BSP cuts TB, RCB reserve requirement A NOTHER P10 billion worth of liquidity will be released into the economy’s cash stream, as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) decided to cut the reserve requirement of smaller banks on Tuesday. In a statement, BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno announced a 100-basis-point reduction in the reserve requirements of thrift banks (TBs), rural and cooperative banks (RCBs) effective July 31, 2020. Diokno told reporters that the deposits and deposit substitute liabilities of thrift, rural and cooperative banks currently amount to about P1 trillion. This means that the BSP’s move will release P10 billion of fresh liquidity infusion into the economy. The reserve requirement is the portion of depositors’ balances that banks are asked to keep idle in the BSP’s vaults as reserves. A reduction of the reserve requirement means
ANTONIO MALONZO, 76, of Sampaloc, Manila, uses a bicycle modified to include trainers and two front wheels for stability, as an alternative mode of transportation and a way for him to exercise as well. NONIE REYES
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that banks are required to deposit less in the BSP’s coffers, thus leaving them with more loanable funds for the public. “The reduction is expected to increase lending capacity of these banks to support financing requirements of their micro-, small- and medium-enterprise, as well as rural community-based clients. It will also help lower intermediation costs and ease financial strain faced by these banks’ customers,” Diokno said. “This move is also part of the BSP’s omnibus package of reforms aimed at assisting the banking public with their liquidity requirements during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic and supporting the transition toward a sustainable recovery during the post-crisis period,” he added. With the reduction, the reserve requirements of TBs and RCBs will be 3 percent and 2 percent, respectively.
As part of its response to aid the economy amid the pandemic, the BSP Monetary Board in March approved a 200-basis-point reduction in the reserve requirements of universal/commercial banks and nonbank financial institutions with quasi-banking functions. The decision was authorized by the Monetary Board through a special meeting called for on Monday. This move has effectively released P180 billion into the local cash stream. The cut is one of the slew of actions the BSP made in an effort to keep the economy afloat amid the Covid-19 pandemic. In a span of five months Diokno has already cut the BSP’s main policy rate by 150 basis points. The BSP also announced that it is buying P300 billion worth of government securities from the Bureau of the Treasury to finance the government’s Covid-19 rescue package.
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Wednesday, July 22, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 286
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OF BIZ FOR REOPENING
TEACHERS at the Jesus Dela Peña National High School in Marikina City undergo online training on e-learning on Tuesday in preparation for the opening of classes in August. NONOY LACZA
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By Elijah Felice Rosales
HE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) will issue next week the reclassified list of business activities allowed to operate during the quarantine, as it eyes to reopen the economy further to minimize revenue losses and boost the return to work.
Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez on Tuesday said the DTI is in the process of reclassifying the industries authorized to do business during the quarantine. Although a number of activities will remain shut under the new guidelines, he hinted that several of those previously prohibited will soon be permitted to operate. “We can live with the virus, and that’s the mindset now. We just have to manage it. The virus is here to
stay, but we should slowly reopen the economy,” Lopez told reporters. “Even under MGCQ [modified general community quarantine], I think there are activities which we can consider too risky to allow. These activities require people to stay close to each other, with no social distancing in place,” he added. Asked what industries will be kept suspended for the duration of the quarantine, Lopez said Continued on A2
Palace certifies 3 bills boosting FI power By Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz
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HE Palace has certified as urgent three bills further assisting financial institutions, which are tasked to help critical industries adversely affected by the Covid-19 pandemic. During a briefing, House Committee on Banks and Financial Inter-
mediaries Chairman Junie Cua listed the measures—amendments to Agri-Agra Reform Act, the Financial Institutions Strategic (FIST) bill, the Government Financial Institutions Unified Initiatives to Distressed Enterprises for Economic Recovery (GUIDE) bills—as having been Palace-certified in order to fast-track their approval in Congress.
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The House has already approved on third and final reading the proposed amendments to Agri-Agra Reform Act and the Financial Institutions Strategic bill. These two bills are now pending in the Senate. “For the information of the committee, three of our five bills were certified as urgent because they are forming part of the total
[economic] stimulus package of the government,” Cua said. According to Cua, the House will prioritize passage of the GUIDE bill when session resumes next week.
BSP backing
DURING the pre-Sona forum, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) See “Palace,” A2
HOUSEHOLD SPENDING SEEN DROPPING 6.5% ON COVID’S IMPACT By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad
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OUSEHOLD consumption—a major driver for the Philippines’ economic recovery—is seen to decline by 6.5 percent this year due to a surge in joblessness and lockdown measures imposed by the government amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic, a bank official said. Frederico Rafael D. Ocampo, BDO Unibank Inc.’s senior vice president and head of Trust and Investment Group-Asset Management, noted that household spending accounted for 72 percent of GDP last year. Bulk of this is represented by food, nonalcoholic beverages and other essentials. However, with many Filipino consumers staying at home and observing physical distancing, the bank official said, “there’s not much consumption going on.” At a webinar hosted by the Financial Executives of the Philippines (Finex) on Tuesday, he said, “The Philippines was one of the most severely affected in the Asean region in terms of people going out to the workplace, retail or malls, transit stations, grocery stores.” Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4608 n UK 62.5742 n HK 6.3746 n CHINA 7.0679 n SINGAPORE 35.5683 n AUSTRALIA 34.6646 n EU 56.5505 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.1773
Source: BSP (July 21, 2020)