Oct 032013
 

Overseas Filipinos hauling “balikbayan” boxes gather in an airport preparing to fly back to the Philippines. Jeff Youngstrom

MANILA, Philippines – A Hong Kong-based finance publication attributed the latest investment grade rating from Moody’s Investor’s Service to overseas Filipino workers (OFW) remittances more than to government.

Finance Asia business editor Nick Ferguson said in a report Thursday that while Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima gives credit to “sound fiscal and monetary policy” under President Benigno Aquino III, it is the 15 million OFWs who contributed to the upgrade.

OFWs remitted $12.627 billion so far in 2013–a 5.8 percent leap from the same period in 2012.

Related: OFW remittances up 6.6% in July

“This windfall means that remittances are more than enough to service the government’s $125 billion national debt, given ultra-low interest rates, which has allowed the government to avoid addressing much-needed tax reform,” Ferguson writes.

Bulk of the remittances were from Filipinos working in the US, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Canada and Japan.

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On Thursday, Moody’s gave the country a Baa3 credit rating, citing that the country’s robust economic performance warranted the upgrade.

Related: Moody’s gives Phl 3rd major investment grade rating

The firm also said the sovereign rating was due to “improved fiscal management” leading to increases in infrastructure and social spending.

It also suggested that the Philippines improves in revenue generation at par with other investment-grade countries.

Oct 032013
 
Stocks end higher despite of caution

MANILA, Philippines (Xinhua) – The stock market extended its rally today even after the fiscal drama in the United States has left many guessing of local investors on the US Federal Reserve’s next move. The bellwether Philippine stock market gained 0.4 percent or 25. 39 points to 6,387.65, while the broader all-share index rose by 0. 14 percent or 5.52 points to 3,842.32. Trading volume reached 921 million shares worth P6.11 billion ($141.74 million) with 72 stocks declining, 62 advancing, and 52 were unchanged. Of the six counters, only the financials and the industrial sectors bucked the trend. “Share prices appeared to poised to take a breather and snapped a two-session run as the continuing fiscal drama in the US left investors clueless,” analyst Justino Calaycay of Accord Capital Equities Corp. said in his daily stock market comment. The latest investment rate upgrade from Moody’s Investor Service nevertheless helped boost investors confidence, especially after the index tumbled by as much as 60 points during the session before clawing back to its closing level. Business ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1 Calaycay said the three-day rally of the local equities suggest that investors might have shifted gear and are now bullish. “Prudence is still better. There are still many headwinds and obstacles along the way,” he said. Stocks in the 30-company index closed mixed. Among those picked up were Alliance Global Group, Inc., Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co., and heavyweight Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co.