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CLI donates condo buildings for informal settlers in Cebu

Cebu Landmasters, Inc. is building tower 4 of the Tipolo Residences, a mid-rise socialized housing building in Mandaue City. — COMPANY HANDOUT

CEBU Landmasters, Inc. (CLI) said it has donated two medium-rise condo buildings, with a combined value of P215 million, for informal settlers in Cebu City and in Mandaue City.

In a statement, CLI said this donation is part of its commitment to provide quality and sustainable in-city vertical socialized housing.

The company recently turned over the Walk-Up Sugbo 1 to the Cebu City government, and broke ground on Tower 4 of the Mandaue City government’s Tipolo Residences.

Walk-Up Sugbo 1 is located on a 1,350-square meter (sq.m.) property in Barangay Lorega-San Miguel. The P115-million medium-rise building features 100 units that will be home to over 100 beneficiary families, who were previously living in danger areas. Each unit has a floor area of 25 sq.m., which is more than the 18 sq.m. required for socialized housing units.

“To us, this is the most meaningful project. We are now starting a project that will become a model. It will become a standard. We hope this will be emulated not just by us but also by other developers,” CLI Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jose Soberano III said in a statement.

“We don’t only build homes, we build sustainable communities. And, we want to give decent homes to the marginalized because they deserve nothing less.”

Walk-Up Sugbo 1 is a collaboration between CLI, the Cebu City government and the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development.

The building features a ground floor chapel, retail spaces for rent, parking area and a livelihood training and multi-purpose hall donated by Cebu Landmasters Foundation. Solar panels will provide electricity for common areas like hallways, stairways and around the property. The building will also have a sewage treatment plant.

Meanwhile, CLI said it will begin construction of the 90-unit Tower 4 of the Tipolo Residences, a mid-rise socialized housing building in Mandaue City.  It is expected to be completed in 18 months.

The building will feature 90 units for the victims of the 2019 fire in Tipolo who are temporarily residing inside the Cebu International Convention Center and for informal settlers. Each unit will have a gross floor area of 24.79 sq.m.

CLI said all units are situated to receive a sufficient amount of daylight, reducing energy use. The ground floor units and common area spaces will be lifted to allow cross ventilation, while a large self-watering green wall will be integrated to provide cooling.

BSP looking to require financial institutions to use standard loan application form

BW FILE PHOTO

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) is looking to mandate financial institutions to use a standard form for business loan applications of small businesses to streamline the process and make credit more accessible.

A draft circular containing guidelines on the adoption of a standard business loan application form (SBLAF) said these templates are designed to improve the process and make it borrower-friendly for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), their target users.

Stakeholders are given until July 15 to submit their feedback on the draft regulation to the BSP.

“The adoption of the SBLAF templates by covered entities supports the MSMEs’ access to financial products and services by facilitating transparency, ease of understanding, and efficiency in loan applications (i.e., reduced turnaround time in processing loan applications),” the central bank said in the proposed guidelines.

“It is also expected to enable the covered entities to improve their risk assessment, hasten turnaround time, and facilitate transition to digital loan application platforms. Moreover, the use of SBLAF among covered entities will likewise support data requirements for improved and consistent credit information services,” it added.

If approved, the new rules will cover BSP-supervised entities offering business loans to MSMEs, namely banks and their subsidiary or affiliate financing and leasing companies, government nonbank financial institutions, stand-alone financing and leasing companies with quasi-banking licenses, and credit granting entities.

Under the proposal, the prescribed templates for loan application will serve as the primary application screening tool to be accomplished by a borrower.

“On a case-to-case basis, covered entities may request additional information and supporting documents commensurate to the borrower’s risk profile in support of sound credit risk management practices and customer due diligence measures,” the central bank said.

There will be two kinds of SBLAF: one for individuals, sole proprietorships, and one person corporations, and another for cooperatives, partnerships, and corporations.

The templates have two components, namely a borrower information sheet and the list of supporting documents. These shall be used for secured or unsecured loan applications of MSMEs seeking financing of business operations and capital expenditures as well as credit accommodations for non-business or personal purposes.

The forms shall be used for new, renewal, and restructuring of covered loan applications.

“The SBLAF templates shall be the sole forms that will be used for covered loan applications. Covered entities are precluded from modifying the templates to preserve the format and minimum information requirements contained therein,” the BSP said.

The central bank said covered entities must ensure the forms are accessible physically or digitally via all channels where borrowers can apply for loans.

Loan applications using the SBLAF will be evaluated and processed using institutions’ approved credit policies and they may refer to their client databases to assess borrowers.

Covered firms will need to submit a quarterly and annual report on their use of the SBLAF to the BSP’s Department of Supervisory Analytics.

The rules, if approved, give covered entities a one-year compliance period, with an additional six months to be given to those that need to make adjustments in the processes and systems to meet the BSP’s new guidelines. — K.B. Ta-asan

Business Expectations Survey

BUSINESS SENTIMENT worsened for the next 12 months, with consumers less likely to spend amid rising oil and food prices, according to the Philippine central bank. Read the full story.

Business expectations survey

Globe says millions of customers report bank-related scam, spam messages

GLOBE Telecom, Inc. on Monday said it partnered with eight major banks to address bank-related scam and spam messages, which reached more than nine million in the first half of the year.

“Globe regularly receives reports of scam and spam messages from eight major banks, including UnionBank (UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc.), with which it has a formal agreement,” Globe said in an e-mailed reply to questions.

From January to June 15, the telco managed to block 9,063,698 messages reported by customers to their banks, it added.

One-time password requests were among the messages blocked.

Globe said it also blocked 1,119 vishing calls, “another scamming scheme where fraudsters call bank customers pretending to be legitimate bank representatives to obtain sensitive information.”

“These bank-related messages and calls are among the total 138 million scam and spam messages that Globe blocked in its network in the first half of the year through a stringent filtering system,” it added.

The telco noted that phishing scams have resulted in a number of depositors losing their money to fraudsters.

“As early as 2019, Globe created a 24/7 group chat with major commercial banks and Mynt, the operator of GCash, for immediate and direct reporting of spam messages mostly received from their customers,” it said.

“Globe has also decided to work with online marketplaces like Lazada and Shopee and provides the same brand whitelisting service as well as 24×7 threat spam/scam intelligence sharing to protect Globe customers that use these e-commerce websites,” the company added. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Visionary British theater director Peter Brook dies aged 97

Peter Brook — WIKIPEDIA.ORG/ JOHN THAXTER

LONDON — Peter Brook, one of the world’s most innovative theater directors who perfected the art of staging powerful drama in bizarre venues, has died aged 97, his publisher said on Sunday.

The British director used the world as his stage mounting productions ranging from challenging versions of Shakespeare through international opera to Hindu epic poems.

Mr. Brook put on plays in gymnasiums, deserted factories, quarries, schools and old gas works in towns around the world.

His 1970 Stratford production of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream played all in white and with a huge garlanded swing, secured his place in the annals of theater history.

According to Le Monde, Mr. Brook — who had been based in France since 1974 — died in Paris on Saturday.

A statement from his publisher confirmed his death on Sunday.

Although Mr. Brook was regarded with awe in theatrical circles, he was less well known among the wider public because of his refusal to bow to commercial taste. He left Britain to work in Paris in 1970.

He often shunned traditional theatrical buildings for the “empty space” which could be transformed by light, words, improvisation and the sheer power of acting and suggestion.

“I can take any empty space and call it a stage,” he wrote in his groundbreaking 1968 book The Empty Space.

His quest for inspiration took him as far afield as Africa and Iran and produced a variety of original improvised plays marked by his eye for detail and challenging approach.

Born in London on March 21, 1925, his father was a company director and his mother a scientist. He left school at 16 to work in a film studio and then went to Oxford University and took a degree in English and Foreign Languages.

In 1970 he transferred from Britain to work in Paris, founding the International Centre of Theatre Research which brought together actors and designers of many different nationalities.

Mr. Brook continued working into his nineties.

“Every form of theater has something in common with a visit to the doctor. On the way out, one should always feel better than on the way in,” he wrote in his 2017 book Tip of the Tongue. — Reuters

US-based GMs Paragua, Barcenilla to beef up PHL in Chess Olympiad

Banjo Barcenilla — PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

UNITED STATES-based Grandmasters (GMs) Mark Paragua and Banjo Barcenilla will reinforce the Philippines seeking nothing less than glory when the 44th World Chess Olympiad returns to face-to-face action from July 28 to Aug. 10 in Chennai, India.

The National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) recently made the announcement of the team that would also be composed of GMs Darwin Laylo and John Paul Gomez and International Master (IM) Paulo Bersamina.

And it came close to making it an all-GM squad for the first time in the country’s Olympiad history had other Filipino GMs like Oliver Barbosa and Julio Catalino Sadorra were available or chosen by the NCFP, which decided to forego qualification tournaments due to lack of time.

Surprisingly, IM Daniel Quizon, a Hanoi Southeast Asian Games silver medalist who topped the country’s last national championship in Lapu-Lapu, Cebu in December last year, was not included in the team.

“We will go straight to Chennai from here, it would be a very long flight,” said Mr. Barcenilla, who is based in Arizona, United States.

WOMEN’S TEAM
Meanwhile, the women’s squad will bannered by Woman GM (WGM) Janelle Mae Frayna, Jan Jodilyn Fronda, Marie Antoinette San Diego, Shania Mae Mendoza, and WGM-candidate Kylen Joy Mordido.

GM Eugene Torre will coach the men’s team while NCFP chief executive officer GM Jayson Gonzales will handle the women’s side.

The country is seeking to improve on its 37th-placed effort in the men’s and 67th in the women’s in Batumi, Georgia four years ago. — Joey Villar

US home sellers slash prices in sudden halt to pandemic boom

FREEPIK

THE turn in the US housing market has been sharp and swift. Just ask Karlyn and Jack Stenhjem, would-be downsizers who dropped the asking price for their home near Seattle by almost $100,000 since May.

The brick Everett, Washington, house, with private access to lakes and trails, is now available for $899,000, a price that makes Karlyn Stenhjem “cringe.”

“Two months ago our house was valued at $1.1 million on Zillow,” she said. “When you look at the map of listings now, the little red dots are on top of the other little red dots.”

The pandemic housing boom is careening to a halt as the fastest-rising mortgage rates in at least half a century upend affordability for homebuyers, catching many sellers wrong-footed with prices that are too high. It’s an astonishing turnaround. Just a few months ago, house hunters felt pushed to make offers within days, waive inspections and bid way above asking. Now they can sleep on it and maybe even shop for a better deal.

It doesn’t mean real estate is heading for a crash on the order of 2008. But when a market reaches these heights, even a drop toward normalcy will feel steep. And of course, a recession could make everything worse.

“The housing market is absolutely in need of a reset,” said George Ratiu, senior economist at Realtor.com. “Overheated markets are unsustainable. Prices will have to adjust. We’re seeing the slowdown in growth already. The question is whether prices drop or move sideways.”

Home listings, while still low, increased in June at the fastest pace in records dating to 2017, according to data released this week from Realtor.com. The cooling is particularly pronounced in pandemic boom areas such as Las Vegas, Denver and California’s Riverside and Sacramento, as well as further east in Austin, Texas; Raleigh, North Carolina; Nashville, Tennessee; and Tampa, Florida.

Sellers with lofty ambitions are having to pare expectations. In the Austin, Phoenix and Las Vegas metro areas, almost a third of listings in June had price cuts, the Realtor.com data show.

Soaring borrowing costs are only part of the issue. Stock-market turmoil and recession fears do little for buyer confidence. And with the country now in a form of COVID normalcy, many of the people who were apt to make pandemic-inspired relocations have already done so.

In Naples, Florida, agent Jennifer DeFrancesco is advising some sellers to drop prices. The flood of calls from buyers in the Northeast have eased. They don’t feel as flush or flexible now that crypto and stock markets are tumbling and employers are demanding more office presence. And those who felt stifled by Covid restrictions in New York and Boston aren’t as antsy to move now that most mandates have lifted, Ms. DeFrancesco said.

“In the month of May, everything came to a screeching halt,” Ms. DeFrancesco said. “We have a rule of thumb that says if you don’t have any showings in 14 days, it’s suggested that you’re 10% overpriced.”

Older buyers are especially worried because they depend on their stocks and savings to live, said Carolyn Young, broker associate with Christie’s International Real Estate Sereno in the East Bay region outside of San Francisco. The buyer pullback has been dramatic for homes she’s marketing at Trilogy at the Vineyards, a 55-and-over community in Brentwood.

She has reduced list prices by $50,000 to $100,000 because cuts that are quick and substantial get buyers in, she said.

“For sellers, it’s devastating, especially if they bought something else earlier and paid too much for that,” Ms. Young said.

Still, most sellers are in a position to reap big profits because they’re sitting on a mountain of equity. In May, US single-family house prices jumped almost 45% from May 2020, the biggest two-year increase on record, according to an analysis of National Association of Realtors data going back to 1968. That capped off a decade of rapid gains.

That means even if homeowners lose jobs in a recession, they’re unlikely to be forced to sell at a loss, limiting the prospects of a widespread foreclosure crisis. And unlike the subprime loans that tanked the economy 14 years ago, the latest boom was built on ultra-low mortgage rates, not risky lending, with demand far outstripping supply.

Even though existing-home sales have been falling since February, prices tend to be stickier and sellers have only started adjusting expectations. With inventory climbing from drastically low levels, prices in many areas are apt to keep rising, just at a slower pace.

Still, the housing downturn will have economic ripple effects. Fewer buyers mean less money spent on landscapers and home decor — to wit, luxury-furnishings seller RH on Wednesday slashed its sales forecast for the second time in a month. It’s also a hit to the real estate industry, where agents and mortgage brokers are getting laid off by the thousands.

Even if home prices moderate, a lack of sales could exacerbate the nation’s housing affordability crisis by pushing more would-be buyers into a rental market where costs are already soaring. That could force young people back into their parents’ basements or to pile in with multiple roommates and drive more families into homelessness.

“I’m worried that this mortgage affordability crisis this year will spill over into a worsening rental affordability crisis,” said Jeff Tucker, senior economist at Zillow.

For now, Daniel Sweeney, a Realtor with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices in Henderson, Nevada, is telling sellers not to panic. Buyers are in shock because of higher rates, but they’ll be back, he tells them. Like commuters upset about $6-per-gallon gas, they’ll bend and pay up, he said.

Still, a house flipper is trying to pull out of a contract to buy a property from one of Mr. Sweeney’s sellers. The investor had 40 properties listed for sale and “nobody looking at them,” Mr. Sweeney said.

“It’s a fast change and that has made people feel concerned that it could get worse,” he said.

The Stenhjems are up against the clock. They’re already paying rent on a one-story home they plan to move to. Jack Stenhjem is 87 and Ms. Karlyn’s not much younger, and the stairs in their old house are getting harder to manage.

The price cut has gotten a couple buyers interested but now they’re wondering whether to make some improvements to the house because so many competing properties have been updated, Ms. Karlyn said.

“It would be nice to make enough on this home in case we live to 100,” she said. “We’re giving away our house at this price.” — Bloomberg

DMCI Homes to develop upscale condo in Makati

FORTIS Residences is a project of DMCI Homes’ premium brand, DMCI Homes Exclusive. — COMPANY HANDOUT

DMCI Homes is developing an upscale mixed-use development with one residential tower in Makati City.

In a statement, the Consunji-led real estate developer said the sales launch for Fortis Residences, located along Chino Roces Avenue, is scheduled this month.

Fortis Residences is the second project under premium brand DMCI Homes Exclusive after Oak Harbor Residences in Asiaworld City, Parañaque City.

DMCI Homes said the project is part of the upcoming Chino Roces Special Mixed-Use District, touted as Makati’s next hub for commerce, culture and recreation.

Adjacent to the residential tower, a mixed-use building will offer office, retail, and commercial spaces.

Fortis Residences will feature a variety of spacious floor plan options. It will also have hotel-like concierge services, and a dedicated customer support team.

“The property will be a showcase of DMCI Homes’ dedication to functional and sustainable design as Fortis Residences will bear the Lumiventt Design Technology — a design innovation that brings abundant natural light and fresh air to the condominium,” the company said.

DMCI Homes said it will work on securing green building certifications for Fortis Residences.

Security Bank starts offer of 1.5-year bonds

BW FILE PHOTO

SECURITY BANK Corp. on Monday started offering 1.5-year peso-denominated bonds and is looking to raise up to P1 billion in fresh funds.

The bonds are being marketed with a fixed rate of 3.7407% per annum, Security Bank said in a disclosure to the stock exchange on Monday.

The proceeds of the bond offer will be used to diversify the bank’s funding sources and support its lending activities, the listed lender said in an e-mail.

The issue size is set at P1 billion with an oversubscription option depending on demand. The bonds will be issued out of Security Bank’s P100-billion peso bond and commercial paper program.

The bonds are available to the market for investments starting at P1 million and in increments of P100,000 thereafter.

The offer period will run until July 15, unless adjusted by the bank.

Security Bank will list the bonds on the Philippine Dealing and Exchange Corp. on July 20 “to provide secondary market liquidity to investors who would like to trade the instruments,” it said.

The lender tapped Philippine Commercial Capital, Inc. (PCCI) to be the sole bookrunner for the issuance. The joint lead arrangers and selling agents for the transaction are PCCI and SB Capital Investment Corp.

Security Bank recorded a higher net income in the first three months of the year amid lower loan loss buffers and an improvement in its core earnings.

The lender’s net profit rose by 66% to P2.7 billion in the first quarter. This translated to a return on shareholders’ equity of 8.81%, while return on assets stood at 1.55%.

Security Bank’s shares closed at P87.60 apiece on Monday, up by 0.34% or 30 centavos from the previous finish. — Keisha B. Ta-asan

Filipino consumers expect to spend less in Q3

Filipino consumers expect to spend less in Q3

Manila Water upgrades pumping station

MANILA Water Co., Inc. announced that it recently upgraded the pumps and motors at its 21st pumping station to meet the increasing water supply demand in Taguig City.

The upgrade is composed of rightsizing three sets of motor pumps with a capacity of 90 million liters per day (MLD) of water each, operated with 700 horsepower, as well as the modification of pump and motor base and fittings.

Emmanuel S. Ferrer III, business manager for Manila Water’s Taguig-Pateros area, said the upgrade will increase the company’s efficiency in providing services to the public.

“The increased efficiency of our 21st pumping station will be of great help in ensuring that the reservoir will be able to meet the demands of the customers, which include the Bonifacio Global City as well as nearby residential areas, for reliable water supply,” he added.

The pumping station began its full operations in 2000 with a capacity of 146 MLD. It has been refilling the 29 million-liter Fort Bonifacio pumping station reservoir 24/7.

In 2016, the average production of the 21st pumping station was 137 MLD.

“With these newly upgraded pumps, its production is expected to boost up to 180 MLD  at peak, serving more than 560,000 population in Taguig City,” Manila Water added.

The water concessionaire services the Metro Manila’s east zone network, which comprises Marikina, Pasig, Makati, Taguig, Pateros, Mandaluyong, San Juan, portions of Quezon City and Manila, and several towns of nearby Rizal province.

At the stock exchange on Monday, Manila Water shares ended unchanged at P16.60 apiece. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

Entertainment News (07/05/22)

ABS-CBN e-books on Beebly

ABS-CBN Books partnered with Beebly, a gamified e-knowledge hub, to bring its best-selling books to mobile. Developed by Philippine-Singapore company Big Crunch Digital, Beebly is an e-reader and e-bookstore that carries recreational books and educational reading materials. Among the best-selling titles from ABS-CBN Books to be available soon on Beebly are Stupid Is Forever  by the late Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago, Pak Humor by TV host and talent manager Ogie Diaz, The Crown: Your Essential Guide to Becoming a Beauty Queen by pageant mentor Jonas Gaffud, Truth & Lies My Mother Told Me by Ruffa Gutierrez, Day, Hard!: Lakas ng Loob, Kapal ng Mukha by Annabelle Rama, Lakas Tawa by comedian Alex Calleja, and Never Be Number Two by social media star Jelai Andres. Readers will be able to access ABS-CBN Books via Beebly’s premium service. Other available titles may be purchased via Beebly’s digital and on-ground payment channels.

CCP Arthouse Cinema screenings

CCP Arthouse Cinema will screen National Artist Fernando Poe Jr.’s Alupihang Dagat (1976) on July 8, 2 p.m., at the Tanghalang Manuel Conde (CCP Audio-Visual Room). There will also be back-to-back screenings of Nadjoua Bansil’s Bohe: Sons of the Waves (2012) and Emmanuel Dela Cruz’s Gabon (2007) at 4 p.m. on the same day to commemorate Eid al-Adha (Feast of the Sacrifice). The film screening, which aims to revisit historical works, is a collaboration with the Film Development Council of the Philippines, the Philippine Film Archive, and the Society of Filipino Archivists for Film.

Steve Aoki summer dance anthem

TWO-time Grammy-nominated artist and producer Steve Aoki and Swedish producer KAAZE join forces on the new track “Whole Again” featuring vocalist John Martin, known for his work with Swedish House Mafia and Martin Garrix. This marks the first time Aoki and KAAZE have collaborated. “Whole Again,” released July 1, is the latest single from Aoki’s forthcoming full-length album HiROQUEST, which will drop on Sept. 16. “Whole Again” can be streamed on Spotify and other music platforms.

War documentaries at MCAD

HISTORICAL documentaries on the life and works of renowned 20th-century artists and how they capitalized on their pieces to provide social criticism on the horrors of wars will be screened for free on the Wednesdays of July. Curated by the Museum of Contemporary Art and Design (MCAD) of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde, the selection showcases truth-sharing and painstaking memory-keeping of the visual masters through films as they encapsulate perspectives and narratives of the battles fought through their artworks. The films to be screened are George Grosz: Enemy of the State (1987) on July 6, Otto Dix: The Painter in the Eyes of the World (1989) on July 13, Chagall (2006) on July 20, and The Art of Henry Moore (2005) on July 27. The free and public online screenings will be conducted via Zoom at noon on the scheduled dates. To register, e-mail mcad@benilde.edu.ph. For more information, visit the official Facebook page of MCAD (facebook.com/MCADManila).