The Freeman

FDIs gain early as foreign firms borrow from HQs

- (Philstar.com)

With new investors still holding back, foreign firms securing funds from their headquarte­rs early in the year provided the single bump on foreign direct investment­s (FDI) in January.

FDI registered a net inflow of $961 million in January, up 41.5% year-on-year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported Monday. A net inflow means more job-generating foreign capital entered the country than those that left.

While headline figures depicted some rebound, the recovery itself appeared shallow. Broken down, central bank data showed debt placements, which represent local offices of foreign firms borrowing from their mother companies’ abroad, were the lone FDI driver, more than doubling year-on-year to $535 million.

These debts, in turn, are believed to be used by local offices to fund their operations and expansion here, although whether these do materializ­e cannot be confirmed.

Apart from them, new investors measured through equity investment­s dipped 1.4% on-year, as well as those foreign companies already with presence here that opted to reinvest their earnings by 9.2%, possibly because of lackluster operations last year. Despite this, the BSP still characteri­zed the overall growth as a result of “investor’s optimism.”

FDI is one of the wanted type of hard investment­s due to their long-term nature that generate jobs and livelihood. They are also difficult to pull out, but since peaking in 2017, this type of inflows have been on a consistent decline, a drop exacerbate­d by the pandemic crisis that pulled them down to a 5-year low of $6.5 billion.

BSP is hoping for a turnaround to $7.8 billion this year, albeit still at a slower pace and below pre-pandemic levels of $8.7 billion in 2019. By 2022, FDI net inflows are projected to hit $8.8 billion.

Sought for comment, economists were nonetheles­s reading the January bounce as indicator that recovery may very well be underway. For one, Nicholas Antonio Mapa, senior economist at ING Bank in Manila, said the debt-driven rally may be considered a “first step” toward the entry of more sustainabl­e FDI.

He however warned: “Despite the decent pickup in FDI, we also highlight that so-called fresh FDI and reinvested earnings from local operations remain in the red, which may be an indicator that firms are not calling for additional investment­s into their local operations nor are they plowing back earnings to the Philippine company,” Mapa said.

“We do hope that this trend can reverse,” he added.

 ?? PHILSTAR.COM ?? FDI posted a net inflow of $961 million in January, up 41.5% year-on-year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas reported Monday.
PHILSTAR.COM FDI posted a net inflow of $961 million in January, up 41.5% year-on-year, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas reported Monday.

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