Sunday, June 28, 2009

Taking caution



It's better safe this way, than be caught flat-footed
as the infection threatens to break out further.
This sign in Davao City turns up only this week as the
government's largest hospital outside the national capital
in Metro Manila disclosed recently it admitted and treated 3
confirmed AH1N1 cases.

Health authorities assured however, that the AH1N1 is
like the common flu except that this time, it is still
a largely new ailment, combining the flu strains:
swine, fowl and human.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Poor borrowers have accessed P1 B from microfinancing

DAVAO CITY – Some P1 billion in small loans have been extended so far by various microfinancing outlets in Mindanao in the last four years, but the current global crisis has stymied aggressiveness from successful borrowers.

Jeffrey Ordonez, executive director of the Mindanao Microfinance Council (MMC), said that the money represented the aggregate figure for the borrowers whose number already reached 600,000 across Mindanao.

“The money has been extended by rural banks, cooperatives and even nongovernment organizations “which have institutionalized their social development objective,” he told the regular Monday press conference of the Davao Press Club.

Microfinance involved borrowings of not more than P150,000 per borrower but Ordonez said that the average borrowing would only be between P10,000 and P25,000.

“Our borrowers are the poorest. They are market vendors, or those who engage in small selling and trading,” he said.

He said that micro-borrowers appeared to have managed well their loans “that repayment is very high among them, from 95 percent to 100 percent”.

The global financial turmoil has also sent many of their borrowers in uncertainty on whether or not to expand their operations, “which we have encouraged them”.

He said that the hesitance of existing and probable borrowers also forced the MMC to stretch its target of reaching out to one million borrowers, from 2010 to 2013.

“This year, we have to make adjustments in our projects,” he said, “offering small finance projects and encouraging those successful borrowers to pursue their plans of expanding their operations.”

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Wednesday, June 3, 2009

PAL’s promo fare pushes binge on domestic travel, cushions decline in international trips

DAVAO CITY – Philippine Airlines’ aggressive low-fare promotion has generated “a lot of inquiries” and an executive for Mindanao has expressed optimism that this reception from travellers would cushion the decline in international travel.

Domingo Duerme, senior assistant vice president for Mindanao, said that its promotional fares to 11 regional destinations, mostly in Asia, “could only affect us with about five percent decline in international travel”.

He said that the outbreak in AH1N1, the virus that causes swine flu, has been blamed for the further decline in global travel, already affected by the global financial crisis.

“If ever we are affected by the decline in international travel, it would be about only five percent,” he said.

The country’s flag carrier has offered cheap round-trip economy fares from Manila of $98 to HongKong, Macau or Taipei; $118to Bangkok, Singapore or Saigon; $148 to Jakarta; $178 to Shanghai; $188 to Osaka; $198 to Beijing; $223 to Fukuoka or Nagoya in Japan, or the same rate from Cebu to Narita; $468 to Sydney or Melbourne; the same rate to Honolulu; and $668 to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas in the US, or Vancouver in Canada.

Under its promotional fare program “Way to Go”, the PAL said that the sale would cover June 1-5 period in ticket sales and travel to regional, or Asia and Japan destinations, should be between July 1 and November 30 this year.

Transpacific destinations, covering US and Canada, should be made between September 1 to December 25 this year.

Promotional fares include surcharges, inflight meals, snacks, beverages, entertainment, blankets and newspapers. The fares exclude fees for government taxes.

“Our sales have been generating a lot of inquiries already and we hope that this would offset the decline in international travel due to the scare of the AH1NI,” he told reporters after the regular Wednesday news forum at the Marco Polo Hotel here.

In the domestic travel, Duerme said that its flights have been getting “a high 90” rate in each flight. This would mean that each flight has a high occupancy, or load factor, rate of 90 percent to 95 percent, especially in the season of travel.

“On ordinary days, we would be getting an average of 85 percent load factor,” he said.

Next to Cebu, Davao City is the next destination with a heavy traffic. PAL has seven flights serving the Manila-Davao route alone. PAL also serves the Zamboanga City with its PAL Express aircraft.
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Rural bank provides online banking services to urban, countryside clients

DAVAO CITY – Rural bank clients in Mindanao, and including many urban bank clients too, could now avail of the convenience of online banking from a leading rural bank, which even many commercial banks have yet to offer.

The One Network Bank, with the largest network in Mindanao, would now connect all, except four, of its 75 branches in its online banking services, other than its ATM services.

“That means, that anybody can deposit in any of the ONB branches for a credit to a savings or checking account in any of the ONB branches,” said Alex Buenaventura, president of the ONB.

That means also, he said, that any ONB savings account depositor can withdraw from any of the ONB branches, and any ONB checking account holder or their payees can encash their checks in any of the ONB branches.

“Anybody can deposit a check in any of the ONB branches fro credit to any ONB savings or checking account, and any ONB depositor can inquire on balance, update the bankbook, or request for a statement of account in any of the ONB branches,” he said.

“Many thought that we were doing online banking when we started our ATM services five years ago,” he said. “But it’s not online banking, just being connected.”

He said the ONB started online banking in October last year, but it was only last month when it was really fully implemented after the bank purchased its own server.

“We are the only bank which also owns the software,” he said.

He said that only four branches would not be served by online banking, although its ATM services would serve as the bank’s electronic service to clients. These are the branches in Sta. Maria in Davao del Sur, Maragusan in Davao del Norte, Manay in Davao Oriental, and Libungan in Sultan Kudarat.

“These are areas that the telcos [telephone companies] have no interconnection facilities,” he said. For the menaime, “these branches would still be remotely interconnected to our central system but that their link is what we call ‘distributed’”.

Distributed connection means that processing of data would still go to the branches for verification, unlike the current connection “where all data-processing, including ATM transactions, would only go to our central data server”.

In this kind of transaction alone, an ATM processing would take about six minutes. “Now it’s only about two minutes or less,” he said.

“In our past ATM transactions, for instance, processing would first go to the central data in Sasa [12 kilometers north of downtown] and then to the branch where the depositor owns an account, and then back again to the central office data,” he said.

“This distributed kind of connection has posed two problems for us in the ATM transactions alone: the undebited and the undispensed cash,” he said. “The problem with undispensed cash, it would take two weeks to verify and to have your cash returned. In undebited cash, we have 85 percent recovery, with the 15 percent of those denying they ever got money.”

Losses to undebited cash transactions in the ATM was about P50,000 “but there was one month that it reached P300,000”. “We can not afford errors like that. That’s why we have to update and upgrade our system.”

“Our online banking has made ATM and other electronic processing much faster, easier and convenient,” he said. He said not all banks have online banking system yet.

He said that ONB’s central server also host other electronic data processing of its accounting division.

ONB spent P12 million in developing the software and including the purchase of the hardware, expenses would reach P30 million.

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