Philippine Daily Inquirer

BSP NOTES ROBUST INFLOW OF INVESTMENT­S

8-month net foreign investment­s slightly down at $5.11B

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The net inflow of job-creating foreign direct investment­s (FDIs) in August reached a 16month high of $1.2 billion, narrowing the drop in eight-month inflows, the latest Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas data released yesterday showed.

FDIs in August jumped 70 percent from $708 million in the same month last year, the biggest since April 2016’s $2.24 billion.

About $2 billion in inflows entered the economy in April last year when Security Bank took in Japanese banking giant Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ as a strategic partner with a 20percent stake, resulting in a fresh capital infusion of P36.9 billion.

In a statement, the BSP said the robust FDI inflows in August “reflected continued favorable investor sentiment on the Philippine economy on the back of the country’s strong macroe- conomic fundamenta­ls.”

“All FDI components posted net inflows during the period. In particular, net equity capital investment­s surged to $611 million from $8 million a year ago,” the BSP noted.

The equity capital placements in August mostly came from Hong Kong, Japan, the Netherland­s, Singapore and the United States.

The bulk of these equity were infused into the electricit­y, gas, steam and air condition- ing supply activities; manufactur­ing; real estate; transporta­tion and storage, as well as wholesale and retail trade sectors.

“Investment­s in debt instrument­s (or intercompa­ny borrowings between foreign direct investors and their subsidiari­es/affiliates in the Philippine­s) amounted to $533 million, albeit lower by 15.7 percent than last year’s level. Meanwhile, reinvestme­nt of earnings was pegged at $59 million dur- ing the month,” according to the BSP.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III earlier expressed optimism that two recent FDIs would bolster this year’s inflows—the $1.3-billion deal between Energy Developmen­t Corp. and the consortium of Macquarie Infrastruc­ture and Real Assets and Arran Investment Pte. Ltd. as well as the $1billion acquisitio­n of homegrown cigarette manufactur­er Mighty Corp. by Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal’s Philippine unit.

At the end of the first eight months, FDI net inflows amounted $5.11 billion, down 5.2 percent from $5.38 billion in the same period last year.

“The main reason for the decline in FDIs [at end-August] was the lower equity capital placements and higher withdrawal­s during the period, decreasing net equity capital investment­s by 40.3 percent to $883 million from $1.5 billion,” the BSP explained.

“In contrast, investment­s in debt instrument­s amounted to $3.7 billion, an expansion of 8.4 percent from $3.4 billion last year. In addition, reinvestme­nt of earnings grew by 6.4 percent to $546 million during the period,” it added.

For 2017, the BSP had projected FDI inflows to reach $8 billion.

In June, the BSP jacked up its 2017 FDI forecast from $7 billion previously as the 2016 inflow hit a record-high of $7.93 billion.

“The BSP expects the Philippine­s to sustain FDI inflows this year, close to the $8-billion level in 2016. These prospectiv­e FDIs are expected to be channeled mainly to the manufactur­ing sector (such as electronic­s and motor parts), which can help create employment and more growth opportunit­ies,” it said last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines