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Thursday, July 7, 2011

World Bank hails steady Philippines' 2011 Economic growth

The World Bank on Wednesday praised the Philippines for its steady economic growth despite the global economic shocks and hailed reforms made by the government of President Benigno Aquino.

In its quarterly update, the bank said it expects Philippine economic growth to stabilize at 5.0 percent this year and rise to 5.4 percent next year. The economy grew 7.6 percent last year.

Manufacturing, construction, buoyant metals prices as well as a booming business process outsourcing industry are expected to be the main growth drivers, said World Bank senior economist Eric Le Borgne.

The body also cited potential gains from reforms put in place by Aquino who was elected in May, 2010.

"Prospects on the supply side remain favorable with manufacturing and construction projected to benefit from the end of the trade disruption linked to Japan’s post-disaster reconstruction," Le Borgne said in a statement.

The update also praised Aquino for his efforts to fight corruption, upgrade the country's infrastructure, and open up aviation to foreign competition to boost tourism.

World Bank country director Bert Hofman said the Philippines' recent performance, which saw 4.9 percent growth in the three months to March, suggests growth had become more robust and steady since the global crisis.

He cited a series of credit rating upgrades that put the Philippines' sovereign debt to within two rungs of investment-grade last month.

Aquino's office said in a statement that the World Bank report showed that the Philippines' economic fundamentals had "significantly improved" and that the government's programs were sound.

Manila has an "aspirational target" of 7-8 percent GDP growth for 2011 but projects more modest growth of 5-6 percent.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Peso ₱ rises to ₱ 42-to-dollar level due to rising portfolio investments

The Philippines' Peso led other Asian currencies in appreciating on Wednesday (July 6 2011), going back to the 42-to-a-dollar level and hitting its strongest finish in nearly two months.

The appreciation of currencies in the region was credited to rising inflows of foreign portfolio investments, which in turn were being driven by expectations that interest rates in emerging economies in Asia would rise further.

Higher interest rates are seen to cause yields of bonds and other portfolio instruments to rise, thereby enticing foreign fund owners.

The local currency closed at 42.89 against the US dollar, up by 16.5 centavos from the previous day's close of 43.055:$1.

Intraday high hit 42.83:$1, while intraday low settled at 43.05:$1. Volume of trade rose beyond the billion-dollar mark to hit $1.102 billion from only $754.59 million previously.

Traders said portfolio yields in the Philippines and its neighbors – including China, India, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Malaysia – have been seen to rise in the months ahead as a consequence of the move of their central banks to hike key policy rates.

In the case of the Philippines, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has already raised its key policy rates twice this year, the first one by 25 basis points in March and the second by a similar margin in May.

The increase in the key policy rates was meant to influence an increase in the deposit and lending rates of banks. Higher commercial interest rates were meant to temper the increase in consumer prices, as the BSP cited acceleration of inflation to beyond comfortable levels if no intervention is made.

Central banks in the region hope that higher interest rates would encourage people to save and temper their demand for bank loans, thus controlling growth in demand and inflation.

BSP Governor Amando Tetangco Jr. said that besides rising interest rates in emerging Asia, the faster growth of countries in the region vis-a-vis growth of industrialized countries has been attracting foreign fund owners to shift their investments to the former.

"The appreciation is influence by rising [foreign] capital inflows given the gap between emerging markets and industrialized economies," Tetangco said.

Philippines' Peso Rises to Nine-Week High on Fitch Assessment

The Philippines' peso climbed to a nine-week high after Fitch Ratings forecast the economy will expand as much as 6 percent this year and next.

The currency rose for a seventh day, its longest winning streak since January, after Fitch said today its outlook on Philippine banks is stable, "underpinned by an improving domestic economy and relatively low asset quality risk." Growth was 4.9 percent in the first quarter, the slowest pace since the final three months of 2009.

"The Fitch comments are validating the improved macro fundamental story that's been making the rounds the past few weeks," said Radhika Rao, an economist at Forecast Pte in Singapore. "For the peso going forward, it's certainly positive."

The peso strengthened 0.4 percent to 42.90 per dollar as of the 4 p.m. close in Manila, according to Tullett Prebon Plc. It touched 42.825 earlier, the highest level since May 3.

Benchmark five-year bonds gained, pushing yields to the lowest level since January. The rate on the 7 percent notes due January 2016 dropped four basis points, or 0.04 percentage point, to 4.71 percent, according to Tradition Financial Services.

The government started a debt swap yesterday, offering at least 100 billion pesos ($2.3 billion) of 10.5- and 20-year bonds in exchange for shorter-dated notes.

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