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Customs tops collection target for 8th straight month

THE BUREAU of Customs (BoC) surpassed its collection target for the eighth straight month in September, Commissioner Isidro S. Lapeña told lawmakers in the House of Representatives on Monday.
The bureau increased collections by P1.61 billion or nearly a third to P52.1 billion from P40.26 billion in September last year as 15 out of 17 ports exceeded their targets.
September collection also topped that month’s P50.49-billion target by 3.18%, according to data released by the bureau.
“This is the eighth straight month that we have hit our target for this year,” Mr. Lapeña told members of the House Committee on Ways and Means, noting that “15 ports were able to hit the target for the month.”
The Customs chief also reported that the eight months to September saw the bureau raking in P435.83 billion, increasing by 34.6% or P112.01 billion from collections in last year’s comparable period and exceeding the P417.49-billion January-September 2018 target by P18 billion or about 4.3%.
The bureau is tasked to collect P598 billion this year, 30.52% more than the P458.18-billion actual collections in 2017.
The eight-month collection is now 72.9% of the full-year target.
In its hearing on Monday, the House Ways and Means committee cited the need to review the law that rewards and penalizes the government’s revenue collectors for their performance.
Committee chairman Rep. Estrellita B. Suansing of Nueva Ecija’s first district asked Lapeña to draft an amendment to the law to incorporate his “one-strike policy.”
“We will revisit,” Ms. Suansing told BusinessWorld in a telephone interview.
Ngayon kasi (Now) what he’s saying is effective ‘yung kanyang one-strike policy,” she noted.
“We are asking him now to draft an amendment for consideration of the committee.”
The committee was acting on House resolutions seeking ways to improve implementation of Republic Act No. 9335, or the Lateral Attrition Act of 2005.
The law provides a rewards-and-sanction system for the BoC and Bureau of Internal Revenue in a bid to encourage their officials and employees to exceed their collection targets.
The law provides that collectors that miss their target by 7.5% risk sanctions, but recent practice gave them six months to shape up.
Under the “one-strike policy” adopted by Mr. Lapeña shortly after he took over the bureau in August last year, however, erring collectors risk prompt transfer.
“I implemented the one-strike policy… because the problem with… Customs when I assumed [the top post] is corruption and the low revenue collection,” he said.
“So I had to devise a way to accomplish the marching order of the President (Rodrigo R. Duterte).” — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Lea: 40 years of entertaining — and winning

RAYMUND ISAAC

AWARD-WINNING singer and actress Lea Salonga (real name: Maria Lea Carmen I. Salonga) is celebrating the 40th anniversary of her career with a two-night, sold-out concert at the Philippine International Convention Center (PICC) Plenary hall on Oct. 19 and 20.
“[My actual anniversary] I spent with friends playing a goddess. And now many, many months later I’ll get to properly celebrate with my brother at the baton and some special guests and, of course, my mom will be crying.” said Ms. Salonga during a concert’s press conference on Sept. 25 at the Peninsula Manila hotel in Makati.
Ms. Salonga recently concluded her run as the goddess Erzulie in the Broadway revival of Lynn Ahrens’ Once On This Island. The musical won the Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical.
Ms. Salonga’s anniversary concert will see her sing songs that defined her career, including her breakout role as Kim in Schonberg and Boublil’s Miss Saigon at the tender age of 18.
She played Kim in both the West End and Broadway iterations, and won the Laurence Olivier award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Musical in 1990 for the West End production and a Tony Award for Lead Actress in a Musical in 1991.
She was the first woman of Asian descent to win the award.
She also won similar awards at the Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, and Theater World awards for the role.
After her stint as Kim, she played the role of Éponine in the 1993 Broadway production of Schonberg and Boublil’s Les Miserables, a role she reprised in the musical’s 10th anniversary. She also played Fantine in the musical’s 25th anniversary concert.
She was the first woman of Asian descent to have played both roles.
She was also the singing voice for two Disney princesses — Jasmine in 1992’s Aladdin and the titular character of Mulan in 1998. She was named a Disney Legend in 2011.
But her career started long before Miss Saigon.
At the tender age of seven, she stepped foot onstage as one of the many children in the musical The King and I, presented by Repertory Philippines. She made such an impression, that she was given the starring role in Rep’s Annie in 1980, then went on to spend the rest of the decade acting onstage in such productions as Paper Moon, The Fantasticks, and The Goodbye Girl.
She received Aliw Awards for best child performer in 1980, 1981, and 1982.
Her career in the Philippines included stints on television, notably in the teen variety show That’s Entertainment, and on film. She starred alongside Aga Muhlach in the 1995 hit film Sana Maulit Muli. The role earned her a Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences nomination for Best Actress.
Ms. Salonga was awarded the Order of Lakandula with the rank of Commander — an order of political and civic merit and one of the highest honors given by the Republic of the Philippines — in 2007 for her “outstanding dedication in fostering mutual understanding, cultural exchange, justice and dignified relations among persons and nations,” the citation reads.
“It’s a milestone anniversary. Not many people get to celebrate 40 years in this business and be able to fully perform at the level that I’m currently performing,” Ms. Salonga said in a press release.
The concert will be directed by her longtime collaborator, Bobby Garcia, with musical direction by her brother, Gerard Salonga, featuring the ABS-CBN Philharmonic Orchestra.
Aside from the concert, Ms. Salonga is also celebrating her 40th anniversary with a role in Diane Paragas’ film Yellow Rose. She shares the screen with Eve Noblezada, who played Kim in the 2014 West End and 2017 Broadway revivals of Miss Saigon. — ZB Chua

Ayala to introduce Maxus vehicles in PHL

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter
THE industrial technology arm of Ayala Corp. (AC) is bringing Chinese auto brand Maxus to the Philippines, with vehicle sales set to commence in the first quarter of 2019.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Monday, AC said its wholly owned unit AC Industrial Technology Holdings, Inc. (AC Industrials) was named by SAIC Maxus Automotive Co., Ltd. as the official distributor of Maxus vehicles in the country.
SAIC Maxus is a wholly-owned subsidiary of SAIC Motor Corporation Limited (SAIC), which is primarily focused in the production of light commercial vehicles. The company was founded in 2011 after it acquired British van manufacturer LDV Group. It has since expanded its sales to 70,000 vehicles across three major model lines in 2017, with more than 10,000 exported in the same period.
Meanwhile, SAIC is a Fortune Global 500 company that has sold 6.93 million vehicles last year. It has 15 major brands under its network, including partnerships with Volkswagen and General Motors.
AC Industrials said the addition of the Maxus brand into its portfolio will strengthen its product offerings, given the Philippine market’s evolving preferences.
“As incomes and productivity have grown, Filipino automotive buyers have increasingly gravitated toward the light commercial vehicle segment, which offers greater utility, flexibility to accommodate a wide range of business and lifestyle needs, and improved comfort and drivability,” the company said in the disclosure.
A representative of AC Industrials’ dealership unit, AC Automotive, told BusinessWorld that Maxus vehicle sales will start in the first quarter of 2019, with preparations such as the ordering of initial inventory and a formal launch of the brand already in the works.
“Given that this is a new entrant, we will be prudent and focus first on building the brand for the Philippine market. The plan is to have one dealership first within Metro Manila to be owned by AC Automotive and aligned with our overall growth strategy as a multi-brand distribution group,” a representative of AC Automotive said via text.
The company added that expansion plans moving forward will be determined as sales ramp up.
“No specific short term targets for now, but we aspire to grow the Maxus brand to one percent market share in five years,” AC Automotive said.
AC Industrials currently has four other vehicle brands under its portfolio, namely Honda, Isuzu, Volkswagen, and KTM.
AC Industrials expanded its net earnings by two percent to P752 million in the January to June period.
Meanwhile, its parent AC generated an attributable profit of P16.1 billion in the first six months of 2018, seven percent higher than the P15.1 billion it posted in the same period a year ago. The listed conglomerate also grew its revenues by a fifth to P148.7 billion in the same period.
Shares in AC lost 1.94% or P18 to close at P910 each at the stock exchange on Monday.

Aging Japan: Manga comics turn gray — but spirited — along with readers


TOKYO — Japan’s graying population is changing the character of its beloved manga comics, spawning a new genre in which the elderly aren’t pitiable oldsters but protagonists making discoveries, finding friends and sometimes even having hot sex.
Demand for stories focused on the elderly has grown alongside their audience: 27.7% of Japanese are older than 65, up from 21.5% just a decade ago.
Readership cuts across society, the publishers say, from retirees looking for plots they identify with to younger Japanese watching their nation age, with growing concern about their later years.
“Different social problems and concerns rise up as opposed to when society is centered around young people, and manga that show the reality of an aging society are in demand from both readers and writers,” said Kaoru Endo, a sociology professor at Tokyo’s Gakushuin University.
Manga, both print and digital, pulled in ¥430 billion ($3.81 billion) in 2017, according to the Research Institute for Publications. They’re ubiquitous in daily life, showing up everywhere from crowded subways to coffee shops and waiting rooms.
Although no public data exists on the market share for senior-focused manga, the genre is clearly growing. 8 of the 11 most popular such works, according to industry insiders, started publication after 2014. Three were in 2017 and 2018.
“The over-60 generation — in whose youth manga gained wide acceptance — have loved manga since they were kids,” Endo said.
Yuki Ozawa, illustrator of Sanju Mariko, about an 80-year-old widow who sneaks out of her crowded family home to live on her own and write, thinks escapism plays a big role too.
“When you watch news about aging, there are so many dark, serious topics. It makes people anxious,” she told Reuters.
“There are also a lot of people who are single, who probably will never marry and always live alone, and when they’re feeling gloomy they read Mariko and feel as if they’ve seen a ray of light,” she said.
Virtually no topic has escaped manga since the medium took off about 50 years ago. There have even been manga on the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, including the Fukushima meltdown.
Elderly characters, though, were mostly peripheral: a loving grandma, somebody needing nursing care, a venerable sage.
Manga that did star the elderly, like an early 1990s series about an aged heavy metal band, didn’t always treat them as normal people.
“Seniors were there, but with an element of surprise. He might be an old man but he’s really smart, a weird superhero,” said Natsuki Nagata, an assistant sociology professor at Hyogo University of Teacher Education in the western city of Kobe. “It was if they were a different species.”
But recent examples, such as Kaori Tsurutani’s Metamorphoze no Engawa (Veranda Metamorphosis), bring a more human touch.
In that story, a septuagenarian widow and geeky teenage girl bond over homoerotic manga, building a friendship of text messages, cafe trips and manga fan events. Ozawa’s Mariko may be 80, but the loneliness that prompts her to leave home is universal.
Characters are “being illustrated in a way that feels closer to reality,” said Tsurutani, 36, who said memories of her late grandmother inform her work.
CHALLENGING SUBJECT
Some manga in the genre use pure fantasy to attract readers while still touching on the often grim reality of elderly issues.
One series features a septuagenarian couple becoming parents, while in another an elderly woman and a teenage girl switch bodies.
“There are certainly a lot of social problems involving the elderly, and they’re very serious,” said Ozawa, whose Mariko has no health issues and a steady income — uncommon even in a nation with vigorous seniors. “But to write just about that means readers will only pay attention to the social issues, and it’ll be a bit depressing.”
Illustrator Kenshi Hirokane, whose Kosaku Shima series about a businessman has run since 1983, shows its hero rise from section chief to chairman of his electronics firm, aging realistically over the years.
Hirokane in 1995 also launched Like Shooting Stars in the Twilight, one of the earliest senior-centered manga. A drama of older peoples’ lives and loves, it also includes some hot sex scenes.
“I wanted to write about ordinary men and women having an ordinary love,” the 71-year-old Hirokane said of the series. “Readers want topics that are close to them.”
Hirokane’s prize-winning series now has 58 volumes.
“As many people age, they lose their dreams and hopes, they think there’s nothing more they can do. No, it’s not like that at all — you can still fall in love, you can still do lots of things,” he told Reuters in his western Tokyo studio.
IN DEMAND
Rikiya Kurimata, a bookseller at Tsutaya, one of Japan’s largest bookstore chains, said the genre’s readers span generations and genders. Recently, they have been asking for “manga about the elderly” as well as specific titles.
“I think this trend won’t just continue but grow. Supply still hasn’t met demand,” Kurimata said. “Right now we don’t have a special section for the genre, but if things go on like this, we’ll have to make one.”
A half-million copies of Sanju Mariko, both print and digital, have been sold since its debut in 2016. Tsurutani’s first volume has gone through five additional printings since May.
Atsuko Ito, 66, a farmer from northern Japan, says she enjoyed Hirokane’s series for the way it highlighted the ups-and-downs of life.
“It feels as if life itself is drawn there, with things that we all have experienced — and some we haven’t — which makes me empathize,” she added. “Then sometimes when a main character makes a decision I think, ‘I can do that too’, and it gives me courage for my daily life.”
That sense of humanity is at the heart of the genre’s success, Endo said.
“What the manga say is, people are the same underneath — and this teaches young people not to be afraid of either the aged or aging,” she said. “We all have the same feelings, young or old.” — Reuters

Gokongwei-led URC ends partnership with ConAgra

UNIVERSAL ROBINA CORP. said it will continue to manufacture and sell Swiss Miss products under a trademark license agreement with ConAgra Grocer Products Company, LLC. — HTTP://WWW2.URC.COM.PH

UNIVERSAL Robina Corp. (URC) is buying out its American partner for Hunt-Universal Robina Corp. (HURC), ending its 35-year-old partnership with the company while still keeping the licensing agreement for its products.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange on Monday, the Gokongwei-led firm said it has signed a share purchase agreement to buy ConAgra Grocer Products Company, LLC’s 50% stake in HURC for P3.18 million. This comprises of 1.4 million shares priced at P2.27 apiece.
URC will now gain full control of HURC, which it said will allow the company to “integrate and simplify its business operations as part of its Philippine business portfolio.”
Incorporated in 1983, HURC was established as a 50-50 joint venture between URC and ConAgra, which was previously called Hunt-Wesson International. Its primary purpose was to manufacture and sell various products such as vegetables, fish, dairy products, fruits, and other agricultural products in fresh, canned, or preserved variants.
HURC started operations a year later, with the launch of its first product, Hunt’s Pork & Beans. Since then, it has added new flavors and product formats in the ready-to-eat canned beans category.
The JV company then sold the license for the Hunt’s brand to Po-led Century Pacific Foods, Inc. in 2017, transferring to the latter the right to manufacture, sell, and distribute Hunt’s branded products.
After ConAgra’s exit from the partnership, URC said it will continue to manufacture and sell Swiss Miss Products under a trademark license agreement with the company.
URC’s buyout of ConAgra’s shares in HURC comes less than a week after it also took control of its partnership with Japanese firm Calbee, Inc. for Calbee-Universal Robina Corporation, Inc. (CURC). The company disclosed last Sept. 27 that it is buying Calbee’s 50% stake in the JV firm for P170.6 million, or 32.7 million shares at P5.217 each.
Calbee entered into the partnership with URC back in 2014 in order to grow the sales of its products and expand its market share in the country. However, the Japan-based snack manufacturer decided to end the joint venture after posting net losses for three consecutive years: P100.38 million in 2015, P85.33 million in 2016, and P95.65 million in 2017.
URC, however, has retained the licensing agreement to produce and sell Calbee brand products in the country. In the first half of 2018, URC booked a 23% drop in net income attributable to the parent to P4.81 billion, weighed down by the weaker peso, currency depreciation for its international subsidiaries, and setbacks in its domestic coffee business. Revenues meanwhile went up by 5.89% to P64.37 billion.
URC committed to invest P8 billion in capital expenditures this year to support its capacity expansion and to improve handling and distribution.
Shares in URC dropped 3.46% or P5 to close at P139.50 each at the stock exchange on Monday. — Arra B. Francia

CNN founder Ted Turner says he’s suffering a form of dementia

LOS ANGELES — Ted Turner, the billionaire founder of cable news channel CNN, says he is suffering from a form of dementia that leaves him exhausted and forgetful.
Turner, 79, told CBS television in an interview that he had been diagnosed with Lewy body dementia, a progressive brain disorder.
“It’s a mild case of what people have as Alzheimer’s. It’s similar to that. But not nearly as bad. Alzheimer’s is fatal,” Turner told journalist Ted Koppel in an interview to be broadcast on CBS Sunday Morning.
CBS on Friday released advance excerpts of the interview, which was conducted at Turner’s ranch in Montana earlier this year. Turner’s office confirmed the diagnosis to Reuters.
“Thank goodness I don’t have that. But, I also have got, let’s — the one that’s — I can’t remember the name of it,” Turner said.
“Dementia. I can’t remember what my disease is,” he added.
Asked what his symptoms are, Turner told Koppel, “Tired. Exhausted. That’s the main symptoms, and forgetfulness.”
Turner, also a noted philanthropist, founded CNN in 1980 as the first 24 hour all-news cable network. He went on to become vice-chairman of media conglomerate Time Warner but quit in 2003 and is no longer involved in running the company.
Lewy body dementia affects an estimated 1.4 million Americans and symptoms can include problems with memory and changes in behavior, according to the Lewy Body Dementia Association.
An autopsy on comedian Robin Williams, who died by suicide in 2014, found that he had the disorder. — Reuters

Megawide approves P2-B share buyback program

MEGAWIDE Construction Corp. on Monday said it will be buying back P2 billion worth of shares from the stock exchange in the next two years.
In a disclosure to the stock exchange, the diversified engineering conglomerate said its board of directors approved the share buyback program as it believes the shares have been “grossly undervalued.”
“Amid the volatility in the stock market, the Company’s management and board believe it is an opportune time to repurchase its own shares, which have been grossly undervalued following the overall market weakness,” Megawide Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Edgar B. Saavedra was quoted as saying.
He noted the share buyback program is a “sign of confidence in the company’s long-term growth prospects and a means to enhance shareholder value.”
Shares in Megawide closed at P15.94 each on Monday, 2.84% or 44 centavos higher from the previous session. The company’s stocks recorded a 52-week high of P25 apiece, and a 52-week low of P15.30 each.
The Megawide board also approved the declaration of cash dividends, equivalent to 20% of the company’s net income in 2017, totalling P247 million or P0.12 each.
The cash dividends will be payable to shareholders on record as of Oct. 15, 2018, and payable on Nov. 12, 2018.
Meanwhile, the company is set to open the Parañaque Integrated Terminal Exchange (PITX) in the fourth quarter of 2018.
“This will be the country’s first landport, which will have numerous transport connections serving passengers from the southwest of Metro Manila while helping to address the worsening problem of traffic congestion,” Mr. Saavedra said.
He said the company will undertake new private sector engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts in the fourth quarter.
“We have a strong balance sheet and robust cash generation to support these programs while sustaining its immediate and future capital expenditure plans,” Mr. Saavedra said.

Fox is said to plan PG-13 version of Deadpool 2 for holidays


DEADPOOL, the famously foul-mouthed superhero, may be losing his edge.
21st Century Fox Inc. plans to release a PG-13 version of Deadpool 2 in theaters in time for the Christmas holiday, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, in a bid to squeeze a few extra dollars out of one of the company’s most-popular film franchises.
The rerelease of Deadpool will test fans’ interest by toning down a character best-known for his acerbic, vulgar commentary. The new version will lack some of the main character’s coarsest jokes, but will also include new footage, said the person, who asked not to be identified because Fox’s decision hasn’t been announced.
Deadpool, played by Ryan Reynolds, is Hollywood’s post-modern superhero. The two films released so far subvert and mock the formulaic, family friendly movies from Walt Disney Co.’s Marvel Studios. Reynolds interrupts the action in a movie to speak directly to the viewer. Disney is acquiring much of Fox, including the film division and movie franchises like Deadpool, in a $71 billion deal.
Deadpool 2 grossed $734 million worldwide this year. Though that’s a decline from the $783 million generated by the first picture, it is still the biggest Fox hit this year. The website Deadline reported on Fox’s plans earlier Friday. — Bloomberg

Yuchengco, Ayala groups approve merger of education businesses

THE Ayala and Yuchengco groups have approved the merger of their education businesses valued at around P15.5 billion, with listed firm iPeople, Inc. to be the surviving entity.
In a joint statement filed after trading hours on Monday, Ayala Corp. (AC) and Yuchengco-led House of Investments, Inc. (HI) said they have signed the definitive agreements merging their respective education units, AC Education, Inc. (AEI) and iPeople, Inc.
HI will control 51.3% of the surviving entity iPeople, while AC will have a 33.5% stake.
Earlier on Monday, the Philippine Stock Exchange granted HI and iPeople’s requests to suspend the trading of their respective shares until 9 a.m. of Oct. 2 to give the investing public equal access to the material information.
AEI and iPeople’s merger will allow the groups to offer a complete education cycle. iPeople brings to the table Malayan Education System, the operator of Mapua University, which is considered a leading private engineering and technical university in the country.
“We are looking forward to the merger of AC Education and iPeople… Together, our schools will not only aim at educating our youth but also at preparing our graduates to become major players in sustainable businesses driven by adaptive technology,” HI Chairperson Helen Y. Dee said in a statement.
Mapua is ranked as a three-star university by London-based rating body Quacquarelli Symonds, indicating that it has a “reputable level of research and its graduates are attractive to employers.” It also has the most Centers of Excellence in Engineering awarded by the Commission on Higher Education.
Mapua has two subsidiaries, Malayan Colleges Laguna and Malayan Colleges Mindanao.
Meanwhile, AEI owns University of Nueva Caceres, one of the oldest and largest universities in Bicol. It also owns APEC Schools, the largest stand-alone chain of private high schools in the country. APEC Schools has 23 sites across Metro Manila, Cavite, Rizal, and Batangas with around 16,000 students.
AEI also acquired last February the National Teachers College (NTC), which was the first school in the country to offer general education up to a Bachelor of Science in Education. The Quiapo-based institution has over 10,000 students.
“We believe that combining our resources and capabilities will allow us to, together, enable many more Filipinos achieve their dreams of a better life for themselves, their families and communities, by arming them with the values, critical thinking, global mindset and 21st century skills that are necessary to succeed in this rapidly changing world,” AC Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala said in a statement.
The merger will bring iPeople’s combined student population to almost 60,000 students.
AC said the merger will still be subjected to the approval of AEI and iPeople’s respective board of directors, as well as the required regulatory approvals. — Arra B. Francia

Led Zeppelin must face new trial claiming it stole ‘Stairway’ riff

LED ZEPPELIN was ordered by a US appeals court to face a new trial over whether it stole the opening guitar riff for its 1971 anthem “Stairway to Heaven” from an obscure instrumental written four years earlier.
In a 3-0 decision on Friday, the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco threw out a June 2016 verdict in the rock band’s favor, citing a series of errors by the trial judge.
The decision revives one of the music industry’s most closely watched copyright cases, potentially exposing Led Zeppelin lead singer Robert Plant and guitarist Jimmy Page to millions of dollars of damages.
Lawyers for the defendants had no immediate comment.
The lawsuit had been filed by Michael Skidmore, a trustee for the songs of Randy Wolfe, a guitarist for the band Spirit.
Skidmore accused Plant, 70, and Page, 74, of stealing the iconic opening to “Stairway” from the Spirit song “Taurus.”
He said the songs had similar chord progressions, and that Page may have written “Stairway” after hearing “Taurus” while Led Zeppelin and Spirit were touring together.
Wolfe, who performed as Randy California, had complained in interviews about the songs’ similarities, but did not sue prior to his death by drowning in 1997.
Jurors determined that while Plant and Page, who testified at the trial, had access to “Taurus,” the song’s riff was not intrinsically similar to the opening of “Stairway.”
But in Friday’s decision, Circuit Judge Richard Paez said the trial judge erred in failing to instruct jurors that the trustee could prevail if Wolfe had created a “sufficiently original combination” of otherwise unprotectable music elements.
Paez also said the judge erred in instructing jurors about the copyrighting of music elements in the public domain, and should have let them listen to “Taurus” while Page testified, to assess his demeanor and help determine whether he had access.
“We do not dispute that Led Zeppelin is one of the greatest bands in history, but their plagiarism indelibly stains their legacy,” Skidmore’s lawyer Francis Malofiy said in an e-mail.
“Led Zeppelin obviously copied ‘Taurus’ by Randy California, a musician they knew well,” he added.
The case was returned to US District Judge Gary Klausner in Los Angeles.
Friday’s decision followed a March 21 copyright ruling by another 9th Circuit panel upholding a $5.3 million judgment to Marvin Gaye’s children. They accused Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams of creating the 2013 smash “Blurred Lines” by copying Gaye’s 1977 song “Got to Give It Up.”
The case is Skidmore v Led Zeppelin et al, 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 16-56057. — Reuters

Seda Nuvali expanding with 2nd tower to open by 2020

By Mark Louis F. Ferrolino
Special Features Writer
AYALA LAND Hotels and Resorts Corp. is expanding its Seda Nuvali hotel in Laguna, adding a second tower that is expected to open by early 2020.
The hotel first opened in 2014 with 150 rooms. The second tower will bring Seda Nuvali’s room count to 356 when it is completed.
Jeffrey Enriquez, general manager of Seda Nuvali, said the company decided to expand the hotel to accommodate more corporate clients from industrial parks in the area during weekdays, and more local residents and travelers on weekends.
“We’re running at 80-90% (occupancy rate), and suddenly it shoots up to 95% and 100%, so we end up declining additional bookings. We really saw the need of putting up additional tower that would give us additional rooms,” Mr. Enriquez told BusinessWorld in a recent interview.
The new tower, which will be 12 storeys high, is adjacent to the first Seda Nuvali structure. It will consist of 206 rooms, offering one-bedroom suites, two-bedroom suites and family rooms.
Mr. Enriquez said the second tower will have a 400-seater ballroom to cater to the demand of companies, government agencies and residents who want to hold seminars and special occasions.
“With the ballroom now and the existing function rooms, it will be a big boost. We can accommodate a big market now,” Mr. Enriquez said.
The additional tower will also have Seda’s signature roof deck bar, Straight Up, designed with indoor and outdoor areas.
“Right now, if you look at the market here, there’s no bar that people can go to especially our guests. So they end up going to Alabang or Makati, which is a long drive away from the hotel. With a bar at the rooftop, our corporate guests can just go there and enjoy handful of drinks and, at the same time, enjoy relaxing music,” Mr. Enriquez said.
Expansion of the hotel’s facilities is also in the pipeline. Aside from a second swimming pool in the new tower, there are plans to expand the lobby, game room and playroom. Its all-day dining facility, Misto, will be renovated to double its capacity to more than 160 seats.
Like the eight other Seda hotels across the country, the second tower of Seda Nuvali will be accented by furnishings created by renowned Filipino artist Ann Pamintuan and artisan Kenneth Cobonpue.
“In all its locations, Seda aims to grow with its markets. We are pleased to be expanding in Nuvali and to offer more rooms and facilities along with the genuine Filipino hospitality matched to global standards that has always defined us,” Mr. Enriquez said.
Seda Nuvali recently received the Anahaw Certification Level 3 of the Zero Carbon Resort for Sustainable Tourism.
The hotel received a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Silver Certification in 2015, making it the first Philippine hotel to be awarded such distinction in its category by the U.S. Green Building Council.
“That’s our way of telling our customers that we don’t just provide service, we’re also responsible to our environment,” Mr. Enriquez said.

Aboitiz Construction sets sights overseas with new subsidiary

ABOITIZ Construction, Inc. (ACI) is setting up an international unit as it plans to expand both its geographic reach and the services it offers.
The company said in a statement on Monday that it created Aboitiz Construction International, Inc. (ACII) which will allow it to target projects in new markets.
“With this move, ACI will pursue new markets and revenue sources while strengthening its industry foothold and enhancing its value proposition that provides customers with the company’s signature RISQ approach, which stands for Reliability, Integrity, Safety, and Quality,” the company said.
ACI said it has been receiving more inquiries and requests for quotations from Japanese and Chinese firms, with a quarter of its open orders coming from the former.
The company is also in talks with some Chinese engineering, procurement, and construction companies, where they can be tapped as either joint venture partners or major subcontractors for the projects they will be developing in the Philippines.
The establishment of ACII also forms part of the its rebranding strategy for its 43rd year in business, where it seeks to position itself as a full-service engineering, procurement, and construction company. Even before the set-up of an international arm, ACI has already been servicing clients in 18 countries, where it offers modular fabrication works for heaters, heat exchanges, and other such specialty services.
ACI is currently undertaking several projects, such as the facility expansion of a shipbuilding company in Cebu and modular fabrication work for a plant in Canada. Its pipeline of projects also includes a power plant in Sarangani, a petrochemical plant in Bataan, a shopping mall called The Outlets in Lipa, Batangas, and fabrication works for a Korean and Japanese firm, among others.
In December last year, the company also held talks with Chinese firms Shandong Electric Power Construction Corporation III (SEPCO3) and Dongfang Electric Company (DEC) for potential partnerships in the power sector and other infrastructure projects in the country.
ACI President and Chief Operating Officer Albert A. Ignacio said that being part of the Aboitiz Group has also benefited the company, as it allows them to take advantage of synergies with other Aboitiz units like Pilmico Foods Corp., Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc., Republic Cement & Building Materials, Inc., and AboitizLand, Inc.
Mr. Ignacio noted that these firms have opened the door for new and recurring projects for ACI. — Arra B. Francia

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