BusinessMirror
THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business TfridayNovember 18,2015 2014Vol.Vol.1010No.No.20840 Tuesday, May 5,
www.businessmirror.com.ph
BSP SAYS EFFECT OF SLOWING CHINESE ECONOMY MOST EVIDENT IN INVESTMENTS, EXPORTS
INSIDE
Sluggish China to hurt PHL growth
FAMILY LOVES ITS SILVER BOX The unbelieving Thomas
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EAR Lord, the unbelieving Thomas has a numerous descent. He is a contemporary of every generation. Especially in our days, the only valid proof of the resurrection people are prepared to consider in our life is our witnessing to our Christian faith. It is through our lives, more than our words, that we can show that You are really risen from death and is now alive. It is through the way we live that we can show that we believe in You and Your resurrection, even though we never saw You with our physical eyes. May we continue to live Jesus in our hearts forever. Amen. EXPLORING GOD’S WORD, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON
Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
‘AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON’ SOARS TO SECONDBIGGEST BOX-OFFICE DEBUT EVER »D3
BusinessMirror
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
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THE so-called Tatami Room can be fashioned from a 14-square-meter condo unit, with a variety of living spaces readily carved out by a couple of handy furnishing units.
Small space? Big ideas
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FAMILY LOVES ITS SILVER BOX OF A HOUSE NEXT TO THE FREEWAY
❶ THE lightwell
casts a glow on the kitchen and dining room, made even brighter with an accent wall the color of the sunniest sunflower. The Jensens replaced some of the kitchen cabinets and hardware. New cabinets are from Ikea. BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES/TNS
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CARMEN appreciates her husband’s passion for design. She likes the functionality of modern design. “It’s all about stripping stuff away,” she says. The painting is by Jeremy’s sister, Jennifer Jensen Mohanty. Behind this wall is a storage room, furnace room and the garage, a buffer between family and freeway.
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JEREMY JENSEN is a fan of contemporary architecture. His family’s living room, open to two stories, is cozy for two and a good book, and also roomy enough for the girls to practice Scottish Highland dancing.
B R T The Seattle Times
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T’S a contemporary box of a house, shiny bright with silver shingles sitting right next to Interstate 90. Some call it “the Lego House.” Let’s go inside. “We used to live in the flight path in the Des Moines area, so I-90 is nothing,” Jeremy Jensen says, quite cheerful about the whole thing. But, he adds, “I guess there are drawbacks. One thing is, you can’t have a party in the backyard.” Jeremy is packed onto the living room sofa with his family, wife Carmen and their daughters Aja, Anna and Liv. The girls squiggle as their parents share their passion for the modern home they found in 2006 built upon an “orphan lot,” a home architect Frank Lawhead built for himself. (Lawhead reports that in 1988 it was one of the least expensive lots in King County.) A home defined and pierced by a two-story lightwell rendering freeway-side windows needless. It warms and brightens almost the entire home, particularly the kitchen, which appears to always have the lights on.
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“This isn’t like a tech type of house,” Jeremy says of his family’s efforts here. “This is the family pitching in.” (They made the concrete kitchen counters in the garage. A floor-sanding effort, however, ended with a call to a professional.) Jeremy is a committed fan of contemporary architecture. It’s his baseball. Years ago, in fact, he wanted to find a lot and build a prefabricated home (now all the rage). “But we would have had to do a teardown or be in a swamp. And we wanted to be in kidville.” Carmen appreciates her husband’s passion for modern design: “It’s all about functionality, about making things work,” she says. “I like functionality. I like not having too much space.” Kidville, meanwhile, is what you don’t see from the freeway. Lake Sammamish is down the street. “The schools are awesome,” Jeremy says. “The kids can ride their bikes in the park. It’s such a cool neighborhood.” The way he looks at it, the whole thing is win-win. Meanwhile, what you can see from the freeway is the latest work on the house: The reflective aluminum shingles. “Every modern home has to become new again. Ours was tired,” Jeremy says of the original waterdamaged cedar. He wanted to replace it with something
different, really different. Flipping through a magazine, Jeremy found Reinke Shakes. Made in Hebron, Nebraska, the web site announces that “proud owners of geodesic dome homes have called them the ‘Cadillac’ of dome roofing.” The aluminum is 99-percent recycled, radiates heat (Energy Star approved) and serves for 50-plus years. The Jensens’ contractor, the folks at WestCoast Contracting, had never seen such a thing. They worked out a pattern on the ground before affixing them to the home. “It was like piecing a quilt together,” Carmen says. “They totally figured it out. It was awesome.” In the future, Jeremy sees a shipping container put to use in the backyard (“I think it’d be fun!”), a new fence, “definitely horizontal.” The Jensens like to mix it up like that. “Anything can be changed and made better. Every once in a while we say, ‘What’s working and what’s not working?’” Carmen says. “When people don’t like what you’ve done they don’t say anything,” Jeremy adds. “But they say to us, ‘I don’t like your house, but I really like what you’ve done with it. Let us know if you’re going to sell it.’ ” They are not. The girls, in fact, want it for their own: “They debate who gets it when we die,” Jeremy says. ■
WITH the demand for affordable housing on the rise, developers are maximizing available floor space in condominium developments to the smallest possible liveable area. These days, it’s not uncommon for some units to be as small as 18 sq m, making it nothing short of cramped quarters even for a starting couple. Of course, some wise man has said that, to every problem, there’s a solution—and, as far as cramped spaces go, ErgoHome has come up with original lifestyle solutions to customize any space according to one’s needs. Says company President and CEO Philip KC Ng, “ErgoHome enters the landscape with the ErgoSpace home furniture line that will expand your small living room into a dining room, and/or a bedroom seamlessly in seconds, all within the same area. This seamless conversion is accomplished through our transformable spacesaving modern furniture.” According to Ng, it took ErgoHome three years to perfect the design for its multifunction furniture, especially in devising the right mechanism that is safe and easy to operate to make such transformation possible. From beds that can be easily tucked away in cabinets, ErgoHome—which has showrooms in SM Mall of Asia, SM Megamall, SM City Cebu and SM City Davao and, soon, SM Aura—also has collapsible workstations that are attached to shelving units, an entire kitchen work area and cupboard hidden inside a cabinet, even a dining table that materializes magically from the floor. “You can expand your space to as much three times easily with just the right furniture,” he says. For example, the so-called Tatami Room featured here can be fashioned from a 14-sq-m condo unit, with a variety of living spaces readily carved out by a couple of handy furnishing units. To provide needed storage space, the floor is raised by about a feet from the floor. The steps leading into room hide drawers where things can be stored. More space is available under the floorboards. A vacuum pull is used to open the wooden panel to expose additional storage. The shelving unit on the side of the room hides a folding bed. To reveal the bed, all you need is to simply push a button and the bed panel slowly goes down. In case of a brownout, you can easily disconnect the motor from a side of the shelving unit to be able to manually pull down the bed. Come dinnertime, a push of another button raises a panel from the floor to reveal a Japanese-style dining area. After a meal, you can easily hide the table in the same fashion. Hidden from sight, the table becomes part of the living room area. The shelving unit at the end of the room serves as a window seat. It can also be constructed in such a way to hide a flatscreen LED TV that can be revealed or hidden, again with the push of a button. To provide added value to clients, ErgoHome offers free professional consultation and 3D model design to enable the condo dweller to customize and visualize his space into a dream unit before it is actually made. Even better, because such seamless transformation of space can’t be your usual DIY project, the company provides free delivery and installation to take away the stress of having to assemble and fit everything by yourself. Now, who says you have lived like a bat when you embrace the condo lifestyle?
LIFE
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NEPAL GOVT ASKS FOREIGN AID WORKERS IN CAPITAL TO LEAVE, RETURN HOME BusinessMirror
World The
B3-1 | Tuesday, May 5, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
GREECE BAILOUT
A man watches the city of Athens at Filopalous hill on April 24. Officials say talks between Greece and its international creditors on how to stave off bankruptcy have made headway and will continue with the aim of reaching an agreement later this month. AP/PETROS GIANNAKOURIS
Taiwan party leader NEPAL GOVT ASKS FOREIGN AID WORKERS IN CAPITAL affirms eventual LEAVE, RETURN HOME reunion with China TO K
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EIJING—The head of Taiwan’s Nationalists reaffirmed the party’s support for eventual unification with the mainland when he met on Monday with Chinese President Xi Jinping as part of continuing rapprochement between the former bitter enemies.
Nationalist Party Chairman Eric Chu, a likely presidential candidate next year, also affirmed Taiwan’s desire to join the proposed Chineseled Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank during the meeting in Beijing. China claims Taiwan as its own ter-
ritory and doesn’t want the island to join using a name that might imply it is an independent country. Chu’s comments during his meeting with Xi were carried live on Hong Kong-based broadcaster Phoenix Television.
The Nationalists were driven to Taiwan by Mao Zedong’s Communists during the Chinese civil war in 1949, leading to decades of hostility between the sides. Chu, who took over as party leader in January, is the third Nationalist chairman to visit the mainland and the first since 2009. Relations between the communistruled mainland and the self-governing democratic island of Taiwan began to warm in the 1990s, partly out of their common opposition to Taiwan’s formal independence from China, a position advocated by the island’s Democratic Progressive Party. Despite increasingly close economic ties, the prospect of political unification has grown increasingly unpopular on Taiwan, especially with younger voters. Opposition to the Nationalists’ pro-China policies was seen as a driver behind heavy local electoral defeats for the party last year that led to Taiwanese President Ma Yingjeou resigning as party chairman. AP
ATHMANDU, Nepal—Nepal’s government urged foreign rescue workers in the quake-hit capital to return home on Monday as hundreds of people visited Buddhist shrines and monasteries to mark the birthday of Gautam Buddha. Information Minister Minendra Rijal said the major rescue work in Kathmandu and surrounding areas have been completed and that the remaining operations can be handled by local workers. How However, work remained in the villages and remote mountain areas and foreign aid volunteers could work with local police and army rescuers in those areas, he said. Since the April 25 earthquake, 4,050 rescue workers from 34 different nations have flown to Nepal to help in rescue operations, provide emergency medical care and distribute food and other necessities. The death toll from the quake, Nepal’s worst in more than 80 years, reached 7,276, police said.
At the Swayambhunath shrine, atop a hill overlooking Kathmandu, hundreds of people chanted prayers as they walked around the hill where the white iconic stupa with its gazing eyes are located. Some of the structures around the stupa, built in the 5th century, were damaged in the April 25 mag magnitude-7.8 quake. Police blocked off the steep steps to the top of the shrine, also called “Monkey temple” because of the many monkeys who live on its slopes. “I am praying for peace for the thousands of people who were killed,” said Santa Lama, a 60-yearold woman. “I hope there will be peace and calm in the country once again and the worst is over.” Authorities had to temporarily close Kathmandu’s main airport to large aircraft delivering aid due to runaway damage on Sunday, but UN officials said the overall logistics situation was improving. The airport was built to handle only medium-size jetliners, but not the large military and
cargo planes that have been flying in aid supplies, food, medicines, and rescue and humanitarian workers, said Birendra Shrestha, the manager of Tribhuwan International Airport. There have been reports of cracks on the runway and other problems at the only airport capable of handling jetliners. “You’ve got one runway, and you’ve got limited handling facilities, and you’ve got the ongoing commercial flights,” said Jamie McGoldrick, the UN coordinator for Nepal. “You put on top of that massive relief items coming in, the search and rescue teams that have clogged up this airport. And I think once they put better systems in place, I think that will get better.” He said the bottlenecks in aid delivery were slowly disappearing, and the Nepalese government eased customs and other bureaucratic hurdles on humanitarian aid following complaints from the UN. AP
Arab coalition ‘reconnaissance’ troops arrive in Yemen S
help train forces loyal to the country’s internationally recognized leader, President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who has been in exile since he fled Aden in March. They would also try to identify an area that could serve as a “green zone” from which Hadi and his government could operate when they return to Yemen. At the top of that list, said the officials, is the al-Bureqah area west of Aden, which stretches for about 15 kilometers (about 10 miles) along the coast and is home to a major oil refinery and large fuel tanks. The Western-backed Hadi fled to neighboring Saudi Arabia in March, just a few weeks after he fled the capital, Sanaa, which was captured by the rebels, known as Houthis, last September. Saudi officials declined to immediately comment on Sunday’s landing. However, military and security officials have repeatedly said a ground operation would follow the Saudi-led air campaign that began on March 26, after the military capabilities of the Houthis and their allies had been suf sufficiently weakened.
ANAA, Yemen—With helicopter gunships hovering overhead, at least 20 troops from a Saudi-led Arab coalition came ashore on Sunday in the southern port city of Aden on what military officials called a “reconnaissance” mission, as fighting raged between Iranian-backed Shiite rebels and forces loyal to the nation’s exiled president. It was the first ground landing by coalition forces since the start of the Saudi-led air campaign against the rebels and their allies—forces loyal to ousted President Ali Abdullah Saleh—who have captured most of northern Yemen and marched on southern provinces over the past year. In Cairo, meanwhile, Egypt, a key coalition member that has been named as a likely participant in any ground offensive in Yemen, acknowledged for the first time that it has deployed troops in the Gulf region and the Red Sea as part of the Saudiled coalition. The objective of Sunday’s landing was not immediately clear, but Yemeni military officials said the coalition troops would
LEBANESE children hold placards and Yemeni flags during a demonstration organized by the Hezbollah group in protest of the Saudi-led air strikes against Yemeni Shiite rebels, known as Houthis, in front of the United Nations headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon, on April 5. Shiite rebels freed more than 300 prisoners in the southern city of Dhale, Yemeni security officials said, as the rebels fought pitched battles with supporters of the country’s beleaguered President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi in the southern port city of Aden. Arabic on the placard (center) reads, “We We are all Yemen, Gulf rulers.” AP/BILAL HUSSEIN W
On Sunday the Yemeni officials said that streamlining the militiamen fighting the Houthis in Aden was a key step toward establishing a coherent force that a coalition expedition in Aden could lend support to. The coalition troops, who included black-clad masked men, as well as Yemeni expatriates wearing military-style shorts, landed in a central area between Aden’s neighborhood of al-Mansoura and the air airport, said the Yemeni officials and witnesses reached by the Associated Press inside Aden. They said helicopter gunships hovered above the landing area as the troops came ashore. The officials, who include a top army commander based in Aden and loyal to Hadi, spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren’t authorized to brief journalists. Residents who witnessed the landing also spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. The troops used at least four vehicles to move around Aden and included Yemenis who had been serving in the
armed forces of Gulf Arab members of the coalition and were likely serving as guides, the officials said. They said the troops carried assault rifles, took photos of the areas they toured and car carried topography equipment. There was no precise figure available for their number, the nationality of the non-Yemenis among them or how long they intended to stay. It was not immediately clear whether they were ferried to Aden by helicopters taking off from coalition navy ships off the coast of Yemen or traveled to shore in speed boats. They landed amid a surge in coalition airstrikes against positions of the Iranianbacked Houthis and their allies in Aden, including those at the city’s airport. In Cairo late Sunday, a statement issued by Egypt’s National Defense Council said the top policy body had agreed to extend by three months the deployment of Egyptian troops for “combat missions” as part of the Saudi-led coalition to protect Arab and Egyptian interests in the Gulf region and the Red Sea, including its strategic southern Bab Al-Mandab entrance. AP
WORLD
B3 1
S. KOREA FIRES WARNING SHOT TO JAPAN: WE’RE WATCHING YENWON Banking&Finance BusinessMirror
B2-2 Tuesday, May 5, 2015
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“Korean companies face bigger difficulties this year than last,” said Song In Chang, the ministry’s director general in charge of foreign exchange market policies. “What’s different is that we have been paying
attention to the won-yen rate since last year, whereas the won-dollar was our main focus before that.” The currency’s gains against the euro have also caught Song’s attention, he said in an interview at Se-
jong, south of Seoul, on April 30. The won is at its strongest level against the yen and the euro since at least 2008, putting pressure on exports that have fallen for four straight months this year, the longest streak since 2009. Companies from Hyundai Motor Co. to LG Electronics Co. and Samsung Electronics Co. reported earnings last month that declined from a year ago and all three said the currency’s strength contributed to the results. The won fell 0.8 percent to 1,080.82 per dollar as of 10:47 a.m. in Seoul today, from Thursday’s close of 1,072.29, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Markets
were closed in Seoul on Friday. The won fell 0.2 percent against the yen. The yield on South Korean government notes due December 2017 rose 5 basis points to 1.89 percent, the highest since March 12, Korea Exchange prices show. Song said that while the government doesn’t target any specific level for the won, it could “fine-tune” movements to ease any “herd behavior” in the currency. The won has gained about 40 percent against the yen since Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe took office in late 2012. It’s up about 17 percent versus the euro and little changed against the dollar over the same period,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “Last year the won’s declines against the dollar offset the impact from the gains against the yen, but this is no longer the case,” Song, 53, said. Still, South Korea has no intention of intervening in the currency market for the sake of exporting companies, Song said. Hyundai Motor cited weakening cited cited weakening of the euro and other emergingmarket currencies for profit declines in the first quarter. LG Electronics last week said its first quarter sales growth was marginal due to negative currency impact. That’s a notable contrast to Toy-
RATES
LENDING 30-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW %
UNIVERSAL BANKS LOCAL BANKS 1. Asia United Bank 2. Banco de Oro Unibank 3. 4.
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with the release of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s updated quarterly forecasts this week, which the board will see at the policy meeting but which won’t be released publicly until May 8. In February, when Stevens cut the cash rate for the first
7.0000 6.6550
6.2500 4.0000
23-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW % 7.0000 6.6550
6.2500 4.0000
REECE is still far from an agreement with its international creditors as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras tries to persuade officials to ease the flow of liquidity to the country. Three days before the European Central Bank’s (ECB) next decision on emergency aid, gaps remain on issues ranging from fiscal forecasts to labor and pension reforms, three people familiar with the talks said. Still, progress has been made in an improved atmosphere and Greece should have the cash to make a €200-million ($223-million) payment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) this week, officials said. The fiscal noose is tightening on Greece after weeks of brinkmanship and Tsipras needs to show European officials that he’s willing to find a compromise. Failure to do so could prompt the ECB to raise the haircut it demands on Greek collateral as soon as May 6, a decision which would risk pushing the country further toward financial chaos and capital controls. A Greek official said the government is targeting a successful
1.2500
0.6250
23-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW % 1.2500
0.6250
Bank of the Philippine Islands China Banking Corp.
6.6000 8.0000
4.0000 4.2500
6.6000 8.0000
4.0000 4.2500
1.0000
0.5000
1.0000
0.5000
5. Development Bank of the Philippines 6. East West Bank 7. Land Bank of the Philippines 8. Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co. 9. Philippine National Bank 10. Philippine Trust Co. 11. Rizal Commercial Banking Corp.
6.6500 6.2500 7.7033 7.5000 8.4000 7.0000 7.7500
4.5000 4.2500 4.7033 5.0000 7.4000 4.5000 5.7500
6.6500 6.2500 7.7033 7.5000 8.4000 7.0000 7.7500
4.5000 4.2500 4.7033 5.0000 7.4000 4.5000 5.7500
1.0000
0.5000
1.0000
0.5000
0.3750 0.6250
12. Security Bank Corp. 13. Union Bank of the Philippines 14. United Coconut Planters Bank AVERAGE BRANCHES OF FOREIGN BANKS 15. ANZ Bank 16. Deutsche Bank 17. Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp. 18. ING Bank 19. Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd.
8.4000 8.5000 7.0000 7.3863
6.4000 6.5000 5.0000 5.1788
8.4000 8.5000 7.0000 7.3863
6.4000 6.5000 5.0000 5.1788
1.2300
0.0000
1.2300
0.0000
0.9257
0.3571
0.9257
0.3571
5.5500 6.2500 6.3700 5.8000 6.6550
2.5000 3.2000 2.9000 3.8000 1.6000
5.5500 6.2500 6.5000 6.1000 6.6550
2.5000 3.2000 2.7500 4.1000 1.6000
1.4500
1.2000
1.4500
1.2000
20. Standard Chartered Bank AVERAGE
4.0700 5.7825
3.6000 2.9333
4.0700 5.8542
3.5550 2.9508
1.4500
1.2000
1.4500
1.2000
30-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW %
COMMERCIAL BANKS LOCAL BANKS 21. Bank of Commerce 22. BDO Private Bank 23. Philippine Bank of Communications 24. Philippine Veterans Bank 25. Robinsons Bank Corp. AVERAGE BRANCHES OF FOREIGN BANKS 26. Bangkok Bank 27. Bank of America 28. Bank of China 29. Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi 30. Citibank, N.A. 31. JPMorgan Chase Bank 32. Korea Exchange Bank 33. Mega Int'l. Commercial Bank Co. Ltd. AVERAGE SUBSIDIARIES OF FOREIGN BANKS 34. Chinatrust Bank 35. Maybank AVERAGE GENERAL AVERAGE
6.0192 6.6550 7.0000 8.5000 8.0000 7.2348
3.5192 4.0000 5.0000 6.5000 5.2500 4.8538
23-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW % 6.6154 6.6550 7.0000 8.5000 8.0000 7.3541
4.1154 4.0000 5.0000 6.5000 5.2500 4.9731
1.0000
0.2500
0.3750 0.2500
30-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW %
1.0000
0.3750 0.6250
0.2500
0.3750 0.2500
23-Apr-15 HIGH % LOW %
0.8750 0.3750
0.5000 0.3750
0.8750 0.3750
0.5000 0.3750
0.7500 1.1250 0.7813
0.6250 0.3750 0.4688
0.7500 1.1250 0.7813
0.6250 0.3750 0.4688
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HINA’ A S stocks rose the most A’ in a week, led by property and power companies, amid signs the real-estate market is stabilizing and speculation grew the government will add to monetary stimulus after a manufacturing gauge weakened. The Shanghai property index climbed to a record high after Soufun Holdings Ltd. data showed home prices climbed in Beijing and Shanghai. Huaneng Power International, the biggest Chinese utility, soared 10 percent as Qinhuangdao coal prices slumped to a nine-year low. The final Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) from HSBC Holdings Plc. and Markit Economics was at 48.9, missing analysts’ estimates and signaling a contraction. The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 0.9 percent to 4,480.47 at the close. The gauge advanced 19 percent in April, the third-straight monthly gain, on expectations the government will reduce borrowing costs after cutting interest rates and reserve-requirements ratios twice each since November. “The market is expecting some cut in interest rates or reserverequirement ratios soon given the poor situation in the economy,” said Wu Kan, a money manager at Dragon Life Insurance Co. in Shanghai, which oversees about $3.3 billion. “The market will meet more resistance as it moves up. It’s growing more likely that the market will have wild fluctuations.” The CSI 300 Index advanced 0.8 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng China Enterprises Index gained 0.4 percent, while the Hang Seng Index added 0.1 percent. Markets in China and Hong Kong were closed on Friday for a holiday. The Bloomberg China-US Equity Index added 0.5 percent in New York on Friday.
PMI data contrasts with the official manufacturing PMI for April that suggested a stabilization. The official manufacturing PMI was at 50.1, compared with the median estimate of 50. “China’s authorities are becoming more concerned about the economic downturn,” Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS Group AG in Hong Kong, wrote in a note on Monday. “In the next couple of months, we expect the government to speed up infrastructure investment with enhanced support from policy banks and cut the benchmark interest rate.” The Communist Party leadership has vowed to step up targeted controls to counter downward pressure on the economy, avoiding any mention of full-blown stimulus. China’s economic growth in the first quarter conformed to expectations, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing a Politburo meeting on Thursday at which President Xi Jinping presided. The nation will “fine-tune” its policies and maintain continuity and stability, Xinhua said. A gauge of property developers in Shanghai climbed 3.4 percent for the steepest gain among five industry groups. China State Construction Engineering Corp. rallied 10 percent. Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd. jumped 7.1 percent in Hong Kong. Beijing home prices rose 0.4 percent in April from the previous month, while those in Shanghai added 0.3 percent, Soufun, owner of China’s biggest real-estate information site, said. New home sales in Shanghai jumped 59 percent last month, according to property consultant Shanghai UWin Real Estate Information Services Co. The property market is stabilizing with improving
ota Motor Corp., Japan’s biggest company, which is forecasting a second-straight record record annual profit record as it benefits from a weaker yen. South Korea’s trade ministry said on May 1 that the weakening of the yen and the euro has hurt exporters from carmakers to machinery manufacturers. Shipments to Japan fell 12.6 percent in April from a year earlier, while exports to Europe dropped 11.9 percent. Separately, Song said the government may sell yuan-denominated bonds for the first time. “We may issue if we need to set benchmark costs for local companies,” Song said, without giving further details.
region’s best performers in April. Greece is also signaling it’s optimistic it will meet all its IMF obligations this month, even if there’s no agreement with creditors. In addition to this week’s payment, Greece also faces a €770-million payment on May 12. “We will have the cash,” Greek Labor Minister Panos Skourletis said in an interview on Monday with Mega TV Channel. Nevertheless, there are signs of dissent within Tsipras’s government with some officials, including Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, stressing their opposition to pension cuts or a sales tax increase. “We will not implement any measures which would lead to pension cuts this year,” Skourletis said. He also said the government will abolish this year a controversial real estate tax and replace it with a different property tax. While the government is working hard to get a deal as soon as possible, it will draw the line on matters such as labor market reforms and cuts to wages and pensions, Greek government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis added.
analysts, led by Oscar Choi wrote in a note. Prices and volumes may see an uptrend, they wrote. A measure of utilities in the CSI 300 surged 7.2 percent to a sevenyear high. Huadian Power International Corp. and GD Power Development Co. both soared by the daily limit of 10 percent. Chinese power-station coal prices slid for a 10th straight week to the lowest level since October 2006, according to data from the China Coal Transport and Distribution Association. Twenty-five companies are scheduled to sell initial public offering shares from today through May 11, which may freeze 2.34 trillion yuan ($376 billion) based on the median estimate of eight brokerages surveyed by Bloomberg. Margin traders increased holdings of shares purchased with borrowed money on Thursday, with the outstanding balance of margin debt on the Shanghai Stock Exchange rising to a record 1.22 trillion yuan. The Shanghai Composite is valued at 17.4 times 12-month projected earnings, compared with the fiveyear average multiple of 10.2, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. An unprecedented amount of money is flowing into the largest exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that track Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong as investors bet on the biggest rally in more than three years will continue. The Hang Seng H-Share Index Fund lured HK$20.5 billion in April, the largest monthly inflow since at least 2010 and the thirdmost among equity ETFs globally, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. About HK$29 billion has been added to the fund during the past four months in the longest stretch since 2013 as assets grew to
BANKING & FINANCE 7.6500 6.6550 6.0000 5.7500 6.5500 3.7300 8.0000 8.2500 6.5731
4.8000 4.6550 3.0000 3.7500 3.5500 3.7300 4.5000 4.0000 3.9981
7.6500 6.6550 6.0000 5.7500 4.0800 3.7300 8.0000 8.2500 6.2644
4.8000 4.6550 3.0000 3.7500 2.8700 3.7300 4.5000 4.0000 3.9131
1.7500
0.5000
1.7500
0.5000
5.7000 7.0000 6.3500 6.8446
4.7000 6.0000 5.3500 4.4874
5.9870 7.0000 6.4935 6.8116
4.9870 6.0000 5.4935 4.4962
1.0000 1.0000 0.9861
0.6000 0.6000 0.4768
1.0000 1.0000 0.9861
0.6000 0.6000 0.4768
1.7500
0.5000
1.7500
0.5000
Second of three parts
B2 2
FROM DREAM TO DISASTER Sports BusinessMirror
C1
PROMOTER Bob Arum (left) talking with trainer Freddie Roach, requested for Manny Pacquiao (center) to be injected with painkillers for the fight but was denied by Nevada Boxing State Commission. AP
| TUESDAY, MAY 5, 2015
mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
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AS VEGAS—The check was for $100 million, a payday so mind boggling that Floyd Mayweather Jr. couldn’t help but show it to a few reporters when the night was done. “No pictures, though,” Mayweather said, sliding the check out of an envelope. “Don’t want any pictures of it.” The check will soon be cashed, adding to the millions Mayweather already has stashed in his bank accounts. It was actually just a down payment for his night’s work, which could total more than $200 million by the time pay-per-view sales are tallied up. The richest fight ever wasn’t the best fight ever, but that wasn’t entirely Mayweather’s fault. He did what he usually does on Saturday night against Manny Pacquiao in a win that cemented his legacy as the best of his generation, even if he didn’t win any new fans doing it. Still, the fight will be a tough act to follow if only because of the staggering money it brought in. Hard to imagine Mayweather fighting for a paltry $30 million or
FLOYD JR. TTAKES HIS $100M ADVANCE
FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR., is at least $100 million richer after the fight.
$40 million after a night he made history with the richest single payday any athlete of any sport has made. He says he’ll fight once more in September, then hang up the gloves. Mayweather says it’s time to enjoy the fruits of his labor from a sport that has consumed his life since he was a kid throwing punches in Grand Rapids, Michigan. “I don’t really think I’ll miss the sport,” Mayweather said. “I don’t even watch boxing. At one particular time I loved the sport of boxing. I wanted to go to every fight and wanted to be at every boxing event. But I just lost the love for the sport.” Before a well-heeled crowd of 16,507 that cheered every time Pacquiao threw a punch, Mayweather dominated late once again to pull out a decision win that seemed closer in the ring than it did on the scorecards. Pacquiao even thought he won, though punch stats showed Mayweather landing far more punches and even throwing more than the usually frenetic Filipino. Pacquiao would blame a shoulder injury suffered in training last month for not being able to throw more right hands. His handlers would blame Nevada boxing officials for not allowing him a shot to numb the shoulder just before the fight, though the excuse rang hollow. “I cannot use a lot of my right hand but the fight was still good,” Pacquiao said. “What we wanted to do we couldn’t do because of my shoulder. But he’s fast, he’s a good boxer. Give the credit to him. He won tonight.” Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, said his fighter would like a rematch, but there is little chance of that. Not with Pacquiao’s shoulder injury, and certainly not after the perfect financial storm of a fight that cannot be replicated. Pacquiao likely made $100 million for himself for the fight that packed the MGM Grand arena with celebrities, sports stars and people paying as much as $40,000 for ringside seats. The bout was delayed for about a half hour because pay-per-view sales were overwhelming cable and satellite systems, a good omen for the paydays of both fighters. But while Pacquiao was the crowd favorite, Mayweather was the masterful boxer. He may not have ended the career of the remarkable career of the Filipino who once sold doughnuts on the streets to survive, but it’s doubtful Pacquiao can continue as a big pay-per-view much longer. “I did my best, but my best wasn’t good enough,” Pacquiao said. “I fought a good fight.” Mayweather fought a good fight, too, even if it wasn’t the crowd pleasing affair fans wanted. He used his reach advantage to land jab after jab, and was so elusive that Pacquiao was only able to land one of every five punches he threw, including only 18 of 193 right jabs. It was another great defensive performance from a fighter who knows just what he has to do to win. Mayweather remained unbeaten in 48 fights in a career that has now stretched 19 years. “I knew I had him from round one,” Mayweather said. “I went out there and felt him out. I wanted to see certain moves. Everything is a calculated move. I’m 10 steps ahead of any other fighter.” If Mayweather is serious about hanging up the gloves after one more fight, he’ll go into the history books as the best of his generation—and certainly the richest. Because he doesn’t take chances and turns fights into chess matches, though, he’s not going to be mentioned on any short list of all-time greats even while he insists he’s the best ever. Mayweather says he plans to give up all three welterweight titles he holds so other fighters have a chance at them. That will also make it easier for him to choose an opponent for a September fight that he says will be his last. But there will be pressure to continue. Rocky Marciano’s record of 49-0 could be broken with two more fights, and the MGM is building an arena on the Las Vegas Strip that Mayweather could open next spring if he keeps fighting. “I’m only human, I contradict myself,” Mayweather said, leaving open the possibility of more fights. “I’m not perfect.” He wasn’t against Pacquiao. But he was good enough to pocket his $100-million check in boxing’s richest fight. AP
WITH PAC PACQU ACQUIAO INJURY URYY,, BOX URY O ING HAD SHOT TO DO RIGHT THING; IT DUCKED
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AS VEGAS—The morning after the fight here became yuck-itup time. The legendary P.T. Barnum line seemed a perfect fit: There is a sucker born every minute. Included in those suckers were the 16,507 who filled the MGM Grand Garden Arena, generating a paid gate of $74 million, all to watch Floyd Mayweather Jr. outbox Manny Pacquiao in a fight about as compelling as jam-packed freeway at 8 a.m. Also right there in Barnum’s pocket were the millions who paid $100 to watch on TV, and the media hordes that encouraged them to do so. This was billed the Fight of the Century. As the Wall Street Journal so aptly put it, it’s good that we have 85 years left to top it. There was a serious and significant side to what took place on Saturday night. Indeed, on a night that might have saved the sport, or at least improved its brand, it was only further damaged. That was not for the obvious reason of delivering a predictable and boring fight, but for the missed opportunity it presented. More than an hour after the fight, when most sane people were asleep, Pacquiao’s team revealed, at the post-fight news conference, that their boxer had fought with a right shoulder injury. The muscle tear reportedly occurred in early April, during a training session in the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles, owned by Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach. The fighter’s sessions had been closed to the media and all but a handful of team members. Roach said the injury appeared to be healing. But at one point during training, he had Pacquiao working only on left-hand-punching drills. Pacquiao said in the news conference that he reinjured the shoulder early in the fight and was not as effective after that. The situation got even more complicated as the news conference continued. It became a game of who knew and when did they know it. Bob Arum, Top Rank Boxing’s chief executive and Pacquiao’s promoter, said they had sent a request for Pacquiao to be injected with painkillers for the fight. That injection would be a cocktail of three drugs, none banned, which included lidocaine. Arum said the request was sent to the Nevada State Boxing Commission a week ago. On Saturday night at 6:08 p.m., three hours before the fight, Top Rank’s Bruce Trampler approached the commission to ask that the injection be done. The commission said no. So Pacquiao went out, reinjured the arm, and much of the postfight news conference furthered the impression that he fought mostly one-armed. It also included the impression that, somehow, the Nevada
commission had done him wrong. That impression was quickly clouded further when, as the news conference was ending and reporters were filing out, commission Chairman Francisco Aguilar took the microphone to say his commission knew nothing of any injury to Pacquiao until Trampler’s request. He said had they known in a timely matter, they would have ordered an MRI to confirm the injury and allowed the injection. All of this raises the $64,000 question, or in the case of this fight, some $640 million questions: Why didn’t boxing postpone the fight? Why didn’t they bite the bullet, face the inevitable skepticism, and do the right thing? Why did they take such a huge chance, knowing that an injury such as this would reduce Pacquiao’s chances against Mayweather to near zero and further turn off a generation of fans? Those who paid dearly to see this were already feeling their pockets picked by the yawner fight they got. Now they are told they had paid for a yawner involving damaged goods. For most, going forward, the response will be: Fool me once...but... All this, remember, came on a night that began with several cable companies carrying the fight pay-per-view locked up near fight time with the rush for late orders. The Twitter world was filled with pictures of blank TV screens, sent by people who had already paid their $100. Arum was questioned about the ethics of putting an injured boxer out there, and he said, “All athletes play with injuries.” He didn’t mention that when there are millions of people not only watching, but wagering on these athletes, full disclosure is essential. That’s what the National Football League’s weekly injury report is all about. In misfortune, there is often opportunity. Boxing had a chance to do the opposite of what it did. Instead of spoiling its brand, it could have enhanced it. It needed to announce a postponement with a clear and constant message—along with refunds—that the sport needed to do what was right, that it would not sell a pig in a poke. Eventually, the public anger and sarcasm would have subsided, and boxing might still have a future. Doing the right thing is always powerful, in life and in sports. Boxing blew it. Its dream turned to disaster. Arum was about to be pressed more on this ethical issue when the champion arrived and took over the news conference stage. Soon, Mayweather, who has nicknamed himself “Money,” was talking about his private jet and showing reporters the $100-million check he received after the fight. The sport of boxing, as it currently exists, was on display.
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Detroit Free Press
LOYD MAYWEATHER JR.-MANNY PACQUIAO is over. Now it’s time for the hot takes. And most hot takes have come to an agreement: Saturday night’s fight at MGM Grand in Las Vegas didn’t live up to the enormous “Fight of the Century” hype that had built for months. “The so-called fight of the century was pay-per-snooze, a complete waste of everyone’s time and money—except in a boxing community now rolling in obscene amounts of cash, surely in disbelief they fooled us rubes again,” For The Win’s Chris Chase wrote. Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson tweeted: “We waited five years for that...#underwhelmed #MayPac.” Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers had one word: “Underwhelming.” In case you missed it, Mayweather, a Grand Rapids native, beat Pacquiao via unanimous decision in a welterweight title fight that many thought didn’t have enough action, and that Mayweather won by being evasive and calculating rather than meeting Pacquiao head-on and trading blows. Either way, Mayweather improved to 48-0 in his boxing career, even if most aren’t exactly in awe about how he got there. “To watch Floyd Mayweather box is to witness an elaborate exercise in selfpreservation,” Deadspin’s Drew Magary writes. “There’s not much passion. There’s certainly not much flair. There’s just Floyd moving around, doing his best to preserve a rote decision, and preserve the potential rematch, and preserve an unbeaten record that holds more historic value to him that it does anyone else. And yes, his style works, if only in the most cynical sense.” These reviews aren’t glowing in the first place. But considering this was supposed to be the biggest match in years for boxing, an ailing sport—and that the pay-perview price was $89.95—that makes them even worse. Among the biggest critics of the fight was Oscar de la Hoya, another former welterweight boxer who lost to Mayweather in 2007 via split decision. For HBO and Showtime, however, there is a bit of good news: Estimates say that the fight will bring in about $400 million from pay-per-view revenues. That’s staggering, even if it was a little too easy for people to watch the fight for free on Periscope, a live-streaming application.
SPORTS
In the Philippines, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said the effect of the slowdown in China is most evident in investments, as well as in the export sector. In its first-quarter risk assessment of the Asia Pacific released on Monday, Fitch said China’s growth remains one of the key determining factors to the future growth of neighbor economies in the region. In other words, a threat to China’s growth could prove detrimental to the growth in specific economies in the region. “The lack of sustained and robust demand recovery across the world’s major economic drivers continues to have implications for the risk profiles of Asia Pacific credit ratings. Slowing growth in China, in particular, remains one of the most significant potential risk factors for the region,” Fitch reported.
ADVOCATING GOOD GOVERNANCE
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Timta, RFI could cost P-Noy business support
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China stocks rise most in week as developers, utilities jump
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conclusion of this stage of talks by Wednesday, which the country hopes will be enough for the ECB to relax, rather than tighten, liquidity conditions. Beyond that, Greece wants to reach a broader, technical agreement with creditors this month. International officials stressed there’s a long way to go, despite the recent progress. All the people involved spoke on condition of anonymity as the talks are confidential. Negotiations resumed on Sunday. Greek government bonds rose slightly early Monday, with the yield on the two-year bond falling 36 basis points to 19.42 percent. The key date this week will be the ECB Governing Council’s meeting on May 6. The central bank’s stance will depend on the progress achieved this week, one of the people said, adding that restrictions on Greek banks can only be eased once it’s absolutely clear that bailout funding will resume. Investor optimism that a deal to unlock financial aid for Greece is close after months of talks put the country’s assets among the
HE tentative growth outlook of many of the large economies— most particularly the slowdown in China—is the single largest threat to the growth of emerging markets in the Asia Pacific, according to UK-based Fitch Ratings.
SPECIAL REPORT
Greece targets May deal as breakthrough remains elusive
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RADERS and economists are the most united they’ve been this year that central bank Governor Glenn Stevens needs to cut rates on Tuesday in the face of a stronger currency. The market is pricing in a better than 75-percent chance borrowing costs will fall to a fresh record of 2 percent and 25 of 29 economists also predicted a quarter-point reduction. Galvanizing the forecasts is a rebounding currency hovering at 78 US cents and a stalled recovery in the price for iron ore that underpins export earnings. Policy-makers also face the risk that firms outside of mining that were supposed to pick up the slack in the economy will actually reduce investment in an economy growing below it’s potential. “The recent surge in the Australian dollar would be viewed quite dimly by the folks at the Reserve Bank,” said Bill Evans, chief economist at Westpac Banking Corp. Failing to cut rates “in the face of such strong market pricing will affect the bank’s credibility over time,” he added. Tuesday’s decision also dovetails
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S. Korea fires warning shot to Japan: We’re watching yen-won OUTH Korea’s top currency of official fired a warning to Japan: his nation has stepped up scrutiny of the yen’s tumble against the won after damage to exporter earnings.
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ESPITE strong opposition from the business sector, the Aquino administration seems bent on enacting the Tax Incentive Monitoring and Transparency Act (Timta) and the Rationalization of Fiscal Incentives (RFI) bill. Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima, the chief proponent of the two fiscal measures, had said the government is losing at least P144 billion in revenues annually due to the grant of income tax holiday (ITH), reduced income-tax rates and duty exemptions to investments. “This represents a significant loss in revenues: 1.5 percent of gross domestic product, 9.3 percent of government’s expenditures or 10.6 percent of government revenues in 2011. These figures are conservative given the report covers only 29 percent of all IPA-registered firms,” the Department of Finance (DOF) said in its first Tax Expenditures Report covering 2011, released mainly in support of the lobbying
PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 44.5180
for the passage of Timta and RFI. In 2011, however, data showed that the Board of Investments, Philippine Economic Zone Authority and other investment promotion agencies (IPAs), approved P746.8 billion worth of new investment commitments from local and foreign businessmen—fresh capital infusions that would not have come in if the country’s fiscal-incentives regime was different. See table 2. This is the bone of contention that business groups want ventilated in opposing the passage of Timta and RFI. The American Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines (AmCham), as part of the Joint Foreign Chambers (JFC), has stood its ground that any change in the investment scheme will only cast doubt on future investments in the Philippines. “Why fix it if it isn’t broken? If it’s a question of redundant incentives, there are numerous laws they can tweak, but don’t change the existing one,” said John Forbes, senior adviser to the AmCham, in
an interview. Forbes was referring to the mandatory list of activities and areas being given incentives in the yearly Investment Priorities Plan, by virtue of existing laws, numbering to more than 50. These laws have also irked the DOF as aggravating the redundancy of incentives. The same sentiment is echoed by other foreign business groups representing the Philippines’s main trade partners and top investment sources, including the European Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines (ECCP) and the Japanese Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines. “Investors will always compare, more so now that we have the Asean integration. We had $6.2 billion in foreign direct investments last year; that’s because of incentives. If the administration succeeds in putting those measures through and shrink the incentives scheme, future investments will go somewhere else,”said Henry Schumacher,
SANDIGANBAYAN DENIES CNN PHILIPPINES’S PLEA TO INTERVIEW SENATORS
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HE Sandiganbayan has denied the request of television network CNN Philippines to interview the senators, who were charged with plunder, to make sure the sub judice rule will not be violated. CNN Philippines wanted to interview Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile, who is under hospital arrest at the General Hospital inside Camp Crame; and Senators Bong Revilla Jr. and Jinggoy Estrada, both detained at the Philippine National Police (PNP) Custodial Center. The three were arrested for their alleged involvement in the pork-barrel scam using bogus non-governmental organizations operated by businesswoman Janet Lim-Napoles, who is, likewise, facing plunder. In a resolution dated April 22, 2015, but was only made available to the media on Monday, Sandiganbayan Presiding Justice Amparo CabotajeTang said an interview with the three senators might lead to the violation of the sub judice rule—a rule which
bars parties from discussing a pending case to avoid prejudging the issue and influencing the court. On March 17, in a letter directly addressed to Tang, CNN Philippines requested that news anchor Pia Hontiveros be allowed to have an exclusive interview with the three senators for the network’s weekly political talk show, NEWS.PH. Also in its request, CNN Philippines requested that the interview be conducted between the months of April and May. The network said the interviews, which will be taped for later airing, will only focus on “updates” on the three senators’ health and on “family matters.” In its comment submitted to the court late last month, the prosecution argued that, though it may be unintentional, the interview “would violate the sub judice rule” given the “political nature” of the talk show. C A
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■ JAPAN 0.3705 ■ UK 67.4937 ■ HK 5.7439 ■ CHINA 7.1771 ■ SINGAPORE 33.4772 ■ AUSTRALIA 34.8232 ■ EU 49.9180 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 11.8721 Source: BSP (4 May 2015)