The Philippine Star

BOP reverses to $917 M surplus

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The surplus in the country’s balance of payments (BOP) reached a 26-month high of $917 million in April, almost reversing the deficit recorded in the first three months of the year, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas officer-in-charge Diwa Guinigundo said yesterday.

“This is encouragin­g because the April position reversed the shortfall in the first quarter. We all want to see a continuing surplus for the rest of the year but it’s too early to forecast with great degree of precision,” Guinigundo said in a text message.

The surplus registered in April was the highest since the country registered a surplus of $985 million in February 2015.

As a result, the country’s BOP deficit narrowed to $78 million from January to April .

“It is very encouragin­g that the April BOP position reversed to a surplus position and mitigated the cumulative BOP shortfall for the first four months of 2017,” he said.

Guinigundo, BSP deputy governor for monetary stability sector, traced the surplus in April to the strong growth in remittance­s from overseas Filipinos as well as the robust business process outsourcin­g (BPO) sector.

“While the data on the ac- tual and specific BOP components have yet to be released, we expect the support to be coming from the recovery in merchandis­e exports, sustained OFW remittance­s and BPO revenues and additional inflows from tourism and foreign investment­s,” he said.

Latest data showed cash remittance­s hit a record high of $2.61 billion in March, 10.7 percent higher than the $2.36 billion booked in the same month last year. This brought the cash remittance­s to $6.95 billion in the first quarter, 7.7 percent higher than the $6.46 billion registered in the same period last year. Personal remittance­s also increased 11.8 percent to a record high of $2.91 billion in March from $2.6 billion in the same month last year, translatin­g to an 8.1 percent rise in the first three months to $7.71 billion from $7.13 billion.

“As a result, BSP foreign exchange operations netted in large inflows including investment income. National government deposits of its foreign exchange borrowings also contribute­d to the favorable outturn even as national government debt servicing moderated the inflows,” he said. The BOP shows a summary

of a country’s transactio­ns with the rest of the world. Components include trade, foreign direct and portfolio investment­s, and even remittance­s from Filipinos abroad.

A deficit means more money went out of the country while a surplus means otherwise.

The Philippine­s booked a BOP deficit of $420 million last year, a complete reversal of the $2.62 billion surplus recorded in 2015.

For this year, the BSP expects a BOP surplus of $1 billion as foreign direct investment­s inflow is seen hitting $8 billion while the outflow of foreign portfolio investment­s or hot money is seen declining to $900 million.

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