Sunday, November 23, 2014
Debit card issuers told to put in place safeguards against fraud
MANILA - Monetary authorities have ordered banks that issue ATM debit cards to protect their clients from fraud by adopting the Europay Mastercard Visa (EMV) chip-enabled technology.
In a statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said its Monetary Board has issued a circular containing the guidelines for dropping magnetic strip technology in favor of the more secure EMV chip for ATM debit and prepaid cards.
Credit and ATM cards that rely on the magnetic strip have been susceptible to fraud schemes, including card skimming. In light of this, the BSP had ordered credit card issuers to migrate to the EMV chip technology no later than January 1, 2017.
The recently approved guidelines pertain to proprietary debit cards as well as to cash advance transactions of credit cards made through ATMs. The BSP's latest rules however don't prevent issuers of co-branded cards from adopting safeguards laid down by international payment networks, as in the case of a local bank issuing a debit card whose transactions are accepted by the Mastercard or Visa payment system.
BSP said its latest guidelines are meant to manage risks while the banking system shifts to the EMV chip-enabled technology without disrupting ATM and point-of-sale transactions.
Monetary authorities have given covered banks 60 days from the date of the latest circular to submit their updated EMV migration plans.
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Private sector takes out more dollar loans in 3Q
MANILA – Foreign currency deposit units (FCDU) of banks issued more loans in the third quarter, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
In a statement, BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco, Jr. said FCDU loans grew by 2.6 percent to $10 billion at end-September from $9.7 billion at end-June.
Sixty-three percent of those loans are medium- to long-term, or those maturing in more than a year, with the remaining 36 percent pertaining to short-term credit.
Eighty-one percent of the loans was taken out by the private sector.
The major beneficiaries were public utilities at 21.3 percent; merchandise and service exporters, 15.4 percent; and producers or manufacturers, including oil companies, 14.7 percent.
Gross disbursements during the third quarter increased to $11.6 billion from the previous quarter’s $8.1 billion. The bulk of loan releases had short-term maturities, 74.3 percent of which was for working capital requirements.
FCDU deposit liabilities increased by two percent to reach $26.2 billion at end-September from $25.6 billion at end-June. The loans to deposit ratio slightly improved to 38.1 percent from 37.9 percent in the second quarter.
Ninety-eight percent of the deposits were held by residents.
source: interaksyon.com
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Unreliable power, poor security keep Tacloban banks, ATMs shuttered -- BSP
MANILA - Banks in Tacloban cannot reopen just yet, as the typhoon-ravaged city still has no reliable power and telecommunications service, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
BSP Deputy Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. told InterAksyon.com that Tacloban residents would have to transact in banks located in n Maasin, Southern Leyte and Catbalogan, Samar in the meantime.
In any case, bank customers would have to contend with shortened operating hours because of limited electricity and poor communications, he said.
“Security is also a concern,” Espenilla said, adding that this is the reason why offsite ATMs remain closed.
About 44 banking and micro-banking offices, as well as 146 ATMs in Tacloban remain shuttered. These include 28 universal and commercial banks, six thrift banks, and 10 rural banks.
source: interaksyon.com
Thursday, October 17, 2013
'Hot money' flows back in Sept amid Philippines' robust economy
MANILA - The Philippines enjoyed significant inflows of "hot money" last month, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said today.
In a report, the BSP said the country saw $2.691 billion in net inflows of foreign portfolio investment in September, up 72 percent from the $1.5 billion in the same month last year.
This led to net inflows of $2.691 billion in the January to September period, ahead of the $2.649 billion in the same nine-month period last year.
Unlike job-creating foreign direct investments (FDI), portfolio funds are invested in financial assets, such as shares in Philippine listed firms and government IOUs. Portfolio investments are also called "hot money" because they flee at the slightest negative news.
The BSP attributed the increase in portfolio funds last month to "the recognition of the country's sound macroeconomic fundamentals and record growth in the first two quarters of this year." To recall, the Philippine economy grew at a record 7.5 percent in the first half of this year, higher than the government's full-year goal of 6-7 percent and the fastest in Asia alongside China.
Hot money in September went to Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE)-listed securities at $1.8 billion; peso government securities, $714 million; and peso time deposits, $52 million. The main beneficiaries for PSE-listed securities consist of holding firms, banks, property firms, information technology companies, and utilities.
The top five investor countries last month were Singapore, the United Kingdom, the US, Luxembourg, and Hong Kong with a combined share of 84.4 percent.
source: interaksyon.com
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Banks ordered to provide more detailed info on credit card business
MANILA - The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is requiring banks and other financial institutions to submit monthly credit card business activity reports (CCBAR) containing data on credit card issuers, cardholders, complaints, and card use location.
The BSP intends to enhance its credit card database to ensure transparency and availability of information on credit card operations and complaints resolution, and afford analysis of the credit card industry for policy-making.
The new rules are contained in Circular 812.
The CCBAR, which will be submitted in monthly, aims to ensure consumer protection as well as managing risks involved in credit card transactions, banks/quasi-banks including subsidiaries and affiliates.
The BSP aims to capture more credit card data, including the number of credit card holders in the country. To date, the BSP regularly reports data on credit card receivables of banks, including that portion which is non-performing.
Credit card receivables climbed 11 percent to P131.9 billion in the first quarter, from P118.8 billion in the same three-month period last year. Universal and commercial banks held bulk of the receivables at 82.6 percent, with their subsidiaries cornering the remaining 17.3 percent.
Non-performing receivables increased to 11.2 percent of total credit card transactions, but eased to 13 percent of big banks' total amount of bad loans.
Recently, the BSP issued new rules to strengthen the security banks and non-bank financial institutions' electronic products, including credit cards.
The regulation requires BSP-supervised institutions to adopt end-to-end Triple Data Encryption Standard (3DES) for the whole ATM network by January 1 and shift from magnetic stripe technology to more secure WMV chip-enabled cards by August 1, 2017.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, September 13, 2013
'Hot money' plummets in August amid emerging markets selloff
Foreign funds invested in shares of stock of local listed firms and in other Philippine financial assets dropped sharply last month amid a selloff in emerging markets.
Data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed that foreign portfolio investments -- also called "hot money" because of their flighty nature -- fell 60 percent to $999 million in August from $2.5 billion the month before. Inflows also slipped 20 percent from $1.3 billion in August of last year.
Outflows also accelerated from $868 million last year to $1.4 billion this year, thus last year's net inflows of $387 million reversed to net outflows of $442 million last month. This narrowed the year-to-date net inflows from $2.2 billion last year to $2 billion this year.
The BSP blamed the net outflow on the shortened trading brought about by bad weather, and on the traditional unwinding of stock market positions during the "ghost month" of August, an inauspicious time to invest for those who believe in luck. Eight out of every nine dollars of portfolio inflows were invested in Philippine stocks.
Also responsible for the outflow was the US Federal Reserve's hints that it may unwind its economic stimulus this month, the BSP said. Nearly eight out of every 10 dollars that pulled out of the Philippines went back to the US.
Foreign funds have been scaling back their exposure to emerging markets like the Philippines amid signs that the US economy is on the mend, a trigger for the Fed's decision to remove its economic stimulus. The Fed's monthly $85-billion bond-buying -- the third tranche of what has come to be called "quantitative easing" (QE) -- has been responsible for equity rallies around the world.
As a resut of the foreign fund pullout, the Philippine Stock Exchange index has trimmed its gains from a record high of more than 20 percent to seven percent in recent sessions.
source: interaksyon.com
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Forex reserves resumed climb in July, BSP says
MANILA - The Philippines' foreign exchange reserves likely resumed their increase this month with the appreciation of the US dollar, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said today.
“It’s because of the foreign exchange operations,” Tetangco said, adding that the appreciation of the US dollar against other currencies such as the Japanese yen and euro also supported the rise in the Philippines' gross international reserves (GIR). The country's hoard of US dollars accounts for 60 percent of its foreign exchange reserves.
“It could to the extent that you have non-dollar reserves – such as yen and euro. If the value of US dollar went up against these currencies, it would have an effect in the dollar value of the GIR but it would be small,” Tetangco said.
He said the BSP would continue to look for opportunities to diversify its reserves, adding that the Chinese yuan can become a candidate if it becomes a convertible currency.
“There are certain criteria for a currency to be part of reserve. This is based on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) definition of international reserve, which is that the currency should be convertible,” Tetangco said.
The Philippines' GIR stood at $81.6 billion at end-June, or $0.4 billion lower than the $82 billion at end-May. At this level, reserves remain adequate to cover 11.8 months worth of imports of goods and payments of services and income.
Alternatively, the reserves would allow the country to pay 8.3 times over its short-term external debt based on original maturity and six times based on residual maturity, which includes portions of the principal maturing in the next 12 months.
The slight decline in reserves last June was due mainly to revaluation adjustments on the BSP’s gold holdings arising from the decrease in the price of gold in the international market. Also pulling down GIR were payments for maturing foreign exchange obligations of the national government.
The BSP forecast reserves hitting $86 billion by yearend, up from last year's $83.8 billion. An ample GIR helps prop up the peso and keep domestic inflation at bay.
The country's economic managers last week revised their exchange rate forecast to a range of P41-43 for every dollar, lower than their previous estimate of P43-45. The peso yesterday settled at 43.23 against the greenback.
Inflation has averaged 2.9 percent in the first six months of the year, or below the lower end of the BSP's full-year target range of 3-5 percent.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, January 18, 2013
Bank loans up 14% to P3.134 T
MANILA, Philippines - Loans granted by big banks grew at a slower pace in November, but the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said credit levels remained supportive of economic growth.
Excluding BSP placements, outstanding loans extended by universal and commercial banks rose 14 percent to P3.134 trillion as of November last year, slower than the 15.8-percent growth recorded in the first 10 months.
The growth rate further drops to 13.3 percent when money with the central bank is included, data released yesterday showed. That also marked a slowdown from 14.2 percent the previous month.
Loans are good gauge of economic activity. As a regulator, BSP sees to it that banks are healthy enough and are able to lend to boost consumption and investment activities.
In a statement, BSP Governor Amando Tetangco Jr. attributed the over-all slowdown to an easing across all types of loans. During the period, credit to production activities grew 14.6 percent from 16.4 percent, while consumer loans expanded 12.1 percent from 13.9 percent.
“The growth in bank lending, especially to productive activities, should provide needed resources to raise the growth potential of the economy,” Tetangco explained.
Loans for production activities accounted for the bulk of loans, amounting to P2.860 trillion for the first 11 months of 2012, figures showed.
Under this category, credit to public administration and defense expanded the fastest pace at 48.9 percent. This was followed by loans to the following sectors: financial intermediation (37.3 percent), wholesale and retail trade (26.9 percent) and transportation, storage and communication (26.5 percent).
Lending to real estate, renting and business services and manufacturing sectors also grew by 24.8 percent and 13.6 percent, respectively, data showed.
Declines, on the other hand, were observed in lending to agriculture, hunting and forestry which dipped 41.8 percent, and mining and quarrying that dropped 39.5 percent.
Meanwhile, consumer loans— or credit used to finance household needs such as purchasing of appliances— reached P252.116 billion as of November with credit card and auto loans leading the pack.
Compared to previous year, credit card receivables grew 10.1 percent while auto loans increased 13.1 percent.
Continued loan growth was supported by increasing domestic liquidity, which accelerated to P4.9 trillion as of November, an improvement of 9.8 percent year-on-year, figures showed. Expansion was faster than October’s 8.6 percent.
“The faster expansion in domestic liquidity during the month reflects in part the impact of previous policy actions of the BSP to help support non-inflationary economic growth…,” Tetangco said.
source: philstar.com
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Forex rate climbs to P41:$1
MANILA - The peso-dollar exchange rate climbed to the P41:$1 level amid demand for the greenback among importers.
At the Philippine Dealing System, the peso traded between 40.900 and 41.040 for every dollar, before closing at 41.020, weaker than Tuesday's 40.955.
Trading volume jumped to $810.6 million from the previous $493 million.
Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co said the peso-dollar pair traded within a "very narrow" range as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas continued to buy dollars.
Metrobank said negative swap points did not stop sellers on Tuesday and a "last-minute" buying from the BSP took offers to P40.960 highs.
Trading on Wednesday was dictated by corporate demand, with most players becoming short of dollars. A local currency trader said there was strong demand from importers, adding that this may persist until next week.
The peso-dollar pair is expected to trade within a range of 40.90-41.10 against the dollar in the coming sessions.
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
HSBC sees BSP holding rates, remittances keeping economic growth within target
“The acceleration of remittances is much stronger than expected, underpinning robust demand for Filipino workers as well the resilient nature of OFWs and their professions,” said economist Trinh Nguyen in HSBC’s latest research note issued a day after the release of official August remittance figures.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas last Monday reported that money sent home by overseas Filipino workers in August had risen by 8 percent year-on-year to $2 billion, with the eight-month tally growing 6 percent to $13.7 billion.
“This pickup stands in stark contrast to August's export contraction of 9 percent year-on-year,” Nguyen said, pointing out that exports contribute 21 percent to Philippine gross domestic product as against the 9 percent for remittances.
“The statistics underscore Philippines becoming an even more service-based economy supported by private consumption,” she said.
In the first half of this year, consumer spending grew 5.4 percent on the back of a 5.1 percent increase in remittances.
“The recent acceleration of remittances points to robust 3Q private consumption growth. At the same time, fiscal spending is also supporting public spending and investment. Growth, therefore, is expected to reach the government's 5-6 percent target,” Nguyen said.
HSBC forecast Philippine GDP expansion of 5.7 percent, which is well within the government target. In the first six months of this year, growth settled at 6.1 percent, or at the top end of the full-year goal.
The bank expects no pickup in inflation until the first quarter of next year, when “an unfavorable base effect and an anticipated recovery from China” will kick in.
Consumer price increases averaged 3.2 percent in the first nine months of the year, or near the low end of the BSP’s full-year target range of 3-5 percent.
“As such, we expect the BSP to continue to support domestic spending by keeping rates at a historic low while remaining vigilant on inflation,” Nguyen said.
“With global demand weak and inflation expected to be on target for the rest of 2012, the BSP has room to hold rates low at 3.75 percent to further spur spending at its next meeting,” she said.
The BSP’s policy-making Monetary Board has two more rate-setting meetings left for this year.
Other market observers, such as DBS, expect the BSP to deliver another 25 basis points reduction in policy rates before the year ends.
The BSP has cut policy rates by a combined 75 basis points so far this year, sending the overnight borrowing and lending rates to record lows of 3.75 and 5.75 percent, respectively.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, October 5, 2012
End-September forex reserves climb to $81.9-B
MANILA - The country's foreign exchange reserves rose to $81.9 billion in the first nine months of the year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said on Friday.
In a statement, the BSP said the country's gross international reserves at end-September climbed $1.2 billion from the $80.7 billion in the first eight months of the year.
At the end-September level, the GIR could cover 11.8 months of imports of goods and payments for services and income.
Alternatively, the nine-month reserves could allow the country to pay 11.7 times over its short-term external debt based on original maturity, and 6.5 times over if based on residual maturity. Residual maturity incorporates principal payment of medium- to long-term debt that is due in the next 12 months.
The BSP ascribed the buildup in the country's reserves to income from its forex operations and investments abroad, as well as from revaluation gains on the central bank's gold holdings.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, September 21, 2012
Foreign debt inches down to $62.5-B at end-June
MANILA - The Philippines foreign debt fell slightly to US$62.5 billion at end-June this year from $62.9 billion at end-March, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said on Friday.
In a statement, the BSP said the country brought down its external debt because of the lower borrowings of the private sector and the national government vis-à-vis the loan repayments made. This resulted in net repayments of $850 million.
The country's foreign debt also dipped with the audit adjustments of $116 million, partially offset by the weakening of the US dollar against the yen and the increased investments of foreign nationals in Philippine debt papers reaching $72 million.
Year-on-year, the country's foreign debt stock inched up 1.7 percent due to net availments of $172 million and $1 billion worth of investments by non-residents in Philippine debt papers, indicating strong and sustained investor confidence in the country.
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, September 17, 2012
BSP to revise upwards forex reserves forecast

MANILA - The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas will revise upwards this year's forecast for the country's gross international reserves.
On the sidelines of the Philippine Economic Briefing, BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said the revision forms part of the central bank's review of its balance of payments assumptions.
The country's foreign exchange reserves climbed to $80.8 billion in the first eight months of the year, well above the BSP's full-year forecast of $78 billion.
At end-July, the Philippines' BOP surplus already hit $4.498 billion, higher than the full-year forecast of $2.6 billion.
The review of the central bank's BOP assumptions comes as the Philippines enjoys huge inflows of foreign portfolio investment - so-called "hot money" - brought about by the weakness in advanced economies, leading investors to search for yields higher than are available in those markets.
The BSP registered hot money inflows of $1.3 billion last month, 41.8 percent lower than in July and 6.6 below that in August of last year. Portfolio outflows reached $868 million, resulting in net inflows of $387 million last month, 60 percent lower than the $963 million in July and 1.7 percent below the $394 million in August 2011.
The strong foreign fund inflows has caused the peso to hit four-year highs against the US dollar.
With a report from Krista Angela M. Montealegre
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, September 10, 2012
Banks rediscount 82% more peso loans at end-August

MANILA – Banks liquefied 82 percent more of their outstanding loans at end-August, thus allowing them to increase lending.
In a statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said the amount of rediscounted peso loans in the first eight months of the year surged to P29.349 billion from a year ago’s P16.108 billion.
Of this year’s total amount of rediscounted loans, 75.4 percent went to commercial credits, 3.2 percent to agricultural and industrial credits, and 21.4 percent to other credits consisting of other services (8.4 percent), capital expenditures (6.5 percent), housing (4.2 percent) and permanent working capital (2.3 percent).
Availments of the BSP’s dollar loan rediscounting facility by 10 commercial banks however fell 21 percent to $123.1 million this year from $155.9 million in the same eight-month period last year.
The dollar rediscounting facility benefited 28 exporters.
For this month, the BSP set the peso rediscount rate at 3.75 percent for all maturities effective July 30, 2012. This is in line with the Monetary Board’s decision last July to cut its overnight borrowing rate to the same level.
For the dollar rediscounting window, the rate is set at 0.23050 percent per annum. This is based on the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate at end-August.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, September 7, 2012
Foreign exchange reserves climb to $80.8-B in August

MANILA - The country's foreign exchange reserves climbed to $80.8 billion in the first eight months of the year, well above the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas' full-year forecast of $78 billion.
In a statement, the BSP on Friday said the country's gross international reserves increased by $1 billion from the end-July level of $79.8 billion.
At the end-August level, the GIR can cover 11.9 months of imports of goods and payments of services and income.
Alternatively, the eight-month forex hoard allows the country to settle 10.9 times over its external debt based on original maturity, and 6.6 times its obligations based on residual maturity. Residual maturity includes portions of long-term debt that are due within a year.
The BSP ascribed the country's strong GIR position to income from the central bank's forex operations and investments abroad, foreign currency deposits of the national government and revaluation gains of gold holdings.
Excluding short-term liabilities, the country's net international reserves likewise increased $1 billion to $80.8 billion at end-August.
Ample forex reserves help prop up the peso and keep domestic inflation at bay. Inflation averaged 3.2 percent in the first seven months of the year, or at the low end of the BSP's full-year target range of 3-5 percent.
The peso meanwhile has scaled to four-year highs on the strength of strong foreign portfolio investments. Data from the BSP showed that net inflows of "hot money" at end-July rose by more than three-fold to $963 million from a year ago.
On Thursday, BSP Governor Amando Tetangco Jr. said the central bank was keeping tabs of domestic money supply growth, which rose 7.1 percent in June largely because of strong foreign capital inflows. Any expansion in domestic liquidity that is faster than demand tends to bid up inflation.
The BSP has brought its policy rates to record lows of 3.75 percent and 5.75 percent for the overnight borrowing and lending windows, respectively. Its policy-making Monetary Board is set to meet next week to decide on any further adjustment.
DBS earlier said it expects the BSP to cut policy rates by another 25 basis points before the end of the year given benign inflation and economic weakness brought about by the Euro zone debt crisis and the US economy's tentative recovery.
source: interaksyon.comMonday, September 3, 2012
Phl pushes for another credit rating upgrade
“We will have meetings with members of the ratings committee to give them the bigger picture of what is really happening here,” said Claro Fernandez, chief of the investor relations office of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
Discussions will involve Philippine officials and representatives from Fitch Ratings, Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services (S&P) and Moody’s Investors Service, Fernandez said.This will take place on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund from Oct. 12 to 14 in Tokyo, Japan.
“Of course, we are hoping for an upgrade. In fact, we are already starting work for investment grade,” he added.
The country currently enjoys its highest credit rating from Fitch and S&P at one notch below investment grade, while Moody’s places the country two notches behind although with a positive outlook.
Credit rating measures the capacity and willingness of a country to settle its debts. A positive outlook means an upgrade is possible over the next 18 months.
The Aquino administration, which has enjoyed eight positive credit rating actions over the past two years, has been pushing for an investment grade status, which would not only lessen interests paid on our debts, but also open the country to more foreign investments.
“This is for them (credit rating agencies) to have a better appreciation of the Philippines. We want to constantly engage them into a discussion,” Fernandez explained.
Itinerary of the meetings – including the attendees – is still being finalized, he said.
Boosted by an acceleration of government spending and strong exports, the Philippine economy grew by 5.9 percent in the second quarter, bringing the first semester expansion to 6.1 percent. This is slightly better than the five- to six-percent target for the year.
Sought for comment, Moody’s Assistant Vice President Christian de Guzman said in an e-mail the debt watcher has been monitoring the Philippines closely.
“The Philippine rating is monitored on an ongoing basis and we respond to developments as necessary,” he said.
Philip McNicholas, Fitch director for Asia-Pacific said the second quarter growth was “broadly in line” with its expectations and that it will await further data before making an assessment.
“Fitch does not take rating actions based on a single data point,” McNicholas stressed.
S&P representatives declined to comment.
Fernandez said the government is continuing its dialogue and cooperation with the credit raters.
source: philstar.com
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Private sector prepays 17.7% more foreign debt in 1H
MANILA - Private sector borrowers with dollar-denominated debt paid down more of their obligations in the first six months of the year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said on Wednesday.
According to the BSP, the private sector prepaid $735 million in debts in the January to June period, or 17.7 percent more than a year ago's $628 million.
The prepayment comes at a time when the peso has strengthened, appreciating 0.78 percent vis-a-vis the US dollar in the past month.
Prepayment totaled $1.5 billion last year, down from $4.1 billion in 2010.
The BSP said the country's foreign debt at end-May reached $62.9 billion or lower than foreign exchange reserves of $76.02 billion.
As a percentage of gross domestic product, the country's foreign debt fell to 27.38 percent from last year’s 29.51 percent. The private sector's foreign debt likewise improved to 6.35 percent of GDP at end-May from 7 percent in 2011.
Total debt also dropped to 21.03 percent of GDP from 22.52 percent last year. Consequently, the country's debt service burden fell to $2.69 billion from $3.18 billion a year ago.
source: interaksyon.com
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Warning On Foreign Currency Trading
These shady activities, according to the BSP and SEC, include schemes involving “foreign currency trading” transactions.
“Any solicitation to engage in foreign currency trading and to commit funds for this purpose should be considered with extreme care and caution,” the government agencies said in an advisory.
The advisory listed the following precautions that an interested investor should consider before placing his or her funds with any foreign currency trading company:
* Stay away from opportunities that sound too good to be true. Get-rich-quick schemes tend to be fraudulent.
* Avoid any company that guarantees large profits or promises little or no financial risk.
– In many cases, claims of large profits or minimal risks tend to be false. Normally, the higher the promised return, the higher the risks involved.
– Be suspicious of companies that downplay risks or state that written disclosure statements are only “routine formalities imposed by the government.”
* Do not trade on margin unless you understand what it means.
– Certain foreign exchange transactions can make you responsible for losses that greatly exceed any amount you deposited.
– Do not trade on margin unless you are also prepared to accept losses that exceed the margin amounts you paid.
– In case of doubt, consult with reputable investment advisers/consultants and/or financial planners.
* Be cautious of sending or transferring cash on the Internet, by mail or otherwise. Be especially alert to the dangers of trading online. While it can be very easy to transfer funds online, it will often be impossible to get refunds.
* Be wary of companies that offer currency trading online but do not provide information about their company (e.g. office address or other information identifying their nationality, contact numbers and other relevant data) on their website. Be aware that if you transfer funds to those foreign/offshore firms, it may be very difficult or impossible to recover your funds.
* Do not deal with individuals or companies who refuse to give you their background.
– Try to conduct a background check of the persons running or promoting the company. Do not rely on the representations or promises of the company’s employees.
– If you are unsure about the legitimacy and authenticity of the individual or company with whom you are dealing, the best thing to do is to avoid transacting and dealing with them.
* Always keep or retain a copy of the contracts/agreements and other document/s or any receipt/s issued by these foreign currency exchange companies.
– This is especially useful in an event involving legal action. A printout of the page of the website alone may not always be acceptable or sufficient as evidence of the transaction.
* Contact the regulatory agencies.
– Please bear in mind that the mere issuance by the SEC of a certificate of incorporation to a corporation does not include a permit or license to engage in activities which require a secondary license.
– Always inquire as to whether or not the company had been authorized or licensed to undertake the abovementioned activities. Verification can be made with the proper government agencies such as the BSP and the SEC.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Economists to BSP: Forget inflation, tackle peso first

MANILA - Economists on Friday called on the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to set aside worries over meeting its inflation target, and instead tackle the problem of the continued appreciation of the peso.
During a forum organized by the Philippine Exporters Confederation, economists from the private sector said the monetary authorities' efforts to stem the peso's rise are not enough, adding that more should be done to help exporters, business process outsourcing companies and the families of OFWs.
They said many instruments are at the disposal of the BSP if only it could temporarily abandon its mandate of inflation targeting, as other central banks in the world are doing.
University of Asia and the Pacific economics professor Victor Abola said the BSP's fears of expanding money supply accelerating inflation is unfounded.
Abola said money growth of above 20 percent in fast-growing countries did not result in high inflation, adding that there was no long-term relationship between the two.
"GDP growth in the Philippines is negative to inflation because you are able to supply the demand. So actually right now before they lowered the monetary policy rates, the monetary policy was tight because money growth was only at 7 percent then economic growth at 6.4 percent," Abola said.
With inflation no longer a concern, the BSP is free to move and put a clamp on the appreciating peso by cutting its key interest rates further, to as low as 3 percent for the overnight borrowing rate. This would keep foreign capital seeking higher yields from entering the country, Abola said.
Last month, the Monetary Board reduced its overnight borrowing and lending rates to 3.75 and 5.75 percent, respectively. Analysts said this surprise move by the BSP was not done to boost growth but rather to keep the peso from firming up against the US dollar.
Raul Fabella, University of the Philippines economist and national scientist, said the government must subsidize the BSP to the tune of P30 billion so it can absorb the losses when it buys dollars to defend the local currency.
"BSP loses when it purchases dollars using the pesos in the SDAs borrowed from local commercial banks, to sterilize inflow of dollars," Fabella said, referring to the special deposit accounts.
"Money lost by the central bank for sterilization is a good use of the money. It is towards a very healthy foreign exchange," he added.
Sterilization is done to temper the value of the local currency against its foreign counterpart and in the case of BSP, it is done by buying more dollars from the market to weaken the peso. Bankers had been saying the BSP was intervening in the market from time to time, to keep the local currency from rising too much.
HSBC earlier said the BSP may be prompted to cut interest rates rather than incur more losses with its purchase of dollars, if not for price pressures from food and oil.
Fabella said the reason the BSP would rather borrow from the SDAs than print more money is its fear of increasing money supply, which at a certain level is inflationary.
"So if BSP can't print money, then the [national government] subsidy is money well-spent," Fabella said.
Abandon inflation targeting
Exporters, however, had been asking monetary authorities to take the drastic measure of keeping the exchange rate fixed at a certain level, just like what the Swiss central bank did.
"If you want to keep exchange rate fixed, you are no longer inflation targeting, then you devalue the peso," Fabella said.
It would be easier for the BSP to let the currency stay at P42 for 10 years simply by buying huge volumes of dollars, higher than the amount monetary authorities are currently allocating for this.
This is where the P30 billion would come in, Fabella said.
But Ernest Leung, former finance secretary, said the BSP does not need the subsidy because when it buys all the dollars at P40 and the peso weakens to P45:$1, then it would have posted foreign exchange gains.
"The BSP has a range of tools it can use but a good question is why is it not employing these? They're too beholden to foreign fund managers around them, telling them what to do," Leung said.
De facto capital controls
Filomeno Sta. Ana, Action for Economic Reforms executive director, said that all the moves of the central bank are in the right direction so far, with it intervening in the market every now and then.
It also loosened its monetary policy last month, on top of the announcement that it would keep foreign funds from getting into the SDAs.
"That is de facto capital control. It is already a form of capital control. They just don't want to announce it as such for fear of receiving negative reactions from foreign investors," Sta. Ana said.
Capital controls are installed by monetary authorities around the world to keep foreign money from coming in, to keep their own currency from rising too much.
"If we want to be competitive and grow, we need to undervalue the peso. For me inflation targeting is already secondary. There is a lot of debate about inflation targeting and that is now discredited," Sta. Ana said.
"I think presently they have already abandoned inflation targeting. Even in the BSP charter, their real mandate is 'price stability' but now their definition of inflation targeting has become rigid, it's not really in black and white. But all over the world inflation targeting is no longer employed," he said.
To keep the peso undervalued, Sta. Ana said the BSP should print more money to buy the dollars. The BSP has enough room to do that since money supply growth is only at 7 percent, way below the inflationary threshold of 20 percent.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, August 3, 2012
Foreign Debt Service Down 21.5%
MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines’ external debt service burden has dropped by 21.5 percent in April to $2.148 billion compared to the same period in 2011 due to some prepayments and foreign exchange adjustments, data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed.
Of the $2.148 billion total foreign debt service, the BSP said that principal debt accounted for $1.087 billion or 40 percent lower from $1.812 billion in April last year. The rest went to interest payments of $1.061 billion, which reflected a 14.8 percent increase from last year’s $924 million.
The BSP expects external debt indicators to continue to be manageable for years to come due to demand for debt papers and improved credit grades for these bonds and securities.
The country’s external debt, reported quarterly by the BSP, totaled $62.9 billion as of the end of the first quarter. It was 3.2 percent higher year-on-year and equivalent to 27.4 percent of the domestic economy’s size. External debt vis-à-vis the gross domestic product has been declining substantially since 2004, from a ratio of 68.61 percent to 27.4 percent as of end-March.
The projection for this year’s foreign debt service burden was originally pegged at $8.8 billion but this was based on a higher peso-dollar exchange rate. The servicing of foreign loans is now expected to decline as it is sensitive to currency movements. Majority of foreign debt are denominated in US dollars.
In 2011, debt service for Philippine foreign debt amounted to $7.47 billion, lower than the projected $8.5 billion. The projection is usually higher because the BSP has to consider worst-case scenarios especially for the yen-denominated loans. Last year’s debt service burden is however 2.16 percent higher than 2010’s $7.32 billion.
In the meantime the BSP’s Early Warning System (EWS), which it uses for assessing debt sustainability, is projected to remain within expected levels in the next five years.
The EWS threshold for foreign loans to GDP ratio is expected to remain within contained levels based on the BSP’s projected nominal GDP and the country’s outstanding loans.
The BSP in a report earlier said that the EWS threshold for external debt to GDP ratio of 72.45 percent will probably remain and not breached in the next five years. The EWS have a threshold of 25 percent. The range of ratios is projected from 32.6 percent to 42.2 percent only.
The latest outstanding debt show the Philippines’ sufficient foreign exchange earnings are enough to service maturing principal and interest payments for 2012.
To control the size of foreign debt from the public or government and private or corporate sectors the central bank is strictly imposing an annual debt ceilings on foreign approvals. The cap this year is $8.5 billion, lower compared to 2011’s $10.5 billion.
source: mb.com.ph