BusinessMirror July 31, 2020

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With income halved, Pagcor suffers H1 net loss By Bernadette D. Nicolas

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OR the first time in at least six years, staterun Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (Pagcor) succumbed to a firsthalf net loss as it suffered an almost 50-percent drop in its income from gaming operations. Based on its statement of comprehensive income, Pagcor swung to a net loss of P1.596 billion as of end-June this year from a net income of P3.079 billion in the same period last year. This was equivalent to a 151.84-percent plunge year-on-year. It also missed its P2.835-billion target net income for the period by 156.31 percent or P4.43 billion. This, as the gaming operations of Pagcor remain suspended except for Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs), which

A BARANGAY police officer stands guard over Leveriza Street, Barangay 14, one of the communities in Pasay City placed on “special lockdown” since July 22 due to the high incidence of coronavirus cases in the area. The lockdown has since been extended to August 5. ROY DOMINGO

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were allowed by the government to partially resume in May in a bid to raise some revenues amid the pandemic. The country’s gaming regulator posted a net loss for the six-month period as its P11.317-billion total expenses exceeded its total income net of gaming of taxes and contributions at P9.732 billion. Pagcor’s total income net of gaming taxes and contributions as of end-June was also lower by 46.59 percent than its P18.22-billion target and also down by 50.38 percent from P19.61 billion it posted for the first semester last year. On the other hand, Pagcor’s total expenses were 26.43 percent short of its P15.38-billion target and 31.53 percent below the P16.527 billion it recorded as of end-June last year. In the last six years since 2014, Pagcor consistently posted net income for the first se-

mester. The oldest available record of Pagcor’s end-June statement of comprehensive income posted in its website was that of 2014. Earlier, Pagcor said 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 closed down their operations, and more will likely follow suit—supposedly due to stringent tax rules from the BIR and the impact of movement restrictions amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Domingo has also since appealed to the government to allow the gradual reopening of casinos.

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Friday, July 31, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 295

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

FITNESS coach Trish Novicio disinfects gym equipment at Anytime Fitness Gym on Tomas Morato in Quezon City in preparation for its reopening, months after gymnasiums were among those closed to stop transmission of Covid-19. The Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases has approved the reopening of gyms, internet shops, tutorial and review centers and drive-in cinemas under general community quarantine starting August 1. NONOY LACZA

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By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad

HE P200-billion decline in the banking industry’s loan portfolio may have an adverse impact not only on the sector but on the economy as well, an audit firm said.

Isla Lipana & Co. said that banks appear to be cautious when it comes to extending credit amid the pandemic, noting that a 2-percent drop—translating to around P200 billion—was recorded for the loan portfolio from December 2019 to May 2020. This, as loans-to-deposit ratio slid from 80.2 percent to 75.8 percent for the same period.

“In the long run, this is not healthy for both the financial services sector and the economy,” Isla Lipana said. The audit firm said that the banks should be able to provide loans and generate earnings to compensate for the potential losses from defaults and cost of carrying deposits. See “Loans,” A2

Lawmakers, groups counsel caution on nuke study

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GATCHALIAN: “[Nuclear power] is an energy source that is very complicated and demands high-level knowledge to fully maximize its utilization without sacrificing public safety.”

LAWMAKER has called on the energy department to “proceed with utmost transparency” in the conduct of a feasibility study on the inclusion of nuclear power to the country’s energy mix. Senate Committee on Energy chairman Sherwin Gatchalian said Thursday that transparency should be the guiding post from day one on the conduct of the study. “The conduct of this study should proceed with utmost transparency to the public in every step

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 49.2170

of the way. The public should be well-informed on the inherent risk and the potential of nuclear power. Only an open and free discussion of this technology will deepen the comprehension of the public,” the senator said. Nuclear energy, he commented, is a “complicated” energy source and a “very risky business.” “The world is always in constant debate on the adoption of nuclear power because of its inherent risk to public welfare. Moreover,

it is an energy source that is very complicated and demands highlevel knowledge to fully maximize its utilization without sacrificing public safety,” said Gatchalian. Malacañang signed last week Executive Order (EO) 116, which paves the way for the creation of the Nuclear Energy Program InterAgency Committee (NEP-IAC). The DOE will lead the committee, while the Department of Science and Technology is the

AMID LOCKDOWNS, HUMAN TRAFFICKERS MOVE TO DIGITAL By Samuel P. Medenilla

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OT even the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic could stop human traffickers, who merely moved their illegal operations from the physical to the digital landscape en masse. This was the observation of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) and other members of the InterAgency Council Against Trafficking (Iacat) in an online forum on Thursday for the celebration of the World Day Against Trafficking organized by the Blas F. Ople Policy Center. In his presentation, POEA administrator Bernard P. Olalia said they noted a spike in the number of online scammers during the pandemic. “There are so many [recruitment scams], which appeared on social media; that is why our AIR [Anti-illegal recruitment branch] continues to monitor [online] advertisements,” Olalia said. He said AIR usually scrutinizes ads from travel agencies and language training centers, which are usually used by human traffickers to recruit their victims. Justice Undersecretary Emmeline Villar said they anticipated Continued on A2

See “Nuke,” A2

n JAPAN 0.4690 n UK 64.0018 n HK 6.3507 n CHINA 7.0297 n SINGAPORE 35.8333 n AUSTRALIA 35.3821 n EU 58.0515 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.1252

Source: BSP (July 30, 2020)


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