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A broader look at today’s business Saturday 2014 Vol. No. 40 Vol. 10 No. 308 Thursday,18,August 13,102015
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BSP INTERVENES ‘TO REIN IN EXCESS VOLATILITY’
Yuan drags down peso to 5-year low
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NATO, RUSSIA WAR GAMES FUEL RISK OF WAR The World BusinessMirror
B3-6 Thursday, August 13, 2015
Nato, Russia war games fuel risk of war, think tank warns
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RUSSELS—The increase in the scale and number of military ex exercises being undertaken by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) and Russia is making armed conflict in Europe more likely, a think tank warned on Wednesday.
Ian Kearns, director of the London-based European Leadership Network (ELN), told the Associated Press that the war games “are contributing to a climate of mistrust” that have “on occasion become the
focal point for some quite close encounters between the Nato and Russian militaries.” Kearns is one of the co-authors of an ELN study, which looked in detail at two military exercises held this year by Russia and
Nato and found signs that “Russia is preparing for a conflict with Nato, and Nato is preparing for a possible confrontation with Russia.” The exercises, according to the ELN, “can feed uncertainty” and heighten the risk of “dangerous military encounters.” Relations between Russia and the West have been in the deep freeze since Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine last year. The ELN study said Nato plans approximately 270 exercises this year, while Russia has announced 4,000 drills at all levels. The Russian exercise in March involved 80,000 personnel, while Nato’s Allied Shield in June mobilized 15,000 people from 19 Nato
countries and three partner states. The ELN study said the exercises showed what each side views as its most vulnerable points: For Nato, it’s Poland and the Baltic states while for Russia, concerns are more numerous and include the Arctic, Crimea and border areas with Nato members Estonia and Latvia. The ELN has formulated a few ideas to defuse tensions, including for governments to examine the need for more restraint in the size and scenarios of future exercises. “History is full of examples of leaders who think they can keep control of events, and events have a habit of taking on a momentum and dynamic of their own,” Kearns said. AP
US intervenes in lawsuit over Palestinian terror attacks
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ASHINGTON—The Obama administration has intervened in a lawsuit over Palestinian terror attacks that have killed Americans, advising a judge that requiring a hefty bond payment in the case could financially destabilize the Palestinian government. The filing comes in a case in New York City, where a jury this year awarded $218.5 million to Americans affected by the attacks in a lawsuit brought against the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority (PA).
That amount is automatically tripled under the Anti-Terrorism Act, lawyers have said. By intervening, the government said it was trying to strike a balance between its support for the rights of terrorism victims to be compensated in court and concerns that a large bond imposed while the verdict is on appeal would weaken the legitimacy of the Palestinian Authority and undermine “several decades of US foreign policy.” “Senior US officials have made clear to
other governments that if the PA were to collapse, we would be faced with a crisis that would not only impact the security of Israelis and Palestinians, but would potentially have ripple effects elsewhere in the region,” Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a five-page sworn declaration filed on Monday in US District Court in Manhattan. He said the loss of the PA’s governing powers would likely “fuel anger and frustration” and could lead to widespread violence in the West
Bank. The Justice Department filed a formal “statement of interest”in the case at the behest of the State Department, federal officials have said. Lawyers for the Palestinian Authority have argued that the group is effectively insolvent and have asked the judge, George Daniels, to waive the bond requirement. Gassan Baloul, a lawyer for the Palestinians, said on Tuesday that the defendants were studying the government’s filing and would respond at a hearing later this month. AP
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XFORD, Mississippi—A young Mississippi couple who are charged with attempting to join the Islamic State (IS) were ordered held without bail on Tuesday, pending federal grand jury action on the charges. Tw e n t y - y e a r - o l d J a e l y n Delshaun Young and 22-year-old Muhammad “Mo” Dakhlalla, who were arrested at a local airport just before boarding a flight with tickets bound for Istanbul, went before a US Magistrate Judge on Tuesday in Oxford, Mississippi. The judge denied bail, saying that even though the pair have never been in trouble with the law and have relatives willing to oversee their home confinement, their desire commit terrorism is “probably still there.” Urging the court to keep the suspects in custody, Assistant US Attorney Clay Joyner likened them to Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, saying that like him, they could commit violence with knives, vehicles or homemade weapons. “They don’t need a gun to do harm,” Joyner said. “They don’t need military training to do harm. What they need is a violent, extremist ideology, and that’s exactly what they have espoused.” FBI agents arrested them at a Mississippi airport, filing criminal charges that both were attempting and conspiring to provide material support to a terrorist group, a federal crime punishable by up to 20 years in
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HE local currency hit a new record low on Wednesday, as Asian currencies came tumbling down for the second day in a row after China devalued the yuan.
Couple charged in IS case ordered held without bail
IN this October 5, 2012, photo, Jaelyn Young, an honor student at Warren Central High School, poses for a photo in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Young and another Mississippi resident were arrested on August 8, on charges that they were trying to travel abroad to join the Islamic State militant group. AP
prison and a fine of $250,000. An FBI agent’s affidavit said both confessed their plans after their arrest. Defense attorneys declined to comment after the hearing, but told the court that the material didn’t prove either had committed a crime. Court papers say both Young and Dakhlalla are US citizens. The government says FBI agents began interacting online with Young in May about her desire to travel to Syria to join the group. It says her Twitter page said the only thing keeping her from traveling to Syria was her need to earn money. AP
Kerry, top Democratic senator spar on Iran nuke deal, sanctions
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ASHINGTON—Secretary of State John F. Kerry sparred on Tuesday with the lone Democratic senator to publicly oppose last month’s historic Iran nuclear deal, saying there was no way the US could prevent American allies from doing business with Tehran if Congress were to reject the agreement. Speaking across town in New York, Sen. Chuck Schumer disagreed and suggested Washington still could force the world into isolating the Iranians until they make deeper nuclear concessions. The dispute goes to the heart of the questions that American lawmakers are considering as they prepare to vote on the nuclear accord. If they were to shelve the deal—and override an expected presidential veto—they could severely complicate the Obama administration’s ability to honor its commitments to roll back economic sanctions on Iran. In exchange, Iran has agreed to a decade of tough restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program and a far more intrusive inspections regime. Republicans are almost universally opposed at this point. Addressing a Reuters Newsmaker event in New York, Kerry took aim at those in Congress who say a better deal could still be reached. That argument would entail the US maintaining or increasing pressure on Iran by threatening foreign governments and businesses for trading with Tehran or buying Iranian oil, a strategy that both President Barack Obama and Republicans credit with drawing Iran into serious nuclear negotiations two years ago. Now that the pact has been finalized, Kerry said such a heavyhanded approach was an option no longer. “Are you kidding me?” he asked the crowd. “The United States is going to start sanctioning our allies and their banks and their businesses because we walked away from a deal? And we’re going to force them to do
Data from the Philippine Dealing System Holdings Corp. showed the peso closing Wednesday’s trade at 46.26 per dollar, shedding 33 cen-
IN this July 16 file photo, Sen. Charles Schumer, Democrat-New York, speaks during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. The lone Democratic senator to publicly oppose President Barack Obama’s nuclear agreement with Iran said on Tuesday that even if the US backs away and other countries lift their sanctions, Iran still will feel “meaningful pressure” from the US penalties. AP
what we want them to do, even though they agreed to the deal we came to?” Kerry warned of severe consequences for pursuing such an approach after the agreement has been accepted by Iran and fellow negotiating countries Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia—and endorsed by all 15 members of the UN Security Council. He said that European governments could walk away from the US-led sanctions strategy against Russia, that the US and Israel would have no support for military action against Iran, if such action were necessary, and that the US dollar would lose its status as the reserve currency of the world. The top American diplomat also challenged those who have criticized the length of the deal’s restrictions on Iranian enrichment of material that can be used in nuclear warheads and other elements of its program. He suggested it was illegitimate to worry that Iran would be a “nuclear threshold nation”
in 15 years or 20 years, because it already is one today. “They became that while we had a policy of no enrichment,” he said, referencing the continued demand of Republicans and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. If Congress were to vote down the deal, he said, the US would lose the moral high ground. “We will have left Iran free to go do its program, without restraints, without inspections, w ithout knock ing dow n its stockpile, without knowing what they’re doing,” he said. Echoing Kerry’s case, 36 retired generals and admirals released an open letter on Tuesday urging Congress to back the deal. “Military action would be less effective than the deal, assuming it is fully implemented,” the letter said. “If the Iranians cheat, our advanced technology, intelligence and the inspections will reveal it, and US military options remain on the table. And if the deal is rejected by America, the Iranians could have a nuclear weapon within a year. The choice is that stark.” AP
WORLD
tavos lower than its closing rate of 45.93 per dollar on Tuesday. Total traded volume on Wednesday also aggregated higher to
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| THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
TIGER’S MODEST GOAL?
TO GET
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HEBOYGAN, Wisconsin—Tiger Woods knows the concept of going through a transition, just not the numbers associated with this one. His world ranking is No. 278. Throw out some of the past champions and the 20 club pros at the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Championship, and his ranking is the worst of all but two players at Whistling Straits—Nick Taylor and Darren Clarke. He has not won a tournament in two years, and he has only one top 10 on the PGA Tour since. And while his winless streak in the majors is at 23 dating to the 2008 US Open, only once in the last six years has he gone into the final round within three shots or fewer of the lead. That was at Muirfield two years ago, and he closed with a 74 to finish five shots behind. This is the new world of Woods at the majors. Expectations are lower than ever. There wasn’t a lot of talk about Woods winning the PGA Championship. His main theme was taking baby steps. “I’m just trying to get better,” Woods said after playing nine holes with Davis Love III. “I’m just trying
to get up there where I can win tournaments, get my game organized so I can be consistent on a tournament basis where I’m going to give myself a chance to win each and every event I play in. That’s what I have done over most of my career. And I’d like to get to that point again where I could do it.” Even if expectations are low, he is still Tiger Woods. He had one of the largest galleries for a morning practice round at Whistling Straits, and he stopped to sign autographs heading to the next tee, which is unusual for him. Hundreds of fans stood below the steps of the media center when they saw Woods walk in, all of them holding flags for him to sign. Woods, who turns 40 at the end of the year, made it clear at the Memorial (where he shot a career-high 85) that he was in this for the long haul. Different from past swing changes is that he is coping with what he keeps calling a “perfect storm” because the switch followed back surgery and recovery that cost him half the 2014 season. Steve Stricker played with him two days at The Greenbrier Classic, where Woods tied for 32nd while posting his lowest 72-hole score (273) since his last win. “He’s going through some down times,” Stricker said.
“It looks like he’s getting things pushed back into shape and he’s getting stronger and healthier. I’ve talked to him. He’s feeling better. And it’s just about getting that confidence level back, him settling on what he wants to do with his swing and going from there, and then that confidence level will come back.... I expect him to get it back and get it going again.” Still, it’s odd for Woods to be at a major and attract so little attention. The majors this year have been about Jordan Spieth, the Masters and US Open champion who missed by one shot a chance at the third leg of the Grand Slam at Saint Andrews. Still in play at Whistling Straits is a chance to sweep the US majors, which has never been done. Rory McIlroy, the world’s No. 1 player, returns from an ankle injury that has kept him out since the US Open. Dustin Johnson has had at least a share of the lead in four rounds at the majors this year and comes back to the course where a two-shot penalty on the final hole cost him a spot in the playoff. Zach Johnson goes for back-to-back majors. Jason Day is trying to win his first after being in contention in the last two. It’s a long list.
And at the moment, that list doesn’t include Woods. The greatest player of his generation, at the moment, is an afterthought. Woods was going through swing changes during his two previous trips to Whistling Straits—with Hank Haney in 2004 (tie for 24th) and he was just starting to work with Sean Foley in 2010 (tie for 28th). So it’s not as if he has positive memories from this course. “Tiger’s game has been flat-lined for the last couple years, and we’re starting to see a sign here or there that he might be able to orchestrate something at Whistling Straits,” longtime friend Notah Begay III said. “But it’s not a golf course that particularly suits his eye or his game.” Woods was in contention going into the weekend at his Quicken Loans National until fading badly, but it was a step. Barring a turnaround, this likely will be his last event of the season. He is at No. 186 in the FedEx Cup, and only the top 125 qualify for the playoffs. “I’m not looking at it like that at all,” Woods said. “I’m just trying to get my game better for years to come.... I’m here now in this position, and as far as my tournament future, if I play well, I play well and I’ll play in more events. If I don’t, then I have more time to practice and get ready for the following events the next season.”
ANGEL YIN (left) shares medalist honors with Jennifer Hahn.
YIN AND HAHN
SHARE LEAD
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ORTLAND, Oregon—Angel Yin shot a five-under 67 on Tuesday to share medalist honors with Jennifer Hahn in the US Women’s Amateur at Portland Golf Club. They topped the 64 qualifiers for match play. The 16-year-old Yin, from Arcadia, California, had seven birdies and two bogeys to match Hahn at six-under 138. Yin lost to Eun-jeong Seong last month in the US Girls’ Junior final in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “Confidence. Maybe momentum,” Yin said. “I didn’t play golf for three days after I went back home [from the Girls’ Junior], so I took a break, which is good.” The 21-year-old Hahn, from Henderson, Nevada, had a 70. She’ll be a senior at Vanderbilt.
“Staying patient was a big factor,” Hahn said. “Ball-striking wasn’t as good as yesterday. I was kind of crooked off the tee, found myself in the rough a lot, hitting punch shots, but I gave myself the best chances to save or get up and down for par.” Nelly Korda of Bradenton, Florida, broke the women’s course record with a 66 to tie for third with Australia’s Hannah Green at five under. The 17-year-old Korda, sister of Ladies Professional Golf Association Tour player Jessica Korda and daughter of former tennis player Petr Korda, birdied eight of the first 14 holes, but dropped strokes on her 16th and 17th holes. “It was amazing,” Korda said. “I’ve never been eight
SINGAPORE DAY Singaporean Ambassador to the Philippines Kok Li Peng (center), Foreign
under par, the lowest score ([’ve ever] shot was seven under. To come one short of it is kind of a little sad, but I’m happy with how I played.” Petr Korda caddied for his daughter. The 18-year-old Green had a 68. Defending champion Kristen Gillman, 17, of Austin, Texas, tied for ninth at two under after a 71. The 15-year-old Seong, from South Korea, tied for 22nd at even par after a 70. Ellen Port, the oldest player in the field at 53, failed to qualify. The 2014 US Curtis Cup captain, from Saint Louis, followed her opening 77 with a 72. The youngest, 14-year-old Anne Chen of Sugar Land, Texas, also dropped out. She shot 82-78. AP
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Secretary Albert del Rosario (left) and Apostolic Nuncio to the Philippines Archbishop Guiseppe Pinto lead the ceremonial toast during the celebration of the 50th National Day of Singapore held at a Makati City hotel. ROY DOMINGO
Megaworld income rose 12% in H1 B VG C
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HE Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) aims to award the P171-billion North-South Commuter Railway-South Line deal two months before President Aquino bows out from office in June 2016. In a bid bulletin, the agency said it aims to complete the tender process for the railway project in less than a year, with the bid submission date now scheduled for March 28. Awarding should be a month after, or April 27, about two months before the President bids good-bye to his office in Malacañang. The South Line of the larger $6.27-billion North-South Commut-
er Railway project aims to connect Manila to Matnog in Sorsogon. The winner of the deal will construct the 56km double-track commuter rail from Tutuban in Manila City to Calamba City in Laguna. It will also be in charge of the rehab of the existing 422-km Philippine National Railways (PNR) Mainline South long-haul line, which runs from Calamba City to Legaspi City. It will also construct new singletrack long-haul lines from Legaspi City to Matnog, Sorsogon (117 km), and from Calamba City to Batangas City (58 km). The railway line, which was auctioned off under the PublicPrivate Partnership Program, will be completed by the fourth quarter of 2019. S “R,” A
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BETTER TIGER WOODS (left) and Davis Love III putt on the first green during a practice round on Tuesday. AP
The Associated Press
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Dams’ stability beyond the 7.2 magnitude earthquake
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$1.102 billion. The value of the peso on Wednesday, currencies traders said, was the local currency’s weakest in more than five years. Not since July 23, 2010, when the exchange rate stood at 46.315 per dollar, had the peso been this weak. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said the peso moved in tandem with generally weaker currencies in the region in reaction to China’s decision to devalue the yuan, also known as renminbi.
GOVT SEEKS TO AWARD P171B RAILWAY SOUTH LINE CONTRACT IN APRIL
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TIGER’S MODEST GOAL? TO GET BETTER Sports
Tiger Woods’s world ranking is No. 278. Throw out some of the past champions and the 20 club pros at the Professional Golfers’ Association Championship, and his ranking is the worst of all but two players at Whistling Straits—Nick Taylor and Darren Clarke.
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EGAWORLD Corp. on Wednesday said its income rose 12 percent in the first half of the year as a result of the aggressive expansion of its mixed-use communities.
The property-development arm of businessman Andrew L. Tan said its net income increased to P5.43 billion during the period from last year’s P4.82 billion, which excludes the P11.62-billion nonrecurring gains. Consolidated core revenues,
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 45.8600
which include Global-Estate Resorts Inc., Empire East Land Holdings Inc. and Suntrust Properties Inc., amounted to P20.93 billion for the period, up 13 percent from P18.43 billion last year. “The backdrop of the Philippines’s
he recent visit of Pres. Benigno Aquino III to Angat Dam in Norzagaray, Bulacan signaled the start of the rehabilitation and repair of the structure of the main dike of the dam, which has been found by several scientific studies to be sitting on a splay or branch of the main West Valley Fault. Tonkin and Taylor, an independent and foreign engineering consultant, even revealed in its report that a break in the Angat Dam can inundate by up to 30 meters in several towns and cities in Bulacan, Pampanga and even parts of Metro Manila. While the problem on the rehabilitation of the Angat Dam has been resolved, another problem that has been besetting all the dams, not only Angat, is the number of agencies that oversee the maintenance, operation, and water usage of the more than 20 dams all over the country. President Aquino said that there
are 30 government agencies that have overlapping functions and responsibilities over our dams. In his speech during his visit at Angat Dam, Aquino said: “Thirty ang ahensya ng naghahati-hati sa
pangangasiwa sa sector na ito. Ang malala pa po nito, watak-watak ang mga institusyon, barabara ang mga plano, butas-butas ang datos at talagang talamakang pamumulitika.” C A
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n JAPAN 0.3664 n UK 71.4453 n HK 5.9082 n CHINA 7.2528 n SINGAPORE 32.7408 n AUSTRALIA 33.4501 n EU 50.6432 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.2283 Source: BSP (12 August 2015)