Businessmirror 10 31 2014

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

Life

Friday, October 31, 2014

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KRISTEN STEWART IS IN A GOOD PLACE

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B D F | USA Today

EW YORK—Almost precisely two years ago, Kristen Stewart was hunched in a dark corner of the Tribeca Grand Hotel’s restaurant, sipping a glass of white wine and relentlessly scanning the room. ❖ There was nothing she loathed more than people spotting her, gawping and then pretending it hadn’t happened. On the flip side, she also detested that feeling of being openly stared at, which accompanies most famous people when they’re spotted out doing things like eating or drinking or pumping gas. And it definitely is part and parcel of being onehalf of the planet’s most notable vampire couples, as was the case when Stewart, 24, headlined the Twilight saga as Bella Swan. Yet, on this sunny, breezy afternoon at the Greenwich Hotel, it all feels like a lifetime ago for Stewart. She still repeatedly glances around the room, but she’s visibly more relaxed, easy, even outgoing in her own way. “I’m really happy right now, overly happy. I’m definitely not looking furtively—I like to look around at [stuff]. I feel great. I’m not overcoming fear right now,” she says. Back when she was last working the promotional circuit, she was on the tail-end of the century’s Great Love Triangle, involving her, Robert Pattinson and then-married director Rupert Sanders, whom she’d been spotted kissing. Stewart never discussed what followed: the kind of public flaying usually reserved for wayward politicians, if anyone at all. During that final Twilight push, Stewart says, “I was scared of so many things. I was not overcompensating but just compensating.” So she finished her required amount of press, kept her head down and shot seven films back to back. The first one to garner major attention is Camp X-Ray, out in limited release and starring Stewart as a wide-eyed army private assigned to Guantánamo Bay. She has never heard of the German city of Bremen, has never read a Harry Potter book when she’s faced with political prisoners hurling feces at the military personnel. And she comes to understand just how complex the whole war on terror is. “I’m definitely not one to get on a soapbox about things I care about. You can affect change in other ways. That’s why doing interviews about it is funny for me. Dude, I did a movie. I thought it was a courageous reminder,” she sighs. “It is not righteous in any way. I was really excited to play an essentially American girl who is so simple. I thought it was interesting to have this girl, a good person, a sweet person, a positively inclined girl who wants to forget herself and wants to be dignified by something. How do you condemn anyone who wants to serve our country? The denigration of that notion was really interesting.” After rebuffing the drunk advances of her boss, Stewart’s Amy Cole is trapped in a situation that slips out of her control, with both implied and obvious hostility directed at her. All the while,

she has to be a pro with the condemned, loathed prisoners under her care, one of whom winds up being her friend despite being labeled a threat. As a famous person, has Stewart felt that judged herself? “Actually, yeah. I never made that connection. Sure, I feel that. It’s silly. It’s so transparently a projection. It’s so insular. It has nothing to do with me. It’s everyone else’s hang-ups,” she says. Stewart just wrapped her final film, the futuristic Equals, starring Nicholas Hoult and directed by Like Crazy’s Drake Doremus. The project, she said, tore her up emotionally and necessitated what she long thought she needed: a break to just be Kristen the person. She won’t read a single script in the coming months. “I’m taking some time off because I’ve been working for two years. I’m an actor and that’s my art form. And, because I started that so young, I’ve always felt intimidated and insufficient when I think about other forms of art I want to create. I’m going to take so much time off,” she says. “I’m going to buy a live-work space in downtown LA and I’m going to make some [stuff] with my hands. Literally, I made that decision a few weeks ago. I’m making a short film. I’m making a bunch of [stuff]. I don’t know how I’ll put it out. But I’m not going to hold it so preciously close to me. I write all the time.” The actress has been famously ill at ease in the public eye. She says she’s still weirded out by red carpets, but it’s gotten better, and easier. As for her very vocal group of fans (and haters), Stewart keeps her distance from it—she is not on Twitter or Facebook and has a private friends-only Instagram account. She can’t even fathom shredding her anonymity even further by sharing what she’s eating for dinner, or what movie she just watched. “What would I tweet about? Who are you talking to? What are you saying? Imagine sitting here right now and thinking, ‘That’s a good thing to say to the world?’” she says, glancing at her phone. “What? I can’t even understand it.” Not that she’s agonizing over it. Or much of anything else, she says. “Now, I really have no apprehension about anything, which is great. I can get behind all of my creative endeavors more so than ever before. I’m super happy and challenged and inspired and relaxed,” she says. The fame thing, Stewart says, is what it is. Dressed today in a white crop top, which she

life

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Dubai vows boom, not bubble The World BusinessMirror

news@businessmirror.com.ph

Friday, October 31, 2014 B3-3

Dubai vows the boom is not bubble this time B J K | Bloomberg

First of two parts

LONGSIDE the Dubai Mall, one of the world’s largest shopping centers, sits an ersatz version of what would be an authentic retail experience in most Persian Gulf cities: an Arab souk.

If, in the evening, you stroll through this air-conditioned, hassle- and haggle-free caricature of a market, staffed mostly by smiling South Asians, you can amble out onto the shores of manmade Burj Khalifa Lake, named after the world’s tallest building, which looms over it. Here—bumping elbows with a veritable United Nations General Assembly of residents and tourists decked out in everything from dishdashas to Dior—you can gawk at the Dubai Fountain, Bloomberg Markets magazine will report in its December issue. Every half-hour, an array of computer-choreographed nozzles sends jets of water erupting from the lake’s surface 500 feet into the air, gyrating to Middle Eastern pop one minute and Andrea Bocelli singing “Con Te Partiro” the next. Awash in fantasia, this metropolis of glass and steel sprouting from the barren sands of the Arabian Peninsula

often seems nothing more than an illusion born of desert heat. Never was Dubai more miragelike than five years ago, after the global financial crisis crushed what had been a bastion of wealth and growth. House prices plunged as much as 60 percent. Half of the city’s $582 billion in construction projects were either placed on hold or abandoned, their incomplete steel skeletons left poking from the sand, a 21st-century Ozymandias.

Mechanical ballet

NOW, Dubai is booming again. To understand why, journey 32 kilometers from the Dubai Mall to a part of the city few tourists ever see. Here, if you pass through the security gates at Jebel Ali port, you’re treated to another mesmerizing mechanical ballet—one less ephemeral and arguably more important to the city-state’s fate than the Dubai Fountain’s dancing waters.

Towering gantry cranes sidle up to 365-meter-long container ships bound for Mumbai or Singapore or Rotterdam. They delicately pluck containers from the tarmac, hoist them into the air in a single, fluid motion and stack them like children’s blocks onto ship decks. The port is a crucial pillar in the efforts of Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, to ensure that this time around, growth rests on a more stable footing: moving away from real estate and leaning instead on trade and shipping as well as finance and tourism.

what it was before the financial crisis, Marios Maratheftis, global head of macro research at Standard Chartered Plc. in Dubai, says the current pace is sustainable. “We would much prefer 4 [percent] to 5 percent than to see 8 percent,” he says. Before the financial crisis, creditfueled real-estate speculation was the major driver of Dubai’s economic growth. Today Maratheftis says, it’s hospitality, retail and logistics. Dubai has profited from its neighbors’ misfortunes. “The Libyans, the Syrians, the Egyptians, the Iranians: They’re all here,” says Patrick Lord, Dubai-based Middle East managing director at Control Risks Group Holdings Ltd., a political- and business-risk consulting firm. “It’s become the place to come—if not physically, then for their money to come.”

government’s commercial assets; he’s also director general of the Ruler’s Court, which functions as the emir’s advisory council.

No duplicity

HIS first task was to persuade creditors to give Dubai enough time to figure out exactly how much it owed. Lenders were suspicious that Dubai was trying to cover up the extent of its financial woes. There was no duplicity on Dubai’s part, Al Shaibani says; the city simply couldn’t keep up with its own growth. “Some banks were concerned we weren’t sharing information,” he says. “In reality, we didn’t have the information to share.” After a $10-billion cash injection from its Emirati next-door neighbor, oilrich Abu Dhabi, and a year of tense negotiations with creditors, Dubai World Corp., the holding company that manages much of the Dubai government’s investment portfolio, agreed to restructure $23.5 billion in liabilities in November 2010. Dubai’s rebound since then has been dramatic. As of late October, the benchmark Dubai Financial Market General Index (DFMGI) was three times higher than its 2009 low, making it among the 10-best-performing stock markets in the world during that time period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Frontier gateway

DUBAI, one of seven principalities that make up the United Arab Emirates, has only minimal oil reserves. Instead, the city-state has positioned itself as the hinge connecting Asia to the rest of the world, the gateway city for the fast-growing frontier markets of Africa and a safe haven for investors shunning an arc of conflict that stretches from Libya to Afghanistan. Still, with real-estate prices reaching new highs amid plans for more office towers, more luxury resorts and more gargantuan shopping malls, the question remains: Can Dubai escape the excesses that nearly sank it before? Mohammed Al Shaibani thinks it can. Sheikh Mohammed enlisted Al Shaibani to help restructure as much as €110 billion ($177 billion) in debt Dubai was left holding in 2009. Al Shaibani, 50, is CEO of Investment Corp. of Dubai, which oversees the

‘Frontline state’

EVEN so, the UAE’s participation in US-led air attacks on Islamic State strongholds in Syria and Iraq may jeopardize Dubai’s haven status. Christopher Davidson, a researcher at Durham University in the UK who specializes in the Gulf states, says of the UAE: “They are no longer influential neutrals and are instead becoming a frontline state in a war that could engulf the whole region.” He says, however, that Dubai’s economic model is not in immediate danger. Setting its sights to the west, Dubai is now looking to profit from Africa’s successes. Once-moribund economies from Ghana to Angola to Kenya have grown

Sustainable growth

GROSS domestic product (GDP) expanded 4.6 percent in 2013, and the government expects it to top 5 percent this year. Although this rate is half

at 5 percent or more a year since 2009, and a rising number of European, US and Asian businesses are putting their African headquarters in Dubai. “You can’t run Africa out of London or French Africa out of Paris anymore, like it used to be in the old days,” says Fadi Ghandour, the co-founder and vice chairman of Aramex PJSC, a Dubai-based transportation and logistics company with close to $1 billion in annual revenue that has recently begun expanding into Africa. “Today, there’s a competitor, and it is here in Dubai.”

‘Plug and play’

THE Jebel Ali port is one reason. Dubai’s air connections are another. Stateowned airline Emirates, which started out with two Boeing 727s in 1985, now flies to 140 destinations around the globe, including 24 African cities. In the first three months of 2014, Dubai International Airport surpassed London’s Heathrow, handling more than 18 million travelers, compared with Heathrow’s 16 million. An airport currently under construction, the $80-billion Dubai World Central-Al Maktoum International Airport, will have five runways and capacity for 160 million passengers annually when it’s completed sometime between 2020 and 2030. Ghandour says Dubai is the Middle East’s only “plug-and-play” city. Born in Beirut, Ghandour grew up in Jordan and now splits his time between Amman and Dubai, which he began visiting regularly in the early 1980s. To be concluded

Syria’s three-year conflict roiling the economy B D H The Associated Press

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AMASCUS, Syria—The middle-aged salesman sat glumly among an array of shorts, khaki leisure suits bedecked with gold belts and dresses with plunging necklines in the ancient Damascus bazaar— luxuries few can afford in today’s Syria. He, like many traders, lost most of his customers when Syria’s uprising erupted in 2011 against the rule of President Bashar al-Assad, and his new clientele is far poorer: Syrians fleeing the fighting with barely any possessions. Now, he fears there’s even worse to come, as the US-led bombings of the Islamic State group target the country’s modest oil reserves under the militants’ control, sending oil and diesel prices soaring. The effect is rippling through the economy, and traders fear they would not be able to absorb the increased costs, pushing them out of business and unraveling yet another key sector of Syrian society, already badly frayed by conflict. “We are hearing there’s unimaginable prices for the winter,” said the 50-year-old clothing vendor, who gave only his first name Amin, referring to the wholesalers he purchases from. “We have been through struggles before, but not like this.” Like all traders who spoke to the Associated Press, he declined to provide his last name, for fear of being identi-

fied as criticizing the Syrian government. Earlier this month, the government raised the subsidized price of diesel from 36 cents to 48 cents a liter just before a major Islamic holiday. The price of heating oil went from 73 cents a liter to 85 cents. The increased prices were tied to the US bombing of small oil wells, tankers and pumping stations under the control of the Islamic State group in the eastern Syrian provinces of Deir al-Zour and Hassakeh, which began in late September. The militants had been selling the fuel at a cut-rate price—including some $1 billion to the Syrian government—and the proceeds amounted to one of the group’s main sources of income, according to a Mideast-based Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. Syria has modest oil reserves. Before the conflict it was pumping 360,000 barrels a day; since the fighting it has only managed 16,000 barrels, Syria economy expert Abdul-Qader Azouz said. That has made it reliant on exports, and militants selling back the country’s resources. The knock-on effects of the latest fuel price hike and continued bombings have already impacted the price of bread, yogurt and milk. The price of a loaf of unsubsidized bread rose to 97 cents from 85 cents—more than

PEOPLE shop in the ancient bazaar known as the Hamidiyeh souq in Damascus, Syria, on Monday. The souq is one of Syria’s chief markets, once packed with tourists and visitors from around the country. Even amid conflict, it’s still an important shopping spot for the country’s working classes but prices here have already quadrupled over the past four years for most products in the market. AP/DIAA HADID four times the 21-cent price tag before the crisis. Milk rose to $1.13 from $1. Before the crisis it was 30 cents. The prices of other goods are likely to rise in the next few weeks, said traders at the Damascus bazaar, known as the Hamidiyeh Souk, who are an important measure of the economy’s pulse. One of Syria’s chief markets, it was once packed with tourists and visitors from around the country who shopped in its cavernous maze of arched alleyways and ancient Roman columns, snapping up everything from antiques to wispy lingerie and sweets—a rumble of chaotic crowds and pigeons flying

overhead. Even amid the conflict, it’s still an important shopping spot for the country’s working classes. Prices have already quadrupled over the past four years for most products in the market. The printed leisure suit in Amin’s stall cost $6 prewar; now it’s $21. While that appears cheap by Western standards, salaries are low in Syria: Most civil servants and soldiers are paid around $100 a month. The price tag for a bottle of perfume at another stall was $4.30. Preconflict it was $1.50. “And at the lower price, we were making a better profit on it,” because of the

increased cost of raw materials, trader Hussam said. As he spoke, a Syrian government plane flew overhead, followed by the thud of a bomb dropping. Nobody flinched. On a recent day, the busiest place was Bakdash, a century-old ice cream shop considered to make the finest gelato in Syria. But even here, the shop was only half full after prices quadrupled from 30 cents a cup to $1.20. Azouz, the Syrian economy expert, said the government was trying to stave off more losses by appealing to Russia for fuel supplies and wheat. It was also asking Iran for guarantor credit lines of $3 billion for oil products and another $1 billion for other expenses, he said. Azouz said resources were being diverted to ensure “the steadfastness” of the Syrian army—meaning soldiers had first access to fuel and food—and to cover payments for the families of soldiers killed in the fighting. The Syrian government has come under fire from its own loyalists for the staggering number of soldiers killed during the conflict, now in its fourth year. The central bank has also intervened to ensure the Syrian pound doesn’t collapse, a policy, Azouz said, would continue. Most of Syria’s impoverished have already hit rock bottom. One 20-year-old vendor, Mohammed, who works selling

vegetables to try to cover his family’s $90 monthly rent, said his family was relying on food aid donated by the social ministry. “It’s beans, sugar and oil,” he said. “We are as you see us,” he added, pointing to his shabby pants and jacket. Another woman, who said her family was living off her son’s salary as a soldier and her husband’s pension, said they hadn’t bought diesel to heat their home in two years because it had become too expensive. “We sit under blankets,” said 45-yearold Umm Ahmad. “We don’t know luxuries anymore.” It wasn’t immediately clear how many Syrian businesses have shut down during the conflict. Some have moved to neighboring Lebanon and Jordan, while others have closed because they were in active battle zones, or because they were bombed into rubble. But even here, in the relatively safe Hamidiyeh area, about a quarter of the shops were closed. A handbag trader said he wasn’t sure how much longer he could hold on if prices rose again, badly cutting into profits when sales were already so bad. “The first year, the second year, those who had good work before the crisis and whose situation was middle class or better—they had a bit of money,” said Firas. But now, traders were running out of cash to cover their continuous loses.

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Giants win world series! C | F, O ,  mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

PAU GASOL scores 21 points and had 11 rebounds in his Chicago debut. AP

GIANTSWINWORLDSERIES! K

B R B The Associated Press

THE GIANTS, A 20-1 LONGSHOT WHEN 2014 ODDS WERE FIRST POSTED A YEAR AGO, WON THEIR EIGHTH TITLE AND THIRD SINCE MOVING FROM NEW YORK TO SAN FRANCISCO AFTER THE 1957 SEASON. THEY ALSO HAVE WON 10 STRAIGHT POSTSEASON ROUNDS, ONE SHY OF THE RECORD SET BY THE NEW YORK YANKEES FROM 1998 TO 2001.

joined Cincinnati’s Rawley Eastwick in 1975 as the only pitchers with at least two wins and a save in a World Series, and the 15-out save set a Series record. With it all, Bumgarner etched his place in postseason lore among the likes of Christy Mathewson, Babe Ruth, Sandy Koufax, Bob Gibson, Reggie Jackson, Randy Johnson, Curt Schilling and David Ortiz— players whose indelible October performances led their team to titles. Posey expected Bumgarner to throw three innings, then turn over the game to setup man Sergio Romo and closer Santiago Casilla—who threw four pitches in the entire Series. “But he just kept rolling,” Posey said. “I mean, it’s unbelievable.” Consecutive sacrifice flies by Michael Morse and Brandon Crawford put the Giants ahead 2-0 on the second against Jeremy Guthrie, but Tim Hudson gave the lead right back in the bottom half on Gordon’s RBI double and Omar Infante’s sacrifice fly. Morse hit a go-ahead single in the fourth on a 99-mph (160-kph) fastball from reliever Kelvin Herrera to break a 2-2 deadlock, and the Giants eked out a battle of bullpens on a night when both starting pitchers made unusually quick exits. The Giants became the second National League team with three titles in a five-year span, matching the Saint Louis Cardinals of 1942-1946. Home teams had won nine straight Game Sevens in the Series since Pittsburgh’s victory at Baltimore in 1979, including the Royals’ 11-0 rout of Saint Louis in 1985. Teams hosting the first two games had won 23 of the last 28 titles, including five in a row. And the Giants had lost all four of their previous World Series

GASOL, BULLS BLOW KNICKS NEW YORK—Pau Gasol scored 21 points and had 11 rebounds in his Chicago debut to help the Bulls spoil Derek Fisher’s first game as a National Basketball Association (NBA) coach by beating the New York Knicks, 104-80, on Wednesday. Reserve Taj Gibson finished with 22 points to lead the Bulls and Derrick Rose scored 13 points after missing most of the last two seasons. Rose, the former Most Valuable Player, took only seven shots and had five assists in 21 minutes in a game Chicago led by as much as 35. Rose missed the 20122013 season after tearing his left anterior cruciate ligament in the 2012 playoffs. He returned last season and hit the go-

ahead shot to beat the Knicks on Halloween in Chicago’s home opener, but was lost again for the season when he tore cartilage in the other knee in November. Carmelo Anthony had 14 points for the Knicks, who won’t have it any easier in the second half of their season-opening, back to back. They visit the Cavaliers, the other Eastern Conference favorite, on Thursday in the first game since LeBron James returned to Cleveland. Miami’s Chris Bosh had 26 points and 15 rebounds and Norris Cole scored a career-high 23 points after winning Miami’s starting point-guard job as the Heat beat the Washington Wizards, 107-95, to open the post-LeBron James era. Dwyane Wade added 21 points for Miami, 12 of those down the stretch after he briefly departed with a leg injury. Luol Deng, part of the class assembled this summer after James departed, scored 12 points. At Boston Rajon Rondo returned from a

pushed to the limit. But before a pumped-up, blue-and-white-clad crowd of 40,535 that hoped noise and passion could lift the small-market Royals to a title that seemed improbable when Kansas City was languishing two games under .500 in mid-July, the Giants won the second all-wild card World Series, 12 years after losing Game Seven to the Angels in the first. Hudson and Guthrie combined for 15 outs— matching the fewest by Game Seven starters. Hudson, at 39, became the oldest Game Seven starter. The 35-year-old Guthrie took the loss. With his shaggy hair making him look every bit a gunslinger, Bumgarner entered to boos in the bottom of the fifth, coated his long arms with rosin and groomed the pocked-up mound with his spikes. He gave up an opposite-field single to his first batter, Infante, then didn’t allow a runner until the ninth. Bumgarner gave up two hits, struck out four and walked none. He pitched 52 2/3 postseason innings, 4 1/3 more than the previous mark set by Schilling for Arizona in 2001, and finished with 270 innings combined, including the regular season. “Yeah, it was hopeless,” Royals Manager Ned Yost said. Pence batted .444 in the Series and Sandoval, a free-agent-to-be playing perhaps his last game for the Giants, finished at .429 following a three-hit night. The Giants, a 20-1 longshot when 2014 odds were first posted a year ago, won their eighth title and third since moving from New York to San Francisco after the 1957 season. They also have won 10 straight postseason rounds, one shy of the record set by the New York Yankees from 1998 to 2001.

broken hand and had 13 points, 12 assists and seven rebounds in the season opener to help the Celtics beat the Brooklyn Nets, 121-105. Kelly Olynyk had 19 points and Jeff Green added 17 for Boston, which opened a 29-point lead at the end of the third quarter and coasted to the win. Mirza Teletovic had 20 points and six rebounds in 23 minutes off the bench for the Nets. Joe Johnson scored 19 points for Brooklyn, and Deron Williams had 19 points and eight assists. The Suns beat the Los Angeles Lakers, 119-99, despite Kobe Bryant’s 31 points after Isaiah Thomas scored 23 points in his Phoenix debut and Marcus Morris matched his career high with five three-pointers. Goran Dragic scored 12 of his 18 points in the third quarter, when the Suns outscored the Lakers 39-24 and led by as many as 29. Phoenix’s Eric Bledsoe had 16 points and nine assists before he drew his second technical foul and was ejected with 30

seconds left in the third quarter. Bryant, 11 of 25 from the field, didn’t play in the fourth quarter. Ed Davis scored 14 points and Wayne Ellington 13 for Los Angeles. Golden State’s Stephen Curry had 24 points and 10 rebounds as an undermanned Warriors downed the Los Angeles Kings, 95-77, while LaMarcus Aldridge had 27 points as the Portland Trail Blazers rallied in the fourth quarter to beat Oklahoma City, 106-89. In other games, Kemba Walker made a 21-footer from the top of the key with five seconds left in overtime to lift the Charlotte Hornets past the Milwaukee Bucks, 108106; the Memphis Grizzlies defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves, 105-101; and the Houston Rockets downed the Utah Jazz, 104-93. The Indiana Pacers defeated the Philadelphia 76ers, 103-91; the Toronto Raptors beat the Atlanta Hawks, 109-102; and the Denver Nuggets were 89-79 winners over the Detroit Pistons. AP

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of the US economy, it should be positive for the emerging-market economy trading partners of the US, including the Philippines,” Tetangco said in a mobile-phone message to reporters. “This also takes out one aspect of uncertainty in the market,” he quickly added. “That said, the Fed action gives us some latitude to keep rates steady as our own domestic inflation dynamics is fairly stable and allows previous Continued on A2

Most Rev. Pablo Virgilio S. David (center), DD, auxiliary bishop of San Fernando, receives a plaque of appreciation as the guest of honor and keynote speaker from Ambassador Antonio L. Cabangon Chua (left), chairman and president of the Catholic Mass Media Awards (CMMA); and Luis Antonio G. Cardinal Tagle, DD, CMMA honorary chairman, during the 36th CMMA gala night at the GSIS Theater in Pasay City. ROY DOMINGO

Abaya orders LTFRB to use Uber inputs in modernizing local transport rules

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BusinessMirror

ANSAS CITY, Missouri—Madison Bumgarner punctuated a World Series performances for the ages by pitching the San Francisco Giants to their third title in five years with a 3-2 win over the Kansas City Royals in Game Seven on Wednesday night. The big left-hander came out of the bullpen to throw five scoreless innings on two days’ rest, saving a Series pushed to the limit. And by winning Game Seven on the road, Bumgarner and the Giants succeeded where no team had in three-and-a-half decades. “I wasn’t thinking about innings or pitch count. I was just thinking about getting outs, getting outs, until I couldn’t get them anymore and we needed someone else,” Bumgarner said in a monotone that made it sound as though he was talking about batting practice. A two-out misplay in the ninth almost wrecked it for him. Bumgarner had retired 14 in a row when Alex Gordon sent a drive to center. Bumgarner pointed his glove in the air, thinking it could be the final out, but the ball fell in front of center fielder Gregor Blanco for a single. Blanco, however, allowed it to roll past him to the wall, and left fielder Juan Perez kicked the ball before throwing to shortstop Brandon Crawford in short left, causing Gordon to hold at third. “When it got by him, I had a smile on my face. I thought maybe I could score, but he got to it quickly enough,” Gordon said. “I just put my head down and ran, almost fell around second base, was just waiting for Jirsch [third base Coach Mike Jirschele] to give me the signal. It was a good hold, he had the ball in plenty of time.” Blanco hoped for the best. “We just need one more out. We got this. Let’s do it,” he thought to himself. Bumgarner, the Series Most Valuable Player, then retired Salvador Perez on a foul out to third baseman Pablo Sandoval near the Giants’ dugout. The 25-yearold ace was immediately embraced by catcher Buster Posey, and the rest of the Giants rushed to the mound to join the victory party. Most of the San Francisco players tossed their gloves high in the air as they ran to the center of the diamond. “What a warrior he is, and truly incredible what he did throughout the postseason,” Giants Manager Bruce Bochy said. “I just told him I just can’t believe what he accomplished through all this. He’s such a humble guy, and we rode him pretty good.” Three days after throwing 117 pitches in a four-hit shutout to win Game Five, Bumgarner threw 68 more and dropped his record-low career Series ERA to a barely visible 0.25. Bumgarner initially was credited with the win. But nearly an hour after the final out, the official scorers awarded it to Jeremy Affeldt, who was in the game when San Francisco took the lead. Affeldt pitched 2 1/3 innings of scoreless relief in his longest outing since July 2012. He was helped by the first reversal in the Series by expanded instant replay, which gave the Giants a double play on Eric Hosmer’s grounder, which second baseman Joe Panik stopped with a dive and flipped to Crawford with his glove for the relay. Bumgarner

he Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) hinted broadly on Thursday of more stable interest rates over the next 12 months, its strongest word yet on the direction of short-term interest charges, following the US Federal Reserve (the Fed) decision putting an end to more than five years of monetary and fiscal stimulation.

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

Sports BY winning Game Seven on the road, Madison Bumgarner and the Giants succeeded where no team had in threeand-a-half decades. AP

By Bianca Cuaresma

The US Fed decision, BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said, effectively removed that air of uncertainty hanging over interest charges in the Philippines that have been deliberately kept low to help the $270-billion economy achieve growth, measured as the gross domestic product (GDP), as high as 7 percent this year. “The Fed’s announcement of the end of taper was widely expected, and to the extent this confirms the underlying strength

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BusinessMirror

Friday, October 31, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 23

FOMC MOVE TO END BOND-BUYING PROGRAM REMOVES ‘ASPECT OF UNCERTAINTY’ in bsp’s own rate adjustments

Kristen Stewart is in a good place EAR Lord, thank You for a month of vacation filled with unusual happenings that make life thrilling, fulfilling and enriching. But it must end. Coming back to reality is sometimes hard to accept, but if we want to function as normal individuals, we must accept and live the conditions and situations in God’s mercy and love. Amen.

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ransportation Secretary Joseph Emilio A. Abaya has directed the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) to be more considerate in handling the case of carpooling-services provider Uber, saying his agency is looking at amending transport rules to make traveling around Metro Manila safer and more convenient. The transport chief said his office has instructed LTFRB Chairman Winston M. Ginez to meet with Uber officials to seek inputs on how to revise transport regulations to “facilitate

PESO exchange rates n US 44.7380 n japan 0.4109

convenient, safe and reliable services to the public; not hamper them.” “I have asked the LTFRB to reach out to Uber, and seek ways to modernize our transportation rules. While the LTFRB was only doing its job in implementing the law, we also have a duty to push for modern solutions to archaic problems,” he said. The Cabinet official said his agenc y’s role shou ld be “one that is supportive of new approaches to addressing transportation inadequacies.” “Regulations must keep up with fast-paced technological innovations; and one way to do that is to

amend antiquated laws or policies, which may no longer be responsive to today’s needs,” he added. The transport chief and officials from the regulatory body will meet with Uber executives “soon” in an effort to modernize the government’s regulatory function over vehicles for public use, in such a way that innovative solutions will be allowed to flourish, without sacrificing safety and security oversight functions. “We welcome the solutions made possible by technology in helping us meet the public’s needs. At the same time, we recognize the LTFRB for

TAGLE: USE MEDIA TO FOSTER GENUINE HUMAN ENCOUNTER By David Cagahastian

T

he prestigious Catholic Mass Media Awards (CMMA) honored for the 36th year the distinguished students, professionals and organizations that made use of mass communication in promoting Christian values among Filipinos. The gala night of the CMMA’s 36th edition, successfully held at the GSIS Financial Center in Pasay City on Wednesday, carried the theme “Communication at the Service of an Authentic Culture of Encounter,” in support of Pope Francis’s message during the World Communications Day on June 1, where he stressed

the importance of human interaction amid the big technological advances in the past years. “It is our hope that, by embracing this theme for the CMMA, we may encourage our mass-media professionals and institutions to strive to bring about a genuine human encounter and institutions where, in sharing our insights, sentiments and faith convictions, we may support and cooperate with each other in building a world where the Kingdom values of justice and love reign,” said Luis Antonio G. Cardinal Tagle, archbishop of Manila, in his message to the 36th year of the CMMA. Continued on A4

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n UK 71.6390 n HK 5.7673 n CHINA 7.3207 n singapore 35.0227 n australia 39.8025 n EU 56.5399 n SAUDI arabia 11.9260 Source: BSP (30 October 2014)


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Businessmirror 10 31 2014 by BusinessMirror - Issuu