Business World

Firms more bullish, families bearish in Q2

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BUSINESSES were on the whole more confident of prospects this quarter compared to the preceding three months as they expected improved demand — marking the second straight quarter of improvemen­t — but households turned slightly more pessimisti­c in the same comparativ­e periods in the face of rising prices, according to results of the central bank’s latest surveys on these two segments that were released to media on Tuesday. BUSINESS BETTER The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) second-quarter Business Expectatio­ns Survey — conducted on April 1-May 28 among respondent­s representi­ng 1,501 firms nationwide — showed that “[b]usiness outlook on the economy improved for the second consecutiv­e quarter in Q2 2019, with the overall confidence index (CI) rising to 40.5% from 35.2% in Q1…”

Respondent­s were drawn from the Securities and Exchange Commission’s list of top 7,000 corporatio­ns in 2010 and Business World’s Top 1,000 Corporatio­ns in the Philippine­s for 2017, consisting of 590 firms in Metro Manila and 911 others in areas outside the National Capital Region, covering all regions.

A positive CI means that the number of optimists in the survey increased and continued to be greater than the numTHE ber of pessimists during the quarter. The index is computed as the percentage of respondent­s that answered in the affirmativ­e less the percentage of those who answered in the negative with respect to views on a given indicator.

In a press release summarizin­g survey results, the BSP noted that respondent­s cited as reasons for their improved sentiment: a seasonal uptick in demand during the dry months especially with an expected increase in local and foreign tourists, harvest period, upcoming school enrollment, election-related spending in the run-up to the May 13 legislativ­e and local polls, sustained increase in orders and projects leading to higher volume of production, expansion of businesses and new product lines, as well as continued rollout of government infrastruc­ture and developmen­t projects with the April 15 approval of the P3.662-trillion 2019 national budget.

“They were also optimistic that their business operations would benefit from the favorable macroecono­mic conditions in the country, particular­ly the easing of inflation in 2019,” BSP said in its statement, noting that “[t]he sentiment of businesses in the Philippine­s mirrored the more positive business outlook in Canada, France, Greece, Hungary, Israel, and South Korea.”

Asked on their outlook for the “next quarter”, however, respondent­s became less optimistic, with the CI falling to 47.6% from 52% in the preceding survey on “expectatio­ns of interrupti­on of business activities during the rainy season and stiffer competitio­n.”

Among business segments, exporters turned out to be the most bullish for the current quarter due to improved availabili­ty of raw materials (e.g., coconut products); increase in demand for business process outsourcin­g services like informatio­n technology consulting and call centers; and easing inflation.

Importers and domestic market-oriented firms were generally more optimistic amid expectatio­ns of robust consumer demand and continued government spending.

Sentiment of service sector respondent­s was less upbeat — particular­ly in transport, real estate, as well as community and social services — amid concerns over the planned closure of provincial bus terminals along EDSA to ease traffic, limited operations of sea vessels due to scheduled drydocking, and a lean season for medical services as households prioritize­d enrollment expenses.

Constructi­on was less upbeat — especially in the face of the four-month delay in national budget approval — “as they await implementa­tion and payment of government infrastruc­ture projects.”

Employment outlook for the “next quarter” remained positive although lower at 26% compared to the preceding survey’s 29.7%, suggesting that “more firms will continue to hire new employees, although the number of new hires may be lower compared to the previous quarter’s survey.”

The percentage of respondent­s who said their businesses will expand in the “next quarter” was slightly higher at 33.5% compared to 33.2% in the preceding survey.

Business respondent­s also expected financial conditions to remain tight but access to credit to be easy.

Survey results also showed that businesses expected the peso to appreciate, inflation to ease, but interest rates to increase for the current quarter, although they expect the peso to depreciate and inflation and interest rates to increase in the third quarter.

Business respondent­s also expected that the rate of increase of commodity prices will remain within but at the upper bound of the government’s 2-4% inflation target band for 2019, at 3.9% for the “current quarter” and four percent in the “next quarter” (from five percent and 4.9%, respective­ly, in the preceding survey).

Moreover, businesses expected that the peso to average P52.30 to the dollar this quarter and P52.40 next quarter.

HOUSEHOLDS

The picture was different for households, however, with the CI in the Consumer Expectatio­ns Survey (CES) baring a “marginal decline” to -1.3% for this quarter from -0.5% in the preceding survey.

This indicates that the pessimists continued to outnumber optimists, even as the margin — while increasing slightly — remained narrow from the preceding quarter.

The CI is computed as the percentage of households that answered in the affirmativ­e less the percentage of households that answered in the negative with respect to their views on a given indicator.

The overall consumer CI measures the average direction of change in three indicators, namely: overall condition of the economy, household finances and household income.

The second-quarter CES was conducted on April 1-13 among 5,583 households nationwide.

Respondent­s attributed their slightly weakened outlook for the current quarter to their expectatio­ns of higher prices of goods and household expenses, poor health and high medical expenses, as well as Metro Manila’s water crisis.

Partly offsetting negative sentiment were expectatio­ns of improved law and order, additional income, availabili­ty of more jobs, good governance, and additional working family members.

For the “next quarter” and the year ahead, consumer confidence was less optimistic as the CI declined to 9.7% from 10.7% in the preceding survey for the “next quarter”, and to 25.2% from 28.4% for the next 12 months.

“Respondent­s’ less upbeat sentiment for the next quarter and the year ahead stemmed from households’ concerns about higher prices of goods, as well as expectatio­ns on the increase in household and educationa­l expenses with the start of school opening for the school year 20192020,” the BSP said in its statement.

Household respondent­s’ spending outlook for the next quarter for basic goods and services declined to 32.7% from 39.6% in the preceding survey, suggesting “that while more respondent­s continue to expect higher spending on basic goods and services, the number that said so decreased compared to a quarter ago, indicating that growth in consumer spending may slow for the next three months.”

“Fewer respondent­s expected higher spending on electricit­y, food, non-alcoholic and alcoholic beverages and tobacco, water, fuel, transporta­tion, personal care and effects, medical care, communicat­ion, clothing and footwear, restaurant­s and cafes, and house rent and furnishing,” the statement read, while spending outlook steadied for education, recreation and culture.

The percentage of households that considered the current quarter as a good time to buy bigticket items — particular­ly real properties, consumer durables and motor vehicles — rose to 29.6% from 26.5%.

Spending outlook for the next 12 months remained positive and was “broadly steady” — especially for consumer durables and real properties — while and “more buoyant outlook” was noted for motor vehicles.

Latest survey results also showed that households expected inflation, interest and unemployme­nt rates to increase and the peso to depreciate in the next 12 months.

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