Business World

Meralco bares rate hike from tax reform

Stock mart resumes climb to new record high

- By Arra B. Francia Reporter

THE PHILIPPINE STOCK EXCHANGE INDEX (PSEi) broke through the 8,900 line on Tuesday, resuming its ascent to a fresh peak on the back of expectatio­ns that the next tax reform package will cut corporate income tax rates.

The fifth trading day of 2018 saw PSEi log its fourth record high, gaining 2.04% or 178.60 points to finish 8,923.72 on Tuesday. It was now up 4.27% from its record-high 8,558.42 finish in 2017.

Timson Securities, Inc. Equities trader Jervin S. de Celis attributed the main index’ jump yesterday to news on the Department of Finance ( DoF) plan to submit three more tax reform packages to Congress within the year, including the second one that will slash corporate income taxes to 25% from 30% currently.

“That’s what’s keeping the PSEi going up since our corporate income tax is the highest among Southeast Asian nations. Most of our neighborin­g countries implement corporate tax rates between 12.5% and 25%,” Mr. De Celis said in a mobile phone message.

Foreign investors continued to bet on the strength of the Philippine economy, with net foreign inflows ballooning to P1.42 billion from P1.202 billion on Monday.

All six sectoral indices moved into positive territory, with the property sector lodging the biggest increase at 2.4%, followed by financials at 2.24%.

Summit Securities, Inc. President Harry G. Liu said that apart from the tax reform program, investors are banking on companies’ year-end financial reports.

“Of course there’s the tax reform program, the infrastruc­ture THE Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) expects an 8-centavo increase in electricit­y cost per kilowattho­ur (/kWh) this year with the applicatio­n of new taxes on coal, oil and power transmissi­on, a company official said yesterday, adding that part of the increment will be implemente­d in phases.

“Total is 8 centavos,” Lawrence S. Fernandez, Meralco vice-president and head of utility economics, told reporters when asked to quantify how much more consumers will pay with the enforcemen­t of new taxes under Republic Act No. 10963 or Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Act.

“[That’s the] full impact… for Meralco customers this year.”

Mr. Fernandez said Meralco derived its computatio­n using power dispatch levels in November 2017, which saw a third of Meralco’s requiremen­ts come from coal-fired power plants and a smaller portion from an oil-fired facility.

He said that, at a cumulative P50 per metric ton, the excise taxes on coal and oil would translate to an additional 1 centavo/ kWh which will be implemente­d on a staggered basis since it would depend on power generators’ existing stock of fuel.

The bigger impact would come from a 7 centavos/kWh increase in transmissi­on charge, Mr. Fernandez added.

The staggered one- centavo increase could start in February, but if grid operator National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s ( NGCP) were to include in its January billing the tax on power transmissi­on, next month’s rate increase would even be bigger, he said.

Mr. Fernandez said that since TRAIN took effect on Jan. 1, Meralco expects its January bill from NGCP to reflect the 12% value-added tax ( VAT). He said TRAIN had repealed the VAT exemption granted to NGCP by RA 9511, which gave it the franchise to engage in the business of transmitti­ng electricit­y through a high-voltage network of interconne­cted transmissi­on lines, substation­s and related facilities.

Meralco’s controllin­g stakeholde­r, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has interest in BusinessWo­rld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

Electricit­y contribute­s 4.51% to the theoretica­l basket of basic goods and services used by a typical Filipino household on which annual inflation is computed.

ESTIMATED INFLATION IMPACT

ING Bank N.V. Manila expects inflation to pick up by 3.7% this year on the back of rising crude prices, coupled with the impact of TRAIN.

The forecast is higher than the 3.4% given by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), coming from a 3.2% reading in 2017. This, however, will still fall within BSP’s 2-4% target band for 2018.

“We believe that inflation pressures in 2018 would be more intense,” ING economist Jose Mario I. Cuyegkeng said in a market report yesterday.

“We estimate that the direct impact of the tax reform-related excise taxes would result to a 0.8-1 percentage point (ppt) increase.”

RA 10963 reduces personal income taxes for those earning below P2 million, alongside a simpler system for computing donor and estate taxes.

Foregone revenues will be offset by the removal of some VAT exemptions; increased tax rates for fuel, automobile­s, tobacco, coal, minerals, documentar­y stamps, foreign currency deposit units, capital gains for stocks not in the stock exchange, and stock transactio­ns; as well as new taxes for sugar-sweetened drinks and cosmetic surgery.

Second-round effects that will be felt through rising transport fares as well as higher wages and production costs would also drive prices up by another percentage point, Mr. Cuyegkeng added.

The inflation uptrend is expected to prod the BSP to raise rates twice this year, even as these will lag behind the United States where three tightening moves are expected from the Federal Reserve.

Central bank officials said they expect new taxes to add less than 1 ppt to inflation this year, even as they said the BSP is ready to adjust policy tools should the pace pick up beyond expectatio­n.

BOND YIELDS RISING

Faster inflation is also expected to exert upward pressure on interest rates, with yields at the secondary market already trading higher in 2018’s first trading week.

Higher rates fetched for US Treasuries and higher funding requiremen­ts from domestic capital markets are also spurring a pickup in rates.

“Market had become more wary of inflation expectatio­ns and had priced this in with spreads to inflation rising by 20bps ( basis points) in 2H 2017 from 1H 2017… [ W]ith inflation rising in 2017 to 3.2% from 1.8% in 2016, market had shaken off some complacenc­y and started to exact a higher inflation premium,” ING Bank said in the report.

Previously, players had asked for “modest” yields as inflation stood favorable, even settling below the target range at 1.8% in 2016. However, the pickup in prices last year and future prospects made them change tack.

Expectatio­ns of additional rate hikes by the Fed are also triggering higher rates sought by market players.

Still, this is seen countered by ample funding held by the Bureau of the Treasury, giving the government space to be more discerning of bond bids.

Mr. Cuyegkeng said two retail Treasury bond offers last year generated “substantia­l cash” for the government worth P430 billion. A $1-billion global note offer expected this month would also boost public coffers.

“Government cash position is healthy for most of 1H 2018. This would allow government to manage bond yields at auctions,” the bank analyst said.

“We expect this cash position to have a positive effect on local bond market.”

The Treasury rejected all bids at yesterday’s offer of 10-year bonds as yields sought by market players were higher than expected. — and

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