Philippine Broadcaster Caught in Duterte Cross-Hairs Plunges

Philippine Broadcaster Caught in Duterte Cross-Hairs Plunges

(Bloomberg) -- ABS-CBN Corp., the Philippines’ largest media company, sank to its lowest in more than a month after the stock exchange allowed the shares to trade again following an eight-day halt.

The stock fell as much as 14% before closing down 7.2% to 16.24 pesos, its lowest since April 3. The Philippine Stock Exchange suspended it on May 6 pending ABS-CBN’s discussion on how its business will be affected by a government order that stopped its broadcast on May 5.

The House of Representatives on Monday resumed its debates on a temporary franchise that will allow the company to air until the end of October, after initially approving it last week. The Senate on Tuesday will hold a separate hearing on the renewal of ABS-CBN’s 25-year franchise.

The Supreme Court is also scheduled to tackle on Tuesday the broadcaster’s plea to overturn the National Telecommunication Commission’s shutdown order. ABS-CBN, in its petition submitted to the court, said it’s losing up to 35 million pesos ($688,000) in daily advertising revenues and that the jobs of its 11,000 employees are at risk.

Largest Philippine Broadcaster Shares Halted After Shutdown

The broadcaster, often the target of President Rodrigo Duterte’s attacks, was ordered shut by the regulator a day after its franchise expired. Duterte first threatened to block ABS-CBN’s franchise renewal in April 2017, accusing it of bias during the 2016 presidential campaign.

The stock surged to a one-year high in February as Duterte said he wouldn’t interfere in Congress’s franchise deliberations. It then sank 35% in three weeks amid a wider coronavirus-fueled sell-off, before rebounding 14% by the time it got halted.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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