Businessmirror february 15, 2015

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three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business

n Sunday, February 15, 2015 Vol. 10 No. 129

P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week

BSP’s next move: Cut or tighten rates? week ahead

ECONOMIC DATA PREVIEW Previous week

The local currency started the week at a weaker note at 44.355 to a dollar, from the previous week’s end at 44.15 to a dollar. This appreciated on Tuesday to 44.31 to a dollar, and further at 44.3 to a dollar on Wednesday. The peso then hit depreciation on Thursday at 44.385 to a dollar, and ended the week at 44.285 to a dollar on Friday. The peso moved along with regional peers during the week. n Week ahead: The peso is expected to rally for the week ahead, but is still seen to trade sideways within the lower band of the 44 territory next week, with a slight depreciation bias due to lack of local leads to catalyze the market.

Balance of Payments (BOP) January 2015 Wednesday, February 18

n December 2014 BOP: The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas earlier reported that the country’s balance of payments (BOP) position yielded a deficit of $2.88 billion for 2014. This is a steep reversal of the country’s BOP position from the previous year, which yielded at $5.085-billion net surplus. The deficit seen last year has been attributed by the central bank to the heavy capital outflow seen earlier during the year, when markets were rattled by the plans of ending the quantitative easing program of the US during the year. n January 2015 BOP: The country’s transactions with the rest of the world are expected to recover this year, according to BSP senior officials, amid the expected disturbances in the external front. The BOP should be able to bounce back strongly from a shortfall in 2014 to a surplus in 2015, with the current account expected to show increasing positive position of at least $6 billion, BSP Deputy Governor for the Monetary Stability Sector Diwa C. Guinigundo earlier said. Bianca Cuaresma

T

By Bianca Cuaresma

he recent slash made by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to its inflation forecast is expected to diversify the market’s view further of the central bank’s next policy action down the line, an international banking giant said. In an analysis commentary following the central bank’s decision to maintain policy rates untouched this week, the DBS Bank Group Research said more economists and analysts are likely to shift their biases from tightening

to cutting rates at the end of the year, as inflation has fallen down to near floor level for the year. After the BSP said that the Monetary Board (MB) decided to maintain policy rates—at 4-percent Continued on A2

War history is littered with

civilian

deaths

‘Cyberthreat onslaught requires joint defense’

P

By Margaret Talev & Chris Strohm | Bloomberg

resident Barack Obama said the onslaught of Internet threats against the US government and business computers requires a joint defense by federal and private security specialists. At a time when relations between Silicon Valley and Washington are frayed over government surveillance and data collection, Obama is appealing to technology companies for cooperation to fend off criminal and state-sponsored attacks on the nation’s computer networks. “The very technologies that empower us to do great good can also be used to undermine us,” Obama said at a White House-sponsored cybersecurity summit on Friday at the Stanford University in California. “Everybody’s online, and everybody’s vulnerable.” Addressing an audience that included executives and security officials from companies such as Microsoft Corp., Google Inc., Yahoo! Inc. and Facebook Inc., Obama said he will make it easier for the government and companies to share threat information while he awaits congressional action on cybersecurity legislation. One of the areas of friction between the government and technology companies is how to balance the privacy of users or customers with national security concerns in the extensive government-surveillance programs that intercept phone, Internet and other communications.

See “Cyberthreat,” A2

MRT 3 owner, govt eye compromise

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

T

HE longdrawn battle between the government and the owner of the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) Line 3 may soon end, after a senior official of the transportation department admitted that his office is currently weighing the proposal of the Sobrepeñaled company to invest more money in the train system in exchange for an extension of its contract. Still, the government is taking extra precaution in considering the

PESO exchange rates n US 44.3960

offer that would free the state from paying billions of pesos in equity rental payments to the company, which also proposed to overhaul the train line without a single centavo from the government. “We’re studying it; we don’t want to say outright that we are in favor or against it. There are certain concerns, like fares,” Transportation Undersecretary Jose Perpetuo M. Lotilla said in an interview. MRT Holdings II Inc. (MRTHII) and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) are proposing to defray the upgrade costs of the train system and release the government from the bondage of paying billions of See “MRT 3,” A2

R

arely has the world had such a frontrow seat for a concerted attack by a major air force on an urban area as it did during last summer’s Gaza war. But Israel is far from the only country to have killed civilians during war. The list is long, from Dresden to Japan, from Grozny to Algeria. GlobalEye»C2

n japan 0.3732 n UK 68.3343 n HK 5.7261 n CHINA 7.1086 n singapore 32.7380 n australia 34.3888 n EU 50.6336 n SAUDI arabia 11.8342 Source: BSP (13 February 2015)


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Businessmirror february 15, 2015 by BusinessMirror - Issuu