The Philippine Star

Foreign investment­s hit 16-month high

Jump 70% to $1.2 B in Aug

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The net inflow of foreign direct investment­s (FDI) soared 70 percent to $1.2 billion in August, the highest level in 16 months, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported yesterday.

The latest figure was the highest since the country registered a record $2.24 billion in FDI in April last year after The Bank of Tokyo – Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd infused P37 billion in fresh equity in exchange for a 20 percent stake in Security Bank Corp. It was also $699 million higher compared to the $708 million recorded in August last year.

“This reflected continued favorable investor sentiment on the Philippine economy on the back of the country’s strong macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls. All FDI components posted net inflows during the period,” the BSP said.

Despite the sharp rise in August, FDI for the first eight months declined 5.2 percent to $5.38 billion from $5.11 billion in the same period last year.

The central bank said equity placements rose by a dramatic 1,194 percent to $630 million in August from $49 million in the same month last year. Equity infusion came mainly from the US, Singapore, the Netherland­s, Hong Kong, and Japan.

The BSP said fresh funds were channeled to manufactur­ing, real estate, wholesale and retail trade, transport and storage, as well as electricit­y, gas, steam, and air conditioni­ng supply.

Withdrawal­s eased 54.5 percent to $19 million from $41 million.

Likewise, non-residents’ investment­s in debt instrument­s or lending by parent firms abroad to their local affiliates retreated 15.7 percent to $533 million in August from $632 million in the same month last year. Reinvestme­nt of earnings declined 12.8 percent to $59 million from $67 million.

Equity placements declined 25.6 percent to $1.27 billion from January to August compared to $1.71 billion in the same period last year while withdrawal­s went up 69 percent to $387 million from $229 million.

From B1 During the period, investment­s in debt instrument­s increased 8.4 percent to $3.68 billion from $3.39 billion while reinvestme­nts of earnings rose 6.4 percent to $546 million from $513 million.

The BSP has raised its net FDI inflow target to $8 billion instead of $7 billion for this year after it reached a record high of $7.9 billion last year.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez earlier debunked unfounded concerns over the supposed drastic drop in the flow of FDI into the Philippine­s as he cited to the recent “healthy” $2.3-billion capital infusion by two global firms in the country’s manufactur­ing and energy sectors.

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