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ECB ‘taper tantrum’ risk downplayed for emerging marts

LONDON — Emerging economies’ debt in euros has shot to record highs thanks to European Central Bank (ECB) largesse, and yet an approaching end to this generosity won’t necessarily inflict the kind of pain that markets once suffered at the hands of the US Fed.

The ECB’s intention to start winding up its €60-billion-a-month stimulus program for the euro zone economy has revived bad memories of when the Federal Reserve tried to signal something similar in 2013.

That led to the “taper tantrum” when investors took fright at the prospect that the ultra-cheap dollar funding they had grown used to would taper away.

While the ECB will proceed cautiously with its own tapering, the risk is that it could derail an emerging market (EM) rally.

UBS strategist Manik Narain, however, argues that withdrawing quantitative easing (QE) in the euro zone won’t hurt so much as the dollar process.

“ECB tapering will have an impact but it’s definitely the lesser of the two evils,” he said.

While governments, companies and consumers in emerging economies have binged on cheap euro borrowing for the past two-and-a-half years, the total remains modest compared with their dollar debts, Mr. Narain pointed out.

No central bank is finding it easy to withdraw policies that helped to keep Western economies afloat after the global financial crisis. Investors are awaiting word from ECB President Mario Draghi, who will speak at a central bankers’ meeting in the United States this week, on how he proposes to engineer a gradual end to the era of mass bond buying and negative interest rates.

The important thing is to avoid a repeat of the taper tantrum of four years ago. This wiped half a trillion dollars off MSCI’s emerging equity index in three months, raised countries’ borrowing costs by an average one percentage point and pushed some emerging currencies down by as much as 20% against the dollar.

Now it is the ECB’s turn.

Mr. Draghi will deliver no new policy messages during this week’s conference at Jackson Hole, sources say.

However, expectations are high that he will tackle the issue at one of the ECB’s policy meetings next month or in October.

Under Mr. Draghi, the ECB has pumped more than €2 trillion ($2.35 trillion) into the global financial system. His first hint in June that tapering might be coming pushed the MSCI’s emerging equity index down two percent over the following week.

On currency markets, Turkey’s lira and South Africa’s rand fell sharply, not only against a broadly stronger euro but also the dollar. Investors were unsettled by the prospect of higher euro zone bond yields dragging up US borrowing costs in their wake.

Emerging markets have achieved stellar gains this year but investors using the euro have largely missed out due to the currency conversion.

The dollar has fallen five percent versus a basket of emerging currencies tracked by UBS, but the euro is up six percent.

Only four emerging currencies — those of Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Mexico — have strengthened against the euro this year.

Developing economies are more exposed to the euro than any other time in history.

Their euro-denominated debt — including bonds and bank loans — has ballooned by almost €100 billion over the last seven years to around €250 billion, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements.

In Mexico alone, debt in euros has quadrupled since 2010 to over €42 billion.

But even then overall emerging borrowers’ euro debt is dwarfed by the $1.7 trillion they owe in dollars. So they are much more susceptible to movements in US government bond yields than those on the euro zone benchmark, German Bunds.

“The bulk of EM external debt is in dollars rather than euro and the EM corporate sector gravitates towards dollar funding… so a 50 basis-point move in Treasuries matters a lot more than 50 bps move in Bunds, other things being equal.”

European exposure to emerging stocks and bonds also lags the United States.

UBS research suggests more than 60% of EM carry trades — borrowings in cheap developed economy currencies invested in higher-yielding emerging currencies — are denominated in dollars, Mr. Narain said.

As of June 2016, euro zone investors held about €407 billion worth of emerging currency-denominated debt, according to calculations by Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML).

But this is little changed from December 2013.

David Hauner, head of emerging markets cross-asset strategy at BAML, says European investors do not appear to have moved heavily into emerging debt during the ECB’s quantitative easing (QE) years.

In fact, most moves happened during the Fed’s own bond-buying from 2009 onwards and when the ECB started its earlier program of showering banks with unlimited, ultra-cheap funding.

A quarter of this money was invested in Polish, Hungarian and Czech debt, the data shows.

Turkey accounts for another €42 billion, while Brazil and Mexico had €39 billion and €74 billion respectively.

Analysis from the Institute of International Finance supports that view. It estimates $200-300 billion flowed to emerging stocks and bonds annually during the peak years of the Fed’s bond buying in 2012-2013. But by last year, when the ECB’s QE peaked, flows declined to $100 billion.

The view that emerging market investing remains a dollar story is supported by a Deutsche Bank study of an equally weighted euro-dollar basket versus 12 emerging currencies. This showed that emerging currencies tended to fall an average 0.6% in months when the dollar strengthened, whereas they rose by 0.4% against the basket during times of euro strength. “These results suggest that if external conditions remain relatively benign, the current emerging currency appreciation cycle has more room to run,” Deutsche’s Gautam Kalani added.

At BAML, Mr. Hauner says euro-based investors earn a better yield premium by investing in emerging markets than those using the dollar. “Unless dollar strength is extreme, euro-based investors do better in EM than dollar-based investors, as euro/dollar removes much of the volatility in emerging currencies,” he said. “In a nutshell we are not very concerned about this.” — Reuters

ECB ‘taper tantrum’ risk downplayed for emerging marts

BSP tightens corporate governance guidelines

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) has tightened the requirement for seats and term limits of independent board directors, as part of efforts to boost corporate governance and risk management in banks and other financial firms.

In a statement, the BSP said its Monetary Board (MB) has approved new corporate governance standards for BSP-supervised entities “aimed at ensuring that the board of directors is composed of a collective mix of individuals who possess the expertise and competence to effectively manage the financial institution.”

The BSP also said in its statement that the changes also seek to promote a “critical exchange of views and exercise of objective judgment” in the board.

A board must have a majority consisting of non-executive directors — including independent directors — or those who do not hold key positions involved in the firm’s day-to-day operations.

Moreover, independent directors must account for a third of the board — or two seats, whichever is more — compared to 20% previously.

But the MB retained the existing requirement for simple rural banks to have only one independent director.

An independent director may serve for a maximum cumulative term of nine years.

A non-executive director may concurrently serve as director in up to five publicly listed companies.

The new rules also prohibit one person from concurrently sitting as chairman and chief executive officer in a firm in order “to promote independence of the board from management and to support an environment where the board can sufficiently challenge the actions of those involved in operations.”

The central bank added that “[i]n exceptional cases” when the MB approves that one person may hold both positions, that individual should be “a lead independent director.”

The BSP likewise spelled out the duties and responsibilities of the board, namely: shaping of corporate culture and values; setting objectives, adopting strategies and overseeing management implementation; appointing key members of senior management; overseeing implementation of the corporate governance framework; and adopting a robust risk governance framework.

“The amendments to the corporate governance guidelines are aimed at promoting prudence and greater accountability in line with the implementation of continuing reforms in the financial sector,” the BSP said, pointing out that such reforms further aligned its rules with international corporate governance standards. — M. L. T. Lopez

7 groups buy bid documents for Clark int’l airport phase 1

SEVEN GROUPS have bought bid documents ahead of pre-qualification for the Clark International Airport Phase 1 upgrade, the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said.

The groups purchasing the P1-million bid documents for the P12.55-billion project are: the First Balfour, Inc. and Datem, Inc. joint venture; the Megawide Construction Corp. and GMR Infrastructure joint venture; Towking Construction Corp.; Qingjian Group Co., Ltd.; R-II Builders, Inc.; China Harbour Engineering Co., Ltd.; and China State Construction Engineering Corp.

The companies attended the pre-bid conference for the project yesterday, along with 43 other companies who have not bought the bid documents but have expressed interest in the bidding process.

Among the 43 interested companies are DMCI (Holdings, Inc.), Metro Pacific Investments Corp., MacroAsia Corp., and Hyundai (Engineering and Construction).

BCDA Vice-President and Chair of the BCDA Bids and Awards Committee Joshua M. Bingcang said that companies can still buy bid documents, and can submit their bids by Oct. 23.

The auction will involve the submission of certificates of eligibility; submission of technical proposals; and submission of bid. The awarding of the bid is targeted for the end of November.

Mr. Bingcang said that as the BCDA still conducts consultations with interested companies, he is confident of more companies submitting bids.

“We are confident that we have more numbers that will submit,” Mr. Bingcang told reporters.

Mr. Bingcang also said that the BCDA will aim to meet the target date of signing the contract by December. “Of course we want to have the biggest number of bidders, but we want to balance it with delivering the project on time,” he said.

Signing of the contract, ground breaking, and start of construction are targeted for December. The new terminal is expected to be operational by the first quarter of 2020.

Mr. Bingcang said “there are several options” regarding the financing of the project. BCDA President Vivencio B. Dizon said the government might also look at loaning a “small” amount as part of financing the project. The government will pay the contractor of the project after turnover in 2020. 

Mr. Dizon added: “What we want to ensure is that the quality of the new facility we’re building in Clark is at par with the best of the world.”

Mr. Bingcang said that among the qualification requirements for interested companies are the completion of a total of P15 billion worth of related projects; the design of an airport currently in operation; a net worth of at least the cost of the project; and the capacity to raise loans, with the winning bidder putting up 20% equity.

Mr. Bingcang also said that he had received requests to extend the deadline for the submission of bids.

“We will consider the request for the extension of submission… We don’t want the number of bidders to be limited only to a few, that we won’t be able to get a good price for the project,” Mr. Bingcang told reporters.

“The minimum is 20% [for equity]. We want to make sure they have the money, not just getting it all from loans… Some of the companies have the financial muscle to finance this on their own. We’re still allowing them to raise funds through loans, but we’re limiting it to 80%,” Mr. Bingcang told reporters.

Mr. Bingcang said the BCDA will make an announcement about the pre-bid for the operation and management (O&M) project of the airport within two months, as the awarding of the contract for the O&M is also targeted for the end of the year. He added that he does not want a scenario where the O&M contractor will raise issues regarding the constructed facility.

“Some of the O&M bidders are already looking. On their part, they want to ensure efficiency that what they are going to build is acceptable and is in the best possible condition… [They want to] see some synergy in terms of the costs of the project, and in terms of operating of the project.” — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Movement, impermanence, and memories

By Nickky F. P. de Guzman, Reporter

ARTISTS and life partners Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan use found objects in their artworks as metaphors for migration and displacement. They are, perhaps, among the most fitting storytellers for this reality of life because, after all, they are migrants who moved to Brisbane, Australia in 2006 together with their five children – Miguel, Diego, Amihan, Leon, and Aniway – in search of a better future.

High Noon2 082217
VIEWS of Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan’s installation called High Noon which is currently on view Bellas Artes Outpost. — PHOTO BY NICKKY FAUSTINE P. DE GUZMAN

Using found boxes, old clothes, rubber slippers, piled blankets, and whatnots, the Aquilizan family (the couple work together with the help of their children) creates installation artworks that are both extemporaneous and ephemeral.

“Our works are always organic and site specific,” said Mr. Aquilizan, adding that their installations will consistently have “conversations with available spaces” and “interventions with architecture.”

Unlike sculptures or paintings that could last many a lifetime, their works are fleeting. Once the gallery show is done, the installations are removed, so the majority of their works are now only on view thanks to photographs and documentation. But it is not correct to say that their artworks never leave a lasting mark. Their installations are not just a product of their own stories, but they are also results from collaborations, compromise, and communication with the people in the community they have projects with.

“We are just conductors of the symphony,” said Ms. Aquilizan, her arms in the air.

The couple are back in the Philippines, and have worked and orchestrated an artwork with local artisans.

POSTS AND PELLETS
They have just finished their residency at the Bellas Artes Outpost, which has a residential site in Las Casas Filipinas de Acuzar in Bagac, Bataan, and there, their exhibition called High Noon was on view from January until June. The installation used found wooden posts from old houses and scrap marble pellets from a nearby church construction. The two worked with the 300 artists in Las Casas Filipinas de Acuzar, which specializes in the simulation and restoration of iconic and historical landmarks.

The High Noon installation has references with a Zen garden, which invites people to contemplate on the meaning of migration: how was the material transported to arrive at their current state and location? What are the stories of these items?

From Bataan, High Noon has been transported to the Bellas Artes Outpost gallery in Chino Roces, Makati City, and is on view until Oct. 14.

Bellas Artes Outpost, founded in 2013, is a nonprofit organization that supports the production and exhibition of contemporary arts and offers residencies at Las Casas Filipinas de Acuzar. The goal of the Outpost is to create a space for public discussion in Metro Manila.

MEMORIES
Before coming back to the Philippines for High Noon, the Aquilizans had been traveling all over: Istanbul, Japan, Indonesia, the Netherlands, South Korea, New Zealand, and Australia, where they had art exhibitions and held artist residencies.

“Narratives are always important as the core of our artworks,” said Mr. Aquilizan.

Whenever they are invited to a new place, they study its architecture, its history and story, and it is there that they will find objects that may be abstract, but always referential. After finding the materials, they work with the people of the community, and together, they install the artwork. In Yogyakarta, Indonesia, for instance, the artists put together wooden handles and sickles to create a bigger sickle to tell the organic story of Yogyakarta as agricultural area. In Japan, they worked with the members of the community to install a life-size panel from scrapped items from abandoned schools and homes. Mr. Aquilizan said schoolchildren in small towns in Japan leave their homes to move to the big cities for further study. The couple found the objects they used from abandoned schools and homes, but they did have a permit they said, smiling.

While people come and go, and the rest of the world is always changing, the artists have always – and will always – find stories of movement and displacement to put in their installations.

“Memories, for me, are more important. They are more permanent than the product,” said Mr. Aquilizan.

PhilWeb gets ‘provisional’ license

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter

PHILWEB Corp. has secured “provisional” accreditation from the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) to resume its operation of electronic gaming sites in the country.

Roberto Ongpin resigned as chairman and director of PhilWeb on Aug. 4, 2016 to supposedly spare the PhilWeb from President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s threat to “destroy” the country’s “oligarchs.” BW FILE PHOTO

In a statement on Tuesday, the listed gaming firm said PAGCOR has granted it a Provisional Certificate of Accreditation to be an accredited Electronic Gaming System (EGS) Service Provider.

Being an accredited EGS service provider means the company can offer software and other services to the operators of PAGCOR-licensed gaming sites for electronic games.

“PAGCOR will soon conduct an inspection of PhilWeb’s servers and gaming facilities as required under the accreditation rules, after which it may then issue a notice to operate,” PhilWeb said in the statement.

The approval of the accreditation comes a year after PhilWeb’s license to supply software systems to gaming sites expired in August 2016.

In a letter to PAGCOR by former PhilWeb Chairman Roberto V. Ongpin, PAGCOR’s decision not to renew the license resulted to the loss of jobs for 6,000 PhilWeb and e-Games employees, as well as the wipe-out of P1.8 billion in investments of 131 operators of e-Games cafes.

Mr. Ongpin then divested his shares from the company totalling 771.7 million shares or a majority stake of 53.75% to the Araneta family.

For his part, PhilWeb Chairman Gregorio Ma. Araneta III said the company can once again contribute revenues to PAGCOR, which amounted to P2 billion in 2015 — its last full year of operations before its contract with PAGCOR expired.

“(I am) very confident that PhilWeb can now go back to doing what it does best which is to be a service provider for electronic games, and in so doing, can contribute a significant amount of revenue to PAGCOR,” Mr. Araneta said in a statement.

At end 2016, the company served a total of 288 operating e-Games cafes across the country, with majority being owned and operated by independent operators. 

Following the company’s announcement of the license renewal, shares in PhilWeb soared by 17.18% to P11.12 apiece, adding P1.63 from the stock’s price in the previous trading day.

PhilWeb reported a net loss of P68 million in the second quarter of 2017, against the P22.18-million net profit it realized in the same period last year. This follows a P38.96-million revenue for the period, outpaced by the P119.14-million expenses it incurred.

Senate approves Expanded Anti-Red Tape Act on 3rd reading

THE Senate has passed on third and final reading a priority bill of the Duterte administration which seeks to reduce the requirements and streamline processes in starting and operating businesses.

Senate Bill No. 1311 was approved with 17 affirmative votes, zero negative vote and no abstention, according to a statement by the Senate which identifies the bill as the “Expanded Anti-Red Tape Act of 2017.” The Senate’s Web site identifies the bill as “An Act Establishing a National Policy of Ease of Doing Business, Creating for the Purpose the Ease of Doing Business Commission, and for Other Purposes.”

The bill was sponsored by Senator Juan Miguel F. Zubiri, chair of the Senate committee on trade, commerce and entrepreneurship and cosponsored by Senate President Pro-Tempore Ralph G. Recto, one of the principal authors. The bill is also among the priorities identified by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council.

According to Mr. Zubiri, the bill seeks to amend the existing Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007 (Republic Act 9485) “to cure the defects in the current system of the business community’s transactions with government.”

In approving the bill, “the Senate immediately responded to the call of President Duterte in his last State of the Nation Address (SONA) to cut red tape in government,” the senator added.

PROCESSING PERIOD
The bill sets a new prescribed processing period under which both national and local government offices will have to “process the application and communicate the decision regarding the approval, or if the application has been disapproved, along with comments or reasons for such disapproval.”

This period will not be longer than three working days for simple applications involving micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and 10 working days for complex applications from the time the application was received.

For special types of businesses that require clearances, accreditation and/or licenses issued by government agencies, the bill prescribes a processing time no longer than 20 working days or “as determined by the government agency or instrumentality concerned, whichever is shorter.”

According to the bill, if the concerned national or local government agency application fails to act on an application for license, clearance or permit after the prescribed processing period has lapsed, then the application “shall be deemed approved.”

However, this is provided that the application has lapsed “without informing the applicant of the error, omissions and/or additional documents required for submission,” and that the applicant has complied with all required documents and fees.

But the prescribed processing period may be extended once for highly technical applications or for such cases where extraordinary due diligence in reviewing the qualifications and merits of an application is required.

Under the bill, stiffer penalties shall be imposed – ranging from 30 days suspension without pay (first suspension) to dismissal and disqualification from public office and one to six years of imprisonment (third offense) – on heads of offices or agencies, as well as supervising officers authorized to issue licenses, permits or clearances who violate the act.

To make the application process faster and more convenient, the bill requires national and local agencies to set up an electronic “Business One-Stop Shop (BOSS)” business permit and licensing system in cities and municipalities nationwide.

Through the BOSS, people who wish to apply for their businesses can avail themselves of online mechanisms for submission and processing of license, clearance and/or permit applications.

In relation, a single or unified business application form shall be used in processing new applications for business permits and business renewals.

“The new form would consolidate all the information of the applicant by various local government departments, such as but not limited to the local taxes and clearances, building clearance, sanitary permit, zoning clearance, and other specific local government unit requirements as the case may be, including the fire clearance from the Bureau of Fire Protection,” the bill said.

The unified application form, as well as a comprehensive checklist of requirements, step-by-step procedures, and schedule of fees, will be made available online in the cities/municipalities’ web sites.

NEW BUREAU
The bill said the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) will be required to establish a cloud-native Central Business Portal or other similar technology, to act as a central system that would receive the application and capture application data from business entities nationwide.

The Central Business Portal would then allow government agencies like the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and other national and local government agencies “to receive and process applications, as well as to issue digitally signed business license documents to applicants.”

The bill also called for renaming the existing Competitiveness Bureau under the DTI as the new Business Anti-Red Tape and Competitiveness Bureau, to be headed accordingly by a bureau director.

The new bureau will be tasked to complement the functions of the Civil Service Commission in implementing the act.

Mr. Zubiri cited a 2017 World Bank report which ranked the Philippines 99th among 190 countries on ease-of-doing-business. In the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), the Philippines ranked 6th among 10 nations.

Duterte vows justice in Kian delos Santos slay

By Ian Nicolas P. Cigaral
Reporter

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte on Monday night, Aug. 21, assured the public the cops behind the Aug. 17 killing of a 17-year-old high-school student in Caloocan City will be jailed if proven guilty.

According to police who seized the teenager in a fresh wave of anti-drug operations last week, Kian Loyd delos Santos resisted arrest, prompting them to fire back at him. Reportedly recovered from Mr. Delos Santos were a .45 pistol and two sachets of suspected shabu (methamphetamine).

But this version has come under fire after a CCTV footage aired by local television networks showed Mr. Delos Santos being dragged by two policemen to a place where his dead body was later found. Eyewitness accounts also claimed that cops forced Mr. Delos Santos to fight back.

SUNG KIM’S TWEET
Mr. Delos Santos’s murder has sparked outrage over the government’s revitalized drug war in the form of “one-time, big time” anti-drug operations, which saw their bloodiest outcome yet last week.

Religious leaders have added their collective voice to the clamor against the conduct of the drug war, and so too have Mr. Duterte’s allies in the Senate.

But in the House, legislators have been uncharacteristically mum over the controversial killing, apart from oppositionists like Ifugao Representative Teddy B. Baguilat, Jr., who said on Tuesday “it was incumbent upon the House of Representatives to undertake its own independent investigation into the killings….”

For his part, US Ambassador Sung Y. Kim on Tuesday said on his Twitter account, as retweeted by the US Embassy: “My condolences go out to the family and friends of Kian. Hope that the investigations lead to full accountability.”

In his media interview at Malacañang, Mr. Duterte said he kept mum on the issue despite viewing the CCTV tape of the incident because the Justice Department has already begun an inquiry on the case

He then stressed that he will not meddle in the ongoing probe.

“I saw the tape or tapes doon sa TV and I agree that there should be an investigation. Should the investigation point to liabilities by one, two, or all, there will be a prosecution and they have to go to jail if convicted,” he said.

“The most prudent thing for me to do is to shut up and wait for the result of the investigation.”

Mr. Duterte, for his part, also said he would not visit the wake of the teenager because such a move is “pregnant with so many suppositions.”

“Then, I would be putting so much pressure on the police….I cannot do that because the organization (of the) PNP (Philippine National Police) is under me. I would be the last person to condemn them without a valid investigation,” he said.

Despite his previous criticisms toward the “corrupt to the core” police force, Mr. Duterte has repeatedly assured cops he will pardon them if they are charged for carrying out his brutal drug war.

When asked if he would grant pardon to the policemen behind the death of Mr. Delos Santos, the President replied: “No, because I saw the evidence. That’s why I called Bato (dela Rosa, PNP chief).”

“You have no duty to murder a person….‘Yung arestado na, nakaupo na diyan, barilin mo, that’s another thing. That would be murder or homicide,” he explained.

“Look, we can only agree on what is right and legal. I do not care if you lose your trust in me.”

Apparently referring to the demonstrations against the killing of Mr. Delos Santos and his brutal drug war, Mr. Duterte remarked: “It is an uprising. I encourage you to do it.”

“Go ahead. I am waiting for that actually. So that there will be a change of President and everything. And perhaps the new generation will come up with a government that is really working.”

The PNP on Monday said it has ordered its Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) to investigate the death of Mr. Delos Santos.

This is apart from a probe by the National Bureau of Investigation, as ordered by the Department of Justice, and a Senate inquiry scheduled on Thursday.

To ensure “utmost impartiality” in CIDG’s inquiry, the PNP said Mr. Dela Rosa has placed Caloocan City police chief, Senior Superintendent Chito Bersaluna, under administrative relief effective Aug. 21. The National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) has also been directed to put all Caloocan cops being probed under restrictive custody.

DE LIMA’S PETITION
Also on Tuesday, detained Senator Leila M. De Lima asked the Supreme Court (SC) to allow her to attend Thursday’s Senate probe on Mr. delos Santos’s death.

Through her counsel Teddy Esteban Rigoroso, Ms. De Lima filed a Very Urgent Supplemental Motion for Legislative Furlough to attend the Senate hearing. She cited previous cases where the SC granted furlough to accused petitioners celebrating their birthdays, Christmas, or the New Year or planning to attend a relative’s wake or surgery.

The senator is currently detained at the PNP headquarters in Quezon City, following a warrant issued by the Muntinlupa Regional Trial Court handling drug trafficking cases filed by the Department of Justice (DoJ) against her.

Meanwhile, Justice Secretary Vitaliano N. Aguirre II said he “simply cannot” sack the Caloocan City Prosecutor who showed prejudice against Mr. Delos Santos.

Senator Franklin M. Drilon, in a statement on Sunday, Aug. 20, called for the “immediate” removal of Caloocan City Assistant State Prosecutor Darwin Cañete who, in a radio interview, was quoted as saying that the possibility of Mr. Delos Santos being totally innocent is “far-fetched.”

In a statement on Monday night, Mr. Aguirre said he “simply cannot order the relief of [Mr. Cañete] from the case of [Mr. Delos Santos]. In the first place, he is not handling the case. As a matter of fact no case has yet been filed.”

The justice chief also explained that Mr. Cañete “is tasked to gather the relevant factual antecedents of such case upon the invitation of the police. And that is all that he did in the case of [Mr. Delos Santos’s death.]”

As such, Mr. Aguirre assured that Mr. Cañete is no longer included in the raffle of the case, should one be filed at the City Prosecutor’s Office of Caloocan City.

“This exclusion is precisely done to avoid any purported prejudgment from being present in his resolution of the case if the same is raffled to him,” Mr. Aguirre added. — with reports by Kristine Joy V. Patag and interaksyon.com

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang musical opens in October

RESORTS WORLD MANILA’s eighth theater production will be the musical Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, which will open on Oct. 21 at the Newport Performing Arts Theater. Based on the 1968 British musical adventure fantasy film, it is a tale of a family for the family.

MICHAEL WILLIAMS calling on the audience during the press launch of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang at Resorts World Manila on Aug. 17. — NICKKY FAUSTINE P. DE GUZMAN

“The musical may be British in origin but we like the fact that the feelings, sentiments, and story are universal. It’s about how a family conquers adversity together and how the family, as a nucleus, as a unit, becomes stronger because of the adventure they have,” said director Jaime del Mundo in a press launch on Aug. 17.

“It’s not really a challenge because one thing I think the Filipino audiences love are musicals about the family,” he added.

First staged at the London Palladium in 2002 – becoming its longest running show, with a three and a half year run – Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was originally a 1964 novel, Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang: The Magical Car, written by Ian Fleming (better known as the creator of James Bond). In 1968, director Ken Hughes and writer Roald Dahl (author of children’s books Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Matilda) made a movie adaptation of it.

Set in 1910, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang tells of the “fantasmagorical” world of inventor and widower Caractacus Potts (played by Gian Magdangal), his love interest Truly Scrumptious (Yanah Laurel), and his children Jeremy (alternately played by Noel Comia and Albert Silos) and Jemima Potts (Isabeli Araneta-Elizalde and Zoey Alvarade), who set out on an adventure abroad their restored flying race car, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. They arrive in the faraway land of Vulgaria where they meet Baroness Bomburst (Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo) and Baron Bomburst (Raymund Concepcion), who both despise children.

Ms. Lauchengco-Yulo, who also serves as the production’s assistant director, said the cast is a dream team: Mr. Magdangal comes fresh from acting stints here and abroad including in Hong Kong Disneyland, Osaka Universal Studios, and Newsies, while Ms. Laurel has just finished a well-reviewed stint in Atlantis’ production of Kinky Boots.

The children are also veterans. Noel Comia won the Best Actor Award in the recent Cinemalaya Film Festival for his role in Kiko Boksingero, while his alternate, Albert Silos, was nominated in the 2015 Metro Manila Film Festival as Best Supporting Actor for Turo, Turo. The girls have also headlined other productions. Isabel Araneta-Elizalde played Annie in the eponymous musical, which won her the Discovery of the Year Award from the Aliw, while her alternate, Zoey Alvarade, has performed in Wizard of Oz, It’s a Giant World, Jewel of Antilles: Two Worlds, and Greased Lightning.

Also in the cast are Michael Williams, who is also the production’s artistic director, James Paolleli, Mako Alonso, Reb Atadero, and Lorenz Martinez.

For details on the production, visit www.rmanila.com. – Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

Broker bares to Senate details of ‘Davao Group’ in drug shipment

TESTIFYING anew before the Senate blue-ribbon committee on Tuesday, Aug. 22, broker Mark Ruben G. Taguba II elaborated on his earlier claim, in the previous Tuesday’s hearing by the committee, that he gave bribe money to a so-called “Davao Group” to facilitate the entry of containers from China in the Philippines.

shabu
Senator Richard J. Gordon listens to witness Mark Ruben G. Taguba II during the continuation of the probe on the smuggling of 600 kilos of shabu or metamphetamine hydrochloride from China into the country, which were reportedly hidden in printer rolls and passed through the “green lane” of the Bureau of Customs .– Senate PRIB /Albert Calvelo

Mr. Taguba is the broker involved in the shipment to the Philippines of P6.4-billion worth of shabu from China, which found its way via the Bureau of Customs (BoC)’s express lane.

He said he allegedly gave P5 million to Councilor Nilo “Small” Abellera, Jr. in Davao City as “enrolment fee” early this year, in exchange for the easy processing of the shipments in question at the BoC.

In addition to the P5 million, Mr. Taguba said he was advised to pay P10,000 per container for an average of 100 containers per week amounting to P1 million.

He also said he mostly interacted with a certain “Jack” who is supposedly “the handler of Paolo.” This is according to a text message to Mr. Taguba that he read before the committee. Paolo is allegedly Paolo Z. Duterte, the vice-mayor of Davao and son of President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

When asked by Senator Antonio Trillanes on how sure he was about the involvement of Vice-Mayor Duterte, Mr. Taguba simply said: “Yun po ang sabi nila.”

Mr. Taguba met Mr. Abellera through another alleged facilitator, a certain “Tita Nanie,” referred to, in turn, by Jojo Bacud of the Special Studies and Project Development Committee of the BoC.

However, the deal with Mr. Abellera fell through after three months when one of Mr. Taguba’s shipments was flagged down. This then led him to a new group involving “Big Brother” “General Capuyan” and a certain Noel.

Mr. Trillanes identified General Capuyan as “Allen Capuyan of Philippine Military Class of 1983.” Mr. Taguba said he was asked to give the new group up to P1 million a week.

But lawyer Mandy Anderson, chief of staff of now-resigned Customs chief Nicanor E. Faeldon, said there is “no Jojo Bacud working at the Bureau of Customs.”

According to Senator Richard J. Gordon, committee chairman, he is ready to submit his preliminary report but is still waiting for what Senator Panfilo M. Lacson has to say about Mr. Faeldon.

Mr. Gordon said he may ask Mr. Faeldon back so he can defend himself. The inquiry is scheduled to resume on Aug. 30 and 31 and on Sept. 4. — Mario M. Banzon

Why BenCab is more expensive than Manansala

DOES ART appreciate over time? Certainly. But the price of one piece of art and another, however, also vary for various economic reasons: the law of supply and demand, competition in the market, and an artist’s marketing strategy.

It is the market that will drive the prices of the most coveted pieces at the “The Well Appointed Life” sale by Salcedo Auctions and co-presented by the Peninsula Manila and Santos Knight Frank.

“We don’t just throw figures out there, the prices are real. We’ve been running auctions for eight years and there is a consistency in terms of result,” Richie Lerma, director at Salcedo Auctions, told BusinessWorld at the launch of the event on Aug. 15 at The Peninsula Manila.

The auction is set on Sept. 23 and 24 at the hotel’s Rigodon Ballroom.

“We are conservative in our pricing so that we know that whatever the price lands in auction is where the market is at the moment and all the data at play, we can verify that these are real sales,” Ms. Lerma added, saying that most of its Philippine art auctions are 90% sold.

Because pricing is market driven, the bidding price of a work by National Artist Benedicto “BenCab” Cabrera is a lot pricier than one by fellow National Artist Vicente Manansala.

“There is a great demand for BenCab right now,” said Mr. Lerma. “It also has a lot to do with how the artist presented himself… in how he has ingrained himself in the Filipino psyche, particularly the contemporary artists. It is quite very, very desirable to have a BenCab [nowadays].”

Yet another National Artist, Fernando Amorsolo, is also in demand because of what he has come to represent.

“Fernando Amorsolo will always be Amorsolo and will always have that value. Why is Amorsolo so valuable? I tell them, every time you think about rural landscape and the idyllic beauty of the Philippines, you think of Amorsolo, that’s how ingrained he is in our psyche,” said Mr. Lerma.

The “Well Appointed Life” will have more than 500 pieces on auction, divided into four categories: Important Philippine Art, Connoisseur Collection, Fine Jewelry and Timepieces, and Rare Automobiles.

The Connoisseur Collection includes furniture, rare books, and maps, while Rolex, IWC, and A. Lange and Sohne watches are available in the Fine Jewelry and Timepieces collection. There are also dresses in the auction including an Alexander McQueen Eiffel Tower-inspired dress (estimated at P16,000 to P18,000). One of the highlights in the auction a 1934 Ford model A Coupe, which comes with original photographs from the time of its production.

Among the Filipino art on sale are paintings by Jose John Santos III (Untitled, 2005, estimate: P3 million to P3.8 million), Jose Joya (Cascade, 1976, estimate: P8 million to P8.5 million), Fernando Amorsolo (Woman Cooking, 1955, estimate: P3.8 million to P4 million); BenCab (Long Haired Woman, 1998, estimate: P8.5 million to P9.5 million), and a Ramon Orlina glass sculpture (A Mother’s Love, 2005, estimate: P800,000 to P850,000).

When asked how the items were curated, Mr. Lerma said many factors come at play: “Curation has always been second nature to me. It is something that I’ve been doing for over 20 years in terms of curating important Philippine art. Of course people ask why it is important. An artwork is important historically, in terms of the career of the artist, and also, the auction, being a venue for sale and acquisition of the art, is also important to the market.”

As for the jewelry and timepieces, he said his wife, who is a certified diamond grader and has studied gemology, curated the items.

“History and tradition are at the heart of what we do at the Salcedo Auctions… It’s not all about the acquisition of objects, but rather about our country’s values and its history, how we protect our culture, and how we see ourselves as a people. Of course, being surrounded by objects of beauty gives us great satisfaction and delight, but so does the knowledge and satisfaction that comes with recognizing the historical importance of the pieces,” said Mr. Lerma.

When items go unsold, there will be a post-auction sale for few weeks, or they will be turned over to other auction houses (now with lower prices), or they will be returned to their owners.

“For the art pieces, [the auction] is almost always 90% sold out. That is what is exciting about it. It is very rare that artworks go unsold at Salcedo – it only means our pricing is correct,” said Mr. Lerma. – Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

MPTC launches e-payment options for Luzon, Subic-Clark, Cavite toll roads

METRO PACIFIC Tollways Corp. (MPTC), setting its sights on someday having cashless payments in its expressways, launched on Tuesday a program that is aimed at making customers aware of various electronic options for paying toll fees.

“Our goal in these payment options is to allow our motorists and our customers to experience even more convenience whenever they travel Metro Pacific expressways,” said MPTC President and Chief Executive Officer Rodrigo E. Franco in a press conference at Seda Vertis North hotel in Quezon City.

The options — which include Easy Trip RFID (radio frequency identification), Mastercard contactless cards and beep cards — are now available to motorists using the North Luzon Expressway (NLEx), Manila-Cavite Expressway (CAVITEx) and Subic–Clark–Tarlac Expressway (SCTEx).

The “Digital tollways” program of MPTC, the tollways arm of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), is also supported by MPTC partners PayMaya Philippines, Easy Trip Services Corp. and AF Payments, Inc.

Mr. Franco said the enabling of electronic transactions in the tollways is a “key contributor” in growing electronic money usage as thousands of motorists use the group’s expressways everyday.

“With this initiative, we are offering Filipinos more options that can suit their lifestyle and personal preferences,” he said.

Although cash payments will not be totally removed, motorists traveling NLEx can now pay tollway fees using Easy Trip RFID, beep cards, Mastercard contactless debit, prepaid and credit cards, including their Smart Mastercard powered by PayMaya.

Mastercard acceptance for CAVITEx and SCTEx will start soon, Mr. Franco said.

Motorists can also pay expressways with their Visa contactless debit, prepaid and credit cards soon.

“With these payment options, motorists will experience an even more seamless, convenient and hassle-free travel at the NLEx, SCTEx and CAVITEx,” he said.

Orlando S. Vea, PayMaya Philippines president and chief executive officer, said the impact of digital transformation in the toll roads space “will not only bring a whole new level of convenience to consumers but also place the country at the forefront of the region’s digital global economy.”

MPTC Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan described the use of digital payments as helping usher a new era of tollways operations “where consumers can enjoy faster, more secure and more convenient electronic transactions.”

He said the initiative is aligned with the National Retail Payment System program of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas that aims to transform 20% of the country’s payment transactions to electronic by 2020.

MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.​ — ​ ​Victor V. Saulon

Resilience, teamwork have triathlon producing gold

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Reporter

MONDAY proved to be a better day for Team Philippines in the 29th Southeast Asian (SEA) Games with triathlon producing impressive 1-2 finishes in both the men’s and women’s events.

Resilience, teamwork have triathlon producing gold
Filipino Kim Mangrobang celebrates after winning the women’s triathlon competition of the 29th Southeast Asian Games on Monday at the Water Sports Complex in Putrajaya City. — PSC-POC MEDIA GROUP

It was a result, the athletes said, of their hard work and dedication to training and resilience as well as their willingness to work together as a team for the greater good of bringing pride and honor to the country.

The men’s side was first to break through for the Philippine triathlon team with Nikko Huelgas and teammate John Chicano finishing first and second.

Mr. Huelgas, the gold medalist in the previous SEA Games in Singapore, clocked one hour, 59 minutes and 21 seconds to retain his crown while Mr. Chicano timed 2:01:26 to formally complete a gold-silver medal performance in men’s triathlon, that saw competitors going through a 1.5-kilometer swim, 40-km. bike ride and 10-km. run course.

Gold-winning Huelgas found himself trailing early in the opening swim but mustered the strength and will to fight his way through to overtake early leader Clement Chow of Singapore and hold the rest of the way along with teammate Chicano.

“Deliver when it matters most. When the country needed you most. For the love. For the Lord,” Mr. Huelgas wrote on his Twitter account after his win.

He went on to say in later interviews that he is very happy that their preparation paid off and they were able to win their event.

TEAMWORK
Moments later, it was the Filipina triathletes who turned over their 1-2 finish with Kim Mangrobang and Ma. Claire Adorna winning gold and silver, respectively.

The Filipinas showed the same amount of team work in the distaff side that allowed them to get the better of hometown bet Irene Wong.

Ms. Mangrobang took the gold with a time of two hours, 11 minutes and 14 seconds.

“It’s okay that I lost the gold,” said Ms. Adorna, who ran alongside Ms. Mangrobang up to transition two before suffering cramps that prompted her to give her teammate the go signal to zoom to victory.

“It doesn’t matter who would win. The important thing is that we keep the gold and silver medals and this victory is for the country. We had a very good strategy and we played perfectly as a team,” she added.

The gold medals of the Filipino triathletes padded our haul to three at that time, in addition to the one won by marathoner Mary Joy Tabal last Saturday.