BusinessMirror July 2, 2015

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BusinessMirror

THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008

A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18, 2014 10 No. Vol. 40 10 No. 266 Thursday, July 2,Vol.2015

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I.M.F. SAYS ISSUANCE OF GUARANTEES SHOULD BE CONSIDERED WITHIN THE BUDGET PROCESS

PHL not fully disclosing state guarantees

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HE International Monetary Fund (IMF) said the Philippines has not reported all its financial guarantees and urged the government to properly disclose its obligations.

INSIDE

BYEBYE, BORACAY? G

Asap: Always say a prayer

OD our Father, if it is Your will, and is Your plan, enter every home in every country. Bring Peace, Unity, Love and Hope. Touch every heart so everyone can show kindness to all. Heal every sickness. Teach each one how to know, love and serve You. Let our Faith be always over our fears. Let our Trust be our lead to Your Kingdom. Let joy and humility be present as we live Jesus in our hearts forever. Amen. YETTA L. CRUZ AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Editor: erard . a o • i e t e

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Life

REELING: LEARNING FROM THE MASTERS: FROM OZU TO KUROSAWA »D2

BusinessMirror

Thursday, July 2, 2015

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Bye-bye, Boracay? Hello, Bohol!

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B G R Lifestyle & Entertainment Editor

N a story that was published last month on CNNPhilippines.com, the writer Paolo Taruc reports: “A Japanese government agency is sounding the alarm of an ‘imminent loss’ of Boracay’s marine and coastal ecosystems if the status quo prevails. In a five-year study of the tourist spot, the Japan International Cooperation Agency and a group of Japanese and Filipino scientists discovered that the island’s coral reef ecosystem has been seriously degraded by tourism-related activities.” Having visited this so-called strip of heaven-on-earth in Aklan intermittently over the past decade, this bit of recent news came as no surprise to me. In 2005 FOMO finally got the better of me and I took a flight to this strip of resort living that had everybody oohing and aahing over its powder-soft white-sand beach and its crystal-blue water. Walking the shoreline that late afternoon of my arrival, as I channeled my inner Jane Fonda, circa Julia, it felt like I was traipsing on powder alright—but overall, the experience fell way short of the sublime. All kinds of detritus carelessly left behind by tourists were everywhere, stretches of water were darkened by kelp, and the long stretch of beachfront reverberated with the mindnumbing din of mindless commerce. So much for heaven on earth. When I returned to Manila and friends eagerly inquired about my Boracay experience, I invariably told them it felt like being in Malate in the 1990s on a weekend—minus the charm and character. Of course Boracay is still on the map—and still cited as one of the “best beaches in the world.” Nonetheless, if the growing buzz being generated by destinations not found in Aklan is any indication, it would seem that no small chunk of tourists, both local and foreign, perhaps reeling from Boracay fatigue, are ready to move on. One such destination is Bohol, in the Central Visayas region and the country’s 10th largest island which made international headlines in 2013 after an earthquake that measured 7.2 on the Richter scale shook the province and the entire region. The

earthquake claimed hundreds of lives and damaged thousands of structures, including centuries-old churches. Today, as Boholanons continue to rebuild from the devastation wrought by the 2013 tremblor, the province is enjoying a renaissance as a tourist destination rich with offerings that go beyond lovely beaches and dazzling blue waters, from sublime churches that date back to the Spanish colonization of the Philippines (Church of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception in Baclayon, Church of San Pedro in Loboc) to a river of such poetry (Loboc River), from mystifying geological formations (Chocolate Hills) to one of smallest primates in the world (Philippine tarsier). This renaissance in tourism has prompted top leisure property developers to open resorts/hotels that would accommodate the influx of local and foreign tourists looking to sample the offerings of the province. These include the ultra-luxurious Eskaya Beach Resort & Spa, and the excellent Bellevue Resort by the Bellevue Hotels & Resorts (the same company behind The Bellevue Manila in Alabang). Both are in Panglao, southwest of Bohol. Joining the Bohol party in Panglao is the Henann Group of Resorts, which has made a name for giving Boracay some of the best accommodations to be found in that island. The developer breaks another record in the hotel and tourism industry with the opening of Henann Resort Alona Beach ( . enann. o o o ), the largest resort in Panglao. “We consider Henann Resort Alona Beach a milestone in our company’s 17-year history, as this is our first property outside Boracay. It has always been my personal goal to expand nationwide and bring the Hennan brand of service to the four corners of the Philippines,” said Dr. Henry O. Chusuey, chairman of the Henann Group of Resorts. Welcoming guests beginning in April— and a group from the lifestyle and travel media in May, myself included—Henann Resort Alona Beach boasts of the longest and widest beachfront along Alona Beach, a 1 1/2-kilometer stretch of pristine white sand and overlooking rocky cliffs. The 6.5-hectare property has an initial 100 rooms on offer to tourists, with an additional 300 rooms nearing completion along with a luxury spa (Kai

Spa) and a three-story, 2,160-square-meter convention center that can house up to 1,000 guests. Its room types range from deluxe, premier and suites to family, premier with pool access, plus presidential and beachfront villas. Anybody who has stayed in the Henann resorts in Boracay will find that its Bohol property echoes the brand’s signature architecture and aesthetics. The rooms feature coastal-inspired modern interiors. Each has a private terrace, wireless Internet access, bath tub with separate shower area (for premier room only), individually controlled air-conditioning, cable TV, direct dial phone, in-room safe, coffee- and tea-making facilities and personal refrigerator. “We build resorts with our clients first in our minds. We make it worth their stay whether they are with us for the short or long term. We always give our guests the best possible service as the goal is to make them happy from the moment they check-in until they leave,” Chusuey said. Also like its Boracay properties, Henann Resort Alona Beach has three pools with a sunken bar for each. Other amenities include an open-air venue for weddings, VIP lounge, fitness and business centers, and a mini shop. The brand’s famous F&B outlets in Boracay will also find a second home in Bohol by the second quarter of the year, including Sea Breeze Café (an all-day buffet restaurant) and Christina’s (Western fine dining). Already operational is the Coral Café, also an all-day buffet offering popular international fare. The opening of Henann Resort Alona Beach couldn’t have come at a more fortuitous time. To attract more travelers both here and abroad, the Bohol Tourism Board has launched its “Visit Bohol 2015” campaign which highlights the province’s heritage and culture and eco-adventure activities. The Henann Group of Resorts manages Boracay Regency Beach Resort and Spa (which will be renamed to Henann Regency Beach Resort and Spa), Henann Garden Resort, Henann Lagoon Resort and four more newly acquired properties in Station 1, Boracay. The company will be operating a total of 1,400 rooms in Boracay alone by 2016 and 2017. With Bohol’s star rising anew as a tourist destination, one hopes that it won’t end up like the sorry mess that Boracay has become. n

THE grand lobby

DR. Henry O. Chusuey (center) with sons Alfonso (right) and Hendrick

THE beachfront beckons.

THE main building façade of Henann Resort Alona Beach

A POOL villa

LIFE

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RINGGIT RALLY

Asean

BusinessMirror Editor: Max V. de Leon • Thursday, July 2, 2015 B3-1

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Infrastructure–vital for growth and competitiveness Asean-EU Perspective

HENRY J. SCHUMACHER

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OUND infrastructure is vital for the long-term growth and competitiveness of emerging economies. In Asean, improvements to connectivity and energy supplies are helping to improve the standard of living and making countries in the region increasingly attractive for investors. Expanding economies like the Philippines are demanding an even greater focus on the development of infrastructure, but the success of the Aquino administration in delivering infrastructure remains extremely limited. And with the coming elections, the chances that infrastructure is developed is undermined by the fact that this administration becomes more and more ineffective and that the next administration will be effective only in early 2017—a vital 18-month period to be lost. Governments in the region are providing investment in transportation and power-supply networks, alongside a raft of improvements to bolster their economies, help rural communities and to serve the growing need of their expanding cities. The task is enormous and this is reflected in projected investment costs. The region will need to spend $950 billion on infrastructure by 2020, to see that its economies grow and develop, according to a study undertaken by the Asian Development Bank. Improvements to water supplies, sewage networks, energy and other basic utilities can no longer be delayed. New railways, highways, ports, airports, power stations, dams and hydro schemes all feature in this promised overhaul. The Philippines aims to spend 5.2 percent of gross domestic product on infrastructure projects by 2016, compared to 2.2 percent in 2013. While the Aquino administration launched massive public-private partnership (PPP) ideas for infrastructure investments, the sad story is that most of them are still in the planning stage, failed bidding stage or a very early implementation stage. As European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, we are supporting three bills debated in committees of Sen. Ferdinand R. Marcos:

The PPP bill; The build-operate-transfer law amendments, and The right-of-way law amendments. We trust that these three pieces of legislation can be finished by the 16th Congress so that the next administration has more tools to implement badly needed infrastructure. The case of railway development within, and between Asean countries with land borders is clear cut. The move from trucks and buses to railways will meet economic, social and environmental requirements. In an archipelagic region that includes some 24,000 islands spread across 5,200 kilometer east to west and 3,400 km from north to south, Southeast Asia is defined by the sea. The maritime sector is crucial to Asean countries’ connectivity, with shipping services, ports, shipbuilding and seafaring core activities, in vast parts of the region. For centuries the region has been a crossroads of global seaborne trade, a fact reflected in the scale of Asean’s maritime industries. The creation of the Asean Economic Community is based upon the free flow of goods and people. This, in turn, depends on the establishment of an efficient and integrated maritime transport sector in the region. Possessing access to the world’s oceans is little advantage without modern ports, sound logistic facilities and effective management of maritime facilities. There are many areas requiring improvements in order to promote a safe, modern, efficient and competitive shipping sector in the region. There is a shortage of airports in many parts of Southeast Asia and even international airports serving major cities in the region are running out of capacity and increasingly stretched by millions of passengers. One consequence is that new landing slots are becoming hard to obtain. The entry and rapid development of budget airlines is responsible for much on the increased traffic. Growth of discount carriers has been phenomenal and they continue to drive the aviation market in the region. Whatever the funding mechanism chosen, Asean’s massive infrastructure overhaul is under way and due to build up considerable momentum. n n n

Malaysia stocks, ringgit rally after Fitch refrains from cut

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ALAYSIAN stocks rallied by the most since 2013 and the ringgit rose along with bonds after Fitch Ratings held off from cut cutting the nation’s credit rating.

Fitch raised the outlook on its fourth-lowest investment grade of A- to stable from negative, according to a statement on Tuesday. It said a new consumption tax introduced in April and fuel subsidy reforms are supportive of Malaysia’s finances, even as government debt guarantees increase. The company warned in March that the chance of a downgrade was more than 50 percent, helping send the ringgit to a decade low. The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Index advanced 1.8 percent to 1,736.88 as of 11:38 a.m. in Kuala Lumpur. MISC Bhd., SapuraKencana Petroleum Bhd. and DiGi.Com Bhd. were the biggest gainers, jumping more than 4 percent. The ringgit strengthened 0.9 percent to 3.7385 a dollar and earlier climbed to a oneweek high of 3.7287, data compiled

es from last year’s peak has weighed on the currency, as have debt woes at state investment company 1Malaysia Development Bhd. and the prospect of higher US interest rates. Prime Minister Najib Razak halted a decades-old fuel subsidy policy in December and started a 6-percent goods and services tax in April to boost state coffers. Falling oil prices prompted the government to lower 2015’s economic growth forecast in January to a range of 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent, from as much 6 percent. Malaysia remains resolute in strengthening public finances and will stay on its fiscal consolidation course toward balancing the budget by 2020, according to an e-mailed statement on Wednesday from the finance ministry. The deficit target for 2015 is 3.2 percent of gross domestic product. The 10-year government bond yield retreated six basis points to 3.95 percent, adding to an eight-basis point decline on Tuesday. Five-year credit-default swaps fell five basis points to 133, the biggest drop since March.

by Bloomberg show. “The rating was expected and there’s no reason for Fitch to downgrade Malaysia’s rating based on what the government has done since the last review,” said Ang Kok Heng, the Kuala Lumpur-based chief investment officer of Phillip Capital Management Sdn., which manages $428 million. “We have been buying and we are still selectively buying,” he said, referring to the nation’s equities.

Bonds rise

THE benchmark stock index fell to six-month lows on Monday as overseas investors pulled funds ahead of Fitch’s review. The ringgit slumped to 3.7887 on the same day, close to the 3.8 level it was pegged at during the Asian financial crisis before being scrapped in July 2005. The 45-percent slump in Brent crude pric-

Surprise move

1MDB’S borrowings amounted to 41.9 billion ringgit ($11.2 billion) as of March 2014, partly because

of purchases of power plants and land. As the company’s troubled finances threatened Malaysia’s rating, Najib faced calls from former premier Mahathir Mohamad to step down as leader because of the performance of 1MDB, whose advisory board he chairs. “Fitch continues to believe that the Malaysian sovereign is incurring additional contingent liabilities beyond explicit guarantees because of quasi-fiscal operations of stateowned entity 1MDB,” according to the Fitch statement. “Fitch thinks there is a high probability that sovereign support for 1MDB would be forthcoming if needed.” Fitch lowered Malaysia’s outlook to negative in 2013, citing weaker prospects for public finances. Moody’s Investors Service and Standard & Poor’s also rank Malaysia at their fourth-lowest investment grades. Moody’s has a positive outlook, while S&P’s is stable. “Fitch’s move to raise Malaysia’s outlook was a surprise,” said Wong Chee Seng, a foreign-exchange strategist at AmBank Group in Kuala Lumpur. “The ringgit’s strength reflects the realignment of trading positions as most people were factoring in a downgrade.” Bloomberg News

Singapore home prices post longest losing streak since 2002

Indonesia’s record bond inflow has Aberdeen braced for reversal

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NDONESIA has all the ingredients for a bond-market slump: accelerating inflation, slowing economic growth and Asia’s second-weakest currency this year. And yet foreign investors are snapping up the country’s debt at the fastest pace on record, lured by a yield premium over Treasuries that’s averaged more than six percentage points this month. They pumped 17.8 trillion rupiah ($1.3 billion) into the sovereign notes last week, the most since the Finance Ministry started tracking the data in 2003. The inflows show how the search for yield is prompting money managers to look past risks in emerging markets with a history of capital flight. While Indonesia’s reduced reliance on foreign-currency debt

gives it more scope to weather outflows than during the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s, Aberdeen Asset Management Asia Ltd. says the country is vulnerable as the Federal Reserve moves closer to raising interest rates. “Just because they issued localcurrency bonds doesn’t mean they’re out of the woods,” said Donald Amstad, a Singapore-based director in business development at Aberdeen Asset Management Asia, whose parent oversees about $491 billion worldwide. “We are ultra-cautious where foreign ownership of a bond market is very high.”

Entry points

OVERSEAS investors now hold 40 percent of Indonesia’s local-currency S “I’,” B-

PUBLIC and private residential housing stands in the Bukjit Panjang neighborhood of Singapore on June 26. Singapore’s home prices dropped for a seventh consecutive quarter, the longest losing streak in 13 years, as tighter mortgage curbs cooled demand in Asia’s second-most expensive housing market.

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INGAPORE’S home prices dropped for a seventh consecutive quarter, the longest losing streak in 13 years, as tighter mortgage curbs cooled demand in Asia’s second-most expensive housing market. An index tracking private residential prices fell 0.9 percent in the three months ended June 30, the longest stretch of declines since June 2002, according to preliminary data from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) on Wednesday. The last time prices fell for this long was eight consecutive quarters from September

at real-estate broker Chestertons. “We expect the same downward trend to continue for the next two quarters.” Prices may decline 4 percent to 5 percent this year, he said. Residential prices have already declined 6.7 percent since the peak in September 2013 as the curbs started to bite. Home sales dropped 57 percent to 638 units in May from a year earlier as developers offered fewer projects, according to previously released URA data. Apartment prices fell 0.5 percent in prime districts in the second quarter, Wednesday’s data showed. Those

2000, the data showed. The government began introducing residential property curbs in 2009 as low interest rates and demand from foreign buyers raised concerns that the market was overheating. They have included a cap on debt repayment costs at 60 percent of a borrower’s monthly income, higher stamp duties on home purchases and an increase in real-estate taxes. “The mortgage rules have impacted volumes a lot, which have more than halved, and that’s now showing in prices,” said Donald Han, Singapore-based managing director

in the suburbs dropped 1.2 percent. Prices in areas near prime districts slipped 0.5 percent. Singapore’s government may start easing residential curbs for Singaporeans owning their second and third homes, CBRE Group Inc. Head of Research Desmond Sim said last month. The government may lower taxes for the island-state’s citizens, but won’t remove them entirely, Sim said. Prices fell 4 percent last year, the first year-on-year decline since 2008, as the government’s five-year campaign to rein in property values curbed demand. Bloomberg News

ASEAN

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Sports BusinessMirror

BIG GUNS

RUSSIA’S Ekaterina Makarova has her eyes on the ball, as Romania’s Simona Halep is frustrated after losing a service game to Jana Cepelova of Slovakia on Tuesday. AP

ANDY MURRAY advances with ease. AP

Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray went through in straight sets and joined the fourth member of their exclusive club, Novak Djokovic, who did the same on opening day on Monday.

B B D

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Los Angeles Times

HREE-QUARTERS of the men’s “Big Four” did what they were supposed to do on Tuesday at Wimbledon. They won. Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray went through in straight sets and joined the fourth member of their exclusive club, Novak Djokovic, who did the same on opening day on Monday. Federer, a seven-time champion here, beat Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3, and was asked afterward what Wimbledon moment he recalled most fondly. “I prefer the moment at match point, until I hold the trophy,” he said, “and until I see my team and family.” Nadal beat Thomaz Bellucci of Brazil, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4, and was asked afterward, seeing as he has slipped to a No. 10 seeding this year, how his game was. “I played OK,” he said. “Played well, played solid. Very good with my backhand.” So where did that put him, confidence-wise? “Second round,” he said. “That’s all.” Britain’s Murray, always the man in a fishbowl here, beat Mikhail Kukushkin of Kazakhstan, 6-4, 7-6 (3), 6-4, and was asked—as the British press seeks any and every imaginable angle from him during Wimbledon—his feelings about the many Brits who died in the recent Tunisia beach massacre. “I thought it was horrific,” Murray said.

KVITOVA CRUISES; HALEP OUT

IT was also a routine start for defending women’s champion Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic, seeded second. She got the featured first match of the second day on Centre Court and made the most of it, beating Kiki Bertens of the Netherlands, 6-1, 6-0. Third-seeded Simona Halep didn’t fare as well. The Romanian was upset by Jana Sepelova of Slovakia, 5-7, 6-4, 6-3. Halep went all the way to the semifinals last year. The woman who beat Halep in last year’s semifinals, and then lost badly to Kvitova in the final, continued to struggle. Eugenie Bouchard, the Canadian who reached two Grand Slam semifinals and the Wimbledon final last year—but slipped all the way to a 12th seeding here— was upset by China’s Ying-Ying Duan, 7-6 (3), 6-4. Bouchard is suffering from a torn stomach muscle and said she hopes that the break between now and the US Open will help her heal. Sam Querrey won for the US men, but Tim Smyczek lost. Christina McHale of the US advanced on the women’s side.

SERENA AND VENUS PULL OUT OF DOUBLES L

ONDON—The Williams sisters pulled out of women’s doubles at Wimbledon on Tuesday, with Serena saying it’s because she wants to focus on her bid for a fourth consecutive Grand Slam title in singles. The official reason for the withdrawal was given as Serena’s “soreness.” Both siblings won first-round singles matches in straight sets on Monday. “Following yesterday’s match, I feel it would be best for me to concentrate on singles here at Wimbledon, and as a result, have made the decision to withdraw from doubles,” Serena said in a statement. “I’ve always loved playing doubles with Venus, particularly here at Wimbledon where we’ve had so much success over the years, and so I’m really sorry to have to withdraw this year.” She trailed 3-1 at the start and later slipped and tumbled to the turf during the first set of Monday’s 6-4, 6-1 victory over Margarita Gasparyan. Venus, who is older than Serena, beat Madison Brengle. 6-0, 6-0. Serena has won 22 Grand Slam matches in a row and seeking to complete another self-styled “Serena Slam” with a fourth straight major title. She also has

a chance at the first calendar-year Grand Slam since Steffi Graf did it in 1988. The two siblings have teamed to win 13 Grand Slam doubles titles as a pair, most recently at Wimbledon in 2012. They have not even been as far as the semifinals at a major tournament in doubles since losing in that round at the 2013 US Open. The sisters have yet to play a doubles match together this season. Their most recent competition was last year’s US Open, when they lost in the quarterfinals. When the Williams sisters played doubles at the All England Club last year, they stopped after three games in the second round, after Serena served four consecutive double-faults. She had looked disoriented during warmups, having trouble grabbing tennis balls tossed to her by ball kids. The reason given that day was that Serena was ill. Misaki Doi of Japan and Stephanie Vogt of Liechtenstein replaced the Williams sisters in this year’s draw. The Slovakian team of Dominika Cibulkova and Anna Karolina Schmiedlova also pulled out of the doubles at Wimbledon on Tuesday. AP

IN GOOD COMPANY

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ONDON—Since 2006, only five teenagers have managed to reach the men’s third round at Wimbledon—and three of them went on to become Grand Slam champions: Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and Marin Cilic. So a couple of kids could find themselves in good company if they can add their names to that short list this year. One, 18-year-old Alexander Zverev of Germany, is in action on Wednesday at the All England Club, facing 105th-ranked wild-card entry Denis Kudla of the United States in the second round. Zverev, who is ranked 74th, won a lengthy opening match on Monday, edging Teymuraz Gabashvili, 6-3, 1-6, 6-3, 3-6, 9-7. Of the five teens in this year’s draw, only one other remains, 40th-ranked Borna Coric of Croatia, also 18. He won his first-round match on Tuesday, and it also ended 9-7 in the fifth set, against Sergiy Stakhovsky. Coric will meet 25th-seeded Andreas Seppi on Thursday with a chance to get to the third round. Djokovic and Murray both were 19 in 2006 when they reached the fourth round at Wimbledon; Djokovic has

since collected eight major titles, and Murray two. Cilic, last year’s US Open champion, was 19 when he played in the fourth round in 2008. The other teens to get at least to the third round since 2006 were Bernard Tomic in 2011, and Nick Kyrgios last year. Here’s what else is happening on Wednesday at Wimbledon:

is only 24 and was a semifinalist a year ago. Haas has been ranked as high as No. 2—way back in 2002—and participated in four Grand Slam semifinals, including at Wimbledon in 2009. But he’s been hampered by injuries, including repeated operations on his right shoulder, most recently in June 2014.

WILLIAMS SISTERS

NO. 1 Novak Djokovic, the 2011 and 2014 champion, plays 92nd-ranked Jarkko Nieminen on Centre Court. Djokovic has won five of their previous six meetings, including last month at the French Open. He’s never lost to a player ranked as low as Nieminen in 228 career Grand Slam matches. Nieminen eliminated 2002 champ Lleyton Hewitt in the first round.

A DAY after pulling out of doubles, Serena and Venus Williams are on the schedule in singles. No. 1-seeded Serena takes a 22-match Grand Slam winning streak into her Centre Court match against 93rd-ranked Timea Babos of Hungary, whose career record at majors is 2-11. No. 16 Venus is on Court 2 against 95th-ranked Yulia Putintseva of Kazakhstan.

OLD HAND

DEFENDING CHAMP

SPORTS

AT 37, Tommy Haas is the oldest man to win a match at the All England Club since Jimmy Connors was 38 in 1991. After getting past 86th-ranked Dusan Lajovic in four sets in the first round, Haas will have a tougher task in the second round, taking on No. 7 Milos Raonic, who

U.S. MEN

THREE of the four remaining American men play, including No. 17 John Isner against 148th-ranked wildcard entry Matthew Ebden of Australia, and 52nd-ranked Steve Johnson against No. 11 Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria. Dimitrov lost to another young American, Jack Sock, in the first round at Roland Garros. AP

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a request for comment on the IMF report. Still, President Aquino’s efforts to boost fiscal transparency are beginning to bear fruit, the IMF said. Since taking office in 2010, Mr. Aquino has undertaken closer scrutiny of spending plans and has cut the validity of most project approvals to one year from two. The government should survey all agencies and state-owned companies on outstanding contractual guarantees and create a regularly updated guarantee register, the IMF said. Issuance of guarantees should be considered within the budget process with a ceiling covering domestic and foreign-currency guarantees, it said. Bloomberg News

Third phase of Nuvali’s Riomonte set for launch B VG C

CRUISE FOR BIG GUNS | THURSDAY, JULY 2, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

Authorities have issued non-central bank guarantees equal to 47 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) but have only reported those equal to 31 percent of GDP, the IMF said in its Fiscal Transparency Evaluation report prepared by a staff team based on information as of May 2014. “There is a range of other guarantees on issue that could cause a problem,” the IMF said in the report, released on June 30, citing guarantees to homeowners by state agencies and on old private-partnership projects. The mission discovered additional obligations through an incomplete survey of state-owned companies’ annual reports, it said. The Philippine finance department didn’t immediately respond to

YALA Land Premier (ALP), the luxury real-estate arm of publicly listed Ayala Land Inc., said it will launch the third phase of its development at its latest project in Nuvali in Laguna this month, as the company recorded brisk sales in the two earlier phases. Jose Juan Jugo, Ayala Land vice president and head of ALP, said the company anticipates sales averaging more or less P100 million a day at its Riomonte development, the company’s seventh in Nuvali. This is an 85-hectare development project involving a so-called

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 45.1370

five-pocket neighborhood that Ayala Land hopes to develop at the cost of some P8.8 billion. The project was launched only on May 31 and sells 10 lots per hectare on average. “The average selling price of an ALP Nuvali lot in 2007 was P9,000 per square meter. That figure has now appreciated to as much as P30,000 per sq m in 2015, or a 91-percent increase,” Jugo said in briefing journalists. He said sales takeup for the two phases of development, worth around P3.75 billion, already reached P2.7 billion or 72 percent of total. C  A

MARRIOTT GRAND BALLROOM UNVEILED The Marriott Grand Ballroom officially opens with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Wednesday, led by (from left) Marriott Hotels Area Vice President for Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines and Japan Karl Hudson; Marriott Manila General Manager Bruce Winton; Marriott Hotels President and Managing Director for Asia Pacific Craig Smith; Alliance Global Group Inc. Executive Director Kevin Tan; Travellers International Hotel Group President Kingson Sian; Pasay City Mayor Antonio Calixto; and Resorts World Manila Chief Operating Officer Stephen Reilly. It was followed by the traditional dragon and lion dance, complete with an elaborate firecracker display. The Marriott Grand Ballroom is an 8,000-square-meter meetings facility that houses the Philippines’s largest hotel ballroom with 3,000 sq m of function space that can accommodate up to 4,000 guests. It features world-class, state-of-the-art technology, including the only ballroom that uses SkyFold Technology — vertical folding partitions that come from the ceiling—and 176 programmable pillow ceiling lights. Aside from the ballroom, there are 28 versatile multifunction spaces, including six VIP boxes, two ballrooms and three dining outlets. ALYSA SALEN

DOT developing new ‘opportunity markets’ B M. S F. A

Special to the BM

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HE Department of Tourism (DOT) is developing new markets to further increase visitor arrivals for 2015, with special focus on tourists coming from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), Europe, former Soviet

Union states and the Middle East. The efforts have been boosted with a P346-million separate lineitem budget under the DOT’s appropriations for 2015, official documents show. “This is the first time that there is a separate line item for the market development group,” confirmed DOT Undersecretary for Tourism Development Benito

C. Bengzon Jr. to the BM. The amount accounts for some 15 percent of the P2.3-billion DOT budget in this year’s General Appropriations Act (GAA). In his presentation at the AIM Conference Center on “The Future of the Asean Tourism Industry” last Friday, Bengzon said the agency S “DOT,” A

n JAPAN 0.3687 n UK 70.9373 n HK 5.8225 n CHINA 7.2790 n SINGAPORE 33.5093 n AUSTRALIA 34.7475 n EU 50.2555 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.0378 Source: BSP (1 July 2015)


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