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EntertainmentNews (02/28/23)

SB19’s Josh Cullen

SB19 head rapper releases a single

SB19’s Josh Cullen steps out as a solo artist with the release of “Wild Tonight,” a song about letting loose and breaking free from the ties that bind you. “The song is edgier and more provocative, and it’s a true reflection of my own personal style and creative vision,” Mr. Cullen said in a statement. “Overall, I feel excited and fulfilled to be taking this journey of growth and discovery.” Written and produced by Mr. Cullen with Ocho, The Bullet, “Wild Tonight” combines elements of EDM, pop, and hip-hop. Apart from the music-making aspects of the track, Mr. Cullen also oversees the choreography and creative direction for the track’s music video. It takes an inside look at the lifestyle of vampire royalty inspired by the character of Nosferatu and features cameo appearances by members of various P-Pop groups such as KAIA, 1st. One and DIONE. The song is available on all digital music platforms worldwide via Sony Music Entertainment.


Rico Blanco releases video for new single

SINGER-songwriter/producer Rico Blanco explores sci-fi themes in the music video of “Palibotlibot,” his current single under Sony Music Entertainment. The visuals present a story of humanity in a world completely engulfed by hopelessness. It stars Mr. Blanco, model TutiPon, and “The Entity,” a robotic figure created by awardwinning filmmaker Richard Somes. The song, which reflects on the uncertainty between friendship and relationship, was inspired by one of the characters in a series that he filmed in La Union last year. “Palibotlibot” will be part of Mr. Blanco’s fourth studio album to be released under Sony Music Entertainment. The music video of “Palibotlibot” can be viewed at www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYy1xuopc6U.


The Voice Kids PHL returns, season 5

Almost four years since the last season of the Kids Edition aired, The Voice Kids Philippines returns this year for its fifth season with two new coaches: KZ Tandingan and Martin Nievera. The new season will also have Robi Domingo and Bianca Gonzalez-Intal as its new hosts. The previous The Voice Kids Edition produced talents such as Darren Espanto, Juan Karlos Labajo, Kyle Echarri, Elha Nympha, Esang de Torres, Lyca Gairanod, and Darlene Vibares. The Voice Kids Philippines airs every weekend on the Kapamilya Channel, Kapamilya Online Live, A2Z, and TV5.


Netflix’s The Glory Part 2 out March 10

Part 2 of the K-drama The Glory will premiere on March 10. Part II will mark the finale of Dong-eun’s revenge, (played by the wonderful Song Hye-Kyo), which she has plotted for years. Watch the trailer at www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvJP7sAhXk4.

KMC Solutions to launch Quezon City office space

KMC Solutions, a provider of flexible private and co-working office spaces, will soon open another branch in Quezon City.

KMC Solutions Chief Executive Officer Michael McCullough said the new branch will be located in SM North EDSA Tower 1, in response to client demand. The new branch is expected to open in April.

“When we scanned the market, SM North EDSA was really the location that was most successful for our employees in the north,” he said during the launch of the company’s One Ayala Tower branch.

According to KMC, the North EDSA branch will have one floor with a floor area of approximately 2,448 square meters (sq.m.). It will have both traditional and co-working spaces.

“Fully equipped with modern amenities and facilities for a seamless work experience, our new office space in Quezon City offers a unique blend of comfort and productivity,” the company said.

Meanwhile, KMC’s One Ayala Tower branch covers 10,663-sq.m. divided into six floors, with dedicated floors for co-working and private enterprises. It has a capacity of 2,133 seats.

Mr. McCullough said the first three floors of the One Ayala Tower branch have been taken up by clients wanting private offices.

“We’re in the corner of EDSA and Ayala Avenue. I can’t imagine a more incredible space,” Mr. McCullough said.

The facility is above the One Ayala transportation hub which serves as a terminal for buses and Asian utility vehicles, and is connected to the Metro Rail Transit Line 3.

It also has amenities such as a training room, shower room and even some sleeping quarters.

Mr. McCullough said companies like Johnson & Johnson, Microsoft partner Avepoint, World Caribbean Cruise Lines, Evolent Healthcare, and the Purple Group have already signed up as clients.

“So, we had a couple big enterprise clients that took floors here… Right now, we probably have 20 clients, and that’s the big enterprise clients where they have private offices,” he said.

KMC Solutions now has 27 flexible office space branches in Makati, Ortigas, Mandaluyong, Bonifacio Global City, Alabang, Pasay, Clark, Cebu, and Iloilo. — Adrian H. Halili

Filinvest’s Gotianun Yap named Property Woman of the Year

JOSEPHINE GOTIANUN YAP, Filinvest Land, Inc. chief executive officer, was recently named Property Woman of the Year by FIABCI. — COMPANY HANDOUT

FILINVEST Land, Inc. (FLI) recently won three golds and a silver at the Property and Real Estate Excellence Awards organized by the Philippine chapter of Paris-based International Real Estate Federation (FIABCI).

FIABCI also named FLI Chief Executive Officer Josephine Gotianun Yap as its first Property Woman of the Year.

“In our industry, collaboration is crucial to the success of any project… Today, sustainability is at the forefront of our developments, and we are grateful that Filinvest excelled in the Sustainable Development category. Being the first Property Woman of the Year is also an honor and highlights the importance of inclusivity, another hallmark of our company mission,” Ms. Gotianun Yap, who is also president and CEO of Filinvest Development Corp., said.

Filinvest won gold in the Residential Mid-Rise category for Botanika Nature Residences and in the Sustainable Development category for Filinvest City.

Filinvest REIT Corp. (FILRT) also won gold in the Office Development category and silver in the Sustainable Development category. Axis Tower One, which is one of the office buildings under FILRT, won silver in the Sustainable Development category.

“These awards underscore our unwavering passion for creating sustainable office buildings that champion future-forward initiatives. At FILRT, our expansion plan is rooted in bringing into the portfolio green, high-value assets that attract tenants who share our vision of a real estate future that prioritizes sustainability in all aspects,” Maricel Brion-Lirio, FILRT president and CEO, said.

Paris mental illness documentary wins top Berlin film prize

A SCENE from On the Adamant.

BERLIN — On the Adamant, a documentary about a floating daycare center in Paris for adults with mental illness, clinched the Berlin Film Festival’s Golden Bear award on Saturday.

Its director Nicolas Philibert said he was deeply touched by the jury’s decision to award the Berlinale’s top prize to a documentary rather than a work of fiction.

“That documentary can be considered cinema in its own right touches me deeply,” he said. “For 40 years I have always fought for it to be seen as much.”

Shot over three years, the film follows life at a daycare center aboard The Adamant, a barge moored on the right bank of the Seine, where patients and carers interact in ways that break with what Mr. Philibert sees as the dehumanization of psychiatry.

“Patients in psychiatry are always stigmatized … and always considered through the prism of violence and I wanted to reverse the cliche and show how human they are,” he said on the red carpet after his film won.

“I hope it will help to awake the consciousness of society.”

The festival’s Silver Bear for best leading actor went to Sofia Otero, who plays an eight-year-old transgender child in 20,000 Species of Bees.

“It is rare to see someone convey so many emotions but remain simple and shattering,” said jury president Kristen Stewart. “Especially in performances given to us by a child.” — Reuters

PAL approves exchange ratio of 15.57:1 for share swap

REUTERS

LISTED company PAL Holdings, Inc. (PHI) announced on Monday that its board of directors approved an exchange ratio of 15.57 PHI shares to one Philippine Airlines, Inc. (PAL) share for its planned share swap.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE), the company said the move is part of PAL’s restructuring, “parts of the debts of the unsecured creditors were impaired and converted into equity of PAL.”

The company said that its impaired creditors now own approximately a 20.1% stake in PAL.

Under the reorganization plan, PAL offered the impaired creditors a mechanism to swap their PAL shares into shares of PHI “so that they would have the ability to trade them on the PSE.”

PAL tapped FTI Consulting Philippines, an independent appraiser, to make a valuation of the two companies and render a fairness opinion on the share-swap ratio.

“Using a high and low estimate of the company values, FTI concluded that the fair ratio was in the range of 14.4261 and 16.7987 so 15.57 has been agreed as the recommended ratio,” the company said.

On the stock market on Monday, PHI shares closed unchanged at P5.7 apiece. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Government partially awards T-bills as rates rise due to tightening bets

BW FILE PHOTO

THE GOVERNMENT partially awarded the Treasury bills (T-bills) it auctioned off on Monday as rates climbed across all tenors on hawkish signals from officials of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) and the US Federal Reserve.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised just P10 billion from its offer of T-bills on Monday, below the P15-billion program, even as bids reached P22.65 billion.

Broken down, the Treasury did not award any 91-day T-bills as tenders reached only P4.12 billion, below the P5-billion program. Had it been awarded, the average rate of the three-month papers would have risen by 45.10 basis points (bps) to 4.864% from the 4.413% quoted last week.

Meanwhile, the government made a full P5-billion award of the 182-day securities as demand for the tenor reached P9.46 billion. The six-month T-bill was quoted at an average rate of 5.177%, rising by 11.7 bps from 5.06% the previous week, with accepted rates ranging from 5.093% to 5.3%.

The BTr also borrowed P5 billion as planned from the 364-day debt papers as bids reached P9.07 billion. The average rate of the one-year papers climbed by 12.2 bps to 5.577% from the 5.455% fetched for the tenor last week. Accepted yields were from 5.565% to 5.6%.

“Results were mixed in today’s Treasury bill auction as the Auction Committee decided to fully award bids for the 182- and 364-day T-bills while rejecting bids for the 91-day security. The 182- and 364-day T-bills fetched averages of 5.177% and 5.577%, respectively. Meanwhile, the 91-day T-bill rate reached 4.864% had it been awarded,” the BTr said in a statement on Monday.

“The auction was 1.5 times oversubscribed, attracting P22.7 billion in total tenders. With its decision, the committee raised P10 billion of the P15 billion offering,” it added.

A trader said the BTr made a partial award of its T-bill offer as yields climbed, still due to the BSP’s recent rate hike and expectations of more increases to come.

The BSP hiked benchmark interest rates by 50 bps for a second straight meeting on Feb. 16 to tame inflation.

This brought its policy rate to 6%, the highest in nearly 16 years or since May 2007 when it stood at 7.5%.

It has now raised borrowing costs by 400 bps since May 2022.

BSP Governor Felipe M. Medalla last week said they could hike borrowing costs again at their meeting on March 23, adding that a smaller 25-bp move is the “most likely” option amid signs of slower inflation in February.

Meanwhile, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the partial awarding “may have to do with higher bid yields and lower amount of bids compared to the previous week.” 

Mr. Ricafort added that rates rose amid “more hawkish signals recently from Fed officials and markets already pricing in three more Fed rate hikes of at least 25 bps in March, May, and June 2023 [which] could also be matched locally, at the very least.”

Cleveland Fed President J. Loretta Mester, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, Boston Fed President Susan M. Collins, and Fed Governor Christopher J. Waller last week said more rate hikes would be needed to tame inflation after data released on Friday showed consumer spending in January increased by the most in nearly two years or since March 2021 to 1.8% last month.

The US central bank hiked its fed funds rate by 25 bps in its Jan. 31 to Feb. 1 meeting to a range between 4.5% and 4.75%. This brought cumulative increases since March 2022 to 450 bps.

The Fed’s next policy meeting is on March 21-22.

“The markets are still waiting for the latest local inflation data and yet to see if it already topped out,” Mr. Ricafort added.

Headline inflation hit a 14-year high of 8.7% in January, faster than the 8.1% in December 2022 and 3% a year ago. This was also well above the BSP’s 2-4% target and 6.1% forecast for the year.

On Tuesday, the BTr will offer P25 billion in reissued seven-year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) with a remaining life of six years and two months.

The Treasury wants to raise P200 billion from the domestic market this month, or P75 billion via T-bills and P125 billion via T-bonds.

The government borrows from local and foreign sources to help fund its budget deficit, which is capped at 6.1% of gross domestic product this year. — Aaron Michael C. Sy

Sun, sand and no inheritance tax fuel property boom in Mauritius

WITH its long stretches of white-sand beaches, blue lagoons and lack of inheritance tax, the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius has long been a beloved destination for high-net-worth individuals in search of seclusion.

Now, a new player is upping the ante for leisure-seekers. Kerzner International, developer of the Atlantis The Royal — the ultra-luxury Dubai hotel that recently hosted Beyoncé in a $100,000-a-night suite — is investing about $100 million in 52 ultra-exclusive villas on Mauritius’ eastern coast. Prices for properties on the former nine-hole golf course range from $2.8 million for a two-bedroom unit to $14.4 million for a seafront villa.

Interest has been robust, with more than 80% of all available units in final negotiations, the developer said in January. Only “a few units” with the four-bedroom configuration have yet to be sold.

Property is a key source of direct investment in Mauritius, which relies mostly on tourism and manufacturing exports for foreign currency. Between 2014 and mid-2022, foreign direct investment in high-end property totaled 63.3 billion rupees ($1.368 billion), or roughly 40% of all inflow, according to the Bank of Mauritius. As real estate has boomed, that number has been steadily ballooning. Last year, the finance ministry projected that property sales helped push inflows to 25 billion rupees.

Located 1,200 miles off the eastern coast of Africa and a four-hour flight from Johannesburg, the former Dutch, French and British colony has been a hotspot for high-end tourists for 70 years, although foreigners were banned from buying property in Mauritius until 2002. That year, the government rolled out the Integrated Resort Scheme, which offered residency to any foreign buyer who spent at least $375,000 on a luxury residence or “development scheme.”   

The first investor to bite was Medine Ltd., which owns 10,000 hectares of land in western Mauritius and set up the Tamarina Golf Estate and Beach Club. The Tamarina now includes 119 villas, a restaurant, a boutique hotel and an 18-hole golf course, and is, according to Joel Bruneau, managing director for the property cluster, “the one fully sold and fully completed IRS estate on the island.”

Among the newer entrants in the market is Heritage Villas Valriche, which sold its first villa in the southwest of the island in 2007 and is now in its final phase of expansion with the construction of 46 new units. In total, said CEO Anton de Waal, the project has attracted 13 billion rupees in foreign direct investment.

More than two decades on, foreign buyers play an outsized role in the local economy, drawn by breathtaking natural vistas, strong airline connections and a favorable tax regime. Property sales have fueled the tourism and hospitality sector, which employs about 100,000 people — or 19%  of the workforce — in this 1.26-million-person country, where average minimum wage is 13,075 rupees ($284) a month, and youth unemployment was nearly 25% in the third quarter of last year.

While France has historically been the main source of buyers, Jyoti Jeetun, CEO of the privately held Mont Choisy Group, believes that may not be the case for long. “Over the last few years, we have seen growing numbers of South Africans looking to invest or relocate to Mauritius,” she said, adding that social unrest could be a reason. Mr. De Waal, of Heritage Villas Valriche, said that his clientele is made up of “about 30% French, 30% South African, 15% from the UK.” The rest is a mix, he added, “including five Mauritians.”

As demand for luxury villas in Mauritius has grown, it has kicked off something of an amenities arms race, said Arnaud Lagesse, chief executive officer of IBL Ltd. And with new entrants like Kerzner showing up, property developers must be “even more creative in their offerings.”

Villa Charlotte, a $10.5-million property located in the Anahita estate on the east coast, showcases the new heights of luxury on offer. In addition to the main residence, the 905-square-meter six-bedroom estate features staff accommodations, an entrance garden and “treatment” suite arrayed around a 25-meter infinity pool fringed with palm trees. Marble was flown in from Italy for the master bathroom, beamed David Rich-Jones, CEO and founder of Richstone Properties, which owns the residence. The villa, he added, reflects “an obsession with details and design.”

Only a few minutes away by golf cart is the well-tended Tamarina course. One morning at the end of November, managers rushed to allocate carts to growing line of players, who sheltered at the restaurant to avoid the light summer drizzle.

Professionally designed golf courses, which are scattered across Mauritius, are another draw for the international elite. The Ile Aux Cerfs Golf Club, planned by two-time Masters champion Bernhard Langer, is located on a private islet of the same name off the coast of the main island. Anahita Golf, by prizewinning South African golfer Ernie Els, is in the seaside village of Trou d’Eau Douce. And Peter Matkovich signed off on the Mont Choisy Le Golf course in the north and Heritage Villas Valriche’s Le Chateau Golf Course in the village of Bel Ombre.

Thierry Vallet, interim CEO of AfrAsia Bank, noted that golf courses are a win-win for both developers and investors. For the former, they offer “unmatched global visibility” by hosting tournaments — the winner of last year’s AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open went home with 170,000 euros — while for the latter, living in a development attached to a golf course brings perks such as security services and landscaped views.

While developers are putting increasingly lavish properties up for sale, the market is also expanding, said Mr. Lagesse. “Even though we still see that there is a market for high end villas — over $1 million — we have noticed that demand has moved toward more practical and safe investments in what we can define as a mid-range market between $300,000 and $750,000,” he said. “In this segment, the market is booming,” he added, citing sales data for the Azuri Ocean & Golf Village, a smart city development on the northeastern coast of the island.

This has been true despite the usual challenges of island living — earlier this month, a cyclone disrupted golf schedules and flights in and out of the island. Nonetheless, as Jeetun of the Mont Choisy Group, put it, “Mauritius has reinforced and broadened its position as a world class lifestyle destination.” — Bloomberg

Hollywood producers honor Tom Cruise and Everything Everywhere

MICHELLE YEOH in Everything Everywhere All At Once.

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Hollywood producers celebrated Tom Cruise’s career and handed their top film honor to multiverse adventure Everything Everywhere All at Once on Saturday at one of the key awards ceremonies ahead of next month’s Oscars.

The Producers Guild of America honored Mr. Cruise with a lifetime achievement award, and several speakers thanked the actor for boosting the pandemic-hobbled movie business with last summer’s blockbuster Top Gun: Maverick.

“Tom Cruise showed all of us that moviegoing was back,” Sherry Lansing, the former CEO of Paramount Pictures, said in her introduction.

The 60-year-old Cruise rose to fame as the star of Risky Business, Cocktail, A Few Good Men and other films.

His producing credits include Vanilla Sky, The Last Samurai, the Mission: Impossible movies and Maverick, which hauled in nearly $1.5 billion at worldwide box offices.

As he accepted his award, Mr. Cruise applauded the work of the TV and film producers in the audience.

“I know what it takes to do what you do,” Mr. Cruise said. “It’s not just luck. You have to create that luck. You have to will it into existence. And I want you to know that I am always rooting for you.”

“I will continue to do all that I can to contribute and help this industry and this art form that I love,” he added.

After Mr. Cruise’s remarks, Everything Everywhere All At Once was named best theatrical motion picture, providing momentum for the movie heading into the Oscars on March 12. Four of the past five winners of the top PGA trophy went on to win the Academy Award for best picture, including last year’s family drama CODA.

Everything Everywhere All At Once tells the story of a Chinese-American laundromat owner struggling to finish her taxes when she is swept into alternate universes.

“This is insane! Thank you so much,” said producer Jonathan Wang, surrounded by Oscar-nominated cast members Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, and Jamie Lee Curtis. — Reuters

Megawide’s P1.5-B preferred share offering secures SEC nod

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced on Monday that it approved the P1.5-billion preferred share offering of listed firm Megawide Construction Corp.

In the commission en banc’s meeting on Feb. 23, the regulator rendered effective the registration statement of the construction company.

However, the SEC said that the registration is still subject to the company’s compliance with the remaining requirements.

The public offering covers 15 million cumulative, redeemable, nonvoting, non-participating, nonconvertible perpetual Series 5 preferred shares.

The preferred shares will be offered at P100 apiece and will be listed on the main board of the Philippine Stock Exchange.

The company expects to raise a net of P1.48 billion from the offering, which will be used to partially fund the full redemption of its outstanding preferred shares.

In a previous disclosure, the company said that the net proceeds will be used to fully redeem its Series 2A preferred shares. It added that if the funds raised are insufficient, Megawide will use internally generated cash to finance the redemption.

Proceeds from the Series 2A shares were used to finance infrastructure investments such as the new terminal at Clark International Airport and the Mactan Cebu International Airport.

The preferred share offering will run from March 13 to 21, with the listing date set on the stock exchange on March 31, as per the latest timetable submitted to the SEC.

Megawide tapped RBC Capital Corp. as the sole issue manager, lead underwriter, and sole bookrunner for the offer. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

RCBC’s 2022 profit rises by 71% to P12.1 billion

RIZAL COMMERCIAL Banking Corp. (RCBC) saw its net income rise by 71% to P12.1 billion in 2022 amid the improved performance of its core businesses.

The listed bank said in a disclosure to the local bourse that its 2022 earnings translated to a return on equity of 11.2% and a return on assets of 1.2%.

Its quarterly report was not available as of press time.

“We continue to work hard and smart to accelerate our transformation journey. Delivering best-in-class customer experience remains our main thrust. And so we are excited to develop more digital innovations and disruptive solutions that can reshape the way we do banking,” RCBC President and Chief Executive Officer Eugene S. Acevedo was quoted as saying.

The lender said the rise in its net profit last year was supported by the “double-digit” increase in core business income.

“RCBC achieved significant expansion in various business segments during the year. Investment securities rose by over 70% year on year, while SME (small and medium enterprise) loans and credit cards posted solid double-digit increases,” it said.

“The credit card business recorded a faster-than-industry growth in billings and balances, while keeping NPL (nonperforming loans) at its lowest in over a decade. Data science and analytics were instrumental in boosting customer acquisition and cross-selling to augment the bank’s foothold across key segments,” RCBC added.

The bank’s fee income also rose 19% year on year amid higher retail, bancassurance and digital transactions.

RCBC’s total assets stood at P1.2 trillion at end-2022. It said this came on the back of a 23% increase in earning asset volume.

The bank’s net interest margin was at 3.7%, while total deposits rose 27% year on year.

Its capital adequacy ratio and common equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratios stood at 15.29% and 12.33%, respectively.

“With an upcoming P27-billion capital injection from Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, one of Japan’s largest banks and 12th largest bank in the world, RCBC can reinforce its asset growth trajectory to become one of the biggest banks in the country,” the lender said.

The bank had a consolidated network of 462 branches, 1,352 automated teller machines (ATM), and 1,559 ATM Go terminals nationwide at end-2022.

RCBC’s shares closed at P24 each on Monday, down by 35 centavos or by 1.44% from the previous day. — A.M.C. Sy

How PSEi member stocks performed — February 27, 2023

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, February 27, 2023.


Philippines retains its rank in Global Intellectual Property list

The Philippines ranked 37th out of 55 economies in the 11th edition of the International Intellectual Property (IP) Index by by the US Chamber of Commerce’s Global Innovation Policy Center. With an overall index score of 41.58% out of possible 100%, the country placed 9th among 15 Asia economies.

Philippines retains its rank in Global Intellectual Property list