UNITED FRONT NEEDED TO CONFRONT CHINA’S‘GREAT WALL OF SAND’ C
HINA is building new harbors and airstrips on various reefs and atolls in the Spratly Islands—facilities that, Beijing confirms, will be used for military, as well as civil purposes. The US and its allies in the region need to weigh their response with care. New images showing the extent of these land-reclamation efforts in the South China Sea have aroused concern, and critics are accusing the Barack Obama administration of fecklessness in the face of provocation. The issue isn’t quite so clear-cut. Sharper thinking is needed about when and how to challenge China’s growing assertiveness.
Territorial disputes
WHILE claiming that the construction was
2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business TfridayNovember Wednesday, April18, 15,2014 2015Vol. Vol.1010No. No.40188
www.businessmirror.com.ph INSIDE
BusinessMirror
Editor: Tet Andolong
W
ITH a remarkable economic growth rate of 6.1 percent, vigorous service and surging foreign investments, the country’s property sector is slated to have another growth year in 2015, according to real-estate services agency KMC MAG Group. “We expect the property markets to remain active throughout the year,” shared KMC MAG Group Managing Director Michael McCullough in a recent media briefing held in Makati City. “There are a lot of reasons for this optimism, chief among them low interest rates, quantitative easing from the central bank and positive feedback from investors. These factors have helped create a favorable climate for both local and foreign businesses.” McCullough noted that the emergence of townships across various cities resulted in the creation of pockets of growth and development in Metro Manila. He said property titans, such as Andrew Tan-led Megaworld, the Sy clan’s SM, and the Zobel-headed Ayala, are focusing on township projects, with Megaworld turning its attention to McKinley West and Uptown Bonifacio, while SM is working on reclaiming more land and expanding the Mall of Asia complex, and Ayala developing the Arca South (Taguig), Makati Circuit (Makati) and Vertis North (Quezon City) townships. Moreover, developer Vista Land of former Sen. Manuel Villar has also started to build townships. The completion to develop townships led to the pouring of gargantuan amounts expected to breach the P300-billion mark this year, covering land acquisitions, ongoing projects and launches. “The township concept also provides a way for developers to be part of the solution to the congestion in Metro Manila,” McCullough said. “With developers taking the critical first step and building in other areas within and outside of the Metro— they’re creating new microdistricts and encouraging more Filipinos to live, work and play closer to home. We hope that this will help reduce congestion and make Metro Manila more livable.” The outsourcing industry will continue to boost the demand for the office market, which has encouraged developers to launch new developments across Metro Manila. In 2015 alone, he said, approximately 560,000 square meters (sq m) of new office space are expected to be built across the major central business districts, with nearly half of the supply located in BGC. “The expansion of business-process outsourcing [BPO] to new wave cities and the economic growth in major cities, such as Cebu and Davao, have spurred developers into pursuing more projects outside of Metro Manila,” McCullough said. He said the office supply is also set to increase in Alabang, Ortigas and in the bay area, with the additions of the Alabang Town Center BPO Building, Vector Three, the BDO Corporate Center and Five E-com. Meanwhile, Quezon City will have to wait until 2016 for new office supply. The retail sector also enjoys the advantage of having lower rates than Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam. “At $49.1 per sq m, the monthly prime mall-rental rate in Manila remains as the lowest in the region, less than its counterparts Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur. The Philippines should be taking advantage of that,” McCullough noted. On the other hand, McCullough recommended the strengthening infrastructure and relaxing foreignownership rules to attract more investments and fully maximize its positive momentum. “We need to make it easier for potential investors to come in and see what we have to offer.” “If the Philippines invests in connectivity throughout Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao, and supports this with good governance, sound macroeconomic policies and more liberal foreign-ownership rules, then it stands a good chance of becoming an economic powerhouse in Southeast Asia.” Rizal Raoul Reyes
PROPERTY
E1
CHINA, RUSSIA AND SAUDI ARABIA INCREASED DEFENSE SPENDING IN 2014 BusinessMirror
World The
U
China, Russia and Saudi Arabia increased defense spending in 2014
U
NITED NATIONS—Chinese, Russian and Saudi Arabian defense spending increased the most last year, while US spending fell, according to a report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. China’s defense spending rose 9.7 per percent from a year earlier, to $216 billion, and Russia’s increased 8.1 percent, to $84.5 billion, the research group said in its annual report on global defense spending adjusted for inflation.
Saudi Arabia had the biggest percentage increase among the top 15 spenders worldwide, rising 17 percent, to $80.8 billion. While the US remains by far the world’s largest military spender, its
defense spending in 2014 fell 6.5 percent, to $610 billion, reflecting a 20-percent decrease since 2010, according to the report. The report focuses on countries that spend more than 4 percent of their gross domestic product on defense. The figures reflect intensifying global turmoil. Russia’s March 2014 annexation of Crimea sparked a conflict in Ukraine, and tensions simmer over territorial disputes in the East and South China Seas. Saudi Arabia continues to arm militants in Syria, joined a US-led coalition against the Islamic State group, and last month launched air strikes against Iranian-backed rebels in Yemen. The data do not reflect the sharp fall in oil prices in late 2014, and it’s
unclear what effect that may have, the institute said in the report. Many oil-producing countries in the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia, are expected to be able to withstand any effects because of the “strong financial reserves” they accumulated during several years of high oil prices. That’s not the case for Russia, which planned its spending increase before the start of the crisis in Ukraine. Russia already has cut its planned spending for this year in consideration of its battered economy, the institute said. Russia still expects to have a substantial increase in total military spending for 2015—about 15 percent in real terms—to $66 billion). In contrast, North Atlantic Treaty Organization nations are unlike-
ly to increase their spending to meet the required target of 2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). Most of Western and Central Europe will see a downward trend from continued austerity policies while Baltic, Nordic and Eastern European countries that border Russia boost expenditures to withstand the Russian threat. China’s military spending has generally kept pace with its economic growth rate, with expenditures remaining a fairly steady share of GDP of 2 percent to 2.2 percent over the past decade, the research group said. Japan spent about the same amount it did in 2013, dropping in rank to the world’s ninth-largest spender, according to the report. India took Japan’s place last year as the seventh-largest. Bloomberg News/TNS
L
CONTAINER trucks carry goods at a sea port in Rizhao in east China’s Shandong province. CHINATO A PIX VIA AP ATO
T
RADE groups from the US, Europe and Japan urged China to suspend guidelines that limit banks from using foreign technology, saying the policies discriminate against outsiders and limit Chinese companies’ security options. In a letter dated on Monday, 31 trade associations asked the ruling Communist Party’s cyberspace leading group to halt the rules from the banking regulator that are aimed at spreading the use of “secure and controllable” or Chinese-developed Internet and technology products. “ pproaches that keep out certain “A
technologies would likely render China’s affected industries slower to innovate, more costly to operate, and less capable of managing dynamic security threats leaving Chinese networks less secure,” the groups said in the letter. The protest follows a similar letter that several of the same groups sent in January seeking urgent talks with the party’s cyberspace leading group about the regulations, which they called “an overly broad, opaque, discriminatory approach to cybersecurity policy.” China has unveiled a national strategy,
reported by Bloomberg News last December, to purge most foreign technology for banks, state-owned enterprises and the military by 2020. China’s cyberspace administrator didn’t immediately respond to a faxed request for comment about the letter. Cyberspace minister Lu Wei said in February others must resist making “false allegations” and countries should manage the Web together. He reiterated that China welcomes investment so long as those entering the country obey Chinese law. Bloomberg News
2010—9.2 percent in 2014—according to Marcus & Millichap. Of the 9,400 new apartment units added last year, 23 percent were in urban core areas. Competition for apartments means renters are less likely to be able to negotiate with landlords, or win concessions such as a free month’s rent. During the last recession many workers who lost their jobs moved in with relatives or took on roommates. About 32 percent of US adults were living with roommates or adult family members in 2012, up from 27.4 percent in 2006, according to Zillow, an online real-estate firm. Stepped-up hiring has begun to reverse that trend. About 2.8 million more Americans have jobs than 12 months ago. “The share of young adults with jobs has climbed in the past year, and that will help many of them move out of their parents’ homes,” says Jed Kolko, chief economist at online real-estate firm Trulia. “Most of them will be renters first.” More people vying for apartments helps drive rents higher. And metropolitan areas with faster job growth are generally seeing higher-than-average rent hikes. as well. The three metro areas with the biggest annual increase in rent in January, according to Trulia: Denver (14.2 percent); Oakland, California (12.1 percent); and San Francisco (11.6 percent). Job growth in each of those cities also eclipsed the national growth rate of 2.3 percent over the 12 months ended in January. Employment grew 3.7 percent in Denver; 2.7 percent in Oakland; and 4.5 percent in San Francisco. AP
WORLD
B31
BusinessMirror
JORDAN SPIETH says his previous losses prior the Masters’ victory keep his head down. AP
C1
T
MASTERS WINNER JORDAN D SPIETH IS GOING PLACES IN A HURRY DAN RR RRY
A QUICK STUDY B D F The Associated Press
A
UGUSTA, Georgia— The most important round in Jordan Spieth’s young career began with a little perspective from his caddie. Spieth’s former golf team at the University of Texas was playing a match on Sunday in California at Pasatiempo Golf Club south of San Francisco. Spieth would have been in his final year in Texas if not for dropping out early to try to make a living on the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour. As they stood on the first tee, Spieth said Michael Greller told him, “Aren’t you glad you’re not at Pasatiempo right now?” Looks like it was a good career move for the 21-year-old Texan, who ended Sunday wearing the green jacket. After having a laugh about where they were, and just how they got there, Spieth birdied the first hole and was on his way to a performance that ranks among the best at the Masters. He set scoring records for 36 holes (130) and 54 holes (200), and a bogey on the final hole on Sunday meant he had to share the record for 72 holes (270) with Tiger Woods. He had the lowest start by a champion (64). He made more birdies (28) in one tournament than anyone in 78 previous Masters. The only number that really mattered to Spieth was 42—his jacket size. “It’s the most incredible week of my life,” Spieth said. “This is as great as it gets in our sport.” But even as he tried to fathom all he accomplished, it was that joke on the first tee that was even more difficult to comprehend. Spieth turned pro in late 2012
without a PGA Tour card and no idea where the road would take him. It led to victory as a 19-yearold rookie, to being selected as the youngest American to play in the Presidents Cup, to the final group at the Masters in his debut last year and losing a two-shot lead with 11 holes to play. “It’s all run together. It all happened quickly,” Spieth said. “Sometimes it feels like a long time ago. And sometimes it feels like yesterday. All in all, it’s really cool.” It was the disappointment of last year that ultimately carried him to a four-shot victory on Sunday. He watched Bubba Watson celebrate another Masters title, and all the perks and celebrity that came with it. He knew that could have been him. “So you get reminded of it all the time, because when you’re Masters champion, it’s a different legacy,” Spieth said. “And so that definitely left me hungry. And then also, having a chance to win the last couple of week and not pulling it off.” He was runner-up in the Texas Open and lost in a playoff at the Houston Open before arriving to Augusta. “So the combination of the two allowed me to keep my head down, not worry about anyone else in the field, except myself, and to play a golf course that is my favorite course in the world,” he said. The par-5 eighth hole is where it all started to go wrong last year. He had a two-shot lead and made bogey to Watson’s birdie. On the ninth hole, Spieth’s shot came up a fraction short and tumbled down the front of the green and back into the fairway, leading to another bogey. Watson birdied and suddenly was two shots ahead, and Spieth didn’t have the power or the putting to catch up.
T
SETTLING IN WITH THE GREEN JACKET B S DM
| WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
JORDAN SPIETH, here getting the help from Bubba Watson to wear the green jacket, now has a full schedule for interviews after winning the Masters. AP
This year was different. His lead down to three shots, Spieth made a simple birdie on the eighth hole. This time, his approach on the ninth was fraction long enough to land on the ridge and stay put. He made par, and Justin Rose had a threeputt bogey to fall five shots behind. There was only one shaky moment after that. Spieth was four shots ahead and looking at a two-shot swing on the 16th when Rose had 15 feet for birdie and Spieth faced an 8-foot putt for par. Rose missed. Spieth made. He was on his way. “It was probably one of the best putts he hit all day,” Rose said. It’s tempting to declare Spieth as golf’s next big star after such a performance and the elite
company he joins. In the last century, only four players have three PGA Tour titles that include a major before turning 22— Spieth, Woods, Tom Creavy and Gene Sarazen. He was the first wire-to-wire winner at Augusta in 39 years. He already is No. 2 in the world, and he still has work to do to reach Rory McIlroy at No. 1. Golf is craving a rivalry, and this has all the trappings of one, especially because the world ranking has never had No. 1 and No. 2 both 25 or younger. It’s worth waiting to see if other young players emerge the rest of the year in the majors, such as Jason Day or even Hideki Matsuyama, who finished fifth. But that Friday at Augusta,
when Spieth shot 66 and built a five-shot lead, felt a lot like Friday at Congressional when McIlroy began to bury the US Open field in 2011. “He’s way more mature than I was at 21, and a hell of a golfer and a great person, as well,” McIlroy said. Spieth was not ready to think about a rivalry, even though he stated his goal very clearly that he wants to be No. 1. This was a big step, but it was only a step. “He’s got four majors,” Spieth said of McIlroy. “That’s something I can still only dream about.” If history is any indication, the kid is a quick study. And he seems to be in a hurry to get where he’s going.
USA Today
HE green jacket sparkled in the Big Apple. Less than 24 hours after Jordan Spieth thumped Augusta National Golf Club in his record-setting victory in the 79th Masters, he hopped aboard a plane on Monday and touched down in New York for a nonstop tour chock full of appearances on various sports, news and entertainment shows. The world’s No. 2 and second-youngest Masters winner did interviews with ESPN Radio, NBC Nightly News and Fox. There was a photo-op and lighting ceremony at the Empire State Building, which was lit green in his honor. And, of course, he met up with David Letterman for his late show. On Sunday he’s live with Mike & Mike in the Morning, CBS This Morning, Today, CNBC’s Squawk Box, Golf Channel’s Morning Drive and The Dan Patrick Show, among others. On Monday he also shot a spot for the Jim Rome Show that will air on Showtime on Wednesday. On Thursday he’ll play in the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head, South Carolina. Good thing he’s 21—and caught a few winks while sleeping with the green jacket by his side. “It has spent very little time away from me,” said Spieth, who dreamed of winning the Masters as a kid as he putted on a makeshift putting green in front of his house. “It’s just been a whirlwind the last 24 hours.... I really don’t think it has sunk in yet. Walking up 18 after the second shot, I knew I was going to win the Masters. But for it to really soak in in its entirety is going to take some time.” While Spieth headed north, his parents went westward to Dallas, where they live within 10 minutes of their son, who still comes over to do his laundry. Most of his family was behind the 18th green when he wrapped up his four-stroke victory over Phil Mickelson and Justin Rose. It came one year after he finished in a tie for second in his first Masters. “There was all of this relief because of how focused Jordan was on the Masters this year, after being so close last year,” Shawn Spieth said of his reaction to his son’s victory. “And it was awesome to see him accomplish a goal that was his No. 1 priority in golf. It happened more quickly than probably anyone expected. And now it has the potential to change his life in certain ways.” But it won’t change who Spieth is. He will remain humble, polite and generous with his time for both fans and news media. And his focus off the course is to help others, especially those with special needs, such as his sister, Ellie, 14, who was born with a neurological disorder that places her on the autism spectrum. She is Spieth’s inspiration. “As great a game golf is, it’s still a game. He has that perspective,” Shawn Spieth said. “It’s not changing a lot of lives in significant ways. What’s really most important to him is outside of golf, and that’s helping people that have different types of needs. He wants to make a difference in other ways in life that are bigger than the game of golf.”
SPORTS
PHL TO CONTINUE AS BEST PERFORMING ECONOMY IN SOUTHEAST ASIAIMF B B C
A QUICK STUDY Sports
HE seven-month-long port congestion cost local and foreign businesses at least $500 million, according to estimates made by the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (ECCP), which enjoins the government to implement reforms to avoid more losses, as the peak season for port activity draws near.
S “P ,” A
INTERNATIONAL TRADE GROUPS TO BEIJING: US apartment rents SUSPEND RULES ON FOREIGN TECHNOLOGY projected to rise again IVING in an apartment? Expect your rent to go up again. Renting has gotten increasingly expensive over the last five years. The average US rent has climbed 14 percent to $1,124 since 2010, according to commercial property tracker Reis Inc. That’s 4 percentage points faster than inflation, and more than double the rise in US home prices over the same period. Now, despite a surge in apartment construction, rents are projected to rise yet another 3.3 percent this year, to an average $1,161, according to Reis. While that’s slower than last year’s 3.6 percent increase, the broader upward trend isn’t going away. “The only relief in sight is rents in the hottest markets are going to go up at a slower pace, but they’re still going to go up,” says Hessam Nadji, chief strategy of officer at Marcus & Millichap, a commercial real-estate services firm. The main reason: More people than ever are apartment hunting. Young people who have been living with their parents are increasingly finding jobs and moving out. Rising home prices are leading many long-time renters to stay put. In addition, most of the new apartments coming on the market are aimed at affluent tenants and carry higherthan-average rents. That’s especially true in cities where new buildings are going up in urban core areas, which means builders need to recoup higher land and development costs. Consider Denver, where rents have increased more than 5 percent a year since
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
Michael Raeuber, president of the ECCP, disclosed his cost estimates for both port-congestion surcharges and trucking rates during the gridlock at Manila’s ports, in a bid to give a better picture of the damage the logjam has cost to exporters and importers. “Just due to the surcharges, we have a damage of a minimum of $166 million. Subic is not considered nor Batangas. What is also not considered here are other surcharges that other shipping lines have imposed, such as container imbalance surcharges and the like,” Raeuber said.
B3-1 | Wednesday, April 15, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
NITED NATIONS—The United Nations on Monday said the world’s population is expected to grow from 7. 3 billion to 8.4 billion between 2015 and 2030, and called for integrating population issues on the post-2015 development agenda. The information was learned from the 48th session of the UN Commission on Population and Development that opened here on Monday, with a focus on current and future population trends and their implications for sustainable development. In a message to the commission, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the international community is going to forge a set of sustainable development goals, and they will be influenced by the “profound demographic shifts,” which take place in current world, especially those related to youth, the elderly, urbanization and migration. According to a thematic report prepared by Ban for the session, all of the 1.1-billion projected growth in global population will occur in urban areas. All regions, except Europe, are expected to record increases of 15 percent or more in the size of their urban populations. “Already, more than half of the world’s population lives in cities, and that proportion will grow over the next 15 years, adding urgency to efforts to optimize the benefits of urbanization and overcome its challenges,” Ban said. The report also noted that over the next 15 years, roughly 2 billion children will reach school age; meanwhile, the share of older persons in the population is projected to increase from 12 percent in 2015 to 16 percent in 2030. “This requires enhancing education for both girls and boys, ensuring access to sexual and reproductive health care and creating more decent jobs,” he said, adding that “we must forge societies where older persons can contribute to the fullest and enjoy the social protections they deserve.” During the session, UN member-states, UN entities and the civil society will review the change and make recommendations for people- centered development strategies, which will benefit the ongoing negotiations on the post2015 development agenda. The session will close on Friday. PNA/Xinhua
nn
Port logjam cost traders $500M T
PHL real-estate sector continues to grow
U.N.: WORLD POPULATION TO GROW W TO 8.4B IN NEXT 15 YEARS
C A
ECCP PRESENTS RECOMMENDATIONS TO AVOID REPEAT OF COSTLY CONGESTION AT MANILA PORTS
PHL REALESTATE SECTOR CONTINUES TO GROW
ROYAL Saudi Land Forces and units of Special Forces of the Pakistani army take part in a joint military exercise called Al-Samsam 5 in Shamrakh field, north of Baha region, southwest Saudi Arabia, on March 30. AP/SAUDI PRESS AGENCY
built military facilities, including airstrips, on islands and atolls they control. The reclaimed land doesn’t necessarily strengthen China’s legal claim to the territory or surrounding waters. And the facilities probably wouldn’t be much use if it came to a shooting war, given their vulnerability to bombs and missile strikes. The US cannot expect to frustrate every manifestation of China’s rise and expanding ambitions. It needs to pick its fights judiciously. Beijing is wrong to try to change the status quo in a tense region, and the administration should say so‚ but if the US hopes to do more than that, it must develop usable measures capable of imposing real costs.
BusinessMirror
THREETIME UB ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE
E1 Wednesday, April 15, 2014
intended for “typhoon shelters, navigation aids, search-and-rescue centers, marine meteorological forecasting stations” and the like, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman admitted the new installations would also be used for military purposes. They’ll enable Chinese naval vessels to refuel, and jet fighters to patrol, far from the mainland. They could help China impose a threatened air-defense identification zone over the South China Sea. In January even foreign ministers from the normally reticent Association of Southeast Asian Nations expressed “concern” at the scale of recent construction. Yet, this “great wall of sand,” in the words of US Pacific Fleet Cmdr. Harry Harris, is not as brazen a move as one might think. Other claimants to the Spratlys have
C1
HE International Monetary Fund (IMF) sees a below-target growth for the Philippines next year, but raised its expectations for 2015. In its recently published World Economic Outlook (WEO) for April, the IMF said its 2016 growth projection for the Philippines is at 6.3 percent. This is lower than its earlier forecast of 6.4 percent, as announced in January this year. It is also below the government’s growth target, at 7 percent to 8 percent. The IMF announced earlier this month that it has raised its growth outlook for the Philippines for this year from 6.6 percent to 6.7 percent, on the assumption of increased government spending for 2015. Amid the downgrade of growth forecast, the IMF said the Philippines is still set to become the fastestgrowing economy in Asean this year and in 2016,
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 44.6330
S “IMF,” A
BUSINESS and government leaders (from left) Lance Y. Gokongwei, president and COO of JG Summit Holdings Inc.; Robert G. Vergara, Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) director; Teresita J. Herbosa, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission; Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo; Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima; President Aquino; Jose T. Pardo, PSE chairman; Eusebio H. Tanco, PSE director; Teresita Sy-Coson, BDO Unibank Inc. chairman; Hans B. Sicat, PSE president; Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, chairman and CEO of Ayala Corp.; and Ramon S. Ang, president of San Miguel Corp., lead the bell-ringing ceremony to mark the PSE index’s ascent to the 8,000 level on the PSE trading floor in Makati City. NONIE REYES
P-Noy expects to ring PSE bell anew soon when index breaks 9,000 level B B F
P
RESIDENT Aquino aims to ring anew the opening bell at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE), when the market index breaches the 9,000 and 10,000 levels, before he steps down in 14 months. In a speech after ringing the bell on Tuesday, Mr. Aquino acknowledged that with the PSE’s “enhanced trading capacity and increased risk-management parameters,” breaching the index target is within reach. “I have no doubt that this system will serve you well in the future, especially since
I expect to ring the bell in celebration of the index breaching the 9,000 and 10,000 levels, hopefully, before I step down from office,” Mr. Aquino said. The President noted that the market of today is “drastically different,” but added that he was “pleased to see that the PSE is adapting well.” He cited the PSE’s move to migrate by next month to a new trading system—the PSETrade XTS—which, he said, “possesses an enhanced trading capacity and increased risk-management parameters—for instance, I am told, the ability to recover from a system failure that will happen in the same day.” Mr. Aquino recalled that the first time
he rang the bell at the PSE was back in September 2010. “Back then, the PSE index [PSEi] was on the cusp of breaching the 4,000 level. We had good reason to believe that it would, since both intraday and closing record highs were observed in the days prior. Now, looking back, I cannot help but think: How times have changed, and might I add, for the better,” the President added. He pointed out that, in almost five years, the PSEi went from record high to record high. “I’m told: 119 in total, with the index breaching the 5,000, 6,000, 7,000 and 8,000 levels.”
n JAPAN 0.3717 n UK 65.5302 n HK 5.7591 n CHINA 7.1795 n SINGAPORE 32.5551 n AUSTRALIA 33.8129 n EU 47.2039 n SAUDI ARABIA 11.9002 Source: BSP (14 April 2015)