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Filipino tycoon to government: Leave business alone

Filipino tycoon to government: Leave business alone

MANILA - Get out of the way. That’s how the government can help Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT) succeed in its multibillion-peso digital shift, the company’s chair, Manuel V. Pangilinan, said.

Speaking to provincial journalists whom PLDT invited to Makati City for its annual stockholders meeting on Tuesday, Pangilinan said the company’s digital shift was likely to succeed if the government would not meddle too much.
 
Some people, including people from the government, do not understand the implementation of major infrastructure needed to transform PLDT and Smart’s services into digital, and they could block the huge project, expected to be operational by 2018, because of lack of understanding of it, Pangilinan said.
 
He said people from the government could help by not dipping their hands too much into the project.
 
“The government’s share is to get out of the way,” he said.
 
 Joint venture with Globe
 
PLDT is linking up with Globe Telecom to buy Vega Telecom Inc., the telco business of San Miguel Corp. (SMC), for 69.1 billion pesos.
 
The joint venture will improve the internet services of PLDT and Globe, the two companies said in separate statements announcing the partnership last month.
 
On Friday, however, the new antitrust body Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) said the PLDT-Globe deal would not be approved until after a comprehensive review.
 
“A comprehensive review includes a determination of the relevant market, whether there will be substantial changes to the market structure, and the potential impact of the transaction on public welfare,” the PCC said in a statement.
 
‘Transitory’ guidelines
 
The regulator’s decision could spur PLDT and Globe into taking legal action, as the two telcos consider the transaction approved under the PCC’s own “transitory” guidelines.
 
Under those guidelines, deals closed after the new competition law took effect but before its implementation rules take effect are deemed approved.
 
The PLDT-Globe deal with SMC was sealed on May 30, four days before the publication of the competition law’s implementation rules.
 
PLDT and Globe said they filed the required transaction notices under the PCC guidelines so the regulator could no longer challenge the deal.
 
But the PCC said the transitory guidelines did not dilute its authority to review transactions, especially if required by national interest and public policy.
 
“The review is intended to ensure that the transaction will, in the end, result in sustained gains for the public by not restricting competition,” the PCC said.
 
New competition
 
The announcement of the PLDT-Globe deal came after President-elect Rodrigo Duterte warned the two companies in May that he would open the Philippines to foreign telcos if they failed to improve their internet services.
 
With an average household download speed of 3.64 Mbps, the Philippines ranks 176th among 202 countries surveyed last year by internet metrics provider Ookla.
 
The local download speed is eight times slower than the global average broadband download speed of 23.3 Mbps.
 
In Asia, the Philippines has the second-slowest internet speed. Among 22 Asian countries studied by Ookla, the Philippines has a download speed just a tad faster than bottom-dweller Afghanistan.
 
Despite its slowness, internet service in the Philippines is expensive, $18.19 per Mbps compared with the global average of $5.21.
 
No public funds involved
 
To improve its services, PLDT is pouring billions of pesos for the shift to digital, and Pangilinan, in his speech to provincial journalists on Tuesday, stressed that no government funds were involved in the company’s investment.
 
“Whose money is being spent? It’s the private sector’s. There is no guarantee from the government, no government fund is involved, so get out of the way, period,” Pangilinan said.
 
“If ever the huge undertaking comes out lousy, it’s the company that will suffer the impact, to the delight of its competitors, and not the government,” he said.
 
If private projects fail, he added, “the government will not rescue us.”
 
Given the stiff competition in the digital industry, Pangilinan said, “we are mindful of other guys watching us.”
 
“We have to be on our toes. Somebody is watching us, like a wife, to police [our] ethical standards,” he said.
 
Improving the digital industry’s services will take time and lots of money, he said.
 
Higher capex
 
“The journey to the digital future will be long and the climb is steep,” he said.
 
“There will be false starts, there will be speed bumps, and there will be mistakes,” he said.
 
For PLDT to achieve its metrics, he said, the company has increased its capital expenditure (capex) to 43 billion pesos this year and beyond. This is before the PLDT-Globe deal to acquire the SMC telco, which added some $100 million to PLDT’s capital expenditures, he said.
 
Pangilinan said the considerable increase in capital expenditure showed the seriousness of the massive effort being taken to transform the PLDT-Smart network into the Philippines’ most extensive and data-capable infrastructure.
 
The undertaking, he said, has also forced PLDT to adjust its financial track for the next three years, like resetting its core income guidance to 30 billion pesos following the partial sale of its shares in power distributor Manila Electric Co.
 
Pangilinan said he was optimistic that PLDT’s 30-billion pesos core income is “(the) new base from which the company will rise.”
 
(US$1= 46.44 peso)
 
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