DOLLAR, SAMURAI BONDS POSSIBLE IN H1 T
LONGEST IN W. VISAYAS Public Works Secretary Mark A. Villar (inset) recently inaugurated the Kalibo Bridge, the longest bridge in Western Visayas, just in time for tourists flocking to Kalibo for the Ati-atihan Festival. The opening of the P500-million two- lane, 770-linear meter bridge to vehicular traffic cuts travel time from Kalibo City to Caticlan from 75 minutes to 60 minutes, and is seen to boost tourism and commerce to and from the capital town of Kalibo. DPWH PHOTO
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HE Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said it is possible the government will be issuing dollar-denominated global bonds, as well as yen-denominated samurai bonds within the first semester along with the euro-denominated bonds, as the government ramps up its borrowing program to support its spending plans. Deputy Treasurer Erwin D. Sta. Ana said they are also eyeing a retail Treasury bond (RTB) issuance “as early as possible” although they are still trying to gauge market conditions. This, after he said they already secured the approvals on the dollar-denominated global bonds. Asked on the likelihood of government issuing euro bonds, as well as the dollardenominated global bonds in the first half of the year, Sta. Ana said: “Possibly, samurai also. You have to consider also Tokyo Olympics. So I mean, if you know everybody will
be busy in Japan at that time, so I don’t know the window of opportunity. We’re still evaluating lately.” He added it is also possible that the samurai bonds would be issued earlier than the Tokyo Olympics, which is set to happen from July 24 to August 9. As for the euro-denominated bonds, Sta. Ana said they have yet to decide on whether to push through with the planned euro bond sale but he said they had “highly successful initial feedback from investors, not only in Europe but also in Asia.” Nonetheless, he said they are eyeing threeyear and a nine-year euro-denominated bonds, which are both of benchmark size. Benchmark sized-euro bonds are equivalent to $500 million. For both tenors, this would amount to at least $1 billion. However, he said this is not set in stone
Wednesday, January 22, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 104
Chilling effect on biz of deal reviews flagged T
By Bernadette D. Nicolas
@BNicolasBM
HE Department of Finance (DOF) revealed on Tuesday another allegedly “onerous” contract between the government and the private sector, this time involving a land deal between Chevron Philippines and a subsidiary of the National Development Co. (NDC) that allowed Chevron to pay a “miniscule” rental fee to the government for more than four decades. This, as Palace officials pressed their point that the transaction that allowed property giant Ayala Land Inc. to lease prime land from the University of the Philippines for the Technohub development in
Quezon City merits a review despite ALI’s clarification that the rental rate is P171, not P20 per square meter as claimed earlier. Analysts, however, cautioned that while reviewing transactions
signals the Duterte administration’s seriousness to fight corruption, such could undermine investor confidence in the government’s guarantee of the sanctity of contracts.
“Definitely, we have to implement a totally transparent method of getting the best deal for the rental of all government property.” —Dominguez
On the Chevron-NDC rental deal, the DOF said in a statement on Tuesday that Chevron is paying a monthly rental fee of just 74 centavos per square meter on a 120-hectare or 1.2-million-sq-m state property in Batangas. This is way lower than the current fair market value in that area of around P17.90 per square meter per month, the agency said. See “Chilling effect,” A2
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@joveemarie
HE chairman of the House Committee on Constitutional A mendments on Tuesday said the panel will reconsider the resolution seeking to introduce amendments to the 1987 Constitution and the proposals of the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF). One of the proposals of the IATF is to include the Mandanas ruling, which will increase the internal revenue allotment (IRA) of local government units (LGUs). In an interview, Cagayan de Oro City Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, the panel chairman, said his committee will reopen its public hearings and consultations to discuss the proposed amendments submitted by the IATF, as well as its
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previously approved Resolution of Both Houses. “So we go back to the drawing board. We are going back to hear their proposals. So we are therefore not going to proceed yet with the plenary discussions on the proposed amendments,” said Rodriguez. According to Rodriguez, one of the amendments presented by the body is the fiscal strengthening of the LGUs, which shall have a just share, as determined by law on the basis of their financial needs, organizational capacities, and resources, in all national taxes. Under the Supreme Court ruling on Mandanas v Ochoa, “the share from the Internal Revenue Allotment of the local government units does not exclude other national taxes like customs duties.” See “Cha-cha,” A2
Bernadette D. Nicolas
P25.00 nationwide | 5 sections 48 pages |
HOUSE, SENATE MOVE ON BUDGET FOR TAAL
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HE leadership of the House of Representatives has vowed to fast-track the approval of a P30-billion supplemental budget for areas affected by the Taal Volcano erruption. If need be, House Majority Leader Martin Romualdez said the House is willing to increase the amount of the supplemental budget to as much as P50 billion. “We are going to coordinate with the Palace to get the full details of the supplemental budget,” he added. At the Senate, lawmakers moved to front-load passage of a P30-billion supplemental budget for Taal-affected areas to augment an assistance fund to help Taal’s disaster-stricken residents. Sen. Panfilo Lacson suggested, however, that lawmakers first need to “find out how much is readily available in calamity funds of the national government [also called the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Fund] and the LGUs affected.”
House panel tackles reso for Cha-cha, Mandanas ruling’s inclusion eyed By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz
yet and they can still “upsize if there’s ample demand.” In terms of the RTBs, Sta. Ana said they have yet to determine the size of the RTBs but noted that these are usually “jumbo issuances.” “So you can expect definitely more than what is actually offered in regular auctions,” he said. In May 2019, the government issued euro bonds, the country’s first in 13 years. It raised €750 million for its eight-year euro-denominated bonds. The debt papers were priced at a coupon rate of 0.875 percent. The government also successfully returned to the renminbi market on the same month last year with its second issuance of panda bonds. It was able to raise P19 billion from its threeyear renminbi-denominated bonds.
Lacson noted that “per the Philippine Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Act of 2010 or RA 10121, LGUs are mandated to allocate at least 5 percent of their regular sources of income, including their IRA, for their LDRRMF. If unexpended since there are no calamities, the cumulative LDRRMF are kept in a special fund to be used in situations like the Taal eruption.” He said the same provision of RA 10121 applies to all the municipalities and barangays affected or not by calamities. The senator pointed out that Batangas province had “allocated P183 million in their 2019 annual budget alone for their PDRRMF although it appears 70 percent has been allocated for overhead expenses like MOOE, and only P55 million was for calamity.” He noted that “the same is true for the different municipalities and barangays within the province.” See “Budget,” A8
China-funded bridges seen finished in ’21 By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario
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A worker at the Picnic Grove in Tagaytay shovels dried mud after days of ashfall from Taal Volcano’s phreatic eruption. The popular tourist place has yet to operate because there is so much to clean. Despite the Phivolcs’ Alert Level 4 warning of an imminent hazardous eruption, some establishments in Tagaytay are operational while others are still cleaning up to go back to business. NONIE REYES
HE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) expressed confidence that it will be able to complete the construction of the bridges funded by the Chinese government in 2021. In a roundtable with the editors and reporters of the BusinessMirror, “Build, Build, Build” (BBB) Committee Chairman Anna Mae Lamentillo said construction of the Binondo-Intramuros and EstrellaPantaleon bridges is now in full swing. Lamentillo said the Binondo-Intramuros Bridge is 27 percent complete while that of the Estrella-Pantaleon Bridge is at 47 percent. The total cost of the two bridges is P4.86 billion. See “Bridges,” A8
US 50.9440 n japan 0.4624 n UK 66.2883 n HK 6.5574 n CHINA 7.4187 n singapore 37.8316 n australia 35.0087 n EU 56.5275 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5796
Source: BSP (21 January 2020)