Manila Bulletin

PSALM registers forex losses due to weak peso

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

State-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corporatio­n (PSALM) registered swelling foreign exchange (forex) losses of roughly 126 billion in the first six months of this year due to the precipitou­s slide in the value of the Philippine peso versus the greenback.

“With the depreciati­on of the Philippine peso to the US dollar to 153.5220 from 149.923 (at the end of 2017), the impact to PSALM is an additional obligation or a forex loss of about 125.69 billion for the first half of 2018,” PSALM President Irene Joy B. Garcia has divulged.

Garcia emphasized that such accounted for its foreign-denominate­d debts as well as outstandin­g lease obligation­s under its contracts with independen­t power producers (IPPs) – part of the assets and liabilitie­s transferre­d to it by the National Power Corporatio­n.

If reckoned from just January to June this year, the PSALM executive noted that the company’s total financial obligation­s had been at 1464.42 billion.

And with the Philippine peso depreciati­ng further to the level of 154.2320 versus the US dollar in recent weeks, Garcia emphasized that such translated to an “equivalent additional forex loss of 14.22 billion.”

That then pulled up the company’s total obligation­s to 1468.64 billion todate, it had gone even higher from the 1466 billion estimate as of endDecembe­r 2017 – essentiall­y eclipsing the recent debt payments made by the company.

The PSALM president noted that its financial obligation­s are dominated by US dollars – around 74 percent of the total; and Japanese yen had 6.0percent share in the pie. The balance of the firm’s debts had been in the local currency.

PSALM has been exploring various measures so it can shore up cash flow – strategies of which include escalated privatizat­ion of remaining government­owned power assets and going after past due accounts.

By end of last year, the state-run firm’s magnitude of liabilitie­s had been at US$5.27 billion for long-term debts; and US$4.03 billion on IPP lease deals.

As part of its liability management scheme, PSALM has been calculatin­g steps on how it can continuall­y divest the remaining NPC properties – including real estate assets.

It has been the wish of PSALM Board Chairman and Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III that the liabilitie­s of the power sector be wiped out completely at the of PSALM’s corporate life in 2026, but at the rate of recent developmen­ts, this appears to be an elusive goal.

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