BusinessMirror October 14, 2015

Page 1

BusinessMirror

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

U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008

www.businessmirror.com.ph

BusinessMirror E1 | Wednesday, October 14, 2015 Editor: Tet Andolong

NIGHT shot

OF SUSTAINABLE LIVING DIRT Weekend

estate development, has grown from 1,800 hectares in 2009 to its current 2,290 hectares. Estacio noted that there is a possibility the current size might expand in the future, if the opportunity arises. Estacio said ALI made all the necessary steps to ensure Nuvali will be developed into a balanced environment by combining nature and manmade structures in the pursuit of sustainability and economic prosperity.

B R R R

UVALI, a master-planned mixed-use development that straddles the cities of Santa Rosa, Cabuyao and Calamba in Laguna, continues to deliver the promise of sustainable living to develop an ecologically sound environment. Further, buying a property in Ayala Land Inc.’s (ALI) biggest eco-community also delivers lucrative returns for people who want to balance work and leisure manner. To broaden the community base, ALI added Amaia to the list of residential developments. “Residential lots offered through Ayala Land Premier, Alveo and Avida ranges from P15,000 to P24,000 per square meter. Avida house and lots, with two- and three-bedroom configurations, vary between P4.7

Flourishing community

[million] to P6.3 million and are recommended for full-nesters,” said John Estacio, Nuvali general manager, in a recent media briefing held in Makati City. “Amaia mid-rise condominium units are for the young professionals, as well as couples and young families, and are available with units ranging from 30 sq m to 75 sq m at P1.8M to P4.8M,” Estacio added. Buoyed by the warm reception of the market, Nuvali, currently ALI’s largest

IN six years, Estacio reported Nuvali became a hot estate with 12,000 residential units, 85,000 sq m of gross leasable areas for retail and office spaces, and 150 hotel rooms. Furthermore, Estacio mentioned two fully operational businessprocess outsourcing (BPO) buildings have become the source of the work force population that has grown to 4,000, and is expected to double in the next three to five years with the completion of the additional office buildings. On the academic side, ALI ensured quality education will be offered in the estate. Estacio reported Xavier School and Miriam College, currently with a student population of 990, is expected to double every

year. In partnership with the Legionaries of Christ, Nuvali will be the home of the Everest Academy—the first international catholic school in the area. In its objective to pursue and encourage a work-life balance, Estacio said Nuvali implemented approximately 50-percent balance between built and open areas, featuring a multifunctional lake, mountain bike and hiking trails, a wildlife and bird sanctuary and Camp N—Nuvali’s teambuilding and camping grounds. In terms of accessibility, ALI has strategically positioned the estate easier to reach. A motorist has five options to reach Nuvali—via South Luzon Expressway through the Mamplasan, Santa Rosa, Eton-Greenfield, Silangan and Canlubang exits. Moreover, Nuvali can also be accessed by public transport. Public buses ply to Nuvali from major centers, like Makati City, Bonifacio Global City and Balibago.

Riding high on the success

INVESTING in Nuvali has yielded positive results because it has the highest rate in land value appreciation. Estacio pointed out residential lot values rose from P9,500 to P20,000 per sq m, while commercial

space offerings experienced a huge upsurge from P20,000 sq m to P40,000 per sq m. Estacio attributed two major factors to the significant appreciation of the Nuvali real estate. “First is the strength of our value proposition that as Ayala Land’s largest eco-community, Nuvali was envisioned as a harmonious and creative space, where a lifestyle of responsibility and sustainability is well-balanced. Nuvali commits to this vision by integrating a mix of land uses and showcasing it through Ayala Land’s expertise in revolutionary sustainable development that allows for economic prosperity, community-building, and flourishing lives within an ecologically sound environment,” Estacio said. “The second factor is the irresistible draw of Nuvali as a complete self-supporting estate. It has attracted professionals and families alike to its work, living and recreational spaces that are bundled in one complete package,” he added. At the start of the development of Nuvali, ALI was laser-focused on implementing sustainability philosophy triggered by the increasing manifestations of climate change and development concerns in key urban areas.

Current developments

ESTACIO said ALI is vigorously pushing the development of the necessary facilities and infrastructure in Nuvali. “Ayala Malls Solenad recently opened its third wing and by November, we are expected to open Solenad’s movie halls. Solenad is designed to meld harmoniously with the ecological features of Nuvali and, thus, features an outdoor theme; there are spacious walkways, pocket garden parks, bike lanes, and a fully featured playground that has unique glow-in-the-dark swings, all placed on attractive colorful rubber flooring,” Estacio said. Meanwhile, S&R membership shopping will open its branch in Nuvali by mid-November of this year. By December Nuvali will open its multipurpose outdoor and recreational facility called Camp N, which is similar to the facility at SandBox in Alviera in Porac, Pampanga. It will have a high and low rope obstacle courses, rappelling and climbing wall, camping grounds and Asia’s longest roller-coaster zipline. To provide the health and medical needs in Nuvali, QualiMed Hospital is scheduled to be opened by the second quarter of 2016.

.M. Wenceslao & Associates Inc. (DMWAI), the Filipino-owned integrated property developer, has reached its 50th year of building not just structures and infrastructure, but more important, a better way of life for every Filipino. The homegrown construction and real-estate giant marks this milestone year in the business, and is gearing up for another 50 years of helping build a nation —quite literally and figuratively. DMWAI was founded in 1965 and has since survived the test of time, political upheavals, economic crises and seemingly insurmountable challenges, to become one of the most reliable property and construction companies in the Philippines today. It has constructed countless of structures and infrastructure on thousands and thousands of square meter (sq m)—all of which still stand as firm and as strong as

the day they were built. And it all began with one man’s vision. “My father was a military engineer who had participated in the defense of Bataan. After leaving the military, he decided to put up his own construction company,” said Delfin J. Wenceslao Jr., chairman and president of DMWAI, as he shared the legacy of his father, the late Delfin M. Wenceslao. Wenceslao Jr. said determination, passion and perseverance are among the values bequeathed by his father. “One major challenge of construction is financial and technical issues, and if you don’t have the proper experience, you will surely encounter difficulties. The construction industry is tough and demanding,” he said. But DMWAI has proven itself to be strong and stable, thus, it remained successful through the years, with a portfolio of big-ticket infrastructure endeavors,

counting the reclamation of the 225 hectare Central Business Park Island B & C, which includes Aseana City and Entertainment City, as one of its major project milestones. “My father’s vision has left behind valuable landscapes and infrastructure built through five decades of hard work. DMWAI is proud of the lives it has changed through the decades,” Wenceslao Jr. said. “Today the third generation of Wenceslaos are also working in the company,” said Delfin Angelo, the youngest son of Wenceslao Jr., who is the CEO and managing director. After graduating with a Masters of Science in Real Estate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Delfin Angelo returned and spearheaded the property-development projects of the company in Aseana City. “Together with the family, the employees have grown with the company, as well”, Delfin Angelo remarked.

Bigger projects on the way

TODAY D.M. Wenceslao is known as the developer and owner of Aseana City. Aseana City, one of the company’s current major projects, is considered another feather in their cap. Located right in between Entertainment City in Parañaque and Mall of Asia in Pasay City, Aseana City, with a size of 107 hectares, is one of the most prime contiguous undeveloped land banks in Metro Manila, and is dubbed as the next major business, tourism and entertainment district in the capital. “We created land from water. Aseana City is a major project for us. It’s one of the few projects where the government did not spend a single centavo, but has resulted in generation of billions of taxes for the government and further employment opportunities,” Delfin Angelo said. The company has also lined up 10 projects that are seen to boost revenues

AERIAL view of Aseana

PROPERTY in the next five years. These include three residential developments with total gross saleable floor area of approximately 70,000 sq m and seven commercial and office developments with a total gross leasable floor area of 320,000 sq m. Armed with 50 years of management experience and technical and project execution skills, DMWAI is gearing up for the next five decades as it commits to continue the vision started by its founding father—that of building structures

that last a lifetime. “Built to last means we are responsible for the job we do. We have to make sure our structures are strong enough to sustain any damage and stable enough to service the requirements of our clients. Optimistically, I invite you to the next 50 years,” Wenceslao Jr. proudly shared. Indeed, there is no stopping DMWAI as we expect to see more of this property giant’s brand rising in significant areas of the country.

E1

WEARABLES HAVE A WAYS TO GO Daily occurrences

D

EAR God, our unending petitions are flooding You almost every day. We ask for solutions of our problems. We ask for practically all our basic needs. We ask and demand the request we make for friends to respond favorably. We storm heaven for our desires to happen instantly. But did we ever pause and see “the miracles of Providence are daily occurrences and they cease only when we lose our faith”? Help us see You in everything we do, think and say. May Your grace be part of our daily system in life. Amen. SAINT LA SALLE’S MEDITATION AND LOUIE M. LACSON

Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

Life BusinessMirror

T

D1

Wearables may be hot, but they’ve got a ways to go

‘W

B O L. G Austin American-Statesman

EARABLES” over the last year or two has become one of those terms in technology that’s such a catch-all, it sometimes feels like it doesn’t mean much of anything. The simplest definition is technology that you wear on your body. That could mean a Fitbit activity tracker a jogger is wearing as they whoosh past you. If you’ve seen a commercial for the Apple Watch, you’ve seen a “wearable.” But it’s also coming to include everything from Bluetooth-enabled jewelry to hearing aids to clothing with sensors built into the fabric (get ready for sweat-detecting bike shorts!), shoes with pedometers built-in, or even eyewear like the too-soon-for-the-masses product Google Glass. Come to think of it, wouldn’t the Casio calculator watches of the 1980s count? And what about the megapowerful smartphones many of us have been carrying in our pockets since around 2007? The difference is the idea that this newer generation of wearables—smaller, less obtrusive, more integrated into our bodies and clothing—is taking off as its own category led by companies including Apple, Microsoft, Google and thousands of startups who’ve decided it’s the Age of Wearable Gadgets. Tech forecasters are bullish on these products. The research firm IDC estimates 72.1 million wearable devices will ship in 2015, a sharp increase from 26.4 million last year. That includes Internet-connected smartwatches like the Apple Watch, but also basic fitness trackers that don’t do things like run apps or allow you to pay for coffee at Starbucks. But it’s not all a story of wild success. Apple has been gun-shy about revealing actual sales numbers of its Apple Watch, which received mixed reviews earlier this year as a Version 1.0 product that’s really not for everyone—particularly if you don’t own an iPhone. And both smartwatches and fitness trackers are fighting the perception that they’re novelty items that people get tired of quickly, sticking them in a drawer after just a few months of use. In fact data released last year suggested just that; a third to a half of gadget buyers eventually ditch their fitness trackers or smartwatches. With that all in mind, I showed up at a one-day conference in downtown Austin, Texas, called Rock Stars of Wearables recently. The first sign of trouble was that there were no guitars or pyrotechnics and that the first “rock star” I witnessed onstage was a business director in a suit from Qualcomm. Odd branding aside, the day was a time for those in the industry to chart the exciting future of wearables, both inside and out. What I learned, shockingly, is that even those who are fully committed to making wearables a thing in our lives agree that they have a long way to go. Battery life is an issue, especially with devices you’re meant to keep on all the time, such as the Apple Watch. Eyewear devices like Google Glass can face a social backlash if they’re viewed as a privacy violation by those around the person wearing them. Some devices that could potentially dispense medicine or be surgically implanted or swallowed— so-called “digestibles”—face FDA hurdles. Jennifer Darmour of Chrono Therapeautics got to my biggest knock on wearables as I’ve seen them so far: They’re often clunky in form and function. And many companies making them don’t seem to be asking, “Who are these products for and what problem are you trying to solve?” The era of sleek smartphones and wireless-speakers-as-furniture has made us less patient for wearables we’d never actual wear outside the house. “People want their products to be well-made and they want them to be beautiful,” Darmour said. “And I’m not talking about blinging out

PLDT/SMART EVP and Head of Consumer Business Group Ariel P. Fermin, Uber Regional GM for Southeast Asia and Australia, New Zealand Mike Brown and Voyager Innovations FVP and Group Head for Business Development and International Partnerships Stephen Misa.

PLDT HOME PARTNERS WITH UBER

THE market is still trying to figure out whether wearables are really our thing and whether we’re going to yield valuable real estate on our bodies to them. Shown here is the iBand Sling, which holds smartphones, keys, money, sunglasses and any portable tech you can fit into it, perfect for music festivals or a hike.

wearables. It’s understand who your audience is and being aesthetically beautiful to them.” And if wearables are really going to succeed, they need better interfaces and to serve not as one more distracting screen to look at but as an invisible bridge to, say, controlling our home environment, keeping track of our fitness habits or interacting with the world around us. Tom Emrich of the Canadian company We Are Wearables said it was less about making cyborgs with technology that eats away at our humanity than making superhumans who are augmented with technology that helps us live in the moment. These devices, he said, “will be unfettered by screens and work side by side with us in the real world. They’ll allow us to reconnect to ourselves, reconnect to the world around us and even to a higher power.” I almost got a lump in my throat when Emrich said, “They’ll allow us to become human again.” Then I remembered, “Wait, we’re already humans.” When did we give up on that idea? My own experiment at Rock Stars of Wearables was a much-more low tech wearable I brought along from an Austin company called Runnur. The “iBand Sling” is a sash you wear across your body like a bandoleer—or, if you’re fancy, a pageant sash. It holds smartphones, keys, money, sunglasses and any portable tech you can fit into it, perfect for music festivals or a hike. I thought I’d get lots of comments and feedback at the conference

iPHONE 6S BATTERY ISSUES ARISE

GERARD S. RAMOS

AS it turns out, it could be that no two iPhone 6ses are alike. It has been reported that two companies manufactured the A9 chip powering Apple’s new hotness: Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC). Of course, this fact would be a nonissue to most consumers, whose only concern really is if they would be able to tweet and post their selfies on Instagram on this smartphone or that for much of the day without having to recharge every so often. Then again, they ought to be: According to reports, the battery life on iPhone 6ses packing the A9 chip manufactured by Samsung is shorter than the TSMC iPhone 6s. How short is short? Reports of tests have the Samsung iPhone 6s clocking in a battery life that’s two hours shorter than those running on the TSMC-manufactured A9 chip. Not surprisingly, Apple downplays the difference in a statement to the tech media: “Our testing and customer data show the actual battery life of the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus, even taking into account variable component differences, vary within just 2 percent to 3 percent of each other.” Sure, with everybody now carrying a power pack, this might be much ado about nothing, but still....

BECAUSE YOU’RE INTO PODCASTS

as I walked around wearing the iBand. No one mentioned it at all or acknowledged that I was wearing a thing that could carry all these wearables that everybody was talking about all day. I spoke to Andrew Hamra, the owner of Runnur, who’s been selling the iBand Sling in different colors at handsfreecarryall.com, as well as a more corporate-focused line of products that can hold larger devices like iPads in a sling. If you’ve seen technicians or music festival workers toting tablets in a secure carrying harness, Hamra is likely behind it. He calls the iBand Sling “Fanny Pack 2.0,” and don’t get him started on why he’d never wear a traditional fanny pack. (Spoiler: They’re not considered cool to wear.) Hamra, like the speakers at Rock Stars of Wearables, has for years been thinking about how we wear our gadgets and how those habits are changing. He thinks about how long it takes to pull an iPhone from a pair of skinny jeans; it should take less than two seconds, he believes. “Technology is the new gold,” Hamra says. “But the tool is not useful unless you can carry it with you.” And it’s not useful if you can’t keep your hands free and if the wearable—be it a smartwatch or a Pancho Villa-like gadget strap across your chest—looks silly or stops being something you want to keep on your body on a regular basis. That may be why a lot of us are still trying to figure out whether wearables are really our thing and whether we’re going to yield valuable real estate on our bodies to them. ■

GOOD news for iOS users who value podcasts as another platforms for news, information and entertainment. Touted as one of the best podcasts apps on iOS, Overcast now allows you to indulge your podcast addiction without having to shell out the $4.99 that unlocks the app’s more robust features, Yes, the app is now available as a free download on the App Store, allowing everybody to enjoy such exceptional features as Smart Speed, which shortens silent moments; and Voice Boost, a voice equalizer—good stuff that once were enjoyed only by those who paid the toll fee. Even better, Overcast now includes podcast streaming, which should be a boon for those 16GB iPhone owners. Needless to say, the podcasts you subscribe to can still be downloaded to your device if you can’t stand the interruption/ buffering that is typical to streaming in these parts of the world with our slow LTE connections.

PC SALES STILL SLOW

IT appears that Microsoft’s promise of a free upgrade from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10 failed to spur PC sales over the summer, with the figures from the most recent quarter registering negative growth, according to reports by Gartner and IDC, with Lenovo and HP, the world’s top two PC manufacturers, both suffering a -4.0 decline. It should be said, however, that this doesn’t necessarily amount to a lukewarm consumer response toward Windows 10. It could only be that consumers didn’t want to have to deal with upgrading new Windows 8.1-powered PCs to Microsoft’s latest and greatest, which could be problematic, and instead put off their purchase until the new machines with Windows 10 preinstalled hit the shelves. Meanwhile, here are the top 5 PC vendors worldwide, according to the Gartner report: 1. Lenovo 2. HP 3. Dell 4. Apple 5. Acer

THE country’s leading home digital services provider which posted a market share of over 70 percent in the first half of the year, PLDT Home has partnered with the world’s leading ridesharing tech company Uber to bring the trailblazing transport service for Filipino families to experience a richer digital lifestyle. PLDT Home and Uber recently formalized a strategic partnership where the telco’s broadband subscribers can more easily enjoy the benefits of the innovative transport service when they download the Uber app on their computers, Telpad and any smart devices at home. As part of the exclusive offer, PLDT Home Fibr subscribers will get two free Uber rides worth P500 each, while Telpad and DSL subscribers will get one free Uber ride worth up to P300 for first-time users of Uber in Metro Manila until October 31. According to PLDT VP and Head of Home Marketing Gary Dujali, the partnership is part of PLDT Home’s commitment to enhance the digital lifestyle of its consumers by teaming up with mobile applications and online platforms that will complement their lifestyle needs. “We are honored to be working with a company that changed the landscape of the world’s ride-sharing economy,” he said. “PLDT Home and Uber share the same vision of providing our customers with digital solutions that add value to their daily lives. We are confident that this partnership will break new ground in the country’s digital landscape.” Uber Philippines General Manager Laurence Cua added, “We are delighted that this partnership will allow Uber to reach Filipino families and provide them with an enhanced digital lifestyle experience. We look forward to expanding our service to more Filipino families with the help of PLDT Home’s wide subscriber base and strong infrastructure.” PLDT Home’s partnership with Uber expands the collaboration between the PLDT Group and Uber. The former’s mobile subsidiary Smart earlier introduced free in-car Wi-Fi in Uber vehicles and offered special promotions for Uber riders on its mobile network.

LIFE

BusinessMirror MEDIA PARTNER

by 32 percent, needs to be adjusted, considering that this amounts to P1.2 million today. “There’s a lot of backroom talks between the Senate President and the Speaker to convince the President to adjust it [tax bracket] to inflation,” he said. “The Speaker and the Senate President have come to a common position, so the next step is really to talk to the President and present what the options are,” Quimbo added. Quimbo, citing the Department of Finance, said the proposal may cause the government to lose revenues totaling as much as 1.5 percent of the country’s GDP, or P30 billion. C  A

TELSTRA IN PHL: A THREAT TO TELCO GIANTS? B L S. M

THE SECRET INGREDIENT YOU’RE MISSING FOR STRONGER MOTIVATION »D4

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

This would be the first phase of the tax-reform package. Belmonte, in a text message, said he and Senate President Franklin M. Drilon will meet the President this month. “Senate President Drilon is cur-

rently abroad. But we may schedule the meeting with President Aquino during this [Congress] break, which is from October 10 to November 2,” the Speaker added. Belmonte said now is the right time to readjust the tax bracket to inflation to increase the take-home pay of ordinary workers. “With this proposal, we are [only] giving the applicable value of these things at the time the National Internal Revenue Code was approved [in 1997],” he said. Liberal Party Rep. Romero S. Quimbo of Marikina City, chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, said the P500,000 level, for instance, which is currently taxable

SPECIAL REPORT

FIFTY YEARS AND STILL STANDING

D

B J M N.  C

The leadership of the 16th Congress will meet Mr. Aquino to convince him to certify a bill that only seeks to adjust the levels of taxable income to inflation, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said on Tuesday.

NUVALI DELIVERS THE PROMISE

P.  |     | 7 DAYS A WEEK

Congress makes final push for income tax-reform bill

L

SUSTAINABLE LIVING AT NUVALI

NUVALI

Thursday 18, October 2014 Vol.14, 10 No.2015 40 Vol. 11 No. 6 Wednesday,

■ ■

AWMAKERS are making a final push for the passage of the income tax-reform bill, this time by presenting a more palatable version of the measure to President Aquino.

INSIDE

N

A broader look at today’s business

D1

Conclusion

HE telecommunications market is expected to further expand, thanks to the relatively lower smartphone penetration in the Philippines; but with the possible entry of another network player, competition is expected to toughen. Smartphone penetration is currently at about 50 percent of the population, but mobile-subscriber count is now at 121 million. The wireless subsidiaries of Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT)—Smart and Sun—dominate the market with 68.9 million subscribers, while Globe Telecom Inc. accounts for 53 million. This is expected to grow to at least 131.97 million by 2019, an analysis by BMI Research of Fitch showed, as more and more users shift to new technologies. Definitely, the incumbents will continue to increase their numbers, but should Telstra Corp. Ltd.’s foray into the Philippine market prove to be as successful as San Miguel Corp. (SMC) hopes, the current network

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 45.8670

C  A

BROKEN PLDT public payphones on Ayala Avenue in Makati City. NONIE REYES

LAWMAKERS NIX PLAN TO REVIVE PRE-SHIPMENT INSPECTION

C

ONGRESS is backing exporters in their stand against the revival of the pre-shipment inspection (PSI) scheme, stressing the need for further trade facilitation. In separate text messages, Rep. Romero S. Quimbo and Sen. Juan Edgardo M. Angara, chairmen of the Ways and Means committees of the House of Representatives and the Senate, respectively, said the scheme should be a matter of choice. The Ways and Means committees of both chambers are in charge of moving the amendments to the Customs Modernization and Tariff Act (CMTA). Several camps are pushing the revival of the PSI scheme through the proposed CMTA. “I don’t agree that pre-shipment inspection should be made a requirement, more so be made legally mandatory. Pre-shipment inspection is potentially in conflict with the Kyoto Convention, which the Senate ratified in 2010. What we need in the BOC [Bureau of Customs] is trade facilitation, not more inspection,” Quimbo said in a text message. For Angara, the implementation of the PSI scheme should not be any different from when it was being implemented before the expiration of the government’s contract with its former contractor, SGS, for this service. “The PSI is something that is left open, meaning as a matter of choice, to a country’s administrators. As in the past, we had the customs working with the SGS, but past administrations terminated this. So, at the end of the day, that type of inspection boils down to an administrative choice rather than a legislative injunction,” Angara said in a text message. The Philippine Exporters Confederation Inc. (Philexport) on Monday warned against any move to insert the PSI scheme into the proposed CMTA, saying that the move will further reduce the competitiveness of traders who are still bearing the hefty costs of trucking and shipping fees, on top of the downturn in export receipts. “If that is implemented, businesses will shoulder the cost. Ideally, the government should shoulder it, but it doesn’t. This is an added expense to the trucking and shipping fees. This makes us uncompetitive,” Philexport President Sergio Ortiz-Luis Jr. said in a phone interview. Catherine N. Pillas

■ JAPAN 0.3823 ■ UK 70.3737 ■ HK 5.9186 ■ CHINA 7.2540 ■ SINGAPORE 32.7950 ■ AUSTRALIA 33.8127 ■ EU 52.1324 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.2384

Source: BSP (13 October 2015)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.