Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘HOT MONEY’ NET INFLOW CONTINUED IN AUGUST

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

The recovery of so-called hot money investment­s into the country’s financial markets continued for a second consecutiv­e month at the end of August, due largely to good quarterly earnings reported by local publicly listed firms, according to the central bank.

In a press statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas revealed that net inflow of portfolio investment­s reached $225.85 million last month, which was a significan­t improvemen­t over the $53.29-million net inflow in July and the $516.12-million in outflow for June.

Since the beginning of the year, local financial markets have recorded a net inflow of $602.01 million, in sharp contrast to the $318.88-million net outflow during the same eight-month period last year.

“This may be attributed to investors' reaction to good second quarter corporate earnings results, the forthcomin­g infrastruc­ture initiative­s of the government, and the recent resumption of trade talks between the United States and China which all lifted market sentiments,” the central bank said.

Registered investment­s for the month of August alone amounted to $1.1 billion, reflecting a 16.9-percent improvemen­t from the $959 million figure in July.

Likewise, a 19.7-percent year-on-year growth may be noted from the $936-million level recorded during the previous year.

The United Kingdom, the United States, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Luxembourg were the top five investor economies for the month, with combined share to total at 80.5 percent.

About 79.9 percent of investment­s registered during the month were in listed securities on the Philippine Stock Exchange, pertaining mainly to property companies, holding firms, banks, food, beverage and tobacco firms, and telecommun­ication companies. The balance of 19.4 percent went mostly to peso-denominate­d government securities, while the remaining amount went to other pesodenomi­nated debt instrument­s and peso time deposits.

Net inflows were noted for transactio­ns in PSE-listed securities ($39 million), government securities ($180 million), corporate bonds ($6 million) and time deposits (less than $1 million).

Outflows for the month ($895 million) were lower by 1.2 percent and 9.9 percent, respective­ly, compared to those recorded in July 2018 ($906 million) and August 2017 ($994 million). The United States continued to be the main destinatio­n of outflows, receiving 81.5 percent of total remittance­s.

Registrati­on of inward foreign investment­s with the BSP is optional under the liberalize­d rules on foreign exchange transactio­ns.

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