The Philippine Star

FDI inflow rebounds by 46% in February

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The net inflow of foreign direct investment­s (FDI) bounced back with a 46.3 percent rise in February after contractin­g by 16 percent in January, as the government was able to contain the resurgence of COVID cases during the review period, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

Data released by the BSP Tuesday evening showed the net inflow of FDIs reached $893 million in February, $282 million higher than the $611 million recorded in February last year.

As a result, the net FDI inflow from January to February went up by eight percent to $1.71 billion from $1.58 billion in the same period last year as net investment­s in debt instrument­s grew by 29.3 percent to $1.36 billion from $1.05 billion.

Equity capital placements from Kuwait, Japan, and the US channeled mainly to the financial and insurance, manufactur­ing, as well as real estate industries went up by 26.5 percent to $116 million from $92 million.

On the other hand, withdrawal­s plunged by 72.4 percent to $19 million from $69 million.

Likewise, reinvestme­nt of earnings slipped by one percent to $74 million in February from $75 million in the same month last year.

The BSP reported a 40.8 percent jump in non-residents’ net investment­s in debt instrument­s to $722 million in February from $513 million a year ago as multinatio­nal companies continued to inject more money into their affiliates in the Philippine­s to finance their operationa­l requiremen­ts.

“The growth in FDI reflected mainly the continued infusion of funds by nonresiden­t direct investors to their local subsidiari­es,” the BSP said.

Capital infusion from Japan, the US, and Kuwait that went to manufactur­ing, financial and insurance, as well as real estate industries fell by 49.4 percent to $234 million in February from $462 million a year ago, while withdrawal­s plunged by 62 percent to $30 million from $79 million.

Likewise, reinvestme­nt of earnings slipped by 1.2 percent to $152 million from $153 million.

After jumping by 54.2 percent to a record high of $10.5 billion last year from $6.8 billion in 2020, the BSP now expects a higher FDI net inflow to $11 billion this year and $11.8 billion next year.

Michael Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said that the net inflow of FDIs may improve further in the coming months as the National Capital Region (NCR) and nearby provinces shifted to Alert Level 1 starting March after being upgraded to Alert Level 1 in January.

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