Wednesday, November 28, 2012

PH stands out among booming markets


Goldman Sachs exec credits good governance

By 



 26 3

President Benigno Aquino. FILE PHOTO
The Philippines has strong growth prospects over the medium- to long-term due to a large degree to policies of the Aquino administration that have succeeded in leveling the playing field for foreign investors, a ranking official of Goldman Sachs said.
In a briefing late Tuesday, the investment banking giant’s vice chair, Carl Stern, pointed out that the country’s economic growth was poised to even surpass its peers in the so-called “Next 11” list of booming emerging markets published last year.
“Your growth prospects look quite good relative to the alternatives out there,” he told reporters during a one-day visit to Manila to meet the firm’s local clients. “The Philippines is certainly one of the fastest-growing economies.”
The Next 11 list was published by Goldman Sachs economist Jim O’Neill last year, citing Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Turkey, South Korea and Vietnam as the emerging market economies that would lead global growth in the 21st century.
O’Neill is the same economist who coined the term BRICs in 2003, representing the booming economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China.
“Among the Next 11, the growth forecast for the Philippines of 5, 6, 7 percent [gross domestic product growth] certainly ranks very favorably,” said Stern, who joined Goldman Sachs after serving as president and CEO of the Boston Consulting Group.
The visit of the high-ranking official of one of the biggest investment banks in the world represented an important milestone for the firm, which, until recently, has kept a relatively low profile in the Philippine financial market.
Stern said the growing emphasis on the Philippines was due, in part, to the economic difficulties being experienced by the advanced economies of the United States and western Europe.
“Investors go where there’s money to be made,” he said, referring to emerging markets in general and the Philippines in particular.
The Goldman Sachs vice chair acknowledged the fact that the Philippines has experienced several boom-and-bust cycles in the past, but expressed optimism that the current economic upswing being experienced was a unique event mainly because of the Aquino administration’s thrust at improving overall governance in the country.
“The job that your government has done in anti-corruption, among many things, is setting a more solid, predictable foundation for the kind of capitalism that we practice,” he said.

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.
                  

Philippine market one of top 3 JP Morgan picks for 2013



By 

 474 302
Global investment bank JP Morgan has picked the Philippines as one of its three most-favored stock markets for 2013, marking the fourth straight year that the local bourse is expected to outperform most of its regional peers.
“We are still very bullish for 2013,” JP Morgan Securities Philippines Inc. executive director and head of equity research Gilbert Lopez said in a press briefing on Monday. The two other Asian markets seen by JP Morgan as top market picks for next year are Thailand and India, citing favorable demographics as a common denominator with the Philippines.
At the beginning of 2012, JP Morgan’s emerging market and Asian equity strategist Arian Mowat also cited the Philippines as among its most favored markets along with Thailand and Indonesia. This year, he said the Philippines was still on Mowat’s favored list.
Lopez said JP Morgan had an “overweight” rating on Philippine equities for the last four years. An “overweight” rating refers to a recommendation to buy in excess of the prescribed weight in a closely followed index like MSCI Asia ex-Japan, which JP Morgan expects to rise by 15 percent next year.
JP Morgan does not target local indices like the Philippine Stock Exchange index but Lopez said that based on its price targets on monitored stocks, the PSEi might have room to rise by another 20-25 percent from current levels. The company covers 30 Philippine stocks, at least 27 of which are part of the PSEi.
“The reason we like the Philippines is that in a global context, earnings environment is still good,” Lopez said, adding that JP Morgan was expecting average earnings per share in this market to grow at a faster pace of 17 percent next year from about 12 percent this year.

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.
                  

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Bankers’ best investment bets in a low-interest-rate regime

Bankers’ best investment bets in a low-interest-rate regime

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687

Exporters’ Confidence Level Is Improving



By LEE C. CHIPONGIAN
November 24, 2012, 12:08pm
Philippine exporters’ confidence level is rising and the outlook for increased international trading has turned more optimistic this quarter.
 “Businesses involved in international commodity trading (exporters and importers) were more optimistic in the fourth quarter,” according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) based on the latest survey results on businessmen’s confidence level.
 “Importers were the most optimistic as they expected brisker consumer demand during the holiday season,” said the BSP. The Business Expectations Survey, released quarterly, noted that exporters showed the “biggest improvement in sentiment” because of the improved investor confidence and introduction of new products in the market.
 For businesses dealing with both the exporting and exporting activities, the outlook is less positive, said the BSP. “The majority of firms in this group was affected by recent developments in the industry such as lack of supply of raw materials, the ‘no fishing’ season for sardines, herrings and mackerel in the Visayan seas and Zamboanga Peninsula, and banning of plastic bags,” said the central bank.
These issues seem to have affected the exporters’ outlook for the next quarter or for the early months of 2013. “For the quarter ahead, the outlook of firms across all trade groups (have) declined.”
Philippine export earnings as of end-September grew 7.2 percent to $40.067 billion from $37.376 billion posted in the same period in 2011. For the month of September, exports rose by 22.8 percent year-on-year to $4.784 billion. The growth was an improvement from August’s nine percent decline.
Based on National Statistics Office data, the increase in merchandise shipments of tuna, metal components, fresh bananas, and woodcrafts and furniture contributed much to the growth for the given period. The exports of ignition wiring set and other wiring sets used in vehicles, aircrafts, and ships, petroleum products, coconut oil, and electronic products also showed growth.
Japan remains the biggest destination for Philippine exports followed by the US and China. Singapore and Thailand are also two of the top export destinations.
The BSP’s BES latest results showed that overall, the business confidence of Filipino entrepreneurs are more buoyant in the last quarter of the year.
The optimistic outlook were attributed to: the increase in orders and start of new projects leading to higher volume of production; the expected increase in consumer demand during the Christmas and palay harvest seasons; expansion of businesses and new product lines; and the favorable macroeconomic conditions in the country, particularly low inflation and interest rates, higher foreign investment inflows and the steady stream of overseas Filipinos’ remittances.
Other factors that are contributing to the optimistic sentiments are the introduction of new and enhanced business strategies; the possible further credit rating upgrade for the Philippines; and the continued confidence in the administration.
Outlook on inflation and the peso are generally stable. “More (businessmen) expected the peso to appreciate in the fourth quarter and first quarter of 2013,” said the BSP. The expectations of the peso’s sustained appreciation will be backed by strong remittances, foreign investments, recovery of export demand and receipts from the business process outsourcing sector.
Filipino business expects interest rates to decline, in the meantime, in the fourth quarter and the next. The BSP has cut rates by 100 basis points since January.
As for the BES’ forward looking survey for the first quarter of 2013, the central bank said it seemed to be less optimistic.
The “less sanguine outlook” was due to the seasonal slack in demand after the holiday season, said the report. Other reasons cited were the lack of supply of raw materials and low sugar prices in the world market that affected the sentiment in the industrial sector.
The BES was conducted from October 1 to November 15 and tallied as respondents 1,576 firms.


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.
                  

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Bankers’ best investment bets in a low-interest-rate regime






 3 0
MANILA, Philippines—The Philippines is in a unique spot nowadays, with most macroeconomic indicators showing robust growth and positive sentiment in the business community, translating to better confidence all around.
However, this poses an equally unique situation for people who want to see their investments yield better returns. As the economy improves, domestic interest rates come down with declining risk levels associated with lending. At the same time, the push toward lower interest rates is also being driven by record low interest rates in the United States and Europe, as their central banks keep yields low in the hope of revitalizing their economies.
Where then should Filipino investors place their money to best profit from the financial markets, given these circumstances? The Inquirer’s Doris C. Dumlao and Daxim Lucas asked bankers and investment experts for their opinion on where to invest a hypothetical P150,000 in extra cash, and here’s what they said:
Norman Martin Reyes
SVP and head of marketing group
United Coconut Planters Bank (UCPB)
“Right now time deposits rates are not too attractive.
“If you have P150,000, you might want to look at UCPB’s trust banking products. With as low as P10,000, an investor can consider our various Unit Investment Trust Funds (UITF). Depending on the investor’s risk appetite, we can recommend either the United Equity Fund (UEF) or the United Balance Fund (UBF).
“The UEF is suitable for an aggressive type of investor with a long-term investment horizon. To achieve long-term capital growth, this fund invests in domestic, listed equities. This fund’s absolute year-to-date net yield is 16.79 percent. Our compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) for the last three years is 46.5 percent.
“The UBF is suitable for moderately aggressive type of investors. To achieve a balance between long-term capital appreciation and income growth, this fund invests in a mix of domestic, listed equities and fixed income securities. The absolute year-to-date net yield of this fund is 11.36 percent. Our CAGR for the last three years is 27.2 percent.
“We have two other funds that invest in fixed rate securities, namely the United Conservative Fund (UCF) and the United Cash Management fund (UCMF). These funds are less risky and they offer steady income streams but the returns are not as high as the other funds.
“One word of caution though: the UITF is not a deposit account and not insured by Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp. Any reduction in income or principal due to prevailing market conditions is for the account of the investor. Historical performance, when presented, is purely for reference purposes and is not a guarantee for similar future return.
“We also have other investment outlets. For P50,000, we can offer investors our services to purchase UCPB’s LTNCD from the secondary market, which can earn about 5.75 percent based on the present market rate. UCPB’s long-term negotiable certificates of deposit (LTNCD) pay interest quarterly and have a maturity of three to five years. We can also act as a broker and offer corporate bonds on the secondary market at rates better than the prevailing time deposit rates. Interest payouts depend on each bond offering.”
Pascual Garcia III
President
Philippine Savings Bank
“I would suggest mutual fund weighted to equities. Bond funds won’t do well next year. I think interest rates will move a bit higher so bonds won’t do well. Easing will essentially taper off locally and globally.”
Marvin Fausto
Chief investment officer
Banco de Oro Unibank

“Because of the people’s generally busy schedule, I recommend that they choose from the existing UITFs available in the banks, particularly BDO.
“They are professionally managed and offer better returns given the commensurate amount of risk one is willing to take. For the conservative investors, I recommend the Peso Money Market Fund—the fund is very stable and offers better returns compared with the ordinary time deposit.
“For the balanced investors, I recommend the Balance Fund that offers a good mix of investments in fixed income and equities, and for the more aggressive investors, I recommend the Equity Fund so they can participate in the strong long term performance of the Philippine stock market.
“UITFs have, in the past, outperformed comparative investments and are specifically designed to benefit investors over the long term. For P150,000, I believe the UITF is the best investment for you.”
Ma. Theresa Marcial-Javier
Senior VP/head of asset management and trust group
Bank of the Philippine Islands

“Invest in the Philippines. Put P50,000 in a growth-oriented peso equity fund that is positioned in cyclical bets that will benefit from the following investment themes—infrastructure spending, consumer spending, banking and credit cycle upturn.
“Put the next P50,000 in a long-duration peso bond fund as interest rates will continue to stay low for a while.
“Put the remaining P50,000 in a short-term fixed-income fund to provide for unforeseen liquidity requirements as well as a stable income source to protect the portfolio from market swings.”
Wick Veloso
Chief executive officer
HSBC
“Select common share equities with a good revenue story or potential significant growth business plan. Otherwise, go for preferred shares instruments (with good dividend paying history) like the SMC Preferred Shares for a good dividend return. Just go either way.
“Deposits, government bonds and other corporate fixed-income instruments offer very unattractive returns compared to the above mentioned investment opportunities.”
Gina Morales
Executive vice president
Philam Asset Management Inc. (PAMI)
“We believe that the Philippine equity market will continue its winning streak for the next three years as the country’s fundamentals are sustainable, with corporate earnings of listed companies expected to grow  as well. With this my recommendation is to invest over the long term in any of PAMI equity-laced funds, namely the Strategic Growth Fund, Philam Fund Inc. and GSIS Mutual Fund Inc., depending on their risk tolerance. These funds are actively managed and have outperformed the index and their peers, and have remained in the top 1 and 2 as compared to other equity funds in the market.
“Also our investment process remains to be our key differentiator versus other fund providers as seen from our consistent track record of performance and having to stay on top of the league tables. We encourage to start investing their hard-earned money in the Philippines given strong long-term growth prospects.
Overall mutual funds are still the investment structure of choice. It  fits every retail investor’s needs of starting with something small and bringing the most benefit of generating maximum returns through diversified portfolio which is actively managed by expert fund managers.

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

BPOs to generate 500K jobs between 2013 and 2016, says House member



LOCAL business-process outsourcing (BPO) firms are expected to generate more than 500,000 new jobs between 2013 and 2016.
“Of our more than 800 BPO players, we see the heavyweights hiring most aggressively over the next three years,” said House Deputy Majority Leader Roman Romulo in a news statement.
“Their economies of scale will enable them to quickly draw in more business that will necessitate the recruitment of thousands of additional staff,” he added.
“The larger BPO firms have cost advantages. Owing to their size, they can easily offer both existing and new clients all kinds of back-office and business-support services at highly competitive prices,” Romulo said.
Accenture Inc., Convergys Philippines Services Corp. and TeleTech Customer Care Management Philippines Inc. have emerged as the country’s largest BPO entities by gross revenues and full-time staff.
With over 25,000 employees in 13 locations in the Philippines, Accenture reported P22.256-billion revenues in 2011, up 27.7 percent from 2010.
Convergys and TeleTech posted P14.400 billion (up 21 percent) and P11.250 billion (up 19.5 percent) in revenues, respectively.
Convergys employs about 30,000 personnel in 19 sites all over the Philippines, while TeleTech has a staff of around 20,000 in 14 facilities.
Based on their 2011 revenues, the other leading BPO firms, to include the in-house back offices here of global corporations, are:
• JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A.—Philippine Global Service Center (P9.888 billion); Stream International Global Services Philippines Inc. (P6.803 billion); Sitel Philippines Corp. (P6.501 billion); Telephilippines Inc. (P5.598 billion); Sutherland Global Services Philippines Inc. (P6.438 billion);
• Deutsche Knowledge Services Pte. Ltd. (P6.419 billion); Sykes Asia Inc. (P5.790 billion); Aegis PeopleSupport Inc. (P5.442 billion); Telus International Philippines Inc.  (P5.431 billion); IBM Daksh Business Process Services Philippines Inc. (P5.122 billion);
• HSBC Electronic Data Processing Philippines Inc. (P4.805 billion); IBM Business Services Inc. (P4.481 billion); Shell Shared Services Asia B.V. (P4.235 billion); Sykes Marketing Services Inc. (P3.170 billion); SPi CRM Inc. (P2.953 billion); Apac Customer Services Inc. (P2.912 billion);
• RMH Teleservices Asia Pacific Inc. (P2.836 billion); IBM Solutions Delivery Inc. (P2.553 billion); 24/7 Customer Philippines Inc. (P2.497 billion);
• Genpact Services Llc. (P2.415 billion); ePLDT Inc. (P2.373 billion); Transcom Worldwide Philippines Inc. (P2.354 billion);
• StarTek International Ltd. (P2.323 billion); Hinduja Global Solutions Ltd. (P2.225 billion); Thomson Reuters Corp. Pte. Ltd. (P2.203 billion); SPi Technologies Inc. (P2.165 billion); Lexmark Research & Development Corp. (P2.005 billion);
• Chartis Technology & Operations Management Corp. Philippines (P1.702 billion); Alorica Pacific Rim Inc. (P1.473 billion); kgb Philippines Inc. (P1.366 billion); Manulife Data Services Inc. (P1.350 billion); and Dell International Services Philippines Inc. (P1.335 billion). The 35 firms alone raked in an aggregate of P168 billion in revenues in 2011.
Romulo is author of the new Data Privacy Act, which is anticipated to help entice global corporations to either establish new in-house back offices in Manila, or transfer their non-core, business-support activities to independent BPO firms operating here.
The new law mandates all entities, including BPO firms, to protect the confidentiality of personal information collected from clients and stored in information-technology (IT) systems, in compliance with rigorous international privacy standards.
The Philippines’s highly labor-intensive BPO and IT-enabled services industry includes contact-center services; back offices; medical, legal and other data transcription; animation; software development; engineering design; and digital content.
The Business Processing Association of the Philippines projects the industry to yield up to $27 billion in annual revenues and directly employ some 1.3 million Filipinos by 2016.
The forecast implies the creation of up to 536,000 new jobs and the doubling of annual revenues over the next three years

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687

Why we pay high interest rates when we borrow but earn little when we deposit





NOTHING confounds the average man on the street more than the wide expanse of ocean between the deposit rate given when one entrusts one’s savings to the banks, and the interest charges one is levied for taking out a bank loan.
Latest data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas show a fractional interest earning of just a tenth of a percent for a savings deposit in most banks across the country.
It is true one could still get interest earnings exceeding 5 percent for a savings deposit nowadays but one has to be a fairly large entrepreneur and financially well-off and able to set aside P1.5 million or more and not touch it within three to five years to deserve a return this size.
Borrowing from the banks, on the other hand, literally costs an arm and a leg, with bank lending rates on all maturities averaging 6.124 percent as of latest.
The rates barely changed from the last auction of government IOUs in the form of Treasury bills and Treasury bonds that, to some degree, influence the rate at which hapless borrowers are charged for loans taken out of the various lenders.
For most people it is only fair that banks are seen as greedy but lazy financial critters eager to extract the littlest monetary value from anything and everything one holds dear in life, including that pink ceramic piggy bank one has given the youngest daughter one Christmas ago.
But is this perception fair or even half accurate? The BusinessMirror went to the experts to find out.
According to Tony Moncupa, president and chief executive officer at East West Bank, the issue boils down to numbers and good old communication having bogged down somewhere.
According to Moncupa, bank services like loans are governed by a number of factors that ultimately determine how much those loans cost to clients who need them.
He said there are so-called friction costs that keep loan rates within particular ranges that may not be appealing to a given set of potential borrowers.
“I think there is an under-appreciation on the cost incurred by the banks, how the market operates and the state of the banking profits,” he said in an e-mail, explaining why it was that banks extend to the depositor just a tiny piece of interest earnings for a tidy sum of savings when the industry extracts a princely sum in interest charges for even the littlest of loans.
He said interest margins, which reflect the difference between the cost the banks incur for obtaining the funds and the interest earnings the banks derive extending the loan, had been pinched for a long time it is a tribute to the innovations the banks have adopted to remain profitable in recent years.
“If you look at net interest margins of the industry in the last few years, you will see that it has been going down. In fact, banks [still] feel the margin squeeze,” Moncupa said.
Bank executives elsewhere have claimed it was extremely rare for banks to have posted interest margins of 5 percent or 6 percent, as actual interest margins the past many years “are much lower.”
Things would have proved more challenging than they already are if not for the fact that bank-loan volumes have risen during the period to compensate for the falling loan margins, Moncupa said.
Bank loans have, in fact, been growing at double-digit rates all year, averaging 13.5 percent as of end-September, based on data obtained from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
That they continue to grow is an indication of continued demand for financing from the productive sectors of the economy, although data also show some signs that loan growth is slowing.
BSP officials, led by Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr., have, of course, dismissed the notion that loan growth is not robust as the numbers suggest, saying the bulk of those loans continues to be driven by borrowers from the production (as opposed to the consumption) side.
Nevertheless, quite a few observers have noted that while loan growth remains on the positive side, the pace of growth has, in fact, slowed from as high as 19.2 percent in the first half of the year to where it is, at only 13.5 percent as of latest.
Bank executives have said liquidity has never been an issue when it comes to lending activities, as there is a surfeit of liquidity in the system best shown by the volumes of special-deposit account (SDAs) that are approaching P2 trillion even as we speak.
SDAs are captured bank funds that ostensibly could not be optimally deployed to generate revenues for their owners but are merely deposited in the vaults of the BSP, where they earn premium interest over the 3.5-percent borrowing rate of the central bank.
Banks that prefer SDAs over traditional lending are in a sense lazy, avoiding the risk of counterparty default by engaging only the central bank where the funds are safe.
That the SDAs have grown tremendously from just a few hundred billion pesos prior to the global financial crisis in 1997 to almost P2 trillion at present is an event that attracted the attention of critics, who point out that the banks would rather engage the BSP, where they have a low-risk, high-return relationship, than go out and engage in real lending activities, where its counterparty may not pay up at all when the loan matures.
Moncupa said the overhead and losses that the banks incur from those who default on their obligations are quite high.
That loan-default rates could be punitive for some of the lenders is shown by non-performing loans of just over 2 percent of the banks’ loan portfolio, or some P70 billion so-called bad loans, out of the total P3 trillion that was extended to all stripes of borrowers as of end-August this year.
He also said competition among banks has benefited the ordinary borrower in that individual lenders cannot afford to charge more than the rival charges for loans at the risk of losing market share.
“Given the fragmented nature of the local banking industry, competition is ensuring that lending rates reflect the cost of funds, the risk taken, the intermediation costs and the overhead costs to deliver banking services,” Moncupa said.
He pointed out the banks are no longer compensated for 18 percent of the funds the industry sets aside as deposit reserve as mandated by regulations.
Moncupa said demonizing the banks as greedy and stingy critters is also unfair if one understands that the bulk of the industry’s earnings as a whole does not come from funds deposited by the banking public but come from their trading activities instead.
“A significant part of the robust income of the banks comes not from lending but from trading. And even with that, the industry is only earning on average, around 13-percent to 15-percent return on capital. And this relatively good level of profitability has gone on only in the last few years. Before this, the industry saw a long period of low profitability,” he said.
However, if one asks Rajan A. Uttamchandani what he believes to be the solution to the conundrum, the president and chief executive at Esquire Financing said the regulators conceivably could mandate the banks lend to particular sectors like they already do to such sectors as the small- and medium-scale entrepreneurs, or SMEs, for example.
Uttamchandani perfectly knows what he talks about, having actually focused Esquire’s lending activities on SME borrowers for close to two years already.
He acknowledged most banks would rather engage its treasury people, the guys who buy and sell interest rate, foreign currency and debt notes and other securities for a living, than toil with the few banks at present that make money the good old-fashioned way by actually lending money to those who need it.
“The opportunity cost for a bank is the amount it can earn from trading gains using its treasury. If banks and government financial institutions are to be persuaded to lend, stiffer penalties must be imposed by the BSP to force banks to take more educated risks in lending,” he said.
Uttamchandani is president and chief executive at Esquire Financing, which specializes in lending to that oft-forgotten sector called SMEs.
Esquire Financing walks the talk and actually lends money to SMEs, its loan book having grown from negligible at the start of the year to P1.5 billion as of end-September.
The banks, on the other hand, have to be persuaded to lend to the sector from whose ranks originate nearly all of the country’s budding businessmen in the form of mandatory lending equal to 2 percent of total loan portfolio for small-scale businesses and another 8 percent for medium-scale entrepreneurs.
The Esquire executive said most banks fail to observe the mandated lending levels and often engage financing company executives like himself to help the big boys hit the mandated lending levels.
“There needs to be more focus on the SME market. SMEs need to focus on leveraging their business so they aren’t left behind during the move toward Asean [globalization] of our markets,” he said.
This pertains to that point in the near future when the country’s financial and allied services will go regional, and banks and insurance companies, for instance, have to compete not just with local rivals but with some of the meanest and most competitive business empires in Southeast Asia.
The integration of the local financial industry with the rest of the region is set to take off by 2015.
It is important for banks and financial institutions to have a strong capital base and to deliver the various services in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
Among regulators, the measure by which retail interest rates actually benefit the enterprising man on the street via appropriate adjustments in policy levers is best indicated by the interest pass-through rate.
This pertains to the degree and speed by which the policy adjustments in the rate at which the BSP borrows from or lends to banks translate also to equal adjustments in interest charges for loans and other forms of credit accommodation.
Simply put, if the bank lowers its policy rates by 25 basis points like the BSP has done yet again late in October this year, then there should be a similar reduction in bank-loan charges equal to 25 basis.
Ideally, the interest pass-through matches the adjustment done on the policy rates of the central bank, and this is readily seen at the retail level when a borrower approaches the bank and its loan charges have moved appropriately in the same manner.
The increase or decrease in the official interest rate is actually passed on to other interest rates, such as the rate for loans maturing in three, nine months, one year and well beyond.
Central banks often reduce their policy rates to boost growth and do the opposite to dampen inflation, or the rate of change in prices of services and goods.
Prior to the October policy-rate reduction, the BSP had a 25-basis-point rate cut in January, another 25-basis-point cut in March and again in July, when another 25 basis points were shaved off the policy rates.
Interest pass-through could be sluggish or quick, depending on whether the transmission of monetary policy was efficient or effective.
A quick, uniform and complete interest pass-through is said to lead to a well-functioning, competitive and efficient financial system.
A sluggish pass-through could mean problematic areas in certain aspects in the economy.
But according to Deputy BSP Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo, the interest pass-through, given that the policy rates have been slashed a full percentage point since the start of the year, stands at 80 percent at present.
This shows not all of the interest-rate adjustments made by the central bank at the policy level were reflected in the retail interest charges charged on bank borrowers like you and me for reasons that Tony Moncupa of East West Bank cited earlier.
BSP Governor Tetangco, prior to embarking on a long official mission abroad, pointed out a total four policy-rate adjustments have thus far been made this year that reduced the policy rates a total 100 basis points.
Late in October this year the BSP announced another 25-basis-point reduction at the rate at which it borrows from or lends to banks, more to encourage the banks to lend the trillions of pesos worth of funds at their disposal that have not been optimized for lending.
Tetangco and many central bank governors in the region view the ongoing sluggishness of business activities in Europe and the United States with apprehension and likely to have a negative knock-on impact on the country’s exports, which is a key growth driver.
Tetangco and the rest of the seven-man Monetary Board see that liquidity has never been a problem but that lending has not been optimized just the same.
He called on both the public sector to spend more than its allotted budget for the year to stimulate consumption and boost demand.
As for the private sector, Tetangco called for greater investment activities than had been undertaken thus far so that the rich pickings of liquidity may be put to greater and more productive uses.
This was why it was important for the banks’ lending rates to fall further than they actually have so that the demand for loans also lifts as a consequence.
Tetangco has made it known there remains room for still more policy adjustments down the line should such a stimulus prove necessary to ensure continued growth not just this year but over the next 18 to 24 months.
Domestic prices, the state of the global economy and a host of other factors need to be considered when such an adjustment becomes imperative, he said.
The literature on interest pass-through showed certain economies in the wake of the global financial crisis in 1997 were slow to transmit the benefits of the scale back in policy rates on to the retail level, the Philippines included.
Factors such as the maturity mismatches of the banks’ loans and deposit portfolio had an effect on how the industry adjusts lending rates.
Pass-through rates also varied from country to country, especially with respect to retail rates, the literature said.

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