The Philippine Star

Hot money reverts to net inflow in Aug

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

More foreign portfolio investment­s or speculativ­e funds returned in August, reversing the net outflow in July, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said.

BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said in his weekly online press conference that foreign portfolio investment­s – also referred to as hot money – turned to a net inflow of $11.51 million in August from net outflows of $339.7 million and $126.76 million in July and August last year, respective­ly.

Economic managers announced last August that the country finally exited from recession, with a gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 11.8 percent in the second quarter.

The pandemic-induced recession stretched five quarters to the first quarter of the year after the country’s GDP contracted by a record 9.6 percent in 2020.

Data released by the central bank showed foreign portfolio investment­s jumped by 21 percent to $806.99 million in August from $666.51 million in the same month last year.

The BSP said about 65 percent of investment­s coming mainly from the UK, US, Singapore, Norway and Luxembourg were placed in securities listed on the Philippine Stock Exchange, mainly in food, beverage and tobacco companies, property companies, holding firms, banks as well as transporta­tion services.

On the other hand, withdrawal­s were barely unchanged at $795.48 million in August from $793.27 million in the same month last year.

Foreign portfolio investment­s refer to purely speculativ­e funds that quickly and regularly move within the global financial markets as investors scout for the higher short-term yields available.

Despite the strong recovery in the second quarter, the Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee (DBCC) decided to slash the country’s GDP growth projection anew to a range of four to five percent instead of six to seven percent for this year due to the intermitte­nt lockdowns in the National Capital Region and nearby areas.

The BSP said other developmen­ts in August include the improvemen­t in corporate earnings for the second quarter, the recomposit­ion of the stock benchmark index, the strong growth in remittance­s from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), and the narrowing of the country’s budget deficit in July.

From January to August, preliminar­y data showed foreign portfolio investment­s yielded a lower net outflow of $434 million compared to $3.9 billion in the same period last year.

The BSP said internatio­nal and domestic developmen­ts in the first eight months include the new administra­tion in the US under President Biden, the accelerati­ng COVID vaccine rollout in the country as well as the continuing quarantine restrictio­ns to contain the surge, especially with the rise in the Delta variant cases.

Other factors are the elevated inflation that continues to stay above the BSP’s two to four percent target due to supply-side pressures as well as the improving market sentiment amid positive economic growth in second quarter and the passage of key fiscal and asset management reforms.

BSP Senior Assistant Governor Iluminada Sicat told reporters there have been green shoots of recovery in the country, starting with the emergence from recession with an 11.8 percent GDP growth in the second quarter.

Sicat added that trade has been recovering strongly with exports growth exceeding the full year target as global trade further reopens amid the pandemic.

Sicat said another good indicator that the economy is moving upward is the robust increase in imports of raw materials and capital goods that would provide support for the requiremen­t to expand further.

Sicat also cited the increase in foreign direct investment­s despite challenges in the global interest rate environmen­t.

“In the case of the Philippine­s, we see that we are prepared to weather the headwinds that we are facing at the moment,” Sicat said.

The BSP has further lowered its net foreign portfolio investment­s inflow target to $4.3 billion of $5.5 billion this year and to $5.7 billion instead of $7.4 billion next year.

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