Businessmirror july 26, 2015

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BusinessMirror Ayala to bid for more infrastructure projects

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

U.N. Media Award 2008

www.businessmirror.com.ph

week ahead

ECONOMIC DATA PREVIEW Week ahead: Peso

n Previous week: The peso hit a downtrend in the previous week as it continuously fell in value against the dollar during the period. In particular, the peso started the week at 45.23 to a dollar, to further shed value on Tuesday at 45.28 to a dollar. The local currency slightly gained to close at 45.24 to a dollar on Wednesday, only to erase its gains on Thursday at 45.38 to a dollar and end the week on Friday at 45.49 to a dollar. The total traded volume during the week is at $2.4 billion, and the average of the peso is at 45.324 to a dollar during the week. n Week ahead: The peso is still expected to tread the middle range of the 45 territory as market players await the results of the Federal Open Market Committee’s most recent decision, as well as preparing to take cues on the earnings season.

M3 (June) July 31, Friday

n May M3: The growth of the amount of cash circulating in the local economy slightly climbed faster at the end in May, but the Bangko Sentral said the growth level is “adequate” for the growing economy. The central bank said domestic liquidity—as broadly measured by M3— rose to P7.6 trillion in May this year, registering a growth of 9.3 percent. May’s liquidity growth was faster

See “Outlook,” A2

T

A broader look at today’s business

n Sunday, July 26, 2015 Vol. 10 No. 290

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

HE country’s oldest business conglomerate has vowed to aid the government—the current administration and the ones to follow— in eradicating the infrastructure constraints that limit the Philippines from sustaining higher economic gains. Ayala Corp. Chairman Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala II said his company will continue working hand in hand with the government to further drive growth to the economy by supporting the state’s drive in developing infrastructure around the country.

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Oil Explorers Expand Drilling Rigs Amid Crude Bear Market

“We have thrown our hat in the ring for some projects...sometimes we don’t. But the whole concept of private-sector participation in building the infrastructure needs of the country is something that we are excited about. Continued on A2

‘Asean integration opens trade opportunities for EU’ By Roderick L. Abad

T

HE European Union (EU) is seeing more trade opportunities in Southeast Asia, as the region’s economies begin to integrate before the end of the year, the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (ECCP) said. “Although the ambition level [of the regional economic unification] is less than the EU—with common currency and all that—it is an important first step to start trading

PESO exchange rates n US 45.3490

more with newer markets [in Europe and in other parts of the world],” ECCP Vice President Erik Moller Nielsen told the BusinessMirror. “It is already a very powerful region. If the economic growth of the Asean [Association of Southeast Asian Nations] countries continues like now, it will overtake the European Union as an economic block in the next few years,” he added. Under the unification of economies of all the 10 Asean memberstates, which will start in December, there will be free flow of goods, services, investment capital and skilled labor. See “Asean,” A2

U

S oil explorers put rigs back to work for the third time in four weeks, as the industry began a tentative climb out of its retreat from shale drilling amid a bear market for crude. Rigs targeting oil in the US rose 21 to 659, Baker Hughes Inc. said on its web site on Friday. The rig count declined by

seven last week. Natural-gas rigs fell by 2 to 216, and miscellaneous rigs were unchanged at 1, bringing the total up 19 rigs to 876. Each of the four major plays expanded, with the Permian Basin of West Texas up 3 rigs to 244, and the Eagle Ford Shale adding 2 for a total of 79 in the South Texas formation. “It’s not hard to bounce off

the bottom like this,” Luke Lemoine, an analyst at Capital One Southcoast in New Orleans, said in a phone interview. “With oil sub-$50, I definitely don’t think this is an upward trend.” America’s oil drillers have sidelined more than half the country’s rigs since October, as the world’s largest suppliers See “Oil explorers,” A2

n japan 0.3661 n UK 70.3680 n HK 5.8510 n CHINA 7.3032 n singapore 33.1450 n australia 33.4679 n EU 49.8431 n SAUDI arabia 12.0924 Source: BSP (24 July 2015)


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