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A broader look at today’s business TfridayNovember 18, 2014Vol.Vol. 10 No. n Friday, May 29, 2015 10 No. 23240
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UNDERSPENDING AGAIN MAIN CULPRIT IN DISAPPOINTING 5.2% GDP EXPANSION IN JANMARCH
Govt takes blame for poor Q1 growth HE national government again failed to deliver on its promise to ramp up its construction spending, dragging down the economy’s growth anew—this time to its slowest pace in almost four years—in the January-to-March period.
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The genuine love of a neighbor
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EAR Lord, then shall we bear the abundant fruits of the new life inaugurated by You with Your resurrection. These fruits will be especially peace, and the genuine love of a neighbor, which expresses itself “in deeds and truth and not merely in words.” Then shall we continually experience in ourselves the reality and the power of Your resurrection and enjoy the presence of the Holy Spirit in us, as did the members of the apostolate community. May we nurture the genuine love of a neighbor in us. Amen. EXPLORING GOD’S WORD, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
RIOT GIRLS The
cast of Pitch Perfect 2 show in no small ways that girl power can fuel films to commercial success.
JAKE CUENCA’S ‘PASSION’ CRANKS UP THE SUMMER HEAT »D4
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Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Friday, May 29, 2015
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‘Pitch Perfect 2’ and beyond: Female filmgoers flex new box-office clout B S H Los Angeles Times
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HEN Rebel Wilson, Anna Kendrick and Brittany Snow walked down the carpet at the world premiere of Pitch Perfect 2 earlier this month, the roars of mostly female fans screaming their names resembled an a cappella medley from the film itself. “I just love their girl power,” said 25-year-old Jessica Hernandez, one of the hundreds who lined up as early as 9 am for a prime spot in the “fan pit” outside Los Angeles’s Nokia Theatre. “Girl power” seems to be at the heart of Pitch Perfect 2’s $69.2-million opening weekend two weeks ago, with an audience that was 72-percent female. Its debut far surpassed preweekend projections that the film would have a $35- to $45-million opening. For perspective, consider that, in one weekend, the sequel beat the entire $65-million domestic haul for the original 2012 film. Even the reboot of George Miller’s action film Mad Max, which came in behind Pitch Perfect 2 but ahead of projections with a $45.4-million opening, has a strong woman powering the film. Charlize Theron kicks as much butt in Mad Max: Fury Road as costar Tom Hardy. These films aren’t outliers—at least this year. Cinderella and Fifty Shades of Grey have earned the year’s third- and fourth-highest box office sales, respectively, to date with largely female audiences. And the year’s No. 1 movie, Avengers: Age of Ultron not only gave Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow a back story and a budding romance with the Hulk, but it also added a second female Avenger, Elizabeth Olsen’s Scarlett Witch. “The genie is out of the bottle now,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior analyst at the audience measurement service Rentrak. “Hollywood is catching on to the fact that it’s good business to try and attract female audiences. Having more female-driven film has gone from being a trend to being the norm.”
Studios have long made billions primarily by aiming at young males—the comic-book-loving “fanboys” who flock to theaters to see action films. But, lately, robust totals for films, such as Disney’s Maleficent Maleficent, which was the No. 3 film last summer, have proven the worth of catering to long-underserved female audiences. “I think, now, there is recognition in the industry that, if you make a film like the Avengers,” said Bruce Nash, who founded the box-office statistics site The Numbers, “you have to make it interesting for everyone who is going to see it.” Analysts say that this summer’s films will likely set records, helping box-office receipts climb to a projected $11.2 billion by the end of 2015. Much of that revenue is expected to come from female-driven films that are being paired strategically with male-centric films as counterprogramming to help boost the overall box office. This means that, on the same June 5 weekend that Vinny and the boys hit the big screen with Entourage, Melissa McCarthy’s comedy Spy will make its debut. The malestripper flick Magic Mike XXL, based on the 2012 original that starred Matthew McConaughey and Channing Tatum, opens opposite sci-fi blockbuster Terminator: Genisys on the Fourth of July weekend. And Amy Schumer’s highly anticipated comedy Trainwreck launches July 17 against Marvel’s Ant-Man. Some of the counterprogramming, propelled by buzz, could outpace their blockbuster counterparts. Spy, which premiered at the South by Spy Southwest (SXSW) festival this year, will likely top Insidious 3 and Entourage when it comes out next month, according to people familiar with pre-release audience surveys. The espionage comedy is written and directed by Paul Feig, who also directed McCarthy in the hit comedies Bridesmaids and The Heat. Trainwreck, directed by Judd Apatow and Trainwreck written by Schumer, may not beat its Marvel
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U.S., CUBA RELATIONS BusinessMirror
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B3-1 | Friday, May 29, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
INDIANS HEAT TOLL SURPASSES 1,400
A villager herds his buffaloes as they enter the Daya River on a hot afternoon in the eastern Indian city of Bhubaneswar, India, on May 27. In southern India more than 1,400 people have died since the middle of April as soaring summer temperatures scorch the country, officials said. Eating onions, lying in the shade and crowding into rivers, Indians are doing whatever they can to stay cool amid the brutal heat wave, where temperatures have soared to 47 degrees Celsius (117 degrees Fahrenheit). AP/BISWA AP/BISW RANJAN ROUT
US, Cuba normal relations ‘weeks away’–US senator
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AVANA—The historic process of restoring longsevered diplomatic relationship between the US and Cuba that began on December 17 will likely come to a successful end in a matter of weeks, a US senator said during a visit to the island on Wednesday. A 45-day period for Congress to challenge a decision by President Barack Obama to remove Cuba from a list of state sponsors of terrorism, a key obstacle to improved relations, will expire on Friday, and the remaining issues will then get quickly resolved, Sen. Tom Udall told reporters in Havana. “We are just two days away. There has not been a vote in Congress so that’s going to stand,” Udall said. “I think it will be a matter of weeks when we have restored diplomatic relations.” US and Cuban officials have said the two sides are close to resolving the final issues that would allow both countries to reopen embassies and exchange ambassadors for the first time since the US severed diplomatic relations in January 1961. Udall, a New Mexico Democrat who led a four-member Democratic congressional delegation to Cuba, said there appears to be growing momentum to removing at least elements of the US trade embargo first imposed in 1960. There is bipartisan support for separate pieces of legislation that would permanently end a ban on travel, allow trade in agricultural goods and enable US telecommunications and Internet companies to
provide services and devices in Cuba, the senator said. The delegation, which included Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota, Rep.
Raul Grijalva of Arizona and Rep. John Larson of Connecticut, spoke to reporters after meeting with Cuban officials and small business owners. All four members of the delegation support lifting the trade embargo, which the Cubans say has badly damaged their economy over the past five decades. Obama softened aspects of the embargo and called on Congress to end it during his State of the Union address in January. Franken said there is strong support among the US public for normal relations. “I think there is a very small minority, really, in the Senate and Congress who have strong objections to this and I think that a majority of the American people and a majority of Congress would be for lifting the embargo,” he said. “But there is work to be done.”
Some of that work emerged as the members of Congress spoke to reporters. Franken was asked about the presence of the US Navy base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, which Castro said must be returned to Cuba. Franken dodged the question, saying, “I don’t believe that that is a salient issue at this time.” He then added that he doesn’t have a “strong opinion” on the base, though, he supports closing the detention center there for terrorism suspects. Udall was asked about the presence of criminals suspected of crimes in the US who have found refuge in Cuba. The senator raised the example of Charlie Hill, who fled to the island after killing a police officer in New Mexico in 1971, and said he should be extradited. “I assume with the normalization of relations we are going to have a lot more discussions about things like that,” Udall said. AP
RESDEN, German—Top finance officials from the Group of Seven (G-7) wealthy democracies are gathering in Germany this week to discuss ways to strengthen the global economy. US officials are pressing countries, such as Germany, that have strong finances to invest more to stimulate their economies. They’re urging European leaders to find a solution to Greece’s financial problems and will seek ways to cut off financing for extremist organizations, such as the Islamic State (IS) group.
EIJING—A former member of China’s national legislature who is accused of running a brothel with 100 prostitutes at a luxury hotel that he ran in southern China has gone on trial on charges of organizing prostitution. Liang Yaohui was the biggest name to fall in a wide-ranging crack crackdown on the sex trade in Dongguan, a manufacturing city near Hong Kong famed for its bathhouses, karaoke parlors and seedy nightlife. Liang allegedly arranged for 100 prostitutes to entertain clients inside sauna rooms at the city’s five-star Crown Prince Hotel, of which he was part-owner and chairman. The scheme was exposed and the hotel closed, following a series of raids in February 2014 that resulted in detention of more than 1,000 prostitutes and their clients and the removal of dozens of police officials suspected of protecting illegal activity and tipping off the gangs who ran them. The Dongguan prosecutors’ office said on its microblog that Liang’s trial began on Wednesday and would continue on Thursday. It wasn’t clear when a verdict and sentence would be rendered.
Liang was dismissed from the National People’s Congress, China’s legislature, following his arrest last year. The largely ceremonial body, which meets for two weeks only once a year in Beijing, has increasingly become a millionaires’ club, with more than 100 members boasting personal wealth of a billion dollars or more. While requiring little in the way of legislative work, membership in the body accords considerable prestige and facilitates contacts, government connections and other privileges that can be a boon to business. Members of the roughly 3,000-member body are elected from provincial assemblies, whose members are themselves drawn from city and county legislatures. However, the nominating process is murky, and VIPs, such as prominent businessmen and star athletes, are of often invited to join, while government critics are blocked from doing so. Along with his hotel, Liang had interests in various businesses, including a property portfolio worth about $325 million, according to state media. The prostitution scheme netted his hotel almost $8 million in 2013 alone, the official Xinhua News Agency said. AP
Greece insists deal ‘very close’; Schaeuble quashes optimism
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U.S. Sen. Tom T Udall (center) talks with US Rep. Raul Grijalba (seated, left) and US Sen. Al Franken (standing, with glasses) after a news conference in Havana, Cuba, on Wednesday. AP/RAMON ESPINOSA
WORLD’S WEALTHY DEMOCRACIES DISCUSS HOW TO HELP GROWTH
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FORMER CHINESE LEGISLATOR ON TRIAL FOR RUNNING BROTHEL
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Ahead of the meeting, activists urging more help for poor countries floated large balloons bearing the faces of government leaders next to Dresden’s historic Frauenkirche, or Church of Our Lady, urging the meeting to produce more than “hot air.” The G-7 meets against the back background of a recovering global economy that faces risks on a number of fronts: n Turmoil in the Middle East and Russia’s pressure on Ukraine are potential risks to growth. n The economies of Europe and the US are growing, but not as quickly as
hoped. The jobless rate remains high in Europe. n The US Federal Reserve is weighing whether to start raising interest rates from levels near zero. Federal Reserve Chair Chairman Janet Yellen has said she expects a rate hike this year. The impact of a hike on financial markets long used to cheap money remains unclear. n Greece’s struggle to reach a new bailout deal with creditors is likely to come up, even though the country is not a member of the G-7. Creditors like Germany have insisted
Greece must commit to controlling spending and reform its economy before it gets more money; US officials don’t want a Greek default and possible chaotic exit from the shared euro currency to roil markets as the economy is getting going. Officials from host country Germany, which has the rotating leadership of the G-7, said the meeting over three days through Friday was envisioned as a relaxed discussion forum to set up decisions and positions to be taken at a June 7 and 8 summit of heads of state and government at the Schloss Elmau resort outside Munich. AP
THENS, Greece—Greece’s cashstrapped government insisted on Wednesday it was “very close” to reaching a vital deal with bailout lenders, but the optimism in Athens was swiftly shot down by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble. Greece’s four-month-old government is days away from loan repayments to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) it says it may not be able to honor. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras paid a rare visit to the Finance Ministry to announce that a break breakthrough was in sight. “We have taken very many steps. We are in the home stretch, close to the final agreement,” he told reporters. The news buoyed markets, with the main Athens stock index closing up 3.6 percent, and other European markets also posting gains. Giorgos Stathakis, Tsipras’s economy minister, insisted a compromise could be reached as soon as this weekend. “The deal is very close,” he told private Mega television, adding that Greece would maintain emergency taxes and agree to simplify sale-tax rates to raise additional annual revenue worth nearly €1 billion ($1.1 billion). Lenders, he said, had made concessions on axing labor rights and pension reforms. In the German city of Dresden, where finance ministers of the Group of Seven economic powers were pre-
paring to meet, Schaeuble said he did not share Athens’s view. “We’ve been hearing a lot of positive news from Greece—and that’s good—but in essence, the negotiations have not progressed much,” he told Germany’s ARD television. Since the start of Greece’s bailout program in 2010, the IMF and eurozone creditors have been releasing rescue loans on condition the country implements strict austerity measures. Tsipras’s radical left-led government, which has promised to end austerity, needs a deal for the latest installment by June 5, when it has to repay some €300 billion to the IMF. Failure to make the repayment could put Greece on a slippery slope, forcing it to impose limits on money withdrawals to avoid a bank run, and threatening its euro-zone membership. Earlier on Wednesday, US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew spoke to Tsipras on the phone. A Treasury Department statement said Lew “reiterated that failure to agree on a path forward would create immediate hardship for Greece and broad uncertainties for Europe and the global economy.” Before heading to Dresden, Lew spoke at the London School of Economics, and warned of the potential risks globally of a Greek impasse. “It’s a mistake to think that a failure has no consequences outside of Greece,” he said. “We don’t know the exact scope.” AP
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WARRIORS IN FINALS Sports BusinessMirror
VIVA LA FRANCE! P
ARIS—Gael Monfils delivered one final ace, his 21st, and closed out his latest raucous, five-set victory on Court Philippe Chatrier to the delight of roaring, partisan spectators. An entertainer at heart, Monfils pounded his chest with his right fist repeatedly and, after hugging opponent Diego Schwartzman at the net, used his right shoe to etch a sketch of a smiley face on the French Open main stadium’s red clay. Needless to say, his adoring public loved that, too. Since 1983, when Yannick Noah became the most recent man from France to win the championship at Roland Garros, the locals have not had a whole lot to cheer about at their Grand Slam tennis tournament. So mark Wednesday as a rare bright light along the way: All five of the host country’s men in action advanced to the third round, including three who were seeded—No. 12 Gilles Simon, No. 13 Monfils and No. 14 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga—and two who defeated seeded players— Nicolas Mahut and Benoit Paire. “Everybody,” Tsonga said, “remembers Yannick’s victory.” Monfils trailed Argentina’s Schwartzman two sets to one, before coming back and improving to 14-10 in five-setters with a 4-6, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 win filled with loud cheers between points and plenty of supportive cries of Allez! “Actually, today I won because I had the crowd behind me,” Monfils said. “They give me, let’s say, some wings.” The 5-foot-7 Schwartzman, who is 9 inches shorter than Monfils, noticed the fans’ effect, saying: “He always uses the people [to his advantage], in all his matches.” While some French players through the years have found the expectations of their countrymen too much to bear during these two weeks—Amelie Mauresmo comes to mind— Monfils and Tsonga occasionally thrive in the setting. Both men have reached the semifinals in Paris—Monfils in 2008, and Tsonga in 2013. And both say they find the attention from the crowds more help than hindrance. “For me,” Tsonga said, “it’s something positive.” What, he was asked, might the reaction in France be if someone could end its 32-year wait for a men’s French Open title? “First of all, I would be interested in winning! What would happen next? I don’t really know. I have absolutely no idea. The fans are happy when we win a first-round match,” a grinning Tsonga replied, enjoying his own one-liner, “so I guess winning the tournament would be something extraordinary for a country like ours.”
Tsonga, the Australian Open runner-up in 2008, had little trouble on Wednesday while defeating Israel’s Dudi Sela, 6-4, 6-1, 6-1. Simon also was a straight-set winner, 7-5, 6-2, 6-3, over Slovakia’s Martin Klizan. “If everything goes fine,” Simon said, “I feel capable of doing great things.” He’ll next face the 116th-ranked Mahut, best known for losing the longest match in tennis history to John Isner at Wimbledon in 2010. Mahut eliminated No. 24 Ernests Gulbis of Latvia, a French Open semifinalist last year, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3. Paire, ranked 71st, beat No. 28 Fabio Fognini, 6-1, 6-3, 7-5. The only seeded Frenchwoman, No. 29 Alize Cornet, added to the general joie de vivre around the grounds—more crowded and louder than on other days of the week, because schoolchildren have half-days on Wednesday—by winning 6-2, 7-5 against Romania’s Alexandra Dulgheru. Cornet now plays Croatia’s 33-year-old Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, who is ranked 70th and authored the biggest surprise of Day 4, compiling a 29-5 edge in winners to beat 2014 runner-up Simona Halep, 7-5, 6-1. Halep, seeded third, also lost to LucicBaroni at the US Open last year. That tournament marked Lucic-Baroni’s first trip to the fourth round at a Grand Slam event since 1999, when she was 17. Problems with financial backing and injuries contributed to years away from the tour. “I take a lot of pride in what I went through in my life, the difficulties. And I know for a fact that a lot of people couldn’t do it,” Lucic-Baroni said. “I was stubborn.... I believed in myself enough and I was strong enough to be here today.” Aware Cornet awaits, as does a crowd that can be expected to take sides, Lucic-Baroni said: “I wish at least three people will cheer for me in that match.” AP
a good day for »GaelIT’SMonfils (left) and Wilfred Tsonga at the French Open. AP
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San Jose Mercury News
AKLAND, California—They became Western Conference champions after defeating the Houston Rockets, 104-90, on Wednesday to win the series in five games. The Golden State Warriors, who will face LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers in the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals, punched their ticket after Stephen Curry scored 26 points and Harrison Barnes poured it on in the fourth quarter to finish with 24 points. Klay Thompson added 20 points before leaving the game with an ear laceration but was all smiles afterward along with his fellow Splash Brother. “We’re four wins away from the goal,” Curry told the crowd at Oracle Arena, which cheered so loudly that his words could hardly be heard. The Warriors, who went to the postseason in only three of the previous 20 seasons before hiring rookie coach Steve Kerr, will host Game One of the NBA Finals on June 4. Rockets guard James Harden, the Most Valuable Player runner-up to Curry, was held to 14 points on two-for-11 shooting and suffered the indignity of committing an NBA playoff-record 13 turnovers. Dwight Howard led the Rockets with 18 points and 16 rebounds, but they shot only 35.1 percent from the field. Barnes scored nine straight Warriors points on a jumper, three-pointer, runner and dunk to give his team an 87-72 lead with 7:10 left. The outburst came immediately after the Warriors saw Thompson leave for the locker room after suffering the laceration when he was kneed in the head by the Rockets’ Trevor Ariza. When the Rockets cut the Warriors’ lead to eight points with 4:19 left, Barnes hit two free throws and ran the floor for another dunk. The Warriors led 74-65 after a 7-0 run capped off by Curry’s three-pointer and a dunk from Andre Iguodala, who had stolen the ball for Harden’s 11th turnover that tied the NBA playoff record. The assist came from Draymond Green, who started the game One-for-10 from the field but contributed on the defensive end. Jason Terry scored seven straight Rockets points before the Warriors’ run. Thompson scored the first five points of the second half to push the Warriors’ lead to 57-46. But he would soon be forced to the bench after committing his fourth and fifth fouls only 22 seconds apart. The Rockets responded with an 8-0 run capped by Ariza’s steal in the backcourt and three-point play. The Warriors led 52-46 at halftime, with Barnes and Curry hitting back-to-back three-pointers to push their first-half lead to as many as eight points. Harden was held to 11 points while committing eight turnovers in the half. Thompson caught fire in the second quarter, hitting three three-pointers in a row to spark a 13-2 run that gave the Warriors a 30-24 lead. He hit his sixth shot in a row with a dunk in transition off a missed Harden three-point attempt and Curry’s rebound and quick pass. The Rockets led 22-17 after the first quarter as the Warriors got off to another slow start, committing six turnovers and going one-for-eight from three-point range. Howard in the quarter collected eight points, five rebounds and two blocked shots. Andrew Bogut also committed two of his fouls and had to take a seat on the bench. The Warriors started the game one-for-nine from the field as the Rockets jumped out to an 8-2 lead. Bouncing back, the Warriors took back the lead after Curry stole the ball from Harden and Thompson made a reverse lay-up in transition to give them a 10-9 lead. Harden hit all seven of his free throws in the quarter, stretching out the Rockets’ lead to 20-12.
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income accounts,” he added. With the disappointing result in the first three months of the year, the economy must now post an average of 7.5-percent growth in the second to fourth quarters to hit the government’s full-year target of 7 percent to 8 percent. The consensus estimate given by private economists on the first-quarter growth was 6.6 percent. “This is a very weak set of numbers,” said Michael Wan, an economist at Credit Suisse Group AG in Singapore. “Industrial production, government spending were a drag to the economy. Moving forward, C A
BSP: No need to tweak rates to boost economy
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WARRIORS IN FINALS Stephen Curry had 26 points and eight rebounds, Harrison Barnes added 24 points and the Golden State Warriors advanced to the National Basketball Association Finals for the first time in 40 years.
The economy only grew 5.2 percent in the first quarter of 2015, the slowest since the last quarter of 2011, when the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 3.8 percent, and the government admitted it was largely due to its underspending. “The slower-than-programmed pace of public spending, particularly the decline in public construction, has slowed down the overall growth of the economy,” Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan said. “[Further] the recent uptick in disbursements from the Department of Budget and Management has not yet been reflected in the national
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| FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
STEPHEN CURRY and the Golden State Warriors will take on LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Finals starting on June 4. AP
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HE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) ruled out on Thursday an easing of its monetary-policy stance, no matter the below-consensus output growth numbers in the first quarter, saying that there is enough liquidity in the financial system to support the continued expansion of the $272-billion economy. “Economic growth in the first quarter of 2015 was modest. The BSP continues to see monetary policy as appropriate, given the continued
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 44.7250
growth in the economy and the good prospects for the rest of the year,” BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said in a text message. “There is sufficient liquidity in the economy, while domestic credit remains supportive of growth. The BSP will continue to promote an enabling environment of stable prices and strong banking system,” he quickly added. In recent months, several central banks in the region and around the world surprised markets by reducing interest rates to boost growth S “BSP,” A
MORE COMMUTING WOES A Metro Rail Transit (MRT) train makes its way through Epifanio de los Santos Avenue. Metro commuters will
have to endure more commuting woes, as funding for the MRT Line 7 project could be delayed by the ongoing tussle on where the common station will be situated, as conglomerate San Miguel Corp. said it cannot talk to funding agencies until the issue is resolved. NORIEL DE GUZMAN
Meralco has 5 reasons to hike 2015 capex
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HE Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) may boost its capital expenditure (capex) for the year by some P1 billion in anticipation of more robust business in the months ahead. “I think, for this year, we are probably looking at P13.5 billion and potentially up to P14.5 billion,” Meralco
President Oscar S. Reyes said. In 2014 Meralco’s capex stood at P12.6 billion. Capex in the first three months this year totaled P3 billion. The Meralco official explained that the additional budget was “directed at five things.” “One, is continue to meet [the] growing number of customer accounts [which is] increasing at 4 percent to 5 percent per annum,” he said.
At end-March Meralco customers aggregated 5.63 million, up by 4 percent and buoyed by residential, commercial and industrial sale segments. Residential customers, which account for 91 percent of its subscriber base, rose by almost 198,000. “Number two, being able to respond to load growth and decrease in energy sales with more awareness S “M,” A
n JAPAN 0.3617 n UK 68.6887 n HK 5.7640 n CHINA 7.2121 n SINGAPORE 33.1027 n AUSTRALIA 34.4967 n EU 48.7816 n SAUDI ARABIA 11.9267 Source: BSP (28 May 2015)