BusinessMirror August 10, 2020

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Monday, August 10, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 305

BSP LENDING TWEAK SEEN TO LIFT CORPORATE BONDS

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By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages |

@Tyronepiad

PHL debt payments jump 42% in 1st half

HE recent Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) circular discounting debt securities from the single borrowers limit (SBL) is seen to propel liquidity for the corporate bonds market, the Philippine Dealing and Exchange Corp. (PDEx) said. PDEx President Antonino Nakpil said in an online listing ceremony last week that the BSP circular is seen encouraging more market maker banks as well. “The recently released circular providing for the temporary exclusion of market makers’ positions from their single borrowers limit definitely and directly supports second market liquidity for corporate bonds,” Nakpil said. Signed by BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno on July 22, Circular 1091, Series of 2020 or “Exclusion of Debt Securities Held by Market Makers from Single Borrowers Limit” removes debt securities held by market makers from the credit exposure limit to a single borrower. SBL refers to the ceiling on the amount of loans a bank can extend to its clients. The Central Bank had increased the borrower’s limit to 30 percent from the current 25 percent in March to boost lending during this pandemic. This increase, which is a relief provided for the banks, is in place for six months. Year-to-date, PDEx has total new listings amounting to P291.95 billion. The total level of tradable corporate debt instruments, meanwhile, stood at P1.51 trillion. Corporate trading volume, ac-

@akosistellaBM Special to the BusinessMirror

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HE Department of Tourism (DOT) is looking at pursuing its partnership with the Expedia Group to promote the Philippines in this year’s winter season in the United Kingdom. I n a n on l i ne e xc h a nge with the BusinessMirror, Tour ism Attaché for London Gerard S. Panga said, “Many Brits turn to Expedia for flight, hotel, flight+hotel package options. So visibility

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n

@caiordinario

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ESPITE a decline in June, the Philippine government’s debt payments ballooned in the first semester of the year, according to the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr). The government’s debt service bill in the January-to-June period this year jumped 42.07 percent to P547.347 billion from the previous year’s P385.254 billion. In June, however, the country’s debt payments contracted 58.97 percent to P34.387 billion from the P83.811 billion posted in the same period last year. "The higher debt service payment for H1 2020 is mainly due to higher domestic maturities [three year FXTBs and RTB issued in 2017)] and bond exchange as well as external amortization," Treasurer Rosalia de Leon told BusinessMirror over the weekend. "Domestic IP also increases this year as a result of borrowings in 2019 and for new issuances this year." The BTr data showed interest payments increased 4.22 percent to P187.676 billion in the first semester of 2020 from P180.07 billion in the first semester last year. Amortization also grew 75.29 percent to P359.671 billion in the January-to-June period this year from P205.183 billion in the same period in 2019.

cording to a recent report by First Metro Investment Corp. and University of Asia and the Pacific, grew by 69.4 percent to P5.8 billion in June from P4.7 billion the previous month. Year-on-year, it recorded a 13.2-percent uptick. Volume for the top 5 corporates, which comprised 63.6 percent of the total amount, rose by 144.6 percent to P3.7 billion in June from P1.5 billion in May. These include SM Prime Holdings Inc., Ayala Corp., Ayala Land Inc., SM Investments Corp. and SMC Global Power. “Moreover, their [corporate bonds] success speaks well of foreign investor confidence in the economy’s ability to overcome the negative impact of Covid-19,” the report added.

Oversubscribed

THE Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) listed its Covid Action Response (CARE) Bonds last week. The offering was oversubscribed by over seven times, with the order book reaching P21.5 billion. “This hopefully indicates that there is not only ample liquidity in our capital markets but also that Philippine investors are responding well in...investment opportunities,” Ephyro Luis B. Amatong, commissioner from Securities and See “BSP lending,” A2

EXPEDIA KEEN ON HELPING PHILIPPINE TOURISM RECOVER By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo

By Cai U. Ordinario

is good, plus we get to promote also our partner hotels and airlines.” The ongoing partnership with online travel agency Expedia for the UK market, is with the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB), the DOT’s marketing arm. He said, the project with Expedia, “is in the work program this year, but we won’t implement it until our country opens to foreign leisure travelers. If ever, we are looking at the fourth quarter to position our products for the winter travel season.” Continued on A2

RESIDENTS of CAA Barangay BF International in Las Piñas City brave Sunday's rainy weather with their umbrellas in order to get their cash assistance under the government's Social Amelioration Program to help low-income families impacted by the Covid-19 lockdowns. Some of them have been waiting in line as early as 4 a.m. of August 9, 2020. NONIE REYES

See “PHL debt,” A8

‘Hard scrutiny before bailout for PhilHealth’ By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz @joveemarie

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EFORE the government considers any sort of bailout for the “troubled state insurer,” lawmakers said the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) must undergo “thorough financial checkup” and “cleansing.” See related PhilHealth story on page A2. House Deputy Majority Leader Bernadette Herrera made the st atement a f ter President ia l Spokesman Har r y Roque announced that the government was ready to provide funding to ensure the survival of PhilHealth, which is tasked with implementing the landmark Universal Health Care (UHC) Act of 2019. “PhilHealth should come clean about its current financial standing

and must be willing to go through a cleansing process to rid the agency of corrupt officials and employees prior to any government bailout,” Herrera said. Last week, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III had conceded that at this point, it is hard to validate with precision the financial status of PhilHealth, as its information system was deeply f lawed, and it will take time to ascertain the integrity of data. This, amid allegations by a board member that certain PhilHealth officials had tweaked the agency’s numbers to hide its true fiscal health. Accord ing to Her rera, t he government’s assurance on the UHC will “help to allay concerns that the corruption scandal and f u nd i ng proble m s hou nd i ng

PhilHealth would delay the law’s implementation.” “We cannot afford any delay in the implementation of the law, which guarantees equitable access to quality and affordable healthcare services for all Filipinos,” Herrera said.

2022 time line

PHILHEALTH Acting Senior Vice President for Actuarial Services Nerissa Santiago recently told a Senate hearing that the staterun insurance firm may cease to exist by 2022 due to the “double impact” of decreasing collections and increasing payouts for the hospitalization of Covid-19 patients. With this, Marikina Rep. Stella Luz Quimbo said the actuarial life of the PhilHealth should be validated by a third party.

“My request is for you to have actuarial validation. To me, it cannot be one year left.... Give us actuarial validation and this validation should be done by a third party,” she said. Citing her computation on PhilHealth reserve fund, investment, premium contribution, invest as well as benefit payments, the economist-lawmaker said PhilHealth should have at least a P112 billion balance when it enters 2021. Earlier, the agency’s president and CEO, Ricardo Morales, said the implementation of UHC and ex pansion of pr imar y hea lth benefits may have to be delayed as the pandemic dealt a big blow to PhilHealth’s finances and capacity to pay for the health-care services of its members. Continued on A2

US 49.0550 n JAPAN 0.4650 n UK 64.4975 n HK 6.3296 n CHINA 7.0544 n SINGAPORE 35.8275 n AUSTRALIA 35.4717 n EU 58.2675 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.0852

Source: BSP (7 August 2020)


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