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Govt ready to keep inflation at bay
THERAPY FOR A CLOUDY OUTLOOK
Life
The promised Messiah
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EXPLORING GOD’S WORD, FR. SAL PUTZU SDB, AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
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SELL YOURSELF FIRST, THEN SELL YOUR ART SECOND »D4
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Therapy for a cloudy outlook B H G Tribune News Service
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FOOL and his money... ...Or.... Insanity is doing the same thing over and over when it didn’t work the first time. I had severe doubts about my sanity as I whiled away a spring afternoon with the kind folks at Western Digital tech support. It was only a week ago that I was butting my head against a Seagate Personal Cloud drive. I finally gave up when I realized, quite sanely, that no matter what I did, it wouldn’t work for me. Others who tried it either sang its praises or agreed with me that, while it promises, promises, the experience is mostly unfulfilled, unfulfilled. The idea behind the Western Digital My Cloud is exactly the same as the idea behind the Seagate drive. Connect a cable between a wireless router and the device, plug it in and wirelessly back up files you may need when you’re away from your computer. It’s called a personal cloud, as opposed to the cloud you may be using already, such as Dropbox or Carbonite. With your personal cloud, only you have the key to your files. There’s a downside to having files stored on a drive next to your PC. If your house burns down, your files will go with it. A power outage would make the drive inaccessible. If you back up to the usual cloud, your files are offsite, presumably—hopefully—impervious to power outages and earthquakes. I take it on trust that people who store my cloud files can’t get into them. But if you’re sloppy about your personal cloud password, a hacker could do some real harm. Compared to the Seagate device, the My Cloud’s software is intuitive, once you get used to the terms it uses. Videos on the Western Digital web site ( d o ) held my hand as I learned the difference between a “share” and a “user.” Shares are folders that you use to back
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up your files. Users are, well, you and I. There also is an abundance of tutorials on YouTube. Folders can be password-protected, or if you want the world to know how much you owe the IRS, you can make them public. Folders can be read-only, or you can give your users full access to them. Video that’s been backed up can be streamed to your smartphone, tablet or another PC. The iPhone and iPad apps for the Western Digital drive are clean and user-friendly. There also is an app for Android devices. You choose which categories of files, such as documents, you want to back up, or you can back up only individual files. Backups can run continuously in the background, or you can set a time for a daily or hourly backup. Like the Seagate Personal Cloud, the Western Digital My Cloud that I bought holds 3 terabytes (TB) of data, photos, music, videos—everything except applications—and costs $169. And, like the Seagate, the WD drive supports Time Machine backups from Macs. Backing up wirelessly can be slow. It took the better part of a day to do a Time Machine backup of 500 gigabytes. If you need extra storage and don’t want to spring for a larger hard drive, you can attach at least one auxiliary external hard drive, via USB, to the My Cloud drive, which means your storage space could be much more than the My Cloud’s native capacity, which ranges from 2 TB to 6 TB. If you hanker for a mirror drive next to the original drive, they are available, too. Now, about doing the same thing over and over. I wanted to create a password-protected folder on the My Cloud drive called “harold.” Despite following WD’s tutorials, I simply couldn’t back up to the folder. It kept asking for my password—I mean, like over and over. A first-tier WD tech support engineer took over my screen, and tried over and over to back up to the “harold” folder. Flummoxed, he bumped
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The Philippines shows the world how to #VibeOn IT’S not uncommon for Filipinos to encounter challenges as we go through work and study every day. And while a little glitch here and there can make us sad or grumpy, it’s nothing that a mood boost from our favorite people can’t fix. Viber, the country’s leading mobile-messaging app (www.viber.com/ viberph), advocates the spread of uplifting viberph messages to counter everyday setbacks with its new #VibeOn campaign, which invites users to turn challenges into good vibes through the Vibe On! Sticker Pack. There’s no better group to share positive vibes than your family and friends, and the special sticker pack makes for inspiring exchange of messages with stickers like
“Kaya mo yan!”, “Chill ka lang”, “Ikain mo na lang yan”, and “Go, friend!” The pack is free to download and features 36 expressions of beloved Viber characters Violet, LegCat & DJ that can make anyone’s day brighter and happier. “Viber wants its signature stickers to do more than just enliven conversations so we came up with the Vibe On! Sticker Pack. It promotes a culture of encouragement among Filipino Viber users and each sticker is like a virtual consoling hug or pat on the back that will surely turn woes into wonderful opportunities to cheer family and friends up,” said Crystal Lee, Viber country manager for the Philippines. Viber recently launched the #VibeOn campaign through a series of mall events at SM Mall of Asia, Glorietta and SM City Manila. Attendees were treated to a day of fun games, great music and cool freebies from Viber and partners like GrabTaxi, which now allows passengers to Viber their drivers whenever they book a ride through GrabTaxi. “We Filipinos are famous for our ability to smile despite our problems and this new campaign highlights that endearing trait. We invite Viber users to download the Vibe On! Sticker Pack and create more heartwarming moments with friends and family,” Lee concluded.
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FASTGROWING ASIAN AVIATION CONFRONTS SAFETY CHALLENGES BusinessMirror
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B3-1 | Wednesday, April 8, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
SECURITY guards stand near the newly recovered remains of the fuselage of the ill-fated AirAsia Flight 8501 on the deck of rescue ship Crest Onyx at TTanjung Priok port in Jakarta, Indonesia, in this March 2 photo. AP/DITA ALANGKARA
Fast-growing Asian aviation confronts safety challenges
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ONG KONG—For Asia’s aviation industry, the growing pains have just begun.
airlines or block them from launching new flights and modifying schedules. The leader of Thailand’s military government, which ousted its civilian predecessor in a coup last year, blamed years of neglect for allowing problems to accumulate to a critical mass. He said the civil aviation department has only 12 inspectors, a figure unchanged for years despite huge growth in tourism. The dictator has vowed to use his authoritarian powers to overhaul aviation, but it’s unclear whether sweeping changes can be implemented fast enough to avoid a damaging downgrade of Thailand’s safety rating. Ross said Thailand’s problems are not unique and stem from the “superfast expansion that’s been taking place over the last 10 years.” Besides hurting tourism, the Icao warning could also prompt insurance companies to raise their rates for airlines operating in Thailand. Passenger numbers in Asia Pacific have risen by a third over the past five years to 1.1 billion, and the region now accounts for 33 percent of global air passenger traffic, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA). That proportion is forecast to grow to 42 percent within the next two decades as an extra 1.8 bil-
“We’re in uncharted waters,” said Desmond Ross, principal at DRA International aviation consultants and former head of the Pacific Aviation Safety Office, which oversees airline safety for South Pacific islands. “I don’t think the world has seen this sort of growth before.” A third of airplane accidents in the Asia-Pacific region from 2008 to 2012 “involved deficiencies in regulatory oversight,” the International Civil Aviation Organization (Icao) said in a report this year. Another 27 percent involved “deficiencies in safety management.” Meanwhile, the agency’s recent audit of Thailand has produced disquieting revelations about what lies below the surface of a country that has marketed itself to the world as a safe and welcoming destination. The agency informed governments in March of “significant safety concerns,” prompting several Asian nations to step up inspections of Thai
A year of disasters, the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 and financial turbulence highlight the challenges confronting the world’s biggest air-travel market, where governments, regulators and airlines are struggling to keep up af after a decade of astonishing growth. A United Nations agency’s warning about airline safety in Thailand, one of the world’s top tourist destinations, is just the latest sign of ferment in the industry. The boom has been driven by the region’s explosive economic growth and market liberalizations that have allowed dozens of new discount carriers to flourish, turning the airline business on its head. The strains are also showing in recurring pilot shortages and shortcomings in air traffic-control systems and airport infrastructure that countries are scrambling to upgrade, especially in big Southeast Asian nations, such as Indonesia.
U.S. SERVICE FIRMS GREW A SLOWER PA AT PACE IN MARCH
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delayed the shipping of needed parts and components. Fourteen of 18 services industries reported growth in March, led by real estate, hotels and restaurants, and transportation and shipping. Still, many analysts now forecast that the economy barely expanded in the first three months of this year. Growth has slowed dramatically in the last six months. The ISM is a trade group of purchasing managers. Its survey of services firms covers businesses that employ 90 percent of the American work force, including retail, construction, health care and financial ser services companies. The ISM’s manufacturing index, released last week, fell for the fifth straight month in March. In addition to the strong dollar, factories have been held back by cheaper oil, which has hurt orders for steel pipe and other equipment. Home construction has been weak despite low mortgage rates. And Americans are still cautious about spending, even with a sharp plunge in gas prices since last June. Growth has faltered as a result. The economy expanded at a 2.2-percent annual rate in the final three months of last year, down sharply from a blistering 4.8 percent in the six months from last April through November. Most analysts expect it slowed even further in the January to March quarter. Harsh winter weather may have been partly to blame. But paychecks are still barely keeping up with inflation, even as the unemployment rate has fallen. That is likely weighing on spending and growth. AP
ASHINGTON—US service firms expanded at a slightly slower yet still healthy pace in March, an encouraging sign after multiple reports last week pointed to a slowing economy. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said on Monday that its services index slipped to 56.5 last month, from 56.9 in February. Any reading over 50 indicates expansion. A measure of sales fell last month and dragged down the overall index. But gauges of hiring and orders rose, evidence that services firms may see solid growth in the coming months. That suggests that recent signs of a weakening economy could prove temporary. The services figures come after a disappointing jobs report last week, which echoed a slew of other weak economic data this month. Employers added just 126,000 jobs in March, the fewest in 15 months. “Based on this survey, rumors of the demise of the US economy have been greatly exaggerated,” Paul Ashworth, chief US economist at Capital Economics, said in a note to clients. At the same time, service firms covered by the report—which include health-care providers, hotels, restaurants, construction companies and banks—are less affected by some of the trends which have held back manufacturing. Factory output has slowed partly because of a rapid rise in the value of the dollar, which makes goods exports more expensive. Manufacturing firms were also hit by a labor dispute at ports in California, which
lion passengers take to the skies. Another big source of concern is Indonesia, where in December an AirAsia jet carrying 162 people plummeted into the sea as it ran into stormy weather on its way from Surabaya to Singapore. The disaster, which was the first-ev first-ever fatal plane crash for the popular budget operator, was one of five suffered by Asian carriers in a 12-month span. The flight itself was unauthorized by Indonesian authorities, showing up laxness in its aviation oversight. Flying is often the easiest travel option in Indonesia, a sprawling archipelago of 17,000 islands that’s home to 250 million people. IATA is worried that regulations and infrastructure aren’t being updated fast enough to keep pace with Indonesia’s expansion. The Southeast Asian country’s air-travel market is forecast to triple over the next 20 years to 270 million passengers, making it the world’s sixth biggest. “I am very concerned about safety in Indonesia,” IATA Firector General and former Cathay Pacific Airways CEO Tony Tyler said in a speech to Indonesian aviation officials in Jakarta last month. He noted the country has had at least one crash in which a plane has been written off every year since 2010.AP
Malaysia’s lawmakers revive detention without trial in antiterror law
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State (IS) group. Authorities on Sunday arrested 17 people, including an Indonesian, accused of planning to rob banks and attack police stations and army camps to obtain weapons. Critics said the new law was a revival of the Internal Security Act, which was repealed in 2012. New York-based Human Rights Watch called it a “giant step backward for human rights” in Malaysia, and said it raised concerns that the government will once again use the law to intimidate and silence vocal critics. “By restoring indefinite detention without trial, Malaysia has reopened Pandora’s box for politically motivated, abusive state actions that many had thought was closed when the abusive
UALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—Malaysia revived detention without trial when lawmakers on Tuesday approved an antiterror law that the government said was needed to fight Islamic militants, but rights groups criticized as a giant step backward for human rights in the country. The Prevention of Terrorism Act bill was passed by lower house lawmakers in the wee hours of the morning after hours of debate, with 79 votes in favor and 60 against. It allows authorities to detain suspects indefinitely without trial, with no court challenges permitted. The government said the law was needed because dozens of Malaysians have been arrested since 2013 for suspected links to the Islamic
Internal Security Act was revoked in 2012,” the group’s deputy Asia director, Phil Robertson, said in a statement. Home Minister Zahid Hamidi, however, said the new law was crucial to curb the rise of Islamic militants. “This is a real threat, and prevention measures are needed,” he said during the debate. National police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said the 17 people, aged from 14 to 49, were arrested during a secret meeting on Sunday to plot attacks in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia’s biggest city, and in the administrative capital of Putrajaya. The group was planning to kidnap several high-profile individuals, rob banks for money, raid police stations and army camps for weapons, and procure more firearms from another terror group
in a neighboring country, Khalid said in a statement on Tuesday. The senior member of the cell is a man detained in 2001 under the former Internal Security Act, and has undergone militant training in Afghanistan and Indonesia’s Sulawesi province, he said. Another key member is a 38-year-old religious teacher. Khalid said both men were in Syria last year for militant training and returned to Malaysia in December. “The aim for this new terror group is to form an Islamic state in Malaysia,” he said. Other detainees include two army personnel, a security guard who has access to firearms and an Indonesian militant who is skilled in handling weapons, Khalid said. AP
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MALAYSIA’S landmark Petronas Twin Towers illuminates the night skyline in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. AP/JOSHUA PAUL
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ON THE PROWL ON THE PROWL
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BusinessMirror
| WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
Sports TIGER WOODS offers a quick glimpse that it could be just about anything. AP
» JASON DAY looking uncomfortable. AP
“But to be able to slip on a green jacket...I don’t know,” he said. “That’s a difficult one, mate. I’m dancing around the question.” Here’s the easy solution for Day. He can’t reach No. 1 in the world this week if he were to win. But at No. 5 in the world, and healthy and determined as ever, he is among the favorites to win the Masters this week.
EARLY TO WORK
UGUSTA, Georgia—Jason Day set two goals for his career. He wanted to get to No. 1 in the world, and he wanted to win the Masters. But if he could only reach one goal, which does he choose? For the only time during his engaging news conference on Monday, the 27-year-old Australian looked uncomfortable. He loves the Masters, his favorite major. He was runner-up in 2011. He had a share of the lead late on Sunday in 2013 until he missed out on the playoff between Adam Scott and Angel Cabrera, with Scott becoming the first Aussie in a green jacket. But there’s an appeal to be No. 1 in the world, too. And four members of Augusta National in their green jackets were in the room. “It’s tough,” Day said, leaning back and shaking his head. “This is the tournament that got me into golf. And being No. 1 has always been a lifelong goal of mine. Just to be able to say you’re No. 1, you are the best golfer on the planet, just for one day, would be the best thing ever. Knowing that you were the best in the world would be pretty neat.” So the answer is to be No. 1 in the world? Hang on.
A TOUGH CHOICE FOR DAY
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TWO-TIME US Open champion Curtis Strange was at the Masters on Monday and already at work with ESPN. It’s one day earlier than he usually works. Chalk that up to “The North Clause.” Andy North, who grew up and still lives in Wisconsin, typically works on Monday, but there was an agreement that Strange would fill in if Wisconsin reached the National Collegiate Athletic Association championship game. The Badgers played Duke for the title on Monday night. Strange was happy to fill in. That was before Tiger Woods showed up at 3:30 and didn’t finish 11 holes of practice until 7 p.m. AP
speculation—some coaches, including former swing coach Hank Haney, said he had the yips. He was said to be practicing hard at home in Florida. When he showed up at Augusta National last week to practice, one report said he shot 74. Another said he was playing better than ever at home. The fans who stuck around the Masters got to see for themselves, at least in practice. The real show starts on Thursday, and everyone is curious. “We’re all waiting with bated breath what Tiger is bringing,” three-time champion Nick Faldo said. “He’s got to believe he’s got a bit more game than that. This is not the place. These are the toughest chipping areas, but off perfect lies, anywhere in the world.... It’s all nerve. That’s what the Masters is. It’s nerve. It’s the most nerve-racking golf course.” Woods looked relatively calm on the golf course. He reached the par-5 second hole with ease on his second shot. He smashed a drive down the short par-4 third and hit a flip wedge that trickled a few inches by the hole, making a tough shot look easy. O’Meara hit a good tee shot on the par-3 fourth. Woods hit it inside that. “I felt good,” Woods said. “It was nice to get out here and play it. It’s a little bit faster than what we played last week. It’s great.” Woods played twice last week, the last time on Friday just before ending speculation by saying he would play in the Masters. Gary Player was among those—and a few thousand fans in the late afternoon would agree— that it was good to see him back inside the ropes. “Golf internationally needs Tiger Woods. He does make a difference,” three-time Masters champion Player said. “People say—I hear this all the time—’Well, they won’t miss Tiger Woods. There’s so many young guys that will take his place.’ There is nobody in the world today that can play like Tiger Woods at his best. Nobody yet. I’m not saying in time to come, a Rory, Jordan Spieth, Jason Day. “As of today, there’s nobody playing like Tiger at his best.” holes. Before that, he shot 82 and missed the cut in the Phoenix Open. In both events, he played 47 holes and hit chips that either didn’t reach the green from 5 yards away or went some 25 yards over the green. That’s when he stepped away, saying his game was not acceptable and he would not return until it was. After his opening birdie, Woods tossed two balls short of the green to work on his chipping. He hit 14 chips—two balls each from various hollows around the green to different pin positions. Most looked reasonable. Some looked good. “Chipping was fine,” Woods said. “I wanted to test out some wedges out here. That’s why I was chipping a little bit more—a couple different bounce settings, because it’s a little bit different than Florida. We figured the right one out.” The real test comes on Thursday, when the shots count. What he showed on Monday certainly looked acceptable, and it was a treat for the fans who normally would be headed home after a long day at Augusta. The first hole was packed when Woods and O’Meara teed off at 4:20 p.m., and more than 2,000 kept following him. Dozens of fans raced over from the second fairway to the fourth tee to get a good spot. Remember, you’re not supposed to run at Augusta National. “I hope he’s happy. I hope he’s fine,” US Open champion Martin Kaymer said. “I hope he will play well this week. But what would bother me a lot is all the speculation. You don’t have a choice. You will read about it somewhere. You will hear about it because you socialize with people. So mentally, it must be quite exhausting, and we know how important the mental part is in golf.” “So it’s difficult, and some things I don’t find very fair,” he said. “You should just let him be. Let him play golf, what he likes to do.” The last image of Woods was the best player of his generation at his worst, especially with the chipping. That led to rampant The Associated Press
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UGUSTA, Georgia—Tiger Woods arrived later than usual on Monday for a Masters that is different from all the others he has played. No one was sure what to expect from him. Woods offered a quick glimpse that it could be just about anything. He hooked his tee shot so far left that it nearly went into the ninth fairway. And then he hit a shot to about 6 feet and rolled in the putt for birdie. “I felt like I had to get my game into a spot where I felt I could compete to win a golf tournament and it’s finally there,” Woods said after playing 11 holes. He played the front nine with Mark O’Meara, then the 10th and 18th holes before darkness. More relevant than any of his shots—including his chipping, which looked fine—was the atmosphere. The first official day of practice at Augusta National was filled with warmth and optimism for the first major of the year. Rory McIlroy, No. 1 in the world and going for a career Grand Slam, played 18 holes with British Amateur champion Bradley Neil. Steve Stricker is playing for the first time all year. Jason Day took four hours on the back nine alone, letting groups through so he could chip and putt, the key to winning a green jacket. And then Woods arrived. Fans ran to the side of the practice area when his cart pulled up, with one man holding a digital camera high above his head for a picture. Fittingly, Woods headed straight for the chipping area and went through two bags of balls before heading to the first tee with O’Meara. Woods is playing for the first time since February 5. He was off nearly five months when he returned at the Masters in 2010 following the scandal in his personal life, but he was No. 1 in the world back then. His last competition was a victory in the Australian Masters. Now he is No. 111. In his last tournament this year, he walked off the course at Torrey Pines after 11
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What Tiger Woods showed on Monday certainly looked acceptable, and it was a treat for the fans who normally would be headed home after a long day at Augusta.
TIGER WOODS ARRIVES AT AUGUSTA NATIONAL
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Wednesday, April 8, 2015 • Editor: Tet Andolong CAPITAL House retail
CAPITAL House unit
CAPITAL House elevator lobby
Jonathan Fabricante, Avida’s innovation and design group head, said the Ayala Land subsidiary is optimistic their latest project can attract small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and other impassioned business people. “We see a good market for businesses seeking a sought-after address like BGC, as evidenced by the success of One Park Drive. Capital House positions movers into an area primed for success with world-class amenities,” Fabricante said. The Capital House is a sequel to the successful One Park Drive office project, which is also in BGC. One Park Drive, at 20 stories high, is also geared for SMEs, and has been completely snapped up at a P2.5-billion value on its first year of selling alone. Fabricante noted the develop-
ment of One Park Drive and Capital House was envisioned to give SMEs the opportunity to have a sweet spot in one of the fastest-growing commercial business districts in the country. He added that a majority of the office spaces in BGC were tailorfit to large-scale operations, such as business-process outsourcing (BPOs) and multinational conglomerates. Units are at least 100 square meters (sq m), while modal offices measure around 250 sq m. Capital House has 222 units with sizes ranging from 62 to 159 sq m., with special whole-floor units at 1,400 sq m. The project sells from P9.9 million to P25.6 million. Office units are appropriate for about six to 20 employees. This size has already attracted a number of law firms, architectural studios and
creative agencies to locate at Capital House, which currently has about 12-percent takeup. On the ground floor will be retail spaces for dining and shopping. The building will also feature an open deck, a roof deck and numerous parking slots. Owners will have 344 slots, while 110 slots will be reserved for visitors. Fabricante said Capital House has been designed for greater flexibility and convenience of start-up and expanding businesses. Furthermore, multipurpose and conference rooms can be leased so owners can expand their office operations without adding to their investment. Instead of a centralized air-conditioning system, Fabricante said Avida has given businesses individualized setups for office units to ensure greater economy and more savings for the tenants. Avida is also offering unit owners leasing services to help them find tenants for their spaces. “Right now, our buyers are a mix of investors and end-users. As the Philippines becomes a booming real-estate market, more and more investors are inclined to buy a mix of residential and office developments. We’ve also noted an increasing rise among foreign buyers for our offices,” said Herbert Herrero, Avida project development manager, Metro Manila and Luzon Area. “Capital House complements the Avida portfolio. It enables the company to enhance the living ex-
perience of our developments. It provides us with the opportunity to offer our buyers and communities the complete live, work and play lifestyle,” Herrero added. The property is in BGC’s “Active North” district, along 34th Street corner 9th Avenue, near such active lifestyle attractions as the Turf BGC all-weather football field and Flying Trapeze Philippines. Soon to rise in the area are the BGC Sports Complex and Kidzania, a family “edutainment” center. Completion of the project will be in December 2017, while turnover will happen by the second quarter 2018. Avida boasts of five residential condominiums near their BGC office projects, four of which are within walking distance of Capital House. This large footprint across the city embodies Avida’s live-work-play balance for developments. All the elements for this lifestyle are carried in its growing range of products. Commemorating 25 years this year, Avida has consistently been top ranked among developers in the entry-level property segment. To date, Avida has built 60,000 homes across 73 projects in 29 strategic locations nationwide, making it the Ayala Land subsidiary with the most number of projects and broadest geographic presence in the country. This includes South Park District, its first large-scale, master-planned mixed-use estate in Muntinlupa.
THE ‘ALL SUITES’ CONDO LIFESTYLE IN UPTOWN BONIFACIO
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PTOWN Bonifacio, the 15.4-hectare integrated urban township in Fort Bonifacio, advances the ante of luxury living by introducing a unique “all suites” residential condominium designed for the lifestyle of the country’s elite with Uptown Ritz Residence. Megaworld, the country’s leading real-estate developer, has taken careful steps in conceptualizing a well-designed layout that sets the benchmark for an ideal first-class lifestyle in Uptown Bonifacio. In Uptown Ritz Residence, all units come with a five-star suite ambiance with large and proud spaces offering two- to four-bedroom (ranging from 78 to 167 square meters). Future residents will also reap the benefits of low-density and true exclusivity
because of its six units per floor. This all-glass and aluminum tower will be at par with some of the world’s most chic residential towers. The project will have a bilevel podium amenity deck that offers a fitness center overlooking a swimming pool and spa complex, children’s playground, bilevel nursery and function rooms fitting for the most glamorous social gatherings and elite corporate events. “We set the bar higher in luxury living. What we are offering at Uptown Ritz are spacious units that overlook the cosmopolitan views of the Fort Bonifacio and Makati central business district [CBD]” said Noli D. Hernandez, senior vice president for sales and marketing, Megaworld. Uptown Ritz Residence will stand in the heart of the Fort’s newest cor-
porate playground, Uptown Bonifacio, where the powerhouses of Asia Pacific’s business and commerce are relocating. Slated to spearhead the growth and development of the up-and-coming CBD, Uptown Bonifacio will offer Megaworld’s signature township components: live, work, play and learn. The township will offer top-grade office sites and a cosmopolitan commercial center at the doorstep of its luxury residential condominiums. Situated next to the institutional zone, the families of business leaders will be perfectly placed beside the country’s most reputable international secondary schools: International School Manila, British School Manila and Manila Japanese School. Within the confines of the global city, Uptown Bonifacio will also be just
steps away from world-class health care at St. Luke’s Medical Center and several of Manila’s finest lifestyle attractions, such as Forbes Town Center and the Manila Polo Club. Uptown Ritz Residence is also easily accessible through major thoroughfares: Kalayaan Avenue and Sen. Gil Puyat Avenue toward Makati, Edsa to Quezon City and C-5 toward Pasig and the South Luzon Expressway. Uptown Bonifacio is one of Megaworld’s 15 townships in its portfolio. The company has allocated P65 billion to develop the township within 10 to 20 years. It will be comprised of several corporate and residential towers. As an integrated urban township, Uptown Bonifacio made its first salvo when the biggest superclub in the Philippines,
The Palace, partially opened its doors in November 2014 with The Valkyrie Nightclub (one of the six sections of the superclub). Once completed, The Palace will be able to accommodate 10,000 people with over 40,000 sq m of party space. This year Megaworld will also open Uptown Place mall, a five-level lifestyle mall in Uptown Bonifacio that will house several shops of renowned international brands, world-class restaurants and stateof-the-art cinemas, among others. Also soon to rise are modern office towers, including the Alliance Global Tower, which will become the future headquarters of Alliance Global Group Inc., the holdings company of tycoon Andrew L. Tan and parent company of Megaworld. www.megaworldcorp.com
PROPERTY
BANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. keynotes the 2015 convention of Chamber of Thrift Banks, themed “Thrift Banks: Meeting the Challenges of a Bouyant Economy,” on Tuesday at a hotel in Makati City attended by representatives of different banks. (From left) Citystate Savings Bank CEO Andres Narvasa and President Benjamin Ramos participate in the convention. ALYSA SALEN
Capital House: A power address for SMEs B R R R
On Tuesday the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said inflation averaged 2.4 percent in the first quarter and in March 2015. This was still within the Development Budget Coordination Committee’s inflation target of 2 percent to 4 percent for 2015. Economic Planning Secretary and National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) Director General Arsenio M. Balisacan said this trend will likely continue due to low pump prices. “Our overall inflation outlook remains well anchored as policies continue to be supportive of a stable inflation rate. While the current episode of mild El Niño and power woes still pose risks to inflation, the continuing efforts to ensure that appropriate policy actions are implemented are expected to temper inflationary pressures over the near to medium term,” Balisacan said.
PHL CONGLOMERATES Citystate to increase MSME loan portfolio to 25 percent KEEN ON DEVELOPING SECONDARY AIRPORTS
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HE national government is optimistic that inflation will be kept at bay despite the El Niño phenomenon and thin power supply, with appropriate policies and remedial actions ready to be implemented to make sure the hike in prices will not go beyond targets.
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CAPITAL HOUSE: A POWER ADDRESS FOR SMEs
OR the driven who want a good start in their business endeavors and are in search of a power address, Avida Land is offering the P4-billion, 26-story Capital House in Bonifacio Global City (BGC), which is specifically designed for professional firms, boutique agencies and entrepreneurs.
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P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
RELATIVELY LOW2.4%INFLATION IN Q1GIVES B.S.P. REASONTO HOLD INTEREST RATES STEADY
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EAR Jesus, Your disciples have already reached the certainty that You are the promised Messiah and not just one of the prophets (Mark 8:27-30); though for them, the concept of “Messiah” is equated with a conquering leader. For three times, You tried to correct that wrong notion and to prepare them for the shocking experience of a violent end in Jerusalem (Mark 8:31; Mark 30-31 and especially Mark 10:32-34). Meanwhile, the time has come for You to take the final steps in the fulfillment of the Father’s plan, which has already been outlined in the writings of the prophets. Amen.
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IVE parties have so far signified their interest in bidding for the P108.2-billion contract to develop several secondary airports in the Philippines, a senior government official said on Tuesday. Transportation Undersecretary for Planning Rene K. Limcaoco listed the companies as San Miguel Corp., Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc., Philippine Skylanders Inc., the partnership between Metro Pacific Investments Corp. and JG Summit Holdings Inc., and the joint venture between Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR Infrastructures Ltd. The list is a mix of new and old players, with the last group being the current concessionaire of the P17.5-billion Mactan-Cebu International Airport deal in 2014. Aboitiz Equity Ventures also participated in the auction for the said deal, but only emerged as the third best. JG Summit, meanwhile, is the parent company of budget carrier Cebu Pacific. Philippine Skylanders, according to its web site, is a pioneer in the air cargo-warehousing industry based in Pasay City. San Miguel, on the other hand, used to control flag carrier Philippine Airlines. It also submitted a $10-billion deal that essentially calls for the construction of a new international gateway in Metro Manila.
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 44.3990
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ITYSTATE Savings Bank Inc. targets to grow its micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) loan portfolio, from 10 percent of total loans at present to 25 percent this year. Newly appointed Citystate President Benjamin V. Ramos said the MSMEs sector is the niche market for thrift lenders like Citystate. “We’re focusing on that particular segment. We cannot compete with the big universal and commercial banks so we have to provide them [MSMEs] with more personal-
ized services that the big banks cannot offer. Growing the MSMEs is our main thrust for this year,” he said at the sidelines of the national convention organized by the Chamber of Thrift Banks. “We’re concentrating on consumer lending, such as jewelry loans, car financing and market vendor loans,” he quickly added. Citystate CEO and Vice Chairman Andres Narvasa Jr. said bank funds set aside for MSMEs is rather small, comprising only 10 percent to 15 percent of total, while the remaining 85 percent to 90 percent are corporate loans and housing. “We target to grow our MSME loan port-
folio to 20 percent, or 25 percent from 10 percent to 15 percent. The loan amount ranges from P500,000 to P3 million per borrower,” according to Narvasa. Ramos said more than tapping the MSME market, the bank will also leverage its relations with sister companies within the ALC Group of Companies. “We had the bank reorganized. All preparations are in place to fully maximize the synergy within the ALC group, which has a strong client base. We have realty, car dealership, securities and insurance. The insurance company is a big provider C A
Interest rates should rise slightly but very manageably–BPI
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HE rate at which the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) borrows from or lends to banks will likely rise by 25 to 50 basis points around the middle of the year, and more or less align with an expected US Federal Reserve (the Fed) increase in rates. But Bank of the Philippine Islands Vice President and lead economist Emilio Neri said that even if US regulators were to hike its interest-rate structure, any BSP
adjustment was not likely a one-for-one response. “We can afford [an interest-rate hike] because there are lots of investments coming into the Philippines,” he told the BM. He said most analysts and observers expect the adjustments will happen in September, although he personally expects the same around June. But, most important, Neri said that even if domestic rates adjust upward, “the
increase should still be manageable and only very modest.” He also said the BSP will allow the local currency the peso to weaken a bit because other currencies weaken, as US authorities scale up interest rates to moderate domestic expansion only beginning to take hold in the world’s largest economy. But with the peso depreciating slightly, the remittances should improve. Neri C A
n JAPAN 0.3717 n UK 66.1190 n HK 5.7272 n CHINA 7.1669 n SINGAPORE 32.7861 n AUSTRALIA 34.0326 n EU 48.5903 n SAUDI ARABIA 11.8366 Source: BSP (7 April 2015)