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VIRGIE SALAZAR AND LOUIE M. LACSON
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RETHINKING THE DÉCOR OF YOUR CHILD’S ROOM »D4
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BEAUTY pared down to the soul, as featured in Heart and Home: Rooms That Tell Stories by Linda O’Keeffe.
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
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BOLD colors and a sublime eye in Decorating the Way I See It by Markham Roberts
Style books to inspire décor
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B P S Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
VERY year dozens of beautifully rendered design and style books hit the shelves. They are often perused for the pictures or used to create a tableau in a reading nook, but the real value is between the covers. There you will find inspiration, encouragement and a sense of what is possible in any space with some imagination and desire. Here are a few worth owning: ■ Decorating in the Grand Manor by Carleton Varney, Rooster Books for Shannongrove Press Nobody understands heritage like Carleton Varney. He owns the oldest design firm in the country, Dorothy Draper & Co. Inc. He has been with the firm since 1962 working with Draper on numerous projects. The first room he did from top to bottom at the Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, was the Crystal Room. It remains today as it was then. He continues the legacy of Draper at the Greenbrier, at The Grand on Mackinac Island, and at The Colony in Palm Beach, where he has incorporated a blend of his style and hers. The author of 27 books on decorating, plus several others, including the official biography of Dorothy Draper, this book is a design memoir taking the reader on a colorful journey through his public and personal spaces.
■ Robert Couturier: Designing Paradises by Robert Couturier, Rizzoli Many try, but not all succeed when it comes to blending eras in a sophisticated not stagey manner. This is an arena where French-born Robert Couturier is king. In Designing Paradises, he shows off his love of luxury and expertise as an architect and interior designer. He offers readers a look at his country home in Connecticut complete with early American guesthouses as well as properties he has designed here and abroad. His work translates well from England to Mexico to the US and beyond. It’s the language of elegance and it is evident in the 250 color illustrations. He established his design firm in 1987 the same year he was commissioned by Sir James Goldsmith to transform his 20,000-acre Mexican estate. From neutral whites to a room with Hermes orange paneling, this timeless tome can be enjoyed for the contrasts and fabulous photos, as well as the way it will stir your own creativity. ■ Artfully Modern by Richard Mishaan, Monacelli Press The essential role art combined with design play in today’s environments is explored in the projects taken on by Richard Mishaam. From the living room he did for the 2011 Kips Bay Decorator Show House to the presidential suite at the Saint Regis Hotel in New York City. It’s a compilation of his best work since 2009. His interiors are described as “sumptuous style mash-ups” because of his fearless pairings of seemingly incongruent periods with art from a variety of eras and
ONE of the exquisite spaces featured in Decorating in the Grand Manor by Carleton Varney.
styles. However, his first order of business when doing a residential space is to understand how his clients live and what their lifestyles will accommodate. ■ Decorating the Way I See It by Markham Roberts, Vendome Press This is a book of beautiful diverse interiors that actually seem attainable partly because the book is divided into informational style chapters, such as Floor Plan, Background, Scheme, Furniture, etc. Readers can actually learn something from Roberts, who worked for the renowned decorator Mark Hampton before branching out on his own. Like others of his ilk, he meshes traditional and contemporary in seamless ways. He says in the book, “I’m happy when clients come to me with great art.” He enjoys the challenge of working existing art and photographs into a new design scheme. Unlike other books, he includes a section on architecture. This is a tome you will want to revisit again and again as a reference tool for your own projects. ■ Rowing Blazers by Jack Carlson, Vendome Not exactly an interior design book, nevertheless Boston native Jack Carlson manages to demonstrate the importance of heritage, a hallmark of great style, whether in decor or fashion. This author, a former member of Georgetown University’s eight-man crew team, also illustrates how passion can be translated into beauty. It’s old school style at its best, something Carlson has embraced, having won in 2013 at one of rowing’s most prestigious venues, the Royal Regatta at Henley, England. He is currently a Clarendon Scholar at Oxford University. His book goes beyond the story of the iconic blazer to what these particular jackets signify. If you have a preppy bent, you will love this book. If you row,
you will love this book. If you are a fan of all things classic, you will want to own this book. ■ Heart and Home: Rooms That Tell Stories by Linda O’Keeffe, Rizzoli As a writer involved in the design world it was only natural for Linda O’Keeffe to observe that rooms, like people, have a story to tell. She chooses rooms from the most complex to playful and refined to emotionally charged. The book offers a peek into the space occupied by connoisseurs in the worlds of art, design, fashion and more. Among them are renowned interior designer Kelly Wearstler, fashion designer Wolfgang Joop and architect Lee Ledbetter. Heart and Home circles the globe going from a New York loft all the way to a haveli in Udaipur, India. As O’Keeffe notes in the introduction, “A home is much more than a dwelling, place of birth, or primary residence. It’s wherever we feel creative or relaxed enough to permanently loosen our stays.” It’s the kind of book that should give readers the courage to make their home tell their story.
life
■ Beyond Chic: Great Fashion Designers at Home by Ivan Terestchenko, Vendome Press Christian Louboutin and Giorgio Armani are only two of the fashion icons whose homes Terestchenko explores. Getting a look at the environments great designers choose to live in offers a kind of voyeuristic thrill as the reader is taken on a journey from lovers of minimal to champions of maximum embellishment. The private personas of the occupants are evident in the photo essays that unveil one designer’s Moroccan riad and another’s Swiss chalet. Although the book was published a while ago, it is worth a mention since lovers of fashion and decor can experience a rare glimpse at both in this well done compilation. ■
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oil firms may keep output up–B.I.S. World Companies BusinessMirror
Editor: Dionisio L. Pelayo• corp@businessmirror.com.ph
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Oil firms may keep output up–BIS
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companies failing to meet interest payments, the BIS said.
NERGY companies may be slow to cut oil production after a 50-percent price drop because they need to service debt that has risen fourfold since 2003, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). “Debt-service requirements may induce continued physical production of oil to maintain cash flows, delaying the reduction in supply in the market,” the Basel, Switzerlandbased institution said in a report. Energy companies’ outstanding debt rose to more than $800 billion this year from less than $200 billion in 2003, said BIS, which is owned by central banks. Sinking oil prices weakened the value of assets used as collateral by
according to the report. This encouraged energy companies to both lock in forward prices, adding to the selling pressure, and to keep production levels elevated to sustain revenues, prolonging an oversupply, the BIS said. Supply will exceed demand by 2 million barrels a day in the first half of 2015, according to Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh.
Borrowing costs
TUMBLING oil prices have increased borrowing costs among energy companies, with spreads on high-yield bonds issued by energy companies soaring to 800 basis points, or 8 percentage points, as of January, from 330 points in June, according to the BIS. The spread measures the additional interest costs paid by a borrower compared above a benchmark rate. Brent for March settlement increased $1.23, or 2.2 percent, to $57.80 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange, up 9.1 percent for the week ended February 6. Even after the recent rally, Brent has still fallen about 50 percent from its June 19 high of $115.71. The expansion in borrowing by energy firms outpaced total debt issuance since 2003, which has tripled in the period to about $6 trillion,
producers and compelled them to sell more of their output on futures markets, it said. Oil’s role as a financial asset may have contributed to the price drop and the most volatile swings in prices in more than six years. Brent crude oil, a global benchmark, has tumbled as members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries refused to cut oil production in response to the highest US output in three decades. Lower prices increases the risk of
Oil production
US oil production is up 8.7 percent since the end of June, even amid tumbling prices. Production reached 9.213 million barrels a day the week of January 23, the highest level in weekly Energy Information Administration data going back to 1983. The level of borrowing in dollars by energy companies outside the US may also push prices lower, as a strengthening dollar makes it harder for firms based in emerging nations to pay off their debt, the BIS said. Oil’s role as a financial asset may
have played a role in the price drop. West Texas Intermediate and Brent futures contracts representing nearly 2 billion barrels of oil traded hands on Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange and ICE Futures Europe exchange in London. The world consumes a little more than 90 million barrels of physical oil a day. WTI has seen price swings of more than 5 percent in three of the past six trading days. The CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index, which measures price fluctuations using options of the US Oil Fund, rose to the highest level since 2009 on Thursday. The US Oil Fund, the biggest US-listed oil exchange-traded fund, holds WTI futures. “The steepness of the price decline and the very large day-to-day price swings are reminiscent of a financial asset,” the BIS said. “As with other financial assets, movements in the price of oil are driven by changes in expectations about future market conditions.” Bloomberg News
Ohio workers join Report: Automakers fail to fully protect vs hacking oil refineries strike W
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REGON, Ohio— Workers in northwest Ohio have joined the first nationwide strike at US oil refineries since 1980. The Blade newspaper of Toledo reported that some 100 BPHusky Toledo refinery workers began picketing at midnight outside the plant in Oregon, Ohio. A local union official said on Saturday night that some 350 workers would be on strike and planned to have picketing around the clock. “They’re discouraged that the strike is happening, bu they understand why it has to happen,” said Bryan Sidel, financial secretary of the local. The United Steelworkers union earlier notified BP Plc. that workers at refineries in Ohio and Indiana would join a walkout that began February 1 at nine other refineries. A BP spokesman said the company expects to continue operating with replacement workers and does not expect a significant effect on production. T he str ike began after steelworkers said that negotiations with Shell Oil Co. had broken down.
Shell is negotiating the national contract for other oil companies. The union has said workers want better health-care benefits and limits on the use of contractors to replace union members in maintenance jobs. She said wages are not an issue. “BP is disappointed that USW leadership decided to call a strike at both the Whiting Refinery and BP-Husky Toledo Refinery,” said BP Spokesman Scott Dean by e-mail. He said BP remained at the negotiating table and wanted a deal that “provides good wages while giving management the flexibility it needs” to remain competitive. BP’s plant in Whiting, Indiana, has about 1,860 employees, more than 1,000 represented by the steelworkers. BP’s Toledo refinery in Ohio, which it owns 50-50 with Canada’s Husky Energy, has some 600 workers total. The plants will be staffed by replacements including retirees and former front-line workers who now hold salaried jobs, Dean said. AP
Coke settles labor dispute with dismissed employee
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TLANTA—Coca-Cola has settled a National Labor Rel at ions Boa rd complaint with a former employee who claimed the beverage giant fired him in retaliation for his role in trying to organize a union at a metro Atlanta bottling plant. Greg Guice, a bulk delivery driver, will receive $42,500 in ending his complaint against the company that dates back to his dismissal in 2012. Guice’s grievance was to go before an administrative law judge on February 12. Coca-Cola denied that it had done anything wrong in settling the dispute. “Coke knew that they were violating my rights when they discriminated against me for organizing a union in Atlanta,” Guice said in a statement. “Now I have a piece of justice. I hope that Coke employees see this settlement as a victory for us all in our efforts to win a voice on the job and a Teamsters contract.”
Guice, who helped to spearhead an unsuccessful effort to organize a union at an Atlantaarea facility in 2010, alleges that the company two years later used his absence from work to take his ill father to the hospital as an excuse to fire him. He said the company termed the absence “unexcused,” even though he had earned appropriate time off for his time away. In a complaint to the National Labor Relations Board alleging “anti-union discrimination,” Guice alleged he had been under the company’s scrutiny since the 2010 organizing effort, including speaking out on the subject that year at Coke’s annual shareholder’s meeting. He said also he was instructed by management to remove a union insignia from his uniform and in 2012 was issued a “disciplinary warning” from a plant supervisor after further questions arose about organizing discussions. TNS
ASHINGTON—Automakers are cramming cars with wireless technology, but they have failed to adequately protect those features against the real possibility that hackers could take control of vehicles or steal personal data, according to an analysis of information that manufacturers provided to a senator. Democratic Sen. Edward Markey of Massachusetts asked automakers a series of questions about the technologies and any safeguards against hackers built into their vehicles. He also asked about how the information that vehicle computers gather and often transmit wirelessly is protected. Markey posed his questions after researchers showed how hackers can get into the controls of some popular cars and sports-utility vehicles, causing them suddenly to accelerate, turn, sound the horn, turn headlights off or on and modify speedometer and gas-gauge readings. The responses from 16 manufacturers “reveal there is a clear lack of appropriate security measures to protect drivers against hackers who may be able to take control of a vehicle or against those who may wish to collect and use personal driver information,” a report by Markey’s staff concludes. Today’s cars and light trucks typically contain more than 50 electronic control units—effectively small computers—that are part of a network in the car. At the same time, nearly all new cars on the market today include at least some wireless entry points to these computers, such as tire pressure monitoring systems, Bluetooth, Internet access, keyless entry, remote start, navigation systems, WiFi, anti-theft systems and cellular-telematics, the report said. Only three automakers said they still have some models without wireless entry, but those models are a small and declining share of their fleets. “Drivers have come to rely on these new technologies, but unfortunately, the automakers haven’t done their part to protect us from cyberattacks or privacy invasions,” Markey said in a statement. Among the report’s findings: n Most manufacturers said they were unaware of or unable to report on past hacking incidents. Three automakers declined to answer the question. One automaker described an app designed by an outside company and released for Android devices that could access a vehicle’s computer network through the Bluetooth connection. A security analysis didn’t indicate any ability to introduce malicious code or steal data, but the automaker had the app removed from the Google Play store as a precautionary measure. n Each manufacturer is handling the introduction of new technology
in very different ways, and for the most part these actions are insufficient to ensure security. Hackers can get around most security protections cited by manufacturers, according to the security experts Markey consulted. n Only one manufacturer appeared able to detect a hacking attempt while
A broader look at today’s business
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I.F.C. ENERGY SPECIALIST SAYS LAW EFFECTIVE IN ATTRACTING INVESTORS, FOSTERING COMPETITION
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ORGIVE us, Father, for how can we give in to such negative thoughts and feelings when we are alive and surrounded with goodness? You have blessed us with family, friends, livelihood, lively conversations and laughter. With what beauty You have adorned the world in which we live in: The sun, the clouds and the blue sky, the moon and the stars, the rain and the dew, the trees and flowers, the birds and the butterflies. How grateful we are for being surrounded with goodness. Amen!
egaworld Corp. on Monday said it will launch five new mixed-development projects this year with combined land area of 400 hectares, bringing the company’s township portfolio to 20. The company, in its disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange, did not mention the specific locations and details of the projects, but said two will be in Luzon, two in the Visayas and one in Mindanao. It will use the landholdings of its units Suntrust Properties Inc., Empire East Land Holdings Inc. and Global-Estate Resorts Inc. It did not specify what these units will develop. This will bring Megaworld’s total township land area to 3,100 hectares by the end of the year, the company said. “With our adequate land bank and landholdings, the Megaworld is growing its townships to even more cities all over the Philippines.
This means more exciting destinations, more homes to be built, more office buildings to be offered and more jobs for Filipinos. Our vision is to build more world-class townships in every major city in the Philippines year after year,” Andrew Tan, Megaworld chairman and CEO, said in a statement. “We still have more lands to develop in our portfolio. Our various groups are working hard to come up with unique concepts and ideas on how we will create more sustainable communities across the country,” Tan said. Megaworld has around 4,000 hectares of land in its portfolio. Around 80 percent have been dedicated for its townships or mixed-use communities, the concept of property development that Megaworld claims it pioneered in the country back in the 1990s, when it developed Eastwood City in Libis, Quezon City. The townships combine the residential, office, commercial and retail components to form integrated communities.
it was happening and only two described credible means of responding to such intrusions in real time. Information from most automakers indicated they wouldn’t know about a hacking attempt unless data from the vehicle’s computers was downloaded by a dealer or at a service center. AP
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Electrolux to buy Chinese dishwasher manufacturer
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HARLOTTE, North Carolina—Electrolux announced on Thursday it will buy Shanghai Veetsan Commercial Machinery, one of the largest manufacturers of professional dishwashers in China. The acquisition is aimed at growing the Swedish appliance maker’s professional segment, which includes food service and laundry equipment, and expansion into China and the Asia-Pacific region, according to Electrolux. The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2015. “Professional dishwashing represents one of the most promising product categories as its penetration rate in China is still considerably lower than other categories, such as cooking or refrigerated storage,” Alberto Zanata, head of Electrolux Professional Products, said in a statement. Veetsan was established in 2003 and has annual sales of about 115 million Swedish kronor (about $13.9 million). Charlotte has been home to the Electrolux North American headquarters since 2010. The company employs 925 people in Charlotte and has said it plans to increase that number to 1,600 by the end of 2017. Company management has credited strength of Electrolux’s North American business to product innovation, such as development of a premium dishwasher that can wash and dry a load of dishes in 30 minutes. TNS
World companies
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greek premier proclaims end to austerity in policy statement
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By Lenie Lectura
he energy specialist of the International Finance Corp. (IFC) is not in favor of amending the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (Epira), saying that the law “has delivered what it was asked to do.” IFC chief energy specialist Tonci Bakovic, in his prepared speech during a recent forum on “Benchmarking Regulation: Exploring an Efficient Regulatory Framework for a Competitive Power Industry,” said the law has been successful in attracting investors, as well as fostering competition in the industry. “Close to 11,300 megawatts [MW] of new generation have been built, attracting close to $17 billion in private investments to the generation sector. Fourteen new players have been introduced to the sector to compete among each other. Not many countries that have undergone reform have achieved the introduction of such number of new players,” Bakovic said. But Bacovic said his statements do not necessarily reflect the views of the IFC, a unit of the World Bank. The IFC official also noted that generation prices have been kept almost at par with inflation in a country that has been growing lately at close to 7 percent per annum from 2010 to 2014. “That is quite an achievement in a country that grows fast,” he said.
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ISRAELI AMBASSADOR AT A.L.C. MEDIA GROUP Israeli Ambassador Effie Ben Matityau (left) visits the office of the ALC Media Group in Makati City for a discussion with editors and publishers. Matityau underscores the critical role of the agriculture sector in developing rural areas in the Philippines. In its bid to help young Filipino farmers learn innovative agricultural technologies, the Israeli government will tap 500 Filipino agriculture students to study in Israel. Following the discussion, BusinessMirror Publisher T. Anthony Cabangon hands over a framed caricature of Matityau as a token of the ALC Media Group’s appreciation. ALYSA SALEN
B3-1 | Tuesday, February 10, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
Mining revenues up GLOBAL GROWTH SCARE 37 percent in 2014 NOW SEEMS OVERBLOWN
MARDI GRAS IN TEXAS
Alisha Wells waves from a Krewe of Aquarius float as the Mystic Krewe of Aquarius Mardi Gras Parade winds its way through downtown Galveston, Texas on the first weekend Mardi Gras festivities on February 7. AP/THE GALVESTON COUNTY DAILY NEWS, STUART VILLANUEVA
Greek premier proclaims end to austerity in policy statement
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REECE’S new Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras set his leftist government on a collision course with Greece’s creditors on Sunday, proclaiming an end to the era of austerity and “five years of bailout barbarity.”
Tsipras presented his government’s policy statement to Greek lawmakers, which included, as he had forewarned, all the promises made by his radical-left party, Syriza, in its manifesto before last month’s election. The government “has taken the irrevocable decision to stick fully to its preelection commitments,” Tsipras said, indicating that he would not compromise on his party’s positions. By demanding a “bridge agreement” that would give Greece and its creditors time to negotiate a new debt deal much more favorable to the country by June, Tsipras appeared to stick to an approach that got short shrift from European Union partners in a series of meetings that Tsipras and his finance minister had with European officials this past week.
“If our [EU] partners are willing, we can agree [on a bridge agreement] tomorrow morning,” Tsipras said. But this would mean the rest of the EU abandoning its declared policies and giving in to Syriza’s demands. “The [bailout deal] has been abolished by popular mandate,” Tsipras said, referring to the two deals that have kept debt-ridden-Greece solvent and provided a historically unprecedented €240 billion ($271.4 billion) in assistance. This aid also went with austerity policies that shrank Greece’s economy by a quarter and resulted in record unemployment, with more than a quarter of the workforce jobless. Having come to power as a result of a popular backlash against these measures, Tsipras geared his speech
completely toward a domestic audience, insisting that it is the EU that must return to its “founding principles of solidarity, social cohesion, growth and democracy.” “We declare categorically, we will not negotiate our history. We will not negotiate this people’s pride and dignity,” said an emotional Tsipras as he concluded his speech. The current bailout deal runs until the end of February, but Tsipras said the government is “not entitled to ask for an extension,” while blasting the previous government for purposely rejecting an EU proposal to extend the deal to June, so that a Syriza-led government would face tight deadlines. “They burned the crops and blew the bridges,” Tsipras said of the previous conservative-socialist coalition government. Syriza’s own program includes measures to provide relief for the poor, such as free meals, free electricity and free health care; relief for the middle class by abolishing an unpopular property tax and replacing it with a tax on very large property; and sops to his supporters, such as the abolition of university reform and a reestablishment of the state TV and radio broadcaster that was shut down in 2013 and replaced by a slimmeddown version. But a pledge to raise the minimum wage to pre-crisis levels, once promised as the first
measure to be implemented by the government, will be done in two stages and not realized until 2016. Tsipras insisted that his government's budgets would be balanced, save for the debt servicing needs. On the debt, while his original demand for a minimum 60-percent “haircut,” or write-off, has been rejected by Greece’s creditors, he has presented other proposals, such as issuance of low-interest “perpetual bonds,” maturity extensions and deferrals of payments that would have the same effect. He said the EU should have no problem accepting his pledges to tackle corruption and tax evasion and reform the state administration. Greek lawmakers will debate the policy statement and hold a confidence vote at midnight on Tuesday. Greece faces three crucial EU meetings in the coming days: An emergency meeting of Eurozone finance ministers on Wednesday, a summit of EU leaders Thursday, and another euro-zone finance ministers meeting on February 16. It has been given a virtual ultimatum to present a program compatible with the bailout deal by that latter meeting; the European Central Bank has applied additional pressure by refusing to accept Greek bonds as collateral after February 11, forcing Greek banks to seek funds from a more expensive emergency liquidity mechanism. AP
PEOPLE line up outside the Dia a Dia supermarket after it was taken over by the government in the Propatria neighborhood of Caracas, Venezuela on February 3. The government is temporarily taking over the supermarket chain as part of a crackdown on private businesses it blames for worsening shortages and long lines. Popular items with government fixed prices that have been running short are coffee, cooking oil, precooked corn flour, sugar, milk, toilet paper, disposable diapers, detergent and fabric softener, among other items. AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS
VENEZUELA TO INCORPORATE OCCUPIED GROCERY INTO STATE SYSTEM
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ENEZUELAN President Nicolas Maduro on Friday announced that an occupied supermarket chain officials accused of hoarding products will be folded into the state food distribution system. Maduro said the 35 locations of the Dia a Dia grocery chain will be assimilated into the state grocery agency starting this weekend. He did not say if the change would be permanent, and stopped short of calling it an expropriation. He accused the chain of “carrying out a war against the people,” referring to the government’s assertion that right-wing business owners are purposely making shopping a nightmare by hoarding goods to cause the shortages and long lineups that are plaguing Venezuela. Soldiers had occupied the Dia a Dia chain earlier this week, and on Friday, the attorney general’s office announced the continued detention of Dia a Dia’s director. Earlier, two executives of Venezuela’s largest drugstore chain, Farmatodo, were detained as part of an investigation by price-control authorities. Many economists blame price and currency controls for causing the economic distortions plaguing Venezuela at a time when falling oil prices are battering its revenues. The Caracas Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Services rejected government accusations that the private sector is the cause of the severe economic crisis, shortages and soaring inflation in Venezuela. AP
Abbott holds less sway to fix worst Australian economy in 24 years
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USTRALIAN Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s diminished mandate after a leadership challenge risks making it tougher for him to address the weakest economy in a generation. With gains in tax revenues slumping, Abbott already faced a challenging job to prepare the annual budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1. Now he’ll have to craft it under a political cloud with almost 40 percent of his parliamentary colleagues voting Monday to unseat him. The scale of the party rebellion suggests political instability will persist. “Ongoing uncertainty over leadership and policy direction is likely to remain a negative for business
confidence, which is already languishing below its long-run average, with implications for business expenditure on both capital and labor,” said Su-Lin Ong, the head of Australian economic and fixed-income strategy at Royal Bank of Canada in Sydney. That is likely to pressure the central bank to cut interest rates further to support the economy, she said. Here’s what the economic environment that Abbott faces looks like: ■ The longest stretch of weak expansion since the 1991 recession Gross domestic product (GDP) growth is on track to be below its 30year average rate for six of the past seven years. The Reserve Bank of Australia on February 6 lowered its forecast average expansion for 2015 to be-
tween 1.75 percent and 2.75 percent. ■ Government debt as a proportion of GDP is highest since 1996 Abbott’s conservative predecessor, John Howard, elected in 1996, paid off Australia’s debt before embarking on tax cuts and middleclass welfare payments financed by the mining boom. Following the 2008 global financial crisis, as revenue failed to meet expectations, the then-ruling Labor party borrowed to continue financing expenditure. Abbott now confronts the crunch of tax increases or welfare cuts, a task bordering on impossible in the current political environment. The ruling coalition lacks a majority in the Senate, which has blocked proposed policy changes. Popular support for
the government fell 3 points to 43 percent, while that for Labor rose 3 points to 57 percent, according to the latest Newspoll published in the Australian newspaper Monday. Net debt as a proportion of GDP is forecast to rise to 15.2 percent in 2014-15, the highest since 1996-97. ■ Business confidence at its weakest since the end of the RuddGillard-Rudd government Corporate sentiment surged with the election of the Abbott’s LiberalNational coalition after three years of minority government and leadership chaos. It has since trended lower as frustration with the new administration grows. “Political instability dramatically affects business confidence,” said
John Osborn, director of economic and industry policy at the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Canberra. “Business is looking for a unity of purpose from government to fix the problems with the budget and to get the economy back on track.” Echoing those sentiments, Saul Eslake, chief Australia economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said: “Business put a lot of store by the change of government in 2013, and I think they have become either increasingly disenchanted with the performance of the government or increasingly frustrated with its inability to get its legislation through.” ■ Australian unemployment has held above 6 percent for the longest
stretch since 2003 The RBA said the economy is set to grow slower than previously forecast, and joblessness is likely to rise higher and remain there longer than earlier seen. ■ Key commodities are at the weakest level in five years The price of iron ore, Australia’s biggest export, has collapsed about 50 percent as China’s economy slows, and the plunge in the oil price has hurt the prospects for the nation’s developing liquefied natural gas industry, whose Asian contracts are linked to crude. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s commodity price index fell 19 percent in Australian dollar terms in January from a year earlier. Bloomberg News
World
B3-1
WHERE SOCCER IS TRULY RELIGION
Sports BusinessMirror
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T, F ,
mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
ALTHOUGH the competition remains limited to priests or those studying for the priesthood, it draws players— including some former pros— from more than 60 countries, most of them African or South American.
WHERE SOCCER IS TRULY RELIGION T
B K B Los Angeles Times
HE Clericus Cup rule book is the Bible of soccer at the Vatican. And just like that other Good Book, it contains certain commandments. The first commandment is thou shalt not foul an opponent who has a free path to the goal. Disobey and the punishment is not a red or yellow card but a blue one that leads to soccer’s version of purgatory: a five-minute trip to the sidelines for spiritual reflection. “I have only heard about the blue card,” said Lewi Barakat, an Australian seminary student who has not sinned in three previous Vatican soccer tournaments. “I never saw it used.” But Barakat, like the more than 350 priests, deacons and seminarians from the Vatican who play in the annual event, has faith the blue card exists. And at the Vatican, faith—and soccer—are both considered essential. Just ask the guy in charge. “It’s beautiful when a parish has a sports club. Something is missing without one,” said Pope Francis, a dues-paying member of the supporters group for Argentine soccer team San Lorenzo— which, not insignificantly, was named after a saint. The pope doesn’t have a favorite among the 16 teams that will kick off in March for the twomonth-long event in the ninth edition of the Clericus Cup, the soccer tournament that takes its name from the Latin word for clergy. But that doesn’t mean he won’t be watching. Because in less than a decade the annual intercollegiate competition among Rome’s Pontifical seminaries has grown from a series of intramural scrimmages into a regulation 11-on-11 tournament that has drawn attention from Fédération Internationale de Football Association (Fifa), the sport’s world governing body, and praise from Union of European Football Associations, European soccer’s ruling organization. “It’s bigger than I ever thought it would be,” said Scott Gratton, a former teammate of Barakat’s on the North American Martyrs, the US seminary
team that has won two of the last three Clericus Cup titles. “It literally is like the World Cup to us.” And though the competition remains limited to priests or those studying for the priesthood, it draws players—including some former pros—from more than 60 countries, most of them African or South American. “It’s no walk in the park,” said Barakat, 30, who was a top-flight amateur player in Sydney. “The Clericus Cup deserves to be taken with some seriousness and played competitively.” It’s not the highest level of soccer played in the Vatican, though. Vatican City, the world’s smallest country, also has an international team composed primarily of the Swiss Guard and other staffers, making the Vatican one of only nine recognized sovereign states whose national team is not a Fifa member. Another is tiny Monaco, which beat Vatican City, 2-0, in its most recent game last May. But whatever the Clericus Cup lacks in talent it more than makes up for in passion. Teams in the tournament have their own supporter groups, composed mainly of other seminarians, who have unique chants for both their teams and individual players. Holy Martyrs—whose uniforms are a patriotic blend of red, white and blue—may have the most impassioned fans, some of whom have shown up costumed as Super Mario, Spider-Man, Uncle Sam and Captain America while waving American flags. Some have even come dressed as priests. “The atmosphere the fans produce is impressive,” Barakat said. “They make noise from start to finish.” Sometimes too much noise. In the tournament’s early years, supporters brought drums, tambourines, megaphones and boomboxes that played reggae music at ear-splitting levels. Neighbors complained, and though the Vatican didn’t institute a vow of silence, it did ask the seminarians to turn down the volume. The seeds for the tournament were planted in 2003 by Jim Mulligan, a seminarian at England’s College in Rome who organized an eight-team “friendly” event called the Rome Cup. But the
POPE FRANCIS DOESN’T HAVE A FAVORITE AMONG THE 16 TEAMS THAT WILL KICK OFF IN MARCH FOR THE TWO-MONTH-LONG EVENT IN THE NINTH EDITION OF THE CLERICUS CUP, THE SOCCER TOURNAMENT THAT TAKES ITS NAME FROM THE LATIN WORD FOR CLERGY, BUT THAT DOESN’T MEAN HE WON’T BE WATCHING.
won three of the first four titles, all by 1-0 scores. Last year they lost by that same score to the African Lions of Collegio Urbano, whose players—with the exception of one Indian and one Indonesian—all came from Africa. There are few breaks in the school calendar for seminary students in Rome, so Clericus Cup games, as well as the twice-weekly practices that began last month, must be squeezed in around class and church commitments. But for Greg Gerhart, a seminarian and former all-state high-school player from Austin, Texas, the two activities complement one another. “There are several connections between the demands of priesthood—or Christianity in general—and soccer,” Gerhart, 27, who also plays for the North American Martyrs, wrote in an e-mail. “For that reason I have thought about putting on summer camps at the parish to show how the fun and discipline that soccer brings about are consistent with the Christian life.” The players bless themselves before taking the field, where both teams meet at the center circle for a pregame prayer. There are no requests for favorable results, though, because the tournament is more about camaraderie and personal growth than it is about winning. “One of the satisfying aspects of playing for our seminary is seeing how the players come together as a team and how that bond strengthens throughout the tournament,” Barakat said. “More than any other competition I have played in, the players look for the balance of playing hard but fair. There is something greater that the players are striving for that goes beyond the Clericus Cup.” Sometimes the physical and the spiritual worlds collide, which is why the North American Martyrs will once again be without Gratton. The highscoring forward sustained a knee injury and hasn’t played since helping his team to its second straight title in 2013—making the Clericus Cup one of the few international soccer events that has been dominated by North Americans. “He wants to be able to genuflect when he is a priest one day,” Barakat said of Gratton. “So he decided to retire early for a greater good.”
sports
idea didn’t win the Vatican’s blessing until four years later. That’s when the church’s No. 2 official, Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, a fan of Italian club Juventus and a soccer commentator during his time as Archbishop of Genoa, doubled the number of teams and modeled the tournament after the World Cup, adding group play and a knockout round. The tournament is played on a hilltop within Vatican City at Columbus Pius XI Field, an artificial-turf venue with a tiny grandstand and a breathtaking image of Saint Peter’s Basilica, which fills the view between the two team benches. The RedMats of Redemptoris Mater are the most successful team in the tournament, having
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By Jonathan L. Mayuga
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ining revenues increased by P27.65 billion, or 37 percent, last year, according to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB), in spite of conditions that tend to adversely affect the industry’s growth. MGB Director Leo Jasareno said nickel production was again the main driver of growth last year. The growth in mining revenues came amid questions raised by the industry’s big players on the inconsistency of national and local policies on mining, as well as the push for higher taxes by the government. Jasareno attributed what he described as “upbeat showing” of the metallic sector to the performances of nickel, gold and copper projects, namely, the Cagdianao Nickel Project of Platinum Group Metals Corp. in Region 13, with P9.94 billion; Didipio Copper-Gold Project of OceanaGold Philippines Inc. in Region 2, P9.76 billion; Padcal Copper-Gold Project of Philex Mining Corp. in the Cordillera Administrative Region, P8.16 billion; Toledo Copper Operations of Carmen Copper Corp. in Region 7, P8.13 billion; and Taganito Nickel Project of Taganito Mining Corp. in Region 13, P7.84 billion. See “Mining,” A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.1630
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he global growth scare that’s gripped financial markets is looking overblown to some economists. Even as bond yields plumb record lows alongside sliding inflation, the world economy is set to strengthen with the US expansion plowing ahead and cheaper oil, cash and currencies providing lift elsewhere. Signs of a healthier outlook—bolstered by central banks rushing to ease monetary policy to prop up prices‚would comfort investors and Group of 20 (G-20) finance chiefs meeting on Monday in Istanbul, even amid the distractions of Greece and Russia. Bank of America Corp. is predicting stocks will outperform bonds this year as reflation takes hold. “G-20 policy-makers are concerned inflation won’t turn around, but what’s in the pipeline does look more promising in terms of the growth and inflation outlook,” said Torsten Slok, chief international economist at Deutsche Bank AG in New York and a former International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecaster. Slok estimates the world economy will grow 3.6 percent this year, the fastest pace since 2011 and a bit quicker than the 3.5 percent envisaged by the IMF last month when it cut its outlook by the most in three years. At hedge fund SLJ Macro Partners Llp. in London, cofounder Stephen Jen is among those betting on a “converge up” scenario in which a resurgent US buoys expansions internationally. See “Global growth,” A2
BSP seen keeping key rates on prevailing low inflation By Bianca Cuaresma
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he sharp moderation of inflation seen in the last quarter of 2014 and again in January this year has helped prevent the central bank from raising the policy rates, thus far this year, analysts at DBS Bank said. But the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) remains wary of such events as a sudden reversal of oil prices, as some experts predict, and, as a result, the monetary authorities were not seen to favor cutting interest rates so soon this year, the regional lender said. In a research note, DBS said the central bank will likely keep its monetarypolicy stance as the monetary authorities train a keen eye on how oil prices behave in the international market. “The rather sharp moderation in the consumer price index [CPI] inflation is the reason the BSP is reluctant to raise its key policy rates for now,” DBS Bank said. Inflation has trended downward since its peak in mid-2014, at 4.9 percent. Starting last September inflation has effectively been managed and brought down by
the central bank, in large part because oil prices have retreated in the international markets. The Philippine Statistics Authority only recently reported that inflation, or the rate of change in prices, averaged 2.4 percent in January. Unlike other central banks in the region, however, the BSP was not seen to cut the policy rates just yet, according to such other analysts as those at JPMorgan, for instance. “Indeed, we remain of the view that the central bank may actually prefer to tighten its policy further in the coming sessions,” the DBS Bank said. “The recent uptick in global crudeoil price may lift CPI inflation slightly higher in the coming months,” according to DBS Bank, quickly adding that the country is still “definitely far” from the 4.5-percent trend seen in mid2014, when the BSP stepped up on its monetary-policy normalization. The central bank adopted a low inflation target for this year of 2 percent to 4 percent, from year ago of 3 percent to 5 percent, in recognition of the moderating pressure on prices as a whole.
n japan 0.3713 n UK 67.3221 n HK 5.6973 n CHINA 7.0721 n singapore 32.6529 n australia 34.4593 n EU 50.0146 n SAUDI arabia 11.7699 Source: BSP (9 February 2015)