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The impossible dream
WORD & LIFE MAGAZINE AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
WHO’S AFRAID OF THE OVEN »D3
BusinessMirror
Friday, November 7, 2014
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TIME, SPACE AND
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JESSICA CHASTAIN B S R The Philadelphia Inquirer
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UILLIARDTRAINED. Schooled in Shakespeare, Strindberg, Oscar Wilde. Dedicated to her art, and to the idea of art. But in Interstellar, the widescreen sci-fi epic from Christopher Nolan,
now in theaters everywhere, Jessica Chastain plays a scientist with a head full of equations, and questions, about time, relativity, quantum mechanics. She’s an astrophysicist. A stretch, right? “Actually, I am an astrophysicist,” insists the
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texas energy group asks court to halt fracking ban The World BusinessMirror
news@businessmirror.com.ph
Friday, November 7, 2014 B3-3
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ENTON, Texas—A Texas city that sits atop a natural gas reserve is preparing for an extended court battle after voters made it the first in the state to ban further hydraulic fracturing—a fight that cities nationwide considering similar laws likely will be watching closely. shale oil producers has boosted US oil output to the highest level in decades. But some communities worry about effects on the environment, including water and air pollution. Nationally, courts have come down on both sides of the issue. New York’s highest court determined that local governments have land-use powers to say where oil and gas wells can be located, even to the extent of an outright ban. But a judge in Boulder, Colorado, ruled that a fracking ban interfered with the state’s interests, which take precedence there. Battling the fracking ban will be the first fight for Texas Land Commissioner-elect George P. Bush, who is the nephew of one US president and the grandson of another. The founding manager of an energy and infrastructure consultancy, Bush promoted the economic benefits of hydraulic fracturing throughout his campaign. The courts must “give a prompt and authoritative answer” on whether Denton voters had the authority to ban fracking, Texas Oil and Gas As-
Ebola countries to receive $450 million in financing
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NITED NATIONS—A new private sector initiative announced on Wednesday will provide at least $450 million in commercial financing to the three West African countries hardest hit by Ebola to promote trade, investment and employment. The International Finance Corp., which is part of the World Bank Group, announced that the package will include $250 million in rapid response projects and at least $200 million in investment projects to support the economic recovery of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea after the Ebola outbreak is controlled. The announcement coincides with the United Nations Development Program’s (UNDP) release of a study on the socioeconomic impact of the outbreak, which found that the governments of the three countries need $328 million to be able to function at precrisis levels. The study said the shortfalls are caused by increased spending to tackle Ebola and the slowdown of economic activity in fields, such as tourism, mining and trade. “Ebola is a humanitarian crisis first and foremost, but it’s also an economic disaster for Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone,” World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said in a statement. “That’s why in addition to our emergency aid, we will do all we can to help support the private sector in these countries to build back their business.” IFC, the largest global development institution that focuses exclusively on the private sector, said its initiative includes a $75-million Ebola Emergency Liquidity Facility to fund critical imports for the Ebolaaffected countries, including energy, food and agricultural commodities, and manufactured goods. IFC said its board approved the rapid response program last week. It will initially be available to six IFC client banks and could be expanded to additional banks. IFC Executive Vice President and CEO Jin Yong Cai said the corporation “will find and create opportunities to encourage private investors to play a large role in the recovery of markets directly and indirectly affected by the ongoing Ebola outbreak in West Africa.” The UNDP study found that because of Ebola, government ex-
THIS February 28 file photo shows Samantha Power, US ambassador to the United Nations, speaking during a news conference after a private UN Security Council meeting. Power is going to visit all three of the West African countries hit hardest by the Ebola outbreak. A statement released on October 25 by the US mission to the UN says Power will visit Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea “to draw attention to the need for increased support for the international response.” AP
penses have risen about 30 percent in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, and fiscal deficits in the three countries are rising. In addition, Liberia has sacrificed $20 million worth of infrastructure improvements and Sierra Leone has sacrificed $16 million worth since the beginning of the crisis, it said. In Liberia, half the mining and agricultural concessions have reduced their activities, UNDP said. In northeast Guinea, exports of fruit and vegetables to neighboring countries have dropped 90 percent, and in Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, nearly all bars, restaurants and nightclubs have closed. That has forced the country’s largest brewery to scale down operations, culminating in a loss of 24,000 jobs in the supply chain. The financial constraints have forced the three countries to resort to domestic and international borrowing, and they have already taken financial packages from the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, UNDP said. AP
IN this July 15 file photo, Topher Jones (from left) of Denton, Texas; Edward Hartmann of Dallas and Angie Holliday of Denton, Texas, hold a campaign sign outside city hall in Denton, Texas. Tensions are mounting as big oil companies and hydraulic fracturing opponents try to sway voters to their side over a Tuesday referendum that would make Denton the first Texas city to ban further permitting of the drilling practice known as fracking. AP
sociation attorney Tom Phillips, a former chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court, said on Wednesday. “We believe the city of Denton lacks authority to ban the only commercially viable method of producing oil and gas in their locality,” he said. Industry groups that have
warned the ban could deliver a severe hit to Denton’s economy. The gas fields under it have produced $1 billion in mineral wealth and pumped more than $30 million into city bank accounts. Pro-bono environmental lawyer have offered Denton Drilling Aware-
ness Group, which submitted the petition for a fracking ban ordinance in June, assistance in the case. “We’re in it for the long haul,” founder Cathy McMullen said. Denton’s city attorney is reviewing the energy industry group’s petition and has said the city council has
U.S. SERVICES FIRMS GROW MORE SLOWLY, BUT HIRING UP
IN this October 23 photo, Christi Ferretti, co-owner and chef of Pine Valley Market, cuts kale at the market in Wilmington, North Carolina. The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, issues its index of nonmanufacturing activity for October on November 5. AP
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ASHINGTON—US services firms expanded more slowly in October, but the pace of growth was still healthy. Hiring also rose to the fastest pace in more than nine years. The Institute for Supply Management said on Wednesday that its services index dropped to 57.1 in October, down from 58.6 in September. That was the second-straight drop after the index had risen steadily since February to 59.6 in August, the highest in eight years. Any reading over 50 indicates expansion. Steady hiring this year means more Americans are earning paychecks, which supports spending at retail stores, hotels and other service companies. While solid, Wednesday’s data indicates that growth among service firms is cooling off a bit after rapid expansion earlier this year. 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 services firms. Sixteen industries tracked by the survey reported growth, led by construction, retail and agriculture. Two industries shrank: arts, entertainment and recreation, and finance and insurance. A gauge of hiring rose to 59.6, its highest level in nine years. That increase suggests that Friday’s government report on jobs and unemployment could show another strong gain. Earlier on Wednesday, payroll processor ADP said businesses added 230,000 jobs last month, the most in four months and a sign of healthy hiring. And Jim O’Sullivan, an economist at High Frequency Economics, noted that October’s 57.1 is still far above the average reading of 54.4 in the first
half of the year. Still, there were plenty of signs that growth among service firms may have reached a plateau after accelerating for most of this year. A gauge of new orders fell nearly two points to 59.1, and a measure of order backlogs also fell. “The majority of the respondents’ comments reflect favorable business conditions,” said Anthony Nieves, chairman of the ISM’s services index committee. “However, there is an indication that there continues to be a leveling off from the strong rate of growth of the preceding months.” New export orders fell sharply, to 53.5 from 57.5 in September, a sign that slowing growth overseas is beginning to impact US firms. However, most of the firms responding to the survey are focused on the US market and don’t have any international business. Only about 35 percent said they had any overseas sales. AP
as much as $4 million in a risk fund to combat legal challenges, according to city spokesman Lindsey Baker. Property rights in Texas are split between the land and the minerals below. Phillips says the ban violates the Texas Constitution. Baker says that’s for the courts to decide. AP
Beijing wants Apec to push Chinese trade agreement
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EIJING—China plans to use a meeting of Asia-Pacific leaders to promote a regional trade initiative at a time when progress on a rival US-led trade deal has stalled, injecting a note of rivalry into an annual summit that aims for consensus. The two-day meeting of 21 countries including the US, Japan and South Korea is the first major international gathering in China since President Xi Jinping came to power. Starting on Monday, the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) meeting gives China, the world’s second-largest economy, a platform to assert itself as a regional leader. The proposal promoted by China, the Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific, is part of an agenda that also includes talks on cooperation in environmental protection, energy efficiency and urbanization. “We will reach important consensus” on the launch of the free trade process, said Foreign Minister Wang Yi at a news conference ahead of the gathering. China’s campaign for the initiative comes as Beijing tries to claim a bigger role in US-dominated global trade, security and financial structures. Last month China and 20 other Asian nations launched a bank to pay for roads and other infrastructure, despite US objections it is an unneeded rival to the World Bank. Beijing is providing most of the $50 billion in start-up capital. In May, Xi called for the creation of a new Asian structure for security cooperation based on a 24-nation group that excludes the US. Beijing worries Washington is pursuing a “strategy of containment” against China and sees a China-led trade pact as a way to gain influence, said Chen Bo, a trade specialist at the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics. “China doesn’t want to be led by the nose by the US,” Bo said. “The more they have in hand, the better their negotiating ability will be. Then people will want to join China, instead of China joining other countries.” AP
the world IN this photo taken on October 29, an elderly Chinese man sits near a restaurant in the Huairou district where a hotel, the venue for the upcoming Apec summit, is, in Beijing. AP
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Sports
| Friday, November 7, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
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THE Jazz’s Gordon Hayward (20) celebrates with Trey Burke (3) after scoring against the Cavaliers. AP
ALT LAKE CITY—Gordon Hayward made a step-back jump shot at the buzzer, one-upping LeBron James and boosting the Utah Jazz to a 102-100 victory over the struggling Cleveland Cavaliers on Wednesday. Hayward, who had 21 points, broke free of James to catch an inbounds pass, faked a move to the basket and then stepped back on the right wing and swished a 21-foot jump shot as the horn sounded. The forward was mobbed by his Jazz teammates in a scene reminiscent of a college tournament game. San Antonio’s Tim Duncan had 17 points and 13 rebounds as the Spurs held on for their 17th straight win, 94-92, at home over the Atlanta Hawks. The Spurs had a season-high 25 assists for a balanced scoring effort that they needed to fend off the Hawks’ furious rally in the final quarter. Tony Parker scored 17 points and Manu Ginobili added 12, including a pair of free throws with 3.8 seconds remaining. DeMarre Carroll and Paul Millsap each had 17 points for Atlanta (1-2). Al Horford added 10. In Milwaukee Derrick Rose returned from his latest injury to help the Chicago Bulls to a 95-86 victory over the Bucks. Taj Gibson scored 23 points, Pau Gasol added 22 and Rose had 13 points and seven assists in 32 minutes for the Bulls, who have beaten the Bucks nine straight times in Milwaukee. Giannis Antetokounmpo had 13 points and eight rebounds for the Bucks. Rose returned from his latest injury and helped the Bulls, who have beaten the Bucks nine straight times in Milwaukee. With Chicago leading by one, Gasol hit a jumper and Butler made an acrobatic lay-up. That started a clinching 9-2 run that was capped by Kirk Hinrich’s three-pointer with 2:16 remaining. Rose, who missed most of the past two seasons because of serious knee injuries, sat out the Bulls’ previous two games with sprains in both ankles. The Memphis Grizzlies downed the Phoenix Suns, 102-91, after Mike Conley had 24 points and 11 assists, while Greg Monroe had 23 points and 18 rebounds in the Detroit Pistons’ 98-95 win over the New York Knicks. In other games, Kyle Lowry scored 35 points and had a key steal in the closing minute to lead the Toronto Raptors over the Boston Celtics, 110-107; the Charlotte Hornets beat the Miami Heat, 96-89; the Minnesota Timberwolves defeated the Brooklyn Nets 98-91; and the Washington Wizards claimed a 96-95 overtime win over the Indiana Pacers. The Orlando Magic edged the Philadelphia 76ers, 91-89; the Golden State Warriors trounced the Los
Angeles Clippers, 121-104; and the Sacramento Kings were 131-109 winners over the Denver Nuggets. Memphis used a strong defensive effort in the third quarter to beat Phoenix and remain unbeaten. The Grizzlies, who won all four meetings last season, forced 10 turnovers in the third and turned an 11-point deficit in the second period into a five-point lead going into the fourth. Conley and fellow guard Courtney Lee, both coming off injuries, combined to score 17 of Memphis’s 30 third-quarter points. Lee, who missed the past two games with a concussion, scored 22 points with four-of-five shooting on three-pointers. Memphis (5-0) is off to the best start in franchise history. Eric Bledsoe made his first eight shots for Phoenix and finished with a season-high 23 points. DeMar DeRozan had 23 points and Patrick Patterson added 14 for the Raptors. Rajon Rondo led Boston with a triple-double of 13 points, 15 assists and 10 rebounds. Jeff Green had 20 points for the Celtics, who have lost three straight after a seasonopening win over Brooklyn. With the score tied at 105, Lowry stripped rookie Marcus Smart and fed DeRozan for a fast-break layup with 33 seconds left. He was fouled on the play and hit the free throw. Rondo’s two free throws sliced it to one, but Lowry nailed a fadeaway jumper from the left wing with eight seconds to play. Green back-rimmed a long trey and Boston’s Jared Sullinger grabbed the rebound, but time ran out. Al Jefferson scored a season-high 28 points and add ed 10 rebounds as Charlotte ended a 16-game, regular-season losing streak against Miami. Charlotte was winless against the Heat in the LeBron James era, including getting swept in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs by Miami last season. Kemba Walker had 16 points and seven assists, and Cody Zeller turned in another solid game off the bench with 13 points and eight rebounds for the Hornets (2-3), who won for the first time since the season opener. Chris Bosh had 23 points and 13 rebounds for Miami (3-2). It was Bosh’s fifth straight 20-point game to open the season. Nikola Pekovic converted a tiebreaking threepoint play with 48 seconds left as Minnesota scored the final nine points of the game to beat Brooklyn. Kevin Martin led the Timberwolves with 26 points and rookie Andrew Wiggins, playing in the arena where he was taken by Cleveland with the No. 1 pick in the draft, added 17. Joe Johnson had 22 points for the Nets (2-2), who had won their last two games. Deron Williams added 19. AP
MEssi BraCE Equals rECord A
MSTERDAM—Lionel Messi’s brace gave Barcelona a 2-0 victory on Wednesday over 10-man Ajax and moved him level with Raul Gonzalez’s all-time Champions League scoring record of 71 goals. Messi scored his 70th Champions League goal in the 36th minute with a soft header after Ajax failed to clear a free kick and linked with substitute Pedro Rodriguez for his second on the night in the 76th. The win assured Barcelona of qualification for the knockout stage of Europe’s top club competition as Paris Saint-Germain beat APOEL Nicosia, 1-0, to stay on top of Group F. Ajax played the last 20 minutes with 10 men after defender Joel Veltman was sent off for his second yellow card. Veltman also was red carded last year when Ajax beat Barcelona, 2-1, in Amsterdam.
“The record wasn’t the goal for today, that was the three points that qualified us for the next round and that’s why we are leaving feeling happy,” Messi told Canal Plus television. “We played against a team that plays football well and, if you let them, move you from one side of the pitch to the other. It was difficult for us to pressure them because of their mobility, but we took advantage of the chances we got. Later, they went down to 10, but in general the match was even.” Messi notched his record-leveling goals in his 90th match in Europe’s top club competition. Former Real Madrid and Schalke striker Raul took 142 matches to reach his tally. “Messi is absolutely the best player I have ever seen as player or coach,” Barcelona Coach Luis Enrique said. His strikes came a night after Cristiano Ronaldo, who has scored 70 Champions League goals, failed to find the net in Real Madrid’s 1-0 victory over Liverpool. Ajax had the best of the early exchanges and Lucas
Andersen shot just wide in the 18th minute after a surging run by 19-year-old winger Anwar El Ghazi. Andersen, Lasse Schone and El Ghazi all stretched the Barcelona defense as Ajax piled on the pressure, but Frank de Boer’s team could not convert its possession into a goal and Barcelona made them pay. “We made a game of it in the first half,”De Boer said. “It’s a shame we weren’t rewarded for our good play.” Jasper Cillessen did well to save a 35thminute Messi free kick but Ajax failed to clear and center back Marc Bartra hooked the ball back into the area for Messi to score with a soft header that Ricardo van Rhijn just failed to clear off the line. Neymar almost doubled Barcelona’s lead five minutes after the break when he shrugged off two defenders but his shot struck the outside of the post. AP
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lioNEl MEssi is tackled by ajax’s Joel Veltman before getting a red card in their match on Wednesday. AP
sports
he local currency the peso weakened by 3 centavos at the close of trading on Thursday to 45 per dollar, a manifestation of global developments potentially exposing emerging markets like the Philippines not only to currency volatilities down the line but capital flight, as well.
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GRAND PRIZE WINNER BusinessMirror (BM) Publisher T. Anthony Cabangon (fourth from left) awards the BM ninth anniversary raffle grand prize—a Mitsubishi Mirage G4— to the winner Nicole Raymundo-Delmonte of the Land Bank of the Philippines (fourth from right). They are joined by (from left) Adel Gasmin, BM vice president (VP) for finance; Ricky Alegre, BM VP for corporate affairs; Arvee Verdadero of Diamond Motor Corp.; Aldwin Tolosa, BM advertising manager; Paul Michael Inocencio of Diamond Motor Corp.; and Marvin Estigoy, BM VP for advertising ales. ROY DOMINGO
Record land sale raises fears asset SAUDI MOVE BETRAYS bubble forming ITS OPEC SUPREMACY Economy shows less dependence on debt
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BusinessMirror
flash GORDON! S Gordon Hayward was mobbed by his Jazz teammates in a scene reminiscent of a college tournament game after he made a step-back jump shot at the buzzer, oneupping LeBron James and boosting Utah to a 102-100 victory over struggling Cleveland.
By Bianca Cuaresma
See “Peso,” A4
Flash gordon! C1
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This sentiment was aired by the sovereign credit watcher Moody’s Investors Service, saying interest- rate adjustments expected in a while from the Unites States, still the country’s top trading partner, will generate economic headwinds that the beneficial impact of the fiscal-stimulus programs in the euro-area countries and in Japan can hardly begin to offset. Data from the Philippine Dealing System Holdings Corp. (PDS) show the local currency hit 45 to a dollar on Thursday, shedding 3 centavos of value from the previous day’s close of 44.97 to a dollar.
Texas energy group asks court to halt fracking ban
An energy industry group and the state’s little-known but powerful General Land Office responded quickly to the measure Denton voters approved on Tuesday night, filing a petition on Wednesday in district court seeking an injunction to stop the ban from being enforced. The ban could lead to similar bans in other Texas cities, threatening an “energy renaissance” in shale gas from hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, said David Porter, a commissioner on the Texas Railroad Commission, the state’s oil and gas regulator. Dozens of cities in other states have considered similar bans over health and environmental concerns. But Denton, a university town north of Dallas, is a test of whether any community in Texas—the nation’s biggest oil and gas producer—could push back against the industry and still thrive. Fracking involves blasting a mix of water, sand and chemicals deep into underground rock formations to release trapped oil and gas. The recent rise of fracking in the US by
Friday, November 7, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 30
‘Headwinds’ drag down peso
time, space and jessica chastain EAR Lord, most of us dream at any time of the day. And to experience dreaming the impossible dream is rightful to anyone because it costs nothing. All kinds of people can do it. To fight the unbeatable foe; to bear with unbearable sorrow; to run where the brave dare not go. Help us, oh Lord, to achieve our goal in life, to realize our dream to be with You in heaven, which is not impossible. Amen!
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DOLLAR STRENGTHENING PUTS LOCAL CURRENCY AT‘PSYCHOLOGICALLY IMPORTANT’45/$
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A broader look at today’s business
ecord bids for two plots of land in a Manila business district have lifted prices to a 17-year high, raising concerns that a property bubble is forming. The 1,600-square-meter (17,200-square-foot) site in the former military camp of Bonifacio fetched P732.8 million ($16.3 million) and P800 million each at a government auction in September. That was a record half-a-million pesos per square meter, about 80 percent higher than the previous government land sale in the area, according to the local associate of Savills Plc. The “Philippines is at risk for an asset bubble,” said Antton Nordberg, a property analyst at KMC MAG Group Inc., Savills’s associate in the country. “The price of the land is just too high.”
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PESO exchange rates n US 44.8930 n japan 0.3913
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audi Arabia showed little concern for fellow members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) by unilaterally cutting its oil prices to the United States this week, a move that casts doubts on the cartel’s credibility and its ability to find a common plan to stabilize the slumping energy market. And while Opec struggles to find consensus, oil prices risk remaining low—or falling further—to the benefit of consumers and businesses in the US and worldwide. The Opec is already riven by differences among its members on what the ideal price level should be. That is exemplified in the rivalry between heavyweights Saudi Arabia, which can withstand lower prices, and Iran, which relies on a stronger market to remain profitable. See “Saudi,” A4
By David Cagahastian
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he country’s outstanding public-sector debt (OPSD) dropped to P7.6 trillion in March, or equivalent to just 64.3 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) at that time. This represented a 7-percentagepoint decrease from the 71.3 percent in March 2013, indicating that the Philippine economy was able to register robust growth with little dependence on debts.
The Department of Finance (DOF) attributed the decline in the ratio of OPSD to GDP to the actual drop of P79 billion in the OPSD from figures that were registered in December 2013, as well as the high GDP growth rates during the one-year period from March 2013 to March 2014. The Philippines registered a record 7.2-percent GDP growth by the end of 2013. “The steep decline in OPSDto-GDP ratio is primarily attributed Continued on A2
n UK 71.7121 n HK 5.7912 n CHINA 7.3419 n singapore 34.7147 n australia 38.5447 n EU 56.0579 n SAUDI arabia 11.9660 Source: BSP (6 November 2014)