Monday, June 23, 2014

Mighty Corp paid excise tax up for 8 billion in 2013

Wholly Filipino tobacco company, Mighty Corp at least P8 billion for 2013 to Bureau of Internal Revenue.
  
This is according to Oscar Barrientos, executive vice president of Mighty. He said, "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.

Mighty 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.


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 which includes scholarship grants, and rebuilding churches.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Mighty Corp pushes the use of organic agri pesticide

Bulacan-based manufacturer of quality cigarette in the country, Mighty Corp promotes the alternative use for tobacco. In this initiative, it will help reduce Filipino farmers’ reliance on chemical-based pesticides, increase tobacco farmers’ income, and protect the environment.

According to Mighty's spokesperson and executive vice president, Oscar Barrientos said it was part of the company's commitment thru their corporate social responsibility thrust. He added that with a growing number of Filipino farmers were shifting from chemical-based to organic pesticides. 

“This trend should be encouraged,” he added.

Mighty Corp, which they collaborated with National Tobacco Administration (NTA), Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority (FPA) of the Department of Agriculture (DA) and University of the Philippines in Los BaƱos, Laguna (UPLB) in this project.

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Mighty Corp paid 8 billion for the excise tax

Bulacan-based tobacco company, Mighty Corp increase their market share by paying at least 8 billion excise tax for the year 2013 to the Bureau of Internal Revenue. In 2012, they paid at least 300 million and signaled the rise of this low-priced cigarette firm. 

According to Oscar Barrientos, executive vice president of Mighty said that the excise tax that the company 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 added that the facts should put to rest false accusations to them has not been paying its correct taxes.
Barrientos pointed out, the BIR and the Bureau of Customs have cleared his company of any tax deficiency until February 2014.

Meanwhile, records from the BIR had shown that excise taxes from both cigarettes and alcohol products increased by 81.5 percent despite a decline in the number of sticks sold. Mighty Corp. was a minor player in the tobacco industry has been reaching out to a lot of people who are in need of help.



Sunday, June 1, 2014

Mighty Corp's rival company halted by BIR on new cigarette variant

The Bureau of Internal Revenue has stopped Mighty Corp's rival company, Philip Morris Fortune Tobacco Inc. from manufacturing a variant of Marlboro cigarettes, “Marlboro Flavor Code” due to alledged error in the printing of its case, it was learned yesterday.

Regarding the revoking the permit that was issued last May 3 to PMFTC , the BIR’s Large Taxpayer Service (LTS) said the “aforesaid brand can no longer be manufactured and distributed in the market without securing a prior permit from this office.”

The cancellation stemmed from PMFTC alleged failure to come out with right color printed in the flip-top-box of the cigarette.

“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 said “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.”

A BIR official who declined to give his name said PMFTC’s 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.

She said PMFTC 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.

She said a manufacturer must specifically state the unique and distinct detail of its packaging and color scheme, otherwise the application will be rejected outright.

This way, she said, 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.

PMFTC 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 PMFTC cannot sell low-priced Marlboro because it is classified as premium brand.

In its letter-request to the BIR on Nov. 25, 2013, PMFTC 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.

Riley wrote the BIR requesting permission to allow PMFTC to introduce to the market low-priced Marlboro cigarettes at a time when it is already selling at one-peso-per stick three cigarette brands it acquired from Fortune Tobacco Corp. in a joint-venture agreement in 2010, namely Westpoint Filter Kings, Jackpot Menthol 100s and Jackpot Full Flavor.

But these brands of cigarettes did not sell as much, a BIR official who requested anonymity said.

Its request to the BIR to produce Marlboro variants and sold them at lower retail prices to avail of lower excise tax rates was rejected because Marlboro has been classified as premium.