BusinessMirror January 8, 2015

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Tuesday, November 2014Vol. Vol.1010No. No.9140 Thursday, January18, 8, 2015

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Abola SAYS OIL WINDFALL COULD CONTRIBUTE 1.2 PERCENTAGE POINTS TO GDP EXPANSION

PAPAL VISIT 2015

‘7.5% growth for 2015 doable’ T By Cai U. Ordinario

he Philippines—being a net oil importer— could see faster growth of up to 7.5 percent this year, with the economic gains from the cheaper fuel likely to contribute 1.2 percentage points to the gross domestic product (GDP) expansion, an economist said.

7 DAYS INSIDE

15 destinations to set sights on in 2015 Father and teacher of youth

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EAR Lord, I wish to pay homage and full respect to Saint John Bosco, the “father and teacher of youth.” Another great event this year is the celebration of the Bicentenary of the Birth (August 16, 2015) of Saint John Bosco, who had a special love of predilection for the youth who are poor and in danger. Although Saint John Bosco’s birthday will be celebrated on August 16, the preparation for that great day and subsequent activities will last several months. Don Bosco Makati School was where my first formative years of teaching took place, which lasted for 48 years, including my stint at Lasallians Institutions. To Saint Bosco and Saint La Salle, I gave my all in the service of Evangelization in Education. Amen! WORD AND LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

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

Life

‘BONIFACIO— ANG UNANG PANGULO’: THE SLOW, BORING LIFE OF A HERO »D3

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15 destinations for travelers to set their sights on in 2015 B C R Los Angeles Times

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S 2014 has slipped into history, these 15 destinations look better and better. Some are nations, some are stations, some are cities and one is a mere neighborhood. But in just about every case, there’s something particularly compelling about them right now. Maybe it’s because hurricane recovery is marching along (Los Cabos, Mexico) or the French government has the tides figured out (Mont-St.-Michel) or perhaps (in the case of Choquequirao, Peru) because an aerial tram might change everything. Here are my picks for the new year:

LOS CABOS, MEXICO IN September Hurricane Odile tore up huge chunks of Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo, closing more than half the area’s lodgings, along with scores of restaurants and other businesses and the airport. But these twin towns at the tip of Baja have too much at stake to lie still. The airport and more than two dozen hotels reopened in October and November. By the end of December, tourism officials expected to have 10,000 of the area’s 16,000 hotel rooms in service, along with its 12 existing golf courses and two new ones. Several more of the best-known resorts (including One&Only Palmilla; Esperanza; and the Westin Resort & Spa, Los Cabos) expect to reopen by the end of March. Whenever you get to Los Cabos in 2015, odds are good you’ll get a warm welcome and lower rates than last year’s. Info: For a status list of hotels—and real-time webcam views of 11 resorts—check www.unstoppable. cabo.com. Info: www.visitloscabos.travel. Info: www. visitloscabos.travel. CUBA LONG known for its beaches and culture, Cuba became mostly forbidden territory for American travelers soon after Fidel Castro seized control in 1959. But relations have gradually thawed in recent years, leading to a watershed agreement announced last December 17 by President Barack Obama and Cuban leader Raul Castro (who took over from brother Fidel in 2008). These normalized relations could mean a rush of US tourists to Cuba. Under restrictions on the books, Americans can travel to Cuba on “people-to-people” educational trips operated by companies licensed by the Treasury Department. Thousands of Americans have visited already; Cuban authorities counted 92,348 American tourists in 2013,

a slight dip from 2012, but much more than the 73,566 in 2011. Info: Among US companies licensed to run tours to Cuba: InsightCuba (www.insightcuba.com), Road Scholar (www.roadscholaradventures.org) and Grand Circle Foundation (www.grandcirclefoundation.org). Info: www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/cu/., Road Scholar (www. roadsholaradventures.org) and Grand Circle Foundation (www.grandcirclefoundation.org). Info: www.state. gov/p/wha/ci/cu/. and Grand Circle Foundation (www. grandcirclefoundation.org). Info: www.state.gov/p/wha/ ci/cu/. Info: www.stage.gov/p/wha/ci/cu/. CLEVELAND IN the last five years, the city has added eight hotels (with a ninth, a Kimpton, coming in 2015) and built a convention center, an aquarium and the new Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (www.rockhall.com) will hold an induction ceremony on April 18. The city’s Playhouse Square—which includes five grand old venues dating to the 1920s—in May added a 20-foot-tall outdoor chandelier at Euclid Avenue and East 14th Street. By summer, the Cleveland Institute of Art (a.k.a. the CIA) is due to complete a $75-million, 80,000-square-foot expansion (including new gallery space and an auditorium). You can expect more prettification around town; the city will host the Republican National Convention in 2016. Info: www.thisiscleveland.com. CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA BUILDINGS and food, people. This architecture-rich city, born in the late 17th century, is where the Civil War began (in 1861 when Confederate troops attacked Fort Sumter at the mouth of Charleston Harbor). Scores of historically important buildings survived the war, an earthquake (1886) and hurricane (1989) and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Since 1977, the Spoleto Festival USA (May 22 to June 7, www.spoletousa.org) has been filling the city with opera, dance, theater, jazz and chamber music. In recent years, the city has won wide attention for its cuisine. (To catch Charleston at its foodiest, visit from March 4 to 8 for the city’s 10th Wine + Food festival (www.charlestonwineandfood.com). Or come on your own timetable to sample old favorites such as McCrady’s Restaurant (where President George Washington is said to have convened a 30-course dinner in 1791) or newcomers such as Brasserie Gigi (opened in April near the 19th-century Charleston City Market) or Prohibition Charleston (a restaurant and bar with live music most nights).

Keep an eye out, too, for proliferating distilleries, including Charleston Distilling Co. and Striped Pig Distillery, which make spirits from local ingredients and offer tasting and tours. Info: www.charlestoncvb.com. MONT-ST.-MICHEL FRANCE THIS site in Normandy—a tiny island at the mouth of the Couesnon River, subject to dramatic tidal surges and home to a 1,000-year-old abbey and hamlet—has been seducing visitors for generations. Mont-St.-Michel, with a population of less than 50, ranks as France’s third most popular tourist attraction. But over the decades, silt has been accumulating around the island, as have parking lots and a causeway used by countless tourists. As a result, it was often surrounded by mud flats instead of water. To bring back the water, French officials have spent years building a dam, moving sand and devising a shuttle system. In 2012 they closed the parking lot. In 2014 came a new bridge. In 2015, to mark the project’s completion, workers will destroy the old causeway (which, dating to 1879, is older than the Eiffel Tower). Nowadays, when the tides are right, visitors can follow a boardwalk 1.2 miles from the mainland to the island, or take a shuttle. Gradually, officials say, the surrounding silt will disperse and the island’s maritime character will return. Info: www.lat.ms/1x5Vgw0. JAPAN MORE trains, more hotels, more visitors and Olympics on the horizon—that’s Japan in 2015. With Tokyo’s 2020 Olympics in mind, officials say they want to double foreign tourism in the next six years. New bullet-train service will shorten travel times from four hours to two hours and 30 minutes from Tokyo to Kanazawa, which is known for its Kenrokuen Garden and Chaya (teahouse) districts. Also, trips from Tokyo to Toyama Prefecture, known for its mountain scenery and traditional villages, will be shortened from about three hours to about two. And, of course, there’s plenty to see and do in Tokyo. The 30-story Hotel Gracery Shinjuku is due to open in April near the city’s busiest rail station. The Aman Tokyo, which was due to open in December, is the first city hotel from a global hotel chain known for ultra-luxe properties in remote settings. It is occupying the top six floors of Tokyo’s Otemachi Tower. Info: www.foreign.info-toyama.com/en, www.jnto. go.jp or www.jnto.go.jp/.

Bohol extends holiday treats at travel fair IT’S all systems go for the first-ever all-Bohol travel fair in Glorietta Mall, Makati City, ongoing until January 11. The province of Bohol gives more reasons to celebrate, as it opens the new year with irresistible deals of up to 70-percent discount on accommodations, tours and other travel essentials in one of the country’s favorite destinations. The travel fair kicks off Bohol’s year-round tourism campaign, dubbed Visit Bohol 2015. According to Gov. Edgar Chatto, the province has lined up an exciting slew of activities in 2015 as it moves to become the must-go destination in the Philippines. This is in line with the Department of Tourism’s (DOT) Visit Philippines 2015 campaign. In promoting the province as the newest must-go tourist destination, the travel fair also features popular Boholano products, along with musical numbers from popular performers such as the world-renowned and Boholano’s pride, the Loboc Children’s Choir. The three-day event signals the first time ever that the tourism sector in Bohol has come together in a massive campaign to entice tourists to visit. It is part of the Bohol Tourism Action Plan developed in collaboration with the United States Agency for International Development through its Advancing Philippine Competitiveness Project, the DOT, the United Nations World Tourism Organization and the Pacific Asia Travel Association, as well as local tourism stakeholders. Budget-carrier AirAsia is the exclusive airline partner for the campaign and offers seat sale.

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■ Next week: more must-visit destinations for 2015.

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shell to pay $83.5m for worst oil spill in nigeria World Companies BusinessMirror

Editor: Dionisio L. Pelayo• corp@businessmirror.com.ph

Shell to pay $83.5 million for worst oil spill in Nigeria

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OHANNESBURG—Oil giant Shell has agreed to pay a Nigerian fishing community £55 million (about $83.5 million) for the worst oil spill ever suffered in Nigeria. Wednesday’s agreement ends a three-year legal battle in Britain over two spills in 2008 that destroyed thousands of hectares of mangroves and the fish and shellfish that sustained villagers of the Bodo community in Nigeria’s southern Niger Delta. It “is thought to be one of the largest payouts to an entire community following environmental damage,” the claimants’ London lawyer, Leigh Day, said. Shell said it is paying £35 million

($53.1 million) to 15,600 fishermen and farmers and £20 million ($30.4 million) to their Bodo community. “We’ve always wanted to compensate the community fairly,” said Mutiu Sunmonu, managing director of Shell Nigeria, which is 55-percent owned by the Nigerian government. Shell originally offered £4,000 ($6,000) to the entire community, Leigh Day said. Sunmonu said Shell also has agreed and is “fully committed” to a cleanup.

High cost of doing business, taxes drive Mercedes-Benz away from New Jersey

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ERMAN luxury automobile maker Mercedes-Benz said on Tuesday that it was moving its US headquarters from New Jersey to Atlanta, in part to be closer to its manufacturing facility in Alabama. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal said the company accepted an incentive package from the state, but said he could not discuss the details yet. The Fulton County Development Authority met briefly on Tuesday to discuss its own incentive package for Mercedes’s estimated $93 million facility but provided no details. The decision comes after weeks of lobbying—some of it public—by New Jersey officials who sought to keep the company in Montvale, at a campus that is about a five-minute drive from BMW’s North American headquarters. About 1,000 jobs are to be moved starting July. The company said it will move first to a temporary facility in Atlanta before moving into a new space in about two years. Deal and Georgia economic development officials would not discuss the location Mercedes is pursuing in metro Atlanta. Mercedes said it would announce more details later this month Mercedes-Benz USA President and CEO Stephen Cannon said in a statement that the company will benefit by being closer to its growing base of customers in the Southeast, as well as its port in Brunswick, Georgia, and its manufacturing facility in Alabama. Cannon praised New Jersey and the company said some operational areas will remain in Montvale and Robbinsville “The state has worked tirelessly with us as we evaluated our op-

tions,” he said in a statement. “Ultimately, though, it became apparent that to achieve the sustained, profitable growth and efficiencies we require for the decades ahead, our headquarters would have to be located elsewhere.” He also said the quality of life, schools and cultural options in Atlanta were reasons to move there. Other recent Georgia projects in the automotive industry include the construction of a new US headquarters for Porsche near HartsfieldJackson Airport and Kia’s first US manufacturing facility about 75 miles southwest of Atlanta. Executives have cited access to the world’s busiest airport for employee travel and to the state’s ports for shipping. Deal credited the state’s access to that infrastructure and an insistence on cooperation between economic development, utility and education officials for the results. Deal said the most memorable portion of the state’s pursuit was being told that the automaker was seriously considering Georgia for its US headquarters. Deal said Mercedes-Benz approached Georgia officials several months ago. “The prestige associated with that name is exciting to me,” Deal said. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie had a series of meetings and calls with Cannon to try to keep the company in New Jersey, said Michael Drewniak, a spokesman for the governor. In each conversation Mercedes USA made one thing very clear about its decision to leave: The cost of doing business and the tax environment is just too high here to be competitive with a state like Georgia, he said. AP

Cutrale-Safra completes takeover of Chiquita

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EW YORK—Safra Group and Brazil’s Cutrale completed their acquisition of Chiquita Brands International Inc. on Tuesday, taking the banana producer private. Chiquita, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, agreed in October to be acquired by investment firm Safra Group and juice company Cutrale Group for about $681 million, or $14.50 per share. The companies had put the transaction’s value at about $1.3 billion, including the assumption of Chiquita’s debt. Saf ra and Cutra le sa id on Tuesday that affiliate Cavendish Acquisition Corp. completed the

tender offer for all of Chiquita’s outstanding stock. The tender offer expired on Monday. About 84.5 percent of Chiquita’s outstanding shares were validly tendered in the offer. With the tender offer completed, the remaining shares not tendered were canceled and Chiquita stock is being delisted from the New York Stock Exchange. Chiquita, now a subsidiary of the Cutrale-Safra Group, said two executives would be leaving the company—CEO Ed Lonergan and Chief Financial Officer Rick Frier. The company named its operating chief, Brian Kocher, as interim CEO. AP

Chief Sylvester Kogbara, chairman of the Bodo Council of Chiefs and Elders, said he hoped “that Shell will take their host communities seriously now” and embark on a cleanup of all of Ogoniland. A United Nations Environment Program report has estimated it could take up to 30 years to fully rehabilitate Ogoniland, an area where villagers have been in conflict with Shell for decades. Kogbara said the community money will be used to provide needed basic services. “We have no health facilities, our schools are very basic, there’s no clean water supply,” he told the Associated Press. Individually, he said villagers are discussing setting up as petty traders and other small businesses until their environment is restored. Each person gets £2,200 ($3,340) in a country where the minimum monthly wage is less than $100. Shell’s Sunmonu insisted that

oil theft and illegal refining remain “the real tragedy of the Niger Delta” and “areas that are cleaned up will simply become reimpacted.” Amnesty International said Shell continues to blame oil theft for spills—which means it does not have to pay compensation—when the company’s own documents state its aging oil pipelines present a “major risk and hazard.” Shell had argued that only 4,000 barrels of oil were spilled in Bodo, while Amnesty International used an independent assessor who put it at over 100,000 barrels—considered the largest ever oil spill in mangroves. Oil pollution in the Niger Delta is one of the biggest corporate scandals of our time, Audrey Gaughran of Amnesty International said. She said thousands more people remain at risk because of Shell’s failure to fix aging and dilapidated pipelines. AP

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has implications for the global market and the US market.” Gerard used a speech to oil and gas officials and others to lay out the industries’ top goals for 2015. Among the goals he outlined: ending a ban on exporting US oil abroad, eliminating a renewable fuel standard that requires a certain amount of gas be made with biofuels, and rolling back proposed Environmental Protection Agency action on emissions. He said a US ban on exporting oil was a “relic of America’s era of energy scarcity” and did not account for rapid growth in energy production. The Renewable Fuel Standard has “outlived its usefulness,” he said. And increased regulations create uncertainty in the market. “Multibillion-dollar industries cannot operate on government guesswork,” he said. Gerard was bullish about America’s energy future, saying that if the right energy policies are pursued the US can eliminate its dependence on other countries for energy. He said he sees “the opportunity to permanently diminish what have been our nation’s biggest economic and geopolitical vulnerabilities.” AP

Lawsuit alleges Dr. Dre, Jimmy Iovine swindled Beats partner

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AN FRANCISCO — Rapper Dr. Dre and record producer Jimmy Iovine are being vilified as scam artists in a lawsuit that alleges the duo duped one of their former partners in Beat Electronics before selling the trendy headphone maker to Apple for $3 billion last year. The complaint filed on Tuesday in San Mateo Superior Court accuses Dre and Iovine of double crossing Noel Lee, the founder of video and audio cable maker Monster Llc. Lee once held a 5-percent stake in Beats as part of a partnership between the headphone maker and Monster that ended in 2012. The lawsuit alleges Dre and Iovine orchestrated a “sham” deal with smartphone maker HTC in 2011 that led to the termination of the Monster alliance. The suit alleges the shady maneuvering prompted Lee to pare his stake in Beats to 1.25 percent before selling his remaining holdings for $5.5 million in the autumn of 2013 after being assured by Beats executives that there were no plans to sell the company for at least several years. Beats announced its sale to Apple in May, opening the door for Dre and Iovine to become executives at the iPhone and iPad maker. Had he held on to his 1.25-percent stake, Lee would have received more than $30 million in the Apple deal. His original 5 percent stake would have been worth roughly $150 million. Both Dre, whose real name is Andre Young, and Iovine, a longtime recording industry executive, reaped the biggest jackpots in the Apple deal, though the precise size of their windfalls has not been disclosed. Lee’s lawsuit says Dre and Iovine each owned 15-percent stakes in the early stages of the Beats partnership.

Jimmy iovine (left) and Dr. Dre

Apple Inc. declined to comment on the lawsuit. The Cupertino company is not named in the complaint. Besides Dre and Iovine, the lawsuit targets HTC America Holding Ltd. and Paul Wachter, a Beats investor and board member. The bitterness seeping through Lee’s lawsuit contradicts how Lee described the ending of the Beats partnership in a late 2013 interview with the Associated Press. At

that time, Lee called it an “amicable” parting and said he was paid “very generously” in royalties. This is not the first time that a former Beats partner has lashed out at Dre and Iovine in court. David Hyman, who sold his music streaming service MOG to Beats in 2012, is suing the two men for bad faith. That action, filed shortly before the Apple deal was sealed, is unfolding in Los Angeles Superior Court.

GDMA scandal: USN officer pleads guilty

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AN DIEGO—A US Navy officer pleaded guilty on Tuesday in a massive bribery scheme involving a longtime military contractor in Asia who allegedly offered luxury travel, prostitutes and other bribes to navy officers in exchange for confidential information. Cdr. Jose Luis Sanchez, 42, is the highest-ranking officer to plead the guilty in the case, which rocked the navy when the first charges were filed in 2013. He faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison when he is sentenced on March 27. Sanchez, who lives in San Diego and remains on active duty, was asked to silently read four passages of a 24-page plea agreement and

say if the wrongdoing described was accurate. “Yes, sir,” he told Judge David Bartick each time. Robert Huie, an assistant US attorney, told reporters that Sanchez admitted taking bribes of cash, prostitutes and hotel stays over four years. Sanchez was charged with accepting bribes for steering Navy ships to Leonard Glenn Francis, chief executive of a Singaporebased company that provided services to vessels at ports. Francis, known in militar y circles as “Fat Leonard,” and his company Glenn Defense Marine Asia Ltd., or GDMA, serviced Navy ships for 25 years. Prosecutors say he bought information that allowed his company

to overbill the Navy for port services in Asia by at least $20 million since 2009. Francis was arrested in September 2013 and has pleaded not guilty. Sanchez, one of four navy personnel charged in the case, held key positions in Singapore and Japan before he was reassigned to Tampa, Florida, in 2013. Prosecutors alleged that he took $100,000 in cash, plane tickets and prostitutes for information on Navy shipping schedules and other information, some of it classified. The judge agreed to let Sanchez remove a GPS monitor, while free on bond and allowed him to back the bond with assets of his mother and sister, instead of his own property. Sanchez’s lawyer, Vincent Ward,

Lee appears to be interested in recovering the money that he believes he lost through the alleged misconduct of Dre and Iovine. The lawsuit also depicts Lee as the brains behind the Beats By Dre headphones, while casting Dre and Iovine as little more than figureheads. One section of the lawsuit likens Lee to two more famous innovators, Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak and sound-system pioneer Ray Dolby. AP

said his client needed his own money to pay legal fees and assured the judge that Sanchez would not betray his family by failing to appear for sentencing. His mother and sister sat in the front row. “He’s closer to his mom and sister than anyone,” Ward said. Sanchez and his lawyer declined to speak with reporters as they left the courtroom. He is the fifth person to plead guilty in the case and the second navy official. Daniel Layug, a petty officer who admitted providing classified shipping schedules and other internal Navy information to Francis, pleaded guilty in May. Nav y Cdr. Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz has pleaded not guilty. AP

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CRUDE SLUMP OPENING DOOR FOR DEALS–ANG

Oil group chief: Amid price drop, US set to be global leader ASHINGTON—Plunging oil prices have hurt American companies in the short run, but increased US production means that the country is on the path to become a global leader in oil production, the head of the US oil and gas industry’s top lobbying arm said on Tuesday. Falling oil prices have empowered the US and weakened the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and Russia, said Jack Gerard, the chief of the American Petroleum Institute. The result is that increased US production has “fundamentally reordered the world’s energy markets,” he said. Stocks in energy companies have tumbled as oil prices have dropped in recent weeks. But Gerard, speaking on Tuesday at an annual State of American Energy event in Washington, said price fluctuations have not affected the long-term prospects for oil demand. “The price today has some impacts...but longer term you will see the demand for our product continue to grow,” he said. “I can’t predict the price. But what it clearly shows is what we’re doing in the United States

In a briefing on Wednesday, FMIC-UA&P Capital Markets Research economist Victor A. Abola said low oil prices can boost growth by enabling the country to save about $3.25 billion, or around P220 billion, from fuel importations—already equivalent to 1.2 percentage points of GDP. “This [low oil prices] is the new normal that we can expect in the next couple of years,” Abola told reporters. This means that, if the economy can grow at 6 percent, an addition of 1.2 percentage points from the oil windfall would result in a growth of 7.2 percent for the full year. Abola cited US oil forecasts that point to West

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an Miguel Corp. (SMC), the Philippines’s biggest company by revenue, is ready to take advantage of falling valuations for energy assets as oil prices slump to a five-year low, President Ramon S. Ang said in an interview. Any acquisition would be in addition to the company’s P360-billion ($8-billion) investment program planned across all its units through 2017, Ang, 60, said in his office in Mandaluyong City on Tuesday. That figure includes $2 billion to be spent on its existing oil business in Malaysia, as the company accelerates its expansion into energy. SMC has been chasing energy-producing assets since at least 2012, when Ang said the company was considering a $5-billion purchase in the gas industry. In July last year, he said, the company had $10 billion

PESO exchange rates n US 44.9800

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papal merchandise A street vendor sells T-shirts with images of Pope Francis for P150 each ($3) outside a church in downtown Manila on Sunday. Pope-related merchandise—

from calendars to mugs, shirts and statuettes—are starting to flood the market, barely a week before the arrival of the pope in the country. Pope Francis will visit this predominantly Catholic country from January 15 to 19. AP/Aaron Favila

GIR recovered in December to hit $79.8 billion

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By Bianca Cuaresma

he Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on Wednesday reported that the country’s gross international reserves (GIR)—serving as the frontline defense against potential risks in the global front— hit $79.8 billion as of end-December 2014. This represented a four-month high since August last year, when the foreign-currency reserves aggregated $80.9 billion. This also marked the first time when the reserves actually grew from a series of declines over three months, starting September last year. Compared, however, to the same month in the previous year, the December GIR still paled in comparison with reserves aggregating $83.2 billion in December 2013.

Data from the central bank show the recovery resulted from higher revaluation of the central bank’s gold holdings, as well as from an increase in its foreign investments and gains from its foreignexchange operations. The BSP’s foreign investments went up by $784 million during the month, from $69.39 billion in November, to $71.18 billion in December. Foreign investments remain the single largest component of the GIR. So-called revaluation of the central bank’s gold holdings contributed $253 million to the rise in GIR, as the gold holdings rose to $7.48 billion in December from $7.23 billion in November. The BSP’s foreign-exchange operations,

meanwhile, resulted in a $99.1-billion increase from $235.9 billion in November, to $335 billion in December 2014. All GIR component values in December, however, proved lower compared to values seen in December 2013. The increase during the month could have been larger, according to the BSP, if this was not partially offset by payments made by the national government for maturing foreign-exchange obligations. At this level, the central bank said the GIR amply covers 10.2 months’ worth of imports of goods, and payments of services and income. It is also equivalent to 8.4 times the country’s short-term external debt based on original maturity, or six times based on residual maturity.

n japan 0.3795 n UK 68.1762 n HK 5.8017 n CHINA 7.2397 n singapore 33.7662 n australia 36.5097 n EU 53.4992 n SAUDI arabia 11.9835 Source: BSP (07 January 2015)


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