister. “UMNO is now facing a trust test, which is very complicated and worrying,” Hishammuddin said. “But I am confident we will come out of this and strive to be better for our survival, the party and country.” Hishammuddin was speaking ahead of the party’s annual general assembly in December. More than 700 resolutions were submitted by 191 divisions for the meeting, ranging from education to religion and the economy, he said. The comments reflect the risk that the imbroglio that’s embroiled Najib erodes support for a party that has been in power since independence in 1957, but won reelection in 2013 with its narrowest margin yet—it lost the popular vote for the first time. UMNO has its
power base in the country’s ethnic Malay population. Najib, who is UMNO’s president, has faced criticism after it was disclosed that hundreds of millions of dollars ended up in his private accounts before the 2013 vote. He has removed detractors from cabinet including his deputy premier and a minister, even as they remained senior leaders in the party.
Middle East
THE premier, 62, has said the funds in accounts that have since been closed were political donations from the Middle East rather than public money, an initial conclusion also reached by the Malaysia Anti-Corruption Commission. The funds were to meet the needs of the party and the community and not a new practice, he has been cited as saying. Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, 90, has been on a public campaign to get Najib out even before the donations scandal and allegations of financial irregularities at debt-ridden state investment company 1Malaysia Development Bhd. (1MDB) led to political tensions and prompted thousands of anti-government protesters to rally in the capital.
Singapore cuts growth forecast
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INGAPORE lowered its growth forecast for 2015 because of weakness in manufacturing, and said gains will continue to be modest next year, even as the global economy improves. The Ministry of Trade and Industry on Wednesday forecast economic growth in 2015 at “close to 2 percent” and between 1 percent and 3 percent in 2016. It previously forecast 2015 growth at between 2 percent and 2.5 percent. Singapore, a city-state at the tip of peninsula Malaysia, is the wealthiest economy in Southeast Asia, but has shifted to lower-growth rates in the past decade as other countries, including China, eroded its traditional strengths in electronics and other manufacturing. It has encouraged investment in higher value industries, such as pharmaceuticals, and also tried to boost services by opening two casinos, encouraging tourism and becoming a center for private banking.
The ministry said global growth is expected to improve next year, but Singapore and other countries in Southeast Asia may not see “significant uplift” in demand for their exports. China’s economic slowdown has dimmed its appetite for imports; growth in the US is driven by service industries, and both China and the US are tending to rely more on domestic manufacturers, it said. “Against this backdrop, the growth outlook for the Singapore economy in 2016 is modest,” the report said. Singapore’s economy grew 1.9 percent from a year earlier in the third quarter, marginally lower than the 2-percent growth in the previous quarter, the ministry said.
“Given the current subdued demand, and the fact that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank have both lowered forecasts, it isn’t a surprise that Singapore has followed suit,” said Song Seng Wun, an economist at CIMB Private Banking. Singapore’s economy grew more than initially estimated in the third quarter as services helped offset a decline in manufacturing amid slowing growth in China. The local currency rose. Gross domestic product rose an annualized 1.9 percent in the three months through September from the previous quarter, when it fell a revised 2.6 percent, the trade ministry said in a statement on Wednesday. That compares with an initial government estimate of a 0.1-percent expansion and a median forecast for no growth in a Bloomberg News survey of 15 economists. The city-state is expecting economic growth to be “close to” 2 percent in 2015, the lower end of its earlier forecast for an expansion of 2 percent to 2.5 percent. GDP is expected to increase 1 percent to 3 percent in 2016, the trade ministry said. Singapore has relied on its position as an Asian financial hub to
bolster services exports as overseas demand for its goods faltered amid slowing growth in China and uneven recoveries in the US and Europe. While the island’s industrial production fell for an eighth straight month in September, retail sales growth has been positive over the same period of time. “Singapore has avoided recession despite the difficulty in the manufacturing sector,” Song said. “Government spending on infrastructure and growing employment in the services sector is helping to boost domestic consumption. Singapore is still facing headwinds amid slowing global demand.”
Currency rises
SINGAPORE’S dollar climbed 0.3 percent to S$1.4063 against the US currency as of 8:56 a.m. local time. The Singapore dollar’s nominal effective exchange rate remains “comfortably” within the policy band, the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s Deputy Managing Director Jacqueline Loh said at a briefing on Wednesday. Downside risks to growth are within the MAS’s planning parameters and the central bank’s policy remains appropriate See “Singapore,” B2-2
INDIAN Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivers a public speech to a crowd of mostly Indian nationals at the Singapore Expo on Tuesday in Singapore. Modi is on a two-day official visit to the city-state. AP
Indonesia set to rejoin Opec with bias for lower oil prices
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FTER defending the interests of oil-exporting nations for five decades, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) has made a surprising choice with its newest member: a country that consumes about twice as much crude as it pumps. Indonesia will rejoin the Opec as its 13th nation next month, almost seven years after suspending its membership. The country says that as Opec’s only Asean constituent, it will provide a vital link to the region where demand is growing fastest. Still, saddled with an oil-import bill of about $13 billion last year, Indonesia makes an unlikely addition to the exporters’ club. “If you’re accepting net-oil importers into the organization, it speaks volumes about the marginalization of Opec,” said Seth Kleinman, head of energy strategy at Citigroup Inc. Indonesia is “never going to cut” supply, he added. Official explanations that paint Indonesia as a conduit between producers and consumers don’t fully illuminate a move that’s fundamentally at odds with Opec’s mission: Why allow a country that will benefit from lower prices into a group set up to underpin prices?
Citigroup says it’s another sign Opec has abandoned its role in defending prices after last year choosing to maximize its market share in the face of a global glut. Opec hasn’t announced any specific market measures since 2008.
Odd decision
INDONESIA contends its return to the group will be mutually beneficial. As a country that both consumes and produces, it can provide Opec with a bridge between the two sides of the oil market, Energy Minister Sudirman Said said in June. “It’s strange,” said Jamie Webster, senior director at consultants IHS Inc. in Washington. “Nothing has dramatically changed since they left some years ago—it’s not like they’ve found some Gawar-like field and now suddenly want to be on top of things,” he said, referring to the biggest deposit in Saudi Arabia. Indonesia believes the move will both ensure access to crude supplies —it’s already in talks to buy Iranian crude once international sanctions are lifted—and attract investment to revive its energy sector, such as a project to build a refinery with Saudi Arabia. “There’s prestige in being part of
Asean
the organization again,” said Harry Tchilinguirian, head of Commodity Markets Strategy at BNP Paribas SA.
Shifting ranks
BRENT crude added 12 cents to $46.24 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange at 12:56 p.m. Singapore time. The global benchmark has lost more than 40 percent over the past year. Indonesia is projected to produce 850,000 barrels a day this year, according to a November 13 report from the International Energy Agency (IEA). That’s about 789,000 less than it consumed last year. Only Libya, Ecuador and Qatar produce less among Opec’s member-states. In October 2014 Indonesia gave up on a target of restoring output to 1 million barrels a day. Crude output has dropped more than 50 percent since the mid-1990s as shifting regulations and complicated permits deter investments in new fields. It’s not unprecedented for Opec’s line-up to shift over time. Its ranks last swelled in 2007 when Ecuador was readmitted after departing in 1992. Gabon left in 1995, though hasn’t announced any plans for a comeback. One impact of Indonesia’s return
could be a change in the group’s collective production target, which has held steady for the past four years at 30 million barrels a day. Officials are considering raising the limit to 31 million to incorporate Indonesia’s output, according to two delegates who spoke confidentially.
Neutral party
B2-1
THAT still wouldn’t mean any change in the group’s actual output: Opec has flouted the current limit in all but four months since its introduction, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Even a raised cap at 31 million barrels would be almost 800,000 a day less than its 12 members pumped in October, IEA data show. A last benefit could be a resolution to years of disagreement on appointing a new secretary-general. Opec has been extending the term of Libya’s Abdalla el-Badri—originally due to stand down in 2012—as countries block proposed candidates from Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq. Indonesia, which has filled the position of secretary-general on four different occasions since 1961, could serve as a neutral alternative, above political rivalries in the Middle East. Bloomberg News
sweet sixteen See “Malaysia,” B2-2
Thursday 18, 2014 Vol.26, 10 No. 40 Thursday, November 2015 Vol. 11 No. 49
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Transport officials ordered to submit Clark plan by Jan W
INSIDE
Asean
A broader look at today’s business
Sports
ith no end in sight for the congestion at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia), lawmakers have given transport and airport authorities a January deadline for the submission of a master plan that will set in motion the use of Clark International Airport (CIA) as the substitute main gateway.
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| Thursday, November 26, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
MUTOMBO
JAPAN’S NAKATANI SUPPORTS U.S. IN SOUTH CHINA SEA
Hawks retire Mutombo’s 55
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TLANTA—The Atlanta Hawks retired Dikembe Mutombo’s No. 55 jersey on Tuesday night to honor the longtime shot blocker’s Hall of Fame enshrinement. Mutombo signed as a free agent in 1996 to make Atlanta the second stop on an 18year career he spent with five other teams. “I don’t think I ever thought my jersey would be retired,” Mutombo told reporters after his jersey was hung from the arena rafters in a halftime ceremony. “My name will stay forever.” The 7-foot-2 Mutombo was a four-time National Basketball
Association (NBA) Defensive Player of the Year, an eight-time All-Star, and he ranks second on the league’s career blocked shots list and 20th in rebounds. Through his foundation, Mutombo, 49, built a hospital that has served 140,000 in his native Congo. He twice won the NBA’s J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award and now works for the league as a global ambassador. Mutombo was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame two months ago. AP
Parker names cubs for family
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AN ANTONIO—Spurs star Tony Parker had a walk on the wild side this week and has named three African lion cubs at the San Antonio Zoo after his wife, their son and himself. Zoo officials said on Tuesday that Parker had decided on Axelle, Josh and T.P. after earlier making the top bid for the naming rights. The National Basketball Association player on Tuesday morning slipped into the lions’ den, accompanied by two zookeepers, and helped the cubs play with some toys. Zoo authorities didn’t immediately say how much Parker bid to name the two males and one female born July 25. AP
GOLDEN State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) drives past Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant. (Above photo) Chicago Bulls guard Jimmy Butler (right) and Portland Trail Blazers center Mason Plumlee (24) are separated by the officials after getting into a shoving match. AP
SWEET GOLDEN STATE SETS NBA RECORD FOR BEST START
SIXTEEN By Mike Bresnahan Los Angeles Times
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AKLAND, California—History was created on Tuesday with the Los Angeles Lakers on the court. It wasn’t the type their franchise was built upon, continuing an unsettling downward spiral that chewed them into tiny pieces since acquiring Dwight Howard and Steve Nash in the seemingly perfect summer of 2012. The Golden State Warriors pasted the Lakers on Tuesday, 111-77, setting a National Basketball Association (NBA) record with 16 consecutive victories to start the season. The Lakers, clearly at the other end of the basketball scale, fell to 2-12, their worst mark through 14 games since 1957. Kobe Bryant had four points and made only one of 14 attempts (7.1 percent), tying his worst shooting night ever when taking more than four shots. He was also one for 14 last November against San Antonio. Not even Bryant’s methodical, prolonged warm-up could help the 37-yearold
perhaps hauntingly, from some of his other poor nights this season. “I’m fine. Honestly,” Bryant said. “My shooting will be better. We’ll be better. I could have scored 80 tonight and it wouldn’t have made a damn difference. I could be out there averaging 35 points a game and we’d be, what, 3-11? We’ve got to figure out how to play systematically in a position that’s going to keep us in a ball game.” Jordan Clarkson didn’t do much (four points, two-of-11 shooting), Roy Hibbert too (two points, 0-for-3 shooting) and nobody scored more than 10 for the Lakers. A couple of days before the game, Bryant left open the possibility of an upset against Golden State. “I’ve seen stranger things happen,” he said, but there was nothing odd or unusual about Tuesday’s game. The Lakers continued to play poor defense and the Warriors continued to score at will. The Warriors had 10 assists in the first quarter. The Lakers had none. The score was 30-11. Stephen Curry had 24 points and nine assists for the Warriors, who passed the 15-0 starts of the Houston Rockets in 1993-1994 and Washington Capitols in 1948-1949. At least one piece of the Lakers’ past was satisfied. Luke Walton has guided the Warriors as their interim Coach, while Steve Kerr recovers from off-season back surgery. “I almost feel guilty a little bit because this should be Steve doing this right here. He loves it so much that he should be having the time of his life right now,” Walton said. Walton, 35, won championships with the Lakers as a role player in 2009 and 2010, days that seem far in the past. Very, very far. There was a line of Lakers employees who briefly hugged Walton after the game—longtime trainer Gary Vitti, Scott and Bryant. It was their brush with history for the night. Somehow, last year’s 21-61 record might seem like an achievement. In Washington, Paul George scored a season-high 40 points and made seven three-pointers, part of a franchise-record 19 by the Indiana Pacers in a 123-106 victory over the Washington Wizards in the NBA on Tuesday. C.J. Miles added 32 points, his most since joining the Pacers before the start of last season, as Indiana won for the ninth time in 11 games. Miles was eight-of-nine from beyond the arc, and George also missed only once from deep. The Pacers finished 73.1 percent (19 of 26) from three-point range, crushing their previous season high of 44.4 percent (12 of 27). Gary Neal scored 23 points off the bench for the Wizards, whose three-game winning streak was broken. In Memphis, Tennessee, Mike Conley scored 21 points, Jeff Green added 19 and seven Memphis players reached double figures in a victory over Dallas, 110-96. Marc Gasol had 15 points and 10 rebounds for Memphis, which won its fifth in the last six games. Matt Barnes and Mario Chalmers added 14 points apiece, and JaMychal Green contributed 13. Raymond Felton and J.J. Barea each scored 16 points and tried to pull the Mavericks back into the game in the fourth quarter. Dirk Nowitzki finished with 14 points and Zaza Pachulia had 13, both also grabbing 10 rebounds. Wesley Matthews had 11 points and Deron Williams finished with 10 as Dallas lost its second straight. In Atlanta, Paul Millsap scored 25 points, Jeff Teague added 16 and Atlanta beat Boston, 121-97. Atlanta had dropped four of five and was coming off a loss on Saturday at Cleveland in which Coach Mike Budenholzer was ejected and subsequently fined $25,000 for bumping into referee Ben Taylor. The Hawks essentially put the game out of reach with an 18-3 run that made it 100-80 with 6:20 remaining on Teague’s three-point play. Avery Bradley had 15 of his 25 points in the first half for Boston, which has dropped three of four. Isaiah Thomas scored 14 points as the Celtics, who began the game ranked ninth in opponent scoring, allowed a season high in points. Los Angeles Clippers beat Denver, 111-94 while Chicago edged Portland, 93-88. With AP
SPORTS
break out of a season-long slump. “Man, it’s cold in here,” he said to no one in particular three hours before tipoff, making his way around the court and shooting from seemingly every angle. He missed his first five shots in the game, including two air-balled three-point attempts at Oracle Arena. Cold, indeed. Then he missed his next nine shots after making a three-pointer. He did not play in the fourth quarter. The Lakers trailed by 34 after three. Bryant said his off night had to do with the team’s overall play—blown defensive coverages, unnamed players not running the offense, etc. “I’m just kind of frustrated with what we were doing,” Bryant said. “It bothered me so I got out of my Zen tonight.” Lakers Coach Byron Scott said he still had “a lot of faith” in Bryant and wouldn’t reduce his minutes to try to increase his efficiency. He did want fewer three-point shots from Bryant, who missed six of seven. Bryant claimed he would rebound from this, which sounded familiar,
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apanese Defense Minister Gen Nakatani on Tuesday expressed his support for the US Navy’s sailing of a warship close to one of China’s artificial islands in the South China Sea. Nakatani told reporters after meeting Adm. Harry Harris, the commander of the US Pacific Command, that the US military was at the forefront of the international community’s efforts to protect open, free and peaceful oceans in the South China Sea. He added he expressed Japan’s support for US actions to Harris. “The international community will not allow the unilateral changing of the status quo by force, and our country believes the same,” Nakatani said. “The US believes the same, too, and we agreed on this point.” The US Navy last month sailed a guided missile destroyer inside what China claims is a
PESO exchange rates n US 47.1340
See “Nakatani,” A2
‘Act For Our Future’ Hundreds of students form the words “Act For Our Future” to launch an advocacy by the government’s National Youth Commission (NYC) that aims to enhance public awareness on climate change at the Rizal High School campus at suburban Pasig City, east of Manila, on Wednesday. The environmentalists are also calling on the leaders of industrialized nations to seriously consider reducing carbon emissions, which lead to global warming. AP/Bullit Marquez
Indicators point to rising imports–Neda H oliday spending is expected to keep import growth robust throughout the fourth quarter, according to the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda). The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported that imports posted a growth of 6.7 percent to $6.17 billion in September. With this, the combined imports for the nine-month period reached $49.92 billion, a 2.3-percent increase. “Upbeat sentiment from the business sector and an overall improvement in consumer expectations for the coming quarter will likely keep imports afloat, especially those in the manufacturing and construction sectors,” Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan said.
“Improved purchasing power due to low inflation will also keep consumer demand vibrant in the succeeding months, and will further be ramped up by holiday spending,” he added. Balisacan said the higher import bill was also due to low prices of goods being sold globally, brought about by the low global demand for various commodities. With this, Balisacan said local industries can take advantage of the low prices and beef up their inventory and expand capacity at this time. “ On the back of sluggish global growth, economic policies should continue to encourage investments that cater to domestic demand. Continuous improvements in product quality, innovation and infrastructure support to
local industries should be sustained in order to elevate the competitiveness of the domestic industries, and make them at par with imported products,” he said. The Neda said the growth in imports in September was due to the 40.7-percent growth in capital goods importation to $2 billion. This, Balisacan noted, was the highest for the year. Raw materials and intermediate goods also increased by 20.1 percent in September 2015 to reach $2.7 billion. The import bill for consumer goods grew by 10.1 percent to $876.8 million in September due to higher purchases of durable goods such as passenger cars and motorbikes.
n japan 0.3848 n UK 71.0686 n HK 6.0818 n CHINA 7.3768 n singapore 33.4236 n australia 34.1155 n EU 50.1459 n SAUDI arabia 12.5473
Cai Ordinario Source: BSP (25 November 2015)