HYBRID TRAIN The Hybrid Electronic Road Train of the Department of Science and Technology roams the Mall of Asia compound during the opening of the 2015 National Science and Technology Week on Friday at the SMX Convention Center in Pasay City. ALYSA SALEN
BusinessMirror
THREETIME ROTARY CLUBB OF MANILA M JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18, July 201425, Vol.2015 10 No. 40 Saturday, Vol. 10 No. 289
www.businessmirror.com.ph
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P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
PHL’S PAYMENTS FOR COMMODITIES FROM OTHER COUNTRIES LOWEST SINCE OCTOBER 2009
Imports declined by 13.4% in May–PSA
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HE country’s import bill in May declined by 13.4 percent to $4.39 billion, from $5.6 billion recorded a year ago, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said on Friday.
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The PSA said the May import bill was the lowest since October 2009, when imports posted a contraction of 16.8 percent. “The decline in total imported goods in May was due to the negative performance of eight out of top 10 major imported commodities for the month,” the PSA said.
TWEET LIKE A PRO In Your kindness, remember us
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OUR ways, oh Lord, are love and truth to those who keep Your covenant. Your ways, oh Lord, make known to us; teach us Your paths. Guide us in Your truth and teach us, for You are God our savior. Remember that Your compassion, oh Lord, and Your love are from of old. In Your kindness, remember us because of Your goodness, oh Lord. Amen.
BREAKING BREAD 2014, MGPC, CALIFORNIA, USA AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
SOMETHING LIKE LIFE DATING AND MARRIAGE TV-STYLE »D4
BusinessMirror
Saturday, July 25, 2015
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In a Twitter world, tweet like a pro
Data from the PSA showed that payments for electronic products went down by 12.2 percent to $1.16 billion, from $1.33 billion a year ago. Electronic products were the top imported commodity for the period, accounting for 26.6 percent of total bill in May. C A
B S K | Chicago Tribune
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HEN people write to me asking for social-media advice, they often seek tips about Twitter. I’ve been using Twitter for eight years now, and while I don’t find it confusing at all, many do. The most popular question is one that sounds simple, but really isn’t: Am I doing it right? Tweeting is a personal experience, and you’ll need to find your own voice to ultimately be successful. But I can tell you some things you definitely should and shouldn’t do that I think will go a long way in helping you #tweetlikeapro in no time. If you’re going to tweet without responding, don’t bother tweeting. It’s really that simple. I often tell people that the best social-media tip in the world is to be social. That part isn’t rocket science, but if I had a nickel for every time someone told me he or she only had time to tweet but no time to respond, I’d be a very rich man. You can’t choose between tweeting and engaging; they’re a package deal. Your bio and photo are very important. An air of mystery is good sometimes, but it’s definitely not good here. Your bio shows up in Google and Twitter searches, so make sure people can see you and find you. The default photo is an egg, and if you’ve heard people say that you shouldn’t be an egg on Twitter, this is what they mean. How serious do I take this rule? Those who have been following my articles on social media know I won’t follow back an egg, no matter who it is.
The rule of thirds will change your social-media life. This is how you ensure the proper mix of content. One-third of the time, tweet about your brand and your business. One-third of the time, tweet about things related to it without using your own content. One-third of the time be personal and answer questions to let people know who’s behind the account. And feel free to play around with the ratios. The key is to not always tweet the same thing and risk boring someone into unfollowing you. Using Twitter lists is like having a clean closet. You
know how good you feel after you pick all the clothes off the floor and then fold and organize everything neatly? That’s how you’ll feel after setting up Twitter lists. Instead of 1,000 people’s accounts all flowing into one giant stream that you can’t possibly manage, separate people by topic or location or in some other way on a Twitter list. Then, using a program such as Tweetdeck, put your list in a column. I’m betting you’ll love it. PLEASE DON’T START YOUR TWEETS LIKE THIS IN ALL CAPS. When you do, the message you want people to be drawn to is almost always
overshadowed by people who don’t understand why you’re screaming at them or telling them what they already know. If you are tweeting about something tragic, there’s absolutely no reason ever to start the tweet with TRAGIC. A final piece of advice about Twitter: Don’t focus so much on failing; focus more on trying and seeing what sticks. I think the tips I have provided here are proven and useful, but after you use Twitter for a while, you might come up with something to share with me. Nothing would make me happier. ■
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TWO DOWN, TWO TO GO C1
Sports BusinessMirror
| SATURDAY, JULY 25, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
TREACHEROUS!
The 186.5-kilometer trek from Gap to Saint-Jean-deMaurienne in Stage 18 takes the peloton over a whopping seven climbs—most midsized except for the Glandon pass, one of the hardest in pro cycling. By the way, there are 18 hairpin bends, climbed for the first time in the 112-year history of the Tour de France. AP FRANCE’S Romain Bardet wins the 18th stage in style. AP
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AINT-JEAN-DE-MAURIENNE, France—The road snaked back and forth like spaghetti stuck to a wall, 18 hairpin bends, climbed for the first time in the 112-year history of the Tour de France. Curiously, there were no crowds on this spectacular vista just perfect for the television age. Police decided that the 3-kilometer stretch of bends, piled one on top of each other up an Alpine cliff, was simply too narrow to let in spectators who line pretty much every other inch of cycling’s toughest race. Not that Chris Froome noticed on Thursday. The race leader isn’t here for the picturepostcard scenery. Just two more days in the Alps, and a second Tour victory will be his. The British rider isn’t about to get distracted and take his eyes off the road now. “I didn’t actually even realize there weren’t any spectators up there,” Froome said. “I was just in a tunnel mode at that point, just following the wheels.” After Stage 18, Team Sky’s leader really has only two wheels to follow: Nairo Quintana’s and Alejandro Valverde’s, the Movistar teammates closest to him in the overall standings. As long as he doesn’t let either of them get too far away from him on Friday and Saturday, then Froome will be sipping champagne and slipping back into the yellow jersey on Stage 21 on Sunday, on the Champs-Élyseés in Paris. “Two more stages left of real racing,” he said. “We’re focused on two guys.” Romain Bardet, on the other hand, was focused on himself. France hasn’t had a Tour winner since Bernard Hinault in 1985, and there are some that think 24-yearold Bardet could be next after his sixth place last year. But he’s not been consistent enough to improve on that this time, so he wanted to at least win a stage. He did. In style. Bardet rode alone down the huge Glandon pass and up the hairpin bends of the Montvernier Laces to take a solo victory at Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne on the second of four days in the Alps. Pierre Rolland of the Europcar team made it a 1-2 French finish, coming in 33 seconds behind the winner for AG2R La Mondiale. As they did on the first Alpine stage on Wednesday, Froome’s rivals again tested him but couldn’t make him crack over seven climbs. “Everyone attacked,” Froome said. Two-time champion Alberto Contador showed spirit, with a burst of speed on the 22-km-long climb up to the Glandon pass, but he couldn’t claw back the minutes he lost on Wednesday in a downhill crash. “One of the hardest days for me,” Contador said. “I was in pain.” Froome, Contador and other podium contenders finished together in a group of 10 riders who rode in three minutes behind the stage winner. Bardet remains too far down the overall standings—in 10th place, nearly 13 minutes behind Froome—to have realistic ambitions for the podium this year. But he is the highest-placed French rider so far. Bardet rode away at the top of the punishing Glandon climb—the hardest Alpine ascent so far—and built a lead on the long descent. He held it up the Montvernier Laces’ spectacular switchbacks. “A crazy stage,” Bardet said. “I can’t believe it.” Without fans, the telegenic ascent was eerily quiet. “Almost every kilometer [mile] of the race up until now you’ve had spectators all the way, and we had three kilometers there where there was no one,” Froome said. “You can understand why...the road really was quite narrow.” But a cheering crowd waiting for Bardet at the top gave him a burst of energy to the finish. “I had goose bumps,” he said. Froome remains three minutes and 10 seconds ahead of second-placed Quintana, and 4:09 ahead of Valverde, in third. But the Tour has covered 3,000 kilometers and their chances have nearly run out to dislodge the 2013 winner. What’s more, Froome says he feels stronger than he did at the same point two years ago, when “I was just sort of hanging on.” The crescendo will come on Saturday on the 21-hairpin bends to the Alpe d’Huez ski station. Unlike the Montvernier Laces, the most iconic climb in cycling will be teeming with fans. “It’s the last challenge,” Froome said. “We can really expect it to be a big finale.”
CHECKING T FOR MOTORS
TWO DOWN, TWO TO GO
OUR de France leader Chris Froome says he welcomes checks on bicycles for possible motors. Race officials say the 30-year Briton’s bike was one of six tested in a surprise check after the 18th stage, including that of stage winner Romain Bardet of France. The International Cycling Union has said it would carry out checks of bikes to ensure they don’t have motors hidden in their frame, which could give cheaters a leg up in the race. Froome says he believed the suspicions have been mainly in social media, adding, “surely they don’t come from nowhere—the technology exists.”
“I’m happy that they’re doing the checks—it’s probably needed given all the rumors out there.”
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HE Tour de France has barred the driver of an official motorcycle in the entourage after he caused the crash of Danish rider Jakob Fuglsang during the 18th Stage. His Astana team said Fuglsang, who lies 26th, was riding with stage winner Romain Bardet of France on the Thursday’s toughest climb when the Dane’s handlebars were clipped by the motorbike, and he
reinjured a bruise on his hip in the fall. Fuglsang was penalized himself for getting a brief tow from a team vehicle as he tried to catch up. The infraction is known in cycling parlance as a “stuck water bottle”—so named as a penalty against riders who hold on too long to team cars when they’re given water.
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HE manager of the Movistar team says Nairo Quintana wants to strike a one-two attack with teammate Alejandro Valverde against Tour de
France leader Chris Froome. On paper, that’s the plan, Eusebio Unzue said before Thursday’s Stage 18 in the Alps. “The reality is that the race is dictating otherwise,” Unzue said. “The yellow jersey is simply the strongest.” Quintana, in second place overall, edged Froome by a second a day earlier in the race’s start into the Alps. Valverde rose to third from fourth overall after American rider Tejay van Garderen dropped out because of illness. Quintana entered the day three minutes and 10 seconds behind Froome, while Valverde was 59 seconds slower. AP
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‘IGLESIA NI CRISTO REMAINS FAITHFUL TO GOD’S TEACHINGS’
APEC 2015 CEO SUMMIT PHILIPPINES A preliminary agreement between organizers of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation 2015 CEO Summit
Following is the official statement of the Iglesia Ni Cristo (INC) denying the allegations of Angel and Tenny Manalo, brother and mother of INC Executive Minister Bro. Eduardo V. Manalo, which they posted on YouTube on Wednesday night:
Trade deals wipe out tariffs on some 200 tech products W
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HE statement posted on You Tube Wednesday night by Angel Manalo and their mother calling on the members of the Iglesia Ni Cristo (Church Of Christ) to help them because their lives are allegedly in danger, and also alleging that there are ministers who were abducted, making it appear that the Church has something to do with it —is not true. The Church of Christ has been here for a hundred and one years—it has gone through many persecutions, harassments, and severe trials but it has held on solely to the teachings of God and His help and guidance. It never deviates from God’s teachings and from the tenets taught by the man who began preaching it in the Philippines—Brother Felix Manalo. What we discern from their statement is that they only want to gain sympathizers in order to achieve their
PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 45.3490
ambition to have a hand in the administration of the Church. But it should be clear to everyone that this Church is not a family corporation. This is a religion that has the teachings of God written in the Bible as the policies it strictly adheres to. The Executive Minister, Brother Eduardo V. Manalo, cannot allow anyone to cause disruption in the Church. Thus, because of what they did with the intent of instigating strife and disunity, it cannot be avoided that the Executive Minister implements the rules and regulations that are applied to all members. Although it deeply pains him, Brother Eduardo Manalo decided to expel these people who are sowing division in the Church. Thus, in the congregational worship services of the Iglesia Ni Cristo beginning onThursday, this decision of the Executive Minister was announced to all the brethren.”
and the BUSINESSMIRROR was reached on Friday in which the nation’s leading business news publication was designated an official media partner. From left are Arturo Enrico C. Navarro, sponsorship associate; Migel Q. Estoque, media and communications director; Yenny B. Gonzales, sponsorship director; BUSINESSMIRROR Publisher T. Anthony C. Cabangon; Jun B. Vallecera, editor in chief; and Frederick M. Alegre, vice president for corporate affairs. NORIEL DE GUZMAN
ASHINGTON—Dozens of countries have agreed to abolish duties on more than 200 technology products— from advanced computer chips to GPS devices, printer cartridges and video-game consoles. The agreement announced on Friday marks the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) first tariff-killing deal in 18 years. The deal is an expansion of the 1997 Information Technology Agreement, which includes 80 WTO member-countries. The updated accord covers products that generate $1 trillion in annual global revenue, including $100 billion a year for American companies.
That worldwide total is equal to global trade in iron, steel, textiles and clothing combined, according to the WTO. US Trade Rep. Michael Froman called the agreement “great news for the American works and businesses that design, manufacture and export state-of-the-art technology and information products.” Froman’s office says the deal will support 60,000 American jobs. Not all 161 WTO member-countries signed on to the expanded deal. But all will benefit, because it eliminates the tariffs on dozens of tech products no matter which WTO country they come from. Tariffs are taxes imposed on imported goods. Dean Garfield, president of the
Information Technology Industry Council trade group in Washington, said the deal “will open markets, create jobs and spur economic growth around the world, as well as bring down costs for consumers.” Talks on revising the technology agreement began in 2012. The breakthrough occurred when the US and China worked out most of their differences during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Washington last November. Negotiators still must complete technical details and a timetable for eliminating the tariffs. The work is expected to be complete by the time WTO members meet in Nairobi, Kenya, in December. AP
■ JAPAN 0.3661 ■ UK 70.3680 ■ HK 5.8510 ■ CHINA 7.3032 ■ SINGAPORE 33.1450 ■ AUSTRALIA 33.4679 ■ EU 49.8431 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.0924 Source: BSP (24 July 2015)