BusinessMirror March 5, 2015

Page 1

BusinessMirror

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

U.N. Media Award 2008

A broader look at today’s business

www.businessmirror.com.ph

7 Asian banks set to enter PHL

custom one-day tour

Life

Trust me

EAR God, You are always faithful to answer. Sometimes Your answer is a much-desired “Yes.” Sometimes Your answer is a merciful “No.” Sometimes Your answer is a faith-filled “Not yet.” Sometimes Your grace-filled whisper is “Maybe.” And sometimes—sometimes, when an answer cannot be found, Your answer is simply “Trust Me.” Oh, God, we really believe You. Amen. YETTA CRUZ AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

THE highrises of Pudong, on the east bank of the Huangpu River in central Shanghai, can be seen from the Bund. PHOTOS: SCOTT KRAFT/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS

JANNY CHYN, owner of Shanghai Pathways, a custom touring agency, stands on a rooftop in the Old City of Shanghai.

THE all-youcan-eat weekend dim sum buffet at Lynn. The restaurant is located in the French Concession, the popular Shanghai neighborhood that until the 20th century was considered French soil.

A TEA merchant, Chen Wangqing, in his colorful shop in the Old City of Shanghai.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

B S K Los Angeles Times

tours, and it specialized in small groups. Several dozen tours were listed on its web site, including such things as feng shui consultations and dumpling making. I didn’t see exactly what I was looking for, so I e-mailed Janny, the owner, who seemed to instantly grasp my goal. She recommended the Custom Tour, a seven-hour guided trip that she tailors to a visitor’s interests. At 2,200 yuan (about $350) for one or two people, it was pricey. But it seemed worth a try. On a cool fall Saturday, Janny showed up at my hotel at 10 am. She carried a backpack and an umbrella, looking more like a graduate student than a business owner. She had roughed out an itinerary, starting with the Bund, the historic waterfront and Shanghai’s most famous site, a viewing point for the high-rises across the Huangpu River. The curving, mile-long embankment, dotted with stunning buildings, once was the heart of an international settlement of American and British financiers and later a major commercial center for East Asia. After strolling along the Bund, we crossed a bridge to the Astor House Hotel, where we wandered upstairs to see the historic rooms where Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein, among other notables, once stayed. Then we went next door to a part of the Astor that had been converted into residences. It was surreal: Some of the dark teak hotel room doors bore their original numbers, and hallways had been converted to open-plan kitchens with stoves and sinks. We passed a woman rinsing abalone and a man chopping garlic. We caught another taxi (they are cheap in Shanghai) to the Bird and Cricket Market. Amid the chirping, Janny explained how many Chinese people revere crickets and keep them as pets. (She has two.) The qualities to look for, she said, are color and “the sound of their song.” Some were dime-sized, but others—especially those sold for fighting—were nearly as large as a fist. The market was filled with kiosks selling cricket accessories, including cricket homes—hand-painted boxes with air vents. We made quick work of the rest of the market: birds, turtles, chinchillas, a truly creepy collection of newborn rat pups and large vats of just-cooked bird food and wiggling worms. Next up was lunch at Lynn, a modern Chinese restaurant in the French Concession, the popular Shanghai neighborhood that until the mid-20th century was considered French soil. The all-you-can-eat dim sum brunch (88 yuan, or about $14 per person) included steamed pork dumplings, pan-fried pork bun, deep-fried turnip cake, bean curd soup, Shanghai smoked fish and black rice in lotus root. Janny showed me how to use a spoon and chopsticks to eat the Shanghai specialty, soup dumplings. (The key: Hold the dumpling in a spoon, lift

HANGHAI—As the nighttime lights of Shanghai winked to life late on a damp Saturday afternoon, the tour guide said she had one last stop in mind: the marriage market in People’s Park. “I just hope we’re not too late,” she said as we hailed a taxi and headed for the huge park in central Shanghai. The marriage market wasn’t listed in my guidebooks. But I had spent the day following her suggestions, exploring parts of Shanghai I wouldn’t have discovered on my own, and I had yet to be disappointed. It was as though I had hired a local friend for the day. We found dozens of people still in the park, all parents shopping for mates for adult children. Some had created signs touting their offspring and affixed those ads to open umbrellas on the sidewalk. Others were clumped in circles, engaged in animated conversations. “Why just the parents?” I asked Janny Chyn, the guide. “The children hardly ever come,” she said. “They wouldn’t want to be seen here. These are the parents who are embarrassed that their children aren’t married and are desperate. She translated some of the signs. One described a 32-year-old man with a master’s degree in economics and an annual salary of 300,000 yuan (about $48,000) who owns his own house. He wanted a wife who was 28 to 30, about 5 feet 4 inches tall, with a bachelor’s degree. We leaned in to a rapid-fire discussion between the mother of an unmarried woman and the parents of an unmarried young man. They were showing photographs of their children, like old friends, and discussing career ambitions. (The woman, a nurse, made more money than the man, which seemed to surprise his parents.) All the while, I realized I was privy to something special. Taking a customized tour of Shanghai was my way of dealing with a predicament: I had just a single free day and wanted to see the city’s highlights. But I also wanted to step off the beaten path, maybe meet some residents, sample good local cuisine and get a sense of what it is like to live there. Finding all of those things in one group tour didn’t seem likely. I’m also not a fan of the big-bus tour. I was reminded of that a year ago when I had arranged for a personalized tour of the Great Wall near Beijing and, on the way back, my guide took me to lunch at a giant restaurant—hundreds of idling buses outside and knickknacks, American accents and industrial Chinese food inside. This time I vowed to be smarter. My research turned up an interesting possibility. Shanghai Pathways offered what it called “alternative trips,” including educational

L

D1

PHL increases flights from SG

Custom one-day tour is a good start to seeing Shanghai

S

By Bianca Cuaresma

REELING: THE THING ABOUT ‘THAT THING CALLED TADHANA’ »D2

BusinessMirror

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

the gathered top with your chopsticks and take a small bite, gently sucking out the broth.) Over lunch, we talked about her philosophy of travel, which led her to create the company. “When I travel,” she said, “it’s important for me to connect with someone who knows the place, who can pass along the experience of knowing that place. Otherwise, I might as well look at photos.” Janny, who is 30, started the agency four years ago after working as an event planner for expatriate companies. She now has a staff of five tour guides, each with a specialty. After lunch, we took a taxi to the Old City of Shanghai, once surrounded by a wall, and strolled through a food market on the narrow streets. Though the skies were overcast, the temperature was surprisingly mild for late autumn. Because it’s on the East China Sea, Shanghai tends to have milder winters than Beijing. We paused for tea, and I was a little worried. During my visit to Beijing, I had been taken to see a “free” tea ceremony and then pressured to buy $40 tins of tea. In the Old City, though, we pulled up two stools at the Yellow Mountain Tea Shop and spent a pleasant half-hour with owner Chen Wangqing sampling and talking about tea, its history, how to drink it and its importance in China. (“Slurp it,” Janny advised. “The louder the better.”) No one even asked whether I wanted to buy. (I didn’t.) The marriage market in People’s Park was our last stop. As we headed to the hotel, I thought back on the day. It would take weeks, months and even years to know a city as large and complex as Shanghai. But, in a little less than eight hours, thanks to someone who did know it well, I had made a start. IF YOU GO ■ Tours. Shanghai Pathways, www. shanghaipathways.com, shanghaipathways@gmail. com. This agency offers an assortment of tours for small groups. ■ Where to stay. Yangtze Boutique Shanghai, 740 Hankou Road, People’s Square; www.theyangtzehotel. com. Doubles from $135 per night. Astor House Hotel, 15 Huangpu Road; www.pujianghotel.com. Doubles from $100 per night. ■ Where to eat. Lynn, 99-1 Xi Kang Road. Modern Shanghai cuisine. Weekend all-you-caneat dim sum brunch is about $14. Jesse (Jishi), 41 Tianping Lu (near Huahai Xi Lu); www.xinjishi.com. Serving Shanghai specialties. Entrees $10 to $25. Reservations recommended. ■ To learn more. Shanghai Municipal Tourism Administration, www.meet-in-shanghai.net.

IN the bid to increase travelers from around the world to the Philippines, the country signed the amended air-services agreement with Singapore. With a 7.1-percent increase in weekly seats—from 18,888 frequencies per week for each country from the previous 17,627 seats—this vital move strengthens the Department of Tourism’s (DOT) strategy in positioning the Philippines as a multiple gateway destination in Asia. The new air-services agreement was signed on February 13 in Manila with several officials from the DOT, Department of Transportation and Communications, Civil Aeronautics Board, Department of Foreign Affairs, and Department of Trade and Industry representing the Philippine Air Panel. Also included in the agreement is the increase in co-terminal and stopover rights for Singapore carriers, which will now include Iloilo and Bacolod, in addition to Manila, Cebu, Davao, Puerto Princesa, Kalibo, Cagayan de Oro, Laoag, Legazpi, Puerto Princesa and Zamboanga. It can be expect that in the coming months, a Singapore carrier can travel to Iloilo, then to Davao, and back to Singapore, without exercising cabotage rights. With increased flights, tourists and investors can expect to travel to and from the two countries with ease. The Philippines gains greater entry to a major hub such as the Changi International Airport, while Singapore residents and citizens can look forward to wider access to top tourism destinations in the Philippines. This agreement is integral to the twin marketing destination strategy of the Philippines and Singapore. In 2014 a total of 179,099 Singaporeans visited the Philippines—a growth of 3.71 percent from the previous year—making it the No. 1 source market of tourists from the Southeast Asia region. With the expanded air-services agreement between the Philippines and Singapore, the country expects to enjoy an increase in tourism arrivals not only from Singapore, but also from other parts of the globe. “The travel business in Southeast Asia today is characterized by a phenomenon called coopetition—a cooperative, collaborative decision by all players to compete with each other so that the world will choose the region before choosing the country. As Asean invites the world to ‘feel the warmth,’ this phenomenon finds one of its most exciting permutations in the travel exchange between the Philippines and Singapore. Our countries are, in very real terms, each other’s value extension,” Tourism Secretary Ramon R. Jimenez Jr., said. “The more connected we become, the more value we add to each other’s offering. As we work toward our goal of achieving our visitor arrival, revenue and employment targets, we need to greatly enhance our international air seats and connectivity,” the Philippine tourism chief added.

FRANCIS GALLAGHER, CEO of Global Traveler, and Bonsung Koo, general manager of Asiana Airlines US Marketing and Alliances, hold up Asiana Airlines’ awards with their proud flight crew members at the annual GT Tested Reader Survey Awards.

Asiana continues best airline services winning streak FOR the 11th consecutive year, Asiana Airlines (OZ) has been named Best Airline for Onboard Services and the Best Airline for Flight Attendants by Global Traveler (GT). The GT Tested Reader Survey Awards had over 26,000 ballots from global travelers voting in 84 travel categories including best hotels, airports and frequent flyer programs. Asiana had previously entered the Hall of Fame for its consistent wins in different categories. During the recent GT awards ceremony at the Peninsula Beverly Hills Hotel, Asiana Airlines also collected the award for Best First Class Seat Design and Best International First-Class Wines on the Wing. Asiana’s selection bested over 100 wine samples from 28 other airlines, as adjudged by a panel of 24 international wine experts. “Asiana Airlines is getting rave reviews from around world through customer-oriented service and customer response with Korean sentiment,” Global Traveler noted. “Asiana received the award for continuous research and development and differentiated services such as its onboard chef and sommelier services.” Asiana’s winning streak continued with more recognition from Premier Traveler magazine. Asiana won Best Flight Attendants in the World for the third consecutive year, and Best In-Flight Services in the World for the second consecutive year. Asiana had also won the magazine’s Best Airline to Asia twice before.

life

D1

standoff over homeland security news@businessmirror.com.ph • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

The World

Newly named San Diego bishop calls for immigration reform

BusinessMirror

S

AN DIEGO—A history scholar selected by Pope Francis to be the new Roman Catholic bishop of San Diego said on Tuesday that he will be a “friend” to the Latino community and called for comprehensive immigration reform. Msgr. Robert McElroy made the comments during a news conference in San Diego hours after the Vatican announced his appointment. He called immigration “the vitality of our nation.” “The border is a reminder to us of what we are called to do in our greatness as Americans and that we sometimes fall short of in how we deal with immigrants and how we must really confront the issues of immigration and resolve them with justice and have a comprehensive immigration reform that will do that,” he said. The 61-year-old native Californian has been serving as an auxiliary bishop in San Francisco since 2010. He will be formally installed as the sixth bishop of San Diego during a Mass at Saint Therese of Carmel Parish on April 15. San Diego’s Bishop Cirilo Flores died of cancer last year. McElroy, speaking briefly in Spanish, vowed to be a “friend” to the Latino community and called Hispanics the foundation of the church. He also called on the need to support Native Americans.

The impending sainthood of the 18th-century Franciscan missionary Junipero Serra has generated protests from Native Americans, who say the priest spread disease, wiped out native populations and enslaved converts as he built a Catholic mission system throughout what is now California. It is important the church be one of inclusion, McElroy said. After earning history degrees at Harvard University and Stanford University, McElroy studied at the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley. He later obtained doctorates in moral theology at the Gregorian University in Rome and in political science at Stanford. He will be spending his first year mostly listening and learning, McElroy said. Joelle Casteix, the western regional director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said McElroy has not done enough to speak out against priests accused of abuse. McElroy said the church has come a long way in improving the way abuse cases are handled. But “we need to constantly reform our environments so that they maximize safety and security for children,” he said. “We can never think we’ve done enough or that we have put it in the past,” McElroy said, adding later that “a constant notion of vigilance going forward needs to be in place.” AP

According to Nestor Espenilla Jr., BSP deputy governor for the supervision and examination sector, two of the Asian lenders already filed their intent to compete in the P10.1-trillion industry already shaping up as one of the fastestgrowing in the region.

Thursday, March 5, 2015 B3-5

Standoff over Homeland Security ends as Republicans back down ASHINGTON—The Republican-led House of Representatives backed down on Tuesday in a dispute that could have led to a partial shutdown of the agency overseeing US borders, handing a major victory to President Barack Obama.

Congress sent Obama a bill to fund the Homeland Security Department through the end of the budget year, without overturning the president’s immigration policies. Republican leaders did not give in to conservatives’ demand that the bill also roll back Obama’s directives sparing millions of immigrants from deportation. Democrats had insisted on legislation to fund the department, which shares responsibility for anti-terrorism operations, without any conditions. The House voted 257-167 in favor of the $40 billion spending bill, which Obama was expected to sign promptly. All 182 Democrats present voted for the bill, while it received only 75 Republican “yes” votes. The Republicans’ retreat underscored the limits on their power despite the party’s widespread gains in November’s elections. House Speaker John Boehner outlined the dwindling options for his deeply divided Republican caucus on Tuesday morning after the Senate left the House with little choice.

Boehner pointed out that the issue of Obama’s executive actions on immigration last fall is now in the hands of the courts. “I am as outraged and frustrated as you at the lawless and unconstitutional actions of this president,” Boehner told his caucus, according to aides. “I believe this decision—considering where we ar—is the right one for this team, and the right one for this country.” House Republicans said that after months spent railing against Obama’s executive actions, which most Republicans view as an unconstitutional overreach, they had no more moves to make. A federal court ruling has temporarily blocked the administration from implementing the new immigration rules. The administration has appealed the decision, and the ultimate result of the legal challenge is unknown. The Republican leadership’s decision angered several conservatives, while some Republicans welcomed Boehner’s move.

In this February 24 file photo, the Homeland Security Department headquarters is seen in northwest Washington. In a major victory for President Barack Obama, the Republican-led House overcame last-minute opposition from GOP critics on Tuesday and moved toward final passage of legislation to fund the Homeland Security Department without restrictions on immigration. AP

Rep. Mike Simpson said he, too, opposes Obama’s executive actions on immigration. Yet, he also said the “security of the homeland is one of our highest priorities,” and added that Congress could continue to oppose the president without forcing a partial agency shutdown that loomed for Friday. Whatever the final result of the struggle, controversy over the legislation has produced partisan gridlock in the first several weeks of the new Congress. For the first time in Obama’s presidency, Republicans have full control of Congress after capturing the Senate in November. They also won more seats in the House than at any time in 70 years.

Missionaries held by Venezuelan authorities return to N. Dakota

W

ASHINGTON—Two major US airlines say they will no longer accept rechargeable battery shipments as new government tests confirm that explosions and violent fires are likely to occur when large numbers of batteries enclosed in cargo containers overheat. The decisions by United and Delta airlines could put pressure on other international carriers to refuse battery shipments or appear indifferent to safety. Tests conducted last month by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) show that rechargeable batteries, also called lithium-ion batteries, consistently emit explosive gases when they overheat or short-circuit, the Associated Press (AP) has learned. In the recent tests, as well as other FAA tests last year, the buildup of gases—primarily hydrogen—led to fierce explosions. An FAA video of one of the tests obtained by the AP shows an explosion knocking a cargo container door off its hinges and tossing boxes of batteries into the air. The container was engulfed in fire minutes later. In the test, a cartridge heater was used to simulate a single battery overheating. The heater caused nearby batteries to overheat and the short-circuiting spread to many of the nearly 5,000 batteries in the container. It’s common for tens of thousands of batteries to be placed in a single container. Citing safety concerns, United Airlines on Monday informed its

cargo customers it will no longer accept bulk shipments of the batteries, which are used to power everything from smartphones to laptops to power tools. Delta Air Lines quietly stopped accepting bulk shipments of the rechargeable batteries on February 1. The airline said in a statement that it took the action in response to government testing and concerns raised by its pilots and flight attendants. A third major US carrier, American Airlines, stopped accepting some types of lithiumion battery shipments on February 23. But the airline is continuing to accept small packages of batteries grouped together or “overpacked” into a single cargo container. Those are the kinds of shipments that the FAA has been testing and that are a greater safety concern. All three airlines said they will continue to accept bulk shipments of equipment containing batteries or in which batteries are placed in the same package as equipment. Placing batteries inside equipment like laptops or in the same package as power tools creates additional buffering and is believed to provide added protection, although safety experts say that theory hasn’t been fully tested. “I think it will cause everybody to take a look at their policies and procedures as far as carrying that cargo, and many will elect not to,” said John Goglia, a former National Transportation Safety Board member and aviation safety expert. AP

Democratic unity blocked passage in the Senate of House-passed legislation with the immigration provisions. By late last week, a split in House Republican ranks brought the department to the brink of a partial shutdown. That was averted when Congress approved a one-week funding bill that Obama signed into law only moments before a midnight on Friday deadline. In a statement, Obama praised Homeland Security employees as “law-enforcement professionals and brave patriots who do a remarkable job, and deserve our gratitude and respect. Today, after far too long, Congress finally voted to fully fund their mission.” AP

Ex-CIA chief admits sharing military secrets with mistress

R

exclusive

Airlines reject carrying rechargeable batteries

FReeD aid worker Arlynn Hefta shows a photo of himself with a 93-year-old patient he helped while in Venezuela on March 3, at Hector International Airport in Fargo, north Dakota. Hefta was among four American missionaries who were released after several days of detention and questioning by Venezuelan authorities. AP

F

ARGO, North Dakota—Four American missionaries who were released after several days of detention and questioning by Venezuelan authorities arrived home in North Dakota on Tuesday, saying they were glad to be back but hoped to return to the South American country someday. The group from the Bethel Evangelical Free Church in Devils Lake, which has been sending missionaries to Venezuela for years to help needy, was handing out medicine and hearing aids in the town of Ocumare de la Costa on Wednesday when they were detained. The group, who was caught up in the escalating political tension between the US and Venezuela, said they were told they didn’t have the necessary work visas, which they had never before been required to have.

“There was so much hyperbole, but I don’t want to speculate,” group leader Arlynn Hefta said when asked why they were detained. Hefta, 62, who works as a hearing aid dispenser in North Dakota, broke down when talking about the afternoon Venezuelan soldiers armed with rifles came into the church where the Americans had set up a clinic. It was shortly thereafter that up to 300 villagers surrounded the clinic and the soldiers. “They challenged the military. They said, we’re protecting you, and we’re not going to let these soldiers take you,” Hefta said. “Imagine the courage.” Hefta said the Americans decided to comply with the soldiers so “nobody would get hurt” and were taken to a military outpost in the city of Maracay. Besides questioning that Hefta

described as “mind games,” they were fingerprinted and photographed on several occasions and went about 30 hours without sleep. Other group members were Desiree Bouvette, 51, a professional hair stylist; Kermit Paulson, 58, a retired 30-year military veteran; and Dr. Russ Petty, 66, a family physician. It was the 12th trip for Petty, eighth for Hefta, seventh for Paulson, and third for Bouvette. Hefta said the group felt better when a Venezuelan general visited them on the third day and said they would be released. They were taken to an immigration office in Caracas and deported, which means they can’t return for two years. All of them said that helping their “Venezuelan family” was worth it and they would return. AP

ALEIGH, North Carolina— Former CIA Director David Petraeus, whose once-bright political future was all but destroyed over an affair with his biographer, has agreed to plead guilty to charges he shared classified material with her for her book. The plea agreement—which carries a possible sentence of up to a year in prison—represents another blow to the reputation of the retired fourstar Army general who led American forces in Iraq and Afghanistan and was perhaps the most admired military leader of his generation. Petraeus, 62, agreed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor count of unauthorized removal and retention of classified material. The agreement was filed in federal court on Tuesday in Charlotte, where Paula Broadwell, the general’s biographer and former mistress, lives with her husband and children. In court papers, prosecutors recommended two years of probation and no prison time. But the judge who hears the plea is not bound by that. No immediate date was set for a court hearing for Petraeus to enter the plea. Prosecutors said that, while Broadwell was writing her book in 2011, Petraeus gave her eight binders of classified material he had improperly kept from his time as the top military commander in Afghanistan. Days later, he took the binders back to his house. Among the secret information contained in the “black books” were the names of covert operatives, the coalition war strategy and notes about Petraeus’s discussions with President Barack Obama and the National Security Council, prosecutors said. Those binders were later seized by the FBI in a search of Petraeus’s Arlington, Virginia, home, where he had kept them in the unlocked drawer of a desk in a ground-floor study. AP

World

B3-5

BIG HIT IN VEGAS Sports

C1 | Thursday, March 5, 2015 • Editor: Jun Lomibao

mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph • sports@businessmirror.com.ph

A flurry of early action on Manny Pacquiao has already narrowed the odds for the big fight in Las Vegas’s legal sports books. By the time they get into the ring on May 2, it’s conceivable that Floyd Mayweather Jr. might not be favored at all.

L

FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR. opened as a 2 1/2-1 favorite in most sports books when the fight was announced, and at that price Manny Pacquiao backers couldn’t wait to get their bets down.

By Tim Dahlberg | The Associated Press

AS VEGAS—Manny Pacquiao has always believed he can do what 47 other fighters before him have failed to do—beat Floyd Mayweather Jr. in the ring.

Turns out a lot of other people are believers, too. And they’re backing their opinions with real money. A flurry of early action on Pacquiao has already narrowed the odds for the big fight in this city’s legal sports books. By the time they get into the ring on May 2, it’s conceivable that Mayweather might not be favored at all. “I’ve never seen Mayweather this low eight weeks out before the fight,” said

Jimmy Vaccaro, who has booked money on every big fight for the past four decades in Las Vegas. “This is as close as we get to a legitimate pick ‘em fight since Mayweather fought [Oscar] de la Hoya.” Mayweather opened as a 2 1/2-1 favorite in most sports books when the fight was announced, and at that price Pacquiao backers couldn’t wait to get their bets down. At Vaccaro’s South Point hotel sports book, there were 150 tickets written on Pacquiao in the

D

DAVIS LOVE III was the right choice.

days after the fight was announced to just 10 on the favored Mayweather. Over the weekend, Vaccaro said his book took a couple of $10,000 bets on Pacquiao, which prompted him to move the betting line closer to try and draw more action on Mayweather. “It’s a one-way attack on Pacquiao,” Vaccaro said. “We’re well into a six-figure loss right now if Pacquiao wins.” That could change when the so-called smarts start weighing in on a fight that is still two months away. Both Pacquiao and Mayweather began training camps this week, giving bettors plenty of time to form their opinions as more news circulates about their training status. Vaccaro actually saw an influx of Pacquiao money first in October, when he put up a line on the fight before it was made, making Mayweather a minus-300 favorite and Pacquiao a plus-250 underdog. That meant a bettor had to wager $300

ORAL, Florida—Now that players on the task force have solved their Ryder Cup problems, the next job is to repair damage to their own tour. One week ago Davis Love III was introduced as the next US captain for the 2016 matches at Hazeltine. That was the decision from an 11-member Ryder Cup Task Force—five of them active players on the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour—who shared other results from their two meetings. Love was the right choice. Requiring two of the assistant captains to already have been Ryder Cup captains can’t hurt. Waiting until five days before the opening match to make the final captain’s pick? That doesn’t make much sense, though whoever it is can make it a moot point by making a bunch of putts. Where the task force failed was in the qualifying process. Majors still count double for each year. And there’s nothing wrong with offering a half-point for every $1,000 to the 30 Americans at Doral this week for a World Golf Championship. It will be the same for the other three WGCs and The Players Championship (WGC). And then next year, it’s a full point for all PGA Tour events. But that’s next year, not next season. Left out of the equation were the five tournaments in the fall that kick off the 2015-2016 season. All offer full FedEx Cup points. Augusta National recognizes them by offering a spot in the Masters to the winners. Phil Mickelson, however, made them sound like second-class citizens when he eagerly explained the reasoning. He mentioned how top players would be competing just about every week this summer through two majors, a WGC, the FedEx Cup playoffs and the Presidents Cup, and then they would stop for

to win $100 on Mayweather, while Pacquiao paid $250 for every $100 bet. Vaccaro had barely posted the line when he got a $3,000 bet on Pacquiao, and the trend has continued unabated. “The smarts really aren’t jumping in yet, they’re going to wait to see how low it goes,” Vaccaro said. “They’re telling you that they think it will get much lower.” The latest odds at the South Point still favored Mayweather, but now at minus-200. Pacquiao has gone to plus-170, meaning Mayweather is now less than a 2-1 favorite in man-to-man betting. At the Westgate Las Vegas Superbook, Mayweather was minus-210, while Pacquiao was plus-180. So far, at least, the betting pattern looks much like it did in 2007, when Mayweather began as a 2-1 pick over De La Hoya in the fight that catapulted him to pay-per-view stardom. While boxing insiders liked Mayweather in the fight, the betting public was infatuated with de la

a break just as the new season was getting started. “If you count money for those last three or four months, you’re giving the bottom half of the tour a three-month head start over ultimately the top guys,” Mickelson said. Never mind that these “top guys” have failed to win the Ryder Cup seven of the last nine times. Two of those fall events had fields that were as strong or stronger than five tournaments in the “regular” part of the season last year. Mickelson probably didn’t realize this because he has never played in any of them. Ryder Cup points are based on money. Did anyone on the task force realize that all but one of those “bottom half” fall events offered more money this season than the opening three events in January, and a total of eight tournaments in the “regular” season? That’s what prompted Duke Butler, president of the Frys.com Open, to send a letter of appeal to PGA of America chief Pete Bevacqua. The Frys.com Open won’t count toward the Ryder Cup in October, even though Rory McIlroy is expected to play. Butler doesn’t understand the concept of a head start, not when only 30 Americans are at Doral, and that’s the highest US representation of all the WGCs. Justin Thomas isn’t in them. Neither is Daniel Berger, who lost in a playoff at the Honda Classic. Brooks Koepka might not be on the PGA Tour right now if not for the Frys.com Open in 2013, where he tied for third behind Walker. They are part of a growing group of young Americans who might soon take over the tour. “I don’t understand it,” said Adam Sperling, tournament director of the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas. “It was a big deal

Hoya, and he would eventually go into the ring as a slight favorite. No matter who ends up favored, the legal bookies figure to be winners. Already, Vaccaro said he has seen more betting on the fight than he ever has two months out, and some in the betting industry are predicting legal wagering of up to $50 million on the bout. The betting handle will be helped by a number of different proposition bets, and the fact tens of thousands of college basketball fans can bet while in town for the kickoff of the NCAA basketball tournament. The fight will cap a huge day in sports that includes the Kentucky Derby and playoffs in the National Basketball Association and National Hockey League, along with a full slate of baseball. “Other than Super Bowl Sunday, the single day will be as big as we’ve written in years,” Vaccaro said. “Look for May 2 to be approaching the Super Bowl handle on Super Bowl Sunday, and that’s saying a lot.”

for a number of us to go from the Fall Series to the FedEx Cup. That was key to the continuation of our support. And it was evident in the investment our title sponsor made in the purse.” Las Vegas had a $6.2-million purse. Ben Martin won. The top 10 featured Koepka, Webb Simpson, Jimmy Walker, Hideki Matsuyama and Brandt Snedeker. Place that in April instead of October and does anyone notice? Love, a task force member and now the captain, has one of those fall tournaments at the McGladrey Classic. He should use his position to persuade Bevacqua to reconsider. Because the real damage is not about who makes the US team for an exhibition it can’t seem to win. It’s about the health of a tour that should be its first priority. The fall tournaments were in danger of going away when they were perceived as second-tier events. To save the some $25 million in prize money, the tour went to a wraparound season and elevated them to regular FedEx Cup status. With one decision by the Ryder Cup Task Force, those tournaments are treated differently again. What’s to keep Augusta National from following suit and no longer offering a spot in the Masters to the winner? And if those tournaments go away, does the PGA Tour become even more of a closed shop and a time when it’s hard to keep track of all the promising young Americans? Most disappointing is the silence of PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem, except to commend the PGA of America for including his players in the process. It was just over a year ago that Finchem and former PGA President Ted Bishop shared the stage and boasted of a new era of cooperation between the two organizations. Now is the time for that. It’s not too late. AP

sports

c1

PGA LOSES DTI CASE VS BUYER OF AUDI A6

enders from around the region look to the Philippines for earning opportunities now that the sector has opened to full foreign competition and well ahead of a projected integration process whose tentative steps firm up and grow more purposeful every day.

W POPe Francis delivers his speech during a special consistory with cardinals and bishops, in the Synod hall at the Vatican, on February 12. A history scholar selected by Pope Francis to be the new Roman Catholic bishop of San Diego said on Tuesday that he will be a “friend” to the Latino community and called for comprehensive immigration reform. AP

P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 30 pages | 7 days a week

REGIONAL LENDERS KEEN ON ESTABLISHING PRESENCE HERE AHEAD OF ASEAN BANKING INTEGRATION

INSIDE

D

TfridayNovember 2014 Vol. 10 No. 147 40 Thursday, March18, 5, 2015

n n

According to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), quite a few have, in fact, formally submitted the intent to make their presence felt in the $270-billion economy whose local output, measured as the gross domestic product (GDP), has the potential to widen this year by as much as 8 percent. Their ramped-up participation comes less than a year after all foreign competition restraints have been removed, such that seven Asian lenders are now in talks with the central bank to begin putting up branches in the country. According to Nestor Espenilla Jr., BSP deputy governor for the super vision and examination sector, two of the Asian lenders already filed their intent to compete in the P10.1-trillion industry already shaping up as one of the fastestgrowing in the region. See “Asian banks,” A2

PESO exchange rates n US 44.0890

DIMAGIBA: “The net decision is favorable to the complainant.”

By Catherine N. Pillas

I

ing off workers. The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas predicts 140,000 jobs in Texas alone could be lost by next year, as the reverberations of the oil slowdown ripple throughout other parts of the state economy. Energy companies worldwide are hurting. But the international market price, known as Brent, is $10 a barrel higher than the benchmark price for US crude sales, West Texas Intermediate.

n an evident win for auto consumers, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) has decided in favor of businessman Ricardo L. Nolasco Jr. in his complaint against Audi Motorcars Inc./PGA Cars Inc., thus, entitling him to either a replacement or a refund of his Audi A6 3.0 TDI. According to the administrative decision penned by DTI Adjudicating Division Officer Ronald Calderon and released to the media, PGA Cars Inc. and Audi Motorcars Inc. were found jointly liable for the imperfections of the vehicle. The order granted Nolasco the option to either a replacement of the vehicle in question or a reimbursement of the amount paid with monetary updating. The decision invoked the Consumer Act of the Philippines in providing the relief. Calderon said the case does not fall under the Philippine Lemon law but the Consumer Protection Act, as the former was passed after the complaint was filed, and there should be no retroactive application of the law.

Continued on A2

Continued on A2

BULL RUN Photo shows traders at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) floor on Wednesday, when the stock market sustained its rally and scaled to a new record, as the benchmark index climbed 71.32 points, or 0.92 percent, to close at 7,847.83, its 18th all-time high for the year. The PSEi has gained 8.5 percent so far this year. Nonie Reyes

Oil giants want US export ban lifted to protect jobs A

s the number of US drilling rigs plummets by a third and thousands in the industry face layoffs, oil companies are focusing on an effort to persuade Congress to lift the long-standing ban on oil exports. “We shouldn’t put domestic producers at a competitive disadvantage by limiting the available markets,” Ryan Lance, CEO of Texas-based ConocoPhillips, told the US Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Scott Sheffield, CEO of Pioneer

Natural Resources, also based in Texas, was making the same push on Tuesday in front of the House Subcommittee on Energ y and Power, arguing the industry’s struggles with low oil prices are worsened because companies aren’t allowed to ship American crude oil to foreign nations. Oil prices across the globe have plummeted because of a supply glut driven by surging American production, which has, in turn, led to companies slashing costs and lay-

n japan 0.3682 n UK 67.7383 n HK 5.6847 n CHINA 7.0269 n singapore 32.3731 n australia 34.2758 n EU 49.2695 n SAUDI arabia 11.7564 Source: BSP (4 March 2015)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
BusinessMirror March 5, 2015 by BusinessMirror - Issuu