Businessmirror 10 25 2014

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N.Y. doctor has Ebola after returning from West Africa World»B3-1

A New York City physician who recently returned from treating Ebola patients in West Africa has become the nation’s latest Ebola patient. Dr. Craig Spencer, 33, is in isolation at Bellevue Hospital Center, which is one of eight hospitals in New York state that were recently designated to treat Ebola patients.

Patient took several subway trains, had gone bowling with friends

2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

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The World BusinessMirror

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Saturday, October 25, 2014 B3-3

Driving up N. Korea’s mountain

North Korean man pushes his bicycle to a village in North Korea’s North hamgyong province. the Associated Press was granted permission to embark on a weeklong road trip across North Korea to the country’s spiritual summit Mount Paektu. AP/DAviD GuttenfelDer By Eric Talmadge | The Associated Press

AKE CHON, North Korea—When North Korea opens its doors, it does so for a reason. So it was when the authoritarian government granted permission for a road trip so extensive that few North Koreans—let alone a pair of American journalists—could imagine taking it. tor and supervise our activities. We were not to take photographs of any checkpoints or military installations, or talk to people we happened to see along the way. For the most part, we were not to detour from our pre-approved route, which, to no one’s surprise, didn’t include nuclear facilities or prison camps. Though we would not get to know the people along the way, the country itself had a great deal to say. And no place is more symbolic of the North Korean psyche than Paektu. North Koreans venerate it for its natural beauty, but more important because it is considered the home of the North Korean revolution. It is dotted by reconstructions of “secret camps,” where guides dressed in period costume recount the legends of Kim Il Sung’s battles against Japanese imperialists. Before we left Pyongyang, the capital, we were warned, half-jokingly, not to get lost.

Mount Paektu straddles North Korea’s border with China. “If you wander off into China,” we were told, “you will be shot.” Something similar had, in fact, happened many years ago. No borders were involved, but a South Korean housewife who strayed off the accepted path at a tourist site was fatally shot in the back by a North Korean guard. Nothing so dramatic had happened as we made our way across the country to the mountain. Wrested out of our beds for our ascent up to the summit after four days on the road, we fumbled without lights to pack our equipment, made our way down our hotel’s candlelit staircase and climbed into our car in the pouring rain. With no signs to guide him, our driver steered silently into the night. Many people have been amazed by nighttime satellite images that show North Korea as dark as the

Brazil’s poor gives Rousseff solid support

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IO DE JANEIRO—Children play amid tumbledown shacks in some of Rio de Janeiro’s poorest hillside “favela” slums, places where armed drug traffickers lay down the law, stray bullets fly and raw sewage oozes into the streets. For the poorest of Brazil’s poor, daily life is a struggle. On Sunday they will get a chance to make their voice heard when they join in the second round of voting for president, and they’re expected to resoundingly support incumbent Dilma Rousseff and her Workers’ Party. Marcio Macedo, who lives in the Dona Marta shantytown, said he’ll vote for Rousseff because she needs another term to fulfill her plans. “Even though she wasn’t able to do all of her projects the past four years, she’ll get to them now,” he said. While their circumstances remain dire, the lowest echelons of Brazil’s social pyramid have seen the greatest

MAriA EduArdA, 7, holds her 2-year-old sister Kauania as another sister Joyce, 4, plays outside their home, while their mother steps away briefly and a neighbor looks after them in a shantytown on the outskirts of rio de Janeiro, Brazil. AP/feliPe DAnA

improvement in their lives over the past decade during three successive Workers’ Party governments. A host of new social programs are providing tiny but steady sources of income, helping lift tens of millions of Brazilians

out of hand-to-mouth survival. Those programs have turned the poor into Rousseff’s bedrock support. Polls say the poor overwhelmingly support her against opposition candidate Aecio Neves. AP

YouNg North Korean schoolchildren help to fix pot holes in a rural road in North Korea’s North hamgyong province. AP/DAviD GuttenfelDer

ocean, set against a northeast Asia brimming with light. There is nothing in the world like experiencing that darkness on the ground over long stretches of the North Korean back country. Possibly more than any other populated place on the globe, North Korea is terra incognita. As we drove toward the dawn, two armed soldiers emerged from

the darkness, signaled for us to stop and for our minder to get out. The rain was coming down harder as they stood in the blurry pool of our headlights. One peered in at us through the rain-dotted window. There was a good deal of gesticulating. Then some head nodding. Our minder got back in the car. We had gotten lost, but we weren’t

in China. We were going the wrong way down a one-lane, one-way road. The soldiers waved us on. With North Korean tourism still in its infancy, we were safe. We wouldn’t see another car until we reached the snowy, wind-whipped parking lot below the crater, where two small vans full of shivering Chinese waited for a guard to wake up and lead them to Lake Chon.

China factory gauge rises as workers weather slowdown

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ChINESE manufacturing gauge rose in October, adding to signs a resilient labor market and export demand are helping the world’s second-largest economy weather a housing market downturn. The preliminary Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) from hSBC holdings Plc. and Markit Economics was at 50.4, exceeding the median estimate of 50.2 in a Bloomberg News survey, which was also the level of September’s final reading. Numbers above 50 indicate expansion. Chinese policy-makers are trying to avoid a deeper slowdown after gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 7.3 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, the weakest pace in more than five years. While the government has relaxed home-purchase controls and pumped liquidity to lenders, the economy also got support from a pick-up in exports in September. “The momentum of the rebound in September is continuing into the fourth

quarter,” said Larry hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Securities Ltd. in hong Kong. “The growth target is still about 7.5 percent, so targeted easing will carry on.” Output, new orders and new export orders all increased at a slower rate, while output and input prices decreased at a quicker rate, suggesting disinflationary pressure intensified. The producer-price index fell 1.8 percent in September from a year earlier, a record-tying 31st monthly decline, data last week showed. Chinese stocks declined and the yuan was little changed. “We continue to see downside risks,” said Ding Shuang, senior China economist at Citigroup Inc. in hong Kong, as manufacturing activity isn’t as good as the headline number indicates. The PMI will possibly be adjusted down in the final release, he said.

A separate manufacturing index from the National Bureau of Statistics and the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing will be published on November 1. Thursday’s report, known as the Flash PMI, is typically based on 85 percent to 90 percent of responses to surveys sent to purchasing managers at more than 420 companies. It showed employment and inventory indexes improved. “While the manufacturing sector likely stabilized in October, the economy continues to show signs of insufficient effective demand,” said Qu hongbin, chief China economist at hSBC in hong Kong. “This warrants further policy easing and we expect more easing measures on both the monetary, as well as fiscal fronts in the months ahead.” The government has eschewed across-the-board interest rate cuts and signaled it will tolerate a weaker expansion, leaving the economy headed for the slowest full-year growth since 1990. Bloomberg News

world

Insufficient demand

ThE final hSBC-Markit PMI reading for October is due on November 3.

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young millennials seek more social media privacy Our baptismal call

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EAR Lord, making us realize our baptismal call, we accept the challenge to proclaim Your Good News to many as we can. To cultivate a welcoming faith in this prayer corner. To communicate with anyone interested to deepen our faith. To inspire and encourage others in the celebration of the Eucharist. And to respond to God’s call by sharing our Godgiven talents by any means to honor and glorify You. Amen. MISSION STATEMENT AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

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

guide to social media VINE Create six-second looping videos and share them with the world. There are currently no privacy settings available. Compared to Instagram video, “It’s just more fun,” said Natalee Gallagher, 14. SNAPCHAT Take a picture or a 10-second

video, send it to one or several friends who must be individually selected, and, after one to 10 seconds of viewing, it disappears. Users can add a caption or draw on the picture with a Microsoft Paint-like tool. Popular for sending “ugly selfies.”

INSTAGRAM Take a picture or a 15-second

video, apply one of several vintage-looking filters— which usually remedies poor photographic ability or picture quality—and share privately with friends or with the world.

TWITTER Users post messages of up to 160

characters that are saved on a feed. Public feeds are searchable by anyone using Twitter, but feeds can be made private.

FACEBOOK The most visited social networking web

site in the world, where users can share pictures, links and play games with their friends. Not popular with young teens, according to Kennedy Arreguin, 13, who said, “Everyone’s parents got Facebook....” “So then it’s like, we don’t want to use that anymore,” continued her friend Natalee Gallagher.

Life

Saturday, October 25, 2014

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B E L The Sacramento Bee

experiment resulted in a direct correlation with a lower GPA. “It doesn’t mean Facebook is making them stupid,” Rosen said. “It’s because they are on it all the time. They check every 15 minutes or less. It holds a very powerful draw.” Rosen explained that the strong desire to check Facebook, other social media and text messages is associated with the brain’s release of GABA, epinephrine, serotonin and dopamine—the same chemicals associated with anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder. The brain triggers a drive to check technological inputs constantly to reduce buildup of these chemicals. If there is no release, then anxiety increases, Rosen said. In another study, Rosen looked at the anxiety levels of college students who had to go without their cellphones. The phones of one group were confiscated, and another group was told to put their phones face down underneath their desk. At first, anxiety levels increased all around. After 20 minutes, however, anxiety levels tapered off among the group that kept their phones. But, among the confiscated group? Their anxiety levels skyrocketed. “Adults think of technology as a tool. Kids don’t think of technology as a tool. Just like we don’t think about air—it’s something we use every day and we take for granted—they think of it as air, as an appendage, literally part of them,” Rosen said. Rosen said this behavior can be explained by the human desire for connection—but that “we, adults, grew up thinking connection was face to face, or, at worst, on the phone.” He cited a study that asked young people about their preferred way to connect with friends. In order, they said: 1) texting, 2) social media, 3) instant messaging, 4) telephone, and 5) face to face. Rosen noted that the only one that requires monotasking is face to face. “These younger generations do not like to unitask,” Rosen said. Jaeyln Singleton, 14, a sophomore at McClatchy, agreed. “Things just go a lot easier for me when I’m doing more than one thing at once,” she said. Another McClatchy student, Jesse Baugh, 16, said he gets annoyed when people call as opposed to text. “Right now if I got a phone call, I don’t know if it’s an emergency—at least send a text message before calling,”

said Baugh, who prefers texts because he can check them while doing other things. MTV Insights, the subdivision of MTV that headed the study, was unable to comment. Jason Rzepka, a media representative for MTV, said the actual study was proprietary information and would not be released to the public. Rosen urged educators and parents to help young people wean themselves off the need to check technology as often—to maintain productivity and creativity and to keep anxiety levels low. He suggested that teachers give a one-minute tech break at the beginning of class and after every subsequent 15-minute block, eventually increasing to 20 minutes, then 30, and finally moving to two minutes at the middle and end of class. Otherwise, students will think about nothing else except their phones. Rosen explained, “You can’t be nervous and learn.” “It’s not our fault. I think technology has finally figured out how to really trigger interest in our brain,” said Rosen. “It attacks all of our senses. God help us when they start having smells come out of our computer.” Rosen, an avid technology user, said he was pleased to discover MTV’s finding that young millennials are slimming down social networks and valuing privacy. Rosen’s 23-year-old daughter recently showed him how she used the increasingly popular— and controversial—Snapchat app. Rosen said Snapchat is not at all for sexting, as many parents fear. “I think it’s just a smart way to connect,” he said. “This younger generation is very concerned about privacy. We have to give them credit for being smarter.” Johnson, the McClatchy High student, said the honesty of Snapchat messages is what makes the app popular. “It’s almost real time,” Johnson said. “You can send really ugly pictures of yourself and then they disappear,” she said. Snapchat also forces Johnson to be creative. “You only have so much space to write,” she said, “so you have to think of something to make them laugh.” Regarding the popularity of Snapchat and more private social media, Rosen said, “Nobody has studied this yet, because it’s so new. But there is somewhat of a revelation that there are other ways to connect—and also maintain control.” ■

life

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no nash this season Sports NO NASH BusinessMirror

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| Saturday, OCtOber 25, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

THIS SEASON ‘Being on the court this season has been my top priority and it is disappointing to not be able to do that right now...I work very hard to stay healthy and, unfortunately, my recent setback makes performing at full capacity difficult. I will continue to support my team during this period of rest, and will focus on my long-term health.’ By Mike Bresnahan

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NASH will »sit STEVE out the entire season because of recurring nerve damage in his back. AP

Los Angeles Times

ITH considerably less fanfare than the day he was acquired, Steve Nash’s tenure with the Lakers ended. Nash will sit out the entire season because of recurring nerve damage in his back, the team announced on Thursday. The $9.71 million he will make in the third and final year of his contract still counts toward the Lakers’ salary cap this season. “Being on the court this season has been my top priority and it is disappointing to not be able to do that right now,” Nash said in a statement released on Thursday by the team. “I work very hard to stay healthy and, unfortunately, my recent setback makes performing at full capacity difficult. I will continue to support my team during this period of rest, and will focus on my long-term health.” Hopes were high when Nash, a two-time most valuable player, signed a three-year, $28-million contract with the Lakers in a July 2012 trade with Phoenix that cost them two first-round picks and two second-round picks. A month later, Dwight Howard was acquired, making the Lakers alleged championship contenders with Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol already in the mix. Nash was coming off a season in which he averaged 12.5 points and 10.7 assists with the Suns and was expected to be the dynamic point guard the Lakers had lacked for years. But he has been injury-prone since his second game with them, sustaining a broken bone in his lower left leg and subsequent nerve damage in the area after an in-game collision in Portland on October 31, 2012. Nash, who turns 41 in February, played only 15 games last season primarily because of the nerve condition in his back, which also leads to weakness in his hamstrings. When training camp began a few weeks ago, he was optimistically penciled in as the Lakers’ starting point guard under first-year Coach Byron Scott. He was able to make it through only one full game in exhibition play, totaling 11 points and five assists in 20 minutes of the Lakers’ opener against Denver. “I felt fine. I felt like I could do anything I wanted,” Nash said after that game. A day later, though, he was more cautious, mentally crossing his fingers that his back would hold up. “It’s been a crazy drive for me,” he said. “Maybe I’m starting to get to the other side of it...but it’s very tenuous. It’s such a monster to me over the last 18 months or two years that I’m not conceding anything to that beast.” He sat out the Lakers’ next game and removed himself at halftime of the Lakers’ third exhibition on October 12 because he “just didn’t feel right,” Scott said that night. Nash had missed all five of his shots against Golden State and finished with three points and one assist in 12 minutes. The Lakers still have three point guards on their roster—Jeremy Lin, rookie Jordan Clarkson and veteran Ronnie Price, who has a nonguaranteed contract. Price has been starting at point guard recently while Lin recovers from two sprained ankles, but Lin is expected to eventually take over the position. The team likes Clarkson, 22, a second-round draft pick, though he missed almost two weeks of exhibition play because of a strained calf and returned to action on Wednesday against Portland. Lin, 26, is in the last year of a contract that pays him $14.9 million this season. “As disappointed as we are for ourselves and our fans, we’re even more disappointed for Steve,” Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak said in a statement. “We know how hard he’s worked the last two years to try to get his body right for the rigors of the NBA, and how badly he wants to play, but unfortunately he simply hasn’t been able to get there up to this point in time. Steve has been a consummate professional, and we greatly appreciate his efforts.” Nash is not officially announcing his retirement, though he probably will determine that at some point this season. Until he did retire, the Lakers could trade him to another team, essentially as an expiring contract, though it would be a longshot for Nash to play again after basically sitting out two consecutive seasons. If Nash were to be traded, the Lakers would have to pay him an additional 15 percent trade kicker, as per terms of his contract. The Lakers could apply for a disabled player exception for up to half of Nash’s salary, or $4.85 million. The exception could be used to sign a player for the remainder of the season or trade for a player making up to $4.95 million in the final year of his contract. The Lakers begin the regular season on Tuesday against Houston at Staples Center.

SERIES GETS QUIRKY

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AN FRANCISCO—Eric Hosmer loaded up, launched a long fly and watched it sail toward McCovey Cove. Way out there in right field, near the 421foot mark, the ball bonked off the brick wall. No splash shot. “We were definitely trying to hit ‘em,” the Kansas City first baseman said. “We took turns trying, but no one did.” Even so, Hosmer liked what he saw during a workout on Thursday as many Royals got their first look at San Francisco’s waterfront ballpark. Starting in Game Three of the World Series on Friday against the Giants, they might also discover what makes AT&T Park so unique. “It’s a little quirky out there,” San Francisco Manager Bruce Bochy said. Just wait until someone trips over a bullpen mound chasing a foul ball. Or somebody loses a fly in the mist that wafts above shallow center. Or those swirling winds turn a routine popup into an all-out scramble. Who knows? Might even get a crazy carom off that odd-shaped brick façade on the right-field wall, resulting in the first Series inside-the-park home run since 1929.

“With that brick wall and that chain-link fence, the ball go could go anywhere,” Royals outfielder Lorenzo Cain said. Tim Hudson starts for San Francisco against Jeremy Guthrie as the Royals play their first game in San Francisco since 2005, when they took two of three. Buddy Bell was their manager back then, Tony Graffanino batted third and Jeremy Affeldt was in the bullpen. The 35-year-old Affeldt now pitches for the Giants and came on in relief on Wednesday night in a 7-2 loss. He said he figured the Royals could handle the new park. “That’s an athletic team over there. So I think they can make adjustments. I don’t think we’ll go in thinking that they’re at a disadvantage because

of not being at our ballpark,” he said. Seven players on the Royals’ 25-man roster have played at AT&T Park with other teams. Of the most frequent visitors, Josh Willingham has hit .352 with five homers in 16 games and Omar Infante has batted .307 in 19 games, STATS said. Among the pitchers, Guthrie did fine in two starts and Jason Frasor made two relief appearances. Cain played one game at the stadium in 2010 when he was with Milwaukee. The American League Championship Series Most Valuable Player practiced with coach Rusty Kuntz to gauge the bounces. “You have no idea of where it’s going,” Cain said. Good luck, Giants designated hitter Michael Morse said. “It’s a big park; right field is tricky. The wind does a lot of different things in the outfield, so our guys are used to it,” he said. “It’s tough. It’s tough out there. But everybody’s a professional. I don’t think it will be a factor.” One thing will change, for sure. With no designated hitter in the NL park, Morse and Kansas City’s Billy Butler will lose their spots—Morse drove in a run during a 7-1 win in the opener, while Butler already has three hits and a pair of RBIs.

A broader look at today’s business n

Saturday, October 25, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 17

21.4%

Not very confident

6.1%

6.7%

Not at all confident

Don’t know

Source: Reuters Graphic: Erik Rodriguez

© 2014 MCT

P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 28 pages | 7 days a week

With tight foul ground, gusts that whip off the bay, twilight starts and pesky seagulls that hover around in the late innings, a lot of balls become adventures in San Francisco. In 2007 Ichiro Suzuki hit the first insidethe-park home run in an All-Star game when his shot off the right-field wall took a weird ricochet. There have been nine inside-the-parkers in World Series play. Lou Gehrig and Casey Stengel are on the list, and Mule Haas of the Philadelphia Athletics hit the last one. Plus, postseason is frequently a weather adventure in the Bay Area. Players need to pack for all sorts of conditions—short sleeves, hoodies, hats and gloves. During the NLCS, Bochy said the teams played

in the toughest winds of the season. Right fielder Hunter Pence had no chance trying to track a fly ball by Saint Louis’s Kolten Wong that landed for a triple. “You play this game, you play in a lot of different ballparks and you find a way to adjust,” Pence said this week. “I think everyone’s going to enjoy it.” AP

sports PABLO SANDOVAL practices »in the batting cage during the Giants’ workout on Thursday. AP

By Cai U. Ordinario

espite the recent lifting of the truck ban in Manila, the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) said port congestion remains a major threat to the expansion of the country’s external trade, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary and Neda Director General Arsenio M. Balisacan said.

PESO ON RECOVERY MODE AS SELL-OFF SEEN ENDING

Young millennials seek more social-media privacy ACEBOOK is totally dying,” said Katie Johnson, 14, a McClatchy High School freshman. “It’s mostly just adults now,” she said. Johnson hardly ever checks Facebook, and doesn’t get a lot of text messages. “I usually only text my mom,” said Johnson, who used to text a lot. Her favorite way to contact friends now? Instagram and Snapchat. Longing to appeal to 14-to-17-year-olds, MTV recently conducted a nationwide marketing study to uncover their fast-evolving technology habits. The results were surprising: Teens 14 to 17 years old are slimming down their social networks and seeking out more private environments than Facebook to share, whether via Snapchat or locked Twitter and Instagram feeds. MTV found that teens in this age group—socalled young millennials—are also “taking time to disconnect, de-stress, de-stimulate and control inputs.” Individuals in that age group “increasingly ‘monotask,’” according to an MTV news release. Larry Rosen, a psychology professor at California State University, Dominguez Hills, and expert on the psychology of technology use, said he was intrigued, but not completely convinced, by all of the study’s findings. MTV claimed that 82 percent of young millennials monotask when stressed. Rosen, however, observed the opposite phenomenon in his research. Rosen’s team went into homes of middle school, high school and college-age students and observed them working on “something important”—their choice—for 15 minutes. They found that, on average, subjects could accomplish only three minutes of studying before being distracted and switching tasks, even though they knew they were being observed. The major culprits? Social media and texting. Rosen’s team also recorded General Point Average (GPA) and found some disturbing trends. Those who used social media more, as well as those who preferred to task-switch—Rosen dislikes the phrase “multitasking”—were worse students. Checking Facebook just once during the 15-minute

Very confident

“Although the truck ban has been lifted to ease congestion in Manila ports, cramped port yards remain an issue that may still have an impact on external trade. These should further be monitored and given ample solution to ease the flow of goods traversing Manila ports,” Balisacan said. Balisacan said solutions to prevent port congestion are crucial, especially with import growth posting a contraction of 1.3 See “Port,” A2 percent in August 2014.

HALLOWEEN, THE UNICEF WAY »D3

BusinessMirror

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Somewhat confident

24.1%

Port logjam still a scourge

driving up north korea’s mountain

We drove 2,150 kilometers in a country that has barely 25,000 km of road, and only 724 km of those paved. By the time we returned to the capital a week later, our Chinesemade Great Wall SUV had a few new scratches and one less hubcap. Our official destination was majestic Mount Paektu, with its jagged peaks surrounding a crystal-blue crater lake. North Korea is pursuing a plan to create dozens of special foreign investment and tourism zones, and this is one of the places it most wants to promote. The easiest way to get there is to fly, but we had been granted permission to drive. This, we were told, would mean traveling through places that no foreign journalists had been allowed to see before. Still, the trip was on North Korea’s terms. Even on the loneliest of lonely highways, we would never be without a “minder,” whose job was to moni-

41.7%

N.E.D.A. CALLS FOR AMPLE SOLUTION TO CRAMPED PORTS AFTER IMPORTS FELL 1.3% IN AUGust

INSIDE

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A Reuters poll asks Americans how confident they are that an Ebola outbreak in the U.S. could be contained

BusinessMirror

three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee

news@businessmirror.com.ph

Ebola containment confidence

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he peso capped a good week on Friday with a slight gain in the average trading value to 44.815 from 44.822 versus the dollar. This gave the local currency its first weekly advance since August on speculation a sell-off of the nation’s stocks is coming to an end. Overseas investors have been net buyers of local shares in the last two days, following 15 straight days of outflows, exchange data show. The nation’s good economic fundamentals will continue to support the peso, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said on Bloomberg Television on Friday. The Philippines reported a $17-million trade deficit for August, less than the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey for a $100-million shortfall. “The risk aversion is tapering off,” said Jonathan Ravelas, chief market strategist at Manila-based BDO Unibank Inc. “The market is slowly moving back to reality.” The peso appreciated 0.2 percent this week to 44.823 per dollar as of 12:16 p.m. in Manila, prices from Tullett Prebon Plc. show. The currency was little changed on Friday and lost 2.9 percent in a run of seven weekly declines ended October 17. One-month implied volatility, a measure of expected moves in the exchange rate used to price options, dropped 44 basis points, or 0.44 percentage point, See “Peso,” A8 this week to 6.04 percent.

PESO exchange rates n US 44.8220

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES President Aquino graces the 40th Philippine Business Conference (PBC) Expo closing ceremony at the Fiesta Pavilion of the Manila

Hotel in One Rizal Park, Manila City, on Friday. With the theme “Proudly Pinoy: Partnering Towards Sustained Growth,” the PBC Expo is an annual business summit that provides a collaborative venue for business leaders, government officials and other development stakeholders to exchange ideas on issues on business and the economy, as well as share business opportunities. Rey Baniquet/Malacañang Photo Bureau /PCOO

Palace still mulling over options on emergency-power resolution By Butch Fernandez

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alacañang is still mulling over options to speed up legislative action on its urgent request for special powers, as Congress is poised to adjourn next week without approving a joint resolution giving President Aquino the authority to contract additional generating capacity to avert the anticipated brownouts in 2015. Under the congressional calendar, the Senate and the House of Representatives are set to adjourn sessions by November 1 for a 15-day recess and will not be back until November 17.

Palace officials did not respond when asked if the Executive will appeal the House Energy Committee’s decision to defer action on its urgent request for emergency authority to address a potentially serious shortage of power supply in the summer months of 2015. Communications Secretary Herminio B. Coloma Jr., however, did not reply when asked if the Palace was considering calling Congress to a special session and cut short its upcoming vacation to act quickly on the President’s requested joint resolution needed to address the problem. Acting on the recommendation of

Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho L. Petilla, the Palace earlier invoked Section 71 of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (Epira), which provides that “upon determination of an imminent shortage of supply of electricity” President Aquino may ask Congress to pass a joint resolution to establish additional generating capacity. This “crisis provision” was inserted in the Epira to allow the Executive emergency options as the same law bars the government from putting up power-generating plants to prevent the state from competing with See “Palace,” A2

n japan 0.4140 n UK 71.8497 n HK 5.7783 n CHINA 7.3245 n singapore 35.1132 n australia 39.3037 n EU 56.6864 n SAUDI arabia 11.9471 Source: BSP (24 October 2014)


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