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FBI raids offices, home of Trump personal lawyer

WASHINGTON — The Federal Bureau of Investigation on Monday raided the offices and home of US President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen, law enforcement sources said, in a dramatic new development in a series of probes involving close Trump associates.
Mr. Cohen’s lawyer, Stephen M. Ryan, said that US prosecutors conducted a search that was partly a referral by the Office of Special Counsel, Robert Mueller.
Mr. Mueller is investigating whether members of Mr. Trump’s 2016 campaign colluded with Russia during the US presidential election. Mr. Trump has called the probe a “witch hunt” and denied any collusion.
The raid could increase legal pressure on the president, because it involves the records of his longtime attorney and indicates a second center of investigations in Manhattan, alongside Mr. Mueller’s Washington-based probe.
Mr. Cohen has been at the center of a controversy over a $130,000 payment he has admitted making shortly before the 2016 election to porn star Stormy Daniels, who has said that she had sex once with Mr. Trump in 2006 and was paid to keep quiet about it.
“It’s a disgraceful situation. It’s a total witch hunt. I’ve been saying it for a long time,” Mr. Trump said at the opening of a meeting with military and national security advisers to discuss Syria.
Mr. Trump cannot fire Mr. Mueller directly, but he could order Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who oversees the special counsel’s probe, to end it, or Mr. Trump could fire Mr. Rosenstein if he refuses.
In a Tweet, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer warned Mr. Trump against interfering.
“If @realDonaldTrump is thinking of using the FBI raid to fire Special Counsel Mueller or otherwise interfere with the chain of command in the Russia probe, we Democrats have one simple message for him: don’t,” Mr. Schumer said.
Under federal regulations, if Mr. Mueller comes across information that is not directly related to his Russia-focused investigation, he must confer with Mr. Rosenstein. Mr. Rosenstein could direct Mr. Mueller to either investigate the issue himself or refer it to another law enforcement authority.
The raids were first reported by The New York Times.
“Today, the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York executed a series of search warrants and seized the privileged communications between my client, Michael Cohen, and his clients,” Mr. Ryan said in a statement. “I have been advised by federal prosecutors that the New York action is, in part, a referral by the Office of Special Counsel, Robert Mueller.”
Federal prosecutors are investigating Mr. Cohen for possible bank and tax fraud, and for possible campaign law violation in connection with the Stormy Daniels payment.
Federal agents also raided a room at the Loews Regency Hotel on Park Avenue in Manhattan where Mr. Cohen has been staying while his apartment is being renovated, The New York Times reported. — Reuters

Australian media report Beijing proposes South Pacific military base

SYDNEY — China has approached Vanuatu about establishing a permanent military presence on the tiny Pacific island, Australia’s Fairfax Media reported on Tuesday, a plan that would likely stoke regional tensions.
The report, citing unnamed sources, said no formal proposal had yet been made, but preliminary talks have been held about locating a full military base on Vanuatu.
It added that the prospect of a Chinese military outpost so close to Australia has been discussed at the highest levels in Canberra and Washington.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop on Tuesday said she had been assured by Vanuatu officials that there was no formal proposal from Beijing, but she stopped short of addressing whether there had been any unofficial talks.
“The government of Vanuatu has said there is no such proposal, but it is a fact that China is engaging in infrastructure investment activities around the world,” Ms. Bishop told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.
“I remain confident that Australia is Vanuatu’s strategic partner of choice.”
A spokesman for Vanuatu Prime Minister Charlot Salwai did not immediately respond to e-mails requesting comment, telephone calls to the Vanuatu High Commission in Canberra were not answered, and the Chinese Embassy in Canberra did not comment.
The Fairfax Media report said the preliminary discussions involved an initial access agreement, under which Chinese naval ships would dock to be serviced, refuelled and restocked, and that would eventually lead to a full military base.
Such a plan would mark an expansion of China’s military aspirations beyond its controversial activities in Asia, particularly the South China Sea, where it has been building artificial islands on reefs, some with ports and airstrips.
Several international nations have accused China in recent months of seeking to buy influence in the South Pacific through international aid, stoking fears that Australia’s long-time influence in the region is being eroded.
China opened its first overseas military base in August 2017 in Djibouti on the Horn of Africa. It is China’s first overseas naval base, but Beijing describes it as a logistics facility.
Djibouti’s position on the northwestern edge of the Indian Ocean has fuelled worry in India that it would become another of China’s “string of pearls” military alliances and assets ringing India, including Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.
China has boosted its naval power in recent years to check US dominance of the high seas and increase its projection of power around the globe. — Reuters

DENR approves over 3,000 land titling applications for public school sites

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) recently approved more than 3,000 special patents for public schools in collaboration with the Department of Education (DepEd).
In a statement released on Tuesday, Environment Secretary Roy A. Cimatu said that this is a “big accomplishment in land management and public school system”.
“It only shows that the DENR, particularly the Land Management Bureau, is actively working to secure public school sites where the education of the future generation of this country rests,” he added.
The DENR and DepEd signed three memoranda of agreement in 2007, 2010 and 2013, which is also supported by Republic Act 10023 or An Act Authorizing the Issuance of Free Patents to Residential Lands.
This allows the survey and titling of public elementary and secondary school lands exclusively for education purposes through special titles and presidential proclamations.
The DENR has so far transmitted 3,467 approved patents for public schools in 16 regions. Of all the regions, Region 2 has the most number of patents at 450, followed by Region 10 and Region 1 with 434 and 343, respectively.
DENR Region 2 had the most number of special patents approved and transmitted at 450; Region 10 had 434 patents, and Region 1 had 343.
“Education is a basic right of every Filipino. The DENR will continue to pursue efforts to award land ownership to public schools so that these learning institutions are secured from ejection in the land they have occupied for decades,” Mr. Cimatu said.
Under the MOA, the DepEd will further develop and improve the public school system. The department is also in charge of selecting the area where the school will be build on.
The DENR will conduct the survey, research, ground verification and preparation of maps and technical description of the identified lands. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Apex Mining earnings surge 33% to P429 million on record production

Apex Mining Co., Inc. (APX) reported that its 2017 consolidated net income went up by 33% to P429 million from P322 million in 2016, after reaching its highest metal annual production.
In a disclosure to the stock market on Tuesday, Apex Mining president and chief executive officer Walter W. Brown said they are satisfied with the company’s third consecutive year of growth.
“We have attained our year-end goal in terms of gold and silver production. Our operating tonnage for the year has actually increased although we were short of our target of milling at 1,800 tonnes daily, which at best has been intermittent,” he added.
The company reported that its Compostela Valley-based Maco mine reached a new record in milling throughput at 578,893 tonnes, higher than the generated 452,948 tonnes in 2016.
The mine’s mill recovery rate likewise saw an all-time high of 82.8%.
The company also reported an increase in milling tonnage by 23% at an average of 1,693 tonnes per day.
Apex Mining’s gold production also saw its highest annual output at 60,185 ounces last year from 2016’s 54,681 ounces.
Mr. Brown said they will continue to procure more metals from their Maco mine amid the ongoing installation of a ball mill in the ISRI-operated Sangilo Mine, which will be initially used as a back up unit.

“The new mill will eventually provide additional capacity for the mine’s long-term plan to operate at 3,000 tonnes daily. Side by side, we have to accelerate our mine development to enable ore delivery match our higher milling capacity,” he added. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Court turns down Philodrill’s motion to reconsider dismissal of estafa case vs former president

The court has denied the motion for reconsideration filed by The Philodrill Corp. on the dismissal of the case for attempted estafa it filed against against its former president Francisco A. Navarro.
On Tuesday, April 10, the company told the stock exchange that it had received the resolution penned by Senior State Prosecutor Arnold L. Magpantay, Office of the City Prosecutor, Mandaluyong City, denying the motion for reconsideration for lack of merit.
The development followed the prosecutor’s recommendation earlier this year for the dismissal of the case for lack of probable cause. Mr. Magpantay penned the previous resolution, which Philodrill received on Jan. 5, 2018.
Philodrill and Reynaldo E. Nazarea, its treasurer, vice-president for administration and director, filed the complaint against Mr. Navarro on Sept. 15, 2017 for violation of the Revised Penal Code, Article 315 (1)(a), for attempted estafa.
The complainants said they had filed the case when Mr. Navarro demanded payment of his supposed “special retirement package,” coupled with a threat that cases will be filed against the company if his demands were not complied with. — Victor V. Saulon

Peso inches up on weak US jobs data

The peso slightly strengthened against the dollar on Tuesday, April 10, touching the P51 level intraday, due to weaker-than-expected jobs data in the US.
The local currency ended Tuesday’s session at P52 against the dollar, two centavos stronger than the P52.02-per-greenback finish on Friday.
The peso moved sideways the whole day, opening the session stronger at P52.015 against the dollar. Its intraday low was at P52.03, while its best showing stood at P51.96 versus the US currency.
Dollars traded slid to $570.64 million from the $645.8 million recorded on Friday.
A trader said that the peso traded fairly quiet on Tuesday, moving sideways during the day.
“Foreign exchange tradings were also quiet everywhere else, so I feel like there’s nothing to go on,” a trader said in a phone interview.
Meanwhile, another trader attributed the slightly stronger peso to the weak US non-farm payroll data which came last Friday, April 6.
“Peso gained strength today following the release of weaker-than-expected US non-farm payrolls data last Friday,” the other trader said in an e-mail.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the US created 103,000 jobs in March, well below the 193,000 market expectations as well as the 326,000 nonfarm payrolls reported in February.
The jobless rate stayed at 4.1% last month, below the market expectations that it will go down to 4%. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Disruption Down the Road: What Banks Are Facing And What Can They Do About It

By Jonee C. Bilasano
So much chatter has been going around regarding the state of the banking industry. Some say it is about to undergo radical change; others opine that disruption will come with the force of a tidal wave and leave things unrecognizable.
If the banking industry is about to be hit with a tidal wave of disruption, then concerned stakeholders should not look away but instead stand their ground.
What is Disruption?
Disruption owes its roots to Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen. He defined disruption as “a process by which a product or service takes root initially in simple applications at the bottom of a market and then relentlessly moves up market, eventually displacing established competitors.”
Examples of these include personal computers, which disrupted mainframes, and cellular phones which disrupted fixed lines.
These examples also showed how established products gave way to new offerings. I can still remember when people relied on landline phones to make calls; now, that mode of communication has become almost dispensable.
Does this mean that any new offering can cause a disruption? Not necessarily. Professor Christensen says that disruption occurs “when the incumbents are so focused on pleasing their most profitable customers that they neglect or misjudge the needs of their other segments.”
Therefore, disruption doesn’t necessarily come with every new product; it’s the novel process involved that causes the disruption. Netflix’s entrance to the market is an apt case in point.
“When Netflix entered the market, it didn’t make a dent in Blockbuster’s market share, because the former’s DVDs-via-mail service ‘didn’t satisfy customers who wanted to get new releases at once.” But, when Netflix changed to an “on-demand streaming model,” Blockbuster began to lose its clients.
Now, that we’ve reviewed the concept of disruption, we shift the discussion to the banking industry. We now survey the most compelling and apparent technology that can disrupt banks.
Disrupting Technology
First on the list is Blockchain, “a decentralized and distributed public digital ledger used to record transactions across many computers so that the record cannot be altered retroactively without the alteration of all subsequent blocks and the collusion of the network.” The definition admittedly can be a mouthful.
To simplify, just remember that Blockchain is a ledger in the Internet, supposedly secure that everyone can access. How does it work? The public records and confirms their transactions in the ledger. Blockchain, in that sense, works as a record of events, shared by numerous parties. And once entries have been made, they cannot be altered. It is that feature that makes Blockchain a probable game changer for the banking industry.
The banking industry, especially here in the Philippines, rely on a lot of documentation. Forms, certificates, photocopies, and the like occupy the vaults and desks of bankers. The same paperwork can even be found stashed underneath tables. So, it isn’t surprising to see piles upon piles of files occupying the offices of the banks in this country.
With the use of Blockchain, banks wouldn’t have to rely too much on paper. For example, Know-Your-Customer (KYC) documentation, in theory, can be recorded using Blockchain technology. This already dispenses with a lot of paperwork.
But, the benefit of Blockchain doesn’t end with reducing the use of paper, it can, for KYC purposes, provide a shared digital record that will store customers’ identities.
This is a big deal since the same record can be continually be updated and be accessed by those that need it.
Now, any discussion about Blockchain includes leads to a related conversation. This is none other than cryptocurrency.
Cryptocurrency functions as “a digital currency in which encryption techniques are used to regulate the generation of units of currency and verify the transfer of funds, operating independently of a central bank.” It is known as a “a peer-to-peer, decentralized and digital currency system that furnish online users with the capability of processing transactions using digital exchange units known as virtual currency.”
So, what’s the connection between cryptocurrency and Blockchain?
“All the transactions made on cryptocurrencies are registered on the Blockchains that are updated by users instead of a centralized authority.” Blockchain technology, in simple terms, makes it possible to use and transact cryptocurrency.
There are a lot of cryptocurrencies around like Ethereum, Ripple, Litecoin, and etc.
But, for brevity purposes this essay will focus on Bitcoin — arguably considered as the first cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin owes its genesis to Satoshi Nakamoto. He wanted Bitcoin, ironically, to act as a Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System. But, when the Bitcoin network came into existence, Satoshi Nakamoto “mined the first block of Bitcoins.” A certain programmer named Hal Finney subsequently downloaded the Bitcoin software and received 10 Bitcoins from Nakamoto on 12 January 2009. The rest as they say is history.
Bitcoin nowadays has achieved a degree of acceptance. Paypal, Microsoft, Dell, and Newegg have reportedly accepted payments in Bitcoin. It has also been used for investments. Bitinfocharts.com says that in 2017, there were 9,272 bitcoin wallets in existence. This translated to $ 1 million worth of Bitcoins.
So, where do banks fit in relative to Bitcoin? At this point, banks in general are not yet dealing or handling Bitcoin since it has yet to achieve universal acceptance. Most central banks are either on the fence or do not believe in its viability as a form of money or currency. It has yet to fully satisfy what economists call as the three-fold test in order for Bitcoin to be considered as money: a store of value, a medium of exchange, and a unit of account.
Still, Bitcoin, according to some pundits, pose as a threat to banks. For instance, a certain Rainer Michael Preiss, an executive director at Taurus Wealth Advisors, says that cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin “are attractive given the banking system’s supposed lack of transparency.”
Vanity Fair’s Nick Bilton, on the other hand, believs that banks are fearful of Bitcoin because they can supposedly be displaced when it comes to intermediate transactions. To open a Bitcoin account, there is no need to present a driver’s license or pay account fees. Banks cannot, so far, provide those privileges.
Aside from Blockchain and Bitcoin, there is another field of technology that can disrupt the banking industry as well. And that is artificial intelligence (AI).
Artificial Intelligence boasts of three major technologies: cognitive computing, machine learning, and natural language processing. AI, as shown in the next paragraphs, can fundamentally change banking in five ways.
Fraud Prevention. With machine learning, it will be possible to detect suspicious activities based on the transaction history and behavior of individual clients. Machines, for example, can at once withhold a huge transaction when there is something dubious; say the initiating bank account historically issues minimal checks and then suddenly does the opposite. Machines can do this in real time.
Chatbots. Simply put, “they are artificially intelligent software that can stimulate a human conversation.” In banking, chatbots can help address critical customer issues. “One popular use case of such bot is the recent initiative by HDFC Bank to launch its very first chatbot, ‘Eva’. This effort gained tremendous media coverage and helped HDFC serve many of its clients.”
Risk Management. With machine learning, analysis of real-time data arising from recent transactions is possible. The same technology can also evaluate market conditions and latest news that in turn can unearth potential risks relative to the offering of credit. Finally, with the help of predictive analytics, “a machine learning algorithm can analyze petabytes of data to understand micro activities and assess the behavior of parties to identify a possible fraud.” Humans unfortunately can only do this manually.
Marketing and Support. Machine learning has the ability to analyze past behavior and map out present or future campaigns. This will lead to designing targeted and responsive programs. Customer experience will in turn improve since the approach won’t be scattershot.
Algorithmic Trading. Studying macro forces and market forces is integral and indispensable to a trader. With the use of AI, it will be easier to churn and process all these pieces of information. The trader then can make real time-decisions since the gap between evaluation and data collection will be virtually be non-existent.
And finally, the most evident source of disruption comes from the emergence of financial technology or more popularly called as fintech. If there is a piece of innovation or a model that seems to have the strongest chance of rocking the banking industry to its foundation, then look no further. Fintech, as pundits say, has the probable potential of making various banking services unnecessary and outdated.
Fintech is defined as a “business that aims at providing financial services by making use of software and modern technology.” Fintechs threaten banks because the former can provide substitutes to the latters’ services. For instance, banks used to dominate the payments business. Now, fintechs offer other alternatives like digital channels or mobile payments. For the first time, end consumers can choose between traditional banking payment methods and the ones that fintechs provide.
What Now?
Due to emerging disruptive technologies, the banking industry is now facing hard questions. Should existing banks immediately shift to new practices and adapt to new technologies? Should they close more branches? Which existing services should be discarded? These are the queries that both foreign and local banks face.
While there are no easy answers to the questions above, one thing remains certain: banks have to decide. They have to determine whether they should retain the status quo for the time being or change altogether. My instincts tell me that it should be the latter. Some of the biggest foreign banks have the same viewpoint.
DBS, according to Treasurytoday.com, has established different innovation project teams all throughout its organization with the purpose of evaluating current products and processes. The bank has to do this because it knows that it is going up against companies in garages that are nimble and daring enough to take risks. But, this isn’t what DBS is doing.
The same website reports that DBS knows that it has to “digitize its organization from end-to-end in order to compete.”
Nordea, a Nordic financial services group operating in Northern Europe, has also embarked on a different path. It is now hiring people with varying skillsets. Erik Zingmark, Nordea’s co-head of Transaction Banking, says that the organization is now empowering its personnel to work differently and not be burdened by institutionalized reporting processes. Bureaucracy shouldn’t hamper innovation.
In the Philippines, local banks are already taking steps to deal with the onslaught of disruption and change.
The Philippine Star reported on 12 September 2017 that the Bankers Association of the Philippines (BAP) and the Association of Banks of Singapore (ABS) convened technology experts, financial institutions and regulators to discuss the plan of the International Finance Corp (IFC) and Monetary Authority of Singapore in establishing the industry sandbox platform. In relation to this, the country’s Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, according to Businessworld in January 2018, has begun talks “with other Southeast Asian central banks to adopt regional standards in testing latest financial technology (fintech) products.”
Based on the accounts above, a lot are going on. It is easy to get lost in all the details and happenings. To manage all the changes, some banks have embarked on programs centering on evolution and the administration of the status quo. This is what PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) says in its latest paper on the subject.
The PWC recently released a paper entitled Financial Services Technology 2020 & Beyond: Embracing Disruption. And in that treatise, PWC outlined the changes to come.
Among the insights in that paper is the need to “change the bank.” This of course is necessitated by the various technological developments happening in the financial services industry.
The same treatise also alludes to the concept of “run the bank.” This notion pertains to the running of day-to-day activities.
So, for PWC banks must ensure that it allots resources in change the bank initiatives, but at the same time manage their respective status quo. But, to me, there is another task being left unattended. There must be people focused on preparing the bank.
Most of the time, organizations focus on preparing for tomorrow. And when this happens, companies force their current realities to change without assessing whether their systems, infrastructure, and people are ready. This is exactly the gap that should be addressed. Banks caught between change the bank and run the bank initiatives should take note of this chasm.
Those that will be assigned to the preparing the bank team must consider the following:
(1) communicate all throughout the organization the changes that the change the bank team is spearheading;
(2) identify pockets or possible areas of resistance relative to the coming changes;
(3) ensure that both the change the bank and run the bank groups are not at odds with each other;
(4) win the buy-in of everyone in the organization with regard to change the bank initiatives; and
(5) determine if all the bank’s personnel have roles to play in its vision for tomorrow.
There are of course other considerations, but the idea is that while banks are looking towards the future and are at the same time managing their day-to-day activities, they should also ensure that their organizations, from systems to personnel perspectives, are ready to embark on their deliberate evolutions.
But, contending against new technology isn’t the only issue that banks must face.
The World Economic Forum in its paper entitled “Beyond Fintech: A Pragmatic Assessment of Disruptive Potential in Financial Services (August 2017) state that: “Banks no longer define customer expectations of the banking experience; instead, fintechs and large technology companies set the standard.” For the first time, banks do not have a solid hold on their customers anymore.
To ensure that clients remain loyal, banks must embark on bold customer experience initiatives. If end consumers have a pleasant time dealing with their banks, then chances are they will repeat their transactions and not leave.
For banks to succeed with their customer experience initiatives, they can do the following:
• Conduct an audit — determine what works and doesn’t work. This entails an organization wide effort. Processes should be evaluated; customers must be interviewed; employees should be consulted. No stone must be left unturned.
• Study how competitors are doing their customer experience initiatives. Benchmark the best practices and then improve on them.
• Look at how other players in various industries are trying to win and keep their customers. Sometimes insights can be gathered from seemingly unrelated markets. Who knows there might be a lesson or two to be learned from the endeavor?
• Make client and bank interface pain free. Simply put, when customers access banking portals, the experience must be enjoyable. If a person wants to get a loan, then the corresponding manner of getting the information, either via navigating through the bank’s website or accessing the organization’s app, must be comfortable.
• Revisit their value chains. This is what Royal Bank of Canada’s Dave Mckay said in a recent Boston Consulting Group interview. “Banks must redefine the relevant problems and pain points they’re trying to solve for their customers and create value, create connectivity to their brands and franchises.” He feels that banks do not step out of their comfort zones and rely on their model that has existed for hundreds of years, “they can expect that someone’s going to step between them and their customers. Someone with a broader value chain will squeeze the margin, if not take them out completely.”
Banks, as this piece shows, face unprecedented threats to their existence. This is the first time in history that they do not have a monopoly anymore with the way they do things. It is only a matter time before they are taken out provided that they do not take action.
But, when there is a crisis, there is also an opportunity. Banks can look at the looming disruption as an impetus to evolve. Adapting this mindset and doing the necessary action, ensures that they will remain relevant in the coming future.
Jonee C. Bilasano is a banker by profession and considers writing, corporate strategy, and basketball as his passions.

BSP expects National ID system law to be passed in May

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) expects the national identification (ID) system to be enacted next month.
Speaking at the national convention of Chamber of Thirft Banks in Makati, BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. said the monetary authority sees the National ID System to be passed into law next month.
“Our great expectation is that we will have finally a proper national ID law as early as next month,” Mr. Espenilla said yesterday, adding that the Senate and House versions have been certified as urgent.
The Senate and House versions of the bill establishing the national ID system has been approved on third and final reading. Mr. Espenilla said he expects the bicameral conference committee to convene next month to consolidate the two versions. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Lady Falcons fight for their tournament lives

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

THE Adamson Lady Falcons try to stay in the hunt for a Final Four spot in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) Season 80 women’s volleyball tournament when they see action today at the FilOil Flying V Centre in San Juan City.
Currently outside looking in with a 5-7 record and two games left in its schedule, Adamson needs to sweep its remaining matches to at least get a playoff for the last remaining semifinal berth.
A loss to the defending champions and league-leading De La Salle Lady Spikers in their 2 p.m. encounter today means the end for the chances of San Marcelino-based Adamson of advancing to the next round of UAAP Season 80 while handing an automatic semifinal ticket to fourth-running National University (NU) Lady Bulldogs (7-6).
Already qualified for the Final Four apart from La Salle (10-2) are the Ateneo Lady Eagles (9-4) and Far Eastern University (FEU) Lady Tamaraws (8-4).
The Lady Falcons are coming off a tough five-set defeat at the hands of FEU on Saturday, April 7.
While they gave their all and competed, the Lady Falcons just could not complete the task in the final set to go down, 25-22, 25-27, 14-25, 25-22 and 15-12.
Four players from Adamson scored in double digits with Jema Galanza leading with 16 points.
Mylene Paat had 15 while Ceasa Pinar and Eli Soyud added 12 and 11 points, respectively.
With their backs against the wall, the Lady Falcons said there is no recourse left for them but to go out and make the most of the opportunities they have.
TOP SPOT
Expected to make it tough for Adamson despite already assured of a semifinal berth is La Salle, which is looking to claim the top spot back in the elimination round after a couple of seasons not finishing number one in the standings.
The Lady Spikers made short work of the already-eliminated University of Santo Tomas Golden Tigresses in their last game on April 8.
Like the case for much of the season, La Salle banked on a total team effort to dispose UST, with Kim Kianna Dy scoring 12 points and Majoy Baron and Aduke Ogunsanya chipping nine and eight points, respectively, to win, 25-23, 25-23 and 25-22.
“Despite winning in straight sets it was still a close game. The important thing is the result,” La Salle coach Ramil De Jesus said.
Interestingly, Adamson shocked La Salle in the first round with a four-set win, 25-18, 15-25, 25-19 and 25-22, providing further fuel in today’s game.
Meanwhile, playing in the second game at 4 p.m. are FEU and the University of the East Lady Warriors.
In other news, FEU’s Bernadeth Pons was named UAAP player of the week after guiding the Lady Tamaraws to another Final Four appearance.
In winning the award, graduating Pons bested NU’s Jaja Santiago, University of the Philippines’ Tots Carlos, La Salle’s Dy, and Ateneo’s Kat Tolentino.

Fridays Boracay operator estimates P45.5-million revenue loss from island shutdown

The operator of Fridays Boracay Beach Resort will take a hit following the “impulsive” decision of the government to close the island for rehabilitation, prompting Boulevard Holdings, Inc. (BHI) to ramp up the sales of its property in Puerto Galera.
In a disclosure, the holding firm of the Panlilio family said shutting down Boracay will negatively affect Friday’s Holdings, Inc., owner and operator of Friday’s Boracay Beach Resort, despite full compliance to laws mandated by Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the Department of Interior and Local Government.
The shutdown has resulted in almost P22 million in advanced deposit cancellations from places like China and German, with the closure coinciding with the peak season.
BHI estimates monthly foregone revenues of P6.5 million for seven months from April to October totaling P45.5 million. The company will also suffer another P35 million in losses due to fixed costs and expenses to be incurred representing utilities, maintenance, repairs, depreciation, personnel costs for engineering, housekeeping, accounting and other general expenses. — Krista Angela M. Montealegre

Malditas fall to China, battle Thailand next

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

THE Philippine national women’s football team hit a wall late Monday night in its AFC Women’s Asian Cup, losing 3-0 to China in their Group A match at the King Abdullah II Stadium in Amman, Jordan.
The loss dropped the Philippine Malditas to a record of one win and one draw for three points, good for joint second place with Thailand, which they would face in a key match on Thursday night (early Friday morning, Manila time).
A win over the Thai national team earns for the Malditas a semifinal place in the ongoing AFC Women’s Asian Cup as well as a spot in next year’s Women’s World Cup in France. A defeat on the other hand relegates the Philippines to the battle for fifth where it has to win over the third-place team in Group B to earn a World Cup berth.
Group B has Japan, Australia, South Korea and Vietnam battling.
Against China, the Malditas found the going tough notwithstanding they were coming off a high with a 1-0 victory over host Jordan in their tournament opener early Saturday morning.
The Chinese were in the element right from the get-go and had the Philippines on the defensive.
China broke through in the 17th minute care of forward Li Ying to give her team the 1-0 lead, which was to be padded 14 minutes later by defender Ma Jun to give the Chinese a 2-0 cushion by the halftime break.
The Malditas tried to fight back at the start of the second half but Ms. Li would score the second of his brace in the 57th minute to make it 3-0 and pretty much put the game away.
For Malditas coach Rabah Benlarbi, there was no denying that they were badly outplayed by the Chinese and that they could have played better.
“We are a little disappointed with the result because we really did not start the game well,” Mr. Benlarbi was quoted as saying by the AFC Web site after their loss.
“We made some mistakes which allowed China to score two goals and after that I think we found it hard to find a way back into the game. It is probably fair to say that China were a better team than us today, but there are some positives we can take from the game, in as much as we tried to react in the second half and we continued to press China until the very last minute,” he added.
But despite the loss, the Malditas recognize that they still have their tournament and World Cup fate in their hands and vowed to give their all in their all-important match against fellow Southeast Asian team Thailand.
“…The game against Thailand is now a very important one for us. We have some tired players, but we will try to recover over the next two days and be fully prepared for the match,” said Mr. Benlarbi.

Westbrook has triple-double; OKC in playoffs

LOS ANGELES — Paul George scored 27 points and Russell Westbrook bagged a triple-double as the Oklahoma City Thunder overturned an 18-point deficit to clinch a playoff berth with a 115-93 victory over the Miami Heat on Monday.
Westbrook finished with 23 points, 18 rebounds and 13 assists in a dynamic performance which assured the Thunder of a postseason berth and kept them in the hunt for homecourt advantage in the first round.
The Thunder improved to 47-34 with the win, leaving them level on wins in the Western Conference standings with fourth-placed Utah, who have played a game fewer.
George and Westbrook were backed by Carmelo Anthony, who finished with 11 points, while Jerami Grant contributed 17 off the bench as the Thunder overcame a determined Miami side.
Josh Richardson led the scoring for the Heat with 18 points while Hassan Whiteside had 16. The defeat saw Miami slide back to seventh place in the Eastern Conference, a half-game ahead of Washington.
George said the Thunder would now aim to finish with a win in front of their home fans on Wednesday, when they host the Memphis Grizzlies.
“It feels great. We’ve got one more to go, we’re heading in the right direction,” George said.
“It’s what we wanted. We wanted to come off the road trip 2 & 0 and we did that. We’ve got one more to close it up at home and get ready for these playoffs.”
Elsewhere Monday, Kevin Love and LeBron James combined for 54 points as the Cleveland Cavaliers kept alive their hopes of snagging third place in the Eastern Conference with a 123-109 win over the New York Knicks.
FINALS IN SIGHT?
With just one regular season game remaining, the Cavaliers will likely need to defeat New York again on Wednesday if they are to have any chance of sneaking past the in-form Philadelphia 76ers for the third seeding.
The Sixers will be assured of third if they win their two remaining games against Atlanta and Milwaukee.
However, Cleveland’s win on Monday handed them the tie-breaker over the Sixers, meaning that should Philadelphia slip up against the Hawks on Tuesday or the Bucks on Wednesday, the Cavs will finish third.
Whichever team finishes third has a potentially easier route to the Eastern Conference finals, with a series against the injury-hit Boston Celtics likely in the second round.
Love, who led the Cavs scoring with 28 points and grabbed five rebounds, said the team was finding form at the right time.
“Heading into the playoffs we always want to get better, and we feel like we’ve done that,” Love said after Monday’s road win at Madison Square Garden.
“It just felt like we moved the ball a little bit better. For 48 minutes it felt like we did a good job of that. A lot of contributions, a lot of guys playing well, it’s always fun to play Madison Square Garden.”
James finished with 26 points and contributed 11 assists in a comfortable win for the 2016 NBA champions. — AFP