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A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18,June 201418, Vol. 2015 10 No. 40Vol. 10 No. 252 Thursday,
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BOI could lose power to validate perks INSIDE
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HE House of Representatives is reportedly bent on removing the power of the Board of Investments (BOI) to validate incentive claims when the two chambers of Congress meet anew for the bicameral conference to craft the final version of the Tax Incentives Management and Transparency Act (Timta).
BLUEWATER MARIBAGO GETS BETTER WITH AGE The brightest future
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EAR Lord, we bring before You women, men and children who have lost their freedom, whose dignity has been broken, whose lives and future have been darkened. Give them back their dignity, restore their broken bodies and spirit. Provide them with the brightest future. Let them live again in love and peace. Let joy and happiness reign in their hearts. Amen.
WORD AND LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
NORA’S BRILLIANCE SHINES AT 38TH GAWAD URIAN »D3
BusinessMirror
The Marine Wildlife Saltwater Lagoon
Thursday, June 18, 2015
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THE Bluewater Gallery
Bluewater Maribago gets better with age
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HERE is a saying that “the older the wine, the better its taste.” I would say this description is also quite apt for the 7-hectare, family-friendly Bluewater Maribago Beach Resort & Spa (www. bluewatermaribago.com.ph), a pioneer luxury resort within the Maribago District in the beautiful island of Mactan, Cebu. The resort opened in July 1989 and last year, it celebrated its milestone silver anniversary. A member of the Bluewater Resorts group, a chain of resorts owned by the wholly Filipino Alegrado family from Butuan City in Mindanao, this Class “AAA” resort has managed to keep up with the times and the competition, remaining very elegant and sophisticated while still highlighting traditional Filipino hospitality with a few modern twists. Just two years after it opened with 30 rooms, it expanded with the new 64-room Garden Wing. When spas became a huge trend in the wellness industry, it added in January 2007 a third wing—the 50 Amuma Spa Suites designed by architect and wood
artist Benji Reyes. Today, the resort, particularly the spa, pavilions and swimming pool area, bears Benji’s signature mark on modern contemporary Filipino architecture (thatched roofs, airy verandas, capiz shell windows, etc.) and you can discern his constant fascination with recycled wood salvaged from old ancestral houses. Lots of it is used all over the resort. As in the past, they worked around the existing decades-old balete and talisay trees when they constructed the new rooms, spa and pavilions. Benji also designed the room’s cantilevered “floating beds,” a Bluewater trademark, as well as other very Filipino wooden sculpted furniture throughout the resort. Today, the resort has 158 well-appointed, spacious and clean air-conditioned rooms designed in the native Filipino concept—20 Premier De Luxe Rooms, five Royal Bungalows, 83 Deluxe Rooms and 50 Amuma Spa Suites. Room amenities include a mini bar, a wallmounted flatscreen cable TV, NDD/IDD telephone, a large skylighted bathroom with free-standing bathtub, closet, bidet and separate shower with rain shower head, private veranda and coffee/tea making facility plus free Wi-Fi. Guests are transported to their respective rooms
and suites via eco-friendly golf carts. Bluewater Maribago is also distinct from other resorts on Mactan Island. For one, it has, at 110 meter, the longest beach of them all. Its white-sand beachfront, like that of any other resort on the island, may not be spectacular as Boracay’s (it now being the unfair standard), but it is still quite nice and clean. The addition of the 1.1-hectare, man-made white-sand Bluewater Private Island, located 65 meter offshore from the beach, also provides resort guests with an additional area to bask under the sun. It is also rented out for romantic, intimate and exclusive weddings (it can seat 1,300 guests) and/or private dining. Of its five top-notch food and beverage outlets, the cool and breezy Cove Live Seafood Restaurant, Bluewater Maribago’s premier restaurant, is the only one on the island to offer a wide variety of the sea’s bounty live, housed in seawater aquariums, and these are prepared to your liking. The others outlets include the 24-hour Allegro Restaurant (the main restaurant that offers a variety of theme dinners and entertainment throughout the week), Molto Italiano (an Italian cafe offering brick oven specialties), Amuma Spa Café &
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The Senate and the House have already approved their versions of the Timta. A particularly contentious amendment, however, will still take place when the Senate and the House meet during the congressional break, officials said. The chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Romero S. Quimbo of the Second District of Marikina City, in a text message,
reiterated his intention to remove the BOI’s power to validate incentives, in a bid to make the processing of incentives quicker. Quimbo earlier hinted that the long assessment period by the BOI may be a tactic to delay the work of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), since the agency’s auditing period comes after the BOI’s validation. The lawmaker said the yearlong validation of the BOI can also give
time for unscrupulous companies to resort to corruption to ensure the BOI passes a clean validation report to the BIR. But, as explained by BOI Governor Lucita P. Reyes during a committee hearing for the proposed bill, the agency must first validate the incentive claims of its registered companies to check if the incentives they are asking for are connected with their registered activity. S “BOI,” A
Juice Bar (offering healthy fare) and the open-air Oyster Bar (offers Happy Hour specials). The resort also has the Bluewater Gallery, a fully functional and updated art gallery that is a venue for local Philippine artists to showcase their works to both local and international audiences. It also hosts events and workshops as part of its art appreciation and educational goals. The Amuma Spa—“amuma” means “to pamper” in Visayan—only hires single mothers as spa therapists to provide the traditional Filipino hilot, pik pik kawayan sa siki (foot massage using bamboo poles), all best enjoyed in the comfort of your room, as well as Western and Asian massage therapies such as water shiatsu (watsu), Swedish, Namikoshi Shiatsu, Duot, Hot Stone and Travel Revive Fusion, their quality right up there with the best spas in the country. The three inviting, beach-inspired, lagoon-shaped swimming pools are set amid landscaping that is a feast for the senses. The resort is also known for its Marine Wildlife Saltwater Lagoons which are filled with assorted tropical fish including black tip reef sharks, groupers and clown fish. ■
Six budget tips and tricks for traveling like a pro WE are already at the tail end of the summer season but planning for travels abroad remains a favorite pastime for many. The demand for affordable airfares, accommodations and destinations continues to increase as more Filipinos are looking to reward themselves with an out-of-the-country trip with friends or family. Traveling offers a complete sensory experience: from authentic food, the sights and sounds, all the way to shopping and discovering great finds to remind you how wonderful your trip was. All these experiences, however, entail a budget. It takes patience and skill to know how to manage your expenses abroad, especially for the more luxurious destinations in Europe or North America. It might be challenging for some, but knowing how to get the best value for your hard-earned money will make your vacation more enjoyable, with a few more to spare for trinkets and souvenirs you can take home. Here are a few tips and tricks to make your travel budgets go a long way while you’re out of the country: 1. Bring your own tumbler and avoid spending for water. Everyone needs water but it can be costly if you’re buying bottles on a daily basis. Pack a tumbler and refill it with water from your hotel or any restaurant you’ll be dining at to save on cost. 2. Traveling with friends? Have a common fund. Pool together the amount
of money you plan to spend as a group for things like entrance fees, transportation, snacks, etc. It’ll be easier to keep track of your group’s spending which, in turn, will help you budget your own personal expenses. It also solves the problem of splitting the bill. 3. Educate yourself on the exchange rate . If you’re flexible with your destination, choose a country where you can get the most out of your money. The exchange rate between our local currency and your country of choice will affect your purchasing power depending on the rate. Make sure that you also get the best rate when exchanging cash abroad. A quick Google search will help you determine where to get the best rates for your money. 4. Pledge your loyalty to an airline and score a free trip. Loyalty does pay off. If you travel with the same airline, make sure you’re on their loyalty program in order for you to collect points each time you fly. Score enough points and exchange them for a “free” ticket or upgrades. 5. Know your way at the breakfast buffet. If your hotel accommodation comes with a daily breakfast buffet, don’t let any of that food go to waste. Discreetly pack up your leftovers (or whatever you’re capable of taking away) and save it as a snack for later. 6. And if you’re on an unlimited mobile surfing plan, make sure you use it to its full potential. Technology
and connectivity can make your travel experience more efficient and enjoyable. Share your adventures abroad with everyone as they happen to you in real-time. Don’t wait around for Wi-Fi when you’ve got the Internet at your fingertips. Message, call, and connect as much as you want with friends and family. Never let them miss out on anything with you, and stay connected with what’s going on back home. Use the Internet to search for coupons and get special online deals on attractions, shows, food and shopping. Save on time by using maps and in-city guides to get train and bus schedules.
You can also skip unwanted airport hassle by doing a Web check-in on your phone. You’ve got the power of mobile surfing, so make the most out of it. And speaking of unlimited data roaming, Globe Telecom has great news for all its prepaid subscribers. The leading telco is now offering its flat rate for unlimited data roaming service of P599 per day to its prepaid users, providing uninterrupted access to the Internet in over 50 countries and destinations worldwide. “With Globe Prepaid Roam Surf, prepaid customers can enjoy their travel experiences and share them instantly with
everyone back home as they happen. With a flat rate for unlimited data roaming service accessible for a full 24-hour cycle, prepaid customers will definitely get the best value for their money,” says Coco Domingo, vice president for Platinum and Roaming Business at Globe. Customers need not worry about the subscription expiring at the stroke of midnight, assuring them of a seamless and worry-free data connectivity experience. Prepaid customers traveling to Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, China, Croatia, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Estonia, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Japan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macau, Malaysia, Mexico, Nauru, the Netherlands, Panama, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, UAW, Uganda, the United Kingdom, and the US can avail themselves of Globe Prepaid Roam Surf. Roam Surf for Globe Prepaid offers customers the ability to choose from three variants, P599 for 24 hours, P1,797 for three full days and P2,995 for five full days. Customers can dial *143# and access the International and Roaming menu to register to the service without having to memorize registration keywords. Visit www.globe.com.ph/international or dial *143# to know more.
LIFE
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IT’S OVER!
WARRIORS WIN
Sports
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| THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
MEMBERS of the Golden State Warriors celebrate at the center court after beating Cleveland Cavaliers in the finals to cop their first title after 40 years. AP
BusinessMirror
IT’S OVER! WARRIORS WIN THEIR FIRST NBA TITLE IN 40 YEARSS
HOPE WILL PREVAIL FOR CAVS
B M B Los Angeles Times
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LEVELAND—The 40-year basketball drought finally ended, the Golden State Warriors flush with their first championship since 1975. Champagne sprayed like geysers in the locker room after the Warriors eliminated the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game Six of the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals, 105-97, continuing the same shoot-at-will style that carried them to 67 regular-season victories and a 16-5 playoff run. Stephen Curry grabbed the game’s final rebound and heaved the ball high into the air as his teammates began celebrating at a quieted Quicken Loans Arena. The Warriors didn’t face a Game Seven in their four playoff series and should be considered one of the best teams ever, “top to bottom,” Curry said. “I wish I had 1,800 more ways to explain this, because this is pretty amazing,” he said with the Larry O’Brien Trophy perched next to him on a table. The Cavaliers, on the other hand, claimed in their plastered-everywhere-in-Ohio mantra they would be “ALL IN,” but missed a key component, the “ALL” part. The Warriors were the ones with contributions from many players, Curry and veteran Andre Iguodala each scoring 25 points on Tuesday, while Draymond Green had 16 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists. Iguodala didn’t start once in the regular season but was promoted from the bench last week for Game Four. He played tough defense against LeBron James throughout and received the Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) award after averaging 16.3 points, 5.8 rebounds and four assists. James tried his best with an unimpressive cast of characters. It wasn’t his fault injuries took out Kevin Love in April and Kyrie Irving in the Finals opener. He acted accordingly, taking a lot of shots, and missing plenty but also creating breathtaking stats, such as accounting for 26 of his team’s 32 field goals in Game Five. He had 32 points on 13-for-33 shooting, 18 rebounds and nine assists in Game Six. For dragging along a damaged team, he deserved much respect. Cleveland fans booed when he wasn’t chosen as the
C GOLDEN State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (left) kisses the championship trophy and Andre Iguodala holds the series Most Valuable Player trophy as they celebrate winning the championship series. AP
Finals MVP, which would have made him the first from the losing team since the Los Angeles Lakers’ Jerry West in 1969 (against Boston). James finished with numbingly impressive stats (35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds, 8.8 assists) but fell to 2-4 in the Finals, further away from the king of the 1980s (Magic Johnson, 5-4 in NBA Finals), the 1990s (Michael Jordan, 6-0) and infant years of the 2000s (Kobe Bryant, 5-2). “I’ve been on the short end of this four times,” James said. “I’m a guy who just tries to be successful in everything I do. When you fall short, it hurts. It eats at you. I wish I could have did better and done more. It just wasn’t our time.” For Curry, it was the first championship of a 27-yearold’s burgeoning career. If he’s not the best player in the world right now, to steal James’s self-proclamation from a few days ago, he’s very close. For Steve Kerr, it was an unimaginable run in his first season as an NBA coach after ditching TV analyst headsets to turn the Warriors into a force at Oracle Arena (48-4) and, really, anywhere. For West, a Warriors consultant and sounding board, it was the first championship he’d been part of since leaving the Lakers’ front office after the 2000 season. For former University of California in Los Angles player
GREAT EFFORT NOT ENOUGH B B M
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The Associated Press
LEVELAND—LeBron James pulled off his sunglasses, and there was no hiding the hurt in his eyes. He had given everything he had, the best player turning into a better teammate, and it wasn’t enough. “If I could have given more, I would have done it, but I gave everything I had,” he said on Tuesday after Cleveland’s 105-97 loss to Golden State in Game Six of the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals. And that’s more than just points, rebounds and assists. Throughout the year James had proven what it meant not just to be the star but to be the leader, even more during the NBA Finals. “What’s evident to everyone is what a spectacular basketball player LeBron is. But he has become a great leader of his team,” Coach David Blatt said. “He’s become a guy that has evolved in terms of his role within the team and within the whole concept of what it is that we want to be about.” James believed he could will Cleveland to a championship, with a confidence that turned almost defiance. Even as the Golden State Warriors had asserted themselves as the series went on, James said he didn’t doubt the Cavaliers could win until the clock reached zero. James finished with 32 points, 18 rebounds and nine assists in another tremendous individual effort, but his outmanned Cavaliers lost the final three games. His fourth loss in six NBA Finals trips left him wondering briefly if he’d be better off just missing the playoffs entirely, so it would hurt less. “I didn’t win a championship,” he said, “but I’ve done a lot of good things in this first year back and, hopefully, I can continue it.” He couldn’t end Cleveland pro sports’ lengthy title drought, a 51-year stretch that’s been so tough even some
Bob Myers, it meant the completion of a wildly successful transition from up-and-coming player agent to Warriors general manager in 2011. For the Golden State players themselves, already record-setters for three-pointers per game in a playoff season, there was a huge ascension from just one year ago, when they finished sixth in the Western Conference and lost in the first round. They quickly became the first team since 1991 to win a championship with no players with previous NBA Finals experience. Cleveland Coach David Blatt scrapped his one-game trial of matching the Warriors’ small lineup, allowing center Timofey Mozgov to return to quasi-prominence on Tuesday (17 points and 12 rebounds). But the Cavaliers’ guards were off the mark, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Dellavedova, J.R. Smith and James Jones making only seven-of-29 shots. Not that the Warriors cared about missed shots by opposing guards. The Bay Area had itself a basketball champion, four decades after the last one.
B M R Akron Beacon Journal
LEVELAND—How best to measure the pain of a fan base in the wake of the Cavaliers’ loss in the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals? Especially when, unlike Jose Mesa’s meltdown or Michael Jordan’s shot, it crept in, pin by pin piercing the well-punctured voodoo doll of Cleveland’s sports history. Anderson Varejao’s torn Achilles. Kevin Love’s dislocated shoulder. Kyrie Irving’s fractured kneecap. Matthew Dellavedova’s dehydration. LeBron James’s exhaustion. Pin by pin, jab by jab, prick by prick, Northeast Ohioans suffered. In a sense, they were being prepared for Tuesday night’s 105-97 loss to the Golden State Warriors at Quicken Loans Arena. The Warriors captured the best-of-seven series, 4-2, and earned their first NBA championship in 40 years. Fans who have supported the Cavs, Browns and Indians with blind loyalty and financial sacrifice only to see the city’s title drought of 51 years stretch on could have been crushed. But to many, this feels different. Different because James is still here. Having the self-proclaimed “best player in the world” back home provides hope. James, 30, will be in his prime for three or four more years, providing he avoids serious injury. A championship, a dynasty, or at least as much of a dynasty as there is any more, is still possible. James didn’t win a title his first season in Miami with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. Despite his summer 2010 prediction of “not two, not three, not four, not five, not six, not seven,” the Heat didn’t break through until James’s second year, then captured the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy in back-to-back years. The Heat went to the NBA Finals all four seasons with James, but he was also denied by the Dallas Mavericks and the San Antonio Spurs.
So there is a feeling the Cavs can get back to the Finals “not two, not three” more times, especially considering the state of the Eastern Conference. In his Sports Illustrated essay announcing his return to the Cavaliers, James warned it wouldn’t be easy. “I’m not promising a championship,” James wrote in the piece, told to Lee Jenkins. “I know how hard that is to deliver. We’re not ready right now. No way. Of course, I want to win next year, but I’m realistic. It will be a long process, much longer than it was in 2010. My patience will get tested. I’m going into a situation with a young team and a new coach.... ” When that essay hit the Internet last July 11, Cavs rookie coach David Blatt didn’t have Love, who arrived in a threeteam trade in August. Blatt didn’t have Timofey Mozgov, J.R. Smith or Iman Shumpert, acquired by General Manager David Griffin in two January deals. After those moves, the Cavs did seem ready. But as the injuries mounted and James’s supporting cast dwindled, each step on the playoff road seemed like a gift. Many wondered if the Cavs could beat the Chicago Bulls in the conference semifinals without Love, yet the Cavs won in six games. They captured the East crown, sweeping the Atlanta Hawks, even though Irving missed two games with foot and knee injuries. Then Irving went down in a Game One overtime loss to the Warriors, and the Cavs seemed destined for the broom. Yet, they persevered, they overcame and until the end, displayed unparalleled fight. The Cavs went where they were seemingly incapable of going, extinguishing the firepower of the deep and talented Warriors to take a 2-1 lead before it all fell apart. Even in defeat, there seems no reason for despair. Love has said he’s coming back. Irving started to learn what it takes to be an elite professional. Tristan Thompson had a breakout season, like Irving following James’s lead. There will be tough off-season decisions in regard to Thompson, Dellavedova, Shumpert and Smith, who could decline his player option, but the Cavs’ foundation is set. The 51-year drought continues, but there is light at the end of the tunnel.
CSR EXPO Officials of the League of Corporate Foundations (LCF) promote the CSR Expo 2015 with the theme “Collaborate.
LEBRON JAMES falls short of leading his Cleveland Cavaliers to a crown. AP
local fans believe in the so-called Cleveland Curse. But they also believe in James, the 30-year-old Northeast Ohio son who came home from Miami last summer and brought life back to the Cavaliers franchise. He couldn’t bring them their first title, not with what he had left around him in these NBA Finals. Kevin Love had been lost to a dislocated left shoulder in the first round. Then Kyrie Irving went down with a fractured left kneecap in Game One of this series. James still willed the Cavaliers to a 2-1 lead and was so good there was even talk that he could join Jerry West as the only NBA Finals MVPs from losing teams. Cavaliers fans sure believed he should have, the ones who remained to watch the award celebration booing loudly when Golden State’s Andre Iguodala was announced as the winner. His departure for Miami in 2010 had turned the locals against him, led them to burn his jerseys in the streets. There was anger, hurt, even hatred in their voices when they jeered him when he came back for the first time with the Heat. He became a two-time champion in Miami but, more important, grew up, learned what it would take to lead a team. He returned more mature than when he left, announcing his decision with a thoughtful essay, a sharp contrast to his widely criticized TV special in 2010. He became a more assertive leader. He was already the best player. It was a little surprising to hear him call himself that after Game Five, when he said he was still confident because he was the best player in the world. He usually leaves talking about his greatness to others. But having belief is one thing; having sufficient help is another. James didn’t, and the effort in trying to carry a team was too much even for one of sports’ most gifted athletes. He stood with his hands on his hips often in the second half, trying desperately to catch his breath while playing nearly 47 minutes. “It’s never a success if you go out losing,” James said. “We put ourselves back where this franchise needs to be, being a contender. But we’ve still got a lot of work to do.”
SPORTS
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MAGNESIUM DEFICIENCY CAUSES LOW ENERGY LEVELS
Sustain. Revolutionize.” (From left) Roderick de Castro and Ma. Esther Santos, LCF board of trustees members; Natalie Christine Jorge, LCF board of trustees chairman; Social Welfare Assistant Secretary Javier R. Jimenez; Ma. Fe Perez-Agudo, chairman of Hari Foundation Inc.; Stephen Reily, CEO of Resorts World Manila; Chito Maniago, LCF Public Affairs director; and Monette Itturalde-Hamlin, secretary and membership head of LCF, show their solidarity after explaining to the media the objectives of this year’s edition of the CSR Expo. STEPHANIE TUMAMPOS
World Bank: Policy shifts can mitigate ‘gray tsunami’
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HEAL H&FITNESS HEALT HEALTH&FITNESS
S the planet’s popul at ion gets older, there are fears that a gray tsunami may make the possibility of golden aging more remote. But a World Bank report released on Tuesday says global aging isn’t an unstoppable
PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 45.1570
force and can be compensated for by policy initiatives. By 2100, the world population is expected to increase from 7.3 billion to 10.9 billion, and the share of older people is increasing, raising concerns about health care, sustainability of pension systems, inter-
generational conflicts and a negative impact on economic growth and productivity. While the report, “Golden Aging, Prospects for Healthy, Active and Prosperous Aging in Europe and Central Asia,” says there are challenges as S “W B,” A
■ JAPAN 0.3660 ■ UK 70.6797 ■ HK 5.8249 ■ CHINA 7.2735 ■ SINGAPORE 33.6440 ■ AUSTRALIA 35.0136 ■ EU 50.6210 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.0419 Source: BSP (17 June 2015)