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Vietnam, Philippines slam China Military garrison plan in Philippine & Vietnam Territories


Vietnam and the Philippines have lashed out at China's moves to establish a military garrison in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea), amid escalating tensions in the disputed waters.

Hanoi filed a formal protest with Beijing against the plan outlined by China this week to station troops in Sansha in the disputed Paracel Islands, saying it "violates international law".

The Paracel Islands are one of two archipelagos in the South China Sea that are claimed by both China and Vietnam.

Manila, which is involved in a dispute over another archipelago, the Spratly Islands, also weighed into the row, summoning the Chinese ambassador to lodge a complaint against the garrison announcement.

An intensifying spat over the South China Sea - the site of key shipping routes and thought to have vast oil and gas reserves - has seen a barrage of diplomatic moves between the countries with competing territorial claims.

Call for 'strong resolve'

Philippine president Benigno Aquino has called on the nation to show strong resolve against China's strident rhetoric.

In a nationwide address, President Aquino said his government had shown 'forbearance and goodwill' in the long-running dispute with China over Scarborough Shoal.

Walden Bello of the Akbayan Party, part of the Aquino administration's coalition, told Radio Australia's Asia Pacific that the Philippine people are united behind President Aquino against Beijing, but would prefer to settle the issue without conflict.

"I don't think that the response that people want is to respond with force to China's move," he said.

"The focus of the President has been to stress a diplomatic solution to the issue, to discuss it bilaterally with China, as well as to bring it to multilateral fora, like the Association of South-east Asian Nations.

"But at the same time, there is a chance that for defensive purposes, the country must be able to have a good defence capability, without being provocative," said Mr Bello

"I don't think that there is any intention on the part of the government to challenge China militarily," he said.

McCain enters fray

Meanwhile, US Senator John McCain says that China is "unnecessarily provocative" in saying it will establish a military garrison on disputed South China Sea islands.

He has called for a multilateral solution to the dispute.

"The decision by China's Central Military Commission to deploy troops to islands in the South China Sea, which are also claimed by Vietnam, is unnecessarily provocative," Mr. McCain said in a statement.

He said other action by China including its appointment of legislators to govern such disputes "only reinforces why many Asian countries are increasingly concerned about China's expansive territorial claims, which have no basis in international law, and the possibility that China will attempt to impose those claims through intimidation and coercion."

The actions by Beijing "are disappointing and not befitting a responsible great power," he said.

Words of caution

Mr. Bello says that although there are those in the Philippines government who favor seeking help from the United States, this is not a majority view.

"There are those of us within the government that are basically saying that we have to rely first of all, on ourselves, secondly on our neighbors, and be very, very careful about the way that the United States steps into the situation," he said.

Mr. Bello says it is important to look at the actual situation rather than getting agitated over China's rhetoric.

"We must distinguish between Chinese rhetoric and what it actually does," he said.

"Especially at this point, there is a leadership transition in China and everybody within every faction within the Chinese Communist Party is trying to impart, to some extent, this kind of militant discourse and rhetoric.

"Once the leadership transition is over, then you might find more flexibility on the part of the Chinese," said Mr. Bello.

"Secondly, the actual Chinese deployments that accompany its rhetoric, these are not major warship deployments," he said.

Australia News Network 

Boracay grabs 3 major Prizes at Travel+Leisure awards in New York


Discovery Shores Boracay was voted Asia's Top Hotel . Spa at the Travel+Leisure Magazine's World's Best . Awards 2012.

  1. World's Best Overall Island
  2. Asia's Top Island
  3. Asia's Top Hotel Spa

The Philippines walked away with three major awards at the Travel+Leisure Magazine's World's Best Awards 2012 held at the newly opened Conrad Flagship Hotel in New York on July 19, 2012.

Chosen by readers of the travel publication, this year's awardees included Boracay Island, which was voted World's Best Overall Island and Asia's Top Island.

One of the top hotels in the island, Discovery Shores, Boracay, meanwhile, was voted Asia's Top Hotel Spa.

The winners were announced earlier by the magazine's editor Nilou Motamed on the US morning TV show, "Today," on July 6, 2012.

Vernie Velarde-Morales, tourism representative of the Department of Tourism (DOT) office in Chicago and concurrent officer-in-charge of the DOT office in New York, and Abigail Yap, the wife of Malay Mayor John Yap received the awards in behalf of Boracay.

Discovery Shores general manager Jose C. Parreño accepted the award for the hotel

The awarding ceremony was also attended by Deputy Consul General Theresa Dizon-de Vega, Filipino Reporter publisher Bert Pelayo, Fairways and Blue Waters Resort, Boracay chairman Wilbur Chan, Discover Suites resident manager David Pardo de Ayala, and Filipino-American entrepreneur and former President of the Aklan Association in the US Northeast Ray Rogan.

Filipino-American special projects editor of Travel+Leisure Irene Edwards was also at the event.

The awards were handed out by Travel+Leisure Magazine editor-in-chief Nancy Novogrod and the magazine's vice president and publisher Jean-Paul Kyrillos

Other major winners included Red Mountain Resort, Ivins, Utah (Top Destination Spa), Singita Grumeti Reserves, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania (Top Hotel), Bangkok (Top City), Singapore Airlines (Top International Airline), and Virgin America (Top Domestic Airline).

The World's Best Awards, now on its 17th year, is an annual tribute to the world destinations, hotels, resorts, tour operators, cruise lines, airlines, and other major tourist services which have been voted by readers of the magazine as being the best in the world.

According to Novogrod, for the 2012 awards, an unprecedented number of the magazine's readers cast their votes for their favorite travel destinations.

She also said the awards for Boracay and Discovery Shores were both well-deserved and speak volumes about the lasting positive impressions made by these Philippine destinations.

Discovery Shores also ranked No. 5 on the list of top 100 hotels in the world and No. 2 among the top resorts in Asia.

"This is an affirmation of our unwavering commitment to giving our guests unmatched service standards complemented by our dedicated staff and our world-class facilities," Parreño said in a statement.

ABS-CBN News

₱6.5 Billion Funding linking Roads to Las Vegas, Manila Philippines

Pagcor City is Asia's Las Vegas-like gaming and entertainment complex that PAGCOR proposed to offer on 8 km² of land on the reclamation area of Manila Bay, Philippines. It lies the western side of Roxas Boulevard and south of SM Corporate District (SM Mall of Asia), part of Parañaque City. Investments to the project can reach up to $15 billion US Dollar, which is scaled down from the more recent $20 billion US Dollar budget.

The four companies granted licenses to build, own and operate integrated resorts at the government's Entertainment City are pouring in up to 6.5 billion to fund an elevated road project that would link the airport to the 100-hectare Las Vegas-style casino complex.

This was disclosed by Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor) chairman and chief executive officer Cristino Naguiat Jr.

In an interview with The STAR, Naguiat said the amount would be split among the four investor-groups but to be coursed through Pagcor as the proponent of the Entertainment City.

"Best chance is by next week, we (Pagcor) and the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) will sign an agreement for the (road project)," Naguiat said.

DPWH is the proponent of the 15.86-billion Ninoy Aquino International Airport Expressway Project, which is among the government's infrastructure projects lined up under its Public-Private Partnership (PPP) program.

Naguiat said that under the agreement to be signed with the DPWH, Pagcor, through the four licensees of Entertainment City, would bankroll part of the cost of building the road.

The toll operator would then pay Pagcor after 10 years.

"It will be a soft loan to be paid after 10 years with almost no interest," Naguiat said.

The four licensees are: 

  • Andrew Tan's Alliance Global 
  • Enrique Razon's Bloomberry Resorts 
  • Japanese tycoon Kazuo Okada 
  • Taipan Henry Sy's Belle Corporation.

According to data from the DPWH, the NAIA Expressway project involves the maintenance and improvement of the existing NAIA Expressway Phase I road and the construction of Phase 2 of the NAIA Expressway, which is expected to decongest traffic between the different airport terminals.

"The alignment for Phase 2 involves the construction of a 4.83-kilometer road from the NAIA Expressway Phase 1 following the existing road alignment over Sales Avenue, Andrews Avenue, Domestic Road and NAIA Road, and ends with entry andexit ramps at the Roxas Boulevard and Manila Cavite Toll Expressway, the Diosdado Macapagal Boulevard and Pagcor's Entertainment City," the government's PPP Center said in a separate statement.

The total length of the NAIA Express way is 9.37 kilometers and is expected to ease traffic going to and from the Manila International Airport at the NAIA complex.

Furthermore, it will also provide direct links to passenger terminals 1 and 2, including the International Cargo Terminal.

PhilSTAR

A Graph of the Laziest Countries in the World – Philippines Not..?..?


To implement effective non-communicable disease prevention programs, policy makers need data for physical activity levels and trends.

In this report, we describe physical activity levels worldwide with data

  • For adults (15 years or older) from 122 countries
  • For adolescents (13—15-years-old) from 105 countries.

Worldwide, 31·1% (95% CI 30·9—31·2) of adults are physically inactive, with proportions ranging from 17·0% (16·8—17·2) in Southeast Asia (ASEAN) to about 43% in the Americas and the eastern Mediterranean. Inactivity rises with age, is higher in women than in men, and is increased in high-income countries.

The proportion of 13—15-year-olds doing fewer than 60 min of physical activity of moderate to vigorous intensity per day is 80·3% (80·1—80·5); boys are more active than are girls.

Continued improvement in monitoring of physical activity would help to guide development of policies and programs to increase activity levels and to reduce the burden of non-communicable diseases.

They found that 31% of adults do not get enough physical activity—defined as 30 minutes of moderate exercise five days a week, or 20 minutes of vigorous exercise three days a week, or some combination of the two.

Women tend to get less exercise—34% are inactive, compared with 28% of men—but there are exceptions and regional variations, as the maps below show.

Women in Russia, Croatia, Luxembourg, Greece and Iraq (to name a few) move more than their male counterparts. Malta wins the race for the most slothful nation, with 72% of adults getting too little exercise. Swaziland and Saudi Arabia slouch close behind, with 69%.

In Bangladesh, by contrast, just 5% of adults fail to get enough exercise. Surprisingly, America does not live up to its sluggish reputation. Six in ten Americans are sufficiently active, compared with less than four in ten Britons. These figures are worrying

From country-to-country, inactivity rises with age, is higher in women than in men, and rises in higher-income countries, according to a new study on idleness in "The Lancet". Here's a map of the world's sloth, via "The Economist". Countries in darker colors had greater recorded inactivity or laziness, defined as failing to reach 30 minutes of moderate activity a day.

Inactivity might rise with income, but some of the world's most inactive groups are women in countries with barriers to female employment, such as Libya and Saudi Arabia. Among men, Great Britain and Japan are reportedly among the most slothful or the laziest countries in the world, but Europe collectively reported walking more than any other group in the study.

The survey found a surprising degree of bustle in the typical American's life America, (the alleged king of couch potatoes?). Six in ten Americans were deemed "active," compared with fewer than five in ten Brazilian men, four in ten Japanese, and three in ten Argentineans. We're still a far way from Benin, Bangladesh, Mozambique, and Mongolia, where more than 90 percent of men got at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise five days a week.

Other factors that could affect the activity of a person include the following;

  • Climate – People will minimize its activity if the weather is too hot like in the African and Middle Eastern Countries. For the tropical climate like the Philippines and other ASEAN countries, higher activity recorded during early morning and the evening and activities would become lesser during noon times.
  • Culture – Middle Eastern Women who are restricted in their culture to find jobs would also affects the daily activity.
  • Financial Activities – Inactivity might rise with income. The more a person is earning in his business the more he would lost its time to do other jobs than just making business and sitting in their office all the time.

France, Russians, Asians students lured Philippine' English language with white sandy beaches

French student Laura Samzun attends a one-on-one English class at Cebu Pacific International Language school in Cebu city in central Philippines July 6, 2012. Photo by Erik De Castro - Reuters

'It's less expensive to go to the Philippines, to come back (to) France, and to pay school than to stay in France (for that time),' French student says

CEBU, Philippines — In the Philippines, English language courses come with poolside classrooms, field trips to the beach, and instructors doubling as tour guides.

English is widely spoken in the former American colony, and language proficiency schools have mushroomed across the country, catering to an expanding market of Asian and European students looking to combine English learning with tropical tourism.

French student Laura Samzun will soon be taking a test to enter a public college in the United Kingdom, and is under pressure to perfect her English. She chose to take classes in the Philippines due to lower costs.

"It's less expensive to go to the Philippines, to come back (to) France, and to pay school than to stay in France (for that time)," Samzun said.

Fresh from a backpacking trip in Indonesia, she kick-started her courses in June at the Cebu Pacific International Language School on the sunny central island of Cebu.

"I really wanted to see Asia, to travel. So I can travel and study (at) the same time. It's a good thing," the 22-year-old Toulouse native said.

There are some 500 schools offering language proficiency programs around the country, and one-fifth are in Cebu. The island's proximity to white sand beaches and its laid-back provincial lifestyle are a big draw for foreign students, who mostly come from big industrial cities.

The schools boast high quality education, with small student-teacher ratios that allow for more focused instruction.

In four months of English proficiency courses, Chinese nurse Flora Wang has progressed from near-zero comprehension to carrying a conversation with ease.

"Actually really getting better. When I came here, I can't speak and understand anything. But during the four months, I improved a lot," said the 25-year old Beijing native who plans to move to the U.S. to study health care.

Wang recently finished her course at Cebu Pacific International Language School (CPILS), one of the pioneers of English language education in the Philippines.

CPILS accommodates around 450 students per course period, mostly from South Korea. The student population has ballooned from 60 students when the school opened 11 years ago, and their pool has expanded to include enrollees from Japan, China, Taiwan, and European countries like France and Russia.

Park Yoon Jae, a university student from Seoul, wants to land a job back home in a multi-national company, where English is a primary requirement.

"Especially these days, (in) Korea, we have to speak English very well. Because almost all company want very high level English skills," Park said.

The intensive English course work in CPILS runs an average of four months, in which students can take up to seven hours of lessons each day. A one-month course can cost around $1,000 a month, including accommodation and food.

Value-for-money

In Cebu, campuses are equipped with a pool and a fitness gym, with some offering yoga classes and dance workshops. The beach is just a half-hour ride from the city, and schools arrange island-hopping trips or diving lessons on weekends.

The success of English-proficiency schools around the country has prompted the Philippines' tourism department to launch the English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) Tour Program, tapping key markets like South Korea, Japan, and Russia where the demand for English-learning is high.

South Korean students of Cebu Pacific International Language school prepare to snorkel during a beach outing in Cebu city in central Philippines July 7, 2012.. Photo by Erik De Castro - Reuters

"This is where the Philippines can be very competitive. We have World Heritage sites, white sand beaches, you have spas, you have dining and shopping," Benito Bengzon, assistant secretary for international tourism promotions, told Reuters.

The Philippines aims to hit 4.5 million international tourist arrivals this year, a fraction compared to neighboring Thailand or Malaysia. But English learning-tourism is unique to the Philippines, and Bengzon said the sector can grow by 10 to 15 percent among Asians, and up to 25 percent among Europeans.

The pitch is that the Philippines is a good alternative to Australia, the United States or the United Kingdom because it is closer to Asian countries and also because the whole experience, from education to extra-curriculars, is value-for-money.

"The message here, apart from the tourism component is that it shows to the world our proficiency in English, our competitive advantage, and of course you can already mix it with the fun and enjoyable and memorable part of it," Bengzon said.

The famed Filipino hospitality, inside and outside the school, is another plus for the students.

"There are 200 or 300 teachers. So I have many chances to go out with them. And while I'm enjoying my time, I can study English with them at the same time," said Yu Kitaoka from Japan.

MSNBC.com

Philippines among hottest emerging markets in the World

The Philippine stock market is no longer the playground for those hunting for bargains.

Yet there is still a lot of money flowing in, driving stock prices to unprecedented heights as the country—with its much-improved economic fundamentals and resilient corporate sector—has turned into a sort of a "safe haven" for large funds diversifying out of Europe. With record-low interest rates, cash-awash local investors are also turning more to equities in search of better yield.

In the first half of the year, the main-share Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) index recorded new all-time highs 19 times, rising a total of 20 percent to finish at 5,246.41 by the end of June. On July 4, the index breached 5,400 in intra-day trade.

Phillip Hagedorn, ATR KimEng Asset Management director for investments, said the big picture was that local interest rates would remain low and might go even lower when the government gets a much-coveted investment-grade rating. As such, he said investors have no choice but to channel more funds to equities even if valuations have crept higher than historical levels. Also, he said the market was willing to pay a premium for high-quality corporations.

Hagedorn said that in the second half of the year, it was possible for the main index to gain another 12 percent to hit the 6,000 mark. However, he said the 5,000 and 5,100 support levels would likely be tested. "I don't expect a breakout or search for a new high sometime in the early to mid-third quarter," he said. "Second-quarter earnings and GDP [gross domestic product] growth will confirm whether we make that move or not."

"At current levels, the market is not cheap," said Erico Claudio, strategist at Pentacapital Investment. "Many investors are already sort of into the market and they are just hoping to see more positive news to come out to sustain this."

But Claudio sees more room for the market to climb in the next two years. In trying to gauge market psychology, which includes "irrational expectations," he said the next target could be around 5,800.

Based on a Bloomberg consensus as of last week, the market was trading at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 15.8x. Historically, investors in the local stock market paid about 15 times the amount of money a company made in a given year. Before the Asian crisis of 1997, the local market's P/E ratio hit a high of 20x.

Hagedorn said the challenge with P/E ratios was that many analysts were "way off the mark" compared to what Philippine companies were delivering. Analysts tended to be conservative, which meant there was room for the P/E multiples to go down, if earnings forecasts rise.

"Is it fair to compare the last 10 years' average versus what the future may hold for the country considering that fundamentally, we're in a different place altogether? Maybe there's an argument to say that we deserve a bit of a premium compared to our historical average," Hagedorn said.

But the equity fund manager said it might still require two or three more quarters of earnings data to confirm that the Philippines has been upgraded not just in terms of sovereign credit but in terms of stock market prospects.

Claudio said one important theme arising from the current environment was that investors might look at companies with above-average revenue growth compared to their peers. However, he said revenues were more difficult to forecast than bottom line. "That's the critical part—if these revenues don't continue to grow, at least in the high teens, the market may be disappointed because what investors really want to see is topline growth," he said.

Moving forward, Claudio said: "This market will be driven by the weight of money and expectation of expanding revenues."

Michael Ferrer, president of ATR KimEng Asset Management, said the Philippine asset management industry was growing as savings rise on the back of increasing wealth. Ferrer, who is also president of the Fund Managers Association of the Philippines (FMAP), said that across the member-organizations of FMAP, his estimate was that less than 20 percent of assets under management were invested in equities. As the trust industry has about P4 trillion in assets under management, he said that even just a 1-percent reallocation of funds to equities would mean P40 billion of inflows to the local stock market from domestic institutions.

"We really have to allocate more to growth assets if you're going to hope even for high single-digit returns," Ferrer said, noting that desired returns would not be met if institutional investors would only keep most of their assets in bonds or special deposit accounts (SDAs) with the central bank.

"The other good thing is that the market distinguishes now between the good corporations and the pretenders, whereas in 2008-2009, everything was just moving in the same direction," Ferrer said.

Foreign portfolio inflows into the stock market are also keeping local stocks buoyant.

Based on PSE data, net foreign buying in the local stock market surged 382.3 percent year on year to 71.12 billion. This was nearly five times bigger than the 14.75-billion level in the same period last year.

"Fund managers, while they were waiting for some positive developments or getting out of the so-called economic quagmire in EU, they'd like to put some bets in some markets like ours, to more or less have an idea of what the Philippine market is all about," Claudio said. "But because they are so huge, it affects us significantly despite the rather poor performances of other markets."

Whether or not the US Dow Jones industrial index goes up or down sharply, for instance, Claudio said "the attention of foreign fund markers are drawn back to their major markets."

But for now, the Philippines is deemed one of the hottest emerging markets in the region, having outperformed other Asian bourses since the start of the year. At the same time, it also reaps the benefits of Southeast Asia as a whole new being on the radar screen of global investors.

"I think the theme that we're thinking about for the next two or three or four quarters is that the Philippines stands out as a safe haven with what we're seeing globally," Melvyn Boey, Southeast Asian equity strategist at BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research said in a recent briefing in Manila.

There is also an increasing expectation on Wall Street that the US Federal Reserve will embark on a third round of quantitative easing—a strategy of buying back bonds to infuse additional liquidity into the system—by the second half of this year. "Under that scenario, Southeast Asian assets will appreciate, especially commodities," Boey said. "ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) is a beneficiary, especially those who are commodity exporters, a bit less so in Philippines but more for the likes of Thailand and Malaysia that are more reliant on commodities."

Given the strong balance sheet of ASEAN governments, Boey said they have more scope to use monetary and fiscal stimulus to counter a global slowdown. In particular, he said the Philippines was a play on the "structural growth story."

"It is one of the markets that we like for Southeast Asia and as a result of that, we think that in terms the sectors that we like to play would be some of the domestic sector, infrastructure, property as well as indirectly the banks," Boey said.

In the first six months, cyclical stocks banking and property led the PSEi's rise even as all indices were on the green.

The financials index emerged as the best performer in the first half after surging 34.6 percent to 1,304.42. The financial index was likewise the best performer in terms of bottom line based on first-quarter earnings resulted culled by the PSE.

The next-best performer was the property index, which jumped 30.1 percent to finish at 1,927.48. The holding firms index also rose 28.1 percent to 4,488.80. The industrial index rallied 10.8 percent to finish at 7,839.57; The services index also climbed 8.8 percent to 1,759.02, and the mining and oil index crept higher by 4.8 percent to 24,629.48.

"Just like our main index, investor confidence in Philippines Inc. is at an all-time high. What's remarkable is that we have been able to achieve unprecedented growth even in the midst of ongoing uncertainties in the Western hemisphere and a cooling Chinese economy. This is a testament to the effectiveness of the reforms that the country has undertaken, which further contributed to the stable macroeconomic environment," PSE president Hans Sicat said.

The combined market capitalization of listed issues in the PSE during the January-to-June period stood at 10.05 trillion, up 12.8 percent from the level in the same period last year. Total value turnover for the first half reached 947.73 billion, or 43.2 percent higher than the 661.81 billion in the previous year. Average daily value turnover stood at 7.64 billion, an increase of 45.5 percent year on year.

"The market's run in the first half has been nothing short of historic, and there's a good chance that we will be able to extend this forward momentum as we anticipate better first-half earnings from our listed firms. The latest sovereign credit-rating upgrade also provides additional support for future growth so overall, I think we are in a terrific position to keep on improving," Sicat said.

Inquirer Business News 

The fuel for the Philippines as the Shining pearl to global investors

Taking a look of the millions of Filipino Professionals who are not hesitant to accept jobs lower from their level of educational attainment, or other Filipinos who landed the match job of their profession makes the Philippines as a funnel from hard working people overseas to build the Economy. They are the legion of  Philippine Economy Army; the Overseas Filipino Workers (OFW)

Eileen Alcala, cashier in the Upper Crust sandwich shop in Singapore, is a member of the legion of Philippine Economy Army and one reason the Philippines is suddenly looking like a rare investment bright spot after years as one of Asia's persistent laggards.

Put off by tough competition for jobs in Manila, the 24-year-old graduate in hotel and restaurant management left the Philippine capital for Singapore two months ago and now sends over half her monthly pay – about S$500 ($394) – back home.

Taking a look at a professional who landed a job abroad match to his educational discipline; Denis Somoso, an International Taxation Specialist and Accountant of a World Leading Design and Engineering & Construction Firm in South Korea, 32 year old bachelor graduate of Bachelor of Science in Accountancy in MTIM Iligan City left the Philippines for South Korea, given a good benefits from the company rented studio type apartment, free transportation,  food and cost of living allowance,  two and a half year ago and for the past 2 years sending 95% of his monthly pay – about Krw 2,550,000 ($ 2,200.00 USD) – back home.

Numbers like these highlight steady growth in remittances from the Philippine diaspora – and help explain why the, Standard & Poor's became the latest rating agency to upgrade the Philippines, to BB+. That is the country's highest grade for nine years and one notch below investment grade.

The move reflected the Philippines' strengthening external position, with OFW remittances and an expanding service export sector continuing to drive current account surpluses", S&P said.

Foreign reserves of $76 Billion as of May exceed the country's external debt of $63 Billion. Inflation is below 3.5 per cent and gross domestic product growth, driven by robust electronic exports, is forecast by the government at 5-6 per cent this year.

At a time when many economies are struggling, the Philippines is among only 10 sovereigns in the world with positive outlooks, notes Barclays.

Investors are taking note. Philippine share prices are up a quarter since the start of the year, making Manila the world's fourth-best performing equities market on expectations that the country will win investment-grade credit status by next year.

Indeed, since January 2012 foreign investors have pumped $1.8 Billion into the market, according to Bloomberg, a 265 per cent increase on the same month a year ago.

A "public-private partnership program" (PPP) launched six months ago to overcome infrastructure bottlenecks has not only attracted foreign interest but is boosting the shares of companies seen likely to benefit from government contracts, such as Ayala and Metro Pacific Investment.

"The government is much focused on accelerating the PPP program," said Prakriti Sofat, regional economist at Barclays in Singapore.

Laggards on the exchange have been companies with broader exposure to the economy, such as Philippine Airlines and Manila Electric. Still, constituents in the stock market index are trading on an average price/earnings multiple of 18 times. That compares with 20 times for the Jakarta index and 15.6 times for the Kuala Lumpur index.

The yield on the country's benchmark 10-year government bond, meanwhile, is at 5.8 per cent, down from 6.5 per cent this time a year ago. That compares with a yield on comparable Indonesian debt of 6.1 per cent, against 7.3 per cent a year ago.

Hans Sicat, chief executive of the Philippine Stock Exchange, predicts funds raised through company listings and secondary activity will hit 107 Billion Pesos ($2.6 Billion US Dollars) this year.

Yet investors may be glossing over the risk that the two-year-old administration of President Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino may take time to deliver.

"Investors are so bullish, they are forgiving many of the country's structural sins," says Luz Lorenzo, economist at Maybank ATR Kim Eng group.

The Aquino administration's gains in lowering the budget deficit were achieved mainly through lower government spending, which fell as a proportion of GDP to 16 per cent last year, from 17.7 per cent in 2009.

A clampdown on tax evasion has resulted in the filing of scores of complaints against suspected tax evaders. Yet, actual tax collection as a proportion of GDP has barely moved, up from 12.1 per cent in 2010 to 12.3 per cent last year, according to the central bank.

The government's tax take is being eroded by a series of exemptions approved by the former president but Mr. Aquino does get credit for a planned new tax on cigarettes and liquor – so-called "sin taxes". Rogier van den Brink, a World Bank economist, says: "They are closing the net on tax collection."

Poor implementation has plagued previous reform efforts, and analysts warn this is still an issue. "I remind [clients] how it went with power privatization. The law was passed in 2001 but the first assets were sold in 2004, and it was only in 2007 that the process really took off," Ms Lorenzo said.

Still, investing has become easier after exchange trading hours were extended in January from a previous lunchtime close to 3.30pm.

A rule forcing listed companies to have a minimum 10 per cent float by the end of this year has prompted a flurry of secondary market activity. That has spurred foreign participation, which accounts for 38 per cent of the market, says Mr. Sicat. "What we're seeing is a very strong local bid, which is helping improve confidence for anyone who is coming in from the outside."

Top US military executive now in Philippines over maritime, security issues

Navy Adm. Samuel J. Locklear III, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, arrives in the Philippines to meet with senior military officials in Manila, Sunday. The United States and the Philippines share a Mutual Defense Treaty, and the two nations work closely together through bi-lateral and multi-lateral training to enhance interoperability. U.S. NAVY PHOTO

The senior United States commander in the Pacific region is in the Philippines and is scheduled to meet with President Benigno S. Aquino and other top defense officials to discuss maritime and security issues.

Navy Admiral Samuel J. Locklear III, commander of US Pacific Command, arrived Sunday (July 15, 2012) "to reaffirm the strength of the U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty and to explore how the US can support efforts to boost Philippine military capacity," the US Department of Defense said in a statement.

The pact between the US and the Philippines says that both countries will support each other when attacked by an external party.

"Now, as the security environment changes, many countries recognize that there has got to be more maritime domain awareness [and] more understanding of what is happening around them rather than [just] what is happening internally," Locklear said.

"So what we are looking for is to try to provide [the Philippines] assistance that builds the interoperability of our defense forces over time," he said.

"This is a reaffirmation that the Mutual Defense Treaty is still in place and still strong. And it is an opportunity for us to find places and missions were we can partner and exercise together in a way that will increase our overall security cooperation and increase security in this critical part of the Asia-Pacific."

Locklear's visit came amid tense maritime dispute among Asian countries in the South China Sea (West Philippine Sea).

He made it clear in an earlier statement, however that the United States does not take sides in territorial disputes and encourages peaceful resolution through international legal processes.

Unresolved "excessive maritime claims that cause friction among neighbors," he said, could lead to "miscalculation" that threatens stability.

Locklear, who will also meet with Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and military chief General Jessie Dellosa, said he will "seek ways to expand the U.S.-Philippine military-to-military relationship in ways that promote regional stability and security."

"On the military side, a productive alliance requires us to be able to work together, to have connectivity with each other, to be able to share information, and to be able to bring our military systems together in a meaningful way across all aspects of military power – whether it's humanitarian assistance and disaster relief or a contingency or otherwise," he said.

"I'm looking forward to giving the message to the Filipino military and to the leaders there that the United States is a very reliable ally," he said. "We want the Filipinos to be a reliable ally to us as well."

General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also visited the country in June.

Inquirer Global Nation 

Goldfield operator blows the budget Up $220 Million USD on Philippines Mining project

The Didipio FTAA-001 straddles a mountainous region between the provinces of Nueva Vizcaya and Quirino in Northern Luzon ~270km north of Manila. Approximately 30 gold-copper prospects are known within the FTAA which have had varying levels of exploration over past years.

 

Employment

The company abides by the rules and regulations of the Labour Code as well as those set by Government Regulatory Agencies in the Philippines. Preference is given to local community members for employment opportunities at the project.

Australian and New Zealand Macraes goldfield operator OceanaGold said its Didipio gold and copper project in the Northern Luzon of the Philippines is now estimated to cost US$220 million, US$35 million more than the company announced in June 2011.

OceanaGold also said it has credit approvals from a group of large multi-national banks for a three-year US$220 credit facility, subject to final documentation.

The main reasons for the Didipio cost blow-out are "associated with increases in engineering design and procurement services, the Tailings Storage Facility (TSF) and infrastructure construction and site support costs," OceanaGold said.

"Working capital requirements on start-up are expected to be an additional US$27 million."

At June 30, the company had spent US$161 million on the project with a further US$24 million committed in contracts. Cash on hand was US$73 million.

"The Didipio project is going extremely well. We remain on track to achieve our goal set out in June last year to commence commissioning," in the December quarter 2012, said managing director Mick Wilkes.

"The increased capital cost for the project is consistent with industry cost pressures today, particularly for engineering design services," Wilkes said.

"We also made the very deliberate decision to engage with high-quality contractors in the Philippines which cost more money to ensure the project was built to a high standard and on time."

In June last year, Wilkes said Didipio had a "very robust" capital payback of one to two years, based on the then estimated capital costs of US$185 million.

Now Wilkes said construction at the Didipio project is more than 70% complete and is fully financed.

"Recruitment for Didipio permanent operations team and operations readiness plans are well advanced" with about 60% of the required positions already filled, it said.

Gold bars on display - Source: Reuters

Key outstanding items are the delivery of seven power generators and electrical switch rooms but all power equipment should be at the site over the next four to six weeks.

"Mining of the Didipio orebody has commenced on schedule this month in readiness for commissioning in the fourth quarter and to build ore stockpiles for production in 2013."

The credit facility will provide additional liquidity if necessary to repay the A$57.8 million of OceanaGold's convertible bonds maturing December 2012, repay the A$110 million of convertible bonds maturing December 2013 and provide US$50 million in working capital, Wilkes said.

Securing the facility is "a vote of confidence in OceanaGold and allows us to focus on successfully commissioning Didipio and generating strong cash flows from our operations in 2013," he said.

In June 2011, Wilkes said the December 2012 bonds would be repaid from cash flow.

OceanaGold shares, which are dual-listed on both the ASX and NZX, are up 3 cents at $2.40. While that's up from the year-low at $2.18 in May, the shares have been trending down from $5.20 in December 2010.

TVNZ News

WARNING! Japan, USA, China: South China Sea WAR - Ready to Explode

A U.S. Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet launches from the aircraft carrier USS George Washington during routine operations in the South China Sea last week. U.S. Navy photo / Lt. Cmdr. Denver Applehans

The South China Sea: From Bad to Worse

TOKYO – Territorial disputes in the South China Sea are about to get a whole lot worse — and at the worst possible time.

Whether the U.S. can avoid being dragged into a shooting match will depend on how far Beijing and its unruly mix of military, maritime and natural resources agencies choose to push their claims. And whether China's increasingly frustrated neighbors decide to push back.

Last week's regional security talks in Cambodia were a step in the wrong direction. China refused to look at a written code of conduct being drafted to govern navigation, resources and related issues in the South China Sea, one of the world's most important waterways. It also blocked discussion – let alone resolution — of the conflicting territorial claims in the region.

China claims exclusive rights to virtually all of the South China Sea, including its vast reserves of oil, gas and ocean resources; four other countries and Taiwan claim large parts of the region, as well. The disputes have led to increasingly tense standoffs between China and its neighbors.

The weeklong security talks, hosted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), dissolved amid charges of Chinese bullying, without even a customary closing statement. China made its point, but it may be a short-lived victory, says Mark Valencia, a Hawaii-based maritime policy analyst and senior associate at the Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability in San Francisco.

"What China is saying is, 'We have this historic claim to the South China Sea and we own everything within it – islands, reefs, submerged areas, resources, you name it. That's the way it is, and we're not even going to talk to you about it.' But they've painted themselves into a corner now, and that's very dangerous for everybody," says Valencia.

So far, the U.S. has stayed out of the territorial disputes. That's wise. The U.S. cannot referee the welter of legal, historical and emotional arguments that accompany each dispute (all or parts of the Spratly Islands, for example, are claimed not only by China, but also by Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and the Philippines, with evidence and documentation of varying degrees of credibility and relevance, dating back hundreds of years in some cases).

The primary U.S. interest in the region is in ensuring freedom of navigation. Half the world's commercial shipping passes through the South China Sea — $5 trillion a year — and U.S. warships regularly transit the region on their way to and from the Persian Gulf, Southwest Asia and the Indian Ocean.

China has promised not to interfere with any ships passing through region. But China has also signaled that it may require prior notice, and that military exercises and surveillance activities by foreign ships and planes may not be permissible. Those are hot-button issues for the U.S., which insists that under international law, nations cannot restrict activity other than economic development within most of their their 200-mile limits – assuming that those claims are internationally recognized to begin with.

An early test could be shaping up with Vietnam. In June, China issued an invitation for foreign companies to explore for oil in a region where Vietnam has already awarded exclusive contracts to U.S., Russian and Indian oil firms. The region is within Vietnam's standard 200-mile exclusive economic zone. China's move is likely in retaliation for a law enacted by Vietnam's parliament earlier in the month that asserts sovereignty over the Paracel and Spratly islands, which of course, China says it owns.

There's little love lost between the two countries, which fought a short but bloody border war in 1979. Last year, a Chinese fishing ship and government fishery patrol boats cut the cables of a Vietnamese exploration vessel in an area claimed by both countries.

Valencia says he won't be surprised if the latest dispute results in bloodshed.

"I don't think it will be war, per se. But Vietnam has shown that it's not afraid of China, so I can see them sending out their navy, and I can see China shooting back at them," says Valencia.

A far more dangerous confrontation could be shaping up outside the South China Sea, with an even older and better-armed rival.

On the same day that Japan's foreign minister was due to meet with his Chinese counterpart at the ASEAN security talks last week, three Chinese maritime patrol ships entered Japanese waters near the disputed Senkaku Islands.

The two governments have been sparring over the islands – which China calls Diaoyu – since 2010, when Japan seized a Chinese fishing vessel that it says rammed a Japanese patrol ship in territorial waters near the islands; the ship and crew were released only after intense economic and political pressure from China.

Japan Foreign Minister Koichiro Genba initially said he wasn't sure whether the intrusion last week "just happened, or was timed to coincide with the bilateral meeting." But all doubt seemed to disappear when another Chinese patrol boat entered Japanese waters the very next day. Tokyo summoned the Chinese ambassador and Genba complained again to Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, who responded by repeating China's claim to the islands, located in the East China Sea near Taiwan,  were "inherently" Chinese.

Although Tokyo has been publicly trying to tamp down the dispute, it's clear that patience is wearing thin.

Tetsuo Kotani, a maritime security specialist with the Japan Institute of International Affairs, a leading Tokyo think tank, said at a forum in Washington DC in late June that it is time for Japan's naval forces to begin actively tracking Chinese submarines in the South China Sea, and to be prepared to intervene militarily.

China's Warship intruded July 11, 2012 and stranded to Half Moon Shoal of the Philippines near the tip of Palawan Island's northern part of Balabac island.

"If an armed conflict results between the South China Sea claimants – for example, China and the Philippines, or China and Vietnam – we have to protect our ships in the South China Sea. And what I am proposing to the government is that if anything happens in the South China Sea, we have to send our self-defense forces to the vicinity of the conflict area to protect Japanese ships," said Kotani, who is not affiliated with the government but who is believed to reflect government views.

Japan's Maritime Self-Defense Force is designed largely for anti-submarines and anti-mine warfare and generally operates in home waters and the Western Pacific. Venturing into the South China Sea could be seen as a provocative move not only by China, but by some of the regions smaller powers, which still view Japan with suspicion. Japan's constitution currently forbids military action except in self-defense.

The South China Sea already is heavily militarized and is certain to become more so as the "re-balancing" of U.S. forces in the Asia-Pacific gains traction. The U.S. Seventh Fleet, based in Yokosuka, Japan, routinely operates there. Three U.S. littoral combat ships are scheduled to begin operating from Singapore next spring.  Japan is supplying the Philippines with 10 patrol boats. China has completed construction of a major naval base at Yalong, on the southernmost tip of Hainan Island, which can hold nuclear-powered ballistic missile and attack submarines and large surface warships, including aircraft carriers.

Although the U.S. does not have a security treaty with Vietnam, it does with mutual defense pacts with other nations that have disputes with China. U.S. officials said earlier this month that a Chinese attack directed at the Senkaku Islands would fall under the U.S.-Japan Mutual Security Treaty, which requires the U.S. to come to the aid of Japan. The U.S. has a similar pact with the Philippines, which was involved in a months-long standoff with China earlier this year as the Scarborough Shoal, a collection reefs in the South China Sea.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration said in a 2008 report that the South China Sea has potential oil reserves as high as 213 billion barrels, larger than then Saudi Arabia.

In addition to the People's Liberation Army Navy, at least four other government agencies or ministries operate patrol craft or have a degree of authority over maritime-related issues. At a forum hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, in Washington DC, one Chinese participant stated that even if a procedure were developed to resolve the territorial disputes, it is not clear which agency within the Chinese government would have the authority to settle the issue.

And that's how you go from bad to worse.

South Korea could be like a roasted piggy with Japan and China; Philippines must PRAY 24/7 for Peace.

Written by KIRK SPITZER of Time

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