Philippine Daily Inquirer

MARCOS AT NYSE: CAN’T SEE PH FUTURE WITHOUT US

- By Dona Z. Pazzibugan @dpazzibuga­nINQ

NEW YORK CITY—President Marcos has invited American investors to do more business in the Philippine­s, giving his strongest commitment yet to the country’s long-standing alliance with the United States and indicating a major foreign policy shift after the pivot to China and Russia of his predecesso­r, former President Rodrigo Duterte.

On the second day of his six-day US visit, Mr. Marcos addressed global investors and traders from the world’s financial center, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), as the special guest to ring the bell to close the day’s trading at 4 p.m. on Monday (4 a.m. on Tuesday in Manila).

“We have adjusted many of our ways of doing business at the behest of our friends in the United States and of the American businesses that are already in the Philippine­s,” he said in a forum hosted by NYSE vice chair John Tuttle and attended by his economic team and business executives, including several Filipino tycoons.

“I think that that will give us great opportunit­ies in the future and for both our countries, for private corporatio­ns, for government-to-government agreements and arrangemen­ts,” he added.

He related his geopolitic­s discussion earlier during the business lunch hosted by the US-Philippine Society at The Brook Club, one of the oldest elite private clubs in New York.

“It is very clear to me in my vision for the way that the country will move forward, that I cannot see the Philippine­s in the future without having the United States as a partner,” Mr. Marcos said.

“When we are in crisis, we look to the United States. We look to the relationsh­ip that has been forged over the many years and I have to say the reason that we have done that is that for the most part we can say that the United States has not failed us,” he pointed out.

The President cited recent policies that further opened the

Philippine economy, such as lowered corporate income tax rates and rationaliz­ed fiscal incentives; reduced minimum paid-up capital requiremen­ts for foreign retailers and foreign startups bringing in advanced new technology, and full foreign ownership of companies providing public services such as telecommun­ications, shipping, air carriers, railways, subways, airports and toll roads.

He said his administra­tion was seeking partnershi­ps in public infrastruc­ture such as mass transit systems, airports, toll roads; in public services; in digitizati­on initiative­s; in energy developmen­t; and agricultur­e modernizat­ion.

He offered investment opportunit­ies for American businesses in areas such as informatio­n technology and business process management or IT-BPM; medical products and devices; electric vehicles and batteries; agribusine­ss, and telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture and services.

“We are all thrilled to be here. We’re familiar with the New York Stock Exchange and the bell and that most important balcony in the world. We had always watched it from afar,” said Mr. Marcos, who later signed the guest book reserved for dignitarie­s and rang the closing bell from the balcony of the trading floor.

He was joined by first lady Liza Araneta-Marcos, the President’s son Ilocos Norte Rep. Sandro Marcos, Speaker Martin Romualdez, Finance Secretary Benjamin Diokno, Trade Secretary Alfredo Pascual, Aboitiz Group CEO Sabin Aboitiz, and Tuttle.

The Philippine flag was hoisted at the façade of the historic NYSE building and shown on the screen of the trading floor.

Aboitiz, whom Mr. Marcos designated as head of the Private Sector Advisory Council, was one of the 30 representa­tives of the Philippine business community selected to accompany the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)-led government delegation to the United States.

According to a statement from the Aboitiz Group, the Philippine business delegation included Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc. chair and president Enrique Razon Jr.; Metro Pacific Corp. chair and president Manuel V. Pangilinan; San Miguel Corp. president and CEO Ramon Ang; Ayala Corp. chair Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala; JG Summit Holdings Inc. president and CEO Lance Gokongwei; Magsaysay Group president and CEO Doris Ho, and SM Prime Holdings director Hans Sy, among others.

Protest

Earlier in the day, he met with executives of American companies NuScale Power, which designs and markets small modular reactors; Wastefuel, which is into waste-to-fuels technology, and Boeing, one of the world’s biggest aerospace manufactur­ers and defense contractor­s, urging them to invest in the Philippine­s.

The President’s convoy arrived at the NYSE just as a group of Filipino-American protesters shouting anti-Marcos martial law chants converged in the street in front of the NYSE that was only closed to motorists but remained open to pedestrian­s.

With US Secret Service agents around, the protesters were just a few meters away as they heckled Mr. Marcos when he alighted from his vehicle.

The same group also held a protest outside the venue of Mr. Marcos’ meeting with members of the Filipino community at the New Jersey Performing Arts Hall on the first day of his visit.

The protesters, who were denouncing Mr. Marcos’ father, the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos, and former President Duterte, dispersed more than an hour before the presidenti­al convoy arrived.

Exporters’ plea

In Manila, two of the biggest export groups said on Tuesday that they welcomed the President’s trip to the United States as it bodes well for businessme­n in both countries.

“It is good. This is like public relations. This is to remind the US that we are still here,” Foreign Buyers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (Fobap) president Robert Young told the Inquirer over a phone interview.

Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion Inc. (Philexport) president Sergio Ortiz-Luis Jr. agreed, saying that a goodwill visit was a positive move by the current administra­tion.

“It shows that we are ready to work with them,” Ortiz-Luis said in a separate phone interview with the Inquirer.

Young said he was hoping that the US Generalize­d System of Preference­s (GSP) could be tackled at the sidelines of one of the meetings because of its importance to local exporters.

“It expired almost two years ago. They have not extended it for some reason,” said Young. The trade program, which gives preferenti­al tariff rates on US imports from eligible countries, was last granted to the Philippine­s in March of 2018 under former US President Donald Trump. It expired on Dec. 31, 2020.

“They (US buyers) will not be buying more because they pay (import) duties now with the GSP suspended. They told me they would be deducting the quantity that they are buying,” Young said, recalling a conversati­on with one of their US clients.

According to the DTI, Philippine exports to the western country under the GSP totaled $1.73 billion in 2019.

 ?? —MALACAÑANG PHOTO ?? READY FOR TAKEOFF President Marcos and his official delegation, including Speaker Martin Romualdez, meet with Boeing officials on Sept. 20 as part of his six-day working visit to New York.
—MALACAÑANG PHOTO READY FOR TAKEOFF President Marcos and his official delegation, including Speaker Martin Romualdez, meet with Boeing officials on Sept. 20 as part of his six-day working visit to New York.
 ?? —MALACAÑANG PHOTOS ?? TRADING FLOOR GUEST President Marcos leads the traditiona­l bell ringing ceremony at the New York Stock Exchange as its special guest on Sept. 19 (New York time). The President mainly spent Day 2 of this six-day working visit offering investment opportunit­ies for American companies in informatio­n technology, business process outsourcin­g, medical products, electric vehicles, agribusine­ss and telecommun­ications, among others.
—MALACAÑANG PHOTOS TRADING FLOOR GUEST President Marcos leads the traditiona­l bell ringing ceremony at the New York Stock Exchange as its special guest on Sept. 19 (New York time). The President mainly spent Day 2 of this six-day working visit offering investment opportunit­ies for American companies in informatio­n technology, business process outsourcin­g, medical products, electric vehicles, agribusine­ss and telecommun­ications, among others.
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