Shoppers flock to Divisoria in Manila, known as the cheapest bargain center in the Philippines, to buy early Christmas gifts. In Baguio City, however, City Hall temporarily shut down its famed night market hours after it opened amid complaints people were not observing physical distancing. ROY DOMINGO
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Thursday, December 3, 2020 Vol. 16 No. 56
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 20 pages |
JFC SETS 10-YR GOALS:
$50-B BUSINESS, 3-M JOBS By Elijah Felice E. Rosales
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PHL readies return to offshore bond market
@alyasjah
HE Joint Foreign Chambers of the Philippines (JFC) has set an objective of securing $50 billion in investments and creating 3 million jobs for the country in the next 10 years.
By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad
Speaking on behalf of JFC, Peter W. Hayden, president of the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, on Tuesday announced the group is targeting to bring in $50 billion worth of new investments into the country up to 2030. These FDI, he added, should generate at least 3 million additional jobs for Filipino workers. The JFC achieved the goals it marked in 2010, at the launch of the first Arangkada Philippines Forum, of pulling $10 billion in foreign direct investments (FDI) and adding 1 million jobs for up to 2020, Hayden reported. As such, he said the JFC decided to raise the roof consistent with the forum’s title, “Arangkada,” to accelerate in Filipino. Hayden argued the new targets can only be achieved if the government enforces reforms across the board, especially in bringing down the cost of doing business in the Philippines at a time the FDI competition is tightening in Southeast Asia. Continued on A2
T A vendor in Quiapo, Manila, arranges his vegetables for display on Wednesday. Prices of vegetables have risen considerably since three successive typhoons destroyed huge parts of the country’s food baskets in Luzon. Prices of Sili (the native chili pepper) has gone up to as much as P500 per kilo—both for the siling labuyo and siling haba varieties. They used to fetch only P80 to P100 per kilo. NONIE REYES
BSP TO ‘PULL OUT ALL STOPS’ TO HELP COVID-HIT LOCAL MSMEs By Bianca Cuaresma
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@BcuaresmaBM
ANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin Diokno said they are looking at implementing more measures to aid local micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in their recovery after being badly hit by the pandemic. Speaking at the virtual launch of the Citi Microentrepreneurship Awards (CMA) 2020, Diokno said more than ever, it is vital to sustain local microentrepreneurs who provide essential products and services in the “last mile.” “Predominant in low-income areas and serving as engines driving local economies, microentre-
preneurs also nurture swathes of the Filipino population depending on them for post-pandemic recovery and rebuilding,” Diokno said. “Hence, the BSP is pulling out all the stops to support micro entrepreneurs and SMEs,” he added. MSMEs account for 99.5 percent of local business enterprises, 62.4 percent of total employment in the country, and 35.7 percent of gross value added (GVA). Diokno said they are looking to implement more projects in the pipeline to help facilitate MSMEs’ access to financing and to further understand their behavior and needs. According to the BSP chief, among the BSP’s hallmark MSME projects include the ongoing
building of a Credit Risk Database (CRD), which uses a variety of data to build statistical scoring models to sharpen credit assessment of banks and promote risk-based SME lending. The governor also said they are developing a standard loan application form (SLAF) for small business loans to address sector preference for simplified and streamlined loan application requirements. To f u r t her u nderst a nd MSMEs’ needs, Diokno said the BSP partnered with stakeholders for the upcoming study to inform strategic interventions toward developing a supply chain finance (SCF) market in the country. Continued on A2
@Tyronepiad
HE Philippine government is tapping the dollar bond market anew to raise additional funds for budgetary support as the economy continues to grapple with the impact of the pandemic, coupled with the recent onslaught of typhoons. The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) is set to sell benchmark-sized 10.5year and 25-year dollar-denominated senior unsecured fixed rate notes. The bonds, which have a settlement date of December 10, are set to mature on June 10, 2031 and December 10, 2045. S&P Global Ratings assigned a “BBB+” long-term foreign currency rating on the offering. Moody’s Investors Service gave a “Baa2” rating, which mirrors the Philippines’s issuer rating. Fitch Ratings, meanwhile, rated the issuance with “BBB,” which is in line with the country’s long-term foreign currency issuer default rating. “The notes represent direct, general, unconditional, unsecured, and unsubordinated obligations of the sovereign, and rank equally with the Philippines’s other unsecured and unsubordinated debt obligations,” S&P said in a statement on Wednesday. With the offering, ING Bank Manila Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa and RCBC Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the Philippines is continuing to build up its war chest to fight the pandemic. Apart from the Covid-19 response, Ricafort said the proceeds can also be allocated to other government spending, such as infrastructure, to boost the economy. See “PHL,” A2
PESO exchange rates n US 48.1100
n japan 0.4613 n UK 64.5540 n HK 6.2062 n CHINA 7.3227 n singapore 35.9808 n australia 35.4523 n EU 58.0736 n SAUDI arabia 12.8276
Source: BSP (December 2, 2020)