BusinessMirror
THREETIME ROTARY CLUBB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business Saturday 201421, Vol.2015 10 No. 40 Friday, 18, August Vol. 10 No. 316
www.businessmirror.com.ph
n n
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
MBC SAYS‘SLIPSHOD’ VERSION OF INCENTIVESRATIONALIZATION BILL WILL ERODE PHL’S COMPETITIVENESS
‘Don’t rush passage of RFI bill’
T
HE Makati Business Club (MBC) is advising lawmakers not to rush the Rationalization of Fiscal Incentives (RFI) bill, as railroading the measure just to pass it in the present Congress—as committed by President Aquino in his last State of the Nation Address (Sona)—may lead to a slipshod version of the key fiscal-reform measure.
INSIDE
ARMIE HAMMER Watch over us
D
EAR Lord, give us an assurance of Your presence in our mind, heart and soul. Let not our spirit grope in the dark. Let us rest with the thought that You watch over us day-in and day-out and with the hope that tomorrow we shall awake with You at our side. Please continue to watch over 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: VEGETARIAN HUNAN-STYLE TOFU »D3
BusinessMirror
Friday, August 21, 2015
D1
ARMIE HAMMER
THE ‘SPY’ WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD
J
ESSE EISENBERG may have gotten the lion’s share of the spectacular triumph of The Social Network in 2010, but Armie Hammer’s astonishing turn as the Winklevoss twins was impossible to overlook. The classically handsome actor—so handsome that GQ was moved to put out recently a story with the title “Armie Hammer Is So Handsome It Must Be a Joke” ( goo.gl/n0QrBK goo.gl/n0QrBK)—followed up that breakthrough with a turn in Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar (2011) so exceptionally nuanced that he won Best Supporting Actor nominations, including one from the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Now, Hammer stars as the overly efficient Russian secret agent Illya Kuryaki in Warner Bros.’s slick action-thriller The Man from U.N.C.L.E. He stars opposite Henry Cavill ((Man of Steel), who plays Kuryaki’s rival in the CIA, Napoleon Solo. The two agents are ordered to put aside their
C D
photographer LORENZO AGIUS producers CAT (BURKLEY) FARBER | PORTFOLIO ONE INC.
stylist EILIDH GREIG groomer CHERI KEATING clothing BLUE AND BLACK STRIPED KNIT JUMPER BY DRIES VAN NOTE; JEANS BY J CREW
LIFE
D1
BANGKOK ATTACK The World BusinessMirror
B3-2 Friday, August 21, 2015
Bangkok attack turns Malaysian family’s vacation into tragedy
news@businessmirror.com.ph
TRUMP, BUSH DUEL AT TOWN HALL EVENTS
D
ERRY, New Hampshire—2016 Republican presidential candidates Donald Trump and Jeb Bush faced off at dueling town hall events in New Hampshire, capping a day of campaigning in the early-voting state. In Derry on Wednesday, Trump drew a capacity crowd to a highschool auditorium of almost 1,000, complete with overflow rooms. He started his criticism of Bush in a briefing with reporters and continued in the town hall. Several national polls show Trump leading the crowded Republican presidential field—there are 17 of them—including Bush, a former Florida governor. Bush and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker are also in the top tier. “I don’t see how he’s electable,” Trump told reporters ahead of the town hall, later describing Bush as a “low-energy person” who has trouble getting things done. “Right down the road, we have Jeb,” Trump said early in the town hall, drawing boos from an audito-
rium packed with enthusiastic supporters. Trump mocked Bush for going “down like a rock” in early polls in the state and failing to excite his supporters. “You know what’s happening to Jeb’s crowd?” he asked at one point. “They’re sleeping.” In nearby Merrimack, meanwhile, Bush, who had once been reluctant to go after his opponents, portrayed the billionaire businessman as a tax hike-promoting Democrat that voters would eventually tire of. “I think what people are eventually going to vote for is a proven conservative leader that’s done it,” Bush said in a video of the event released by his campaign. He went on to criticize Trump for his past contributions to Democrats, as well as his changing positions on issues, including taxes and his previous support for a single-payer health care system. “He’s won over a lot of people. People are very angry about how Washington’s not working. He’s tapped into that,” Bush said. “But
B C N. P
when people look at his record, it is not a conservative record” Trump and Bush, who remains the favorite of establishment donors, have been clashing frequently over their stances on issues, including immigration, in recent weeks. Bush’s wife was born in Mexico and he has said in the past that people entering the country illegally do so as an “act of love” for their families. Trump, who is calling for the mass deportation of people who have entered the country illegally and the building of a giant wall on the border, has mocked such rhetoric. Trump also defended the use of the term “anchor babies” on Wednesday and also bragged about the wall he plans to build along the Mexican border, saying it would look good as well as keep people out. Bush, meanwhile, criticized Trump’s immigration platform, arguing that it’s “not a conservative plan” because it would cost tens of billions of dollars to carry out.AP
MBC Executive Director Peter Angelo Perfecto said that, while the business sector supports the initiative to streamline fiscal incentives to help plug revenue leakages, sacrificing the content of the law just to ensure its passage this Congress could lead to the erosion of the country’s competitiveness as an investment destination. “Like what we said before, we do agree with rationalization. That’s important; I think we have to do that. But we have to make sure it doesn’t
affect our competitiveness. If [the timeline is too tight], we might make the mistake and we might regret the final form of the law,” said Perfecto at the sidelines of an Integrity Initiative Forum on Thursday. Congress is now facing a constricted schedule in passing the RFI bill, as the national budget deliberations are already under way. There is also the pressure to pass the Bangsamoro basic law in the present Congress. C A
ISRAEL TO U.N.: INVESTIGATE OFFICIAL FOR MISCONDUCT
U IN this August 16 photo provided by the Neoh family, a groupie taken by Lim Soo See (left) during a lunch with her family (from second from left) Neoh Ee Ling, 4-year-old Lee Jing Xuan, Lee Tze Siang, an unidentified Thai driver, Neoh Hock Guan, Neoh Jai Jun and Lim Saw Gek, in Hua Hin, Thailand, the day before the explosion at the Erawan Shrine at Rajprasong intersection in Bangkok. All family members pictured in the selfie were killed except for Neoh Ee Ling and Neoh Hock Guan. NEOH FAMILY VIA AP
K
UALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—This week’s deadly bombing in Bangkok left a Malaysian family struggling to come to grips with an attack that claimed at least four members who had been enjoying a Thai vacation.
Among the hardest-hit has been Tan Kim Kee, 71, who was devastated when told her family had been caught in the middle of Monday’s blast at a shrine popular with tourists, as well as Thais. “She cannot accept the truth,” close family friend Visen Lim Gin Seong said on Wednesday. “She has been crying nonstop since yesterday and asking why heaven is so cruel to the family when they have been so good to people.” Seven members of the family had traveled by train on Saturday from Butterworth on northern Malaysia’s Penang island to the Thai beach resort city of Hua Hin, and arrived in Bangkok on Monday, Lim said. Neoh Ee Ling, 33, who is five months pregnant, was not wounded in the bombing, and her father, Neoh Hock Guan, 53, reportedly suffered minor injuries. But four other family members, including Ee Ling’s 4-yearold daughter, are confirmed dead, and a fifth is presumed to have died.
“All the family members are distraught,” Lim, a businessman, said in a phone interview from Penang. “It is also heartbreaking for friends and neighbors. They are good, friendly and generous people. Nobody expects this to happen.” “Seven of them went on holiday, but only two came back,” Lim said. The family had waited for Hock Guan’s youngest son, Neoh Jai Jun, 20, who studies in Taiwan, to return to Malaysia before heading to Thailand for a vacation, while his sisterin-law, Lim So See, 52, who lived in Singapore, joined the trip as well, Lim said. Jai Jun was killed in the blast, and So See is presumed dead. The other members of the family who died were Hock Guan’s 49-yearold wife, Lim Saw Gaik; son-in-law Lee Tze Siang, 35; and granddaughter Lee Jin Xuan, 4. The Monday evening explosion at the open-air Erawan Shrine, located at one of Bangkok’s busiest intersec-
tions, left 20 people dead and more than 120 wounded. Hock Guan was quoted by the Malay Mail as saying he was about to pray at the shrine on Monday evening when he dropped the candle he wanted to light. “When I bent to pick it up, I heard the explosion,” he said. “The next thing I knew, none of my family members were in sight.” “I can’t believe our holiday would end like this...this incident is a black mark in our lives,” he said. Lim said Hock Guan—who runs a cake business and is known as “Kuih Guan” in his neighborhood—and his family are well known for their charity work, cooking food for a nearby old folks’ home and making frequent visits and donations to orphanages. Kuih is the Malay word for cake. But now the surviving family members are struggling to deal with the aftermath of the attack. Ee Ling’s 6-year-old son, Lee Jian Hen, who stayed back with his grandmother in Penang, sensed something was amiss when he saw crying family members and photos of his father in the newspapers. The boy’s grandfather, Lee Ting Hiang, 61, told local media that Jian Hen has become reserved and moody since the tragedy. “He keeps on asking why his father’s photographs are all over the newspapers, but we have yet to tell him.... I don’t know how,” Ting Hiang said. “This is the hardest thing I have to do in my life—breaking the news of my son’s death to his son.” AP
NITED NATIONS—Israel’s ambassador is urging the UN’s internal watchdog to investigate the head of a UN agency for misconduct, accusing her of “modern day anti-Semitism.” Last year he tried unsuccessfully to get Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to suspend Rima Khalaf. Ambassador Ron Prosor met Carmen Lapointe, the head of the Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS), late last month and called for a disciplinary hearing against Khalaf, a Jordanian who heads the Beirut-based UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia, which promotes economic and social development in 17 Arab countries. A letter from the ambassador to Lapointe obtained on Wednesday by the Associated Press (AP) said “Ms. Khalaf has abused her position in order to promote an anti-Israel agenda, in a flagrant violation of UN obligations and principles.” Khalaf told AP in Beirut on Wednesday that she stands by her statements highlighting “Israel’s documented violations of international law against the Palestinian people” and rejecting “the concept of religious or ethnic purity of states.” “I am surprised that rejecting discrimination, and reiterating the principles of
equality and justice in the UN Charter, can still be contested by anyone,” Khalaf said. Prosor gave a series of examples including her support for the June 29 “illegal and provocative attempt” to break Israel’s naval blockade of the Gaza Strip, a July 7 reference which he said equated “terrorism with a fight for ‘justice,’” and what he called “a hate-fueled report” on Arab integration in March 2014 “that once again promotes anti-Israel incitement by blaming Israel for shortcomings in the Arab world.” “Ms. Khalaf’s outrageous criticism against the state of Israel and the discrediting of its government undermine the integrity of the United Nations and amount to serious misconduct, by UN standards,” Prosor said in the July 27 letter. “I call on you to initiate an urgent investigation into this matter.” Lapointe said late on Wednesday, when asked whether her office would investigate, that “OIOS is not allowed by our mandate to discuss whether or not it has opened a case, or the status of a case that may have been opened.” Last year Israel urged the secretarygeneral to suspend Khalaf for anti-Israeli statements but he refused. In a speech in late February 2014 Khalaf
referred to “Israel’s adamancy that it is a Jewish State, which violates the rights of both the Muslim and Christian indigenous populations and revives the concept of state ethnic and religious purity, which caused egregious human suffering during the 20th century.” Prosor strongly objected to her reference to Israel practicing religious and ethnic purity like the Nazis in World War II, and to “the appalling claim” in the March 2014 report that Hitler sought to facilitate the emigration of German Jews to Palestine when he was responsible for the murder of 6 million Jews. Khalaf said she did not claim that Hitler sought to create a safe haven for the Jewish people in the Middle East. “Nothing is comparable to the atrocities of the Nazis, especially the Holocaust,” Khalaf said. “Yet this should serve as a reminder for the world of the disastrous consequences of discriminating among people based on their religion or ethnic origin.” Israel’s UN Mission said Prosor told Lapointe during their meeting that “Israel is already fighting against hate and incitement in enough arenas every day” and “will not remain silent” about Khalaf’s remarks. AP
60 PERCENT OF TOURISM ROADINFRA PLAN DONE
INDIGENOUS PROTESTERS CHASE OFF POLICE IN ECUADOR TOWN
S. KOREA LEADER TO ATTEND CHINA’S END OF WWII EVENT
S
EOUL, South Korea—South Korean President Park Geun-hye will travel to China next month to attend a ceremony marking the anniversary of victory over Japan in World War II, her office said on Thursday. China plans to hold a series of events to commemorate the anniversary, including a lavish military parade featuring aerial displays and its latest weapons. Park’s office said in a statement she will attend a September 3 anniversary ceremony. But her aides said Park remains undecided on attending the military parade set for the same day. Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to attend the Chinese celebrations though many Western leaders won’t do so.
China assisted North Korea and fought against South Korea during the 1950-1953 Korean War, while Americanled UN troops fought alongside South Korea. China and South Korea now have booming trade ties. China is North Korea’s last major ally and biggest aid benefactor. It’s not known if North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will attend the Chinese ceremonies. If he attends, it would be his first known travel outside the country since taking power upon the death of his dictator father Kim Jong Il in late 2011. Earlier this year, there was speculation Kim would attend May’s Victory Day celebration in Russia. But Kim eventually didn’t go and sent his parliament head to the event that marked the 70th anni-
However, attendance is considered problematic for at least three reasons, offering sufficient cause for foreign leaders to maintain their distance. Many nations, including those as far away as Great Britain, have recently criticized China’s aggressive military moves in the seas on its periphery, including building new, military significant islands in the South China Sea. There is also concern that the parade is being used to build international support for China in its ongoing rivalry with Japan. Some also worry about the imagery of foreign leaders attending a military parade adjacent to Tiananmen Square, the heart of a student-led pro-democracy movement in 1989 that was
WORLD
B L S. M
INDIAN women from the Amazon region of Ecuador take part in a protest march in Quito, Ecuador, on Wednesday. The march was called by labor unions and indigenous organizations to protests against policies of President Rafeal Correa. AP/DOLORES OCHOA
Q
UITO, Ecuador—Indigenous protesters wielding spears in southeastern Ecuador sent police and soldiers fleeing on Wednesday in a clash that Interior Minister
and soldiers in the Amazon town of Macas are upset with President Rafael Correa’s refusal to consult them on mining and oil drilling on their traditional lands.
since a diverse coalition of anti-Correa forces called a general strike on August 13. Key among their demands is that legislation be withdrawn that would allow Correa indefinite reelection.
LASTGASP PUSH Sports BusinessMirror
B32
TIM DUNCAN has made sacrifices, both financial and statistical, in pursuit of championships.
C1
| FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
NBA’S TOP TEAMMATE S
AN ANTONIO—Tim Duncan has given up millions in salary to give the San Antonio Spurs the cap space needed to re-sign teammates and add players, such as LaMarcus Aldridge. And Duncan has deferred offensively to teammates like Tony Parker and Kawhi Leonard despite averaging 19.5 points over his 18-year career. He has made those sacrifices, both financial and statistical, in pursuit of championships, not individual awards. But the National Basketball Association (NBA) gave him one anyway. Duncan’s peers awarded him the TwymanStokes Teammate of the Year award on Wednesday. In its third year, the award is voted upon by players from a candidate pool selected by past NBA stars. “I know how to be the way I am because of people that came before me,” Duncan said. “The people I was able to be teammates with, be around, watch them operate, watch them work, watch them as teammates [and] watch them accept the role. All those things are big pieces in what I am today and who I am today. So a lot of credit goes to them, as well.” Duncan received 72 first-place votes. Vince Carter of the Memphis Grizzlies finished second and Atlanta’s Elton Brand finished third. Spurs center David Robinson accepted a lesser role with the team early in Duncan’s rookie season after San Antonio made the 6-foot-11 forward the No. 1 pick in the 1997 draft. The lessons the Hall
of Fame center imparted that season have resounded with the entire organization, Duncan in particular. Duncan’s scoring and defense have helped the Spurs to five NBA championships. But it has been the 39-year-old’s willingness to accept contracts far below the maximum value he could earn that has helped San Antonio maintain a roster which has made 18 straight postseason appearances. “Tim’s contributed to our success in so many ways for so long,” Spurs General Manager R.C. Buford said. “I know people continue to point it out, and it needs to be pointed out, the support and what he’s allowed us to do, but this is nothing new.” Despite being arguably the team’s best overall player last season, Duncan is taking a $5 million pay cut this season so the team had the resources necessary to re-sign Leonard and Danny Green and bring in Aldridge, a prized free agent. Those moves helped convince David West to walk away from a $12.6 million player option with the Indiana Pacers to sign a $1.5 million offer from the Spurs. “I’m excited to get to know him because of that and other reasons,” Duncan said. “People talk very highly of him. A lot of guys who have been teammates over the years with him have a lot of great things to say about him. Obviously, talent wise, he’s a great addition. He’s a tough body. He’s a veteran player that knows how to play the game. All those things you add them the right way, it’s going to be an incredible plus for us.” West’s addition along with and the return of Parker, Manu Ginobili, Leonard, Green and Boris Diaw have made the Spurs a strong contender to win their sixth championship. Duncan said he has worked out twice with Aldridge in the past week. “Obviously we’ve added talent, and that’s wonderful,” Duncan said. “We’re going to have to work them in, have them figure out how to play with us and for us to play with them. It will be a process. Pop’s excited about it, I’m definitely excited about it, I know the guys coming in are excited. It’s great to be in a situation where we have a chance [to win an NBA title] again.” AP
LAST-GASP PUSH
In 10 previous events this year, Tiger Woods has missed the cut in four of them and withdrew from another. He’s had three rounds in the 80s, his best finish was a tie for 17th at the Masters and his best week came at The Greenbrier Classic, where he finished just six shots out of the lead.
TIGER WOODS gets a last chance
B J M The Associated Press
G
REENSBORO, North Carolina—It’s now or never for many players at the Wyndham Championship— the last chance to qualify for golf’s postseason. That group includes Tiger Woods. The biggest name in the sport is playing the final event of the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour’s regular season for the first time, in an effort to get his game back on track and make a last-gasp push for the playoffs. “I’ve started to build. I just need to get more consistent with everything, and start stringing together not just holes, not just rounds, but tournaments,”Woods said on Wednesday. “That’s why this tournament’s important to me. Hopefully I can win it, get into the playoffs and play a bunch of golf.” Woods, who missed the cut at the PGA Championship last week, beat last Friday’s deadline to enter the Wyndham but didn’t finalize his commitment until Monday. He said he had “a blast” playing a pro-am round on Wednesday with National Basketball Association All-Star Chris Paul—a native of nearby Winston-Salem who starred at Wake Forest. And now he wants to stick around for a while. In 10 previous events this year, Woods has missed the cut in four of them and withdrew from another. He’s had three rounds in the 80s, his best finish was a tie for 17th at the Masters and his best week came at The Greenbrier Classic, where he finished just six shots out of the lead. He’s eager to test his game on the Donald Ross-designed course at Sedgefield Country Club that puts a premium on strong iron play and features fast, undulating Bermuda grass greens that Woods is trying to quickly figure out. During a soggy pro-am, though, the course played a bit differently with more, well, woods. “It’s going to be a lot of irons off the tee, but it wasn’t the
case because it’s so wet,” Woods said. “Balls are plugging. Lot of mud balls out there.” The Wyndham has relished its spot as the last chance for the tour’s bubble players to force their way into the FedEx Cup playoffs, which begin next week at The Barclays in New Jersey. Woods—who’s at No. 187 on the points list—is pretty far from the bubble. Only the top 125 players will make it to The Barclays, which means he probably needs a victory in his first visit here. Recent history seems to be against him: Last year, only one player outside the top 125—Sang-Moon Bae—earned enough points here to move into the playoffs. A 14th-place tie helped him jump from No. 126 to No. 120. The year before, nobody did it. “If I don’t win this event,” Woods said, “I’ll have my offseason early.” Luke Donald is 124th, followed by Charl Schwartzel, Scott Langley, Seung-Yul Noh, S.J. Park and last year’s winner, Camilo Villegas. The top 125 in the standings also will earn 2015-2016 tour cards. “There’s so much to play for,” said Webb Simpson, the 2011 winner who’s safely at No. 49 on the points list. “It’s definitely on guys’ minds, I think.” This would rank as one of the best fields in the 76-year history of the tournament even if Woods hadn’t made his last-minute decision to play Sedgefield. Adam Scott, meanwhile, joined Woods as two of the six former world No. 1 ranked players in the field. Until Woods’s late entry, Scott was arguably the biggest attraction for the event. He also was in a pro-am foursome that was immediately behind the one with Woods and Paul, and with so much of the gallery following them, Scott could go through his round in relative anonymity. “There’s no doubt about things created by Tiger,” Scott said. “It happens everywhere he goes. You can tell how passionate the local people and everyone involved in the tournament here are about this tournament, and it means such a great deal to them to have Tiger Woods in the field. I think it’s fantastic. “We’re in for a great week, no matter what,” he added.
SPORTS
C1
R
OUGHLY 60 percent of the P60-billion tourism roadinfrastructure master plan of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and the Department of Tourism (DOT) has been completed, a Cabinet official said on Thursday. In absolute terms, the government has paved about 1,549 kilometers of tourism freeways over the last five years, Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson said. “The investment amount released over the period of five years from financial year 2011 to 2015 was utilized to finance 463
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 46.3060
projects involving construction, upgrading, rehabilitation and improvement of roads and bridges, including slope-protection works with a total length of 2,502 km, ” he explained. Financed by the DOT-DPWH Convergence Program and the DPWH’s road-infrastructure program, the master plan is more than half way through with 110 projects completed, 316 ongoing and 37 under the procurement stage. Among the major tourism road projects completed and ongoing include the 6-km, twolane tunnel Ternate-Nasugbu Road connecting the coastal C A
WHERE’S THE INFRA UPGRADE? Ramil Santos parks his metal-wheeled cart with benches fashioned from scrap wood as he waits for passengers along the railway in Manila. Manila and other cities are choked with construction sites for office and apartment towers, but spending on roads, railways and other unglamorous but essential infrastructure collapsed after the 1997 financial crisis and has yet to recover. AP
Intl commercial air traffic up 27% in Q1
I
NTERNATIONAL commercial air traffic soared by 28 percent during the first quarter of the year, but the growth posted by local carriers were outpaced by their foreign counterparts. Data obtained from the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) showed that airlines with operations to and from Manila flew a combined 5.34 million international passengers during the first three months of the year, a 28-percent rise from 4.19 million passengers the year prior. Domestic carriers flew 2.54 million of the total passenger count, roughly 12 percent higher than the 2.27 million in 2014. L egac y c a r r ier Ph i l ippi ne Airlines sliced half of the international traffic for local carriers at 1.463 million. Cebu Pacific trailed behind with 837,942, followed by
AirAsia Zest with 174,246. These figures are higher when compared to the air-traffic performance in the first quarter of 2014. Foreign carriers, however, grew by a faster 47 percent, to 2.8 million passengers from 1.91 million passengers. Officials of the air-services regulator were sought for further details, but they were not available as of press time. Domestic and international air travel are expected to get a boost this year after the regulator decided to scrap the fuel surcharge from airline fares due to the declining prices of jet fuel in the international market. A fuel surcharge is a temporary relief granted to airlines to help them recover losses incurred from higher jet-fuel prices. It ranges from P500 to as high as P15,000, depending on the destination.
Fuel prices have been dropping as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries decided to maintain current production levels despite a glut in the market with an estimated oversupply of 1.5 million to 2 million barrels daily. Following a period of relative stability of above $100 per barrel, oil prices have plunged since mid-2014, falling by more than $40 per barrel to five-year lows. Fuel accounts for as much as 60 percent of an airline’s operating cost per passenger, and is the secondhighest expense next to labor. Data from the International Air Transport Association showed that jet-fuel cost was at $63.5 per barrel as of July 31, down by 14 percent from the preceding month and 47.7 percent less than the year-ago price. Lorenz S. Marasigan
n JAPAN 0.3739 n UK 72.6124 n HK 5.9727 n CHINA 7.2404 n SINGAPORE 33.0073 n AUSTRALIA 33.9512 n EU 51.5201 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.3456 Source: BSP (20 August 2015)