Businessmirror november 30, 2014

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BusinessMirror

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

U.N. Media Award 2008

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business

n Sunday, November 30, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 52

P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 28 pages | 7 days a week

Aquino told: Gov’t should get more than P20B from Calax project week ahead

ECONOMIC DATA PREVIEW Foreign exchange

n Previous week: The lo-

cal currency stayed in the 44 territory within the week amid local and international data releases. The peso started trading on an appreciating note to hit 44.91 to a dollar against the previous week’s close of 44.98. This slightly dipped to Tuesday’s 44.97 to a dollar and back to appreciate on Wednesday at 44.92. Meanwhile, the local currency ignored the disappointing output expansion on Thursday to strengthen further and appreciate at 44.85 to a dollar. The peso ended last week’s trade at 44.89 to a dollar.

n Week ahead: Players in

the foreign-exchange trading market will likely be watching the country’s inflation in November this year, as the financial markets factor in the lowerthan-expected gross domestic product (GDP) of the country and look for fresh leads.

Inflation (November) December 5, Friday

n October inflation: Infla-

tion in October has settled to 4.3 percent, slightly lower than September’s 4.4 percent. As compared to inflation last year, however, October’s was still an increase from the 2.9-percent consumer-price growth in the same month last year. October’s inflation of 4.3 percent is the second consecutive month of slowdown for the country’s inflation. The slower inflation for the year was attributed to lower annual increments in the prices of food and nonalcoholic beverages. Lower prices of petroleum products were also noted during the period.

n November inflation:

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. earlier said that the inflation for November will be within the range of 3.5 percent to 4.3 percent, slower than the previous month’s inflation rate. “Stable food prices, continued decline in international oil prices and lower electricity rates for the month are seen to dampen inflation pressures,” Tetangco said. Bianca Cuaresma

Prove decision to reauction is justifiable–Team Orion

P

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

RESIDENT Aquino must ensure that his administration could net more than P20 billion in revenues from the rebidding of the P35.42-billion Cavite-Laguna Expressway (Calax) deal to justify his decision to stage a fresh auction for the contract. Team Orion of Aboitiz Land Inc. and AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp., the winning bidder in the first auction for the project, said Mr. Aquino must prove that his decision is reasonable by maximizing the economic benefits of the deal. However distasteful the order was, the consortium said it will no longer exercise its right to sue the government for declaring the original tender a failure. “[I]n the interest of national progress, Team Orion will not stand in the way of the Calax rebid,” the group said. The consortium also urged the government to fast-track the controversial bidding for the

Bloomberg

T

he refusal of Saudi Arabia and its Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) allies to curb crude-oil output in the face of plummeting prices has set the energy world on a painful course that will leave the weakest behind, from governments to US wildcatters. A grand experiment has begun, one in which the cartel of producing nations—sometimes called the central bank of oil—is leaving the market to decide who is strongest and how to cut as much as 2 million barrels a day of surplus supply. Oil-patch executives, including billionaire Harold Hamm, have vowed to drill on, asserting they can profit well below $70 a barrel, with output unlikely to fall for at least a year. Marginal producers in less-profitable US shale areas, as well as countries from Iran to Russia, and opera-

PESO exchange rates n US 44.9160

Liberia wants to move

beyond Ebola

much-needed infrastructure. Team Orion, being deeply hurt by the decision, emphasized the need to conduct the tender with no more controversies by abiding by the auction’s rules. This, the group said, would ensure that the government, which is seemingly thirsty for more revenues, could net the P20-billion premium it supposedly gained. “We expect the rebidding to be conducted swiftly, aboveboard and in line with established bidding procedures in order to ensure that the government obtains the P20 billion it had assumed to gain,” Team Orion said. See “Calax,” A2

Opec refusal hits oil’s weak links from Iran to US shale By Bradley Olson & Rebecca Penty

voices

tions from Canada to Norway will see the knife sooner, according to analyses by Wells Fargo & Co., IHS Inc. and ITG Investment Research. “We’re in a very nerve-racking environment right now, and will be for probably the next couple of years,” Jamie Webster, senior director for global crude markets at IHS, said in a phone interview. “This is a different game. This isn’t just about additional barrels, this is about barrels that are going to keep coming and keep coming.” Investors punished oil producers, as Hamm’s Continental Resources Inc. fell 20 percent, the most in six years, amid a swift fall in crude to below $70 for the first time since 2010. Exxon Mobil Corp. fell 4.2 percent to close at $90.54 in New York. Talisman Energy Inc., based in Calgary, was down 1.8 percent at 3 p.m. in Toronto, after dropping 14 percent on Friday.

US supplies

A production cut by the 12-member Opec would have been See “Opec,” A2

In this November 15 photo, an unidentified couple, who just got married, walk in a park used for wedding photography in the city of Monrovia, Liberia. Many have postponed their weddings in October, as Ebola ravaged Liberia’s capital and the government warned people to avoid large gatherings. Weddings are full of kissing and hugging, and just one unknowingly sick person could infect dozens. Now, in a sign that daily life is returning to normal as cases fall, the couple tied the knot without waiting any longer. AP/ Abbas Dulleh

By Gregg Zoroya USA Today

M

ONROVIA, Liberia— This is a city that desperately wants to shake off Ebola and get on with life. The massive billboards warning of infection and imploring people to wash their hands and monitor fevers still loom everywhere, but they’ve lost visual punch, fading into the kaleidoscope of a busy cityscape. A population warned about physical proximity touches and holds hands and elbows, crowding together as readily as in any other teeming metropolis. Children scatter across intersections, hawking wrapped candies or fried plantains through car windows. Motorcyclists dart through traffic, weighed down with paying riders who cling tightly for dear life, four to a bike.

Where major paved arteries give way to capillaries of rutted dirt roads and congested neighborhoods, the poor populations seem too busy for the measures aimed at defeating Ebola. “Let’s be realistic,” US Ambassador Deborah Malac says. “It’s very hard for human beings to bear down and focus so intensely over an extremely long period of time. It becomes difficult. It’s hard on people.” The epidemic has eased in Liberia, but it isn’t over. Nearby Sierra Leone and Guinea remain in the thick of the disease. In Monrovia, living with a virus that kills 60 percent of those it infects, even if the infection rate has dropped, cannot become “the new normal,” says Kevin DeCock, head of a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention team. “The danger is of complacency,” he worries, “accepting

the unacceptable.” When the epidemic was at its worst in this capital city, as bodies lay in the streets and the sick lined up at overflowing treatment clinics, people saw the sickness as an imminent danger and responded. Now, Ebola is largely tucked out of sight in partially filled clinics, or it claims individual victims lost in vast slums. As it has from the beginning, the Red Cross moves out in convoys to recover and incinerate bodies to fight Ebola. Because Monrovians are so eager to put the crisis behind them, the process of body removal is becoming trickier and even threatening at times, says Victor Lacken, a Red Cross spokesman. I joined a retrieval effort on Monday in Paynesville, a sector that was true to the sound of See “Liberia,” A2

n japan 0.3815 n UK 70.7158 n HK 5.7937 n CHINA 7.3163 n singapore 34.6040 n australia 38.3865 n EU 56.0013 n SAUDI arabia 11.9706 Source: BSP (28 November 2014)


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