Pagcor misses ₧34-B H1 goal by 47% By Bernadette D. Nicolas
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TATE-RUN Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor) missed by 47 percent its gross revenue target of about P34 billion for the first half of the year. It only drew in P18 billion during the period as the Covid-induced lockdown prompted it to suspend the operations of Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs), as well as casinos and gaming stations. Pagcor Chairman Andrea Domingo told the BusinessMirror their gross revenue as of end-June also suffered a 48-percent drop compared to about P34.6 billion in the same period last year.
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“[Our gross revenue for the period is] about P18 billion, lower by 47 percent of our original target and lower by 48 percent compared to last year’s real income for the same period. Please take note that this figure includes the revenues earned from January 1 to March 15, 2020, when we were still in full operation,” Domingo said in a message. Pagcor earlier said it expects to lose P5 billion to P6 billion monthly from the suspension of operations of POGOs, casinos and gaming stations following the lockdown which started mid-March. It was only in May that the government allowed the partial
resumption of POGOs in a bid to raise some revenues while several parts of the country remained under lockdown due to the pandemic. Prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, Pagcor was targeting to earn P85 billion in gross gaming revenues. However, it was recently reported that two POGOs—SC World Development Group Ltd., a unit of Macau’s gambling giant SunCity Group, and Don Tencess Asian Services Solutions Inc.—have signified their intention to exit the country, and officially asked for cancellation of their offshore gaming licenses. Aside from them, 13 other service providers were also reported
to have also closed down their operations and more will likely follow suit due to stringent tax rules from the BIR and the impact of movement restrictions amid the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Pagcor. Meanwhile, Domingo has also since appealed to the government to allow the gradual reopening of casinos. But when asked if the staterun firm has renewed its appeal for the government on the resumption of casinos given the reduced gross revenue of Pagcor for the first half of the period due to the lockdown, Domingo said: “We will just follow their guidelines.”
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PHL GETS P23.5-B LOAN FROM JAPAN FOR COVID www.businessmirror.com.ph
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Thursday, July 2, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 266
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PHL’S END-MAY G.I.R. HITS $93.3B, HIGHEST EVER ON RECORD
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FOREIGN Affairs Secretary Teodoro L. Locsin Jr. (left) and Japanese Ambassador Haneda Koji (right) sign diplomatic notes on the loan assistance package extended by Tokyo to support Manila’s response to Covid-19. Japan Foreign Minister Motegi Toshimitsu had personally affirmed to Locsin, in their telephone discussion on May 22, Japan’s commitment to extend this assistance. After the Exchange of Notes, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III and Jica Chief Representative Eigo Azukizawa signed the ¥50-billion (P23.5 billion) Covid-19 Crisis Response Emergency Support Loan at the Department of Finance Building in Manila. DFA PHOTO BY NILO K. PALAYA
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By Bernadette D. Nicolas
HE Philippines and Japan signed on Wednesday a “highly concessional” ¥50-billion loan (P23.54 billion) that aims to help the government in its war against the Covid-19 pandemic and provide economic relief to Filipinos most affected by the health crisis.
Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III and Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica) inked the agreement for the Covid-19 Crisis Response Emergency Support Loan (CCRESL). The Philippines is also the first recipient country of the new facility designed by the Japanese government to help developing countries globally in augmenting their Covid-19 response program and stimulating economic activity. Dominguez told reporters that
the loan will essentially cover part of the drop in state revenues at a time that the government is ramping up its spending for its response against the pandemic. “There’s no specific item here, but again it will support government operations, such as the hiring of the contact tracers, increasing the number of testing centers we have. You know, we went from one testing center in March, I think we now have 72
HE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Wednesday that the Philippines’ dollar reserves climbed to its all-time high in end-May despite economic disruptions caused by the pandemic. In a statement, BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said the country’s gross international reserves (GIR) hit $93.3 billion as of endMay this year, the highest GIR on record for the country. The country’s GIR is the level of foreign-exchange holdings the Central Bank has during a given period. The GIR is a crucial component of the economy as it is often used to manage the country’s foreign-exchange rate against excess volatility and an important line of defense against an economic rundown. At its current level, the country’s GIR represents an “ample external liquidity buffer,” which is now equivalent to 8.4 months’ worth of the Philippines’ imports of goods and payments of services and primary income, the BSP said. It is also about 7 times the country’s short-term external debt based on original maturity and 4.6 times based on residual maturity. The country’s GIR managed to hit a strong run in May due to the billions in surplus in the country’s Balance of Payments (BOP). The BOP represents the total transactions of the country’s residents with the rest of the world for a given period. A surplus means the country earned more dollars compared to what it has spent, while a deficit means spending overtook dollar earnings during the period. In May, the Philippines’ BOP hit a surplus of $2.63 billion, about 2.6 times higher than the $928-million BOP surplus recorded in the same month last year. According to the Central Bank, the BOP surplus in May 2020 reflected mainly the inflows arising from the national government’s foreign currency deposits with the BSP as well as the BSP’s foreignexchange operations and income from its investments abroad. The BOP surplus could have been higher, the BSP noted, if not partially offset by the foreign currency withdrawals made by the national government to pay its foreign currency debt obligations during the month. The May surplus brought the total five-month BOP surplus of the country to $4.03 billion in May, lower than the $5.19-billion surplus seen a year ago.
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Naia problem: Bottom line, not name T
HE Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia), the country’s main gateway which proadministration congressmen want renamed, may soon be known as the “Need Assistance International Airport” due to pandemic restrictions, Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto warned Wednesday. Recto reminded the government that Naia’s immediate problem is not its signage, but its bottom line, noting that the Cov-
id-forced travel lockdown is seen to plunge its 2020 revenues by as much as P10 billion. Recto said the amount is barely enough for the country’s gateway “to keep payroll and the lights on.” In a statement, the Senate President Pro Tempore pointed out that “Naia is a corporation, deriving its income from what its users pay, be they airlines or passengers.” Recto warned that “the disappearance of these customers will severely impact its financials,” not-
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ing that on a forecast 3-percent increase in passenger traffic, the four-terminal airport was projecting a gross revenue of P15.43 billion this year. But if the pandemic-imposed air travel restrictions will continue, he estimates “a 60-percent cut on income will bring down its gross revenues to P6.05 billion, and to P4.53 billion if it will be a deeper 70-percent reduction.” Recto added in a mix of English and Filipino: “[The] real pay-
roll of Naia is at least P3.3 billion a year, to include contracted services like security and others. Then we still have to pay for water and power, at about P1.5 billion,” citing the corporate operating budget of the Manila International Airport Authority (Miaa) for FY 2020. The Naia, he warned, “may have to dig into its reserves” if it relies on its current income to cover payroll and utility bills, adding: “If these will be drawn from just See “Naia,” A2
PASSENGERS at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 1 get constant reminders from airport employees to observe physical distancing and to minimize contact at all times within the airport premises, from check-in to boarding, while inflight and during disembarking. NONIE REYES
n JAPAN 0.4613 n UK 61.7496 n HK 6.4242 n CHINA 7.0474 n SINGAPORE 35.7302 n AUSTRALIA 34.3551 n EU 55.9341 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.2752
Source: BSP (July 1, 2020)