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PHL lady archers shock Vietnam in thrilling shoot-off

PIA Bidaure, Abby Bidaure and Phoebe Amistoso of Team Philippines won the gold for the women’s recurve-team during the 31st SEA Games held in Hanoi, Vietnam. — PSC/NONILON REYES

HANOI — Archery contributed its first gold to the Philippine campaign in the 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games on Wednesday, nipping top seed Vietnam 26-25 in a thrilling shoot-off for the women’s team recurve title at the Hanoi National Training Center.

Abby Bidaure, 20, emerged as the heroine for Team Philippines, hitting the bullseye in the final arrow of the shoot-off for a 10 with just 10 seconds left on the clock, eliciting loud cheers from other members of the team who gingerly watched the thrilling showdown from behind.

The winning team, which included Ms. Bidaure’s sister, Pia, and Phoebe Amistoso, battled back with a 57-49 win in the fourth frame after trailing 1-2 in the first three, forcing a shoot-off that came down to Abby’s winning shot.

Pia, who won her first SEA Games gold in her third try, expected Abby to hit the bullseye and make the difference in the tightly-fought contest.

The archery squad gets a chance to shoot for its second gold on Thursday when it battles Malaysia in the finals of the compound bow mixed team event.

Shooting a perfect last end, the team of Paul dela Cruz and Jennifer Jing Chan came from behind to edge Thailand 155-154 in the semis last Tuesday while the Malaysians beat Vietnam 154-152.

Depp lawyer questions Heard about drugs, love notes in defamation case

Johnny Depp and Amber Heard in a scene from the 2011 film The Rum Diary. — IMDB.COM

LOS ANGELES — Johnny Depp’s attorney grilled the actor’s ex-wife Amber Heard on Tuesday, producing affectionate notes she wrote during their short-lived marriage to challenge her accounts of frequent violence and bolster the Pirates of the Caribbean star’s case for defamation.

Mr. Depp, 58, is suing Ms. Heard for $50 million, saying she defamed him when she claimed she was a victim of domestic abuse. He has testified that he never hit Heard and argued that she was the abuser in their relationship.

During her cross-examination, Depp lawyer Camille Vasquez showed jurors a knife Ms. Heard bought Mr. Depp as a gift in 2012. Ms. Heard, best known for her role in Aquaman, said Mr. Depp had already turned violent by then and often lashed out at her when he was drunk or using drugs.

“This is the knife you gave to the man who would get drunk and violent toward you?” Ms. Vasquez said to Ms. Heard, who responded that she did not think he would stab her with it.

Ms. Heard, 36, has countersued Mr. Depp for $100 million, arguing that Mr. Depp smeared her by calling her a liar. She said she only hit Mr. Depp to defend herself or her sister.

On Tuesday, Depp’s attorney read entries from a journal that Ms. Heard said the couple kept to share love notes.

“True love isn’t about just the madness of passion or instead picking the safety of peace. No, it’s about both,” Ms. Heard wrote in May 2015, two months after an argument in which the top of Mr. Depp’s right middle finger was cut off.

“I still, perhaps more than ever, want to rip you apart, devour you and savor the taste,” she added.

Mr. Depp has said Ms. Heard threw a vodka bottle that injured his finger, while Ms. Heard said it was likely Mr. Depp harmed himself when he smashed a phone into “smithereens.”

In another journal excerpt, after their July 2015 honeymoon aboard the Orient Express, Ms. Heard said she “couldn’t imagine a more gorgeous honeymoon,” and added, “I love you more and more every passing day.”

Ms. Heard had told jurors on Monday that Mr. Depp assaulted her and wrapped a T-shirt around her neck during the trip.

Asked about entries, Ms. Heard said she tried to “nurture as much peace” as possible, and that “when things were good they were really good.”

Ms. Vasquez also showed jurors a proposed schedule for her wedding to Mr. Depp. The agenda included time for a “dance party and drugs and music” after the rehearsal dinner.

“You planned to have drugs at your wedding to someone you characterize as a drug addict?” Ms. Vasquez asked.

Ms. Heard said the schedule was a draft that underwent changes.

The actors wed in February 2015 and their divorce was finalized about two years later.

The legal case centers on a December 2018 opinion piece by Heard that appeared in the Washington Post. The article never mentioned Depp by name, but his lawyer told jurors it was clear that Heard was referencing him.

Mr. Depp, once among Hollywood’s biggest stars, said Ms. Heard’s allegations cost him “everything.” A new Pirates of the Caribbean movie was put on hold, and Mr. Depp was replaced in the Fantastic Beasts film franchise, a Harry Potter spinoff.

Ms. Heard’s attorneys have argued that she told the truth and that her opinion was protected free speech under the US Constitution’s First Amendment.

Less than two years ago, Mr. Depp lost a libel case against the Sun, a British tabloid that labeled him a “wife beater.” A London High Court judge ruled that he had repeatedly assaulted Mr. Heard.

Mr. Depp’s lawyers filed the case in Fairfax County, Virginia, because the Washington Post is printed there. The newspaper is not a defendant. — Reuters

Allianz to pay more than $6B in US fraud case, fund managers charged

BW FILE PHOTO
ALLIANZ SE agreed to pay more than $6 billion, among the largest settlements in corporate history, over the collapse of investment funds during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. — BW FILE PHOTO

NEW YORK/MUNICH — Germany’s Allianz SE agreed to pay more than $6 billion and its US asset management unit pleaded guilty to criminal securities fraud over the collapse of a group of investment funds early in the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

Allianz’s settlements with the US Department of Justice and US Securities and Exchange Commission are among the largest in corporate history, and dwarf earlier settlements obtained under President Joe Biden’s administration.

Gregoire Tournant, the former chief investment officer who created and oversaw the now-defunct Structured Alpha funds, was also indicted for fraud, conspiracy and obstruction, while two other former portfolio managers entered related guilty pleas.

Once with more than $11 billion of assets under management, the Structured Alpha funds lost more than $7 billion as COVID-19 roiled markets in February and March 2020.

Allianz Global Investors US LLC was accused of misleading pension funds for teachers, bus drivers, engineers, religious groups and others by understating the funds’ risks, and having “significant gaps” in its oversight.

Investors were told the funds employed options that included hedges to protect against market crashes, but prosecutors said the fund managers repeatedly failed to buy those hedges.

Prosecutors said the managers also inflated fund results to boost their pay through performance fees, with Mr. Tournant, 55, collecting $13 million in 2019 and becoming his unit’s highest or second-highest-paid employee from 2015 to 2019.

Investigators said the misrepresentations began in 2014, and helped Allianz generate more than $400 million of net profit.

At a news conference, US Attorney Damian Williams in Manhattan said more than 100,000 investors were harmed, and that while American prosecutors rarely bring criminal charges against companies it was “the right thing to do.”

Investors “were promised a relatively safe investment with strict risk controls designed to weather a sudden storm, like a massive collapse in the stock market,” he said. “Those promises were lies…. Today is the day for accountability.”

BLAMING COVID
Also known for its insurance operations, Allianz is among Germany’s most recognizable brands and an Olympic sponsor.

Its namesake arena near its Munich headquarters, meanwhile, houses Bayern Munich, one of world’s best-known soccer teams.

The settlement calls for Allianz to pay a $2.33-billion criminal fine, make $3.24 billion of restitution and forfeit $463 million, court papers show.

Williams said the fine was significantly reduced because of Allianz’s compensation to investors.

Even so, the payout is close to twice the $3.3 billion in corporate penalties that the Justice Department collected for all of 2021.

An Allianz lawyer entered the guilty plea at a hearing before US District Judge Loretta Preska in Manhattan.

Allianz also accepted a $675-million civil fine from by the SEC, one of that regulator’s largest penalties since Enron Corp. and WorldCom, Inc. imploded two decades ago.

Shares of Allianz closed up 1.7% in Germany, with the payout broadly matching reserves that the company previously set aside.

Tournant, of Basalt, Colorado, surrendered to authorities on Tuesday morning.

The US-French citizen appeared briefly in Denver federal court, and was released after agreeing to post a $20-million bond. An arraignment was set for June 2 in New York.

Mr. Tournant’s lawyers, Seth Levine and Daniel Alonso, said the investor losses were “regrettable” but did not result from a crime.

“Greg Tournant has been unfairly targeted [in a] meritless and ill-considered attempt by the government to criminalize the impact of the unprecedented, COVID-induced market dislocation,” the lawyers said in a joint statement.

The other two portfolio managers — Stephen Bond-Nelson, 51, of Berkeley Heights, New Jersey; and Trevor Taylor, 49, of Miami — agreed to plead guilty to fraud and conspiracy, and cooperate with prosecutors. Their lawyers declined immediate comment.

VOYA PARTNERSHIP
Allianz’s guilty plea carries a 10-year ban on Allianz Global Investors’ providing advisory services to US-registered investment funds.

As a result, Allianz plans to move about $120 billion of investor assets to Voya Financial Inc. in exchange for a stake of up to 24% in Voya’s investment management unit. It expects a final agreement in the coming weeks.

Regulators said the misconduct included when Mr. Tournant and Bond-Nelson altered more than 75 risk reports before sending them to investors.

The SEC said projected losses in one market crash scenario were changed to 4.15% from the actual 42.15%, simply by removing the “2.”

Allianz’s alleged oversight lapses included a failure to ensure Mr. Tournant was hedging, though prosecutors said only people in his group knew of the misconduct before March 2020.

“No compliance system is perfect, but the controls at AGI didn’t even stand a chance,” Williams said.

Bond-Nelson, at Mr. Tournant’s direction, also lied to Allianz’s in-house lawyers after the company learned about the altered reports and the SEC probe, prosecutors added.

“Unfortunately, we’ve seen a recent string of cases in which derivatives and complex products have harmed investors across market sectors,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said in a statement.

Investors have also filed more than two dozen lawsuits against Allianz over the Structured Alpha funds. — Reuters

Converge secures tax incentives for ‘missionary’ fiber rollout in remote areas 

CONVERGE ICT Solutions, Inc. announced on Wednesday that it will enjoy tax incentives from the government for deploying fiber internet services in unserved and underserved areas.

The company has “secured the approval of the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) to avail of tax incentives for its multi-phased establishment of connectivity facilities for high-speed broadband services targeting undeveloped and underdeveloped areas nationwide until 2026,” Converge said in an e-mailed statement.

“Under the approved incentives, Converge will receive four years of income tax holiday followed by five years of enhanced deductions or special corporate income tax as laid out in the CREATE Law (Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises law), as well as 11 years of duty- free importation of capital equipment, raw materials, spare parts or accessories starting from the Registration Date,” it added.

The company believes the FIRB approval was a recognition of the “missionary nature” of its project, which is expected to “bring connectivity to marginalized areas of the Philippines.”

“Broadband connectivity is one of the priority sectors that have a direct impact on AmBisyon Natin 2040, the government’s long-term vision for the nation,” it said.

Converge, which saw its attributable net income increase by 27% to P1.97 billion in first quarter, targets to roll out fiber-to-the-home infrastructure to cover more than 1,200 unserved and underserved towns nationwide.

“The digital infrastructure will make use of the latest technologies that allow higher capacity and faster data transmission,” it said.

The first phase of the company’s nationwide fiber internet rollout started in November last year.

Citing 2021 data from the Media Partners Asia, Converge said the fiber penetration in the country is only 17% of households, lagging far behind some Southeast Asian countries whose penetration rates have breached 40% and even reached 80% in Vietnam.

“The target of the Broadband Commission for Sustainable Development is for middle income countries including the Philippines to reach 65% broadband internet penetration by 2025,” it added.

The company’s revenues increased by 40% to P7.75 billion from P5.55 billion in the same period in 2021, its first-quarter report showed.

Revenues from the company’s residential business increased by 42% to P6.81 billion during the period from P4.80 billion previously, driven by a 52.5% year-on-year growth in its subscriber base. It ended the quarter with 1,802,202 residential subscribers.

Enterprise revenues increased by 25% to P935 million in the first three months of the year from P750 million in the same period in 2021. The increase was fueled by robust growth in the small and medium enterprise (SME) segment. Its SME customers surged by 200%, reaching 25,810 as of March 31.

Converge ICT shares closed 0.54% lower at P28 apiece on Wednesday. — Arjay L. Balinbin

OPPO set to introduce Find X5 Pro in PHL

OPPO Find X5 Pro

GLOBAL smart device brand OPPO is set to introduce the Find X5 Pro in the Philippines on Thursday, it said in a statement.

The flagship OPPO Find X5 Pro, released abroad in March, is equipped high-end camera technology to allow users to take sharp and high-quality photos and videos.

“To empower your every moment, especially those at night, the flagship device integrates OPPO’s self-developed imaging Neural Processing Unit (NPU), known as MariSilicon X, a breakthrough in night videography. It enables users to capture bright and high-quality videos at night,” OPPO said.

“This powerful feature is reinforced as the OPPO Find X5 Pro leverages the Hasselblad Camera for Mobile, which delivers accurate and natural colors to your life’s every moment,” it added.

Based on OPPO’s website, the Find X5 Pro is powered by a Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 processor and has a 6.7-inch OLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate. The phone runs on Android 12 with ColorOS 12.

The flagship device has a 5,000mAh battery that supports fast and wireless charging.

It has a triple rear camera setup: a 50-megapixel (MP) main camera, a 13-MP telephoto lens, and a 50-MP ultrawide lens. The phone also has a 32-MP front camera.

The Find X5 Pro’s cameras can shoot videos in 4K and also support Ultra HDR and feature optical image stabilization.

The phone comes in Ceramic Black, Ceramic White and Blue. It is offered in 8GB and 12GB RAM with storage options at 256GB and 512GB. — BVR

Cycling team targets first gold in criterium event

HOA BINH — Jermyn Prado leads the women’s team and Jan Paul Morales heads the men’s squad as the Philippines targets its first gold medal in cycling in the criterium event of the 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games on Thursday morning.

Joining Ms. Prado — individual time trial gold and road silver medalist in 2019 in Tagaytay City — are 2019 SEA Games cross-country mountain bike bronze medalist Avegail Rombaon and 2021 national trials road winner Kate Yasmine Velasco.

With Mr. Morales in the race set over a 1.48-km circuit in the heart of this rustic city some 90 kilometers southeast of the capital Hanoi are fellow sprinters Dominic Perez and Aidan James Mendoza.

“It will be a solid sprinting and endurance race all the way,” said cycling head coach Ednalyn Hualda, who thanked the Philippine Olympic Committee and Philippine Sports Commission for fully supporting the team’s SEA Games campaign.

“Because this is a race to the finish, there will be no relaxing for the cyclists,” added Mr. Hualda.

The starters for the other countries remained pending until Wednesday afternoon’s team managers meeting although a maximum of 33 riders are expected to see action in the three-to-ride per team event.

The women’s race is set for 10 a.m. (Manila time) consists of 20 laps for a total of 29.60 kms and the men’s race up at 11:30 a.m. 30 laps for 44.40 kms.

Format is race to finish — meaning the top three riders are awarded the gold, silver and bronze medals.

Cycling delivered three bronze medals in mountain bike courtesy of John Derrick Farr and Naomi Gardoce in downhill and Jericho Rivera in downhill.

The Philippines clinched three golds — Ms. Prado, Mr. Farr, and Lea Denis Belgira in downhill — four silvers and four bronzes in the 2019 Games.

Cannes Film Festival opens with Zelensky appeal to world cinema

CANNES, France — The Cannes Film Festival opened up Tuesday with crowded red carpet arrivals, a star-studded ceremony, and a call from Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky for the world of cinema to speak out against the war.

“We need a new (Charlie) Chaplin to prove that today cinema is not silent,” said Zelensky, referring to Charlie Chaplin’s satire of Adolf Hitler at the outset of World War II in 1939.

“We must be victorious. We need cinema to guarantee this ending, that each time it will be on the side of freedom,” said the Ukraine leader through a live video link from Kyiv during the opening ceremony, marking a somber note in the otherwise festive proceedings.

Event organizers had rolled out the red carpet earlier in the day, as cinema stars, festival-goers, and oglers gathered for the 75th anniversary event, bringing buzz and glamor back to the French Riviera resort, as well as discussions about the role of cinema during times of conflict.

The festival kicked off with the screening of zombie film Final Cut, by Michel Hazanavicius, who was joined by cast members Berenice Bejo and Romain Duris on the red carpet.

In the opening ceremony, festival president Pierre Lescure handed Forest Whitaker an Honorary Palme d’Or for lifetime achievement, prompting a standing ovation.

“An honorary Palme to the artist, the filmmaker, the UNESCO ambassador, simply, a citizen of the world,” said Lescure.

The actor’s production company is showing For the Sake of Peace, a documentary on the war in South Sudan.

The world’s biggest film festival runs from May 17-28 and will include screenings of Hollywood titles including Tom Cruise’s Top Gun: Maverick and Baz Luhrmann’s musical drama Elvis. — Reuters

Lagarde gives central bank chiefs louder voice on policy

EUROPEAN Central Bank President Christine Lagarde has given national central bank chiefs a bigger say in policy meetings, sources said. — BW FILE PHOTO

FRANKFURT — European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde has given national central bank chiefs a bigger say in policy meetings, asking her own board to speak less and set aside more time for debate, sources familiar with the process said.

Ms. Lagarde has told chief economist Philip Lane and fellow board member Isabel Schnabel to limit their presentations and leave more space for the central bank chiefs of the euro’s 19 countries to air their views, six sources told Reuters.

Marshalling consensus among different countries has always been a tricky task for the Frankfurt-based central bank and complaints about the structure of the meetings, where a few voices typically dominate, predate Ms. Lagarde’s tenure.

Such criticism has grown since last summer as Mr. Lane and his staff repeatedly underestimated the size and duration of inflationary pressures. The surge in prices, which some ECB policy makers warned were persistent, eventually prompted the central bank to change tack and open the door to higher interest rates this year.

Ms. Lagarde has now decided to limit board member presentations to 20 pages and told staff to wrap up seminars by lunchtime on the first day of the ECB’s policy meeting, the sources said.

On top of that, the two-day policy meeting now starts on Wednesday morning rather than the afternoon and the Thursday session begins 30 minutes earlier than previously, all with the aim of leaving more space for debate, the sources said.

The changes, which have not previously been reported, were already in use at the April 14 meeting.

“We are now providing more comprehensive analysis in supporting documents prior to the meeting so that presentations can be more concise to avoid repetition,” an ECB spokesperson said. “By starting meetings earlier, the Governing Council has given itself more time to reach a shared assessment of the economic outlook and take collective monetary policy decisions.”

As the person who oversees economic forecasts and the author of policy recommendations at the ECB, Mr. Lane’s presentations and proposals are the centre piece of its policy meetings, which include an informal dinner on the Wednesday evening attended by the national bank chiefs and the six ECB board members.

Before the changes where introduced, some of Mr. Lane’s presentations ran to over 60 pages, three of the sources said, leaving little time for discussion.

Although the new directive also applies to Schnabel, the other board member who addresses the meeting and who is head of the ECB’s market operations, her presentations on financing conditions tend to be relatively short, three sources said.

Lane, who had inherited the meeting structure from his predecessor under Mario Draghi’s presidency, has recently been sending briefing materials to governors ahead of meetings, freeing time for others to speak.

He declined to comment for this story.

Inflation in the euro zone is currently nearly four times the ECB’s target and may not fall back below 2% for years, according to a host of public and private sector projections.

Some policy makers had publicly warned that price surges could be bigger and more durable than the ECB predicted and disputed Lane’s view that the record jump would ease without tougher action. Some policy makers said privately they felt the contrasting views were given short shrift by Mr. Lane.

“Philip has an oversized voice in the discussion so it’s good to balance that out,” one of the sources said. None of the sources wished to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.

Mr. Lane and all other ECB policy makers who have spoken in public have now recognized that high inflation was here to stay at least until next year and rate hikes are likely needed.

JOACHIM?
In what one source saw as a possible change of approach at the April policy meeting, Ms. Lagarde called on Bundesbank chief Joachim Nagel in the early exchanges of the debate, even though Mr. Nagel had not yet appeared to ask to speak.

Mr. Nagel, who started on the job in January, has repeatedly called on the ECB to curb stimulus and raise rates several times this year as high inflation, now at 7.5%, was at risk of getting entrenched.

“Lagarde said ‘I think Joachim wanted to say something,’” one of the sources said.

The ECB has acknowledged errors in its inflation projections but has noted that other forecasters looking at the euro zone were similarly wrong and errors in “conditioning assumptions,” particularly for energy prices, accounted for three-quarters of the mistake.

Other central banks including the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England have also failed to predict the recent price surge which has been stoked by successive waves of the coronavirus pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. However, both were quicker to admit that inflation is not as transitory as once hoped.

The errors in the ECB’s forecasts forced the bank into an unprecedented policy pivot, with Ms. Lagarde first saying that a rate hike this year is highly unlikely, then just months later cementing expectations for a move around midyear.

Frustration that the bank had to switch gears so abruptly and as well the format of debate at policy meetings have prompted some policy makers to leak details of the policy meetings, the sources said.

“Christine (Lagarde) is really annoyed by the leaks and this is another step in trying to stop them,” one of the sources said.

When she took office in late 2019, Ms. Lagarde pledged to make the policy-making process more inclusive after the fractious final months of Mr. Draghi’s presidency — when a number of policy makers vocally opposed policy decisions.

Her move to restructure meetings is seen as part of this commitment.

Shortening presentations in favour of discussion brings the ECB closer into line with the practices of other central banks, including the Fed. — Reuters

SSI Group forms joint venture with Gucci

SPECIALTY retailer SSI Group, Inc. said its subsidiary entered into a joint venture agreement with the entity behind Gucci to form a company named Luxury Goods Philippines, Inc. (LGPI).

It said the agreement was forged on May 17 between its unit Stores Specialists, Inc. and G Distribution B.V. (Gucci).

“The joint venture between SSI and Gucci further strengthens the cooperation between Gucci and SSI, and is expected to further accelerate the growth of the Gucci brand in the Philippines and enable operating efficiencies, as Gucci and SSI transition from a franchisor-franchisee relationship, to joint venture partners,” SSI told the stock exchange on Wednesday.

SSI said LGPI will have an initial capital of P350 million. The listed company will own 25% of the joint venture while Gucci will own the remaining 75%. The numbers translate to an initial investment amount of P87.5 million for SSI and P262.5 million for Gucci.

“LGPI is expected to commence operations on June 1, 2022, and shall own and operate Gucci stores in the Philippines,” it added.

SSI said the joint venture’s profits will be distributed pro-rata between SSI and Gucci.

On Tuesday, reported a net income of P67.7 million in the first quarter, turning around from a loss of P99.5 million in the similar period the year before. Sales during the quarter were up 28% to P4.5 billion, with e-commerce sales also increasing by 21% year on year.

In 2021, the company’s net income was up 117% to P151 million. Revenues likewise rose by 26% to P15.5 billion.

The company’s brand portfolio ranges from luxury, casual, fast fashion, footwear, accessories and luggage, among others.

SSI’s specialty retail footprint consists of 570 stores located within approximately 83 malls across the Philippines.

At the stock exchange, shares in the company were unchanged at P1.27 each on Wednesday. — VVS

Musk signs Twitter deal without asking for more info

TWITTER, Inc. published its account on Tuesday of its deal negotiations with Elon Musk, showing he opted out of asking the questions about the social media company’s business he has now cited in declaring the $4-billion acquisition is “on hold.”

The account, published in Twitter’s proxy statement that outlines what shareholders need to know to vote on the deal, paints a picture of Musk in a rush to clinch a deal with his “best and final” offer.

Mr. Musk negotiated the Twitter deal over the weekend of April 23 and April 24 without carrying out any due diligence, the proxy statement shows.

Since signing the deal on April 25, Mr. Musk has questioned the accuracy of Twitter’s public filings about spam accounts representing less than 5% of its user base, claiming they must be at least 20%. This is despite Twitter stating in its filings that the numbers could be higher than it estimates.

Independent researchers have projected that 9% to 15% of the millions of Twitter profiles are bots.

Mr. Musk tweeted on Tuesday that Twitter Chief Executive Parag Agrawal has refused to show proof for his company’s estimate and that the deal cannot move forward until he does. Twitter’s proxy statement shows that in the run-up to the deal Mr. Musk made no effort to get information about the issue.

“Mr. Musk did not ask to enter into a confidentiality agreement or seek from Twitter any non-public info regarding Twitter,” Twitter said in its proxy statement.

The proxy statement makes no mention of threats Mr. Musk has tweeted about not going ahead with the deal if he does not get to the bottom of how many spam accounts are on the platform.

Twitter investors appeared convinced that a deal at the agreed price was now out of the question. Twitter shares were trading around $37.55 on Tuesday afternoon, a discount of more than 30% to the $54.20 per share deal price.

Mr. Musk suggested for the first time on Monday at a conference in Miami that the deal could be done at a lower price, without specifying what that could be. He has yet to inform Twitter that he wants to renegotiate the deal.

Legal experts have said Mr. Musk would likely lose in court if he tried to walk away from a deal. But they say that any litigation would likely be protracted and cast uncertainty over Twitter’s business. Even companies that have prevailed in court over their acquirers have ended up negotiating financial settlements.

Mr. Musk is contractually obligated to pay a $1-billion breakup fee if he does not complete the deal, but Twitter can sue for “specific performance” to force Mr. Musk to complete a deal and obtain a settlement from him as a result.

Ann Lipton, a professor at Tulane University Law School, said the fact that Mr. Musk had not asked Twitter for information before signing the deal meant he would now have to show that the company’s public filings were wrong and posed significant long-term financial issues — a high legal bar.

“Twitter has long said ‘this is our estimate of spam but we might be wrong.’ So it’s not clear that they said anything false,” Ms. Lipton said.

COMMITTED TO THE DEAL
Twitter said on Tuesday it remained committed to the deal at the agreed price and expected it to be completed in 2022.

The San Francisco-based company said in its proxy statement that Mr. Musk expressed his interest in joining its board or taking it private on March 26. This would indicate that Mr. Musk mischaracterized his stake of more than 9% in Twitter as passive when he revealed it in a regulatory filing on April 4. He subsequently clarified it was an active stake.

Representatives of Mr. Musk did not respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Musk also told Twitter that he contemplated starting a competitor, according to the proxy statement.

Twitter’s CEO, Mr. Agrawal, is entitled to a $60.2-million golden parachute if the deal closes, while the company’s chief financial officer, Ned Segal, would get $46.4 million, the proxy shows. Twitter’s top lawyer, Vijaya Gadde, would be paid $30 million.

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. stands to be paid $65 million for advising Twitter once the deal is completed, having already been paid $15 million, the proxy statement shows.

Another Twitter adviser, JPMorgan Chase & Co., stands to be paid $48 million once the deal closes, having already made $5 million for its fairness opinion to the company. — Reuters

Hokkaido inks Dwight Ramos for 2022-23 season in Japan B.League

BLEAGUE

GILAS Pilipinas ace Dwight Ramos is staying put in the Japan B.League albeit with a different squad after striking a deal with Levanga Hokkaido.

Hokkaido announced Mr. Ramos’ signing on Wednesday, securing his services for the 2022-2023 season in a bid to boost its playoff bid after struggling this season.

“I’m looking forward to playing with very talented players in Hokkaido and hopefully making a run in the playoffs next season,” said Mr. Ramos, who suited up for the Toyama Grouses in his debut B.League season.

The 23-year-old Filipino import played 46 games for Toyama, registering solid averages of 10.0 points, 3.9 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.1 steals in 24 minutes of action.

The Grouses, however, missed the playoffs with a 24-35 slate at 14th place of the 22-team B.League standings.

Levanga Hokkaido also struggled at 16th place with a 21-35 record but is counting on Dwight Ramos’ contribution this time to make a deep run.

Other Filipino players playing in Japan are Thirdy Ravena (San-en), Kiefer Ravena (Shiga), Kobe Paras (Niigata), and Ray Parks, Jr., (Nagoya), who was the only one to make the playoffs this season.

Top prospect Justine Baltazar is reportedly on his way to join other Filipinos in the Land of the Rising Sun for the Hiroshima Dragonflies while Javi Gomez de Liaño made the jump to the PBA after one season with the Ibaraki Robots.

Gibson guitar smashed on night rock band Oasis split sold at auction

1960 – Oasis- Noel Gallagher | Gibson — PHOTO FROM MILLESIMEGUITARS.COM
1960 – Oasis- Noel Gallagher | Gibson — PHOTO FROM MILLESIMEGUITARS.COM

PARIS — A 1960 Gibson electric guitar used by Oasis star Noel Gallagher before it was smashed up by his brother and former band mate Liam Gallagher during a row on the night the band split sold at auction in Paris for €300,000 ($315,900) on Tuesday.

Liam Gallagher wrecked the red Gibson at a festival in the French capital in 2009, shortly before the band had been due on stage, in a fit of fury that was to become a cult moment in music history.

It was later painstakingly repaired by a French luthier.

“This 1960 Gibson 355 serial #A34884 was the guitar that Liam Gallagher smashed up in Paris 2009 the night Oasis split up,” Noel Gallagher wrote in a note presented with the guitar.

“It was also my #1 favorite guitar that I used to both writing and recording using it on many Oasis recordings as well as using it live! Peace, love + bananas!!”

Formed in Manchester in 1991, Oasis had its heyday at the height of Britpop fame in the 1990s, with hits such as “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “Wonderwall.”

But the brothers’ famous feuds led to a break-up in 2009, after tempers flared at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris, prompting Noel to quit the group. — Reuters