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Seven super athletes to be inducted to Philippine Sports Hall of Fame in May

TAGAYTAY CITY — Magnificent Seven. That is the number of the new batch of super athletes who will be enshrined into the Philippine Sports Hall of Fame in a special event befitting heroes slated on May 20 at a still unspecified venue.

Philippine Sports Commission Chair Patrick C. Gregorio and Philippine Olympic Committee President Abraham N. Tolentino on Wednesday announced the final seven inductees from an original list of 75.

These seven, who will be officially named right after the Holy Week next month, will receive P500,000 each, which was increased from P200,000 given to early Filipino Hall of Famers in the past.

“As early as nine months ago when I took office, I gave instructions to resuscitate the Hall of Fame for our athletes who gave our country honor in the past,” said Mr. Gregorio during a media briefer at the Tagaytay City Velodrome here.

“These seven came from the initial list of 75 that was trimmed down to 15 before the final screening committee identified the final seven,” Mr. Tolentino, who is also the PhilCycling chief, for his part, said.

Since its enactment into Republic Act No. 8757 27 years ago, the Hall has enshrined a league of 47 extra-ordinary gentlemen and women that included basketball’s Carlos Loyzaga and Robert Jaworski, boxers Pancho Villa and Gabriel “Flash” Elorde, swimmer Teofilo Yldefonso, chess’ Eugene Torre, and bowlers Paeng Nepomuceno and Bong Coo.

That group will grow into 54 in two months. — Joey Villar

Philippines hosts Asian Cycling Confederation Track Championships

TAGAYTAY CITY — Philippine cycling is literally back on track on the Asian map.

It came to be after the 45th Asian Cycling Confederation (ACC) Track Championships was unveiled on Wednesday at the Tagaytay City Velodrome, which will be the country’s first staging since it hosted this same event 31 years ago at the now demolished Amoranto Sports Complex track.

“Welcome to the Asian Cycling Track Championships. After 31 years, we’re back on track and this is a dream come true,” said PhilCycling President Abraham N. Tolentino during Wednesday’s opening ceremony of this week-long meet.

Also simultaneously being hosted is the 14th Asian Para Track Cycling Championships.

Also present in the inaugurals were ACC head Dato’ Amarjit Singh Gill, Philippine Sports Commission Chair Patrick C. Gregorio and commissioners Walter Torres and Ed Hayco, host Mayor Brent Tolentino, Vice-Mayor Agnes Tolentino, and former Cavite Governor Athena Tolentino.

Mr. Tolentino toned down expectations of how the Filipino cyclists would perform since the national track team has just been recently revived.

“I don’t expect medals since we’re literally back to zero,” he said.

The Philippine Olympic Committee chief, however, said this event and the new track should spur a great revival of the sport that produced three-time Southeast Asian Games gold winner Alfie Catalan decades back.

Cycling notes: Mr. Tolentino said Iran, Qatar and Mongolia have backed out with the former two because of the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East. “Saudi Arabia and UAE (United Arab Emirates), however, are here but I wasn’t able to ask how they managed to get here,” he said. — Joey Villar

Maharlika Basketball renews broadcast deal with Solar Sports

THE Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) will stay with the home TV broadcast network of its founder Manny Pacquiao for the second straight season.

Led by Mr. Pacquiao, the MPBL on Wednesday renewed its broadcast deal with Solar Sports that housed majority of his boxing fights during his heydays in time for the top regional league’s much-awaited 8th season on April 10.

And the fans indeed should expect an electric season on demand at different cities or at the comfort of their homes with a wider and bigger coverage from Solar Sports, which is accessible at Channel 21 on free TV in the Greater Manila Area and on up to 200 cable channels nationwide.

From six games a week last year, Solar Sports is elevating the fan TV experience with 12 games a week this season with three games each day during Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.

The long-time sports TV network will also broadcast all games of the playoffs regardless of the schedule while the MPBL, featuring a total of in-house 15 commentators, analysts and courtside reporters, will have a simultaneous online broadcast of all the games on Facebook and YouTube.

Solar Sports also houses the Shakey’s Super League, V-League, UCAL, PSAA, NAASCU and Metro Manila leagues across all sports.

The MPBL for now has 26 teams but is still finalizing more applicants to make it to up to 30 teams before it rolls off on April 10 in Caloocan and Laguna. — John Bryan Ulanday

Western powers couldn’t secure shipping in the Red Sea; Hormuz may be harder

An LPG gas tanker at anchor as traffic is down in the Strait of Hormuz, amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Shinas, Oman, March 11, 2026. — REUTERS

LOS ANGELES/LONDON — The Western allies trying to negotiate a way to protect the Strait of Hormuz for energy shipping face a stark reality: a similar effort in the Red Sea that started years earlier cost billions of dollars and ultimately failed against Yemen’s Houthis.

The costly Red Sea experience — four ships sunk, more than $1 billion in weapons expended, and a route that the shipping industry still largely avoids — looms over the more complex Strait of Hormuz, the shipping artery used by roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas supply and now blocked by Iran, a more formidable adversary than the Houthis.

Iran’s threats to the strait and its attacks on energy infrastructure in nearby Gulf nations have sent oil prices soaring in the worst disruption to oil and gas supplies in history. Absent the strait’s reopening, shortages will become more acute, threatening higher costs for energy, food and numerous other products worldwide.

“There is no substitute for the Strait of Hormuz,” Kuwait Petroleum Chief Executive Officer Sheikh Nawaf Saud Al-Sabah said in a fiery video call streamed to the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston on Tuesday. “It is the world’s strait, under international law and practical reality.”

United Nations Security Council members on Tuesday were negotiating resolutions for protecting the strait, with some nations, such as Bahrain, taking a forceful stance that would authorize the use of “all necessary means” to protect the strait — which could mean the use of force.

Reuters interviewed 19 security and maritime experts who described the myriad challenges facing the US and its allies in protecting the strait. Iran has far more advanced military forces than the Houthis, an arsenal of cheap drones, floating mines, and missiles, and easy access from its steep mountainous coast to the narrow waterway.

“Defending convoy operations in the Strait of Hormuz is significantly more challenging than in the Red Sea,” said retired Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery, who in 1988 was involved in US tanker escorts through the Strait of Hormuz during the Iran-Iraq war.

That’s a big concern for US President Donald J. Trump as he seeks to justify the Iran war ahead of the November midterm elections to inflation-weary American voters now facing gasoline at nearly $4 a gallon. The spike in energy prices is not expected to fully reverse until the waterway opens, analysts said.

Mr. Trump has been noncommittal about US involvement, first saying the US Navy will escort ships when needed, then more recently saying other nations should lead the effort. Iran has blocked most ships from the maritime chokepoint since joint US-Israeli attacks on Iran began Feb. 28.

Iran is considering a proposal to levy fees on vessels that want to use the strait, an Iranian lawmaker told state media last week.

THE HORMUZ QUAGMIRE
The US mission to protect Red Sea shipping from the Houthis launched in December 2023, with European nations joining in with their own operation a few months later. The allies shot down hundreds of drones and missiles, but the Houthis still sank four ships between 2024 and 2025. Shippers now largely avoid the passageway, once home to 12% of world trade, opting for a much longer voyage around the Horn of Africa.

“It was a tactical and operational victory and a strategic draw, if not a strategic defeat,” said Joshua Tallis, a naval analyst at research firm CNA.

The danger zone around the Strait of Hormuz is up to five times bigger than the Houthis’ attack area around the Bab el-Mandeb Strait that flows into the Red Sea. Unlike the Houthis, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is a professional military with its own weapons factories and access to funding.

Providing escorts for the strait would require as many as a dozen large warships such as destroyers, backed up by jets, drones and helicopters to account for the limitations created by the lack of space to maneuver, some military experts said. Overhead air cover would be critical to protect against flying drones as well as explosive-laden manned or unmanned vessels that can easily blend into sea traffic.

“A destroyer can intercept missiles but cannot simultaneously sweep mines, counter drone-boat swarms from multiple bearings, and manage GPS disruption,” SSY analysts said.

Analysts believe Iran’s IRGC fighters have missile and drone stockpiles hidden in buildings and caves along the hundreds of miles of steep and mountainous coastline. In some places, the shore comes so close to ships that drones could swarm a vessel in as little as five to 10 minutes, experts said.

“There are ballistic missiles, drones, floating mines and even if you were able to destroy those three capacities, there are suicide operations,” said Adel Bakawan, director of the European Institute for Studies on the Middle East and North Africa.

Sea mines and heavily armed mini-submarines are a threat the US did not encounter in the Red Sea, said Tom Sharpe, a retired Royal Navy commander. He said the stakes for meeting those threats are enormous.

“If (the Americans) lose a destroyer in this… that changes the calculus of everything. That’s 300 people,” Mr. Sharpe said, referring to potential deaths of US sailors.

There is no clear evidence that Iran mined the strait, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said earlier this month, after reports that Iran had deployed about a dozen mines in the waterway.

A combination of mine clearing, military escorts and air patrols should eventually get strait traffic moving again, said Bryan Clark, an autonomous warfare expert at the Hudson Institute.

“You might have to do that for months before you have finally eroded the IRGC threat,” Mr. Clark said. Reuters

Britain pilots social media bans, time limits and curfews for children

ARPAD CZAPP-UNSPLASH

LONDON — Hundreds of British families will test social media bans, curfews and app time limits to see how they impact children’s sleep, family life and schoolwork, the government said.

Britain, like other governments, is considering restricting access to social media for children. Nothing is off the table, it has said, including following Australia in a complete ban for under-16s.

Experts have said there is no clear evidence that a ban would be effective, while a group of young people in London recently told Reuters they were opposed to restrictions.

The measures will be tested in the homes of 300 teenagers, the government said, and data from the pilots would inform a consultation launched earlier this month.

“We are determined to give young people the childhood they deserve and to prepare them for the future,” Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said on Tuesday.

“This is why we are listening to parents, children and experts with our consultation, as well as testing different options in the real world.

“These pilots will give us the evidence we need to take the next steps, informed by the experiences of families themselves.” Reuters

Global oil crisis seen to accelerate country’s EV adoption — Gatchalian

Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian during a panel discussion on the Philippines' energy transition, Mar. 25, 2026. — EDG ADRIAN A. EVA

A Philippine lawmaker on Wednesday said the ongoing global crisis prompted by the war in the Middle East could be a “turning point” that will accelerate electric vehicle (EV) adoption in the country, helping it catch up with its 2040 targets.

“What’s happening right now with petroleum prices is an eye-opener. A lot of people will be exploring the transition,” Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian, chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance, told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of a panel discussion on the Philippines’ energy transition hosted by ClientEarth, a non-profit environmental organization.

He also said that, alongside a potential surge in demand, banks are expected to become more “liberal” in financing EVs following recent events.

“Financing is key. Before, bank financing only favored the name brands, but now they’ll be open to other brands,” Mr. Gatchalian said.

In 2040, the country targets to achieve a 50% EV adoption rate.

This target is outlined in the Comprehensive Roadmap for the Electric Vehicle Industry (CREVI), the country’s EV adoption blueprint under Republic Act No. 11697, which was signed in 2022. The roadmap aims to deploy at least 2.45 million EVs and 20,400 charging stations nationwide by the target period.

When asked whether the country is on track to meet its 2040 target, the lawmaker said the goal remains far off.

“I don’t think we’ve reached 10% of the cars on the road. I think it’s less than — if I’m not mistaken — less than 5%,” Mr. Gatchalian said.
He cited range anxiety and limited infrastructure, particularly the lack of charging stations, as key bottlenecks that have slowed EV adoption in the country.

“But I think after this, we’ll see a faster transition, and that’s why we’re thinking of sustaining the non-fiscal incentives,” he added.

In a recent automotive sales report, EV sales rose by 70.6% to 3,098 units in February from 1,816 units in the same period last year, according to data from the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. (CAMPI) and the Truck Manufacturers Association (TMA).

This was despite a decline in overall automotive sales during the same period, indicating a shift in consumer preference.

Eric T. Francia, president and chief executive officer (CEO) of ACEN Corp., said he is also seeing a surge in EV adoption as a response to the recent series of oil price hikes — similar to how financial technologies (fintech) were adopted during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Definitely, there will be a surge in demand,” Mr. Francia said on the sidelines of the same event.
“I think this energy crisis will really be a catalyst and accelerate adoption, similar to what we’ve seen during COVID. It’s a bad event that has some silver lining,” he added.

To support more sustainable transportation through EVs, Mr. Francia said the power supply must be augmented with a larger share of renewable energy.

In support of the country’s EV transition initiatives, he said ACEN is helping companies and government agencies develop their EV transition plans, including installing charging stations at their facilities. This is in partnership with AC Mobility, Ayala Corp.’s mobility and automotive arm.

He also noted that EV infrastructure companies are doubling or even tripling their efforts to expand EV charging stations nationwide.

For those looking to transition to EVs, Mr. Francia recommended purchasing plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), which offer the advantages of both traditional and electric vehicles.

Apart from the excise tax exemption for fully electric vehicles under the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law, as well as the 0% tariff on certain EVs under Executive Order No. 12 (2023), the lawmaker said the Senate is considering additional non-fiscal incentives to push wider EV adoption. These include designated parking slots, toll exemptions on key expressways, and higher excise taxes on internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles.

The lawmaker also welcomed the declaration of a state of national energy emergency by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Tuesday, saying the Senate will work closely with the crisis committee and support it through budget allocations.

“It’s good that we have that declaration. It will trigger many mechanisms — price regulation, supply regulation, and, of course, concerted efforts from the government,” Mr. Gatchalian said. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

Vertiv says Philippines on track to reach 1.5-GW data center capacity target 

VERTIV

US-BASED infrastructure and data center firm Vertiv expects the Philippines to achieve its target of 1.5 gigawatts (GW) in data center capacity by 2028, driven by surging demand and the entry of new players.

“From our perspective with our clients, we see that they’re expanding their data center. The current data centers that they’ve built are filling up. So, there will be an environment for them to build,” Vertiv Country Manager for the Philippine market Nico Echavarria said in a briefing on Wednesday. 

The Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) said last year that the Philippines’ data center capacity could reach 1.5 GW by 2028 as more operators are expected to enter the market and existing players expand their facilities.

However, current capacities only stand at roughly 200 megawatts (MW). 

The demand for data center growth is being fueled by artificial intelligence (AI) adoption, backed by government support, according to Jordan Koh, Vertiv’s Senior Director for Emerging Markets Asia.

“From a supply capacity perspective, the Philippines is committed to providing the infrastructure needed to support new AI workloads,” Mr. Koh said, adding that much of the demand for scaling up data center adoption is being driven by sectors like banks and business process outsourcing, which are increasingly embracing the use of AI. 

He said that emerging technologies are enabling operators to shift locations, citing the rise of modular data centers or those prefabricated units that can shorten typical construction timelines by six to eight months.

Vertiv is a provider of infrastructure and technologies for data centers. The company generated total revenues of $10.2 billion in 2025. 

For this year, the company expects double-digit growth, Mr. Koh said, adding that Vertiv considers the Philippines as one of its most important markets in the region as the country is positioned to capture the growing demand for data center capacity. 

“The Philippines is one of the key growth emerging markets in Asia. I think it is commonly known that the Philippines is strategically located between Asia and the US that provides a very advantageous position for the Philippines when it comes to data centers,” he said. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Hong Kong police arrest bookstore owner, staff for selling Jimmy Lai biography, TVB says

Photo of Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai by Studio Incendo/CC BY 2.0/Wikimedia Commons

HONG KONG — Hong Kong police arrested a bookstore owner and three shopkeepers on Tuesday for allegedly selling “seditious” publications including a biography of jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai, broadcaster TVB reported.

The owner of the Book Punch store Pong Yat-ming and three staff were accused of selling copies of “The Troublemaker”, a biography of Mr. Lai by one of his former business directors, Mark Clifford, TVB reported.

Mr. Lai, founder of the now-shuttered pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper, was sentenced to a 20-year jail term in February for collusion with foreign forces and sedition in the city’s biggest national security case.

A police spokesperson, asked about the reported arrests, did not comment directly but said in a statement that police “will take actions according to actual circumstances and in accordance with the law”.

Hong Kong’s Secretary for Security Chris Tang did not respond to reporters’ questions. Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Rosanna Law said it was inappropriate for her to comment as someone has already been arrested.

Asked whether the arrests could impact public reading habits, Ms. Law said “reading will continue to be promoted in Hong Kong”.

A notice outside the door of the bookstore read: “Resting for a day due to emergency, sorry for the inconvenience.”

Reuters could not immediately reach Mr. Pong for comment and could not determine whether Mr. Pong or any of the staff had been charged with any offense.

Mr. Clifford, now based in New York, was a former director of media group Next Digital owned by Mr. Lai. In response to questions from Reuters, Mr. Clifford said he was not aware of the arrests, but “if true, it’s a sad and ironic commentary that selling a book on a man who is in jail for his activities as a journalist, for promoting free expression, would be subject to sedition”.

Under a local national security law, known as Article 23, sedition is punishable up to seven years in jail and a maximum of 10 years if the act involves collusion with an “external force”.

Beijing imposed broader and more sweeping national security legislation on the city in 2020.

Facing criticism by some Western governments and international rights groups, Hong Kong and Chinese officials said new laws were needed to bring stability after months of pro-democracy protests rocked the city in 2019.

Two other independent stores announced temporary closures on Wednesday as word spread of the arrests among readers and supporters who said the booksellers have become vital outlets for civil society by hosting book talks and workshops.

A loose network of stores seeks to offer a broader range of political and social titles than those found in mainstream stores, some of which are controlled by Chinese state-owned Sino United Publishing.

In January, Mr. Pong pleaded not guilty to three charges of operating an unregistered school after he held a Spanish class at the bookstore last year. The case is ongoing.

On Instagram last year, Book Punch said it had canceled several activities due to anonymous complaints.

Another independent shop, Hunter Bookstore, said earlier that it faced regular visits and checks by various government departments as well as tax probes.

Mount Zero, an independent bookstore in Sheung Wan on Hong Kong Island, closed in 2024, citing visits by authorities after a string of anonymous complaints on its social media.

In a further crackdown on dissent, the city’s government on Monday gazetted new amendments to the implementation rules to the Beijing-imposed law, which would allow customs officers to seize items that are deemed to have “seditious intention”.

The moves also mean police with warrants from a magistrate can now demand that people suspected of breaching the national security law provide phone or computer passwords or face jail and a fine.

Hunter Bookstore on Instagram said it would remain open but it urged the government to maintain an updated public list of publications that are deemed to be seditious.

“Books and publishing are not just independent businesses, it is the cultural foundation of the entire society,” it said. — Reuters

OpenAI drops AI video tool Sora, startling Disney

ON MONDAY evening, Walt Disney Co. and OpenAI teams were working together on a project linked to Sora, OpenAI’s artificial intelligence (AI) video tool. Just 30 minutes after that meeting, the Disney team was blindsided with word that OpenAI was dropping the tool altogether, a person familiar with the matter said.

OpenAI announced the move publicly on Tuesday.

“It was a big rug-pull,” according to the person, who requested anonymity to discuss the matter.

The move is the first big step by the ChatGPT maker to focus its business on potentially more lucrative areas such as coding tools and corporate customers.

But the abrupt cancellation of Sora illustrates how messy the streamlining process may become as OpenAI prepares for a stock market debut that could come as early as later this year.

The Sora decision means the end of a blockbuster $1-billion deal between Disney and the ChatGPT maker that was announced a little more than three months ago. As part of the three-year deal, Disney said it would invest $1 billion in OpenAI and lend more than 200 of its iconic characters to be used in short, AI-generated videos.

But the transaction between the companies never closed, two other people familiar with the matter said, and no money changed hands.

OpenAI executives have been debating Sora’s fate for some time. Running the AI video app required significant computational resources, a fourth person with knowledge of the matter said, and left other teams with less firepower.

Even so, some OpenAI staffers on the Sora team were surprised when they were informed of the changes on Tuesday morning, one of the people and another source said. The announcement was made just a day after OpenAI published a blog post about Sora safety standards.

“We’re saying goodbye to Sora … we know this news is disappointing,” the Sora team said in a post on X, adding that timelines for the app and API, as well as details on preserving user work, would be shared later.

OPENAI FOCUSES ON A SUPER-APP
OpenAI executives are now focusing on other research areas, including robotics and building artificial general intelligence. The company is rolling more of its capabilities into a single super-app. To reflect that shift, Fidji Simo’s title was changed from CEO of applications to CEO of AGI deployment.

Separately, CEO Sam Altman said OpenAI’s security and safety teams would no longer report directly to him.

A spokesperson for Disney said that the media giant respects “OpenAI’s decision to exit the video generation business and to shift its priorities elsewhere.”

The two sides are discussing if there is another way they can partner or invest with one another, one of the people familiar with the matter said.

OpenAI first introduced Sora in early 2024, stunning the tech world with software that could generate high-quality, feature film-like videos based on text prompts. The launch prompted AI companies across the US as well as China to ramp up releases of their own AI video-generation models.

The company launched the standalone Sora app in September 2025, letting users create and share AI videos that can be spun from copyrighted content and shared to social media-like streams.

Sora’s cancellation comes as OpenAI faces intensifying pressure to ramp up its enterprise and coding products, as competition from rival AI startups and tech giants heats up.

Anthropic’s focus on training its models on coding has helped its Claude Code product gain strong traction among developers, giving the company an edge over OpenAI and other competitors in the enterprise AI market. Reuters

Arm unveils new AI chip, expects it to add billions in annual revenue

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Freepik

SAN FRANCISCO — Arm Holdings announced a new artificial intelligence (AI) data center chip on Tuesday which it said will add billions of dollars of revenue and represent a significant shift in the company’s strategy.

The new chip, called the AGI CPU, will address data-crunching needed for a specific type of AI that is able to act on behalf of users with minimal oversight, instead of responding to queries as part of a chatbot.

So-called agentic AI has jump-started demand for the central processing units (CPUs) produced by the likes of Intel and Advanced Micro Devices.

Arm shares jumped 6.5% in the extended session after the company issued its financial projections. Arm stock closed down 1.4% on Tuesday and have advanced 22% this year.

For years, Arm, majority-owned by Japan’s SoftBank Group, has relied only on intellectual property for revenue, licensing its designs to companies such as Qualcomm and Nvidia and then collecting a royalty payment based on the number of units sold.

Last year, Arm signaled to investors it was investing in making its own chip, a process that can cost hundreds of millions of dollars, and that the company had hired key executives to assist with the effort. The AGI CPU will be the first chip under that new strategy.

“It’s a very pivotal moment for the company,” CEO Rene Haas said in an interview with Reuters.

Arm, is forecasting the new chip will generate roughly $15 billion in annual revenue in about five years, Mr. Haas said.

Overall, Arm expects to generate annual earnings per share of $9 and revenue of $25 billion, also in five years, he said.

Mr. Haas said the company expects the intellectual property business to double over roughly five years.

The new chip will be overseen by Mohamed Awad, head of the company’s cloud AI business, and Arm has additional designs in the works that it plans to release at 12- to 18-month intervals.

Meta Platforms will be the company’s lead partner for the AGI CPU and the two companies worked together on the design. Arm’s customers for the new chip include ChatGPT maker OpenAI, Cloudflare, SAP and SK Telecom.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is fabricating the device on its 3-nanometer technology and is made from two distinct pieces of silicon that operate as a single chip. Arm plans to put it into volume production in the second half of this year but has received test chips that function as expected.

“It’s back, and it works, and it’s doing everything we thought it would,” Mr. Haas said, referring to the new chip.

In addition to the chip itself, Arm is working with server makers such as Lenovo and Quanta Computer to offer complete systems.

For its current fiscal year, Wall Street expects Arm to generate a net profit of $1.75 per share on revenue of $4.91 billion, according to LSEG estimates. Reuters

Epic Games to cut more than 1,000 jobs as ‘Fortnite’ usage falls

EPIC GAMES will cut more than 1,000 jobs following a drop in engagement for “Fortnite,” the latest layoffs in the video game industry where growth has stalled due to economic uncertainty.

The company also expects to save $500 million by reducing contracting and marketing spend and eliminating some open roles, CEO Tim Sweeney said in a note to employees on Tuesday.

“We’re spending significantly more than we’re making, and we have to make major cuts to keep the company funded,” he said.

Blockbuster titles such as the first-person shooter game “Fortnite” had proven resilient after the pandemic, holding up as a slowdown eroded demand beyond the biggest franchises.

But engagement is now declining even for those, particularly live-service games that rely on a constant flow of costly new content to retain players.

“We’ve had challenges delivering consistent Fortnite magic,” Mr. Sweeney said, adding “market conditions today are the most extreme” since the early days of the company founded in 1991.

“The layoffs aren’t related to AI,” Mr. Sweeney noted amid industry fears that the technology could replace developers.

Epic had earlier this month raised prices of Fortnite’s in-game currency, citing higher costs to run the game.

The move marks Epic’s second major round of layoffs in three years. In September 2023, the company cut about 830 jobs, or roughly 16% of its workforce, to boost profitability.

It was not immediately clear what percentage of staff would be impacted by Tuesday’s announcement.

Last month, Fortnite topped US monthly active players across PlayStation and Xbox, yet the average playtime fell sharply, according to Mat Piscatella, senior director at Circana.

Other gaming companies have also cut jobs.

In September, Electronic Arts laid off hundreds of workers and canceled a Titanfall game that was in development, according to media reports. Amazon’s broader job cuts late last year also affected its gaming division.

Rising memory chip prices have added to the industry’s difficulties, as surging demand from artificial intelligence data centers absorbs supply, pushing up semiconductor costs and forcing console makers to raise prices. Reuters

BlackRock CEO Fink warns of ‘global recession’ if oil goes to $150, BBC reports

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

BLACKROCK CEO Larry Fink said oil prices could reach $150 a barrel and cause a “global recession” if Iran “remains a threat” even after the war ends.

“If there is a cessation of war, and yet Iran remains a threat, a threat to trade, a threat to the Strait of Hormuz, a threat to this peaceful coexistence of the GCC region, then I would argue that we could have years of above $100 closer to $150 oil which has profound implications in the economy,” Mr. Fink told BBC’s Big Boss Interview podcast published on Wednesday.

“We will have global recession,” he said, when asked if oil stays at $150 a barrel.

Oil prices have remained volatile and risen sharply since the US-Israeli war on Iran began. However, prices sank about 4% on Wednesday after reports the US had sent Iran a 15-point proposal aimed at ending the war, raising prospects of a ceasefire.

The war has all but halted shipments of oil and liquefied natural gas through the Strait of Hormuz, which typically carries about one-fifth of the world’s gas and crude supply, causing what the International Energy Agency has called the biggest-ever oil supply disruption. — Reuters