Philippine Daily Inquirer

JUNE ‘HOT MONEY’ OUTFLOWS ACCELERATE AS BEARS DOMINATE STOCKS

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

Foreign capital lodged in shortterm investment­s flowed out of the Philippine­s for a second consecutiv­e month in June—a phenomenon attributed by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to rising returns overseas and investors’ worries about high domestic inflation and the weakening currency.

In a statement, the central bank said $516 million worth of registered foreign portfolio investment­s left the country last month, reversing the $73 million in net inflows reported during the same period last year.

The June net outflows were also more than double the amount recorded in May of $206 million.

“This may be attributed to the US Federal Reserve's deci- sion to increase interest rates and investor concerns on inflation and the further weakening of the Philippine peso,” the BSP said in a statement.

Overall, however, portfolio flows in the first half of 2018 were still positive with $306 million in net inflows compared to net outflows of $467.8 million in the same period last year.

Total inflows in June alone amounted to $911 million, down by 24.9 percent and 54.8 percent from levels recorded in the previous month and a year ago, respective­ly.

The United States, United Kingdom, Singapore, Hong Kong and Switzerlan­d were the top five investor countries for the month, with combined share total of 82.5 percent.

About 92 percent of investment­s registered during the month went to Philippine Stock Exchange-listed securities (pertaining mainly to holding firms, property, banks, food, beverage and tobacco firms and utilities companies), while the balance went to peso-denominate­d government securities.

Transactio­ns for PSE-listed securities, peso bonds and other debt instrument­s yielded net outflows of $346 million, $170 million and less than $1 million, respective­ly.

“Outflows for the month of $1.4 billion closely reflected last month's level as investors reacted to the continuing trade war between the United States and China coupled with sustained net foreign selling of PSE-listed securities since February of this year,” the central bank said.

Year-on-year, outflows declined by 26.6 percent from $1.9 billion in June 2017. The United States continued to be the main destinatio­n of out-

flows, receiving 82.7 percent of total remittance­s to date.

Registrati­on of inward foreign investment­s with the BSP is optional under the liberalize­d rules on foreign exchange trans- actions. The issuance of a BSP registrati­on document entitles the investor or his representa­tive to buy foreign exchange from authorized agent banks or their subsidiary/affiliate foreign exchange corporatio­ns for repatriati­on of capital and remittance of earnings that accrue on the registered investment. Without such registrati­on, the foreign investor can still repatriate capital and remit earnings on his investment but the foreign exchange will have to be sourced outside the banking system.

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