BusinessMirror June 16, 2020

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Biggest PHL firms return to bonds market

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RAPPLER CEO and Executive Editor Maria Ressa, wearing a protective mask, waves to the media before attending a court hearing at the Manila Regional Trial Court on Monday. The court found Ressa and former researcher Reynaldo Santos Jr. guilty of libeling businessman Wilfredo Keng. Story at bottom of front page. ROY DOMINGO

HE biggest companies in the Philippines need to repay the most debt ever next year, and they’re lining up for fresh funds while interest rates are still low. Three corporate groups—Ayala Corp., JG Summit Holdings Inc. and San Miguel Corp.—are looking to raise a total of $2.5 billion with bonds, based on regulatory filings. They are among the first firms to return to the debt market after a lockdown caused issuance to plunge to a 4-year low of $540 million in the second quarter, Bloomberg-compiled data show. Philippine firms are set to join the global rush to borrow funds as they prepare for a massive debt bill: about $8.3 billion in corporate bonds and loans will mature in the second half of the year, before that pile climbs to a record $16.4 billion in 2021, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. They are keen to borrow

while rates are still low, amid signs the central bank is moving to absorb excess funds as the economy gradually reopens this month. “We expect to have a very busy next couple of months, and hopefully the second half of the year will retain the momentum,” according to Ryan Martin Tapia, president of China Bank Capital Corp., one of the country’s most active bond arrangers. Still, lingering pandemic uncertainty is making tenors shorter and credit spreads wider, Tapia said. In the latest possible Philippine debt deal, PLDT Inc. hired Credit Suisse Group AG and UBS Group AG for a series of investor calls starting June 15. They may be followed by an offering of 10-year and 30-year dollar bonds, the telecommunications company told the stock exchange last Monday.

Port operator International Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI) priced $400 million of 10-year bonds on June 10, one of only two Philippine debt issuers in the second quarter along with a peso deal by Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., Bloomberg-compiled data show. Developer Robinsons Land Corp. also has notes in the pipeline.

Tumbling yields

FALLING interest rates may spur increased demand for Philippine corporate securities. Peso-denominated 5-year government bond yields dropped to a 7-year low this month after policy-makers pumped cash into the market. The virus outbreak caused the nation’s economy to shrink for the first time since 1998 and its unemployment rate to rise to a record. Continued on A4

BIR: NOT EYEING SMALL, TEMPORARY ONLINE BIZ

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n Tuesday, June 16, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 251

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages |

G2G RICE IMPORTS IN LIMBO ON LEGAL COVER, FUNDING By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM

& Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas @jearcalas

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THIS dining hall in a Taguig City mall used to be full of people eating their favorite food with friends and family, even with co-workers. But with the “new normal” under GCQ, it is one table, one chair per person to be able to comply with strict physical distancing as imposed in the fight to stop the spread of Covid-19. NONIE REYES

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By Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM & Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz @joveemarie

HE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) clarified on Monday that temporary online sellers are not required to register their business activities, as the tax agency drew flak from lawmakers who said targeting pandemic-displaced workers trying to eke out a living was ill-timed.

According to BIR Deputy Commissioner Arnel Guballa, those required to register are people who are “habitually” engaged in the online selling business. “Kung talaga namang sobrang liit na alam mo na you are not habitually engaged, hindi naman siguro kailangan magrehistro ka kasi you cannot be considered as engaged in a business,” Guballa said in a radio interview. He added that online sellers earning an annual net income of less than 250,000 will not also be subject to tax.

Guballa explained that the RMC was aimed at helping BIR determine the number of online sellers in the country, adding that they are looking to focus their efforts first on domestic corporations before running after giant companies, such as Netflix and Google. “Actually, ang pakay talaga ng BIR dito sa yung itatax ang online, yung malalaki [the BIR’s target are the big online sellers],” he told DZBB, although he admitted the BIR also wants to look into the small businesses. See “BIR,” A2

Ressa ‘guilty’ in cyber libel raps by bizman By Joel R. San Juan

@jrsanjuan1573

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HE Regional Trial of Manila City on Monday declared social news network Rappler executive editor Maria Ressa and a former researcher guilty of cyber libel, a development that quickly drew warnings on press freedom implications even as the private accuser said he had no other

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recourse but the courts. In a 37-page ruling, Manila RTC Branch 46 Presiding Judge Rainelda Estacio-Montesa sentenced Ressa and her co-accused Reynaldo Santos Jr. to six months up to six years in jail, and directed them to jointly pay complainantbusinessman Wilfredo Keng the amount of P400,000 as moral and exemplary damages. Minor it y Senators Francis Pangilinan and Risa Hontiveros

said the setback to Ressa was a blow against press freedom, continuing the alleged political persecution of critics in media, human rights sector and civil society. The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) said the way the case unfolded, it was obvious that Ressa and Rappler were singled out for persecution for their critical stance against the government.

Judge Montesa, however, indicated that the failure of the defense to present Ressa and Santos to refute the charge against them despite the court’s earlier ruling that the evidence for the prosecution is competent and sufficient to sustain their indictment for violation of Section 4 (c) (4) of Republic Act 10175 or the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012 was a big blow to their case. See “Ressa,” A2

HE Philippines’s 300,000-metric ton (MT) rice importation via government-to-government (G2G) transaction is now in limbo as the Philippine International Trading Corp. (PITC) had no legal authority to conduct the tender, officials told the BusinessMirror. Budget Secretary Wendel E. Avisado said they could not provide the budget requirement of P7.45 billion as the PITC tender had no legal basis since President Duterte has not greenlighted the rice importation. “We already officially responded to Department of Agriculture/PITC on the matter. We need the prior approval of PRRD [President Rodrigo Roa Duterte] because there’s no legal basis to import rice. They should be the one to seek authority from PRRD. If they have it, then we will comply on our side,” Avisado said in a message in a mix of English and Filipino. The Department of Agriculture (DA) and the National Food Authority are providing technical advice to the PITC regarding the G2G importation since they have been involved with rice importation, especially G2G, prior to deregulation of the rice industry. Budget Undersecretary Tina Canda also questioned the legality of the PITC rice importation, arguing that the attached agency of the Department of Trade and Industry and even the DA itself have no mandate to import. “PITC needs to have a mandate to import. With RCEF, even DA has no mandate. “The first question you need to ask is the authority of PITC vs RCEF law,” Canda said, referring to the Rice Tariffication Law which mandates the government to annually appropriate P10 billion to fund RCEF, which was meant to support rice farmers. Even if PITC has already conducted the bidding, Canda said several issues hound the PITC importation, including the lack of funding source and the legality of

the whole transaction. Budget Undersecretary Laura Pascua said the DBM returned the request of PITC, “commenting that the Rice Tariffication Law requires an approval by the President of any importation, and there is no item in the GAA [General Appropriations Act] which can be augmented to fund the request.” Pascua said she was also surprised with this development as she recalled Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar saying that the 3.3 million metric tons supply deficit from the estimated production of 17.6 million metric tons can be raised from the P8.5 billion that the DBM released for the rice resiliency project. The P8.5-billion fund is part of Covid-19 releases and is on top of the RCEF. In a June 11 advisory, PITC said it is holding in abeyance the issuance of notice of award to prospective rice suppliers to the country pending the availability of funds from DBM. This, even after it already conducted the bidding. The PITC also said the “submission of bids shall not be construed as a commitment to purchase on the part of PITC and shall not be bound to award contract to any entity based on bids received.” The PITC has also published the results of its evaluation of bids submitted by the four Asian governments. The PITC document showed that only 105,000 MT out of the 300,000MT target importation had qualified bids. Only three lots—Manila, Cebu and Davao—had ranking bids, with the remaining lots of Tacloban and Zamboanga having no successful bids.

‘Better scrap it’

FEDERATION of Free Farmers (FFF) National Manager Raul Q. Montemayor said it would be better for the government to scrap the G2G transaction given the complications. The government could explore other options to procure rice stocks, particularly to replenish the depleting supply of the National Food Authority, to stabilize market prices, he added. See “G2G rice,” A2

US 49.9350 n JAPAN 0.4650 n UK 62.5136 n HK 6.4430 n CHINA 7.0471 n SINGAPORE 35.8343 n AUSTRALIA 34.0707 n EU 56.1469 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.3107

Source: BSP (15 June 2020)


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