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TLDC named Best Boutique Developer

TORRE LORENZO Development Corp. (TLDC) took home four awards at the PropertyGuru Philippines Property Awards, including Best Boutique Developer.

The company’s Dusit Thani Residence Davao was named Best Condo in the Philippines and Best High-End Condo in Davao, while dusitD2 Davao Hotel received the award for Best Hotel Interior Design.

“It is an honor to be part of this prestigious event and receive these recognitions in our pursuit to become a world-class real estate developer as we widen our reach and continue to understand the needs of the communities we serve to upgrade their living experience,” TLDC Chief Executive Officer Tomas P. Lorenzo said in a statement.

TLDC partnered with Thai hospitality company, Dusit International, to establish the Dusit Thani Residence Davao and dusitD2 Hotel, the first five-star luxury complex in Davao.

As a main category winner for Best Condo in the Philippines, TLDC also qualifies to compete at the Asia Property Awards Grand Final ceremony in Bangkok in November.

AGP secures $100-M investment from 2 Japan firms

AGP International Holdings Pte. Ltd. (AG&P) said on Monday that it had received an equity investment of approximately $100 million from two Japanese institutions to back the company’s inroads in the global natural gas value chain.

In a statement, the Philippine-based firm identified the investors as Osaka Gas Co. Ltd., through its affiliate Osaka Gas Singapore Pte. Ltd. (Osaka Gas) and the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC). The two have invested in a minority stake in AG&P.

“We are humbled and privileged by the trust that both Osaka Gas and JBIC have placed in AG&P. These are amazing institutions that possess tremendous expertise and experience in their respective fields,” Jose P. Leviste, Jr, AG&P chairman, was quoted as saying.

AG&P owns and operates two major yard facilities in the Philippines where it employs 4,000 people.

The company said the capital will be used to execute its multiple liquefied natural gas (LNG) initiatives worldwide, including the development and rollout of its city gas distribution business in India.

The company has won long-term, exclusive concessions to connect people in India to compressed natural gas (CNG) for their vehicles and piped natural gas (PNG) directly into their homes across South India and Rajasthan.

Part of the capital will also be used for small- and medium- scale LNG import terminals, such as AG&P’s pending terminals in Karaikal, India and elsewhere.

Investments will also be made on LNG applications and logistics, such as LNG delivery to end-customers by different transportation options, the company said. Capital will also be infused in additional intellectual property for AG&P and its family engineering company, Gas Entec.

AG&P said it will also use funds for its advanced modularization and field construction services to serve global energy and commodity markets in the US, Australia, the South Pacific and Southeast Asian markets and rapidly accelerating domestic infrastructure in the Philippines.

AG&P quoted Katz Sato, head of South and East Asia business development for Osaka Gas, as saying: “Osaka Gas has known AG&P since 2014. Since that time, we have come to admire AG&P’s unique ability to disrupt the natural gas value chain in areas such as city gas distribution, LNG import terminals, LNG bunkering, LNG engineering and advanced manufacturing.”

“We strongly believe that this investment in AG&P will provide Osaka Gas with a valuable asset to create and develop new markets for Osaka Gas. AG&P’s single-minded focus in developing solutions with the end-customer in mind has been inspirational to our team,” he added. — Victor V. Saulon

Government fully awards Treasury bills

THE GOVERNMENT made a full award of the Treasury bills (T-bill) it offered yesterday, with rates dropping across all tenors amid strong demand following the central bank’s reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cuts and bets of monetary policy easing at home and in the US.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) fully awarded P15 billion worth of T-bills yesterday as the offer was almost five times oversubscribed as tenders received amounted to P74.32 billion.

Broken down, the government borrowed P4 billion as programmed via the 91-day tenor as bids amounted to P12.41 billion. The average rate plunged 11.4 basis points (bp) to 3.769% from the 3.883% logged in the previous auction.

The Treasury also made full award of the 182-day papers, accepting P5 billion as planned out of bids worth P25.66 billion. The average yield also declined 13.8 bps to 4.1% from last week’s 4.238%.

For the 364-day T-bills, the Treasury fully awarded the programmed P6 billion, with tenders amounting to P36.252 billion. The one-year tenor’s average rate declined 21.7 bps to 4.519% from the 4.736% logged a week ago.

At the secondary market yesterday, the three-month, six-month and one-year T-bills were quoted at 4.111%, 4.308% and 4.763%, respectively, based on the based on the PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. De Leon said there was strong demand from banks ahead of the implementation of the last phase of cuts to banks’ RRR and market expectations of monetary policy easing by the US Federal Reserve and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

“First, end of July, we’ll see again a 50-bp cut in terms of the RRR, and then of course there’s also both the BSP Governor and also following the statements made by the Fed that there are chances there would be…policy easing,” Ms. De Leon told reporters after the auction.

“The FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) FOMC will meet end of this month, then it would be like a 25-50 bps cut in the policy rate. So there’s really a convergence in terms of first, the reduction in the interest rate and second, also again stronger liquidity that we’ll be seeing in the market,” Ms. De Leon said.

After a 100-basis point RRR cut across all banks last May 31, the BSP trimmed the reserve ratios of universal and commercial lenders and thrift banks by another 50 bps last June 28 to 16.5% and 6.5%, respectively.

Another 50-bp reduction will be implemented on July 26 to finally bring the RRR of big banks to 16% and thrift banks to 6%, which completes the phased cuts the BSP announced in May.

Meanwhile, Fed chair Jerome Powell previously hinted on a cut in benchmark rates, saying the central bank will “act as appropriate” to sustain growth amid “crosscurrents.”

The BSP is also expected to cut interest rates when the policy-making Monetary Board convenes again next month. BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno earlier said the regulator is likely to cut policy rates in the second half before moving to reduce banks’ reserve requirement ratio.

Last week, Mr. Diokno said a possible 25-bp or 50-bp rate cut from the Fed gives the BSP “and the entire world more policy space for cutting.”

Sought for comment, Robinsons Bank Corp. peso debt trader Kevin S. Palma said, “The market continued with its bullish ways as dealers and investors put liquidity to work and lock-in yields ahead of the Fed decision.”

“Reinvestment activities were also evident due to some P16 billion T-bills maturing on Thursday,” he added.

SAMURAI BONDS
Meanwhile, Ms. De Leon said the government expects to get the necessary approvals for its planned issuance of yen-denominated or samurai bonds before the end of the month or in early August.

Mayroon lang mga (There are) approvals we have to secure, yung parang (such as) preliminary requirements that we also have to comply with… It could be next week or before the start of the ghost month,” she said.

She said the Treasury is not planning any other offshore bond offerings besides what it has issued previously as the government also has to prioritize the utilization of official development assistance (ODA).

“We are limiting the external borrowings to 25% for next year. Also we have to be mindful that we have to put access to ODAs. So given the concession of financing, so we’d like to get first the ODAs out of the door before we resort to other external commercial borrowings,” Ms. De Leon said.

“The menu would be the same: the dollar, the euro, the samurai and the panda.”

The official added that the government has no plans to issue more retail Treasury bonds following the “jumbo issuance” from recent auctions.

“We have to again see the pace of the utilization of all the funds right now, given the catch-up plan,” Ms. De Leon said.

The government operated on a re-enacted 2018 budget from the start of the year until April 15, when President Rodrigo R. Duterte signed the latest general appropriations into law, but vetoed P95.3 billion in appropriations that he said were not in accordance with his administration’s priorities, slashing this year’s national budget to about P3.662 trillion.

The delay in the budget’s enactment was largely blamed by economic managers for the slowdown in the country’s gross domestic product growth in the first quarter to 5.6% — its worst performance in four years.

In May, the government’s Economic Development Cluster mapped out a strategy to catch up on growth following the disappointing first-quarter print.

The government plans to borrow P230 billion from the domestic market this quarter, broken down into P90 billion in T-bills and P140 billion in Treasury bonds. — R.J.N. Ignacio

The Lion King rules with $185 million US debut, $433 million worldwide

LOS ANGELES — Simba and Mufasa reigned supreme this weekend as Disney’s The Lion King dominated box office charts. Director Jon Favreau’s remake of the animated classic collected a massive $185 million from 4,756 North American theaters during its first three days of release.

In yet another win for Disney, the movie landed the best domestic launch for a PG film and set a new record for the month of July. That figure represents the second-best domestic debut of the year behind Disney and Marvel’s Avengers: Endgame ($357 million). The Buena Vista company now holds five of the top six biggest movies of 2018 so far.

Overseas, The Lion King felt the love with $269 million for a global start of $433 million. The film launched in China last weekend and has since earned $98 million, boosting the worldwide haul to $531 million.

“We have a lot to celebrate,” Cathleen Taff, Disney’s president of global distribution, said on a Sunday morning call. “The Lion King has such a resonance in pop culture that you see all different types of people coming out. People wanted to be part of this.”

The state-of-the-art technology used to bring the Pride Lands and its inhabitants to life drew a polarizing response from reviewers, but the newest version of Disney’s crown jewel proved to be critic-proof, and the prospect of hearing Donald Glover’s Simba and Beyoncé’s Nala harmonize to Disney classics was irresistible. The Lion King is already one of the most recognizable stories across the world, but the remake benefited from an equally buzzy voice cast including Mr. Glover as Simba, Beyoncé as Nala, Chiwetel Ejiofor as Scar, and Billy Eichner and Seth Rogen as Timon and Pumbaa. James Earl Jones reprised his role as Mufasa from the original movie. The updated version also includes a new song from Beyoncé.

Disney has re-imagined five of its classics to mostly consistent success. Outside of The Lion King, 2017’s Beauty and the Beast had the strongest start with $174 million, followed by 2010’s Alice in Wonderland launched with $116 million. In 2016, Favreau’s The Jungle Book earned a strong $103 million in its inaugural weekend. In May, Guy Richie’s Aladdin debuted with $91.5 million and is approaching the $1 billion mark globally. However, Tim Burton’s Dumbo stumbled with $45 million earlier this year.

In a banner weekend for Disney, the studio is now home to the highest-grossing movie in history. Avengers: Endgame crossed $2.7892 billion at the global box office, officially dethroning the 10-year record of James Cameron’s Avatar. — Reuters

Fed leaning toward a quarter-point July interest rate cut led by Powell

FEDERAL RESERVE Chairman Jerome Powell and his colleagues look primed to cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point later this month, eschewing a bigger move in what would be their first reduction in borrowing costs in more than a decade.

Faced with slow global economic growth and elevated trade tensions, the policy makers are also likely to leave open the possibility of further cuts down the road as they seek to sustain the record-long US economic expansion.

“I’d like to go 25 basis points at the upcoming meeting,” St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, a 2019 voter and one of the central bank’s most dovish policy makers, told reporters Friday. Bullard characterized such a move as a recalibration, rather than kicking off multiple cuts.

“I think easing cycle is a little bit strong for this situation,” he said, instead citing episodes in the 1990s when the Fed made downward adjustments in the policy rate to take out insurance against external shocks and keep the economy growing.

Investors are fully pricing a quarter-point cut at the July 30-31 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. But they scaled back bets for a half-point reduction after the New York Fed took the unusual step of walking back comments made on Thursday by its president, John Williams, that were interpreted as a call for a more aggressive policy move.

The action convulsed financial markets in Asia, and President Donald Trump waded into the confusion Friday with tweets that renewed his criticism of the central bank for having raised rates in the past, while saying he agreed with Williams’s first comments “100%.”

Expectations for a rate cut had already been clearly signaled by Powell during congressional testimony on July 10 and 11, where he discussed the uncertainties stemming from Trump’s trade policies and slowing global growth.

Speculation for a more muscular half-point move grew after Williams spoke at an academic conference about the benefits of acting swiftly when rates are already near zero. His prepared remarks didn’t discuss the current economic outlook but the context — the Fed’s target range for its policy rate is 2.25% to 2.5% — caught people’s attention. The message appeared to be reinforced a short while later by Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida.

“You don’t need to wait until things get so bad to have a dramatic series of rate cuts,” Clarida, a Trump appointee, told Fox Business Network. “We need to make a decision based on where we think the economy may be heading.

MARKETS GYRATE
Stock and bond prices rose and the dollar fell as investors absorbed the comments from Powell’s top two lieutenants, who spoke within an hour of each other on Thursday afternoon, and then sharply reversed some of those moves after a New York Fed spokeswoman issued a statement several hours later to stress that Williams speech “was not about potential policy actions at the upcoming FOMC meeting.”

The messaging confusion was widely criticized by Fed watchers.

“Fed communications could have been a lot better and more linear, just to put it mildly,” said Roberto Perli, a partner at the research firm Cornerstone Macro LLC.

Michelle Meyer, US economist at Bank of America, called it “a debacle in communication” and stuck with a call for a quarter-point cut. Economists at LH Meyer Inc. changed their call to half-point cut, then went back to a quarter-point after the clarification. The Washington-based research firm’s founder, former Fed Governor Laurence Meyer, said former Chairman Alan Greenspan would have had his head, had he moved markets like that.

SOMEWHAT ACCOMMODATIVE
For all the tumult, Powell’s been clear as he’s led a move toward easier policy after the four 2018 rate hikes. At his June press conference he said the case for “somewhat more accommodative policy’’ had strengthened in the view of “many’’ on the FOMC. He repeated the “somewhat more’’ phrasing at a speech in Paris on July 16.

The case for a modest move — versus a more aggressive cut, or doing nothing at all — has a lot to do with still-resilient US economic data, as well as divisions among policy makers on the committee.

US non-farm payrolls increased a robust 224,000 in June, retail sales data showed that consumer spending remains strong, and overall financial conditions have eased up despite rising global risks and tensions — in part because the Fed has signaled that it’s tacking toward easier policy.

SOME OPPOSE CUTS
Thomas Barkin and Raphael Bostic, presidents of the Richmond and Atlanta reserve banks, respectively, have suggested they see little need for a rate cut just now with the economy performing well even amid rising uncertainty. Neither are FOMC voters this year. But Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren is a voter, and on Friday he sounded steadfastly against a reduction in rates.

“As long as the economy’s doing well, if that continues we don’t need accommodation,” Rosengren told CNBC, citing encouraging comments over trade between the US and China at the Group of 20 meeting in Osaka, Japan, in late June, as well as encouraging US economic data.

“In the last six weeks, things have gotten a little bit better for the economy,” said Nathan Sheets, chief economist for PGIM Fixed Income “I don’t think this is an environment where you need to go 50 basis points all at once.” — Bloomberg

SM takes part in Adopt-A-City campaign

THE NATIONAL Resilience Council (NRC) launched the Adopt-A-City campaign, an innovative partnership model that links private companies with local government units to establish disaster-resilient LGU systems.

SM Prime Holdings Inc. became the first private company to take part in the Adopt-A-City campaign, with SM Prime Chairman of the Executive Committee Hans T. Sy signing the memorandum of understanding with NRC president Ma. Antonia Yulo Loyzaga and Cagayan de Oro City (CDO) Mayor Oscar S. Moreno.

“We are very glad to launch the Adopt-A-City Campaign which is a great way to encourage the private sector to become more involved in disaster resilience as it can in fact be made part of each business’ core business value cycle,” Ms. Loyzaga said.

“Disaster resiliency is not the job of the government alone. It is a job that can be successful on collaboration with the government. The government sector alone can succeed only if both the private sector and the government will work together,” Mr. Sy said.

Aside from CDO, SM has also vowed to support Naga City and Iriga in disaster resiliency efforts.

Star Trek faves to return with Patrick Stewart in Picard

SAN DIEGO — The upcoming Star Trek series about Jean-Luc Picard will reunite the beloved starship commander with android officer Data and other characters from the long-running space franchise, the cast revealed to fans at San Diego Comic-Con on Saturday.

British actor Patrick Stewart, who is returning to the role of Picard that he played from 1987 to 1994 in the TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation as well as four feature films, unveiled a trailer for the new series in front of 6,500 fans who packed a convention hall.

The footage from Star Trek: Picard included surprise appearances by Data (Brent Spiner) from Next Generation and Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) from Star Trek: Voyager. Both actors joined Mr. Stewart on stage and drew loud applause and cheers.

Mr. Stewart, 79, had repeatedly refused efforts to lure him back as Picard. Discussions with writers of the new series changed his mind, Mr. Stewart said.

“I knew something very unusual was going to happen and I wanted to be a part of it,” Mr. Stewart said. “I’m very, very happy to be here.”

Picard, set to be released next year, will be available in the United States on CBS Corp.’s CBS All Access streaming service and in 200 other markets on Amazon.com Inc.’s Prime Video.

The new series will pick up Picard’s life 20 years after the character last appeared on screen. The trailer showed a retired Picard living a quiet life running a family vineyard until he meets a young woman in danger and puts together a new crew to return to space.

“What the hell are you doing out here, Picard? Saving the galaxy?” Seven of Nine asks.

Other returning stars from Next Generation include Jonathan Del Arco (Hugh), Jonathan Frakes (Riker), and Marina Sirtis (Troi).

Executive producer Alex Kurtzman said the new series shows Picard at a time when he is questioning some of his life choices but still “standing up for what matters.”

“Age has not changed his resolve. It’s just changed his circumstances,” Mr. Kurtzman said. “Picard has to soul search, and to soul search you need a dark night of the soul to come out lighter and brighter.”

Producers also announced they plan to release six new Short Treks episodes of 10 to 15 minutes each. One will be a teaser for the Picard series. They also are at work on a Star Trek podcast and an animated series Lower Decks. — Reuters

PHL customer orders Airbus ACH160 helicopter

EUROPEAN aircraft manufacturer Airbus said it has recently secured the first order for an ACH160 private helicopter from the Philippines.

The helicopter unit of the aerospace firm, Airbus Corporate Helicopters (ACH), said in a statement Monday the unnamed customer is the first to purchase the ACH160 from the Southeast Asia and Pacific region.

The helicopter is said to be used for private and business flights within the Philippines.

“Launching the ACH160 in Southeast Asia with a new Philippine customer underlines the global attractiveness of our corporate helicopters offering to meet the evolving travelling needs of our customers,” Frederic Lemos, head of ACH, said in the statement.

“We are equally excited to see our ACH products gaining good success in the growing Philippine private travel market,” he added.

The medium twin-engine helicopter with a maximum capacity of eight passengers is designed to function like a business-jet aircraft. It is scheduled to enter into service by next year.

Aside from the receipt of the helicopter, the deal with the Filipino customer covers the aircraft’s maintenance through HCare First, ACH’s premium support service.

ACH said last month Chinese firm Shenzhen Eastern General Aviation Co. also signed an agreement to order one unit of ACH160, making it the first customer in China for the VIP version of the helicopter. — Denise A. Valdez

Pru Life targets to launch trust arm before yearend

PRU LIFE UK expects to launch its new subsidiary before the year ends. — PRULIFEUK.COM.PH

PRU LIFE Insurance Corp. of UK (Pru Life UK) is eyeing to launch its asset management and trust subsidiary before the year ends, with the insurer already ironing out internal processes and requirements.

In a press conference on Monday, Pru Life UK President and Chief Executive Officer Antonio G. De Rosas said the life insurer is “on track” to launch Pru Life UK Asset Management and Trust Corp. by the fourth quarter.

“Right now, it’s more of getting ourselves ready in time for our target launch which is before the end of the year,” Mr. De Rosas told reporters yesterday.

“There’s a lot of things we still need to do in terms of processes and governance to satisfy the requirements, not only of the regulators which is the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas), but also our own internal governance requirements before we can launch. We want to do this right,” he added.

Pru Life UK said in a previous statement that the creation of a stand-alone trust company will provide greater convenience to its clients as they will work with fewer fund managers.

In January, the insurer said Antonio L. Garces II, who serves as Pru Life UK vice-president and chief investment officer, will head the new trust company.

Mr. De Rosas said Pru Life UK will be able to offer more “flexible” investment vehicles under the new money market arm.

“We will offer similar and dissimilar products that we are currently offering. Products we offer (right now) are mainly single premiums and that comes a long with an attached life insurance cover. For the asset management company there will be no life insurance cover…so we are flexible in the kind of products we will offer,” he said yesterday.

Mr. De Rosas added that the company already accomplished regulatory approvals for the establishment of Pru Life UK Asset Management and Trust.

Pru Life UK, the subsidiary of international financial services group Prudential plc, has been offering life insurance products in the Philippines since 1996.

It has expanded its reach to over 160 branches nationwide with 31,000 licensed agents. Mr. De Rosas said the insurer aims to increase insurance sales by employing more agents and improve their productivity.

Insurance Commission data showed Pru Life UK was the fourth-largest life insurer in the country in terms of premium income in 2018 with P22.03 billion, higher than the P19.22 billion recorded in 2017. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Lion King: The power of consolidation in Hollywood

By Anousha Sakoui, Bloomberg

COME FOR the harmonic pairing of Beyoncé and Donald Glover as they sing the Elton John classics, stay for the comedic fireworks of Seth Rogen and Billy Eichner in Walt Disney’s live-action The Lion King.

That’s the standard take from the reviews of one of Disney’s crown jewels this year. But critics have given this version of the beloved tale a frosty reception — only 60% are recommending it, according to aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. With an estimated $175 million-plus opening weekend, it’s still likely to record the second-biggest opening of the year so far, behind only Avengers: Endgame.

“I don’t think critics’ reviews are going to matter as much with this film,” says Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at Box Office Pro. Mr. Robbins predicts it will generate more than $1.3 billion globally, which would overtake Beauty and the Beast as the biggest of the live action re-imaginings the studio has been plugging away at since the success of Alice in Wonderland in 2010.

The strategy has helped introduce the studio’s most popular characters, from Belle to Aladdin, to a new generation of consumers. It is also contributing to a year in which Disney is exerting a dominance over Hollywood the likes of which Tinseltown has never seen. Since it closed a $71 billion offer for a swath of 21st Century Fox assets in March, the studio’s domestic market share has risen to nearly 35%, more than double its closest rivals, Warner Bros. and Universal Pictures.

One of the key indicators that helps explain why audiences will turn out to Lion King, whatever the critics say, is the dominance of Disney’s so-called “event films.” The top-five grossing films so far this year — four of which are Disney movies — account for 36% of the box office ticket sales. In 2018, that sort of box office concentration was less than 23%.

Doug Creutz, analyst at Cowen & Co., has been studying this evolution. He expects that by the end of summer, the top-four-grossing movies from Hollywood’s most lucrative season will account for more than half of all ticket sales. This level of consolidation has happened last year, too, and in 2015. But it was pretty rare before then: From 2001 to 2014, there was only one year in which the top four films exceeded even 40% of the total.

2019 has the potential to be “highly concentrated,” Mr. Creutz says. With upcoming sequels of Star Wars and Frozen still on the way, he says it’s possible that the year will set a record for the fewest number of movies that account for the biggest share of the box office. “Nobody wants to put their movie next to Disney’s big movies,” he says.

Compounding the issue is that there is a record number of wide releases this summer — 34 of them, compared to the 18-year average of just 24. This makes the odds of success lower for anything that isn’t a huge event at theaters, and the fallout will be born by smaller studios trying to compete with Disney, according to Mr. Creutz. Producers and distributors have a tougher choice to make about whether a movie has the ability to survive in a theatrical release, or if streaming is a better fit.

Even this year’s Aladdin, which was widely panned, managed to swing a sizable profit, raising $964 million globally. (Dumbo, which flopped in March, appears to be the rare exception.) The Lion King has already opened in China, the second-biggest movie market, and has bested the results of The Jungle Book, Beauty and the Beast, and Aladdin.

Fans of Beyoncé are doing their part to ensure The Lion King’s success, using the singer’s lion character Nala as their profile pictures on social media as a way to raise the profile of the movie. But for some critics, the fierceness of the singer’s stage persona doesn’t translate. Nala’s “Lions, are you with me?” rallying cry is no “Okay ladies, now let’s get in formation.”

Catalina Combs, of the review site Black Girl Nerds, notes that the best song of the movie isn’t Beyoncé’s but the comedians’ “Hakuna Matata.” “The voice work, combined with the hyperreal CGI during the more emotional scenes, comes off as bad dubbing,” she wrote. “At times, it sounds incredibly cheesy.”

At the screening I attended last week, it was hard to know if what you were seeing was real or digital. Visually, the film is stunning, mixing technology from the gaming world, virtual reality, and real sounds and views of Africa. That seems to have come at the cost of facial expressions that might allow you to connect with a character.

Others were disappointed that the film is a play-by-play of the original 1994 animation. To David Ehrlich of Indiewire, the movie is “a creatively bankrupt self-portrait of a movie studio eating its own tail.”

It isn’t the most powerful Hollywood property when factoring merchandise and other revenue streams — that title might go to Pokémon — but Lion King ranks high and has had remarkable staying power, in large part because of some $9 billion in ticket sales to its stage show, which has run through more than 9,000 performances.

And unlike such Disney properties as Marvel, which are driven by toy sales, the movie merchandise tie-ins include a cosmetic collection by Luminess and Sir John, Beyoncé’s makeup artist, along with $75 crown rings, courtesy of jeweler Pandora. There’s a hat line from milliner Gigi Burris, and Bloomingdales will have its own in-store “Style Kingdom.”

But the fact that even Beyoncé can’t make the movie a resounding success on all measures is perhaps a warning for the studio’s many remakes in store. A live-action version of Lady and the Tramp for Disney’s new streaming service is scheduled for later this year. Mulan is set for a March 2020 release, and Cruella, a reboot of 101 Dalmatians starring Emma Stone, is cued up for 2020. For a remake of The Little Mermaid, Disney is trying to keep the franchise current by casting black actress and singer Halle Bailey as Ariel. The studio has live-action versions of its animated hits scheduled through 2023.

Federal Land secures BCI Asia Top Developer Award

FEDERAL Land, Inc., developer of The Seasons Residences in Bonifacio Global City, was named one of the country’s top developers during the 2019 BCI Asia Top Ten Awards.

The annual BCI Asia Top Ten Awards is given to property developers and architectural firms with environmentally responsible projects. The selection criteria considered the developers’ sustainability efforts and confirmed green building ratings.

Federal Land submitted The Seasons Residences — Haru Tower for the awards. The residential project is being developed by Federal Land and Japanese conglomerates Nomura Real Estate Development Co., Ltd. and Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings Ltd.

The Japanese-influenced project will have four towers, namely Haru (Spring), Natsu (Summer), Aki (Autumn), and Fuyu (Winter). It is located on 8th Avenue corner 36th Street, Grand Central Park in North Bonifacio Global City, Taguig.

Vista Land raises P14.5 billion from corporate notes

VISTA LAND & Lifescapes, Inc. (VLL) has raised P14.5 billion through a corporate notes facility to finance the expansion of its commercial projects.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange Monday, the Villar-led property developer said the five-year corporate notes carry a fixed rate of 7.125% annually.

The listed firm signed a corporate notes facility agreement with PNB Capital & Investment Corp. as mandated lead arranger and bookrunner. Its subsidiaries, Brittany Corp., Crown Asia Properties, Inc., Camella Homes, Inc., Communities Philippines, Inc., Vista Residences, Inc., and Starmalls, Inc. acted as subsidiary guarantors.

“The proceeds of the corporate notes facility will be used to fund the company’s 2019 capital expenditures for commercial property projects, and to fund other general corporate purposes,” the company said.

VLL has committed to spend P40 billion in capital expenditures this year for the expansion of its residential and commercial projects. The company last year hit its target to have 1.3 million square meters (sq.m.) in leasable area for its commercial space business.

The company looks to end 2020 with a total of 60 malls, from the 31 it had by the end of 2018. It earlier changed the name of subsidiary Starmalls, Inc. to Vistamalls, Inc. in line with its mall expansion. The name change is still pending with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Meanwhile, the company has about P60 billion worth of projects to be launched this year, about P10.8 billion of which have already been unveiled during the first quarter.

Prior to the corporate notes facility, VLL already has about P20 billion in outstanding debt at the bond market. It has about P5 billion in retail bonds issued in 2014, P5 billion in 2017, and P10 billion in 2018.

VLL reported a net income attributable to the parent of P2.85 billion in the first quarter of 2019, 12% higher year on year, as revenues jumped 14% to P11.44 billion.

The company earlier said it projects a 12-15% growth in both net income and revenues every year until 2020, boosted the positive performance of its core residential business and a 22-25% increase in its leasing business.

VLL is currently present in 147 cities and municipalities across 49 provinces by the end of March.

Shares in VLL dropped 0.65% or five centavos to close at P7.70 each at the stock exchange on Monday. — Arra B. Francia

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