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free travel apps that save you money, time
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EAR Lord, “money is a protection” and “a root of all evils,” are commonly said, but we can safely say that the blame is on the user of the money. “A lover of silver will never be satisfied with silver, nor a lover of wealth with income. This, too, is futility” (Ecclesiastes 5:10;7:12). While we may need money to survive, we should avoid greed. We must learn to share what our money can buy. We should find contentment in whatever we have as we put our best to live simple and clean. Amen. AWAKE! AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
‘CINDERELLA’ ENCHANTS MOVIEGOERS »D3
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Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Thursday, March 19, 2015
By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo
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Free travel apps that save you money, time
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B K V The Hartford Courant
FTER a winter getaway to Florida and the Caribbean, I returned with a new appreciation for what travel apps can do to ease glitches along the way. We organized travel information in the updated Tripit app; found free Wi-Fi with Wi-Fi Finder and used Cost Split to tally up our tabs at the end of our journey. If you’re planning vacation or business travel anytime soon, download these free travel apps to help you deal with any unexpected bumps in the road: ■ Having trouble keeping track of your trip details? Just forward all those confirmation e-mails for your flights, hotels, car rentals and cruises to plans@ tripit.com and Tripit will organize it all into an easy-touse itinerary for you. The app syncs your travel plans with your online or mobile calendar and will forward details to others. Available for iOS, Android, Windows and BlackBerry. ■ Missed a connection or stuck somewhere unexpectedly overnight? Hotel Tonight, available for iOS, Android and Windows, lists same-day deals for hotel rooms in more than 500 cities and lets you book from your phone. Hotels are rated Basic, Hip or Luxe, so you have an idea of what you’re getting. (A new feature now lets you book deals up to seven days in advance. Prices aren’t as good as the same-day deals, but there are savings to be had.) On the flip side, ever booked and paid for a hotel room in advance and then had a lastminute change of plans? Roomer, available for Android and iOS Free, helps you sell that reservation to someone who is looking for a last-minute deal. ■ Stay in touch, but don’t get stuck with huge data bills. Wi-Fi Finder provides a listing of hotels, restaurants, airlines, stores and other locations across the country, throughout Europe and around the world that offer free Wi-Fi hot spots.
■ Traveling with a group and sharing expenses? Cost Split, for iOS, lets you set up a budget and keep track of who spends what throughout the trip. Each person can add expenses (from their own device), as they go along. At the end of the trip, the app generates a report outlining who owes what and to whom. ■ Here’s one of my travel resolutions—never pay full price for a drink. With Happy Hours, an app for iOS and Android, you can find the best food and drink deals wherever you are in the US Search by day, time, location and other features, like free Wi-Fi or type of cuisine. ■ Still not sure what is and what’s not allowed in your carry-on bag? To help clear up questions, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has created a free mobile app, My TSA, available for iOS and Android. The app includes tips on how to prepare for various security lanes before getting to the airport and a “Can I Bring...” tool, which lets you know what items can and can’t go through security in checked or carry-on baggage. Users just type the name of the item in the search field for information. ■ If you’re driving to Boston, New York City, Chicago, San Francisco or one of more than 100 other cities, download the Best Parking app before you go. Once you arrive at your destination, plug in an address, cross street, neighborhood or attraction, and the app will direct you to the cheapest nearby parking lot. Rates are updated regularly, and links to any available discount coupons are provided. The app also lists airport parking deals. Available for iOS, Android or BlackBerry users. ■ When you gotta go, you gotta go. Airpnp, (no, that’s not a typo of Airbnb), lets residences and businesses rent out their bathrooms to people who need to use them. You plug in your location and the iOS app lists nearby restrooms and the charge to use them. Payment is made through the app. Charges generally range from $1 to $5 per, well, tinkle. Users rate their experience afterward so you can see how
each restroom stacks up. ■ Waze, a traffic and navigation app for iOS and Android, posts real-time traffic info from drivers in your area. The app alerts you to
any accidents, road hazards, road or bridge closures or traffic jams ahead, posts area gas prices so you can find the cheapest fuel and lets you coordinate arrival and departures times when you’re traveling with friends. ■
Easter staycation packages and two children under 12 years old. Better yet, make the stay even more memorable with lunch and/or dinner buffet at Circles Event Café added on top of the room package for a small fee. All offers include applicable charges. To know more of Makati Shangri-La’s Easter room and dining offers, visit www.bit.ly/ MakatiShangEaster.
MAKATI Shangri-La, Manila offers Easter room packages exclusive to Philippine residents for stays between March 27 and April 5. Guests may experience the Easter holidays at the hotel with family and loved ones with special Easter room packages that start at P8,200 per night or P15,800 for two nights in a Superior Room with breakfast buffet for two adults
THE Executive Room of Makati Shangri-La
Hollywood glamour flies in style ETIHAD Airways has launched its new global brand campaign with the worldwide premiere of a new television commercial (TVC) in Abu Dhabi, attended by Hollywood actress Nicole Kidman, representatives of the global media and hundreds of specially invited guests. Kidman is both star and narrator of the captivating feature, which will be shown on global TV stations and social media in both 60- and 30-second formats, with still versions of the campaign appearing in print, digital and on outdoor channels. The TVC was shot onboard Etihad Airways’s new flagship Airbus A380 and in locations around the world, including various landmarks in Abu Dhabi. The TVC also features a digitally created scene of Kidman in the interior of the soon to be opened Louvre Abu Dhabi, celebrated architect Jean Nouvel’s futuristic and awe-
OSCAR winner Nicole Kidman provides the face and narrative for the Etihad Airways’s evocative new “Flying Reimagined” brand campaign.
inspiring showcase of modern architecture, influenced by the light and geometric patterns of the Emirate. The Foster & Partners Vieux Port Pavilion in Marseilles was chosen to reflect the airline’s focus on design, while the Villa Méditerranée, also in
Marseilles, a center of culture and promotion of international dialogue and friendship, symbolizes Etihad Airways’s role as a global ambassador. The 17th century baroque hall of the historic Strahov Library in Prague represents knowledge, learning, and the desire to
innovate and lead. Peter Baumgartner, Etihad Airways chief commercial officer, said: “Etihad Airways is constantly pushing boundaries, taking inspiration from the world to provide a superlative in-flight experience for our guests. We are rewriting the rule book and reimagining flying by breaking away from convention and leading the way in innovation, design, style and hospitality. This new campaign has succeeded brilliantly in bringing our unique brand and service ethos to life on film, in print and on digital channels. “Nicole Kidman, as a globally respected artist, was the perfect voice and face for our story, and embodies worldly sophistication, intelligence, originality and elegance— values which form the foundations of the Etihad brand.” The new campaign can be viewed on http://bit.ly/Live_ News.
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u.s. navy urges asean patrols of disputed sea Asean www.businessmirror.com.ph
Tourism in Southeast Asia is growing fast Asean-EU Perspective
HENRY J. SCHUMACHER
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ORE people are traveling than ever before with just over 1 billion tourists recorded worldwide in 2013. As in 2012 the Asean region was again featured as the fastest-growing globally, with a 10.8percent increase in international tourist arrivals, a reflection of buoyant intra-regional demand, according to the United Nations World Travel Organization (UNWTO). The travel sector is helped by growing connectivity in the Region which supports to stimulate tourism. In 2004 Asean Transport Ministers drafted a 10-year plan under which the region’s air travel would be progressively integrated and liberalized. More competition in the skies has helped in turn to reduce prices and provide more direct flights between countries and destinations in the countries. As a result, the travel and tourism industry is seen as crucially important for development; tourism is vital for the socioeconomic benefits as it promotes people-to-people connectivity, one of the key strategies toward achieving the Asean community, starting 2016. Industry trends continue to be encouraging; UNWTO believes that growth will continue, higher than the long-term forecast of 3.8 percent between 2010 and 2020 that the organization had previously predicted. “Asean attracted 90 million visitors in 2013, an increase of 12 percent from 2012. This is a precursor to what lies ahead for the region, a robust tourism economy. It is human capital that is at the core of this sustainable success,” says Peter Semone, chief technical advisor for the Lao National Institute of Tourism and Hospitality. Data from 2014 illustrates just how important tourism has become. UNWTO statistics reveal that Brunei Darussalam received 225,000 international visitors; Cambodia 4.2 million; Indonesia 8.8 million; the Philippines 4.7 million; Vietnam 7.6 million; and Thailand 26.5 million. Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore are recipients of the largest number of visitors in the region. The latter two countries have seen international arrivals numbering around 25 million and 11 million, respectively, for each of the last two years. Income received from international tourism is at an estimated $21 billion for Malaysia in 2013; $18.9 billion for Singapore; $9.3 billion for Indonesia; $7.5 billion for Vietnam; $4.7 billion for the Philippines; $2.7 billion for Cambodia; and a huge $42 billion for Thailand. This places Thailand among the top 10 countries in the world for international arrivals, and for earnings from its tourism industry. The accelerating development of the tourism sector is focusing the attention of governments. Member-countries are keen to help tourism by developing a free flow of services and trained personnel. They also want to improve skills by implementing a Mutual Recognition Arrangement (MRA) of qualifications for those working in the hospitality sector. A regional secretariat is being set up in Indonesia to facilitate the introduction of MRA. The move includes setting up an Asean Tourism Qualifications Equivalent Matrix to serve as a key reference for the tourism industry and associated training institutions, as well as an Asean Tourism Professional Registration System. Another priority is to develop a strategic plan for ecotourism. This aims at promoting sustainable economic development through conservation of nature based tourism in the region. Asean Tourism Ministers also see opportunities to attract more of the booming international cruise business. This follows the establishment of an Asean Cruise Work Plan in 2013, designed to showcase the attractions and ports. A central part of the Asean tourism development strategy is also the creation of a single entry visa to the 10 member-countries. The strongest proponents of this visa are countries, such as the Philippines and Indonesia and these will benefit most according to Tourism Secretary Ramon R. Jimenez Jr.
Vietnam, Australia agree to strengthen defense ties
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IETNAM and Australia agreed to closer security ties on Wednesday, including training Vietnamese troops in Australia, as Canberra seeks to balance its relationship with its biggest trading partner China and relations with other neighbors in the Asia-Pacific region. Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung told reporters that his Australian counterpart Tony Abbott had agreed during a meeting at Parliament House to strengthen cooperation on security and defense in a range of areas, including experience and information sharing, English-language training and special forces cooperation. “We agreed on the importance of the assurance of peace, stability, maritime security and freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, in compliance with international law,” Dung said. China says it has historical claims to a huge swath of the South Sea China that overlaps with the claims of several neighbors, includ-
ing Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and the Philippines, fueling concerns of a conflict. Abbott said 120 Vietnamese military personnel would be trained in Australia and Vietnam would take part in joint military training exercises in Australia. He acknowledged a growing security relationship between Australia and Vietnam in recent years. Australian troops fought alongside the US against the Vietnam communists during the Vietnam war. “We have both prospered in peace over the last 40 years, because of the stability that our region has enjoyed and anything which disturbs that stability is something that we would mutually deplore and mutually work to ensure didn’t happen,” Abbott said. “We both support freedom of navigation by air and by sea in the South China Sea. We both deplore any unilateral change to the status quo. We both think that disputes should be resolved peacefully and in accordance with international law,” he said. AP
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US Navy urges Asean patrols of disputed sea
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Countries could streamline cooperation on maritime security while respecting sovereignty and coastal space, as in the case of counter-piracy efforts in the Gulf of Aden, Vice Admiral Robert Thomas said on Tuesday at the Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition in Malaysia. The US has reassured allies in the region it will back them against China’s assertions to about four-fifths of the sea. China has ratcheted up pressure on some Asean members, and has accelerated reclamation work on reefs in the waters criss-crossed by claims from Vietnam, Taiwan, Brunei, the Philippines and Malaysia. “Perhaps easier said than done, from both a policy and organization perspective, such an initiative could help crystallize the operational
of navigation by air and by sea in the South China Sea, we both deplore any unilateral change to the status quo,” he said in Canberra. At Langkawi, the US is exhibiting two F/A-18F Super Hornets, a P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, as well as the Ticonderoga-class guidedmissile cruiser USS Shiloh equipped with a MH-60R helicopter. The scale of the US delegation to the show held every two years underscores its increased focus on the region. ‘‘There’s a lot of competition I would say in the South China Sea, but for the United States our goal is just peaceful resolution of any conflict,’’ said Captain John Enfield, a deputy Navy commander who flies one of the F/A-18F Super Hornets. ‘‘The US doesn’t get dragged’’ into a discussion about resources, he said in an interview.
objectives in the training events that Asean navies want to pursue,” Thomas said at a panel session with navy chiefs. “If Asean members were to take the lead in organizing something along those lines, trust me, the US Seventh Fleet would be ready to support.”
India, Japan
SINGAPORE Defense Minister Ng Eng Hen said in an interview on March 16 that his country would welcome India playing a greater role in the South China Sea. In January Thomas said the US would encourage an extension of Japanese air patrols into the area. Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott signed an agreement today to host Vietnam forces for training. Both countries “support freedom
Code of conduct
China agreed to talks with Asean over a code of conduct for the South China Sea in July 2013, but little progress has been made. The government in Beijing signed a nonbinding declaration of conduct in 2002, which calls on parties to refrain from ‘‘inhabiting on the presently uninhabited islands, reefs, shoals, cays and other features.’’
The maritime force is ‘‘a nice idea, but it’ll never be anything meaningful,’’ said Richard Bitzinger, a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. ‘‘Creating interoperability will be a nightmare, you need common communications equipment, intelligence-sharing agreements,’’ he said. ‘‘Above all you need a common threat perception.’’ Asean has consistently called for parties to show restraint on the South China Sea and preserve freedom of navigation. The 10-member bloc has avoided singling out China, its largest trading partner. In May last year, rioters damaged Chinese businesses and factories in Vietnam, after China parked an oil exploration rig in contested waters near the Paracel Islands. China warned of a hit to trade and investment ties unless the protests were halted. Several months later it withdrew the rig. Asean nations are consistently occupied with managing conflicting boundary claims in the South China Sea, Malaysia Defense Minister Hussein Hishammuddin said on Tuesday. This remains a major obstacle to upholding Asean’s zone of peace, freedom and neutrality, he said. Bloomberg News
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Population peak
THAILAND’S working-age population is forecast to peak in 2017, a year after South Korea, according to estimates by Bank of America Merrill Lynch based on UN data. Indonesia won’t get there till 2058 and the Philippines not until 2085. In China, which adopted a one-child policy in the 1980s, the decline began in 2012. Thailand’s pool of workers is shrinking as it tries to regain its
ORE foreign cruise lines are making port calls in several destinations in the Philippines, making it more urgent for the government to fast-track its port-infrastructure projects. cruise ports facilities in the Philippines, specifically in Manila, Puerto Princesa in Palawan, Bohol, Cagayan de Oro, Palawan and three other places, because nothing we have is up to scratch.” He added that in 2013, “the Philippines received 14 large Continued on A8
Solar Philippines to Build Largest Solar Farm in Luzon
Thailand grows old too soon to benefit from China’s rising costs UCHNARTSAKVISETCHAIKUL got married four years ago in Bangkok at the age of 33. She has one child and doesn’t want more, an increasingly common trend among a population that is rapidly growing old. “I want my kid to have the best I can give,” said Nuchnart, a senior executive at an insurance company in Bangkok whose mother looks after her 3-year-old daughter during the day. “My work is demanding. It’s good that I have only one kid.” Women marrying later and having fewer children is one reason Thailand will join the ranks of its northern peers, whose labor forces are shrinking, just as the number of working-age people in other Southeast Asian nations rises in coming decades. The decline will constrain Thailand’s long-term growth potential, analysts at Credit Suisse Group AG said. Almost a third of Thailand’s population will be over 60 by 2050, compared with less than a sixth in the Philippines and a fifth in Malaysia, according to the United Nations. That puts the country at a disadvantage among the Asean just as rising costs in China are pushing manufacturers to find new bases in the region. “Thailand is emerging as the old man of Asean,” said Chua Hak Bin, a Singapore-based economist at Bank of America. “Demographics are useful predictors of real gross domestic product growth” and Japan’s experience suggests an aging population will weigh on expansion and property, he said.
Special to the BusinessMirror
During a recent discussion with editors and reporters of the ALC Media Group, Tourism Secretary Ramon R. Jimenez Jr. said about 62 cruise ships will be making port calls on the Philippines this year, “whether we’re ready or not.” As such, “we need to improve
Editor: Max V. de Leon • Thursday, March 19, 2015 B3-1
HE commander of the US Navy Seventh Fleet called on Southeast Asian nations to form a combined maritime force to patrol areas of the South China Sea where territorial tensions flare with China.
ROADSIDE beauticians use a threading technique to remove hair from customers in Bangkok, Thailand. AP
position as a regional powerhouse for manufacturing and exports after floods inundated its industrial heartland in 2011 and years of political impasse ended in a military coup last year. Overseas sales fell for a second straight year in 2014, the first backto-back decline in almost two decades, while Vietnam and the Philippines posted strong gains. Thailand is forecast to have the slowest growth in the region this year after Singapore, Southeast Asia’s only developed nation. Central bank Governor Prasarn Trairatvorakul likened the country to a patient with flu and arthritis —the flu being an export slowdown caught from the global economy and the arthritis being the country’s own structural problems.
Quick cure
THE country needs to find a cure fast, “before it’s too late,” Prasarn said in a speech on March 13. Thailand will be an aging society within 10 years and “this will make it even more difficult to cure our economic diseases.” It wasn’t always like this:
Thailand once led the charge in Southeast Asia’s development, going from a low-income nation to an upper middle-income one in less than a generation. The government had encouraged large families, setting up a marriage promotion bureau in 1942 and holding contests to reward women with the most children. Participants generally had more than 15 children, a research paper showed. Government policy flipped in the 1970s with the slogan “the more children, the poorer” as the country turned its attention to raising the standard of living. As more women were educated and began working, they had fewer children. The annual population growth rate for the 20102015 period is estimated at 0.3 percent, the lowest among the 10 Asean economies, UN data showed. The fertility rate in the same period is 1.4, compared with 3.1 in the Philippines and 2.4 in Indonesia.
head of the National Economic & Social Development Board (NESDB), which is preparing a population plan for the next 20 years. “We need to make the public realize the seriousness of the impact and how to prepare for it.” The Thai government’s efforts to boost the fertility rate include encouraging married couples to have kids and giving tax benefits and child-related perks. Proposals include raising the retirement age, encouraging mothers to join the workforce and revising rules for foreign workers, an NESDB draft showed. Thailand’s challenge is the opposite of Indonesia, where a birthcontrol program has been revived after decades to prevent a burgeoning population from overwhelming its services. In the Philippines President Aquino took on the Catholic Church to provide free contraceptives to the poor as unemployment rises.
Serious impact
Tax breaks
“OUR key problem is how we will shape our future and drive the economy with this demographic structure,” said Arkhom Termpittayapaisith,
See “Thailand,” B3-2
Vista Land to tap bond 3 foreign banks market anew for capex await BSP nod
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chill in the air Sports
| Thursday, MarCh 19, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
BusinessMirror
Calatagan Mayor Sophia Palacio (from left) with Solar Philippines President Leandro Legarda Leviste and Paraiso Barangay Captain Romeo H. Zara at the groundbreaking ceremony of the company’s new solar-farm project in Batangas on Tuesday.
CHILL IN THE AIR What the near-capacity crowd in the main stadium at the BNP Paribas Open was seeing was perhaps not exactly what it was getting. Serena Williams and Sloane Stephens have some history, and it isn’t about pajama parties or girls’ nights out.
By Bill Dwyre
Los Angeles Times HERE is an old Midwest expression that sums up Tuesday’s fourth-round tennis match at Indian Wells between Serena Williams and Sloane Stephens. It says, all the icicles weren’t on the rain gutters. What the near-capacity crowd in the main stadium at the BNP Paribas Open was seeing was perhaps not exactly what it was getting. Williams and Stephens have some history, and it isn’t about pajama parties or girls’ nights out. In the quarterfinals of the 2013 Australian Open, up-and-coming Stephens, who had been the subject of great praise from Williams as both a future American star and future black star, beat Williams in a three-setter. A few months later, Stephens gave an interview to ESPN the Magazine, in which she said that Williams had snubbed her since that day and even had done one of those unforgivable things among the younger generation. She had unfollowed her on Twitter. Stephens also said in the article, “She’s so friendly, so this and that...that’s not reality.” After the article hit the newsstands, Stephens said she had been tricked by the reporter and thought that part was off the record. The reporter countered that she had asked if it were OK to turn on her tape recorder
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SHARAPOVA OUT AT INDIAN WELLS I
NDIAN WELLS, California—Struggling with her serve and a rash of errors, Serena Williams overcame a slow start to beat Sloane Stephens, 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-2, in the fourth round at the BNP Paribas Open on Tuesday, extending her winning streak to 14 matches. Maria Sharapova struggled mightily, too, losing 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 to defending champion Flavia Pennetta, who won her ninth straight match after becoming emotional and leaving the court in the first set. Four-time Indian Wells champion Roger Federer defeated Andreas Seppi 6-3, 6-4, avenging his thirdround loss to Seppi at the Australian Open. Seppi fought off three match points on his serve to trail 5-4 in the third set. He netted a forehand to give Federer a fourth match point in the next game, and the Swiss star closed it out with a forehand winner in the corner. Seppi’s win Down Under stopped a 10-match skid against Federer. The Italian broke Federer to tie it up 3-all in the second, but Federer broke back on a forehand
winner in the next game to take a lead he never gave up. “It absolutely was an opportunity right away to play him again and sort of erase it to some extent from the memory as the season moves forward,” Federer said. “It’s one of those matches you’re happy you’re through, and I was happy it was over.” Pennetta was happy to advance after working through her emotions, saying she “let everything out, screaming, do something.” “For the first two or three games I was OK,” Pennetta said. “Then it’s coming. Like I never expect. I never do something like that. Normally you go away and you don’t want to stay on the court. But for me was important to just keep calm and try to play. In the end I just play really well.” Pennetta had 34 unforced errors and just 15 winners. Sharapova topped her in both categories with 42 unforced errors and 27 winners to go with 11 double faults. Pennetta broke two-time Indian Wells champion
and Stephens had said yes, and had even reminded her to turn it off when a phone call came in during their lunch. It didn’t end there. Stephens was photographed in the stands at the 2014 Australian Open, arms thrust into the air, appearing to celebrate Ana Ivanovic’s upset victory over Williams. Stephens said later that she was merely mocking the
celebration of Ivanovic’s team. Since then, the subject has been pretty much glossed over. An Agence France-Presse reporter asked Stephens, 21, before the tournament started, about where her relationship stood with Williams. “We are colleagues,” Stephens said. Williams, of course, was making her much-celebrated return to Indian Wells 14 years after a booing incident in the final, which she won, prompted her boycott. So, with plenty of emotion floating around about that, losing the first set to Stephens in a tiebreaker could have pushed Williams to the brink of overload. But her steely control over the next two sets answered that, and the 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-2 final score was not even that startling a result. Stephens is, indeed, a possible future star, and even though she has slumped from her best ranking of No. 11 in 2013, she still is No. 42 and has one of the more dangerous forehands in the women’s game. She sought to characterize everything as normal, using the phrase she has learned to lean on for almost
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any hint of a question about her relationship with Williams: “She is No. 1 in the world.” Williams had one set point in the first set and let that slip away. And Stephens still had a shot to win the match with Williams serving at 3-2 in the third. At 15-30, Stephens hit deep, approached and had a perfect putaway forehand volley floating her way. She netted it and Williams sailed home, ending the festivities. The match, and the standoffish body language, ended with an exclamation point perhaps meant as a message. Williams hit a 128-mph ace. Direct discussions of this have pretty well become taboo. It has been made clear there will be no answers, certainly no honest ones. The closest attempts were to queries about the post-match handshake. Williams: “I told her good job and keep up the good work.” Stephens: “Good match. Good luck. The normal handshake. That was it.” In the end, this match might have represented the coolest temperatures Indian Wells has ever seen.
SERENA WILLIAMS (left) sets up match point with a »128-mph ace and wins when Sloane Stephens dumps a backhand into the net, one of her 36 errors. AP
MARIA SHARAPOVA struggles mightily, losing 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 to defending champion Flavia Pennetta. AP
Sharapova twice in the final set, winning the last seven games. “She got in a really good rhythm,” said Sharapova, who didn’t notice Pennetta’s meltdown. “Everything I gave her she was able to hit back solid with pace.” Williams committed 52 unforced errors and had nine double faults to go with 13 aces and 31 winners in the up-and-down match played in 90-degree (32 Celsius) heat. “I’m just trying to find my bearings,” the world’s topranked player said. “Little off this week, but like I said, I’m just happy to be here.” Williams set up match point with a 128-mph ace and won when Stephens dumped a backhand into the net, one of her 36 errors. Williams broke Stephens three times in the final set of her third match at Indian Wells since ending a 14-year personal boycott of the tournament, where she has won two titles. “The crowd has been really great,” Williams said. “It’s been really relaxing here. I just feel I don’t want to leave.”
Stephens recovered after blowing a 3-1 lead in the first set to dominate the tiebreaker that included just one winner, a smash by Williams to trail 3-2. Williams has been subdued on court, with none of the screaming and exuberant fist-pumping that often marks her matches. “That’s why I was so calm after I lost [the first set], because it was like, I don’t really need to win this title,” Williams said. “Just being out here is a real win for me and I was just calm through it.” Stephens won four of the final five points and then promptly got broken to start the second set. Her double faults in the first game set up both break points, and Williams cashed in on the second one when Stephens’s backhand went long. Stephens held to get to 3-2 before Williams won five straight games to close out the second set 6-2 and take a 2-0 lead in the third. They shared a brief conversation at the net during the post-match handshake. “I have always thought Sloane can be really great,”
Ayala Land lists P16-B equity top-up placement Ayala Land Inc. (ALI) held a bell-ringing ceremony at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) for the listing of the subscription tranche of its P16-billion equity top-up placement, which is the largest capital-raising activity for ALI as a listed company. “The amount of capital raised in this deal is a testimony to the trust that investors have on the company,” PSE Chairman Jose T. Pardo said in his welcome remarks during the ceremony. “Since most of those who subscribed to the placement were global institutional investors, I believe that the success of this offering is also a testament to the confidence that investors have on the Philippine equity market, as well as in the country’s economy,” Pardo added. Shown in the photo are (from left) ALI Treasurer Augusto D. Bengzon, ALI CFO Jaime E. Ysmael, ALI President and CEO Bernard Vincent O. Dy, ALI Chairman Fernando Zobel de Ayala, Pardo, PSE President and CEO Hans B. Sicat, PSE COO Roel A. Refran and PSE Director Alejandro T. Yu.
AN alternative for Thailand is to increase immigration. Human Rights Watch estimates there already may
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Williams said. “I think she’s on the right track. She played really well. It’s good to see her doing really well again.” In third round men’s play, Nadal beat Donald Young, 6-4, 6-2, in a matchup of lefties. “I feel confident that I am playing much better than one month and a half ago,” Nadal said. “I feel closer to be what I am, what I want to be, and it’s a positive victory for me.” Sixth-seeded Milos Raonic beat Alexandr Dolgopolov, 7-6 (2), 6-4; No. 11 Grigor Dimitrov lost to 17th-seeded Tommy Robredo, 6-4, 1-6, 7-5; Jack Sock upset 15thseeded Roberto Bautista Agut, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 to earn his first meeting against Federer; and No. 9 seed Tomas Berdych beat Steve Johnson, 6-4, 6-2. No. 12 Carla Suarez Navarro beat Heather Watson 7-6 (5), 3-6, 6-1 to reach the quarterfinals, where she will play third-seeded Simona Halep, a 6-4, 6-4 winner over 14th-seeded Karolina Pliskova. Jelena Jankovic, the 2010 champion, outlasted 18-year-old Belinda Bencic, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.
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alatagan, Batangas—After pioneering the nation’s first large-scale solar rooftop projects, Solar Philippines claims a new frontier with the launch of the largest solar farm in Luzon. At the ceremonial groundbreaking of the 50-megawatt (MW) project in Calatagan, Batangas, attended by officials from the local
PESO exchange rates n US 44.4610
and national government, Solar Philippines President Leandro Leviste marked the event as a turning point for renewable energy in Batangas, which is home to both the nation’s largest number of fossil-fuel plants and various ecotourism destinations. The ground-mounted system will comprise over 150,000 solar Continued on A2
By VG Cabuag
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roperty developer Vista Land and Lifescapes Inc. on Wednesday said it will float as much as $100 million worth of bonds later this year, about half of which will be used to pay for its maturing loans and the rest to fund its project. Manuel Paolo Villar, the company president and CEO, said the company has not finalized the amount yet, but the $100-million range will be enough to cover both its maturing debt of about $46 million and
requirements for capital expenditures (capex). “We are comfortable with a fiveyear range. We’re taking advantage of a low interest rate environment. In the past, we have been able to access both local and foreign markets,” Villar said in a briefing on the company’s financial results for last year. Villar did not mention this year’s capex budget, as the company has not yet finalized the cost. Last year it allocated some P21.1 billion. “It will be definitely higher than last year,” he said. See “Vista Land,” A2
on PHL branch By David Cagahastian
T
hree foreign banks have applied to set up branches and are waiting for the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to approve their petitions. BSP Deputy Governor Nestor Espenilla said on Wednesday the applications of the three foreign banks are under process and should form part of the Monetary Board discussions set for today, Thursday. “Currently we are processing three, in addition to one that’s already approved. We’ll make an appropriate announcement See “Foreign banks,” A2
n japan 0.3664 n UK 65.5355 n HK 5.7274 n CHINA 7.1139 n singapore 32.0278 n australia 33.8931 n EU 47.0798 n SAUDI arabia 11.8544 Source: BSP (18 March 2015)