BusinessMirror February 13, 2015

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BusinessMirror

three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

www.businessmirror.com.ph INSIDE

Motoring

P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week

Key rates kept, as expected T

BusinessMirror

Editor: Tet Andolong

TfridayNovember Friday, February18, 13,2014 2015 Vol. Vol.10 10No. No.40 127

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B.S.P. SAYS ROBUST DOMESTIC GROWTH,WITHIN-TARGET INFLATION SUPPORT KEEPING POLICY SETTINGS STEADY

california dreaming Henry Ford Awards Best Motoring Section 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 2011 Hall of Fame

A broader look at today’s business

Friday, February 13, 2015 E1

By David Cagahastian

AMArAnello masterpiece—the 2015 Ferrari California T.

Story and photos by Kris C. Lim

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WOKE up to the sound of my alarm clock one Saturday morning—I hate getting up that early—and I had wanted to sleep again, but then I realized that it was “Ferrari Day.” That thought propelled me to take a shower, change clothes and drive to West McKinley Estate in Taguig City for the much anticipated driving experience and official debut of the Ferrari California T in Manila. And damn! It felt like my blood stirred upon seeing a bunch of Ferraris parked at the event venue such as the 348 GTB, F50 GT, F430 and 458 Italia. Imagine the nostalgic feeling of seeing those Italian luxury cars. And, perhaps, what was even more interesting was the opportunity to meet the latest Ferrari California T. Ferrari’s local distributor, Autostrada Motore Inc., made sure that it would be a memorable day as they allowed us to drive two California Ts—in red and blue—which had just been shipped into the country. The Ferrari California is a grand touring sports car hardtop convertible named after the late 1950s Ferrari 250 GT. The letter “T”, which is on the Holy Grail nameplate, stands for Turbo. The front of the car is dominated by the unmistakable Ferrari grille which gives it an aura of power and sportiness. The small side air intakes, which look like fish gills, ventilate the intercoolers for the new turbocharged engine, while the front brake intakes are in the front underbody. The headlights have a sleek wedge shape and house LEDs. The shape of the California Turbo is inspired by the 250 Testa

Rossa’s famous pontoon-fender styling. Dynamically hugging the front wheel, the line of the flank stretches all the way back to the aerodynamic air vent behind the wheel arch. The new door designs are now even more sculpted, down to the new 19-inch or optional 20inch forged wheels. What’s cool about this car is that it takes just 14 seconds to convert from a sophisticated coupe to a more chic, seductive spider! When I stepped inside the car, it felt like I owned everything in this world. Great attention has given to creating extra space to stow items of your girlfriend (or whoever your passenger is). Cabin elements have been completely redesigned and carefully studied to combine exceptional standards of sportiness, comfort and elegance. In terms of power, everyone knows that Ferrari engines are the products of cutting-edge,

technological know-how that makes all of the Maranello-born cars unlike any other. An astonishing new direct injection 3.9-liter V8 engine endows the California Turbo with 552 hp, which allows it to sprint from zero to 100 kph in just 3.6 seconds. Turbo technology has an honorable place in the Prancing Horse’s engineering tradition, as seen in its iconic models such as the GTO of 1984 and the F40 of 1987.

To experience an exhilarating drive, George Ramirez—a wellknown professional racer and instructor—designed a simple track on which we were tasked to do a full sprint, braking and maneuvering exercise. Flooring the pedal of the car was truly an awesome sensation. With a push on the gas pedal, the California T screamed like a cat! The sound became even more impressive as the revs increased. On the short braking exercise,

the California T was equally impressive. Thanks to new composite discs and pads integrated with the ESP 8.0 Premium system, which controls the high-performance ABS, the car is able to achieve extremely short stopping distances. The California T also boasts of true sports car dynamics, too, thanks to reduced steering wheel activity and improved steering wheel response courtesy of a new steering box and new suspension

setup. New springs and the latestgeneration Magnaride dampers (now more than 50 percent faster) combined with body motion accelerometers reduce roll and pitch to deliver more precise handling while still guaranteeing an incredibly comfortable ride. All told, the Ferrari California T driving experience was truly a memorable one. You can put it in two words— California dreaming!

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inspired, ‘unbroken’... angelina jolie

Life

Where God feels at home

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HANK You, Father, for the love that will fashion our families, our communities, our countryside, our coastlands and our cities into havens of peace, collaboration, solidarity, mutual respect and trust. A country built on love is a country with a future. It is a country that promotes justice and curbs corruption, a country that loves peace and works for it with persevering resolve. A country built on love, solidarity, mercy and compassion is a country where God feels at home, and where all its citizens feel at home with God. Amen. WORD AND LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

The policy rates were held in place as inflation forecasts remained low over the policy horizon in keeping with the significant decline in oil prices in the international market. At the rate-setting meeting of the MB on Thursday, the interest rates on special deposit accounts (SDAs) were also kept steady at 2.5 percent. “The MB’s decision is based on its assessment that prevailing monetary-policy settings remain appropriate. Latest baseline forecasts show a lower See “Key rates,” A2

LOVE CHOCOLATE? HAVE IT FOR DINNER »»D3

BusinessMirror

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

Friday, February 13, 2015

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Inspired, ‘Unbroken’...

Angelina Jolie

THE Oscarwinning actress/ director shares a moment with Louis Zamperini before his death last year.

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B J H Los Angeles Times

XENFORD, Australia—From within the sea of cast and crew she emerged, looking far less like one of the world’s most recognizable movie stars than a random, plainly dressed member of the Unbroken production team. Wearing a simple black blouse and slacks and walking with no train of assistants or handlers, the director didn’t magically part the waters the way filmmakers, such as Martin Scorsese or Baz Luhrmann, do on a film set. She put out her hand to shake, said, “I’m Angie,” and started to show a visitor around. There was tremendous bustle in and around Jolie’s world as the actress-turned-director was filming the true story of World War II bombardier Louis Zamperini. As a special-effects team prepared to reenact the Pacific Ocean crash of Zamperini’s B-24 on one massive stage, another crew inside another huge stage was setting up the yellow rafts in which Zamperini (Jack O’Connell) and crew mates Russell Allen “Phil” Phillips (Domhnall Gleeson) and Francis “Mac” McNamara (Finn Wittrock) would begin their epic voyage of survival. Inside all of the comings and goings encircling her, Jolie found a quiet corner in Village Roadshow Studios, where she pulled out a stack of photographs. They were taken just a few days earlier, when Jolie and her cinematographer, Roger Deakins, had filmed Zamperini and his fellow prisoners of war loading coal toward the end of their detention. The images were strongly evocative of (and, indeed, inspired by) Sebastião Salgado’s black-and-white work from the Brazilian gold mines in Serra Pelada, with the American soldiers covered head to toe in soot, their darkened bodies almost part of the Japanese landscape. “For us, the movie is all about the theme of light and darkness—it’s both a metaphor and it’s practical,” the 39-year-old Jolie said of directing just her second film,

after her 2011 debut, the independent Bosnian war drama In the Land of Blood and Honey. “When Lou is in the camps it’s dark, and when he comes up, it’s light. And that’s what we are trying to depict.” (Reviews of the film have been solid if not spectacular, but all have praised the film’s production and visual style.) It’s not only an interesting visual allusion but also a telling use of language: Unbroken was not a movie Jolie was making as an “I,” it was a movie she was making by “Us” and “We.” And that group categorically was

governed by one person, who was then miles from her Australian set and in the last months of his life: Zamperini himself. SPIRITUAL HINGE LOUIS ZAMPERINI, who died in July at age 97, was an Olympic long-distance runner who survived 47 days in a life raft only to be tortured for more than two years after he and Phillips (McNamara died at sea) were captured by the Japanese in 1943 and interned as prisoners of war.

Zamperini’s extraordinary ordeal—and his postwar struggles with alcoholism before he was able to absolve his principal tormentor, the sadistic prison commandant Mutsuhiro Watanabe—were the focus of Laura Hillenbrand’s 2010 biography, Unbroken, which has been on the bestseller list more than 180 weeks. Many filmmakers—including Steven Spielberg and Ron Howard—had been asked to shoehorn the sprawling story into a two-hour movie, but none before Jolie and her screenwriters, Joel and Ethan Coen, had figured out a possible path. The insurmountable challenge had been how to jettison the last third of Hillenbrand’s biography—everything that Zamperini experienced after being liberated from his third and final camp—without excising the book’s potent message of reconciliation. Working with the Oscar-winning filmmakers behind No Country for Old Men, Jolie seized on a singular moment in Zamperini’s captivity and decided that it had to become the spiritual hinge of the adaptation, the film’s emotional conclusion. About three-quarters of the way through her book, Hillenbrand recounted how Watanabe forced Zamperini to hold a heavy wooden beam over his head. Healthy men might have labored to keep it aloft for more than a few minutes; Zamperini, racked by dysentery and malnourished, defied his oppressor and lifted it above him for more than half an hour. “Something went on inside of me,” Zamperini recalled later. When O’Connell tried to replicate the feat during filming, he twice passed out. “I’m not one to look for or preach about miracles or anything like that; I’m still searching myself for what to be sure of and what to believe in,” Jolie said weeks later back in Los Angeles. About to attend a party to promote the film, which opened on Christmas Day, she now was outfitted in an elegant dress and looked very much like one of the most striking women in the world. “You hear

life

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‘i need a lot of work’ C1

| Friday, February 13, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

THE Clippers’ Glen Davis shouts after a dunk. AP

Sports CLIPPERS SILENCE ROCKETS

TIGER WOODS says on his web site the last two weeks have been disappointing, especially at Torrey Pines, where he is an eight-time winner. AP

‘I NEED A LOT

OS ANGELES—Los Angeles Clippers center DeAndre Jordan had 24 points and 20 rebounds to lead the Clippers to a 110-95 win against the Houston Rockets in one of two key clashes between National Basketball Association (NBA) Western Conference contenders on Wednesday. The other West showdown resulted in Oklahoma City comfortably beating Memphis. In the Eastern Conference, Toronto further built its massive lead in the Atlantic Division by narrowly beating Washington, while conference leader Atlanta was beaten on the buzzer at Boston. The Clippers played their third game without Blake Griffin, who will be sidelined at least three weeks after surgery for a staph infection in his right elbow, but Jordan stepped up in his absence, as did Jamal Crawford and JJ Redick, who each had 20 points. Jordan shot six-for-eight from the field, extending his NBA-record streak to 39 consecutive games shooting at least 50 percent. Corey Brewer scored 22 points for the Rockets, who have lost 11 of their past 12 meetings with the Clippers. Toronto’s DeMar DeRozan hit a tiebreaking jump shot with 12 seconds left to give the Raptors a 95-93 victory over Washington. Lou Williams scored 27 points and DeRozan had 23 for the Raptors, who have won seven of the past eight meetings with the Wizards, including all three this season. John Wall scored 21 points for Washington, which fell into a tie with Cleveland for fourth in the East. Oklahoma City got 50 points from the pairing of Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook to defeat Memphis, 105-89. Durant scored 26 points and Westbrook added 24 for the Thunder, who have won five of six heading into the All-Star break. Zach Randolph scored 16 points for the Grizzlies, who had won 10 of their previous 11 games, and failed to capitalize on Houston’s loss, with the gap between the division rivals staying at three games. Boston’s Evan Turner made a running scoop shot with 0.2 seconds left to give Boston its only lead of the game as the Celtics pinched an 89-88 win against Atlanta. Jared Sullinger had 17 points and 15 rebounds for the Celtics, while Turner had 12 points, nine assists and seven rebounds. Al Horford scored 22 points and added 12 rebounds for the Hawks, who suffered only their third loss of the calendar year. San Antonio won, 104-87, at Detroit, setting it up with a strong defensive performance in the first quarter. Danny Green scored 19 points and Tony Parker added 17 for the Spurs, who held Detroit to 12 points in the first quarter and led comfortably through just about the entire second half. D.J. Augustin scored 22 points for the Pistons. Dallas held on for an 87-82 home win against Utah, helped by 15 points in the third quarter by JJ Barea. Starting while Rajon Rondo recovers from a broken orbital bone, Barea (22 points) got a boost when Monta Ellis joined him in the backcourt a day after being called doubtful with a hip injury. Gordon Hayward was limited to 12 points for Utah and had two of his six turnovers in the closing minutes. Golden State’s Andre Iguodala and Leandro Barbosa led a dominant effort from the reserves, leading the Warriors to a 94-91 win at Minnesota. Portland beat Los Angeles, 102-86, to extend the Lakers’ road losing streak to a franchise-record 11 games. Indiana cruised to a 106-93 win at New Orleans, which was without All-Star Anthony Davis and forward Ryan Anderson. Milwaukee produced a third-quarter surge to win, 111103, against a Sacramento team preparing for its third coach this season. Cleveland made it 14 wins in 15 games by defeating Miami, 113-93, with LeBron James scoring 18 points against his former Heat teammates. Orlando’s Nik Vucevic had 28 points and 18 rebounds to lead the Magic to an 89-83 victory over New York. AP

OF WORK’ Hopeful of having injuries behind him, Tiger Woods made a horrific start to the new year. He shot a career-high 82 in the second round of the Phoenix Open to miss the cut by 12 shots. And then he withdrew after 11 holes of ordinary golf at Torrey Pines because of tightness in his back from a fog delay.

By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

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EBBLE BEACH, Florida— Tiger Woods said on Wednesday his game is “not acceptable” to compete in tournaments and he will return when he thinks it is. Hopeful of having injuries behind him, Woods made a horrific start to the new year. He shot a career-high 82 in the second round of the Phoenix Open to miss the cut by 12 shots. And then he withdrew after 11 holes of ordinary golf at Torrey Pines because of tightness in his back from a fog delay. Woods said on his web site the last two weeks have been disappointing, especially at Torrey Pines, where he is an eight-time winner. He said he never wants to withdraw, but recent injuries have allowed that to happen too often. Woods said his latest injury was not related to the back surgery he had last spring, and that he is feeling better every day with physical therapy. “Right now, I need a lot of work on my game, and to still spend time with the people that are important to me,” Woods said. “My play, and scores, are not acceptable for tournament golf. Like I’ve said, I enter a tournament to compete at the highest level, and when I think I’m ready, I’ll be back.” Woods is not playing Pebble Beach or Riviera, and said he would practice next week at his home and at The Medalist “getting ready for the rest of the year.” He said he wants to play the Honda Classic, which starts on February 26, but he won’t be there unless his game is

tournament ready. “That’s not fair to anyone,” Woods said. “I do, however, expect to be playing again very soon.” Ernie Els, who has known Woods longer than any other active Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour player, heard about his woes while playing in Dubai and later saw highlights. “As competitive as we are, we don’t want to see anyone suffer like that,” said Els, who has finished second to Woods more than any other player. “We’ve got to do our stuff in public. I don’t care if you’re Tiger Woods, Ernie Els or whoever. If you have some error in your game, you get exposed.” Woods, the winner of 79 PGA Tour events and 14 majors, has never looked this bad on the golf course. He had back surgery to relieve a pinched nerve a week before the Masters and missed three months (including the first two majors), and then he took four months off at the end of last year to regain strength and get his back fully healed. He also hired a new swing consultant and embarked on the fifth swing change of his career. His chipping was bad at the 18-man Hero World Challenge at Isleworth in December, when he tied for last. His chipping looked even worse at the Phoenix Open, a collection of shots that he either flubbed short or bladed across the green. Woods is at No. 62 in the world, his worst ranking since before he won his first PGA Tour event in 1996. He is not eligible for the World Golf Championship at Doral. “I am committed to getting back to the pinnacle of my game,” Wood said.

sports

‘NO THERAPEUTIC CLAIM’ TO GIVE WAY TO FILIPINO TRANSLATION SOON–FDA By Roderick L. Abad

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BusinessMirror

he Monetary Board (MB) kept the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s (BSP) key policy rates at 4 percent for overnight borrowing and at 6 percent for lending.

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HE Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced on Thursday that the phrase “No Therapeutic Claim” can no longer be used in all advertisement, promotional and sponsorship materials or activities concerning food or dietary supplements in the country. “We will be requiring in ads and promos the use of Filipino translation, instead,” Center for Food Regulation and Research Officer in Charge Director Maria Victoria D. Pinion told the BusinessMirror at the sidelines of an FDA forum in Makati City. This, she said, will be reiterated in a circular that they will issue to concerned advertisers anytime this February. “We already have the draft. It’s for final review. We target within the month to issue such,” she bared. While the circular is just a reiteration of the

PESO exchange rates n US 44.3530

See “Therapeutic claim,” A1

ABS-CBN PIONEERS DIGITAL TELEVISION IN THE COUNTRY From being the first to introduce television in the country, to being the first to broadcast in full color, ABS-CBN once again pioneers another milestone in Philippine broadcasting as the first TV network to broadcast in digital with the launch of ABS-CBN TVplus. ABSCBN TVplus, a digital box more popularly known as the mahiwagang black box, promises clear picture and sound, and will offer four free exclusive channels (CineMo, DZMM TeleRadyo, Knowledge Channel and Yey!) on top of ABS-CBN, ABS-CBN Sports+Action and all the free-to-air channels available via digital transmission. It is offered at an affordable one-time payment of P2,500 only, with no monthly or installation fee. The ceremonial and historic switch-on for ABS-CBN TVplus happened on February 11 at the ABSCBN Center Road, led by (from left) ABS-CBN Chairman Eugenio Lopez III, President and CEO Charo Santos-Concio, and Head of Access Carlo Katigbak. See story on A8.

Ayala Corp. to spend ₧185 billion this year By VG Cabuag

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onglomerate Ayala Corp. on Thursday said it will spend some P185 billion in capital expenditures (capex) this year, with its property arm getting P100 billion. The figure was slightly lower than the record P187-billion spending budget set

in 2014 by the company, which is slowly venturing into capital-intensive power and infrastructure projects. Property unit Ayala Land Inc. will get P100 billion in capex as it implements its so-called 2020 vision business plan. The said plan is meant to support Ayala Land’s target of growing by an average of 20 percent every year, with the end goal of

reaching the P40-billion net-income target by 2020, more than tripling its P11.7-billion profit in 2013. “We started an aggressive growth strategy a few years back and we continue to undertake value-enhancing opportunities amid this sustained momentum in our economy. Each of our business units is See “Ayala,” A2

n japan 0.3688 n UK 67.5940 n HK 5.7207 n CHINA 7.1048 n singapore 32.5933 n australia 34.2177 n EU 50.1189 n SAUDI arabia 11.8230 Source: BSP (12 February 2015)


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