BusinessMirror March 21, 2020

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THE COVID-19 ‘WIPEOUT’ HOPE IN FACE OF A GLOBAL HEALTH PANDEMIC

POLICE, Army and Navy personnel guard the entry and exit points of the Manila-Cavite Expressway, which links Manila to Cavite. NONIE REYES

T

By VG Cabuag

no bottom is still in sight.

Ongoing assessment

HE seemingly relentless spread of the coronavirus (Covid-19) fears has ravaged the global economy and that may very well include the Philippine stock market.

Many could still not believe that a health crisis such as this could even eclipse the damage wrought by the financial crises of 1998 and 2008 within just a short span of time. The pandemic fears easily wiped out some P4 trillion from the stock market—from P16.72trillion market capitalization at the start of the first week of the year to just P12.81 billion—in the second week of March.

Notwithstanding state-owned pension funds efforts to pump money into the market though the purchase of cheap stocks, prices are still falling. No further help from the government may seem to be enough to lift the market. Many of the stock prices were pulled down to their level about a decade ago, and it may not go up that easily since their businesses were hard hit. The main index is now down to its level in 2012, and

SOME companies, such as the Andrew Tan group’s Alliance Global Group Inc., were vague in admitting the effects of the Covid-19 to its major business led by its property development arm, Megaworld Corp., and liquor arm Emperador Inc., saying the group still has to assess the effects. Tan’s group, which claimed for itself as the country’s largest landlord, earlier said it wants to become the country’s largest hotel owner in the Philippines by this year with a total portfolio of 12,000 hotel rooms.

Taking a hit A POLICEMAN uses a plastic sheet to protect himself from the virus as he mans the PasigCainta boundary checkpoint on Ortigas Avenue Extension. BERNARD TESTA

THE Gotianuns’ Filinvest Development Corp. (FDC), which is also in the hotel business, was more upfront on the negative effects of

Covid-19 to its real estate and hotel businesses. “The [impact] of [the] contagion has already affected the travel and tourism sectors, resulting from the imposition of travel ban policies of various countries including the Philippines,” FDC said. The company has six hotels, but two of these have just opened and have not yet reached their optimal operations. Hotel operations accounted for a mere 4 percent of the group’s revenues and 2 percent of its net income.

Worst-case scenario

FILINVEST Land Inc., which owns the office buildings, said some of its tenants might reduce, or at worst case, pre-terminate space to adopt a work-from-home scheme, or other flexible working arrangements. It said it is ready to “give more concessions to tenants such as con-

struction rent-free period or flexible rent escalation arrangements.” The company, however, said it has no control over the possible cancellation of lease negotiations for either new space or expansion due to internal business decisions of the clients. “But we will continue to communicate with the clients on our building pipeline that may align with clients’ future requirements,” it said. “With Covid-19, malls, hotels and resorts have been experiencing lower foot traffic and bookings, respectively, as a result of the community quarantine, travel ban and curfew. We also expect some impact on residential sales as property buyers may prioritize personal health and safety given the current environment,” Ayala Land Inc., for its part, said. Continued on A2

Ravaged by war, Mideast countries face a new scourge

C

By Isabel Debre | The Associated Press

protection programs. Hundreds of thousands of people driven from their homes by fighting are crowded in close quarters in tent camps or improper housing. “We are becoming very worried,” said John Nkengasong, director of Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as the virus reached conflict-ridden Iraq, Libya, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. “The impact will be magnified.” Most patients who contract the new coronavirus develop only mild symptoms and recover after about two weeks. But the virus is highly contagious and can be spread by those with no visible symptoms. For older adults and people with underlying health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.

AIRO—When Dr. Ismail alMansouri goes to work in Yemen’s capital, he puts on one of the hospital’s few pairs of medical gloves. Then he enters a cramped clinic teeming with listless patients, many malnourished, some vomiting, others with diarrhea. Al-Mansouri, a pediatrician, has been struggling for years to battle the rapid spread of otherwise preventable and treatable infections, such as cholera, that have surged in war-ravaged Yemen. Now as the coronavirus outbreak intensifies in the region, he is faced with a new threat, one he can only hope to ward off with a handful of masks. “I cannot even speak about our preparedness for the coronavirus,” he said, “because we have none.”

‘Vulnerable’

LONG-RUNNING wars and conflicts across the Middle East have wrecked potential defenses against coronavirus outbreaks, leaving millions vulnerable in Yemen, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, the Gaza Strip and elsewhere. Health-care systems have been gutted; war has blasted key infrastructure. Several of the countries are carved up among rival claimant governments, factions or armed groups, snarling any attempt at nationwide

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 51.2150

Invisible pandemic A PALESTINIAN health worker sprays disinfectant as a precaution against the coronavirus in a gymnasium in Gaza City, March 15, 2020. In conflict zones across the Middle East, the specter of the coronavirus looms large. Authorities in Yemen, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan and the Gaza Strip warn that health-care systems gutted by years of war and unrest have left millions of people doubly vulnerable to the pandemic. AP

SO far Yemen, Libya, Syria and Gaza have not confirmed any infections. But doctors in many cases Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4618 n UK 58.7282 n HK 6.5991 n CHINA 7.2013 n SINGAPORE 35.2720 n AUSTRALIA 29.3616 n EU 54.6106 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6246

Source: BSP (March 20, 2020)


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