BusinessMirror December 8, 2015

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OPEC’S FREEFORALL SEEN AS BOON TO ASIA

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HE world’s biggest oil consumers could hardly have hoped for a better Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) meeting. The group that supplies most of Asia’s crude effectively decided to abandon production limits, in the hope that unrelenting supply of cheap oil will squeeze out rivals. With prices trading near a six-year low, amid swelling global stockpiles, a policy of continuing to flood the market gives little reason for a rebound in prices, according to IG Ltd. While the collapse in crude has triggered the worst slump in the energy industry since the 2008 financial crisis, it’s been a boon for Asian economies dependent on imports, helping temper inflation, support household spending and bolster refining

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profits. After the Opec decided that “everyone does whatever they want,” in the words of Iran’s oil minister, the benefits for Asia will probably continue. “Big oil consumers will take a lot of succor and refiners will get good sleep,” H. Kumar, managing director of India’s Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Ltd., said in a phone interview on Monday. “There’ll be a lot of stability in the market.”

Biggest buyers

THE Asia-Pacific region will consume 31.87 million barrels a day of oil in 2015, exceeding demand of 31.28 million barrels from the Americas, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in a report on November 13. China, India, Japan and South Korea will be among the biggest users of oil, according to the

Paris-based IEA. India and the Philippines are likely to benefit the most because they depend heavily on crude imports, according to Bloomberg Intelligence (BI) analysis. Both economies also rely on consumer spending for growth and cheap oil typically gives households more money to spend. India’s 7.4-percent growth is the strongest among Asia’s emerging economies, while the Philippines has expanded at 6 percent year-on-year, according to BI. It’s also good for the region’s refiners, such as Reliance Industries Ltd. Regional profits from turning crude into naphtha, which is used to produce gasoline as well as petrochemicals, have surged to the highest level since at least May, data S “O,” A

IN this June 12, 2014, file photo, a pair of tanker trucks park next to pumps at an oil-producing well in McKenzie County, North Dakota. AP

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2015 ENVIRONMENTAL MEDIA AWARD LEADERSHIP AWARD 2008

A broader look at today’s business Thursday 2014 Vol.8,102015 No. 40 Vol. 11 No. 61 Tuesday,18, December

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MANILA SIGNALS STRONG INTEREST TO JOIN THE PACIFIC RIM TRADE BLOC VIA TECHNICAL CONSULTATIONS

PHL to hold TPP talks with US

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HE Philippines is set to consult with three Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) members in the first quarter of 2016, including its lead proponent the US, as the country pursues its bid to join the new trade bloc.

INSIDE

HOLIDAY GREETINGS START WITH YOUR DOOR D

Life

A ‘ just shoot’

EAR God, You reassure us that You will keep Your promise in the future, just as You kept Your promise in the past. You made in the past about the coming of the Messiah as a “just shoot” from the house of David. To those who ask what they should do while waiting for the fulfillment of Your promises, Saint Paul declares: “Increase and abound in love for one another and for all.” That’s the seed that will produce a better world. Don’t we qualify, too, as a just shoot to make this world full of peace, love, hope and solidarity with Your help and guidance? Amen. WORLD AND LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON, HFL Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Assistant Secretary for Industry Development and Trade Policy Ceferino S. Rodolfo said the technical consultations with TPP members will send a strong signal that the Philippines is really interested in joining the US-led bloc, which currently consists of 12 economies. He said these consultations are part of the country’s preparations should it get invited by the member-economies. Notably, the Philippines will again engage the US to determine the particular commitments that will be required in the TPP. Rodolfo did not name the two other countries. Rodolfo said the Philippines welcomes the instruction of President Barack Obama during the recently concluded Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit for the US Trade Representative (USTR) to collaborate with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

EDDIE REDMAYNE AND A NOT-SO-ORDINARY WORLD »D2

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

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

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Holiday greetings start with your door

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B M C G Tribune News Service

OUR front door is the first thing guests see when they come to your home, so you want to dress it up with a display that offers warm holiday greetings, a hint of what they will find inside. I asked Bev, our seasonal floral designer, to share some of her secrets for creating beautiful holiday doors. BRING THE INSIDE OUT BEV suggests that the decor on your front door be an extension of the look you’ve created inside your home. How have you decorated your tree and fireplace mantel? Maybe your tree reflects a snowman or Santa theme. Or your garland is dotted with pinecones. Maybe plaid ribbons twist their way down your banister and through the garland on your mantel. If so, Bev says to pick three elements from your displays, like ornaments, floral picks, colors or ribbons, and use them to create your door display. In the right photo, Bev dressed my door in a upside-down bouquet made

from tying together a bare twig, some pinecones and evergreen picks, then finished it off with a plaid bow. SYNC WITH THE STYLE OF YOUR HOME THE décor on your door should be in keeping with the style of your home. When I lived in my formal Greek revival historical home, my door displays needed to be a lot grander than they do now that I live in my snug little cottage. To match my little home’s personality, I’m opting for smaller, simpler, more casual treatments. PAY ATTENTION TO PROPORTIONS WHEN creating a floorplan for your home, it’s essential you pay attention to proportions, making sure everything in the space is on the same scale. The same goes for your front door design. If you have a small door, like I do at my cottage, you need a smaller, simpler door treatment. Those of you who have large doors and dramatic entries will need to ramp up the size of your wreath or swag. Just make sure to leave plenty of the door showing. Do you have a glass outer door? Bev suggests placing your display next to the

B C N. P

door instead of squishing it between the door and storm door. This year bells are super popular. Bev used a trio of different-sized bells to adorn this large pine pick on my front door. She finished it off with a double layer of ribbons in burlap and plaid. COORDINATE YOUR PORCH DÉCOR ONE mistake Bev sees folks make when they decorate their doors and front porches is to mix together too many dissimilar objects. The elements may be adorable individually, but they lack enough connection to work together as a group, and end up looking chaotic. She suggests that your door décor set the theme. Then, any other items on your porch should reflect the colors, theme and objects used on your door. For example, if you were to decorate your door with a basket full of greens, you might want to put a Christmas tree in an urn by your door and decorate the tree with the same ribbons, pinecones and berry picks. ■ This article was adapted from Mary Carol Garrity’s blog at www.nellhills.com.

ITALPINAS NOW A PUBLIC COMPANY Officials of Italpinas Development Corp. (IDC), known for its sustainable-development thrust, lead the ceremonial ringing of the bell at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) trading floor in Makati City on Monday, signaling its official listing on the PSE. In the photo are (from left) lawyer Jose Leviste III, IDC president; Arch. Romolo Nati, IDC chairman and COO; Jose Pardo, PSE chairman; Vivian Yuchengco, PSE director; Hans Sicat, PSE president; and Alejandro Yu, PSE director. Story on B1. NONOY LACZA

S “TPP,” A

LIFE

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FIRST U.S. SHIPMENT IN MONTHS STARTED FLYING TO SPACE STATION

B L S. M

The World BusinessMirror

news@businessmirror.com.ph | Tuesday, December 8, 2015

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Libya’s rival governments shun UN, sign separate peace deal

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ENGH A ZI, Libya—Lawmakers from Libya’s rival parliaments have reached a power-sharing agreement in Tunisia, shunning a UN-brokered deal to avoid the “foreign intervention” tainting it, an internationally recognized government representative said on Sunday. However, it appeared the deal had failed to gain broad acceptance by either side, with representatives from both parliaments coming out to slam the newly minted agreement. Libya slid into chaos following the 2011 toppling and killing of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi. The oil-rich country has been torn between an internationally recognized government in the far east and Islamist-backed government in the capital, Tripoli. The UN’s unity government deal, which is aimed at ending the conflict, was drafted by its former envoy to Libya, Bernardino Leon, who accepted a job last month from the United Arab Emirates. The country backs some members of the internationally recognized government, casting doubts on the international body’s neutrality. Sunday’s move seemed to splinter the north African country’s governing bodies even further, with members from both sides coming out to praise or criticize the deal. “We believe this is a step on the right track away from intervention of foreign entities and manipulation,” prominent internationally recognized parliament member Abu Bakr Beira said in the eastern city of Tobruk, where his parliament is based. Meanwhile, his parliament’s spokesman told the Associated Press the new deal does not represent the body. “This is an individual effort and a childish attempt to get out of signing the real peace deal,” Faraj Abu Hashim said.

If successful, Sunday’s deal would see the formation of two 10-member committees, with both camps enjoying equal representation. One committee would name a prime minister and two deputies one from each body—in the next two weeks. The trio would then form the unity Cabinet. The other committee would draft a constitution and prepare for parliamentary elections within two years. Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi received the chief negotiators Sunday night after the talks and urged the negotiating parties to maintain contacts with the UN envoy for Libya. “Tunisia welomes this step, which helps to bring an end to division in Libya and allow this brother country to reestablish unity and assure conditions of security and stability on its territory,” the president’s office said in a statement after the low-profile talks in the Tunis suburb of Gammarth. According to the media offices of both parties, nearly half the members of each body are still in favor of the UN deal despite Leon’s departure, albeit with conditions. The UN has repeatedly refused to reconsider changing the proposal. The UN deal due for endorsement next week in Rome had been rejected by the internationally recognized government because it would have given the unity government the power to fire all senior Libyan officials not unanimously approved by its members—a clause they interpreted as an attempt to remove their fiercely anti-Islamist army chief, Gen. Khalifa Hifter, whose forces have been battling Islamist militias nationwide for over a year. The Islamist authorities, on the other hand, were unhappy with the deal because it did not provide sufficient guarantees that Islamic law will be applied, Islamist officials said. AP

Possible IS gains if Palestinian leadership vacuum–Clinton

PALESTINIAN Fatah supporters put up a flag, while waiting for Gaza’s Hamas rulers to hand over the house of late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat to officials from his Fatah party, with the intention of turning it to a museum for the iconic leader on November 10, Gaza City. The house has been closed since the Islamic militant group Hamas took over Gaza in 2007 after routing the Palestinian Authority's forces and ousting Fatah under the leadership of Arafat’s successor, Mahmoud Abbas. AP/ADEL HANA

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ASHINGTON—Hillary Clinton says “the black f lag” of the Islamic State (IS) group could be flying over the Palestinian territories if the Palestinian Authority and President Mahmoud Abbas fail to keep order. The Democratic presidential candidate and former secretary of state says a Palestinian leadership vacuum could provide an opening for IS to make inroads. Clinton also says that as president, she’d push Israelis and

Pa lest i n i a ns towa rd a peace d e a l . B ut s he a c k no w le d ge s the difficult y of broker ing a two-state solution. She tells a conference at the Brookings Institution in Washington that she understands “the frustration and the disappointment.” But she also says, “I don’t think you can give up on it.” Clinton is also promising to rebuild US-Israeli relations, which have grown chilly under President Barack Obama. AP

Armenia votes to give president’s political powers to prime minister

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EREVAN, Armenia—Early results show that Armenian voters at Sunday’s referendum have supported constitutional changes that would give more powers to the prime minister and parliament at the expense of the president. Armenia’s Central Election Commission said in a statement early on Monday that 63 percent have supported the amendments that would make the president largely a figurehead.

BSP looks to ease currency Clark holds key for PHL to reap restrictions to boost trading rewards of ballooning air traffic T SPECIAL REPORT

The opposition has seen the reform as an attempt by President Serzh Sargsyan to extend his rule. Sargsyan has denied the claim, saying he has no intention of shifting into the prime minister’s seat after his second term in office ends in 2018. Sargsyan’s government has promoted the constitutional changes as a step toward strengthening democracy in the former Soviet state by providing for a greater balance of powers and a stronger judicial branch. AP

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A UNITED Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket lifts off from launch complex 41 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on December 6, in Cape Canaveral, Florida. The rocket is delivering supplies to the International Space Station. AP/JOHN RAOUX

First US shipment in months started flying to space station

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APE CANAVERAL, Florida—A US shipment of much-needed groceries and other astronaut supplies rocketed toward the International Space Station for the first time in months on Sunday, reigniting National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa’s) commercial delivery service. If the Orbital ATK capsule arrives at the space station on Wednesday as planned, it will represent the first US delivery since spring. “Santa is on his way!” Tory Bruno, president of rocket maker United Launch Alliance, announced via Twitter. More than anyone, perhaps, the six space station astronauts were thrilled following all the weather-related delays. They managed to photograph the rising rocket from their windows as both craft sailed over the Atlantic. “Caught something good on the horizon,” commander Scott Kelly reported in a tweet. To Nasa’s relief, the weather cooperated after three days of high wind and cloudy skies that kept the Atlas V rocket firmly on the ground. Everything came together on the

fourth launch attempt, allowing the unmanned Atlas to blast off with 7,400 pounds of space station cargo, not to mention some Christmas presents for the awaiting crew. Just before liftoff, Bruno urged, “Everyone cross your fingers and think happy weather thoughts.” It apparently worked. The Atlas soared through clouds and, 21 minutes later, ended up placing the Cygnus cargo carrier in the perfect orbit. Ecstatic launch controllers applauded, shook hands and hugged one another. “We’re real happy to be back in space,” said Frank Culbertson, president of Orbital’s space systems group. United Launch Alliance manager Vernon Thorp couldn’t help but notice all the number fours in Sunday’s launch equation. Liftoff occurred at 4:44 p.m. on the

fourth launch attempt, and Orbital’s designation for the mission was—yep—number four. “I guess the numbers just all lined up right today,” Thorp told reporters. The space station astronauts— two of them, including Kelly, deep into a one-year mission—have gone without American shipments since April. Two private companies contracted for more than $3.5 billion by Nasa to replenish the 250-milehigh lab are stuck on Earth with grounded rockets. Orbital ATK bought the United Launch Alliance’s rocket, the veteran Atlas V, for this supply mission. Orbital’s previous grocery run, its fourth, ended in a fiery explosion seconds after liftoff in October 2014. SpaceX, the other supplier, suffered a launch failure in June on its eighth trip. Russia also lost a supply ship earlier this year. But it picked up the slack and has another resupply mission scheduled just before Christmas; Japan has chipped in, as well. Much-needed food is inside Orbital ’s cargo carrier, named Cygnus after the swan constellation. Nasa normally likes to have a six-month stash of food aboard the space station, but it’s down a couple months because of the three failed flights. Space station Program Manager Kirk Shireman expects it will take another year

to get the pantry full again—provided there are no more accidents. Also aboard the newest Cygnus capsule: clothes, toiletries, spacewalking gear, air-supply tanks and science experiments. This is the first time that the United Launch Alliance’s Atlas V has served the space station. Normally used for hefty satellite launches, it is the mighty successor to the Atlas used to put John Glenn into orbit in 1962. Boeing intends to use the Atlas V to boost the Starliner capsules it’s building to ferry astronauts to the space station beginning in 2017. Orbital plans to use another Atlas rocket for a supply run in March, then return its own Antares rocket to flight from Virginia in May. SpaceX—also part of Nasa’s commercial crew effort—aims to restart station deliveries in January with its Falcon rockets. While acknowledging 2015 has been a difficult year because of the disrupted supply chain, Shireman said commercial space is inevitable and will drive down launch costs. Nasa’s 30-year shuttle program proved expensive and complicated, and, on two flights, deadly. “It is our future,” Shireman stressed last week. The Cygnus launched on Sunday is named after Mercury 7 astronaut Deke Slayton, a pioneer in commercial spaceflight before his death in 1993. AP

Poland denies considering request for nuclear weapons

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ARSAW, Poland—Poland’s Defense Ministry denied on Sunday that it is considering asking for access to nuclear weapons through a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) program under which the US places them on the territory of certain allied states. On Saturday, Deputy Defense Minister Tomasz Szatkowski said that the ministry was currently discussing whether to ask to take part in Nato’s so-called Nuclear Sharing program to improve the country’s defenses. He made the comments in an interview with the private broadcaster Polsat. But the Defense Ministry issued a statement on its web site on Sunday denying that discussions are under way. “Within the Defense Ministry there is presently no work under way concerning the accession of our country to the Nato Nuclear Sharing program,” the statement said. AP

WORLD

NORTH Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg (left), makes a speech as Nato foreign ministers stand in front of the logo for the upcoming Nato Warsaw summit 2016 during a group photo at Nato headquarters in Brussels on December 1. The Nato summit will take place in Warsaw in July 2016. JONATHAN ERNST/POOL ST/POOL VIA AP ST

B23

Second of three parts

HERE’S enough blame to share for the snailpaced growth that Clark International Airport has seen over the past decade and a half. Talks about the development of the air hub have been going on for years. Unfortunately, no concrete master plan has been crafted. The Philippine aviation sector generally has little infrastructure to boast. The country’s airport infrastructure can be considered pitifully bad when compared to our Asean neighbors. This is the result of the absence of vision, which led to poor planning and inefficient execution. Tony Fernandes, chief executive of AirAsia, the

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 47.0810

largest low-cost carrier in Southeast Asia, said the government needs to craft a general aviation policy that will outline everything that the Philippine aviation sector needs to become competitive. “I believe that Clark is a fantastic asset that the country has, but the government needs to come up with an aviation policy. There are great airports in the country that need a little bit of investments to accept bigger planes,” he said. Congress has ordered the transportation department to craft a master plan that will set in motion the use of Clark as the alternate air hub. It has given the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) a January deadline to produce a blueprint. C  A

HE Philippine central bank is evaluating currency restrictions, including possibly raising the P10,000 ($212) limit of local currency that can be taken in and out of the country by travelers, to boost trading. “If we see that there are still restrictions that could prevent an otherwise vibrant cross-border trading, then we will address those restrictions or ceilings,” Bangko Sentral ng Pilpinas (BSP) Deputy Governor for the Monetary Stability Sector Diwa C. Guinigundo said in a December 4 interview. The bank’s international operations department will make the recommendations, he said. Since 2007, the BSP has implemented several waves of currency reform, including easing rules for foreign-currency purchases and loans. While the peso has fallen about 5 percent this year, it is still among the best-performing Asian currencies, with Indonesia’s rupiah and Malaysia’s ringgit losing more than 10 percent. BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. in February said transparency and flexibility in foreign-

exchange transactions help the market plan better and, from experience, these policies have helped the central bank better manage external vulnerabilities. Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, research officer at the BPI Market Research and Strategy, supported the BSP’s move to increase the cap on the amount of local currency that can be taken out of the country by travelers. “This law is grossly antiquated and was originally implemented to prevent capital flight in the Marcos years. Back in those days, bringing P10,000 out of the country may have constituted capital flight, but nowadays P10,000 is something most people have access to and not even enough to cover the purchase of a high-end smartphone,” Mapa said. “As such, even if the cash is brought outside, the peso is not freely convertible and may or may not boost cross-border trade. However, the law should be changed to reflect the current incomes of the people and value of the peso.”

Bloomberg News, Bianca Cuaresma

■ JAPAN 0.3823 ■ UK 71.1300 ■ HK 6.0750 ■ CHINA 7.3541 ■ SINGAPORE 33.6991 ■ AUSTRALIA 34.6515 ■ EU 51.1959 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.5489

Source: BSP (7 December 2015)


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