EXPORTS RISE SIGN OF RECOVERY FOR JAPAN
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Gantry cranes move containers from trucks and container ships at a shipping terminal in Tokyo, Japan, on November 11. Japan’s exports rose the most in eight months in October, supporting an economy that fell into recession last quarter. Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
apan’s exports rose the most in eight months in October, supporting an economy that fell into recession last quarter. Overseas shipments rose 9.6 percent from a year earlier to the highest level since October 2008, the finance ministry said, compared with the median estimate for a 4.5-percent increase in a Bloomberg News survey. Imports grew 2.7 percent, leaving a trade deficit of ¥710 billion ($6 billion). Rising exports provide support for an economy that contracted for two straight quarters after a sales-tax increase in April. The weaker yen, championed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the central bank, may bolster shipments further as Japan heads to an election next month. “The weaker yen’s boost to car shipments and a recovery in Asia [are] driving a pickup in Japan’s exports,” said Minoru Nogimori, an economist at Nomura Securities Co. in Tokyo. “Imports will fall from November, as declining petroleum prices offset the effect of the yen’s depreciation.”
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POP GOES TAYLOR SWIFT
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HEY came from Bakersfield, San Diego, Long Beach and elsewhere across the Southland, about three dozen young women plus a handful of young men who had caught the eye of the gathering’s host with posts about her on Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr and other social-media sites. ❖ Enticed by vague invitations to be part of “an amazing opportunity,” they were shuttled in luxury vans through the winding roads above Beverly Hills on a Saturday afternoon to a two-story mansion where they noshed on pizza and other snacks before being invited into the warmly appointed living room.
Just moments after they’d settled into couches, chairs and nine overstuffed pillows scattered across a large Persian rug, arguably the biggest pop star on the planet popped through a doorway, a fluffy white kitten clutched to her chest. “Hey, guys,” Taylor Swift said to screams of delight. A few minutes later, Swift explained how her guests had been selected based on comments they had posted on social-media sites. “You guys have been individually handpicked—by mostly me,” she said. “I’m obsessed with Twitter and Instagram and Tumblr. Why I wanted to have you here at this secret session is to play the entire new album for you.” It was the first of several of Swift’s “secret sessions” during which she personally previewed her fifth studio album, 1989, for groups of fans ahead of the album’s release in late October (others were held at her homes in Nashville, New York and Rhode Island). That’s a major departure from the veil of secrecy surrounding her two previous blockbuster albums, Speak Now in 2010 and Red in 2012, both of which defied the music industry’s downward trajectory of recent years by selling more than a million copies each in their first week of release. One reason for these fan listening sessions was to ensure her audience stays with her as she continues her transition from country star to pop. Starting in the mid-2000s working her MySpace page relentlessly, she’s done the same with other social-media platforms to establish a Permabond-like connection with fans over the last eight years. The big question facing 1989 is whether Swift will be able to strike platinum a third time. Billboard projections are putting firstweek sales in the 800,000 neighborhood, which in the ever-shrinking world of music sales is still a rare achievement. So far, no album released in 2014 has sold more than 1 million copies, and the biggest first-week sales figure this year came in May with Coldplay’s Ghost Stories, which sold just under 383,000 copies. (“1989” sold 1.287 million copies during its first
week of release, according to Billboard.—Ed.) Swift is always cognizant of the business side of her career and in the weeks leading to the release of her new album, she staged a media blitz with appearances on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, two drop-ins to ABC’s Good Morning America, a visit to NBC’s The Voice and The View on Wednesday, and became omnipresent on the radio as more than 900 iHeartRadio-affiliate pop stations across the country carried programs spotlighting Swift and her new album. The latter exposure must have compensated for the reduced airtime she likely received from country radio, where Swift established her career starting with the 2006 release of her debut album Taylor Swift. She has called 1989 her first “official pop album,” and much of it was created in collaboration with popR&B producer songwriters Max Martin and Shellback, Ryan Tedder and singer-songwriter Jack Antonoff of Fun. “I think if you respect, admire and love a person—or in this case, a musical community—you’ll be honest with them and very upfront about what’s happening,” she said in reference to her continuing musical evolution. Wearing a creme-colored sweater, chunky heels and plaid mini-skirt, she added: “Looking back, I think when [her 2012 single] ‘I Knew You Were Trouble’ spent seven weeks at No. 1 on the [pop] singles chart, a lot of the world should have seen that as a warning flare. It showed that this part of my music is really working, and it’s something I’m really passionate about. “I don’t think the country music community was shocked that I made a pop album,” she added. “I think they were shocked that I was honest with them about it. “There was this huge fear that they may be about to hear an album from me that sounded alien to them,” she said, shifting into a singsong delivery as she added, “like I’d be singing ‘Dance, dance, dance in the club, club, club and the beat drops.’”
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china factory gauge at six-month low BusinessMirror
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B3-1 | Friday, November 21, 2014 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
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SNOW BLAST
Mark Settlemyer (left) gets help clearing snow on the roof of his mother’s house from Ken Wesley on Wednesday in Lancaster, New York. Lake-effect snow pummeled areas around Buffalo for a second straight day, leaving residents stuck in their homes as officials tried to clear massive snow mounds with another storm looming. AP/MIKE GROLL
China factory gauge at six-month low
CHINESE factory gauge fell to a six-month low in November, adding to signs broader stimulus is needed to halt a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.
The preliminary Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) from HSBC Holdings Plc. and Markit Economics was at 50.0, below the median estimate of 50.2 in a Bloomberg News survey and lower than last
month’s 50.4. Numbers above 50 indicate expansion. Following readings that showed fi xed-asset investment in the first 10 months expanded the least since 2001 and credit growth weakened
last month, the manufacturing report suggests targeted monetary easing is failing to boost growth, raising the prospect of further policy support. “It’s clear that the effects of targeted easing measures are waning,” said Hua Changchun, a China economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong. “It’s quite obvious that the central bank should cut the RRR,” he said, referring to the reserve ratio requirement for banks. Hua maintained a call for the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) to cut the RRR 50 basis points by the end of this year, followed by four
more reductions in 2015. Burdened by overcapacity and weak domestic demand, China’s economy is headed for the slowest full-year growth in more than two decades. The central bank has refrained from broad-based interest rate or RRR cuts to avoid a fresh surge in debt. China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite index was 0.1 percent lower at the break, while Australia’s dollar held declines. At a regular cabinet meeting on Wednesday, Premier Li Keqiang said companies are still finding it difficult and expensive to get fund-
ing. China will tweak the loan-todeposit ratio calculation by including some interbank deposits—a move that could boost banks’ lending capacity by 808 billion yuan, the equivalent of 10 percent of new loans in 2013, according to Bank of America Corp. The PBOC may need to cut reserve ratios two or three times to offset the impact of any additional deposits available for lending, Huang Jie, a Beijing-based analyst with China International Capital Corp, wrote in a note on Thursday. An index of manufacturing output fell to 49.5, a seven-month
low and below the threshold of 50 that separates expansion and contraction. Today’s report, known as the Flash PMI, is typically based on 85 percent to 90 percent of responses to surveys sent to purchasing managers at more than 420 companies. “The reading confirms downward pressure on China’s economy,” said Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior economist at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong. “This adds to pressure on the central bank to do more to stimulate growth and exerts downward pressure on the yuan.” Bloomberg News
Honduras beauty queen slain TV LAND PULLS ‘COSBY SHOW’ FROM LINEUP N by sister’s jealous boyfriend
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ISS Honduras 2014 was supposed to fly to London on Wednesday to compete in the Miss World pageant. Instead, she and her sister were found dead near the spa where they disappeared six days ago. Leandro Osorio, who heads the National Directorate of Criminal Investigation, told the media in Honduras on Wednesday that officials could “confirm 100 percent” that two bodies found buried were those of beauty queen Maria Jose Alvarado, 19, and her sister, Sofia Trinidad, 23. Osorio also said investigators had found both the murder weapon and the vehicle allegedly used in the slayings. Plutarco Ruiz, Trinidad’s boyfriend, and an alleged accomplice, Aris Maldonado, have been arrested in connection with the case. The two sisters disappeared after attending a birthday party for Ruiz on Thursday. Police said Ruiz confessed to shooting them, jealous that his girlfriend had danced with another man. At some point during the night of the party, a heated argument broke out and Ruiz pulled a gun, fi ring fi rst at his girlfriend and then at Alvarado as she tried to flee, said Gen. Ramon Sabillon, director of the National Police. Alvarado was hit twice in the back. Alvarado had been scheduled to leave for London on Wednesday to compete in the Miss World 2014 pageant. The pageant activities begins on Thursday and take place over three weeks with a finale on December 14. Honduras won’t compete in the
IN this April 26, photo, Maria Jose Alvarado is crowned the new Miss Honduras in San Pedro, Sula, Honduras. Alvarado, and her sister Sofia disappeared after attending a birthday party in Western Honduras on Thursday. They were later found dead. AP
Miss World pageant this year because of Alvarado’s tragic death, Honduras pageant organizer Eduardo Zablah said. On her bio page for the Miss World competition, Alvarado described herself as a dedicated student with aspirations for a career in diplomacy. She used her statement to encourage tourists to see her country for themselves. “Our ethnic groups like the
Tawakas, Lencas, Pech, Garifunas and Misquitos have made Honduras a country with a cultural diversity rich in customs, gastronomy and religious beliefs,” she said. “For this and more I encourage you to make of Honduras a travel destination, the best is yet to come!” Julia Morley, the chairwoman for the Miss World Organization, issued a statement on Wednesday “to everyone around the world who has been touched by the awful news from Honduras this morning.” “We are devastated by this terrible loss of two young women, who were so full of life. Our thoughts and prayers are with the family and friends of Maria Jose Alvarado and Sofi a Trinidad at this time of grief,” Morley said. She added that her organization is planning a special service Sunday for Alvarado and her sister and are planning a fundraiser to benefit a children’s home in Honduras, selected by their mother. Honduras has been in the news in the US this year because of a steep increase in the number of children from the country crossing into America unaccompanied by adults. The migration has been driven in large part by high crime and little opportunity in the Central American nation of about 8 million people. Honduras’ overall homicide rate was the highest in the world for 2012, with 90 homicides per 100,000. Much of the high rate of violent crime there is fueled by gang and drug-trafficking conflicts. Los Angeles Times/TNS
EW YORK—NBC has scrapped a Bill Cosby comedy that was under development and TV Land will stop airing reruns of The Cosby Show, moves that came a day after another woman came forward claiming that the once-beloved comic had sexually assaulted her. NBC spokesman Rebecca Marks said on Wednesday the Cosby sitcom “is no longer under development.” A TV Land representative said the reruns would stop airing immediately for an indefinite time. The Cosby Show also was to have been part of a Thanksgiving sitcom marathon. The NBC sitcom and Cosby Show reruns joined a Netflix Cosby standup comedy special, which was indefinitely postponed late on Tuesday, as mounting evidence of Cosby’s faltering career. They occurred a day after model Janice Dickinson, in an interview with “Entertainment Tonight,” became the third woman in recent weeks to allege she’d been assaulted by Cosby—charges strongly denied by the comedian’s lawyer. The developments, which involve allegations that were widely reported a decade ago, as well as new accusations, have gravely damaged the 77-year-old comedian’s reputation as America’s TV dad at a time when he was launching a comeback. A year ago, a standup special— his first in 30 years—aired on Comedy Central and drew a hefty audience of 2 million viewers. His prospective new series was announced by NBC in January. Cosby has never been charged in connection with any of the allegations. Former Pennsylvania
BILL COSBY AP
prosecutor Bruce L. Castor Jr., who investigated a woman’s claims that Cosby had sexually assaulted her in 2004, said on Wednesday he decided not to prosecute because he felt there was not enough evidence to get a conviction. “I wrote my opinion in such a way as I thought conveyed to the whole world that I thought he had done it, he had just gotten away with it because of a lack of evidence,” the former Montgomery County district attorney said. If Cosby hadn’t been cooperative with the investigation, “I probably would have arrested him,” he said. Cosby was asked about the growing furor by an Associated Press reporter when the comedian was promoting an exhibition at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art that features the comedian’s African-American art collection alongside African artworks. When the Associated Press interviewed Cosby, on November 6, the story involved long-circulated accusations from several women and recent criticism from comedian Hannibal Buress. Cosby de-
clined to comment, saying “We don’t answer that.” The Associated Press mentioned the allegations and Cosby’s decision not to comment at the end of its story, which, like the interview, was primarily about his loan of more than 50 artworks to the Washington museum. Since then, two women have come forward publicly to accuse him of sexual assault, Netflix, TV Land and NBC cut ties and an appearance on The Late Show With David Letterman was canceled. In recent days, as the allegations gained increasing attention, AP went back through the full video of the November 6 interview and decided to publish Cosby’s full reaction to questions about the claims. The Associated Press was among a handful of news organizations granted interviews with Cosby in connection with the art exhibition. After his initial refusal to comment—as the interview was winding down but with the camera still running and Cosby wearing a lapel microphone—the comedian asked the Associated Press to not use the brief on-camera refusal to comment he had just made about the allegations. “And I would appreciate it if it was scuttled,” he said. The interview was on the record. The Associated Press had made no agreement to avoid questions about the allegations or to withhold publishing any of his comments at any time. The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art has not changed its plans for the show, which opened this month on the National Mall and is scheduled to remain on view through early 2016. AP
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Boxing’s new haven BusinessMirror
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| Friday, November 21, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
ALGIERI SHARP IN HIS DRESS AND INTERVIEWS By Greg Logan
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FoR MANNy PAcquIAo, MAcAu MEANS SAVING MILLIoNS
Newsday
ACAU—Boxing news conferences generally are exercises in hyperbole, but Wednesday’s made-for-livestreaming-video event advertising Saturday night’s Manny PacquiaoChris Algieri World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight title bout did contain one moment of truth. It was provided by, of all people, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum, who famously is known for saying “Yesterday, I was lying; today, I’m telling the truth.” Before launching into an ode to box-office star Pacquiao, Arum turned to Algieri and said, “I want to thank you for the tremendous help you’ve been on this promotion.” That might have been the understatement of the boxing year. From the moment he popped out of the basement in his parents’ Greenlawn, Long Island, home to win the WBO light-welterweight title from Ruslan Provodnikov and ace out bigger names for the pay-per-view date with Pacquiao, Algieri has been a promoter’s dream, answering every reporter’s question as if it were an essay test. He was at it again on Wednesday night at the Venetian Macau, sitting down for one last roundtable interview before the event while Pacquiao just put in his time on the dais. Algieri won the news conference on style points, too, looking like a model fresh out of a catalogue in a youthful sports jacket and narrow tie. “I like to stand out and do something a little different,” Algieri said. “It’s a little old school, too. I think of the guys in the ‘30s and ‘40s. I’d rather look sharp.” In the interview, Algieri added that fight preparations came together as neatly as his wardrobe. “I feel awesome,” Algieri said. “Today’s workout was fantastic. My coaches were impressed at how good we’re feeling this close to fight night.” Despite his status as an 8-1 underdog, Algieri’s middle classto-$1.7-million purse story and his bold insistence that he can upset an eight-division world champion might stir the pay-per-view market to life. At 5-11, Algieri (20-0, 8 KOs) has a pronounced size advantage over the 5-61/2 Pacquiao (56-5-2, 38 KOs), but the champion’s experience dwarfs Algieri’s. Could a relative neophyte lacking a knockout punch really score such a monumental upset? Algieri gets the skepticism, especially considering a first-round knockdown by Provodnikov that left him with a shiner of epic proportions. “Who the hell am I?” Algieri said. “Who is this guy? “Most people haven’t seen any of my other fights. They base my entire style off the fight against Ruslan, which is ridiculous because I fought 111/2 rounds with one eye. I wasn’t throwing the right hand because it was pinned against my damaged right eye that couldn’t get hit.” All the questions Algieri has fielded with such aplomb since the promotion kicked off nearly three months ago will be answered when the fighters step into the ring at a quarter after noon on Sunday Macau time, which translates to 11:15 ET Saturday night. “It’s going to be a great show,” Algieri said from the dais to the cameras. “You don’t want to miss this.” Getting into the spirit of things, Pacquiao added, “I know my opponent has trained hard, and he’s excited to win. But I won’t let that happen.”
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NEW HAVEN By Martin Rogers
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FoR fighting in Macau, Manny Pacquiao can save millions of dollars from tax. AP
USA Today
ACAU—For Manny Pacquiao, fighting Chris Algieri in Macau this weekend just makes too much sense. Dollars and sense. While this tiny enclave of China, where gambling is the centrifugal force that drives the region’s economy, has thousands of immigrant Filipino workers and is conveniently close for much of the Pacman’s fan base, it all really boils down to cash. Pacquiao is guaranteed at least $20 million from Saturday night’s welterweight contest, according to his promoter Bob Arum, and will save himself vast sums of money by preventing the Internal Revenue Service from punching a hole in his pocketbook. “By fighting in Macau, Manny is not subject to United States income tax,” Arum told USA Today Sports. “Most of that would be at 39.6 percent. We are talking millions of dollars he can save.” Pacquiao will still be taxed in his homeland, the Phillipines, but at a lower rate of around 20 percent. A few million is chump change compared to the vast sums that role through Macau on a daily basis, where gambling revenues outstrip those of Las Vegas by a wide margin and where boxing’s greatest modern experiment is currently taking place. A generation ago, Macau was still synonymous with seedy gambling dens. This weekend’s fight venue–the Venetian Hotel and Casino’s Cotai Arena—was swamp, and professional boxing was outlawed. Now, a series of gleaming resorts are packed onto a spit of land half the size of Manhattan, the government is hungrily exploring all new avenues to increase tourism, and the sweet science has found itself an unlikely new home. Perhaps no city-sport combination is more closely entwined than boxing and Las Vegas, but by hosting Pacquiao for his bout with Brandon Rios last November, and now the clash with New York’s
Algieri, Macau is shaking things up with its mere presence in pugilism’s elite circles. “There is no reason not to keep the foot on the accelerator,” said Ed Tracy, president and chief executive officer of Sands China Ltd., operator of the Venetian Macau. “We are interested in meaningful high-quality events. I’m trying to create a venue for boxing to take the next step in my market.” That market, namely mainland China, has potential that Arum describes as “unfathomable.” The promoter said the Pacquiao-Algieri bout will be broadcast on terrestrial television channel CCTV, and is expected to be seen by 300 million Chinese viewers. Years of drastic revenue growth in Macau slowed since the midpoint of this year, when a huge corruption clampdown by the Chinese government caused some potential high rollers to assume a significantly lower profile. The next target demographic to grow Macau’s economy is China’s increasingly affluent middle class. The presence of that audience is a key reason why undercard fighter and two-time Olympic gold medalist Zou Shiming is likely to hear louder cheers than Pacquiao come fight night. Las Vegas is not going to be cut out of the boxing picture any time soon, but its once impenetrable stranglehold is no longer in place. Indeed, if the much-discussed yet still mythical bout between Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather ever takes place, AT&T Stadium in Dallas, with its 105,000 capacity, would be a more likely destination than Sin City. “Vegas has been the king for a long time but it is in an interesting position now,” said Freddie Roach, Pacquiao’s trainer. “Boxing follows the money, that’s how it has always been. If this is where the money is, you’re only going to see more boxing here. And Macau has made a great start.” Arum, still with a spring in his step at 82, makes little attempt to disguise his affection for Macau and admitted that taking the Pacquiao show on the road has kept his own enthusiasm bubbling strong into his later years. He already has staged smaller shows on the Chinese mainland and has no doubt as to where boxing’s future growth lies. “I have staged big fights, but a lot of people have done that,” Arum said. “I want to be known as the guy who brought boxing to China, because if it takes off, and that’s what it is starting to do, it will take the sport to a level it could never have dreamed of. I want that to be my legacy.”
If it’s not Mayweather, Pacquiao mulls drop in weight By Lance Pugmire Los Angeles Times
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ANNY PACqUIAO is among the millions who’d like his next fight to be against Floyd Mayweather Jr. “Crossing fingers, hopefully that fight will happen,” Pacquiao said. If it doesn’t, the current
world welterweight champion is positioned for a move back to the junior-welterweight class, where he believes his famed power will return. Pacquiao (56-5-2, 38 knockouts) is defending his World Boxing Organization belt on Saturday night against New York’s Chris Algieri at a catchweight of 144 pounds.
In a meeting with reporters on Tuesday, Pacquiao was at 143 pounds. He said he believes he could even trim down to 135. From September 2005 through 2009, a year in which he savagely decked Ricky Hatton and then wore down current middleweight champion Miguel Cotto in a 12th-round technical knockout, Pacquiao won eight of
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11 bouts fought between 130and 144-pound weight limits by stoppage. “The speed’s still there, the power’s still there, the hunger’s still there,” Pacquiao said. “Moving down in fighting weight is good for me.” Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach has Mayweather as his No. 1 choice for Pacquiao’s next
foe, but he expects a dominant showing on Saturday night (Pacific time) against Algieri, and says he’d “love” a Pacquiao fight against another unbeaten 140-pound champion, Danny Garcia. “Floyd’s my wish, he’s my second wish,” Roach said of Garcia.
Tuesday, November21, 18,2014 2014 Vol. Vol.10 10No. No.43 40 Friday, November
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By Bianca Cuaresma
he economy is facing downside risks in terms of local output, measured as the gross domestic product (GDP), as the government has proven reluctant to spend even as global growth remains tepid, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Thursday.
Ayala Corp. President and COO Fernando Zobel de Ayala appears to be deep in thought as he walks in front of the Makati Shangri-La Hotel in Makati City. Ayala Corp. announced on Thursday that it raised some $275 million through a top-up placement, but saw its share price drop. nonie reyes
LEMON LAW I.R.R. OUT, BUT LOOPHOLES NOTED Ayala Corp. raises $275M Hari sales for infra, power projects up 18% in October T By Catherine N. Pillas
Sports
AMERIcAN chris Algieri wants to stand out and look different. AP
A broader look at today’s business
In the minutes of the Monetary Board (MB) meeting on October 23 and released on Thursday, the MB said economic growth might have slowed in recent months. “Notwithstanding the indications of underlying strength in domestic-demand conditions, economic activity in the second half could be dampened by a slowdown in government expenditures,” the BSP said. “Slower global economic activity could also exert a downward pull on external demand,” it added. A regional banking giant, likewise, cited the feeble fiscal spending that compelled the economic managers to revise the forecast output growth in the third quarter of the year. See “Growth,” A4
World
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Gross domestic product in the July-to-September quarter shrank an annualized 1.6 percent, putting the world’s third-biggest economy in its fourth recession since 2008 and pushing Abe to delay a further sales-tax increase. Manufacturers saw output growth weakening in November from the previous month, according to a preliminary Purchasing Managers Index. “The Japanese economy is already starting to recover from the sales-tax hike,”Takuji Okubo, an economist at Japan Macro Advisors in Tokyo, said in a Bloomberg Television interview, citing export gains and rising retail sales and machinery orders. Bloomberg News
Underspending to slow H2 growth
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Export volumes climbed 3.8 percent from September to the highest since March last year, and the volume of imports was little changed. Exports of cars, ships and steel were some of the biggest contributors to the rise, with the value of motor-vehicle shipments gaining 6.2 percent on increasing sales to the European Union and Asia. Toyota Motor Corp. this month raised its profit forecast to a record ¥2 trillion, while Nintendo Co., Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. also cited the weak yen for improved quarterly results.
Surprise recession
DBS BANK, BSP SAY GOVT’S RELUCTANCE TO SPEND HAMPERING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
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Rising volumes
The nation has posted 28 straight monthly trade deficits as energy import costs surged, after all nuclear power plants were shut down in the wake of the Fukushima disaster. The value of crude-oil imports declined almost 11 percent, with the price down 32 percent since a June peak. Total mineralfuel imports declined 5.9 percent.
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EAR God, we thank You for giving us the world’s greatest book, the Bible. The stories in it give us the history of the world from when You began to create until right up to our present day. They even tell about Your promises to do in the future. The world’s greatest book gives us an idea of what the Bible is all about. It tells about people how to know, serve and love God most of all and others. Amen.
The yen traded at 118.33 per dollar at 12:49 p.m. in Tokyo, after earlier touching the lowest level since August 2007. The currency has dropped 11 percent in value this year as the Bank of Japan implements its unprecedented easing program, while the US economy recovers and the Federal Reserve ends its quantitative easing. The Topix index of stocks was 0.3 percent higher at the morning break on Thursday.
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he Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) has released the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) of the Lemon law, although loopholes remain in the provisions on the remedial process that may be considered disadvantageous to consumers. The trade office, however, vows to clarify the procedures until December. Trade officials and automotive-industry representatives convened on Thursday at the Board of Investments, and presented the approved IRR of the Philippine Lemon Law, or Republic Act 10642. The law provides that the consumer, upon finding a defect on a brand-new vehicle, can notify the motor-vehicle dealer, distributor or manufacturer, and is entitled to four repair attempts. The Lemon law period covers the 12 months from the date of original delivery of the vehicle to the consumer, or up to 20,000 kilometers of operation, after such delivery, whichever comes first. See “Lemon law,” A4
PESO exchange rates n US 45.0540
By Vg Cabuag
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onglomerate Ayala Corp. on Thursday said it raised some $275 million (about P12.37 billion) through a top-up placement that will be channeled to its power and infrastructure ventures. The company, however, saw its share price fall, after it sold the shares at a discount. The company said in its disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) that it sold some 18.78 million common shares at P660 apiece, or a discount from its last traded price of P682 per share. As a result, its share price at the PSE declined 5 percent. “The top-up placement entails our is-
suance of equal number of new shares at the same price, with Mermac Inc. as the seller in the placement tranche and subscriber in the subscription tranche,” the company said. Mermac is the holding firm of the Ayala family. The placing price reflects a discount of 5.2 percent, based on the 30-day volume weighted average closing price of Ayala shares. It then increased its public float from 38.23 percent to over 40 percent. “The placement was 2.35 times oversubscribed, with strong demand coming from long-only funds and a good mix of investors coming from Asia, Europe and See “Ayala,” A4
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yundai Asia Resources Inc. (Hari), the official distributor of Hyundai vehicles in the Philippines, on Thursday said it sold 1,982 units in October, reflecting a year-on-year growth of 18 percent. Year-to-date sales are at 19,675 units, or a 10-percent improvement over the same period in 2013, credited mainly to the performance of the passenger-car (PC) segment. See “Hari,” A4
n japan 0.3821 n UK 70.6717 n HK 5.8099 n CHINA 7.3620 n singapore 34.5162 n australia 38.8866 n EU 56.5608 n SAUDI arabia 12.0086 Source: BSP (20 November 2014)