Huwebes, Setyembre 25, 2014

Mighty Corp's newest premium brand released




Expect competition in the local tobacco industry to heat up.
Mighty Corp., the oldest Filipino-owned tobacco company, has launched its premium brands King and Chelsea in a bid to firm up its position as the country’s second-biggest cigarette manufacturer.
“Our decision to enter the premium brand segment is part of the company’s thrust to reposition our brands and expand our reach into all segments of the market,” Oscar P. Barrientos, Mighty executive vice president, said.
“We hope to extend the reach of Mighty Corp. and strengthen our position as the top Filipino-owned tobacco company in the Philippines,” Barrientos added.
He said that both brands are premium in terms of smoke character. “But from the packaging and cigarette design, King is more traditional while Chelsea radiates unconventionality,” he explained.
The two premium brands are blended with the finest tobacco grades to give off a balanced taste and aroma. Both come in full flavor king size, lights king size and menthol 100s or a total of six different variants.
“One of our advantages is the smell, flavor and aromatic taste of our cigarettes that are also exceptionally smooth, mellow and attractively packaged,” Barrientos, a retired RTC judge, said.
Mighty’s premium brands will be categorized in the highest tax bracket for cigarettes.
“Our decision to expand our product lines is just part of our vision to become a major player in the market and show what a Filipino company can do,” Barrientos said.
The company was established in 1945 by businessman Wong Chu King with a small factory in Manila producing native cigarettes known as “Matamis.”
The company was renamed Mighty Corp. in 1985 and bought the trademarks of Alhambra Industries in 1993. It now operates a nine-hectare fully integrated manufacturing and processing plant in Malolos, Bulacan.

Mighty Corp. was able to build up its market share through an aggressive marketing push and heavy investments in research, development and production.

Mighty Corp approved the plan for cigarette stamps

Filipino-owned cigarette producer Mighty Corp. yesterday welcomed the early implementation of the Internal Revenue Stamp Integrated System (IRSIS) designed to further improve the collection of tobacco tax.
“Our contingency is now fully activated to meet the smooth implementation of the IRSIS which we drew up as early as six months ago in anticipation of its final approval by the finance department upon the recommendation of the BIR,” retired regional court judge Oscar P. Barrientos, MC executive vice president and spokesman, said.
Barrientos said Mighty is ready to comply with the new BIR regulation saying that some of their machines are equipped with stamp applicators.
The BIR has just released Revenue Regulation 7-2014 which imposes the affixture of Internal Revenue Stamps on imported and locally-manufactured cigarettes as well as the use of the IRSIS for the ordering, distribution and monitoring of tobacco manufacturers.
According to BIR chief Kim Jacinto-Henares, all cigarette companies have until the end of this year to sell or pull out of retail shelves those unstamped packets produced before implementation. 
All cigarettes whether for domestic sale or export shall be affixed with the new internal revenue stamps.
“This measure will strengthen our capacity to combat smuggling of tobacco products. We believe in implementing regulations with enough teeth to bite down on smugglers who are intent on depriving the nation of critical resources for greed and private gain,” Henares said.


Huwebes, Setyembre 18, 2014

Mighty Corp willing to reveal their marketing secrets

Mighty Corp. said Wednesday it is willing to reveal its trade secret on how it captured a large share of the low-end cigarette market if its foreign competitor stops bullying them and monopolizing the market.
“We’ve eaten their market because their people have not been working and that their down-the-line distribution is gone,” said MC executive vice president Oscar Barrientos, referring to Philip Morris-Fortune Tobacco Corp.
“Gone is the key word,” he said, “because while MC anticipated the possible effects of the Sin Tax Law and drew up its own strategy, its giant competitor relied mostly on its traditional marketing style of pushing premium and sub-premium brands and invariably neglected equally promoting its joint-venture partner Fortune Tobacco’s six different brands of P1 per stick cigarettes and, thus, many of its country-wide network also switched, largely for economic reason, to MC’s sales force which continued to expand.”
“You see it’s not only consumers shifting from premium and sub-premium brands which PMFTC dominated for many years but also some of their salesmen and other cigarette vendors to MC network now selling our products which admittedly are more tasty, smooth and aromatic,” the MC executive said, adding that in addition “we have an efficient workforce, no foreign obligations and most of all the ability to apply the knowledge and wisdom of comparative and managerial economics.”
“Not really so much on knowledge though because it’s practically unlimited. What is important is wisdom because it gives you the ability to perceive what is important and what is not in the crucial three stages of business operations which are sourcing of cheap but quality raw materials, manufacturing and marketing of products,” Barrientos said.
MC’s excise tax payments to the government increased 1,677 percent to P8.2 billion in just one year as against PMFTC’s only 110-percent increase for the same period after the effective implementation of the 2012 Sin Tax Law.
MC’s excise tax payment the previous year was more than P500 million.
MC’s shares in the market increased to more than 20 percent from a measly 3 percent as a result of the successful implementation the Sin Tax Law that saw the field leveled between local cigarette producers and PMFTC, which controlled 94 percent of the premium, sub-premium and low-priced brands.
“We are happy with the result of our intelligence research and business war-games which we had at the advent of the Sin Tax Law,” he said, adding that: “we had anticipated the advantages of the tax measure, prognosticating at the same that there was going to be a major shift in the smoking preferences of the majority of the Filipino consumers, either migrate to low-cost brand or entirely quit the vice or reduce the frequency of smoking for economic and health reasons.”

Farmers overwhelmed over Mighty Corp's assistance


FARMERS in Pangasinan and the Ilocos provinces have expressed relief that their tobacco leaves will have a sure market this year.

Expressing relief was Mario Cabasal, president of the National Federation of Tobacco Growers and Cooperatives (NFTGC) after learning that Mighty Corp has made commitments to initially buy at least 10 million kilograms of tobacco leaves at an average price of P70 per kilo and buy all the excess tobacco leaves that farmers could not sell to other buyers.
 “We limited to minimum areas fields planted to tobacco last year in anticipation of depressed demand due to the scheduled implementation of the sin tax,” Cabasal said. “good thing, some farmers were able  to sell part of their low-grade harvests to Mighty Corporation in 2013,” he pointed out.
“Now that we are assured of an alternative market, besides other tobacco companies, our members will again be inspired to devote larger areas to the cultivation of Ilocandia’s most important cash crop,” he said.
Fearing that tobacco prices and demand for the yellow leaf would dive as a result of the new excise tax law on cigarettes, many farmers in the Ilocos Region shifted to planting yellow corn, the only other cash crop that thrives in dry land where rainfall is scarce during the summer months. Profits from corn are, however, lower than tobacco.
Planting of the golden leaf started last month and selling the dry leaf often peaks just before the Holy Week.

“With Mighty’s assurance that the company will buy all the unsold tobacco harvested by farmers, we can also be sure that unlike in the past, prices will stay high even after the holiday season. Price cut downs on harvests after the Holy Week was an old practice of middlemen from Ilocos Norte to Pangasinan.

Lunes, Setyembre 15, 2014

Churches in Visayas received help from MIghty Corp

The recent quake that destroyed or damaged historical churches in Bohol and Cebu has firmed up the advocacy of wholly-Filipino tobacco company Mighty Corp (MC) to build more churches in the country.

Retired Judge Oscar P. Barrientos, executive Vice President and spokesperson of MC, said in a statement that the destruction of churches during the quake in Bohol and Cebu has prompted MC to continue with its mission to strengthen the Filipino faith.

“The recent calamities that hit the country last year only strengthened the Filipino faith. Mighty Corp. will continue to build churches that Filipinos go to in their times of great trials,” said Barrientos in the statement.

The advocacy has prompted Church leaders, like Caceres Archbishop Rolando Tirona, to express support for MC in its struggle to clear its name amid charges of technical smuggling and tax evasion.

In a statement released by MC, Tirona was quoted as saying that MC “adheres strictly to the company’s commitment to its corporate social responsibility.”

The family that owns MC, the Wongchukings, has a record of building and repairing churches.

Last year, the Wongchuking Foundation Inc. (WFI), helped renovate the Diocesan Shrine of Immaculate Conception in





Naic, Cavite, and rebuild the Basilica Minore of Our Lady of Piat in Cagayan.

WFI, said the MC statement, also supports poor but deserving students through scholarship programs, with beneficiaries from the elementary to the college level.

The foundation has also initiated relief operations when

Bulacan, the host province of the MC tobacco factory, suffered heavy damage from monsoon rains. It also launched relief operations in Naic, Cavite when the town was hit by

Typhoon “Gener.”

Archbishop Emeritus Diosdado Talamayan, of the Archdiocese of Cagayan, also earlier expressed support for the Wongchuking family.

In a handwritten letter, Talamayan said, “For the past many years, I have personally known Mrs. Nelia Wongchuking. She, together with the entire family, are great devotees of Our Lady of Piat.”



Talamayan added that the family has built a chapel in Malolos, Bulacan as a gesture of their devotion.

Foreign investor willing to work with Mighty Corp, other tobacco firms

The British American Tobacco (BAT) has signified its willingness to partnering with another cigarette manufacturing company to cement a strong foothold in the country’s lucrative tobacco industry.
Robert Eugenio, BAT Philippines head of corporate and regulatory affairs, said yesterday that the Lucky Strike cigarette-maker is open to any “beneficial” opportunity in the Philippines.
Since BAT’s return to the Philippine market in 2012, the company’s market share grew at a snail’s pace despite a money-losing marketing strategy of selling imported cigarette packets below the economical price.
BAT, which unveiled a $200- million investment plan for the Philippines in 2012, currently has a weak distribution network in the country, and been incurring an additional cost for the importation of its Malaysia-made Lucky Strike and Pall Mall brands.
“In the process of running a business, we would look at whether partnering with another company would make sense than putting up our own manufacturing facility,” Eugenio said. “In the past, we partnered with La Suerte Cigar and Cigarette Factory, but it was terminated when we left in 2009.”
Meanwhile, industry sources said that BAT has already approached the Wongchuking family of Mighty Corp earlier this year to ask if the latter is open to any partnership.
“I’m not aware and involved in such a transaction,” Eugenio said when asked if BAT is in talks with the Bulacan-based cigarette company.
Sources said BAT wants a partnership with Mighty following its success in snatching up a substantial market share of local market leader PMFTC, a joint venture of LT Group’s Fortune Tobacco Company and Switzerland-based Philip Morris International (PMI).
Since the new excise tax regime took effect in 2013, PMFTC fought tooth and nail to protect its market position against Mighty, which has been very aggressive in offering cheaper alternatives to Lucio Tan and PMI’s premium cigarette brands.
The country’s second largest tobacco company, Mighty, known for the P1-a-stick cigarette, managed to raise its market share from a mere 3 percent in 2012 to nearly 35 percent last year.
However, Mighty’s success is hounded by accusations of tax dodging and smuggling.

Martes, Setyembre 9, 2014

Mighty Corp dedicated to help tobacco farmers


Farmers in the Ilocos Region and Cagayan Valley  have been assured of  brisk sale of tobacco leaves in 2014 following a bumper crop.
The assurance was made by  Oscar P. Barrientos, executive vice president of Mighty Corp, amid reports that the company’s share of the domestic market has dramatically risen from  five percent last year to 20 percent this year.
“We have earned our fair share of the market by making quality but affordable cigarettes that were smartly packaged, creatively and ingenuously sold to the mass market. That is the secret of our success in breaking the cigarette monopoly in this country and were mighty proud of our modest success coming from a home-grown and Filipino-owned cigarette company, said Barrientos, a retired judge.
With a bigger share of Mighty Corporation in the market today, we are giving the tobacco farmers a fair shake of our success by offering competitive prices to their crops,” he pointed out.
He stressed that over the years, Mighty has consistently championed the cause of the Filipino tobacco farmers by buying a larger share of the low-grade tobacco leaves at a good prices. This year, they bought even the low-priced tobacco leaves.

The domestic market for cigarettes became a virtual monopoly with over 90 percent of the market share when international tobacco giant Philip Morris acquired majority ownership of its lone competitor, Fortune Tobacco in 2010.

Mighty Corp talks about increase of market share

Bulacan-based Mighty Corp. will continue to eat up a slice of market share from rivals as the Wongchuking-owned tobacco firm believes it offers quality but cheaper alternatives to expensive cigarette brands, a company official said.

In a briefing late Thursday, Oscar P. Barrientos, Mighty executive vice-president, said smokers continued to shift from premium brands to cheaper alternatives this year as prices of cigarettes in the domestic market rose due to reformed excise tax law.

“Mighty’s market share is rising because of our very competitive price as well as quality of our cigarettes,” Barrientos told reporters. “Consumers are shifting from premium to low-premium brands after the new excise tax law.”

Barrientos said Mighty’s market share grew from 5 percent in 2012 to between 10 percent and 12 percent last year. The company earlier claimed its market share stood at 20 percent in 2013.

“For this year, we’re targeting to expand it by two percentage points, or 12 percent to 14 percent,” Barriento said. “The country’s tobacco industry is estimated to be more than 100 billion sticks annually.”

Barrientos said the company currently sells its Mighty brand for P26 to P27 a pack, while Marvel brand for P25 to P26 per pack, both higher by P5 compared with last year’s retail price, reflecting the P5 increase in excise tax rate this year.

However, some retailers sell Mighty brand at P23 per pack, while Marvel brand P18.4 per pack.

Barrientos, meanwhile, noted a slight decline in number of adult-smokers in 2013 based on the report of the Department of Health (DOH).

But despite the decline in smokers’ population, Barriento said Mighty is still positioning for the forthcoming unitary excise tax rate of P26 per cigarette packet by 2017.

Barrientos said Mighty expects demand for low-premium cigarette brands will decline in 2017, while premium brands may regain their popularity in the next three-years.

“That’s why we launched our premium brands King and Chelsea in a bid to firm up our position.” the company executive said. Mighty is currently the country’s second largest cigarette firm in terms of market share, next to PMFTC Inc.

Barrientos, meanwhile, just shrugged off Marlboro-maker and Lucio Tan’s foreign partner, Philip Morris International (PMI), accusations against Mighty of tax dodging.

“Those are baseless accusations by Philip Morris,” Barrientos said “But we’re ready to face investigations by authorities. Our factory is open to any inspection by Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and Bureau of Customs.”

Barrientos also explained the company managed to lower its operational cost as it does not pay royalty to foreign headquarters, like in the case of PMFTC, and has no foreign consultants or employees.

He, meanwhile, revealed that Mighty’s manufacturing cost of cigarette per packet declined last year from 2012 as the company expands its market share.

“Our cost per pack of cigarette is around P3.5 to P4 [excluding taxes], this is cheaper than in 2012 when our market share was small. We managed to reduce the cost as Mighty expands market share due to economies of scale,” Barrientos explained.

Huwebes, Setyembre 4, 2014

Mighty Corp doubled its tobacco production up North

A cigarette manufacturing company announced it would double its purchase of tobacco from five million to 10 million kilos this year, which would boost the income of farmers in the area, the president of the National Federation of Tobacco Farmers Association and Cooperatives (NAFTAC) said.
NAFTAC president Mario Cabasal said the announcement of Mighty Corp was expected to break the farmers’ dependence on giant tobacco companies, who enter into contract with farmers to make them plant high nicotine varieties.
“The farmers now have a buyer for low-grade tobacco,” Cabasal said.
Mighty Corporation, a Filipino company, produces low-priced brand of cigarettes, which are popular among the masses. The company provided farmers 83 units of water pumps and 16 hand tractors.
The company also sponsored 100 college scholarship for children of tobacco farmers in La Union. It signed partnership agreements with farmers at the Hotel Ariana in Bauang, La Union last February 8.
Mighty Executive Vice President Oscar Barrientos said the company will compete with the giant tobacco companies in the purchase of tobacco, which they needed as cigarette filler.
Edgardo Zaragosa, Administrator of the National Tobacco Administration, welcomed the entry of Mighty Corporation in the market, “which is good because competition in tobacco trading will help farmers, especially if the price is right.”
“If Mighty is absent, we will be having problems selling tobacco,” Zaragosa said.

Lunes, Setyembre 1, 2014

Mighty Corp's market share increase this year

Bulacan-based Mighty Corp. said Thursday it expects to widen its market share in the tobacco industry, as it continues to supply quality but cheaper alternatives to expensive cigarette brands.

Mighty executive vice-president Oscar Barrientos said the increase in market share was due to the shift of the local market from premium brands to cheaper alternatives.

“Mighty’s market share is rising because of our very competitive price as well as quality of our cigarettes,” Barrientos said.
 “Consumers are shifting from premium to low-premium brands after the new excise tax law,” he said.

Barrientos said Mighty’s market share grew from a range of 3 to 5 percent in 2012 to a range of 10 percent to 12 percent in 2013.

“For this year, we’re targeting to expand it by two percentage points, or to 12 percent to 14 percent,” Barrientos said.

He said the size of the tobacco market was more than 100 billion sticks annually and was continuously growing despite the increase in cigarette prices.

Barrientos said the company was now selling the Mighty brand for P26 to P27 a pack, Marvel brand for P25 to P26 a pack, which were both higher by P5 from last year’s retail price.

He said the adjustment reflected the P5 increase in excise tax rate this year. He said some retailers were still selling Mighty brand at P23 per pack and Marvel brand P18.4 per pack.

Huwebes, Agosto 28, 2014

Representatives from Mighty Corp, other local cigarette firms completes training

Thirty people, including 17 from local tobacco manufacturer Mighty Corp., have completed a proficiency-training seminar conducted by American experts on tobacco leaf utilization, leaf chemistry and leaf purchases.
The seminar, jointly conducted by MC and American Tobacco Associates (TA) Inc., also trained the participants on the US Leaf Standards Grading System for both Burley and flue-cured tobacco developed by the US tobacco industry in the early 1900s.

Bobby Wellons, tobacco training specialist from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) conducted the US Leaf Standards Seminar on Burley and flue-cured together with TA’s vice president, Hank Mozingo.


According to retired Gen. Edilberto Adan, MC president, understanding leaf tobacco grading standards provides the foundation for learning and appreciating tobacco qualities and characteristics in the Philippines.


“More specifically,” he said, “the seminars helped those directly involved in tobacco manufacturing gain a better understanding of the unique characteristics of each US tobacco grade and which grades are more suitable for specific blend needs.”     


While MC provided all the necessary on-site assistance and essentials, the TA group supplied all tobacco samples and training materials. 


The short but comprehensive course was conducted at the new MC facility (Pavilion) located inside the factory grounds.  


Aside from the MC participants, the others came from the National Tobacco Administration, Universal Leaf Philippines, Trans-Manila Inc., Continental Leaf, Prudence and WCD. 


The first two days of the seminar focused on the Burley tobacco grades and characteristics. The remaining three days covered flue-cured. 


At the end of the training course, each participant received a certification from USDA for completing the program.
Overall, the tobacco grading seminar has successfully served its purpose, providing participants with a deeper and a more extensive knowledge on the different sectors of the tobacco industry.

Huwebes, Agosto 21, 2014

Foreign tobacco company willing to partner Mighty Corp, local companies

The British American Tobacco (BAT) has signified its willingness to partnering with another cigarette manufacturing company to cement a strong foothold in the country’s lucrative tobacco industry.
Robert Eugenio, BAT Philippines head of corporate and regulatory affairs, said yesterday that the Lucky Strike cigarette-maker is open to any “beneficial” opportunity in the Philippines.
Since BAT’s return to the Philippine market in 2012, the company’s market share grew at a snail’s pace despite a money-losing marketing strategy of selling imported cigarette packets below the economical price.
BAT, which unveiled a $200- million investment plan for the Philippines in 2012, currently has a weak distribution network in the country, and been incurring an additional cost for the importation of its Malaysia-made Lucky Strike and Pall Mall brands.
“In the process of running a business, we would look at whether partnering with another company would make sense than putting up our own manufacturing facility,” Eugenio said. “In the past, we partnered with La Suerte Cigar and Cigarette Factory, but it was terminated when we left in 2009.”
Meanwhile, industry sources said that BAT has already approached the Wongchuking family of Mighty Corp earlier this year to ask if the latter is open to any partnership.
“I’m not aware and involved in such a transaction,” Eugenio said when asked if BAT is in talks with the Bulacan-based cigarette company.
Sources said BAT wants a partnership with Mighty following its success in snatching up a substantial market share of local market leader PMFTC, a joint venture of LT Group’s Fortune Tobacco Company and Switzerland-based Philip Morris International (PMI).
Since the new excise tax regime took effect in 2013, PMFTC fought tooth and nail to protect its market position against Mighty, which has been very aggressive in offering cheaper alternatives to Lucio Tan and PMI’s premium cigarette brands.
The country’s second largest tobacco company, Mighty, known for the P1-a-stick cigarette, managed to raise its market share from a mere 3 percent in 2012 to nearly 35 percent last year.
However, Mighty’s success is hounded by accusations of tax dodging and smuggling.

Linggo, Agosto 17, 2014

Mighty Corp donates tobacco dust for fish pond owners, operators

Local cigarette manufacturer Mighty Corp. said it will donate tobacco dust, a fish pond conditioner that protects local ponds from predators, to help millions of Filipino fish pond owners and operators as well as tobacco farmers nationwide.
“We are going to help the National Tobacco Administration promote the use of tobacco dust by donating to our thousands of fish pond owners and operators all over the country,” Mighty Corp. executive vice president Oscar Barrientos said in a statement.
“In doing so, we are helping both tobacco farmers and fish pond owners and operators increase their yield,” he said, adding the company previously sold tobacco dust to fish pond owners and operators.
Barrientos said the NTA was promoting tobacco dust to control the population of snails and other fish pond predators, as this was “an effective and economic option to replace highly toxic and cyanide-based chemicals used in the preparation or sterilization of fishponds.”
He said the cigarette company aimed to increase the income of the tobacco-growing industry by buying 10 million tobacco leaves from local farmers all over the country.  It allotted P700,000 for the purchase of green leaves.
The NTA manufactures Tobacco Dust Plus at a plant in Sto. Tomas, La Union, where leaves are re-dried and pulverized.
The dust promotes the growth of lablab, an algae and natural fish food, and serves as pond floor conditioner. Pond owners and operators use it to prepare or sterilize fish ponds before stocking fingerlings there.
Fish stocking is the practice of raising fish in a hatchery and releasing them into a river, lake, or the ocean to supplement existing population, or to create a population where none exists.
Studies by a team from the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center in Tigbauan, Iloilo under Joebert Toledo had confirmed the tobacco dust efficacy.
Other studies headed by the government agency showed promising results from the use of tobacco dust as a substitute to chemical fish pond fertilizers.

Mighty aims to help local tobacco farmers earn more with a projected increase in the production of tobacco leaves and tobacco dust while helping pond owners and operators and the environment as well. 

Mighty Corp doubles their tobacco orders


Mighty Corp., one of the country’s local producers of low-priced cigarettes, announced it will buy 10 million kilograms of tobacco products worth millions of pesos from farmers in Northern Luzon and elsewhere in the country.
Mighty executive vice president Oscar Barrientos said in an official letter of intent to National Tobacco Administration administrator Edgardo Zaragoza it would buy tobacco from farmers 100 percent more than the five million kilograms his firm bought in 2013.
“This is to assure our tobacco farmers of our willingness to help in response to the published report of the market leader in the tobacco industry to lessen production this year,” Barrientos, a retired regional trial court judge, said.
The letter of intent, in effect, debunked critics’ allegations that MC has been importing raw materials from foreign countries at low prices and is no longer buying tobacco from local farmers.
Barrientos said the critics had been resorting to a disinformation campaign using convoluted data in an effort to undermine Mighty’s tremendous increase of its market shares.
MC’s market shares surged to almost 20 percent of the low-priced cigarette brands last year from in 2012, resulting in the payment P8.2 billion in excise taxes.
Barrientos said the company’s market shares shot up after the government effectively implemented Republic Act 10352, or the Sin Tax Law, that leveled the playing field in the multibillion-peso tobacco industry which was controlled by Philip Morris and Fortune Tobacco.
The new law that took 14 years to pass and certified as urgent by President Aquino III caused a tremendous migration of smokers from the expensive premium and sub-premium brands to low-priced cigarettes.
It also resulted in some smokers, because of economic reason, to simply quit the vice and thus validated health authorities’ estimate that the sin tax law would result in the decrease of the number of smokers in the country.

Biyernes, Agosto 1, 2014

Mighty Corp helping people through their charitable projects

Mighty Corp, and its charitable arm, Wong Chu King Foundation was commended by Bishop Rodolfo Beltran of San Fernando City, La Union.

They have been helping out the church by spreading the faith in the Philippines and for prioritizing apostolic works and education in its programs and projects.

According to Beltran, the foundation donated church projects funding the education of poor in Lagawe, Bontoc. The said scholarship grants which was given to four seminarians and students of vocational courses like sewing, weaving and hairstyling.

“The parents of these students are low-income farmers producing only for local consumption,” the bishop said. “So you can imagine the positive impact this kind of support has for them.”, he added.
He also commended for the outreach project for 65,000 organized tobacco farmers of Northern Luzon.

Under the agreement, Mighty Corp  donated to the farmers 16 hand tractors worth P2.5 million and 90 irrigation pumps worth P1.1 million.

“I’m quite happy about all these projects. It’s a big lift for our farmers, not only in La Union but also the whole of Northern Luzon,” Beltran said. “This is something very beautiful as the hand tractors and water pumps encourage our farmers to use modern methods of agriculture.”

Meanwhile, the foundation and Mighty Corp renovated several churches in the country such as earthquake-stricken churches in the Visayas region, Basilica Minore of the Our Lady of Piat Church in Piat, Cagayan in 2012, and the renovation of the Diocesan Shrine of Immaculate Conception in Naic, Cavite last year.

Archbishop Rolando Tirona of the Archdiocese of Caceres in Naga City, Camarines Sur, described them as an upright family and said it was “highly uncharacteristic for them to be involved in the illicit trade practices of technical smuggling and tax evasion.”


Miyerkules, Hunyo 25, 2014

Tobacco farmers overwhelmed over Mighty Corp’s assistance

Mighty Corp, a wholly Filipino-owned tobacco company has been helping out the farmers in Pangasinan and the Ilocos provinces have expressed relief that their tobacco leaves will have a sure market this year.

According to Mario Cabasal, president of the National Federation of Tobacco Growers and Cooperatives said that when he learned that Mighty has made commitments to initially buy at least 10 million kilograms of tobacco leaves and buy all the excess tobacco leaves that farmers could not sell to other buyers.

 “We limited to minimum areas fields planted to tobacco last year in anticipation of depressed demand due to the scheduled implementation of the sin tax,” Cabasal said. “good thing, some farmers were able to sell part of their low-grade harvests to Mighty Corporation in 2013,” he pointed out.

“Now that we are assured of an alternative market, besides other tobacco companies, our members will again be inspired to devote larger areas to the cultivation of Ilocandia’s most important cash crop,” he said.

Many farmers in the Ilocos Region shifted to planting yellow corn, which thrives in dry land where rainfall is scarce during the summer months. It’s selling the dry leaf often peaks just before the Holy Week.

“With Mighty’s assurance that the company will buy all the unsold tobacco harvested by farmers, we can also be sure that unlike in the past, prices will stay high even after the holiday season. Price cut downs on harvests after the Holy Week was an old practice of middlemen from Ilocos Norte to Pangasinan.

Mighty Corp aimed for more tobacco production from local farmers

Mighty Corp, one of the biggest local producers of low-priced cigarettes pursued to buy 10 million kilograms of tobacco products worth millions of pesos from farmers in the country.

In an official letter of intent that Executive Vice President Oscar P. Barrientos sent to National Tobacco Administrator Edgardo D. Zaragoza, said that they are buying tobacco from farmers 100 percent more than the five million kilograms that his firm bought in 2013.

“This is to assure our tobacco farmers of our willingness to help in response to the published report of the market leader in the tobacco industry to lessen production this year,” Barrientos said.

Market shares of Mighty surged to almost 20 percent of the low-priced cigarette brands in 2013 from three percent the previous year, which resulted to the payment P8.2 billion in excise taxes.

Mighty Corp paid 8B excise tax in 2013

Mighty Corp, a Bulacan-based tobacco manufacturer paid at least P8 billion for 2013 to Bureau of Internal Revenue.

This was announced by Oscar Barrientos, executive vice president of Mighty Corp., who added that “the tax we paid for the year 2013 just past reflects the jump in our market share and our fair share in the increased taxes on “sin” products.

He also said that despite charges in the news media and by some members of Congress against the company, no case has been filed in court.

The company paid P300 million in 2012, when its share of the local market of cigarette was a measly three percent. The said share went up since the government put into effect Republic Act 10352, or new sin tax law.

The law has synchronized a five-year adjustment of taxes on cigarettes for it to become a uniform P30 per pack in five years covering all brands.

Mighty Corp. is been known as a minor player, pitched in more than P8 billion of the excise tax. And they also devoted to several Corporate Social Responsibility projects in the country.

Martes, Hunyo 24, 2014

Mighty Corp assures tobacco production to farmers

Mighty Corp, a tobacco company based in Bulacan assured the farmers in the Ilocos Region and Cagayan Valley on the tobacco production in the region.

According to Oscar P. Barrientos, executive vice president of Mighty Corporation said that the company’s share of the domestic market has dramatically risen from five percent last year to 20 percent this year.

“We have earned our fair share of the market by making quality but affordable cigarettes that were smartly packaged, creatively and ingenuously sold to the mass market. That is the secret of our success in breaking the cigarette monopoly in this country and were mighty proud of our modest success coming from a home-grown and Filipino-owned cigarette company.”said Barrientos.

He reiterated that the Mighty has been consistently championed the cause of the Filipino tobacco farmers by buying a larger share of the low-grade tobacco leaves at a good prices. This year, they bought even the low-priced tobacco leaves.

Lunes, Hunyo 23, 2014

Mighty Corp's Oscar Barrientos

Retired Regional Trial Court Judge OSCAR P. BARRIENTOS has found himself on the other side of the defence as defender of the cigarette manufacturer Mighty Corporation.

As the executive vice president of Mighty Corp., Barrientos also doubles as company spokesman. He has become the face for the low-profile owners of the wholly-owned Filipino cigarette company, who have been doing their business for 68 years quietly and away from the prying eyes of the media and even from competitors.

But the former judge, who also leaches marketing and finance, sees his role in Mighty more of a battle in actual grassroot marketing rather than a courtroom drama.

Chinese migrant Emmanuel Wong Chu King founded La CampanaFabrica de Tobacos Inc. in 1945 as his way of helping Filipino war victims.

At first, Wong Chu King, married to Nelia, a Filipina, did everything from blending the tobacco to working as salesman, delivery man, collector, cashier and promoter of his products. The Company specialized in producing native cigarettes. The iconic La Campana and Magkaibigan were the company’s original brands.

In 1985, Mighty Corporation was established and became the American blended Virginia Cigarette Manufacturing Co. In 2001, Mighty entered into a cigarette manufacturing agreement with Sterling Tobacco to produce the latter’s trademarks. In 2004, the company entered into a cigarette manufacturing agreement with the Philip Morris Philippines as the latter brought the trademarks of Sterling Tobacco.

The rest is history. What used to be just a simple native cigarette manufacturer has expanded to become not just an industry pioneer but a force to reckon with under one name Mighty Corporation.

Barrientos, who joined Mighty Corporation a year ago upon the encouragement of the owners who happened to be good friends of his, can only at least in the best position that this company has to offer and will continue to offer.

While Mighty focuses on the non-premium cigarette brand, it does not lose focus on what makes it stick all these years. It has remained faithful to what it does best, producing cigarettes for the Filipinos market content with a 3 percent market share.

“Mighty has good taste, good price and good packaging,” stresses Barrientos.

While both prices for premium and the non-premium brands were adjusted to account for the increase in excise tax, the non-premium has a lower tax increase and therefore it has lower price hike while the premium brands have to endure with the huge price hike making them more expensive to the ordinary smoker.

As prices of cigarettes become more expensive, most smokers can no longer afford the premium cigarette brands so they shift to the non-premium brands benefitting Mighty, which has a total of 23 brands.

But Mighty has another big edge: Its clear understanding of the domestic market, which it has been serving well and faithfully for the past 68 years.

 “We have a very good distribution system focusing in the rural areas. Our distribution system touches system right down to the grassroots,” says Barrientos.

In fact, Mighty is very strong in the Zamboanga area. Its premium competitors though have been concentrating in the big cities and their distribution are mostly in big supermarkets.

“We understand the market better,” says Barrientos, who finishes his MBA at the Asian Institute of Management.

Another unique strategy is the company’s credit line offer to the rural sari-sari stores. This strategy does not only ensure that small stores carry Mighty products, but also augment the poor Filipinos capital to enable them to continue their small business.This has endeared them to the sari-sari store owners, who now prefer Mighty grateful for the lifeline provided to them.

According to Barrientos, 70 percent of Filipino smokers buy by the stick, not packs.The company has also tapped the direct selling network to further beef up its market. Barrientos explained that at the end of the day, the price of a merchandise will redound to the cost of production plus margin.

In the case of Mighty, it has never gone overboard in its expenses. Its operation has remained low cost with not much overhead cost.

“In the first place, we don’t have expats personnel to pay for. An expat can easily command $10,000 salary a month,” says Barrientos. Maintaining expats is expensive because the employer must also consider they have a lifestyle to keep.

All these years, Mighty has remained a low maintenance firm. It holds its headquarters in Makati, along the Pasig River which also serves as the residence of the company owners. Most traditional Chinese businessmen also reside in a building where they do their business. This lean organization is simple and bereft of the trappings of the high-end offices in Makati. It operates in an old but well-maintained building.

“Our strategy at the plant is to produce low cost but quality cigarettes, but we go for volume because there is a strong demand for our products,” says Barrientos. Its CSR program is mostly providing education to poor but deserving students. Now, it’s scholars are mostly children of tobacco farmers numbering 100 and is expected to reach 500 this year.

This scholarship program, which is geared for the tobacco farmers or through the Federation of Tobacco Farmers, has been going on for the past ten years already.

Part of its CSR program is to help improve the quality of local tobacco produce so they will not import anymore in the long run.“Why is the imported tobacco has better quality than the locally grown when they come from the same seeds,” says Barrientos.

The company also extends assistance to affected families during calamities without any fanfare. Barrientos relates that his father was a chain smoker who could consume three packs a day, but he does not smoke nor his seven other siblings.“But I don’t feel guilty being in this industry,” says Barrientos of his work in the cigarette industry, which is known to cause lung cancer.“The health warning that cigarette is addicting is right although it has no effect to some,” notes Barrientos.

His being in the industry does not give him also the license to encourage others to smoke.

“I will not encourage anyone to smoke, but let them find their own stick. Parents are only there to guide, although children may not follow them 100 percent,” says Barrientos, who used to play golf until he joined Mighty.

“I was supposed to be enjoying my retirement, but I was called to this job, something that I cannot refuse because it is very challenging. Aside from that, one of the owners is a good friend of mine and they treated me well and that’s what they’ve been doing with the rest of the employees,” says Barrientos, who finished law and management from the Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila and the Philippine Christian University.

“This is a family-owned corporation, but the owners are very fair and professional. I enjoy this job, otherwise I should have left already. It’s good to meet new people and become part of this company,” says Barrientos.

“I am happy here. Definitely, I am in the right company,” says Barrientos.

Biyernes, Hunyo 20, 2014

Mighty Corp increase production boost to Northern Luzon farmers

Last February, wholly-Filipino owned cigarette manufacturing company Mighty Corp pledged to double its purchase of tobacco from five million to 10 million kilos this year.
According to National Federation of Tobacco Farmers Association and Cooperatives president Mario Cabasal said the announcement of the company was expected to break the farmers’ dependence on giant tobacco companies, who enter into contract with farmers to make them plant high nicotine varieties.
“The farmers now have a buyer for low-grade tobacco,” Cabasal said.
Meanwhile, Mighty Corp also sponsored 100 college scholarship grants for children of tobacco farmers in La Union. The partnership agreements with farmers at the Hotel Ariana in Bauang, La Union last February 8.
Edgardo Zaragosa, Administrator of the National Tobacco Administration elated the entry of Mighty Corporation in the market, “which is good because competition in tobacco trading will help farmers, especially if the price is right.”
“If Mighty is absent, we will be having problems selling tobacco,” Zaragosa said.

Huwebes, Hunyo 19, 2014

Mighty Corp pushes the use of organic agri pesticide

Mighty Corp, a Bulacan-based tobacco manufacturer in the country pushed through their plans to develop and promote the alternative use for tobacco in which help reduce Filipino farmers’ reliance on chemical-based pesticides.  It will also help to increase tobacco farmers’ income, and protect the environment.
According to Mighty executive vice president and spokesperson, Oscar Barrientos said that the said move was part of the company’s corporate social responsibility thrust. He added that a growing number of Filipino farmers were shifting from chemical-based to organic pesticides, or a combination of the two. “This trend should be encouraged,” he explained.
Mighty has been coordinating with National Tobacco Administration, Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority (FPA) of the Department of Agriculture (DA) and University of the Philippines in Los Baños, Laguna (UPLB) in this effort to give the pond owners alternative.
Did you know that a lot of Filipino farmers make up 11.55 million of the country’s 38.6-million-member labor force? They contributed at least 20 percent of its gross domestic product. Insects and other pests have adversely affected farmers’ production of main agricultural crops, including rice, corn, coconuts, sugarcane, bananas, pineapples, coffee, mangoes and abaca. Also affected are secondary crops like peanuts, cassava, sweet potatoes, garlic, onions, cabbages, eggplants, calamansi, rubber, and cotton. Nicotine from tobacco has been used on crops as a natural insecticide that does not have the health and environmental risks of chemical-based pesticides.

Miyerkules, Hunyo 18, 2014

Mighty Corp helped out fish pond owners

Filipino-owned tobacco company, Mighty Corp donated tobacco dust, a fish pond conditioner that protects local ponds from predators. This will help millions of Filipino fish pond owners and operators as well as tobacco farmers nationwide.
“We are going to help the National Tobacco Administration promote the use of tobacco dust by donating to our thousands of fish pond owners and operators all over the country,” Mighty Corp. executive vice president Oscar Barrientos said.
“In doing so, we are helping both tobacco farmers and fish pond owners and operators increase their yield,” he said, adding the company previously sold tobacco dust to fish pond owners and operators.
Barrientos also said the authority promoted tobacco dust to control the population of snails and other fish pond predators. He added that it was an effective and economic option to replace highly toxic and cyanide-based chemicals used in the preparation or sterilization of fishponds.
Mighty aimed to increase the income of the tobacco-growing industry by buying 10 million tobacco leaves from local farmers all over the country.  The company allotted P700,000 for the purchase of green leaves.
The tobacco dust which promotes the growth of lablab, an algae and natural fish food, and serves as pond floor conditioner. Meanwhile, pond owners and operators use it to prepare or sterilize fish ponds before stocking fingerlings.
The studies conducted by a team from the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center in Tigbauan, Iloilo under the leadership of Joebert Toledo which confirmed the tobacco dust efficacy.
Mighty Corp which aims to help local tobacco farmers earn more with a projected increase in the production of tobacco leaves and tobacco dust while helping pond owners and operators and the environment as well. 

Martes, Hunyo 17, 2014

Mighty Corp vows to double local tobacco orders

Mighty Corp., a wholly-Filipino owned tobacco company decided to  buy 10 million kilograms of tobacco products worth millions of pesos from farmers in Northern Luzon and elsewhere in the country.

According to the company's executive vice president Oscar Barrientos said in an official letter of intent to National Tobacco Administration administrator Edgardo Zaragoza it would buy tobacco from farmers 100 percent more than the five million kilograms his firm bought in 2013.

“This is to assure our tobacco farmers of our willingness to help in response to the published report of the market leader in the tobacco industry to lessen production this year,” Barrientos, a retired regional trial court judge, said.

Barrientos said the critics had been spreading lies about the company, especially Mighty’s tremendous increase of its market shares.

The company's market shares went up to 20 percent of the low-priced cigarette brands last year from in 2012, in which the result of paying P8.2 billion in excise taxes.

Barrientos said the company’s market shares shot up following the implemented Republic Act 10352, or the Sin Tax Law, that leveled the playing field in the multibillion-peso tobacco industry which was controlled by Philip Morris and Fortune Tobacco.

Lunes, Hunyo 16, 2014

Non government agency overwhelmed on Mighty Corp's initiative for farmers

Mighty Corp, a Bulacan based tobacco manufacturer in the country has been vocal to their initiative to help tobacco farmers. The National Tobacco Administration chief Edgardo Zaragoza welcomed the assistance provided to tobacco farmers to the company. “The more players dealing directly with the farmers, the better and merrier. This is a big boost to the tobacco industry,” Zaragoza said.

He said that Mighty's CSR programs will increase the assistance provided to farmers and their families and “we hope this would encourage other cigarette industry players to do the same.”

Meanwhile, Mighty Corp decided to buy 10 million kilograms of tobacco leaves, one fifth of the industry’s total production. It has also provided 100 scholarships to high school graduate  children of  tobacco farmers.
Zaragoza said the NTA was working on the implementing rules for the excise taxes on cigarettes “to ensure that the taxes will directly benefit tobacco farmers.”

“In 2003, excise tax collection from tobacco increasaed by almost P35 billion. From P32 billion in 2012, it became P67 billion in 2013,” Zaragoza said.

Lunes, Hunyo 9, 2014

Church officials backs Mighty Corp’s CSR projects

Mighty Corp, a wholly Filipino owned company which is dedicated their works in helping out the needy.

With the Church officials who are elated over the charitable works of Mighty Corp, Archbishop Emeritus Diosdado Talamayan of the Archdiocese of Cagayan said the Wongchuking family was helping build churches and promoting devotion to Our Lady of Piat.

“For the past many years, I have known personally Mrs. Nelia Wongchuking, chair of the board of trustees of Wong Chu King Foundation Inc.,” said Talamayan.

 “She, together with the entire family, are great devotees of Our Lady of Piat,” the bishop said. He added that the family built a chapel for Our Lady of Piat in Malolos, which was a gesture of their devotion.


Mighty Corp purchased tobacco leaf for farmers

For the past few months, Mighty Corp, a wholly Filipino owned tobacco manufacturer pledges help to the farmers in the Ilocos Region and Cagayan Valley. The company assured of  brisk sale of tobacco leaves.

According to Oscar P. Barrientos, executive vice president of Mighty Corp said that the company’s share of the domestic market has dramatically risen from  five percent last year to 20 percent this year.

“We have earned our fair share of the market by making quality but affordable cigarettes that were smartly packaged, creatively and ingenuously sold to the mass market. That is the secret of our success in breaking the cigarette monopoly in this country and were mighty proud of our modest success coming from a home-grown and Filipino-owned cigarette company”, said Barrientos.

“With a bigger share of MightyCorporation in the market today, we are giving the tobacco farmers a fair shake of our success by offering competitive prices to their crops,” he added.

Barrientos stressed out that Mighty Corp consistently championed the cause of the Filipino tobacco farmers by buying a larger share of the low-grade tobacco leaves at a good prices. He also explained that the tobacco company bought even the low-priced tobacco leaves.

The domestic market for cigarettes became a virtual monopoly with over 90 percent of the market share when international tobacco giant Philip Morris acquired majority ownership of its lone competitor, Fortune Tobacco in 2010.

Huwebes, Hunyo 5, 2014

Tobacco manufacturer Mighty Corp giving hope to farmers

Filipino-owned company, Mighty Corp has been pushing to help the tobacco industry through their projects. One of which is helping three million tobacco farmers and their dependents increase their yield in the Ilocos and Cagayan Valley regions.

According to Mighty’s executive vice president Oscar Barrientos said that the company’s share of the domestic market dramatically increased from a minimal 5 percent in 2012 to 20 percent in 2013. This increased help to millions of tobacco farmers whose lives were dependent on the tobacco industry.

“We have earned our fair share of the market by making quality but affordable cigarettes that were smartly packaged, creatively and ingenuously sold to the mass market. That is the secret of our success in breaking the cigarette monopoly in this country and we’re mighty proud of our modest success coming from a homegrown and Filipino-owned cigarette company,” said Barrientos

 “With a bigger share of Mighty Corp. in the market today, we are giving the tobacco farmers a fair share of our success by offering competitive prices to their crops,” he added.

 “Last year alone, we have bought even the low-priced tobacco leaves. Had Mighty Corp. not done that, it would have created a great economic dislocation for tobacco farmers,” said Barrientos.

“We will be happy to offer better prices to tobacco farmers and are willing to tie-up with the Department of Agriculture and the National Tobacco Administration to cement our partnership with the farmers,” he said.

Aside from the farmers who were benefiting from Mighty’s growth, it also pushed their way to pay the right amount of taxes annually.

“Our contribution is in the form of taxes, because it helps the development of the country, with taxes. We were paying P300 million before, now we are paying more than P8 billion in excise taxes and that helps the economy. We also employed more factory workers. Now, we have more than 2,000,” he said.

Barrientos said with bigger contribution, Mighty was also expanding its corporate social responsibility projects to help tobacco cooperatives increase their production.

“As far as CSR is concerned, we will have irrigation pumps in their area and provide mini tractors. This will come in the form of grant. We will have scholarship grants,” he said.

“We have other plans. Aside from scholarship, by next year, we plan to give awards for outstanding farmers, in cooperation with the National Tobacco Administration,” he added.

Mighty Corp. had a long-term plan to improve its market share and help hundreds of thousands of tobacco leaf growers’ workers.

Mighty Corp agreed to pursue joint projects to farmers

Four months ago, group of tobacco farmers and Mighty Corp sealed an agreement to pursue joint projects designed to uplift the lives of farming families in Northern Luzon.
During the signing of agreement, it was attended by Mighty executives led by retired general Edilberto P. Adan and retired judge Oscar P. Barrientos, president and executive vice president, and Mario Cabasal, head of the National Federation of Tobacco Farmers and Cooperatives, Inc. The said theme for the project called “Sama-sama Tayong Pilipino sa Pagyabong ng Industriya ng Tabako.”
Meanwhile, they held a consultative meeting between 200 tobacco farmer leaders in Pangasinan, La Union, Abra and the Ilocos provinces and Mighty Corporation.
Through the company’s CSR arm, Wong Chu King Foundation Inc. handed 16 units of hand tractors worth P2.5 million and 90 units of water pumps worth P1.1 million to chapter delegations from seven provinces in Northern Luzon. 
 “We are happy that Mighty has stood firm on its commitments to help the 65,000 strong tobacco farmers in the Philippines with their pronouncements this year to purchase 10-million kilograms of tobacco leaves and the P10-million outreach projects for tobacco farmers,” said Cabasal after the agreement was signed by the new partners. “This is definitely a big help to us, tobacco farmers,” added Cabasal.
Cabasal expressed elation over the Mighty Corp’s commitments to initially buy at least 10 million kilograms of tobacco leaves.

Mighty Corp reaching out for fish pond operators

Bulacan-based tobacco manufacturer, Mighty Corp had pledge to donate tobacco dust for the tobacco farmers from the northern part of the country.

The fish pond conditioner protects local ponds from predators that will help millions of Filipino fish pond owners, operators and tobacco farmers nationwide.

“We are going to help the National Tobacco Administration promote the use of tobacco dust by donating to our thousands of fish pond owners and operators all over the country,” Mighty Corp. executive vice president Oscar Barrientos said.

“In doing so, we are helping both tobacco farmers and fish pond owners and operators increase their yield,” he added.

The NTA was promoting tobacco dust to control the population of snails and other fish pond predators, as this was “an effective and economic option to replace highly toxic and cyanide-based chemicals used in the preparation or sterilization of fishponds.”

The company targeting to level up the income of the tobacco-growing industry by buying 10 million tobacco leaves from local farmers all over the country as they allotted P700,000 for the purchase of green leaves.

The dust promotes the growth of lablab, an algae and natural fish food, and serves as pond floor conditioner. Pond owners and operators use it to prepare or sterilize fish ponds before stocking fingerlings there.

Fish stocking is the practice of raising fish in a hatchery and releasing them into a river, lake, or the ocean to supplement existing population, or to create a population where none exists.

Mighty Corp’s continuing efforts to help local tobacco farmers earn more with a projected increase in the production of tobacco leaves and tobacco dust while helping pond owners and operators and the environment as well.

Lunes, Hunyo 2, 2014

Mighty Corp’s rival stopped the new cigarette variant by BIR

Last May 3, the rival company of Filipino-owned cigarette manufacturer Mighty Corp cancelled the error printing of their new cigar variant.

The said flavoured-cigar, Marlboro Flavor Code that the permit that was issued by BIR was been revoked without securing a prior permit. “Please be informed that upon verification and comparison of the approved label of the subject brand name against the commercial label being manufactured and distributed in the market, it was found out that the actual color scheme was not in conformity with the approved color scheme for the particular brand,” LTS Chief Alfredo Misajon said.

He added that “the  color of the approved sample label bears shade of dark gray while the color of the actual commercial label found in the market is black.”
Misajon’s letter added  PMFTC blatantly violated the condition of the permit (ELTRD-(T)-011-05-13-87598) it issued to the firm with an explicit prohibition that:

“No changes/alteration of the color scheme on the approved commercial label shall be made without prior approval from the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.”

The reason why the permit was revoked because it failed to meet the specifications as stated in its application like the color and other details to be put in the pack, or carton cover.

The sources said that the Lucio Tan’s owned company has already signified its intention to appeal the adverse decision, adding that the error was due to the kind of paper used which could not meet  the color specified in its permit application.

“If an applicant applies for a bright red or blue color he must come out with the right coloration, not a shade of red or blue,” she said. And the infringement of patent and unfair competition can be avoided as provided for under Revenue Regulations Nos. 3-2006 and 17-2012.

A manufacturer should not also ride on the popularity of a brand that was previously registered, the same official said.

Mighty Corp’s competitor has been trying to employ various schemes to regain its market dominance, including the attempt last January, to sell in Mindanao and elsewhere at P245.00 per ream or P1.23 per stick of the same label with a black shade of color which the BIR subsequently banned, claiming that they cannot sell low-priced Marlboro because it is classified as premium brand.

They sent a letter-request to the BIR on Nov. 25, 2013, the company claimed there was a need to introduce new cigarette brands to reverse the current decline in its sales due to stiff competition.

“What is more worrying, we expect the down-trading to continue, with the Marlboro volume further decreasing to 7.9 billion sticks in 2014,” PMFTC President Paul Riley said.
Meanwhile, Mighty Corp has been dedicated to the Filipino people on their CSR projects and boosting the livelihood of the tobacco farmers in the country.

Biyernes, Mayo 30, 2014

Wong Chu King Foundation funded chapel construction in Xavier School

Mighty Corp’s charitable arm, Wong Chu King Foundation has been helping the construction of the Sacred Heart Chapel of the Senior High School Building for Xavier School in San Juan City.

The said chapel will be dedicated “in loving memory of the friendship” of Mr. Wong Chu King, patriarch of the family that formed the foundation, and Jesuit priests Jean Desautels and Ismael Zuloaga.

According to Caesar Wongchuking, vice president of the foundation said that  the Sacred Heart Chapel of Xavier School’s senior high school building is being built “in line with the cause and passion for education of my father, our family patriarch.”

Both parties knew each other for the past several years. Wong Chu King was one of the school’s founding donors. Fr. Desautels, a French-Canadian Jesuit, was one of the school’s founders and its first president and director. Fr. Zuloaga was the school’s longest-serving president and director at 19 years, from 1966 to 1985. The school is named after St. Francis Xavier, one of the first leaders of Jesuit missions in China.

“Fr. Desautels went door-to-door in Manila for donations to buy the land needed to set up the school,” Wongchuking added.  “At 3:30 pm on December 15, 1955, Fr. Desautels closed the deal and purchased the land barely an hour and a half before the 5 p.m. deadline agreed on with the seller of the land on which the school was eventually built.”

“All of us, my siblings and I, graduated from Xavier School and imbibed the Jesuit’s God, education and service-centered mission,” he added.

“This project is our way of honoring our father’s friendship with the Jesuit community and paying forward for the excellent education we received from the school,” said Alex Wongchuking, executive director of the foundation,

During the signing the deed of donation witnessed by Marietta Wongchuking- Co Chien, Wong Chu King Foundation Director; Johnip Cua, Xavier School chairman of the board of trustees; and Fr. Aristotle Dy, school president and director.