Businessmirror december 20, 2015

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A broader look at today’s business

n Sunday, December 20, 2015 Vol. 11 No. 73

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Govt still aiming to close 15 PPP deals in homestretch of Aquino’s Palace term

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By Lorenz S. Marasigan

he government is still bullish that it could sign at least 15 key infrastructure deals before President Aquino steps down from office in 2016, despite hitting a roadblock on a project that the private proponent decided to terminate due to the state’s dilly-dallying act. week ahead

ECONOMIC DATA PREVIEW n Previous week: The peso in the previous week followed a declining trend, as markets await the conclusion of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). However, during the actual hike, the trade value of the peso only moved sideways—indicating that the market has already factored in the move from the Federal Reserve. The local currency hit 47.395 to a dollar on the day of the Fed liftoff. n Week ahead: While some volatility is still expected in the markets after the Fed finally lifted off its rates in the previous week, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said it will not be as significant as in the past. “The regional currencies have already moved lower versus the dollar in recent weeks. This may continue, as would the outflows, but not in significant magnitudes as in the past,” Tetangco said.

Agricultural commodities

The Philippine agricultural sector registered an increase in rice- and corn-stocks inventory in November. The stock inventory for rice as of November 1 reached 3.11 million metric tons (MMT), compared to the month of October, which had 2.20 MMT. The inventory for the month went significantly higher at 41.5 percent. Rice-stock share in commercial warehouses was at 28.4 percent, while rice from National Food Authority (NFA) warehouses

See “Outlook,” A2

Now that Megawide Construction Corp. has decided to terminate its P5.69-billion contract to modernize the Philippine Orthopedic Center—no thanks to a Cabinet official’s decision to review the project despite being signed—the government must work much harder to achieve its goals for the PublicPrivate Partnership (PPP) Program. But, despite this setback, PPP Center Executive Director Cosette V. Canilao is still confident that the government could meet its targets, given the current pace of procurement being undertaken by several agencies. “We still hope to award and sign 15 contracts. We still have 13 projects that we are currently

CANILAO: “We still have 13 projects that we are currently bidding out. From the number, I think we can achieve that goal.”

bidding out. From the number, I think we can achieve that goal,” she said. The Department of Transportation and Communications holds the lion’s share from the list. With live tenders are the P108.2-billion deal to develop five regional airports around the See “PPP,” A2

Amid challenges, PHL seen to sustain economic growth By Bianca Cuaresma

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conomic managers continue to see “sustained resiliency” in the country’s ability to push its growth, despite the dragging factors largely emanating from challenging external environment, as shown in the reassessment of balance of payments (BOP) assumptions. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Friday that it has retained its assumption of BOP for 2015 this year at a surplus of $2 billion, or 0.6 percent of the country’s GDP, despite lower projections across subcomponents of the country’s BOP, or the summary of the country’s transactions with the rest of the world. In particular, the current-account surplus for this year, which is the largest component of the coun-

PESO exchange rates n US 47.3050

Congress passes U.S. spending measure to end oil-export ban

Guinigundo: “On the basis of the numbers, we see continued resiliency of BOP in 2015 and 2016.”

try’s BOP, is expected to hit $8.9 billion for 2015. This is a downward revision from the earlier projection of a $14.2-billion surplus in the current account. The downward assumption came in as the wider trade deficit for the year, brought about by the sharp decline in the country’s exports, pulled down the inflows coming from Filipino migrants’ remittances, tourism and business-process outsourcing (BPO) receipts for the year. See “Economic growth,” A2

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi updates reporters on Democratic reaction to the bipartisan $1.1-trillion omnibus spending bill during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday. Upset with GOP efforts in lifting a ban on US oil exports, Pelosi suggested there might not be enough Democratic votes to push it through the chamber. Congressional leaders hope to ship both bills, a 2,200-page legislative bundle, to President Barack Obama on Friday for his promised signature and adjourn for the year. AP/J. Scott Applewhite

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ongress passed a $1.1-trillion spending measure that averts a US government shutdown and ends a 40-year-old ban on crude-oil exports, a plan that ensures fiscal peace in Congress through most of 2016. The Senate passed the bill 65-33 on Friday, shortly after a 316-113 House vote. The legislation, which will finance the government through September 2016, goes to President Barack Obama, who plans to sign it.

“Let’s take steps—as the legislation we’ll consider proposed—to support more jobs, more opportunity and more economic growth,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said on the Senate floor. “I think it’s legislation worth supporting.” The end of the 40-year ban on most US crude-oil exports is a “big win,” according to House Speaker Paul Ryan, and it’s a top priority for Republicans. Demo-

crats call it a giveaway to oil companies and, in exchange, they negotiated extensions of environmental measures, including solarand wind-energy tax credits. The two measures, combined in House Resolution 2029, include about $680 billion in revived tax breaks over the next 10 years. A number of them would be made permanent, including those for business research and development, small-business expenses, individual deductions for

state and local sales taxes, and financing rules for multinational corporations. The research tax break will be “a booster shot for the innovation economy in America,” said Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top Democrat on the Finance Committee. Nonetheless, he voted against the bill, because he said it contained “unacceptable” provisions weakening oversight of government surveillance. Continued on A2

n japan 0.3856 n UK 70.4561 n HK 6.1024 n CHINA 7.2960 n singapore 33.3439 n australia 33.6571 n EU 51.1935 n SAUDI arabia 12.6153

Source: BSP (18 December 2015)


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