BusinessMirror April 1, 2015

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VERTIS NORTH CHANGES THE BUSINESS AND LIFESTYLE LANDSCAPE IN QUEZONProperty CITY» E1

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THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008

A broader look at today’s business TfridayNovember Wednesday, April18, 1, 2014 2015 Vol. Vol.10 10No. No.40 174

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SMARTPHONE DOMINATION Righteous and faithful

H Lord, hear our prayer, listen to our cry for mercy, answer us, You who are righteous and faithful. Do not bring Your servant to judgment, for no mortal is just in Your sight. We wish to stand with clean mind, heart and soul before You, oh God, to please You ever. We wish to be certain that You are pleased with what we do all the days of our lives. Amen.

VIRGIE SALAZAR AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

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

Life

DOLE backs plea to limit holidays

PC SECURITY UPGRADES A WELCOME ANTIDOTE TO BREACHES »D2

BusinessMirror

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

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LG G3 HOLDS GRAND CELEBRATION SALE

ANDROID users have one great reason to celebrate this summer, as no less than “Best Smartphone” LG G3 is on a grand sale until April 5 in honor of its recent victory at this year’s Mobile World Congress. The 32GB variant of the LG G3 is currently retailing for P29,990 from its P35,990 SRP, allowing purchasers a substantial P6,000 worth of savings for the coveted handset. “We are truly excited about all the acclaim that our current flagship smartphone is garnering both internationally and locally,” LG Mobile Philippines Vice President Jay Won said. “This celebration sale is to thank our consumers for all their great support, and for being our inspiration to innovate products that make life simpler and smarter.” The renowned LG G3 sports a vibrant 5.5-inch quad HD display with razor-sharp image quality and a powerful 2.5-GHz quad-core processor, while its 13-megapixel camera that boasts of Optical Image Stabilization Plus and Laser Auto Focus. Simple and intuitive features, such as the KnockCode, Smart Keyboard and Gesture for Selfie, are packed into the G3’s slim, sleek and modern body. The LG G3 celebration sale (bit.ly/LGG3CelebSale) is available in all LG concept stores nationwide.

Smartphone domination pretty close to complete

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B P S Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

N case you haven’t raised your head long enough to notice the throngs of people gazing hypnotically at their smartphones, the nation has passed a milestone. Smartphones now make up 75 percent of the mobile-phone market, up from 65 percent a year ago and just 2 percent a decade ago, according to the Internet analytics firm comScore. Put another way, three-quarters of Americans age 13 and older now have smartphones. Most other people have some other type of cell phone, such as a flip phone or TracFone, used mostly for old-fashioned talking. The percentage of people who don’t own any kind of mobile phone is so low it’s not worth mentioning, said Andrew Lipsman, vice president of marketing and insights at comScore, based in Reston, Virginia. “If you take a look at the big picture, it’s how mobile has taken over and become the dominant platform through which people engage in digital media,” he said. Desktop-computer usage has flattened out, but people are spending more time in front of a digital screen—whether it be on the way to work, throughout the day, sitting in front of the TV or in bed at night—because of the availability of smartphones and tablets, he said. On the plus side, as a nation of smartphone users connected to the Internet 24/7, people are better informed and may be learning more quickly, Lipsman said. Still, there are negative implications to consider, as well. “Obviously, the drawback is what that [greater reliance on smartphones] means for how people engage

with each other,” he said. Research released last month by the digital technology firm Apigee in San Jose, California, along with Stanford University’s Mobile Innovation Group, found a deepening dependence on smartphones for social interaction. Dependency was strongest among the one-quarter of smartphone users who reported using their devices the most. Among these top users, the majority said they used their phones “nearly all the time,” including while at dinner with others. Twenty-one percent of top users said they could not maintain a relationship with a significant other without the apps on their phones, while 19 percent said they couldn’t find new friends without their smartphones. Among all smartphone owners surveyed, 11 percent said they would be unable to be happy without their electronic companions. It’s probably no surprise that younger Americans tend to use smartphones the most. Among every age group between 13 and 44, at least 85 percent have smartphones, according to the comScore survey. Then the numbers drop off. Among people ages 45 to 54, it’s 76 percent; ages 55 to 64, 63 percent; and for those 65 and older, it’s 48 percent. Apple devices are the most popular, making up 41 percent of the market, followed by Samsung at 29 percent, LG at 8 percent, Motorola with 5 percent and HTC with 4 percent, comScore said. As for the most popular smartphone apps, Facebook reigned supreme, reaching 70 percent of the app audience; followed by YouTube at 55 percent; and Google Play at 52 percent. Google Search, also at 52 percent, and Facebook Messenger, 47 percent, rounded out the top 5. ■

LIFE

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NATIONAL

ARTISTS Art

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B S J

HE Order of the National Artists Award (Orden ng Gawad Pambansang Alagad ng Sining) is the most noteworthy national distinction given to Filipino individuals who have made huge contributions to the advancement of Philippine expression and the arts—to be specific, in music, dance, theater, visual arts, literature, film and broadcast arts, and architecture and allied arts. Mutually controlled and administered by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CPP), and bestowed by the president of the Philippines upon the suggestion by both institutions, the order aims to recognize Filipino artists who have made significant contributions to the cultural heritage of the country, and to give due honor to Filipino artistic accomplishment at its highest level and creative expression as significant to the development of a national cultural identity, and also to individuals who have dedicated their lives to their works to forge new paths and directions for future generations of Filipino artists. National Artists are given a Grand Collar symbolizing their status, usually during a conferment ceremony at Malacañan Palace. Likened to the US National Medal for the Arts, and the Order of Culture of Japan, the honor is given to recipients who exemplify the highest ideals of humanities and aesthetics and ideal expression of Filipinos as exemplified by their outstanding works and contributions. Thus, the award is one of the highest distinctions presented by the Republic of the Philippines that encapsulates the country’s goals in the humanities. These accomplishments are measured according to their artistic vision, understanding, imagination, creative ability and technical mastery. The award was established under Proclamation 1001, dated April 27, 1972, to give suitable distinction to Filipinos who have made extraordinary commitments to Philippine arts and letters. The first award was given to Fernando Amorsolo. Proclamation 1144, dated May 15, 1973, named the CCP Board of Trustees as the National Artist Awards Committee, and Presidential Decree 208 issued on June 7, 1973, repeated the mandate of the CCP to give the award, as well as outline the benefits and honors of National Artists. However, Republic Act 356, dated April 2, 1992, gave the NCCA wide responsibility over the advancement of Filipino culture and the arts, including the giving of awards. Executive Order 236, dated September 19, 2003, generally known the Honors Code of the Philippines, raised the award to the level of a cultural order, fourth in precedence among the orders and distinctions that comprise the honors of the Philippines, and equivalent in rank to the Order of National Scientists, renaming the National Artist Award to the

FERNANDO C. AMORSOLO was the first National Artist.

GUILLERMO E. TOLENTINO was the second awardee and the first recipient for sculpture.

Order of National Artists. Here are the privileges provided to those conferred with the Order of National Artists: First, the rank and title of National Artist, as proclaimed by the President of the Philippines; the National Artist goldplated medallion minted by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and citation; lifetime material and physical benefits comparable in value to those received by the highest officers of the land, such as a minimum cash award of P200,000, net of taxes for living awardees, and a minimum cash award of P150,000, net of taxes for posthumous awardees, payable to legal heirs; a minimum lifetime personal monthly stipend of P30,000; life-insurance coverage for those who are still insurable; a state-funeral benefit not exceeding P500,000; and a place of honor, in line with protocol, in state functions, national commemoration ceremonies and all other cultural presentations. Anyone who meets the criteria for the order may be nominated by the government and non-governmental cultural organizations and educational institutions, as

well as private foundations and councils, except agencies attached to the NCCA and CCP. Likewise, NCCA and CCP board members and consultants and NCCA and CCP officers and staff, and NCCA committee members are automatically disqualified from being nominated. However, the criteria is broad and includes living artists who have been Filipino citizens for the last 10 years prior to nomination, as well as those who have died after the establishment of the award in 1972 but were Filipino citizens at the time of their death; artists who have helped build a Filipino sense of nationhood through the content and form of their works; artists who have distinguished themselves by pioneering in a mode of creative expression or style, making an impact on succeeding generations of artists; artists who have created a significant body of work or have consistently displayed excellence in the practice of their art form, enriching artistic expression or style; and artists who enjoy broad acceptance through prestigious national or international recognition, awards in prestigious

national or international events, critical acclaim or reviews of their works, and respect and esteem from peers within an artistic discipline. Such nominations are made in writing and are submitted to the National Artist Secretariat that is created by the National Artist Award Committee. A First Deliberation composed experts from different art fields prepares a short list of nominees. A Second Deliberation of a joint meeting of the commissioners of the NCCA and the board of trustees of the CCP decides on the final list. This is then forwarded to the president of the Philippines, who confers the honors. For our purposes, we shall only list the National Artists for visual arts, sculpture and painting. They are Napoleon V. Abueva, Federico Aguilar y Alcuaz, Francisco Coching, Ang Kiukok, Victorio C. Edades, Cesar Legaspi, Vicente S. Manansala, Hernando R. Ocampo, Benedicto R. Cabrera, Abdulmari A. Imao, Amorsolo, Carlos “Botong” V. Francisco, Arturo R. Luz, J. Elizalde Navarro, Guillermo E. Tolentino and Jose T. Joya. ■

Pio Abad at Silverlens Singapore SILVERLENS (www.silverlensgalleries.com) presents A Short History of Decay, the first solo exhibition of London-based Filipino artist Pio Abad in Silverlens Singapore. On view until April 12, the exhibition is comprised of new drawings and sculptures that further explores the artist’s ongoing interest in inventories and the social and political implications of objects. Taking the title of the show from Emil Cioran’s book A Short History of Decay, Abad adapts both the nihilistic stance and aphoristic construction of its pages, creating a series of largescale drawings that echo the Romanian philosopher’s argument that “consciousness changes only its forms and modalities, but never progresses.” While examining how one’s individual identity may play out over a multitude of objects, Abad extends the inquiry further by asking how the same objects may intersect with the progression (or nonprogression) of a nation’s or a civilization’s

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B CA N. P

HE Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) is backing the proposal of the Joint Foreign Chambers (JFC) to limit the declaration of nonworking holidays.

The JFC is hoping that the number of holidays per year be limited to 15 days. Beyond that, the JFC wants companies to be given the flexibility in paying their employees the extra pay. “We’d like to have the flexibility; if it’s in their bargaining agreement, then they should pay [the additional rate], but we’d just like to have the flexibility if it goes over the 15,” said David “Ebb” Hincheliffe, executive director of the American

The National Artists

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P.  |     | 7 DAYS A WEEK

JFC WANTS FLEXIBILITY IF NUMBER OF HOLIDAYS EXCEEDS 15 PER YEAR

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collective memory? Portrayed objectively in black and white and in an unaffected manner, these items turn into unassailable, concrete evidences. These objects, which seem disparate in nature with their own unique historical contexts (museum acquisitions, ethnic utensils, historical relics, electronic devices, common household tools, natural artifacts, accidental rubbish), have been organized by way in which not to signify the singularity of their object-hood, but rather to represent the peculiarity of one’s personal encounters with them. Their placement next to each other leads to the construction of a universal reading; one which connects each item as if forming a pattern or a unique picture-message to communicate the idea that knowledge and history, while conceived in different forms, refer to the same world and ultimately subscribe to the same decadent end.

Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (AmCham). He said the management and employees of companies should be allowed to discuss among themselves the compensation or the need to follow the nonworking holiday declaration without violating the Labor Code. Members of the JFC informed the DOLE at a meeting last week that the group is now C  A

‘Ronald Ventura: Big and Small’ at Ayala A Museum AY LAA Museum welcomes the summer season with a new exhibition, entitled Ronald AYA Ventura: entura: Big and Small, Joel Mendez, MD, Collection, featuring early works by the region’s most sought-after contemporary artist today. Considered by many to be the most exciting artist to emerge from the Philippines in the beginning of the 21st century— a view intensified after his stately painting Grayground fetched a record-breaking $1.1 million at the 2011 Sotheby’s auction in Hong Kong— Ventura is first and foremost admired for his technical mastery of the classical human figure. The works featured in the ongoing exhibit include over a hundred male and female nude paintings and anatomical studies dating as early as 1998 until the mid-2000s from the collection of physician and gallery owner Joel Mendez, MD. Ventura’s dramatization of the human form is apparent regardless of the size of his canvas, hence the title of exhibition. Marking a very early period in Ventura’s career, the collection, in the truest sense, strips his art off its characteristic potpourri of imagery and reveals what lies at its very foundation: the human body and its language. Art critic Alice Guillermo makes note of this in the book Realities: Ronald Ventura entura when she said, “The basis of his art is his mastery of anatomy, so that having gone through the entire gamut of male and female nudes in all postures, stances and attitudes, he has assumed the capability of distorting the human body, clothed or unclothed, or of morphing it in the most unexpected ways.” Ronald Ventura: entura: Big and Small, Joel Mendez, MD Collection is presented under Ayala Museum’s Collector Series exhibition program, which aims to expand the understanding and appreciation of local and international art by providing the opportunity to view artworks that are usually not seen in public, especially a body of work of a single artist whom a collector admires. The show is ongoing until April 26 at the Ayala Museum Ground Floor Gallery (www. ayalamuseum.org).

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SISTERS ON WAR PATH Sports

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FALCONS FINED FOR

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| WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

VENUS WILLIAMS beats Caroline Wozniacki (below) and is potentially on track to facing sister Serena (inset) at Key Biscayne. AP

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‘FAKING IT’

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EW YORK—The National Football League (NFL) said on Monday it has fined the Atlanta Falcons, stripped the organization of a draft pick and suspended Team President Rich McKay from the league’s Competition Committee for at least three months, following the team’s use of artificial crowd noise at home games. The league said that, throughout the 2013 season and into the 2014 season, the Falcons violated league rules that state “at no point during the game can artificial crowd noise or amplified crowd noise be played in the stadium.” The league also said Roddy White, the team’s former director of event marketing, was directly responsible for the violation and would have been suspended without pay for the first eight weeks of the 2015 regular season had he still been with the club. White was fired by the Falcons after the issue came to light. Atlanta must also forfeit its fifth-round pick in the 2016 draft. If the team has multiple picks in that round, the highest selection will be taken away. “Our review also determined that Falcons ownership and senior executives, including Team President Rich McKay, were unaware of Mr. White’s use of an audio file with artificial crowd noise,” said Troy Vincent, the NFL’s vice president of football operations. “However, Mr. McKay, as the senior club executive overseeing game operations, bears some responsibility for ensuring that team employees comply with league rules.” For owner Arthur Blank, the incident has been a huge embarrassment on top of firing longtime Coach Mike Smith after last season and dealing with criticism over a pricey seat-licensing plan to help fund the team’s new stadium. “What took place was wrong and nowhere near the standards by which we run our business,” Blank said in a statement. “Anytime there are actions that compromise the integrity of the NFL or threaten the culture of our franchise, as this issue did, they will be dealt with swiftly and strongly.” Beginning April 1, McKay will be suspended from his position as chairman of the Competition Committee, an influential group that considers NFL rule changes. He can petition Commissioner Roger Goodell for reinstatement no sooner than June 30. The Falcons accepted the penalties handed down by the NFL. “We understand the penalties imposed and their impact on our team, and we will not appeal the league’s decisions,” Blank said. “Further, we have addressed the matter internally and taken actions to ensure that something like this does not happen again.” Blank told the Associated Press in early February that he had seen enough of the NFL’s investigation to acknowledge wrongdoing by his club in 2013, when the Falcons were touted as a Super Bowl contender but struggled to a 4-12 record. Last seaso Atlanta went into the season finale with a chance to make the playoffs in the weak NFC South, but lost to Carolina at home and finished 6-10. The Falcons say 101 of 103 games have been sellouts since Blank bought the team in 2002. Last season Atlanta ranked 10th among the 32 NFL teams with its average home attendance of 72,130, though there were clearly more empty seats as the team struggled. Construction is under way for a new $1.4-billion stadium that will replace the Georgia Dome in 2017. AP

ON WAR PATH Eighteen years and $30 million later, there Venus Williams was again, a few months shy of her 35th birthday, winning her 57th match on these now oh-sofamiliar Key Biscayne tournament grounds.

B M K

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Miami Herald

T is March 20, 1997, and Venus Williams, a 16-year-old newcomer to the professional tennis tour, is playing at the Lipton Championships in Key Biscayne for the first time. Her beaded braids fly with every serve and powerful groundstroke as she takes a 6-1 lead over an older American player named Ginger Helgeson-Nielsen. That’s when the shrieking began from the stands. A rat was running loose, creating a commotion. The match was suspended 15 minutes while the rodent was caught and removed. Williams, who was ranked No. 110 at the time, went on to win, 6-1, 4-6, 6-3, and then beat 23rdranked Jennifer Capriati before losing to No. 1 Martina Hingis in straight sets. She took home a paycheck of $6,750. Eighteen years and $30 million later, there Williams was again, a few months shy of her 35th birthday, winning her 57th match on these now oh-so-familiar Key Biscayne tournament grounds. She beat Caroline Wozniacki, 6-3, 7-6 (7-1), on Monday afternoon to advance to the Miami Open quarterfinals, where she will face 12th-seeded Carla Suarez-Navarro of Spain, who rallied to beat Agnieszka Radwanska, 5-7, 6-0, 6-4. Williams is two wins away from a potential final against her kid sister, 33-year-old top-ranked Serena, who beat Svetlana Kuznetsova, 6-2, 6-3, on Monday. As the younger Williams wrapped up her match on Stadium Court, the elder Venus was in an interview room, reminiscing about that rat-infested day of 1997. “At that age I was so young and didn’t know much,” Williams said, smiling. “I think I was playing Ginger Helgeson-Nieslen. I played Capriati in the second round. It was a long match. Hingis, at that time, was so much better than I was. I had a lot of potential, but I needed some more experience. “She definitely, definitely dominated that match, but it was a good experience I learned from.” Over the past 18 years, Venus has reached No. 1 and won 46 titles, including five Wimbledons and two US Opens. Venus’s ranking took a major dive from No. 5 to No. 103 in 2011 when she was off seven months after being diagnosed with Sjogren’s Syndrome, an autoimmune disease. She began 2014 ranked No. 47, and many fans and experts figured she would not return to the Top 10. Now, she is within striking distance at No. 16. She has won seven of her past eight matches against Top 10 players.

In men’s third-round play, four-time champion Novak Djokovic defeated qualifier Steve Darcis, 6-0, 7-5, and will next face Alexandr Dolgopolov. No. 4 Kei Nishikori and No. 5 Milos Raonic also won. No. 22 John Isner, the lone remaining American in the men’s draw, defeated No. 9 Grigor Dimitrov, 7-6 (2), 6-2. While Serena Williams, 33, has been ranked No. 1 for the past two years, Venus’s fortunes are only lately on the upswing after health issues caused a long slump that stirred retirement speculation. In January at the Australian Open, she reached her first Grand Slam quarterfinal in five years before losing, and with the victory over Wozniacki, she’s 4-0 in 2015 against Top 10 players. Venus skipped Indian Wells, where Serena recently ended a 14-year family boycott after being booed there as a teenager. Venus said it was wonderful to see the warm reception her sister received there this month, but was noncommittal regarding whether she’ll return. Given the way she’s playing lately, she might have several chances. Williams credits her persistence and optimistic nature for her recent resurgence, which comes more than three years after she was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease that can cause joint pain and sap energy. “I don’t give up, and I believe in myself no matter what the odds are and what you may experience,” she said. “I have always seen it as something to overcome, and not something that could stop me.” Unlike her sister, she has never tired of tennis, a problem for some top players even before their skills decline. “I never get bored, actually,” Venus said. “Tennis is definitely not pushing paper. I mean, when you get out there you have no idea what’s going to happen in the point. You can try to plan it the best you can, but it’s all up in the air. You have to improvise every single time. That never gets boring.” Williams won Monday with her familiar high-wire approach, swinging aggressively from the baseline. Sometimes she missed badly, but she hit 40 winners to nine for Wozniacki. “Today I played similar to how young V would have played, either knocking a winner or knocking an error,” she said, with a grin. “It’s fun to just hit

SPORTS

out, though. It feels good.” She moved forward more often than in the past, winning 14 points at the net, and used her long strides to chase down balls in the corners and extend rallies. The stadium crowd applauded Williams’s staying power. So did the 21-year-old Stephens, who could face her in the final. “She is a superhuman,” Stephens said. “ I don’t know how she does it.” “She just has so much belief in herself and her ability,” said US Fed Cup captain Mary Joe Fernandez, an analyst

for ESPN. “It is a great story for sure.” Key Biscayne has always ranked among Williams’s favorite tournaments, because she lives 90 minutes up I-95 in Palm Beach Gardens. She’s playing in the event for the 16th time, which leaves lots of room for reminiscing. “My first match here, there was a rat in the stands,” she said, with a laugh. “They had to stop the match. That was intense.” She enjoys looking back, and also looking ahead. She’ll face Carla Suarez Navarro on Tuesday night for a berth in the semifinals.

THAI PM TO LIFT MARTIAL LAW 10 MOS AFTER COUP

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HAILAND’S militaryinstalled prime minister said on Tuesday he plans to lift martial law 10 months after staging a coup, but will invoke a special security measure that critics say is more draconian. The development has sparked concern from humanrights groups, lawyers, political parties and scholars who say the measure, Article 44 of a junta-imposed interim constitution, gives Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha unchecked authority over all three branches of government. Prayuth, the former army commander who led the May

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 44.7960

22, 2014, coup that overthrew an elected government, told reporters on Tuesday that he is seeking King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s approval to revoke martial law. The monarch’s approval is considered a formality. Prayuth has faced growing pressure to scrap martial law, which places the military in charge of public security nationwide and has been criticized as a deterrent to tourists and foreign investors. Thai media have referred to Article 44 as “the dictator law.” Under a similar law in the 1960s, a Thai dictator carried out summary executions. S “M ,” A

TO JOIN OR NOT TO JOIN In this October 24, 2014, file photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping (center) shows the way to the guests who attended the signing ceremony of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Malacañang said it has no plan as of now to join the Chinaled AIIB. See related story on A5. AP/TAKAKI YAJIMA

Maybank: Firms need to ‘rethink’ Asean strategies B B C

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INGAPORE—Companies and industry leaders from different sectors are urged to “rethink” their strategies going forward, as the integration within the Asean happens to allow them to keep up with the changing and diversifying markets in the region. At the annual Invest Asean conference hosted by Maybank in Singapore on Tuesday, corporates in the region were told to reshape their integration plans and strategies and update them to present day trends—such as the use of technological advances in the delivery of payments of goods and services, the rising role of the so-called millennials, the rapidly growing Asean consumer base and the increasing

role of women in economic growth. “Today to be Asean is no longer simply a matter of being part of cooperative regional grouping. It is an urgent necessity and whether you like it or not, Asean is going to change us in more ways than we can imagine…. Common sense dictates that we need to rethink,” Datuk Abdul Farid, Maybank CEO, said in his address. The conference—which included about a thousand attendees mostly from 67 corporates in 11 countries in the region—highlighted the expanding role of technology in banking and its proposed integration. In one of the plenary sessions on Tuesday morning, panelist Ratan Malli, strategic planning director of J. Walter Thomson Asia Pacific, cited the mobile cash-remittance transfer system in the Philippines as a model

for other companies involved in the movement of cash and capital. Malli said the innovations are good examples of technology “leapfrogging for opportunities.” “That kind you don’t see in other markets,” he added. Malli further said that innovations represent the “future” of the region, as more and more people migrate and travel within Asean and companies must set up the infrastructure or pathways to make this more convenient for individuals in the region. Likewise, the Maybank CEO said the use of technology to transfer funds is important for demographic purposes given that 60 percent of the people in Asean are the so-called millennials. S “M,” A

■ JAPAN 0.3729 ■ UK 66.2981 ■ HK 5.7766 ■ CHINA 7.2162 ■ SINGAPORE 32.5742 ■ AUSTRALIA 34.2372 ■ EU 48.4961 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 11.9427 Source: BSP (31 March 2015)


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