Showing posts with label insurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insurance. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Philippine year in review 2015

Strong domestic demand and increased government spending helped sustain high levels of economic expansion in the Philippines throughout 2015, though a slight slowdown was observed late in the year as demand from the country’s main trading partners eased.

While yearend data have yet to be released, estimates from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in December project gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 5.9% — short of the 6.4% forecast earlier in the year — as a result of declining merchandise exports, which fell by 6.9% year on year in the first three quarters to $43.7 billion.
Despite the modest slowdown, the Philippine government remains confident that end-of-year spending will help boost GDP growth to 6%-6.5% by the close of 2015.
The months ahead are expected to usher in strong economic expansion, with the ADB projecting growth of more than 6% in 2016 as the government continues to increase public spending. Higher demand from India and other Southeast Asian economies is expected to offset the effects of this year’s weaker exports.
INFLATION SUBDUED, EMPLOYMENT UP
While still modest, inflation gained pace late in the year, rising to 1.1% in November, up from 0.4% in October. However, rates remain within the Central Bank of the Philippines’ target band of 0.4% to 1.2%, and well below the 3.7% registered in November 2014.
According to the National Economic and Development Authority, inflation is being driven by rising food and non-food prices stemming from higher local demand and the lingering effects of typhoon Lando, which struck the country’s shores in October.
Core inflation — which excludes energy and unprocessed food costs — edged up in the last quarter of 2015, reaching 1.8% in November, its highest level since July, but still below the 2% target set by monetary authorities.
In a research note issued in early December, Barclays predicted inflation would rise to 2.4% in 2016, due in part to a modest anticipated increase in fuel costs and the potential impact of the El Niño weather pattern on agricultural prices.
Nonetheless, the ongoing strength of the economy helped stem unemployment in 2015, with figures released by the Philippine Statistics Authority in early December reflecting a 5.6% unemployment rate as of October, down from 6.5% in July 2015.
POSITIVE RATINGS OUTLOOK
The steady growth and stability of the economy prompted ratings agency Fitch to revise its outlook for the country from stable to positive in late September. The agency also affirmed the Philippines’ long-term foreign- and local-currency issuer default ratings at “BBB-” and “BBB”, respectively, maintaining the country’s investment-grade standing.
Moody’s was also optimistic about the Philippines’ economic prospects for 2016, reaffirming the country’s “Baa2” bond rating with a stable outlook in mid-October. According to the agency, the rating reflects the “resilience of [the Philippine] economy to the current headwinds buffeting neighboring countries” and expectations that the positive economic and fiscal trends will continue for the next one to two years.
BUDGET DEFICIT WIDENS
The year’s economic expansion was fueled in part by higher levels of government spending, which led to a deeper budget deficit in the latter half of the year. On the back of more than P1.82 trillion of disbursements in the first 10 months of the year, the year-to-date budget shortfall rose to P52.6 billion in October, up 56% year on year.
While outlays were higher than anticipated, government revenues were also up, with receipts rising by 12% year on year to P1.77 trillion between January and October.
In past years the government had come under fire for the relatively slow pace of spending, which often fell short of expenditure targets and delayed investment and capital projects. The late-term acceleration in public spending could help clear some of the project backlog and further stimulate the economy.
Economic activity in the coming year is also set to be fueled by presidential elections in May 2016. A recent report by Standard Chartered Bank predicted the election campaign would spur an influx of investment in the manufacturing, government services, private services, transport, communications and storage sectors, in particular.
According to the bank, the ramp up in public spending, alongside higher household consumption levels, could add between 0.1 and 0.3 percentage points to GDP in 2016.


Source: Oxford Business Group/ January 7, 2016/ http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Economy&title=philippine-year-in-review-2015&id=121092

Monday, January 11, 2016

Insurer looking to fund more infrastructure projects

Sun Life Financial Philippines is looking to invest in more infrastructure projects as part of its investment portfolio because these investments involve long-term investments, which insurance companies are more able than banks to undertake.
Sun Life Financial Philippines President and CEO Riza Mantaring said at the sidelines of the Second annual Sinag Financial Literacy Journalism Awards on Thursday that Sun Life has around P170 billion in its general fund, a portion of which the company is keen on deploying in infrastructure projects.
The Sinag Financial Literacy Journalism Awards is Sun Life Philippines’s annual awards to honor journalists whose body of work helps promote financial literacy among Filipinos.
Mantaring said that, aside from its reported foray into the business of producing power, Sun Life Philippines is also looking at other infrastructure projects that it can either fund or have an equity in because infrastructure projects provide insurance companies with a steady cash flow over a long horizon.
She added that Sun Life Philippines is looking initially at an investment ceiling of P2 billion for each project that the insurer will fund, even as it also starts a due diligence audit.
Many of the projects are proposed to be passed on to Sun Life Philippines by banks because insurance companies are more able to handle longer-term investments than banks, which are in the business of lending money and are therefore required to be more liquid. Mantaring noted that the operations of Sun Life’s main branch in Canada is also into investments in infrastructure, such as toll roads, bridges, and even jail facilities, which Sun Life Philippines is looking to replicate here.


According to current regulations, insurance companies may use a portion of their investible assets on infrastructure assets, subject to approval from the Insurance Commission.
Source: by David Cagahastian /  http://www.businessmirror.com.ph/insurer-looking-to-fund-more-infrastructure-projects/

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