BusinessMirror
THREETIME ROTARY CLUBB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business Saturday 201414, Vol.2015 10 No. 40 Friday, 18, August Vol. 10 No. 309
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MONETARY BOARD KEEPS POLICY RATES ANEW AS 2015 INFLATION SEEN TO DECELERATE TO 1.8%
‘Low-inflation regime to persist’
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RICE pressures were seen decelerating some more over the near horizon, the pace slow enough as to send the average for the year still lower than target to 1.8 percent, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Thursday.
BENJAMIN ALVES IS NO LONGER A ‘STRANGER’ Make saints abound
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EAR Lord, stay with the whole world. Help those who believe in You to persevere; those who have turned away from You to return; and those who do not yet know You to seek. Where there is war, bring peacemakers. Where there is inequality and injustice, raise men and women of integrity and courage. Where there is materialism and disregard for human and godly values, make saints abound. By our way of life, simple and clean, make saints abound among us. Amen. DAILY PRAYERS 2015, VIRGIE SALAZAR AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
ON THE MENU: GREEN PAPAYA SALAD WITH RAU RAM, PEANUTS AND CRISPY SHALLOTS »D3
BusinessMirror
Friday, August 14, 2015
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BENJAMIN ALVES IS NO LONGER A ‘STRANGER’ B G R Lifestyle & Entertainment Editor
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N an entertainment landscape where even the most distant relations leverage their showbiz connections to a career in the spotlight, it would have surprised no one had Benjamin Alves really worked the Piolo Pascual association when he decided to take another shot at acting as a profession, following an earlier, seemingly half-hearted attempt. Yes, THAT Piolo Pascual—one of the most handsome men around these parts and also among the most talented, and
who also happens to be Alves’s uncle. However, when Alves returned to the Philippines in 2012 after graduating summa cum laude from the University of Guam, he signed not with ABS-CBN, where his uncle reigns as arguably its most prized star, but with GMA. Since then, he has studiously earned his stripes as an actor in a variety of dramas, including Katipunan, Dading and Hiram na Alaala. Now, Alves gets his biggest challenge yet, starring opposite Heart Evangelista, Lovi Poe and Rocco Nacino in Beautiful Strangers, GMA’s new prime-time soap, which made its debut on Monday. In
the soap, Benjamin plays Lawrence, the happy-go-lucky only son of the powerful Alejandra and Ronaldo Castillo (Christopher de Leon and Dina Bonnevie), and the half-brother of Kristine (Heart Evangelista). As is typical of the genre, there are plenty of scheming and intrigues and criminal behavior punctuated by floods of tears, jaw-dropping slapping and hair-pulling, and verbal grenades gleefully thrown in all directions anytime and every time. Here, Benjamin Alves talks about life in the spotlight and creating a sanctuary.
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U.S. ARMY HELICOPTER CRASHLANDS ON SHIP The World BusinessMirror
B3-2 Friday, August 14, 2015
news@businessmirror.com.ph
US Army helicopter crash-lands on ship off Japan island; 6 hurt
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OKYO—A US Army helicopter crashed while landing on a Navy ship during training off Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, injuring six people and damaging the aircraft, officials said. The H-60 helicopter made a hard landing on Wednesday on the USNS Red Cloud cargo vessel around 30 kilometers east of Okinawa, US Forces Japan said in a statement, adding that the cause was under investigation. Okinawa is home to most of the tens of thousands of US troops in Japan. The injured were transported to a Navy hospital, the statement said. Their conditions were not available. The US military originally said seven people were hurt, but on Thursday said the correct number was six. Two of the injured belong to a Japanese special response unit called the Central Readiness Force, who were participating in the training, according to Japan’s Ground Self-Defense Force. One had a broken bone and the other a cut, but no specifics were given. Japan and the US are strengthening
military cooperation as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government tries to bolster Japan’s defense role. The other 10 people aboard the helicopter were not hurt, said Japanese coast guard Spokesman Shinya Terada. Japanese national broadcaster NHK showed video of the helicopter sitting on the cargo ship, with its tail broken off and its body partly covered with an orange tarp. The presence of so many US troops on Okinawa—more than half of about 50,000 American troops in Japan—has been a source of friction and Okinawans have long complained about crime, accidents and noise from the US bases. A plan formulated in 1996 between the Japanese and American governments would move US Marine Air Station Futenma from a populated neighborhood to a less developed area, but Okinawans
A YELLOW sheet covers a US Army helicopter H-60 that crashed on the Navy cargo vessel USNS Red Cloud in the waters around 30 kilometers east of Japan’s southern island of Okinawa on Wednesday. The helicopter crashed during a training mission while landing on the Navy ship, injuring several people and damaging the aircraft, officials said. RYOSUKE UEMATSU/KYODO NEWS VIA AP
want the Marine base moved off the island altogether. Wednesday’s accident coincided with Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga’s visit to the island for talks with Okinawa Gov. Takeshi Onaga, a vocal opponent of the relocation plan. “For those who live near [US] bases, it’s a serious matter,” he said at the outset of the talks, reminding
Suga of Okinawa’s burden and risk of accommodating the US military bases. Onaga has threatened to revoke an approval for reclamation work to build an off-shore runway in the area called Henoko. Suga called the helicopter accident “extremely regrettable,” and told reporters that he has lodged a protest to the US military over it, asking for
prompt information disclosure, thorough investigation and implementing preventive measures. Since the island prefecture reverted to Japanese control in 1972, there have been 45 crashes involving US military aircraft, according to Okinawan government statistics. The island was the scene of a harsh World War II battle and was occupied by the US for 27 years. AP
Jimmy Carter says he has cancer
FORMER President Jimmy Carter uses a hand saw to even an edge as he works on a Habitat for Humanity home in Pikeville, Kentucky, in this June 16, 1997, photo. On Wednesday Carter announced he has cancer and will undergo treatment at an Atlanta hospital. AP/ED REINKE
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TLANTA—Former President Jimmy Carter, who at age 90 still travels the world supporting the humanitarian endeavors that have consumed his time in the decades since he left office, announced he has cancer that has spread to other parts of his body. A statement released by the Carter Center on Wednesday makes clear that Carter’s cancer is widely spread but not where it originated, or even if that is known at this point. The liver is often a place where cancer spreads and less commonly is the primary source of it. The statement said further information will be provided when more facts are known, “possibly next week.” “Recent liver surgery revealed that I have cancer that now is in other parts of my body,” Carter said in the statement. “I will be rearranging my schedule as necessary so I can undergo treatment by physicians at Emory Health care.” Carter announced on August 3 that he had surgery to remove a small mass from his liver. Good wishes poured in on social media after Carter’s announcement, while President Barack Obama said he and first lady Michelle Obama wish Carter a fast and full recovery. “Jimmy, you’re as resilient as they come, and along with the rest of America, we are rooting for you,” Obama said in a statement.
Carter was the nation’s 39th president, defeating Gerald Ford in 1976 with a pledge to always be honest. Before his career in politics, Carter graduated from the US Naval Academy and served seven years in the Navy submarine force. A Georgia peanut farmer who had been a state senator and governor of Georgia for a single term before running for president, Carter ended up seeing his second term for president doomed by a number of foreign-policy conflicts, most especially the Iran hostage crisis—losing in a landslide to Ronald Reagan in 1980. He spent the decades since carving out a reputation for promoting such global issues as health care and democracy, often with his wife Rosalynn by his side. He joined the staff of Emory University and in 1982 established the Carter Center to promote those issues. His new role as global statesman took him into places often shunned by other diplomats. Carter helped defuse nuclear tensions between the Koreas and monitored the first Palestinian elections. In 2002, he won the Nobel Peace Prize. According to the Carter Center, he and Rosalynn volunteer one week a year for Habitat Humanity, a nonprofit that helps build and renovate homes for people in need. Despite remaining active through
the years, Carter’s health has recently become the subject of speculation. In May, he was forced to cut short an election observation visit to Guyana when he developed a bad cold. Carter also completed a book tour this summer to promote his latest work, A Full Life. Carter included his family’s history of pancreatic cancer in that memoir, writing that his father, brother and two sisters all died of the disease and said the trend “concerned” the former president’s doctors at Emory. “The National Institutes of Health began to check all members of our family regularly, and my last remaining sibling, Gloria, 64, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and died in 1990,” Carter wrote. “There was no record of another American family having lost four members to this disease, and since that time I have had regular x-rays, CAT scans, or blood analyses, with hope of early detection if I develop the same symptoms.” Carter wrote that being the only nonsmoker in his family “may have been what led to my longer life.” “Our thoughts and prayers go out to President Carter,” said Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society. “There’s a lot we don’t know,” but the first task likely will be determining where the cancer originated, as that can help determine what treatment he may be eligible for, Lichtenfeld said. AP
SOUTH Korean Choi Hyeon-yeol (left), 80, sets himself on fire as a woman tries to extinguish the firre during an anti-Japan rally demanding full compensation and an apology for wartime sex slaves from the Japanese government in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea, on Wednesday, August 12. AP/LEE JIN-MAN
S. KOREA’S TYCOON PARDONED
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EOUL, South Korea—South Korea’s President Park Geunhye pardoned a tycoon who heads the country’s third-largest business group. The justice ministry said in a statement on Thursday that SK Group’s Chey Tae-won will be among some 6,500 people to be released from prison before the 70th anniversary on Saturday of Korea’s liberation from Japan’s colonial occupation. It said the government decided on pardons for 14 business people, including Chey, based on their contributions to the national economy. Chey was serving a four-year prison term that began in January 2013, after being found guilty of embezzling company funds to trade financial products. He remained chairman of SK Group while in prison. It is the first time that Park has pardoned the head of a chaebol, as big family-controlled business groups are known. AP
U.S. JUDGE: ARGENTINE ASSETS CONSIDERED COMMERCIAL IN DISPUTE
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UENOS AIRES, Argentina—A US federal judge in New York sanctioned Argentina on Wednesday, ruling that he will consider Argentine government assets in the US as commercial property in a long-running dispute over the South American nation’s debt. US District Court Judge Thomas Griesa said the only exceptions would be military and diplomatic assets. The decision will make it easier for hedge fund NML Capital and other creditors to try to seize Argentine assets if they decide to go after them. The judge also gave Argentina 10 days to produce a log of any documents it deemed protected by attorney-client privilege, or else he would waive the privilege with the firm representing the country. The holdout creditors have long been trying to get lawyers representing Argentina to turn over details of Argentine assets. The dispute goes back to Argentina’s $100 billion default in 2001. Most creditors accepted lower-valued bond swaps in 2005 and 2010. But the hedge funds refused and took Argentina to court in New York and won. AP
NATIONAL SECURITY LEAKER FACES POSSIBLE SOLITARY
KOREAN MAN BADLY HURT CONFINEMENT AFTER SELF-IMMOLATION W AT PROTEST VS JAPAN
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EOUL, South Korea—An 80-year-old South Korean man was in life-threatening condition on Thursday after setting himself on fire during an anti-Japan protest in Seoul, hospital officials said. The rally on Wednesday, attended by hundreds and held in front of the Japanese Embassy, was staged ahead of the 70th anniversary of the Allied victory in World War II on Saturday that freed the Korean Peninsula from Japanese colonial rule. Choi Hyeon-yeol, who remains unconscious, suffered third-degree burns on his face, neck, upper body and arms and has been relying on a breathing machine after his lungs deteriorated, said an official at Seoul’s Hallym University Hangang Sacred Heart Hospital, who didn’t want to be named, citing office rules. Doctors had planned to operate on Choi on Friday to remove dead skin from his body, but it’s now unclear whether they will be able to do so after Choi’s condition took a turn for the worse after experiencing a sudden drop in blood pressure overnight. “He is an old man and the injuries are serious, with more than 40 percent of his body covered in third-degree burns, so there’s no guarantee that he will survive,” the official said. Lumps of burned cotton and a small glass bottle that reeked of gasoline were found on a flower bed near the rally
where Choi set himself a blaze. A five-page statement found in his bag, apparently written by him, condemned Japan for issues related to its colonial rule of Korea and wartime conduct, according to Seoul police official Seo Hyeon-su. The rally continued after Choi was taken to the hospital. Since 1992, activists have organized weekly protests in front of the Japanese Embassy to demand justice for South Korean women who were forced to work as sex slaves for the Japanese military during the war, and the gatherings have been mostly peaceful. The turnout was particularly high on Wednesday as the World War II anniversary approached. Many South Koreans harbor deep resentment toward Japan over its colonial occupation. Hundreds of thousands of Koreans were forced to fight as front-line soldiers, work under slave-labor conditions or serve as prostitutes in brothels operated by the Japanese military during the war. Such sentiment has strengthened in recent years over what South Koreans feel are attempts by Japan to downplay its wartime conduct, as well as Tokyo’s territorial claims to a set of small islets occupied by South Korea. Protests sometimes turn violent. Scuffles with police are common and demonstrators have severed their own fingers or hurled excrement at the embassy in the past. AP
ICHITA, Kansas—Convicted national security leaker Chelsea Manning could be placed in solitary confinement indefinitely for allegedly violating prison rules—by having a copy of Vanity Fair with Caitlyn Jenner on the cover and an expired tube of toothpaste, among other things, her lawyer said on Wednesday. The former intelligence analyst, formerly known as Bradley Manning, was convicted in 2013 of espionage and other offenses for sending more than 700,000 classified documents while working in Iraq. She is serving a 35-year sentence at the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, for leaking reams of war logs, diplomatic cables and battlefield video to the antisecrecy web site WikiLeaks in 2010. Her attorney, Nancy Hollander, said an August 18 hearing is set at the Fort Leavenworth prison for the transgender Army private. The hearing before a three-person panel is closed, although Manning has asked that it be public. “This is like prison disciplinary infractions in a civilian prison and there will be a hearing, but frankly it looks to me like harassment,” Hollander said. The military had no immediate comment on Wednesday. The prison charges include possession of prohibited property in the form of books and magazines while under administrative segregation; medicine misuse over the toothpaste; disorderly conduct for sweeping food onto the floor; and disrespect. All relate to alleged conduct on July 2 and 9. The maximum penalty Manning could face is indefinite solitary confinement. AP
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| FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
BATTLE AT THE TOP RORY MCILROY (left) and Jordan Spieth make the most out of the practice round on Wednesday. AP
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when McIlroy tees it up on Thursday. “Expectation levels are the same,” McIlroy said. “I have played quite a number of rounds of golf. I’ve been practicing for over three weeks getting my game ready, getting my game sharp. I feel like I’m playing well, hitting it well on the range. I’ve taken that onto the course in practice rounds and from there, it’s being able to take it into tournament play with a card in my hand.” Expectations haven’t changed for Spieth, either. For a guy who just turned 22, he is regarded as a greater thinker. At Chambers Bay, Spieth would find the worst part of the putting green to rap 6-footers before the weekend rounds to prepare him for some bad bounces. During his final nine holes of practice on Wednesday, he was tossing balls in some quirky spots around the green, even down on the sandy bank of Lake Michigan. He wants no surprises. He is prepared for a tough test. And he has the same attitude he had going into the British Open. This isn’t a chance to make history. It’s a chance to win a major. At stake for Spieth is an opportunity to be the first player to sweep the three American majors in the same season. A victory would make him No. 1 in the world (provided McIlroy doesn’t finish second) and make him the first $11-million man on the PGA Tour. His first goal, outlandish as it might seem, is to make the cut. Spieth has never played the weekend in two previous trips to the PGA Championship. And his goal at the start of the year was to make the cut in all four majors and contend in at least one of them. So one box has been checked in a major way. “That first part of that goal has yet to be accomplished,” he said with a smile. “So I’ve got some work to do these first two days and from there we’ll adjust and work our butts off to try and get a third major, which would be a pretty cool place in history.”
The Associated Press
SPANISH RETURN
Spain’s Carolina Marin makes a forehand return to Taiwan’s Pai Yu Po during their women’s singles match at the Badminton World Federation championships at the Istora Stadium in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Thursday. AP
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ORTLAND, Oregon—Co-medalists Angel Yin and Jennifer Hahn dropped out of the US Women’s Amateur on Wednesday, losing first-round matches at Portland Golf Club. France’s Justine Dreher beat the 16-year-old Yin, from Arcadia, California, 5 and 4. Vanessa Ha of Plano, Texas, topped Hahn, the 21-year-old Vanderbilt player from Henderson, Nevada, 4 and 3. The 23-year-old Dreher, the oldest player to advance to the round of 42, won four of the last five holes on the front nine to open a 5-up lead and finished off Yin with a birdie for a halve on No. 14.
“I putted really, really well,” said Dreher, coming off her senior season at South Carolina. “I didn’t miss any 10-footer or less besides hole No. 3, and I had a lot of them.” The 19-year-old Ha, a rising sophomore at San Francisco, won four straight holes on the front nine to take a 4-up lead. Hahn twice pulled within three holes before falling with a halve on the 15th. “I was focusing mostly on my mental game, and that’s the biggest indicator for my putting,” Ha said. “The key was that I wasn’t focusing on trying to make the birdies. They just went in.”
SPORTS
Dreher and Ha survived a playoff on Wednesday morning to reach match play. Defending champion Kristen Gillman of Austin, Texas, advanced with a 2-up victory over Kelly Su of Scottsdale, Arizona. The 17-year-old Gillman won last year at Nassau Country Club in New York. Hannah O’Sullivan of Chandler, Arizona, routed Haley Mills of Tyler, Texas, 7 and 6. The 17-year-old Sullivan won the Symetra Tour’s Gateway Classic in February in Mesa, Arizona, at 16 to become the youngest winner in the history of the professional circuit.
U.S. EXPANDING QUERY INTO POSSIBLE BONDTRADER LIES
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This compares with target range of 2 percent to 4 percent for the year and an indication of how far price pressures have decelerated in an economy looking to expand as much as 7 percent this year in terms of local output or the gross domestic product. The seven-month inflation has also proven lower than target at only 1.9 percent thus far, a development that, in certain sectors, raised the likelihood of deflation, or the general cut back on prices that is just as bad as high inflation. This and related developments compelled the sevenman Monetary Board (MB), the policy-making body of the BSP, to keep the policy rates steady at 4 percent for borrowing and 6 percent for lending. The rates on term RRPs or borrowings, RPs or repurchases and special deposit accounts were also kept steady. C A
BATTLE AT THE TOP
HEBOYGAN, Wisconsin—Rory McIlroy faces a different set of questions from the last time he played, and he had answers for most of them. His left ankle, with swelling the size of a tennis ball after he heard it snap while playing soccer with friends in early July, felt fine when he got off the plane and began preparing for the final major of the year. His game is good, and he sees no one reason that will change when the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Championship starts on Thursday. One other question was a little more tricky. Who’s the best player in the world? McIlroy is No. 1 in the world ranking. He also has watched Jordan Spieth produce an inspiring year in golf by winning the Masters and US Open, and then coming within one shot of a playoff at the British Open. Spieth has four wins this year, one more than McIlroy, though two of them are majors. “If you were to go by this year, you would have to say Jordan,” McIlroy said. “If you go over the last two years, I would say it’s probably a toss-up between Jordan and myself. That’s a hard one. OK, we’ve got the rankings there, but it’s all a matter of opinion.” And what was his opinion? “I’ll tell you at the end of the week,” McIlroy said with a smile. The shine came off golf when Spieth’s bid for the Grand Slam ended at Saint Andrews. It returned when McIlroy began posting photos and videos last week that indicated he would be playing at Whistling Straits, his first tournament since the US Open. They face off on Thursday afternoon, in the same group with British Open champion Zach Johnson. It will be the third time in the last eight majors that McIlroy and Spieth have played together the opening two rounds. It has never received attention like this. “I think that’s just what you guys want to see,” Spieth said. “I think he and I just want to go out there and try and win the tournament. We have to beat each other in order to do that, along with...155 other guys. It’s great. We’re all very happy to see him back. I’m excited to just share a couple days with Rory, and Zach, as well. “Hopefully, we can all get into contention, and it will certainly be exciting.” McIlroy, the defending champion, said he never targeted the PGA Championship as his return. His test came in Portugal last week when he played—and walked—72 holes. There was no pain, no swelling. And he knew he was ready. “If I hadn’t passed that test, I wouldn’t have been here,” he said. For all the attention Spieth has earned with his four victories (along with playoff losses at the Colonial and Houston Open), McIlroy hasn’t been a mere spectator to this sensational season. He has three victories, one of them a World Golf Championship, and he had top 10s in both majors he played. Still, there is a degree of uncertainty about his game. It will have been 53 days without competition
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Eun Jeong Seong, the 15-year-old South Korean player who won the US Girls’ Junior last month in Tulsa, Oklahoma, beat Duke’s Celine Boutier of France 1 up. Mariel Galdiano, the 17-year-old from Pearl City, Hawaii, who won the Canadian Women’s Amateur last month, topped Kimberly Mitchell of Woodbridge, Virginia, 7 and 5. Elizabeth Wang of San Marino, California, beat Stanford star Mariah Stackhouse of Riverdale, Georgia, 1 up. Stackhouse three-putted the final hole for a bogey. AP
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HE US is expanding an investigation into deceptive sales practices by bond traders even though the first major conviction in the area could be overturned. Aided by technology that’s allowing unprecedented scrutiny of trades, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is looking beyond 10 cases it’s been developing with US prosecutors to examine other instances of bankers, potentially lying to clients and booking improper round-trip transactions, two people with knowledge of the matter said. Some criminal charges from the first batch of probes may come as early as next month, another person said. Going after bond traders, and in the case of the Justice Department, trying to put some of them behind bars, represents the government’s
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 46.2140
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ALLNEW LEXUS ES Lexus Manila President Daniel Isla leads the toast during the launch of the all-new Lexus ES at the showroom of the Grand Hyatt Hotel Bonifacio Global City, Taguig City. Also in photo are Lexus Manila Chairman and Toyota Motors Philippines (TMP) Vice Chairman Alfred Ty, TMP President Michinobu Sugata, TMP Senior EVP Dr. David Go, TMP SVP for Marketing Ariel Arias, TMP EVP for Marketing Yohei Murase and TMP First VP for Marketing Raymond Rodriguez.
Ang, Gozon reach out-of-court settlement B L S. M
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HANKS to a third party, the camps of businessmen Ramon S. Ang and Felipe L. Gozon have finally gotten closure on their rift. After a yearlong roller-coaster ride, the two parties finally settled to end the GMA Network Inc. buy-in deal initiated by the San Miguel Corp. president in March 2014. The settlement was reached to mend the relationship of the two businessmen, who threw heated and spicy remarks against each other. “The settlement was initiated by a third party who is known to both parties. It resulted in a mutually acceptable and win-win settlement for both parties,” a source privy to the matter said.
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Part of the amicable settlement agreed upon by the two parties was the return of the P1-billion down payment to Ang. In return, the syndicated estafa case filed against Gozon and his family was dropped. Ang earlier sued the network’s chief
executive with syndicated estafa—a nonbailable case—earlier this month, after the botched acquisition of a significant minority stake in the broadcasting firm. He claimed to have been swindled with P1 billion, as Gozon refuses to return the amount—paid as down payment to the deal—despite the collapse of negotiations between the two parties. The broadcasting company’s big wig then explained that he has the right to keep the money until the court decides how to address this issue. Gozon claimed that he has the right not to return the down payment as it can be considered as payment to lost opportunities. Just last week Gozon hinted that he is “open” to settle the legal tussle with Ang C A
n JAPAN 0.3723 n UK 72.1955 n HK 5.9592 n CHINA 7.2356 n SINGAPORE 32.9982 n AUSTRALIA 34.0962 n EU 51.6072 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.3205 Source: BSP (13 August 2015)