BusinessMirror
three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. Media Award 2008
www.businessmirror.com.ph
T
INSIDE
HOLIDAY MUSIC GIFTS: LEAVE THE BEST FOR LAST-MINUTE
Life
Prayers and pondering at Christmas time
JO A. SALDANA AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
...WHAT TO TELL YOUR KIDS WHEN THEY ASK IF SANTA’S REAL »D3
BusinessMirror
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Saturday, December 20, 2014
D1
HOLIDAY MUSIC GIFTS: LEAVE THE BEST FOR LAST-MINUTE B M S | Los Angeles Times
I
KNOW it’s last minute. But to procrastinators, a week until Christmas is all the time in the world. Hanukkah’s just begun; fortunately, the holiday has another week to go. And if you’ve finished your shopping, why not treat yourself? This is the good stuff. ❖ Another “Messiah” recording is rarely news. Still, hearing soprano Lucy Crowe’s luminous performance of “Rejoice greatly” on French conductor Emmanuelle Haïm’s exquisitely phrased new live performance of Handel’s oratorio is more than enough reason to rejoice greatly. Played with period instruments and featuring inspired soloists, this is a “Messiah” that seems to float in air. Haïm’s—for once—un-macho “Messiah,” with an ethereal “Hallelujah” chorus, is intoxicating. For those of a more mystically medieval Christmas mind-set, the Hilliard Ensemble’s “Transeamus” brings refined, mysterious awe to obscure 15th century British carols and motets. On the other hand, Hanukkah cheer can be found with the New Budapest Orpheum Society’s two-disc set, “As Dreams Fall Apart,” a survey of Jewish stage and film music from 1925 to 1955, which mixes sentiment and schmaltz with uproarious novelty numbers. In an era of ephemeral downloads, the best boxed-set collections have come to be the CD equivalent of lavish art books, presenting the scope of an artist’s career in a fine package. With “Maria Callas Remastered: The Complete Studio Recordings [1949-1969],” EMI has remastered all of Callas’s studio recordings in the best sound they’ve ever had, making this fabled soprano’s theatrical presence more startling than ever. But nice as it is to have all her recordings in the miniature slipcases of the original LPs, the highresolution downloads available on HD Tracks sound even more vibrant than the CDs. With his 90th birthday approaching in March, Pierre Boulez is being celebrated with a 13-disc set on DG of the composer’s “Complete Works,” which means much of the most intricate sonically inventive music of our time in the best performances. And then there’s Sony’s 67-CD set of all the recordings of Boulez’s conducting, “The Complete Columbia Album Collection” released on Columbia in the 1960s and 1970s. Everything sounds as scintillating as ever. Franz Brüggen, the inspiring Dutch early music specialist who died earlier this year is remembered with “Mozart: The Last Three Symphonies: Live From Rotterdam, 2010,” his recording of Mozart’s last three symphonies with the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century. Two unusual opera CDs stand out. Darius Milhaud’s “L’Orestie d’Eschyle,” the French composer’s epic early 20th century take on “The Oresteia,” has only now been recorded in full, a document of a performance at the University of Michigan last year. Here is a masterpiece finally revealed.
Another item of opera news last year was “Invisible Cities,” Christopher Cerrone’s new opera based on an Italo Calvino novel and created for an arresting production at Union Station in Los Angeles. The Industry, which commissioned “Invisible Cities,” has released a recording in a delightful wooden box that includes postcards of scenes from the production. Once you open the box, it is extremely hard to get everything back in, and the music is the same. It stays with you. This has been a Richard Strauss year, the 150th anniversary of his birth, and his operas have flooded the market. The one that may matter the most is a DVD of the “Elektra,” conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen and directed by Patrice Chereau, which reveals Strauss’s extraordinary relevance to our time. You might find it interesting to pair it with a more traditional but no less masterful “Elektra” led by Christian Thielemann on CD. The expansive Christmas spirit asks us to think of others. “Our World in Song” finds Chinese pipa player Wu Man, Hawaiian ukulele player and slack key guitarist Daniel Ho and Cuban percussionist Luis Conte offering their multiculti versions of folk songs from around the globe. It is irresistible. “Japanese Children Songs,” featuring soprano Diana Damrau, with Kent Nagano conducting the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal, reveals surprisingly the carol-like quality of these charming ballads. Then again, you just might be looking for a Christmas escape route. The Seattle Symphony recording of John Luther Adams’s “Ocean” is lapping music that takes you out of yourself. For the daring wishing to lose themselves in a deeper sea of drone, try “Youuu+Mee=Weeee” by quirky keyboardist Charlemagne Palestine and electric guitarist Rhys Chatham. Three CDs worth of the strangest hums and whirrs and whatnots is a full universe away from Christmas commercialized but remarkably close to its original spiritual essence of selflessness. ■
life
Tuesday, Saturday,November December18, 20,2014 2014Vol. Vol.1010No. No.4072
d1
E.U. LEADERS AGREE TO CREATE FUND FOR JUMPSTARTING ECON GROWTH
By Bianca Cuaresma
The deficit represented a reversal from a four-month series of surpluses beginning in July, when the Philippines benefited from a change in sentiment in the opening months when so-called foreign funds left the country in huge volumes. The November BOP also represented a steep reversal from a surplus of $837 million reported in the same month last year. The imbalance was the third-largest shortfall for the year and brought the country’s BOP in the first 11 months to $3.7 billion. This was also below the government’s assumed number for the year, when the balance of payments was recast to reflect a deficit totaling $3.4 billion this year. The BOP measures the country’s transactions with the rest of the world. A deficit means the foreign-currency earnings of the $270-billion Southeast Asian economy exceeded its foreign-currency expenses. Just last month, the central bank revised the Continued on A2
jeepney restoration A vintage jeepney in Las Piñas City is being restored and decorated by a worker. No two jeepneys are alike, with its bare frame made of metal panels mostly being able to accommodate any kind of art. “The more, the merrier” seems to describe the concept of jeepney art that is marked by accessories called borloloys in the form of mirrors, horns and tassels. The jeepney is said to be the king of the road in this country as it is commonly used by most commuters to get to their destinations. NONIE REYES
After elections, obAmA tests his powers
W
BusinessMirror
World The
LuxeMbouRg’s Prime Minister xavier bettel (right) speaks with Denmark’s Prime Minister Helle Thorning-schmidt (center) and european union Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini during an eu summit at the european Council building in brussels, on Thursday. eu leaders meet with the top agenda item an ambitious plan to use eu seed money and loan guarantees to jump-start investment and revive the eu’s growth and job-creation rates. AP/Yves loGGhe
B3-1 | Saturday, December 20, 2014 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
EU leaders agree to create fund for jumpstarting econ growth
B
RUSSELS—European Union leaders agreed on Thursday to create a strategic investment fund that could generate up to €315 billion ($386 billion) in private- and public-sector money to upgrade infrastructure, jumpstart the EU’s sluggish economies and ignite job growth.
“The economic situation has improved...but we are not safe yet,” said EU President Donald Tusk. “Today, we need more investment, more structural reforms and sound public finances across Europe.” The plan approved by leaders of
the 28-nation EU at their one-day summit meeting in Brussels calls for the new European Fund for Strategic Investments to be in operation and approving new investment projects by mid-2015. The plan, which calls for use of
EU seed money to leverage up to 15 times more in private funds, is the brainchild of European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker. Critics have already warned that despite its multibillion-euro price tag, it may not be big enough to win over wary investors. “This package looks like creative accounting for the moment,” Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite said as she arrived for the summit. Grybauskaite and the other EU leaders seemed to acknowledge the possibility that private companies may be reluctant to risk their capital by noting in a summit communiqué that the strategic fund will accept contributions from EU member-states. For the fund to launch, it would also require approval by European legislators. European Parliament President Martin Schulz, in a speech prepared for delivery at the summit,
said the EU must stimulate and modernize its economy, or risk falling farther behind global competitors like the US and China. Schulz said investment in areas like schools, universities, green energy and infrastructure was key “if we want Europe to be an economic champion in the future.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said investments fostered by the strategic fund “must go into projects for the future—particularly, for example, in the digital economy or where we aren’t so good on the world market as we should be: electromobility [electric cars] and the like.” Over dinner, the leaders discussed what Tusk termed the other major challenge for Europe: what long-term policy to adopt toward Russia. “We must go beyond being reactive and defensive,” Tusk, a former Polish prime minister, said. He
called for a strategy that is “tough and responsible” for dealing with Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin, and resolving the Ukraine crisis. The policy discussion will resume when EU leaders meet again in March, Tusk told a post-summit news conference. He asked Europeans to “be self-confident and realize our own strength.” EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini, also attending the Brussels summit, said she derived no satisfaction from the economic woes of Russia, the target of EU and US sanctions since the Kremlin annexed the Crimean Peninsula. But Mogherini said Putin and other senior Russian officials “should reflect seriously about the need for introducing a radical change in the attitude toward the rest of the world and to switch to a cooperative mode.” AP
Putin: West wants to defang, declaw Russian bear
M
OSCOW—Sternly warning the West it cannot defang the metaphorical Russian bear, a confident-looking President Vladimir Putin promised on Thursday to shore up the plummeting ruble and revive the economy within two years. While he issued a litany of sharp rebukes against the West, Putin struck a conciliatory note on Ukraine, saying that the rebellious east should remain part of the country, backing a quick exchange of war prisoners and praising his Ukrainian counterpart. The mixture of blistering antiWestern rhetoric and constructive signals appeared to indicate that Putin is eager to negotiate a face-saving solution to the Ukrainian crisis, but has no intention of conceding defeat in his standoff with the West. In his first public appearance since the crash of the ruble’s value this week, Putin accepted responsibility for the economic crisis. He said Western sanctions accounted for at least 25 percent of the ruble’s fall, but the main reason was Russia’s failure to ease its overwhelming dependence on oil and gas exports. In his speech, the man who has led Russia for 15 years sought to soothe market fears, saying the country has sufficient currency reserves and would not resort to administrative controls, such as fixing exchange rates or obliging export-
ers to convert their Western currency holdings to rubles. Following Putin’s performance, the Russian currency traded between 60 and 62 rubles to the dollar, roughly the same level as late Wednesday, when it rallied 12 percent after plummeting to a historic low of 80 rubles per dollar. Still, the currency has lost about half its value since January. In Brussels, the European Union strengthened its sanctions against Russia with new measures on Thursday that ban investment and discourage tourism in Crimea. And in Washington, President Barack Obama signed legislation authorizing new sanctions on Russia but said he does not plan to impose the penalties outlined in the measure. Putin shrugged off speculation that some members of his inner circle hurt by Western sanctions could rebel against him in a “palace coup,” citing strong public support. An Associated Press-National Organization for Research Center (NORC) Center for Public Affairs Research poll released on Thursday backed up that view, recording his approval rating among Russians at 81 percent, a level far above typical ratings for world leaders. The poll was conducted before the ruble’s slump this week, which spurred many Russians to withdraw bank deposits and buy Western cur-
Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during his annual news conference in Moscow, Russia, on Thursday. The Russian economy will rebound and the ruble will stabilize, Putin said, adding that ukraine must remain one political entity. AP/PAvel Golovkin
rencies or durable goods in an attempt to protect the value of their savings. Audi was the latest major company to suspend deliveries in Russia amid the ruble’s turmoil. Apple halted online sales earlier this week. If the Kremlin fails to stabilize the ruble soon, panic could spread, triggering an even more massive run on banks and a sharp surge in inflation that could swiftly erode Putin’s support. The president argued that the nation’s hard currency reserves are sufficient to keep the economy stable.
He said the Central Bank should not “thoughtlessly burn” its reserves worth $419 billion. Chris Weafer, senior partner at Moscow-based Macro Advisory, said Putin’s comments reflected a greater political will to push overdue reforms, but also amounted to an acknowledgment that the government lacks a clear strategy. He summed up Putin’s message as, “We’re definitely in a world of pain here and there is no obvious solution.” Putin struck a defiant note against
the United States and the 28-nation EU, saying the sanctions they slapped on Russia after it seized the Black Sea region of Crimea in March were part of a historical campaign to weaken Russia. To illustrate his point, he raised the metaphorical Russian bear. “Sometimes I think maybe it would be better for our bear to sit quietly, rather than chasing around the forest after piglets; to sit eating berries and honey instead. Maybe they will leave it in peace,” Putin said. “They will not. Because they will always try to put him on a chain, and as soon as they succeed in doing so, they tear out his fangs and his claws.” Putin said he was referring to Russia’s nuclear arsenal, which protected its valuable natural resources. “Once they’ve taken out his claws and his fangs, then the bear...[will] become a stuffed animal,” he said. “The issue is not Crimea. The issue is that we are protecting our sovereignty and our right to exist.” Putin said he wanted a political solution to the crisis in Ukraine, where pro-Russian insurgents have battled Ukrainian government troops since April, leaving more than 4,700 dead. He said Ukraine must remain one country and the two sides should hold a prisoner swap before Christmas. AP
ASHINGTON—President Barack Obama is shaking up the governing status quo with a recent streak of activism, laying down a foundation that, while fragile, is defining how he enters the final two years of his term. In the weeks since the midterm elections gave Republicans full control of Congress, Obama has acted in unbridled ways on foreign and domestic policy fronts. The list is significant. In addition to taking executive actions to shield millions of immigrants from deportation, securing anti-pollution goals with China and undertaking a historic diplomatic opening with Havana, Obama has sought to sustain new ties with once reclusive Myanmar, make Alaska’s Bristol Bay off limits to oil and gas drilling, and affirm “net neutrality.” David Axelrod, a former senior Obama adviser, said: “He is someone who ran for office to tackle big, lingering problems and, now, as he looks at the final years of his administration, he seems determined to use every tool at his disposal to make progress on as many of them as he can.” Aides and advisers say that even if Obama’s actions can be undone, he is giving the public a taste of change that would be difficult to reverse. “Though his powers are significant, they’re not without limit, so some of the actions he’s taken could be reversed by future presidents,” Axelrod said. “But is some future president really going to want to reach back and break relations with Cuba? Or put millions of undocumented workers who have lived and worked here for years back on the list for deportation?” The November 4 elections inflicted a heavy cost on the Democratic Party’s agenda, with the Republicans seizing control of the Senate and expanding their majority in the House. But they had a liberating effect on the president. Politics, of course, are still a factor in presidential decisions, but no longer does Obama have to weigh the effect his decisions would have on his own electoral prospects or consider the parochial concerns of vulnerable Democrats like he did in delaying his immigration measures before the elections. For Obama, another consequence of his actions is that they have exposed cracks in the Republican Party. Republican lawmakers have not come together on a specific strategy on how to undo his immigration initiatives and a minority still believes the party should overhaul the system and get the issue behind them. The Cuba opening, while loudly decried by Republican leaders, also cleaves the party, with farm-state lawmakers and those with more libertarian outlooks having a more favorable view of new relations with the island. Those divisions were in stark relief on Thursday when Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is eyeing a presidential run, became the most prominent Republican to side with Obama on Cuba, declaring that a half-century-long economic embargo hasn’t worked. “If the goal is regime change, it sure doesn’t seem to be working, and probably, it punishes the people more than the regime because the regime can blame the embargo for hardship,” Paul said in a radio interview. Other potential Republican presidential candidates, such as former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Govs. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, have all criticized Obama’s decision to open an embassy in Havana and ease economic and travel restrictions on Cuba. Obama’s executive actions are not permanent. Only Congress can lift the economic embargo against Cuba. Obama’s immigration measures would expire in 2017. His ambitious climate-change goals aim to set 2025 emissions more than one-quarter lower than they were in 2005. The new pollution standards would require the support of subsequent presidents. “Clearly the clock is ticking and he’s got a lot of stuff he wants to get done,” said Simon Rosenberg, president of NDN, a Democraticleaning Washington think-tank and a longtime advocate of overhauling immigration laws. “How lasting are these things? We’ll find out. But certainly he’s leaving tracks on the ground where he is advancing his agenda.” AP
WORLD
DTI urges SMEsto take advantage of EU-GSP+ By Catherine N. Pillas
B3-1
WARRIORS SILENCE THUNDER Sports BusinessMirror
C1 | Saturday, December 20, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
OKLAHOMA City’s Russell Westbrook (0) shoots between Golden State’s Stephen Curry (left) and Andre Iguodala. AP
BERNIE ECCLESTONE returns on F1 board and stays as CEO. AP
WARRIORS SILENCE THUNDER By Diamond Leung San Jose Mercury News
O
AKLAND, California—The Golden State Warriors are back in the win column again, thanks to Stephen Curry and his teammates performing in crunch time. The Warriors won, 114-109, on Thursday, defeating an Oklahoma City Thunder team that lost Kevin Durant to injury halfway through the game. Curry scored 11 of his 34 points in the fourth quarter, racking up nine assists and seven rebounds to lead the Warriors. Two nights after going one for 10 from three-point range in a loss at Memphis that snapped Golden State’s 16-game winning streak, he made five three-pointers. Leading 112-109, the Warriors sealed the win with Harrison Barnes hitting a turnaround fadeaway with about 17 seconds left. Golden State improved to a league-leading 22-3. Klay Thompson had 19 points, and Draymond Green had 16 points, nine rebounds and a careerhigh nine assists. Russell Westbrook scored 33 points in carrying the load for the Thunder after Durant’s hot start was halted by an ankle injury. Durant poured in 30 points in the first half, going five for six from three-point range before he suffered a mild right-ankle sprain after stepping on Marreese Speights’s foot with 2.4 seconds left in the second quarter. The reigning Most Valuable Player had to be helped off the court by teammates and did not return. The Thunder led 40-32 after the first quarter, making a strong opening statement by scoring the most points the Warriors allowed in a single quarter all season. Oklahoma City made 15 of its first 25 shots and led by as many as 17 points as Serge Ibaka hit a three-pointer to give the Thunder a 30-13 lead. But without an injured Andrew Bogut, the Warriors took the punch and fought back. They went on a 10-0 run, with Shaun Livingston putting them ahead 49-48 with a jump shot. Curry on the previous possession made a difficult three-pointer, colliding with Andre Iguodala before taking the pass and shooting without taking a dribble. Curry then made a high-arching three-pointer to break a 52-all tie and start an 8-0 run capped off by Thompson’s long-distance shot. By halftime, the Thunder closed the gap as the Warriors led, 65-63. Durant did not return to the court after halftime after having missed the Thunder’s first 17 games because of a fractured right foot. He and Westbrook returned from injuries to lead the Thunder to a seven-game winning streak. That became the longest active streak in the league after the Warriors’ streak was snapped on Tuesday at Memphis. The Warriors as part that franchise-best winning streak won at Oklahoma City last month with the Thunder missing Durant and Westbrook. The Warriors were also without Bogut for most of that game but were rescued by another strong performance from Speights off the bench. Warriors Coach Steve Kerr confirmed General Manager Bob Myers’s comments that forward
CHICAGO’S Nikola Mirotic (44) battles New York’s Jason Smith for the loose ball. AP
BULLS TOP KNICKS By Al Iannazzone Newsday
David Lee (hamstring strain) could return to action on Monday against Sacramento if he goes through practices before the game unscathed. “David Lee will be back next week, probably,” Kerr said. Kerr said Lee’s adjustment back on the court could be helped by the absence of Bogut as he would receive more minutes with the Warriors missing a starting big man. Kerr said he hasn’t given much thought to how Lee would be used upon his return. “David and Andrew are similar playing out of the high-post and running all of our actions through them with dribble handoff stuff,” Kerr said. Anthony Davis, meanwhile, led New Orleans to victory at Houston and Milwaukee used good outside shooting to edge Sacramento. Houston’s James Harden entered leading the National Basketball Association (NBA) in scoring and had scored more than 40 points in two of his last three games. But he had a tough night by his standards and made just eight-of-23 shots, finishing with 21 points. Milwaukee sank 10 three-pointers in the first half and hung to edge Sacramento, 108-107.
GOLDEN STATE RALLIES FROM AN EARLy 17-POINT DEFICIT TO BEAT OKLAhOMA CITy, 114-109, WITh STEPhEN CuRRy hAVING 34 POINTS AND NINE ASSISTS FOR ThE NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION-LEADING WARRIORS.
BACK ON DRIVER’S SEAT LONDON—Bernie Ecclestone’s control of Formula One was fully restored on Thursday after overcoming court cases that threatened his grip on the motorsport series. The 84-year-old Ecclestone stepped down as a board member of F1’s holding company this year while standing trial for bribery in Germany. The case was closed in August when Ecclestone made a $100-million settlement payment. Investment group CVC Capital Partner, F1’s controlling shareholder, announced Ecclestone’s return to the board in a statement on Thursday, and that he will continue as chief executive.
CHICAGO—Carmelo Anthony and Bulls guard Derrick Rose already had been declared out of the nationally televised game when TNT’s Charles Barkley offered his first analysis of the night. “My God,” Barkley said outside the Knicks’ locker room, “it’s going to be awful.” The game lacked star power but was more competitive than anyone could have predicted, and the heavily undermanned Knicks battled to the end. They were down one with less than a minute left but couldn’t get key defensive rebounds in crunch time in a 103-97 loss to the Bulls on Thursday at the United Center. The Knicks (5-23) lost for the 13th time in 14 games and have the most losses in the league (the 76ers are 2-22). “We put forth a great battle, we truly did,” Amare Stoudemire said. “We’ll take a moral victory. We played hard against a team that’s pretty good.” Anthony’s troublesome left knee is sore. He said he wants to try to play through the pain, but he needed Thursday night off. Neither the Knicks nor Anthony has ever said what is bothering him, and there has been talk that he needs surgery. Anthony, who missed a game last week because of his knee, said he aggravated it on Tuesday night. “I’ve had multiple people say just shut it down or just take time off,” he said. “At the end of the day, it’s hard for me to just do that right now amid what’s happening with the team. So I’m just trying to be smart about it.” He was asked what it would take for him to shut it down. “I don’t know, man,” he said. “I take some days off, some days it feels like I can go. Some days it feels like I have everything. It’s going to be off and on like that.” Anthony, who tested his knee at shootaround, said the Knicks “shut me down” on Wednesday and wouldn’t let him practice. After a back-to-back tomorrow and on Sunday, the Knicks have three off days before playing the Wizards on Christmas Day. “I’m just trying to see over the next couple of days how it reacts,” Anthony said. “It gets frustrating not knowing what’s going to happen.” The Knicks also were without JR Smith (partially torn plantar fascia), Iman Shumpert (dislocated shoulder) and Andrea Bargnani (calf). In addition to Rose, who was ill, Taj Gibson (ankle) didn’t play for Chicago (16-9). The Knicks’ starting lineup was Jose Calderon, Tim Hardaway Jr., Travis Wear, Stoudemire and Cole Aldrich. Stoudemire was supposed to have “a recovery day,” but with the Knicks shorthanded, he told Derek Fisher, “There’s no way I can sit this one out.” Hardaway had 23 points but air-balled a three-pointer with 37.9 seconds left with a chance to tie. Stoudemire added 16 points and Aldrich had 13 points and 10 rebounds. Jimmy Butler scored a career-high 35 points for the Bulls. Pau Gasol had 20 and Aaron Brooks 18. A 12-0 Chicago run put the Knicks in a 10-point hole with 7:30 to go, but they got within 98-97 on Stoudemire’s jumper with 1:01 left. On the ensuing trip, Brooks threw a jump pass to Gasol for a lay-up that made it a three-point game with 52.9 seconds to play. After Hardaway’s missed three-pointer, the Bulls came up with two offensive rebounds, one off a missed foul shot. Gasol hit two free throws for the final points with 10.3 seconds left. “I think we competed pretty good against a really good team with some of the guys out,” Calderon said. “The effort was there. I think we played good basketball. Again, we couldn’t finish.”
Sports
CVC also said former Ferrari chairman Luca di Montezemolo and Paul Walsh, the former chief executive of drinks giant Diageo, will become nonexecutive directors from January. Ecclestone built his powerbase in F1 from the 1970s, and helped to create the Formula One Constructors’ Association that controlled the business side of the series, including selling the TV rights. The British-based company later became known as Formula One Management. It has fought regular tussles with the teams over finances, but has retained control of the global motor racing extravaganza. AP
P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 28 pages | 7 days a week
he balance of payments (BOP), or what is left after the country’s foreign-currency expenses are deducted from its foreigncurrency earnings, stood as a deficit in November, totaling $314 million.
25 DAYS
D
n
BOP reverted to $314-M shortfall in November
PAPAL VISIT 2015
EAR God, may love inspire and underlie all our thoughts, words and deeds. May love be present in all our relationships. May love enliven every aspect of our life, every day. Are we trying to be a loving person? May we willingly and happily give to members of our family the love that is due them. Help us be aware that all creation and the fruits of human activity in the world are mutual gifts of love between the Father and His children in union with Jesus, His Son. Amen.
A broader look at today’s business
C1
T
he Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) is encouraging small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to take full advantage of a preferential trade scheme of the European Union (EU), which removed tariffs on key Philippine exports. DTI officials issued the statement after the EU announced on Thursday the approval of the Philippines’s application for entry into the EU-Generalized System of Preferences plus (EU-GSP+). “We intend to launch an information campaign and training next year so we can help SMEs maximize the use of the GSP+,” Trade Undersecretary Adrian S. Cristobal said in a media briefing. Cristobal said the Export Management Bureau of the DTI will conduct five information sessions in January on “Doing Business with the EU Using the GSP+,” in Makati, Cebu, Davao, General Santos, and Angeles City in Pampanga. The DTI
PESO exchange rates n US 44.7490
hopes to complete the training of SMEs and the information campaign during the first half of 2015. The DTI said the current GSP scheme is “underutilized,” with utilization rate pegged at 63.5 percent. Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo said informing and educating SMEs about the benefits of the scheme would boost their ability to meet standards under the new scheme. Domingo said the government intends to do this through the EU’s Trade Related Technical Assistance (TRTA). The EU’s TRTA is a program which will deploy EU-GSP+ experts to help SMEs comply with standards and avail themselves of preferential tariffs. Under the EU-GSP+, duty on exports, such as processed fruit and foodstuffs, coconut oil, footwear, fish and textiles, has been slashed to zero. The upgraded EU-GSP+ covers 6,274 tariff lines, two-thirds of which will be allowed to enter EU See “DTI,” A2
Megawide and GMR consortium bags ₧23.3-B loan for Cebu airport expansion By VG Cabuag
T
he consortium of Filipinoowned Megawide Construction Corp. and Bangalorebased GMR Infrastructure Ltd. signed an omnibus loan and security arrangement with banks to fund the expansion and rehabilitation of the Mactan-Cebu International Airport.
Michael Cosiquien, chairman and CEO of Megawide, said in a text message that the loan to GMR Megawide Cebu Airport Corp. will amount to P23.3 billion. Megawide said in its disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange that the banks that signed the loan agreement include Unibank Inc., Bank of the Philippine Islands, Development Bank of the Philippines,
Land Bank of the Philippines, Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co. and Philippine National Bank. GMR Infrastructure Ltd. and GMR Infrastructure (Singapore) signed as sponsors, while BDO Capital and Investment Corp. has been picked as the lead arranger. In April the consortium bagged the 25-year contract to set up a See “Megawide,” A2
Saudi says oil decisions not linked to politics
R
IYADH, Saudi Arabia—Saudi Arabia’s oil chief said in comments published on Thursday that there are no links between the kingdom’s decision to oppose production cuts and political objectives—an apparent response to accusations last week from Shiite powerhouse Iran. Petroleum Minister Ali Naimi was quoted by the official Saudi Press Agency as saying that there are “incorrect information and analyses... linking petroleum decisions with political objectives.”
“These erroneous analyses will undoubtedly be exposed and proven wrong,” he said, adding that eventually “others will see that what we are doing will yield the best results for the kingdom.” Last week Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said the sharp fall in global oil prices was the result of “treachery,” a remark interpreted as a reference to Saudi Arabia. The Sunni kingdom’s rivals are concerned that Saudi Arabia, which is capable of withstanding revenue losses, is forcing lower oil prices to damage their economies.
Naimi said he was optimistic about the future, but that, for now, the kingdom would maintain its current output for competitive reasons. “In a situation like this, it is difficult, if not impossible, that the kingdom or Opec [Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries] would carry out any action that may result in a reduction of its share in market and an increase of others’ shares, at a market time in which it is difficult to control prices,” he said. “Thus, we lose the market and lose the prices together.” AP
n japan 0.3766 n UK 70.1396 n HK 5.7703 n CHINA 7.1986 n singapore 34.0737 n australia 36.5387 n EU 54.9831 n SAUDI arabia 11.9219 Source: BSP (19 December 2014)