Philippine Economy projected to grow 7.5-8% this year
MANILA, Philippines -
The Philippine economy is expected to further expand by 7.5 to eight percent this year on the back of heavy election spending, increased infrastructure projects, robust consumer and service sectors, and stronger tourism and gaming industry, economists said.
In an economic outlook forum yesterday, First Metro Investment Corp. (FMIC) said they have a very optimistic outlook for the Philippine economy for 2013.
FMIC chairman Francisco Sebastian said with a 7.1 percent in gross domestic product in the third quarter of 2012, a lower than expected inflation rate of 3.2 percent, gross international reserves (GIR) rising rapid and a debt-to-GDP ratio that has fallen below 50 percent, the Philippines is definitely now on the rise.
The countrys GDP is estimated to grow at 6.3 percent while GIR was at $84.5 billion in 2012.
The countrys international reserves come from governments foreign borrowings, remittances from OFWs and portfolio investments.
OFW remittances will remain resilient, according to FMIC, at four to five percent growth despite the Israeli-Palestine conflict, euro zone debt problem and the fiscal cliff in the US as demand for Filipino workers will be sustained, which will continue to stimulate and intensify domestic consumption.
The economy is in an unprecedented growth momentum, supported by solid fundamentals, Sebastian said.
As a result of robust economic growth, the governments pungent anti-corruption stance that has improved tax administration and with new tax revenue sources, budget deficit will remain low and may not reach P200 billion or 1.5-1.6 percent of GDP. Debt-to-GDP ratio is expected to fall further and it will be lower than Thailand, FMIC president Roberto Juanchito Dispo said.
Dispo said they also expect a revival of mining companies in order to sustain the resurgence of the manufacturing sector.
Despite the positive outlook, University of Asia and the Pacific (UA & P) economist Vic Abola, for his part, warned of the internal threats that need to be closely looked at.
Abola said growth could be hampered by the peso appreciation as this would redound to slower growth in imports/exports ratio; lower job creation and lower tax collections.
But imports, FMIC officials said, is expected to significantly jump 10 to 15 percent supported by high domestic growth as well as resurgence of the manufacturing sector.
FMIC, in its outlook, said the peso will remain in an appreciation trend and is seen to average at 41 to 42 to the dollar this year. UA&P, on the other hand, sees the peso to averaging 42 to a dollar in 2013. The peso settled at 41 average in 2012.
The power shortage especially in Mindanao, Abola said, would also dampen investment activities in the province which may cause a dent in the entire economy.
The UA&P economist also took note of the threat of possible real estate bubble.
Monetary authorities must also keep track of the inflation rates.
Inflation is anticipated to further drop to an average of 2.8 percent supported by stable food and oil prices. The National Government is spending more money in agriculture in the form of rehabilitation and construction of more irrigation systems, farm-to-market roads and storage facilities. International rice prices have also remained stable due to abundant inventories, FMIC noted.
FMIC said further softening of oil prices is expected as a result of larger surplus with the continued expansion of shale oil and gas output in the US and Russia. Oil price forecast is at $93 per barrel.
Lower interest rates, on the other hand, would affect the income performance of companies, particularly those engaged in financial transactions, FMIC assistant vice president Bede Lowell Gomez said.
Market breaks 6,000-pt mark: PSEi seen to hit 6,800 this year
MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine stock market continued its bull run yesterday, breaking the 6,000-point mark for the first time in the 86-year history of stock trading in the country as investors cheered the positive economic news here and abroad.
The Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) index rallied by 1.23 percent, or 73.46 points, to post another record close at 6,044.91, which is also the new intraday high.
Analysts are expecting share prices to continue posting robust growth this year, giving investors decent returns on the back of a strong uptick in corporate earnings and the economy. They said the PSEi will likely hit the 6,680 to 6,800-point mark this year.
All subindices were in the green, led by the mining and oil sector which rose by 1.79 percent or 358.56 points to 20,396.43 while financial firms added 1.57 percent or 24.37 points to 1,576.95.
Advancers outpaced decliners, 107 to 71, while 39 stocks remained unchanged as trading value hit P8.511 billion.
Yesterdays close was the fourth consecutive record high notched by the PSEi since trading resumed on Wednesday, Jan. 2, after pausing for the New Year holidays. The market lodged 38 all-time highs last year.
We are very proud to have reached and breached the 6,000 level which affirm that market liquidity continues to be strong and investor sentiment remain positive over good news both locally and abroad, said PSE president and CEO Hans B. Sicat.
Basically, most investors took directions from Wall Streets latest ascent last Friday, Freya B. Natividad, investment analyst at brokerage firm 2Trade-Asia.com, said in a phone interview.
Investors also factored in the benign inflation outlook for the year as well as aggressive government and private spending on top of the first half election spending, Natividad added.
Philippine inflation in December was only 2.9 percent, bringing the full year inflation figures to 3.2 percent that is at the lower end of the central banks 3-5 percent target.
We continue to get good numbers like the benign inflation data last week, said Bede Lovell S. Gomez, assistant vice-president of First Metro Investment Corp.
There is a favorable sentiment coming out from the regional and global market, he added.
Standard & Poors 500 index closed last week at a five-year high as the US evaded the fiscal cliff.
In the local market, most actively traded shares were in the green, led by Megaworld Corp. that surged by 8.82 percent while BDO Unibank Inc. inched up by 0.74 percent.
For the rest of the week, there might be re-testing of new highs, Natividad said, adding that immediate support level is at 5,930-5,960 while resistance is at 6,100.
http://www.philstar.com/business/20...t-breaks-6000-pt-mark-psei-seen-hit-6800-year