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How venture capital created the modern world

VECTORJUICE-FREEPIK

VENTURE CAPITAL (VC) is by far the most interesting form of capital — and, along with tech entrepreneurs, venture capitalists are the most interesting sort of capitalists. Over the past 60-odd years VCs have propelled Silicon Valley to the heart of the world economy. Now they are driving the rise of artificial intelligence and other clever technologies in China. Most capitalists focus on predictable returns. VCs are in the business of betting on the future. If capitalism is about creative destruction, as Joseph Schumpeter argued, then venture capital is creative destruction taken to the nth degree.

How does the venture capital industry work its wonders? Is there a replicable formula for successful VC investing, or is it just a matter of being in the right place at the right time? And how secure is Silicon Valley’s dominance of the industry? Sebastian Mallaby’s absorbing new book, The Power Law: Venture Capital and the Art of Disruption, seeks to answer these questions.

Mallaby, a veteran journalist and a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, has set himself the grand task of chronicling the rise of our current finance-focused version of capitalism, and does so in much the same liberal, optimistic spirit in which Thomas Macaulay chronicled the rise of parliamentary liberty in the mid-19th century. (Full disclosure: I was Mallaby’s colleague at The Economist for many years.) In More Money Than God he told the story of hedge funds. In The Man Who Knew he profiled Alan Greenspan and through him the Federal Reserve in its pomp. He now brings his trademark mixture of exhaustive research and clear analysis to his most interesting subject so far.

In our author’s view venture capital owes its success to two principles: the power of networks and the logic of what is known as the Pareto principle. This book is in a sense the story of two great economists, Ronald Coase and Vilfredo Pareto.

Coase, a Nobel Prize-winner, analyzed the modern economy in terms of the interaction of firms and markets: Firms make sense if the cost of doing things internally is lower than the cost of going to the market. Mallaby argues for the importance of a third force — networks.

In legal terms, venture funds are private limited partnerships that pool the partners’ money to fund particular ventures (they are very similar to the funds that financed individual sea voyages before the rise of the limited liability company). In practical terms, they are networks of contacts and expertise. Venture capitalists have achieved their disproportionate impact because they combine the strengths of both corporations and markets. They are like companies in that they can provide startups with management skills, corporate resources, and strategic vision, and like markets in that they are fluid and flexible. Networks don’t so much trump markets and corporations as supercharge both.

For his part, Pareto famously observed that 80% of the land in Italy was held by 20% of the people just as 20% of the pea pods in his garden produced 80% of the peas. In the world of the normal distribution curve, nearly all the observable variations in a data set cluster around the average and the tails of the curve get ever thinner until they disappear. In the world of the Pareto principle, or what was later called the power law, the tail extends and expands. The rich go on getting richer and the famous more famous. This is the world venture capitalists inhabit: The vast majority of startups end up being worth nothing, but a handful will become superstars, paying for all the dud investments many times over. “Venture capital is not even a home-run business,” Bill Gurley of Benchmark once remarked. “It’s a grand-slam business.”

Yet how do you build a successful industry on the power of networks and the logic of the Pareto principle? Venture capital is an inherently inexact business. There are no precise metrics to measure world-changing ideas in the same way that conventional investors can measure the book value of a company and hedge funders can discover hidden patterns in markets. VCs are in the business of making long-term bets on talent, but talent is impossible to measure with any exactitude. Sometimes jerks who appear to be geniuses turn out to be plain jerks. Sometimes people with astonishing ideas can’t hack it in business. Still, in reading Mallaby’s detailed narrative I counted five informal rules for success.

First: You need to be a consummate valley insider, preferably a former tech entrepreneur yourself, like Peter Thiel, the PayPal cofounder who went on to create the Founders Fund in 2005. The venture capital firm Accel even had a “90% rule” — they should know 90% of what founders are going to say before they open their mouths.

Second: You need to combine two qualities that are not often found together, revolutionary zeal and patience. VCs are in the business of disrupting established ways of doing things, but they usually have to wait years for their hunches to pay off. Today’s most revolutionary form of capital is also the most patient.

Third: You must understand that you are in the liberation business, freeing talent to do what it does best. Arthur Rock created the modern VC industry in the late 1950s because he set himself the task of freeing talented scientists from the prison of Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory, where they were being driven to distraction by William Shockley’s egomania, and then providing the liberated scientists with the resources that they needed to turn ideas into products.

Fourth: You must understand that liberation takes the form of management as well of money. VCs must provide entrepreneurs with management either in the form of advice, expertise, or even an outside CEO. This task is rendered more complicated by talent’s ambivalence about liberation: It’s not uncommon for entrepreneurs to resist the imposition of a management team, particularly a new CEO, even if they have repeatedly demonstrated that, left to themselves, they can’t run a whelk stall.

Fifth: You need to be willing to disrupt yourself with the same ruthless enthusiasm that you disrupt other industries, including dismissing older partners if their networks age and their ideas go out of fashion. Kleiner Perkins dominated the valley for a quarter of a century only to decline precipitously. Sequoia, one of the most persistently successful ventures, reminded itself of its mortality by producing a slide of “the departed”: partnerships that had flourished and then failed.

How secure is the valley’s global leadership of the industry that it invented? The most successful rising venture capital powers are small countries such as Singapore and Israel. Europe has failed miserably in getting into the game. The exception to this picture is the country that really matters, China. In the early 2000s the dot-com bust persuaded hungry venture capitalists to look elsewhere for growth, and no big market was growing faster than China. The Chinese, as is their way, quickly learnt from the masters, using their newfound skills as VCs not only to make money but to build strategic industries. In 2017 China overtook the US as the top country for venture returns measured by current returns on investment. China is leading the world in a growing number of new technologies, including drones, mobile payments, next generation 5G networking equipment, face recognition and AI. With the US military-industrial complex frozen in the 1950s, the Americans continue to pour billions into aircraft carriers while the Chinese mass-produce cheap, expendable, autonomous drones that, deployed in vast swarms, may render the floating hulks obsolete.

Mallaby nevertheless concludes that America’s venture-capital machine is “an enduring pillar of national power.” Here his argument is a bit too Whiggish for my taste: The 2020s are not the 1990s, and we deserve a bit of Oswald Spengler mixed in with our Macaulay. Is an economy based on the power law compatible in the long term with a political system based on democracy and equality? Is the domination of the tech industry by so many freaks and misfits a cause for concern? (Among the many extraordinary facts that our author has unearthed is that four of the six early PayPal employees built bombs when they were in high school.) And is there a connection between the Californian business elite’s success at producing technological marvels and the political elite’s failure to prevent social breakdown? I worry that the answers to these questions are dark ones, not least because, the last time I visited San Francisco, the streets were paved not with venture-capital gold but with human excrement and used syringes.

There is no doubt that California venture capitalists have been geniuses at thinking up new ways of making money, as Mallaby engagingly demonstrates. But when it comes to thinking about how to preserve a healthy civilization California’s politicians have been as thick as a brick.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

NATO sends ships, fighter jets to eastern Europe

MOSCOW/BRUSSELS — NATO said on Monday it was putting forces on standby and reinforcing eastern Europe with more ships and fighter jets, in what Russia denounced as Western “hysteria” in response to its build-up of troops on the Ukraine border.

The US Department of Defense in Washington said about 8,500 American troops were put on heightened alert and were awaiting orders to deploy to the region, should Russia invade Ukraine.

Tensions are high after Russia massed an estimated 100,000 troops in reach of its neighbor’s border, surrounding Ukraine with forces from the north, east and south.

Russia denies planning an invasion and Moscow is citing the Western response as evidence that Russia is the target, not the instigator, of aggression.

President Joseph R. Biden, pushing for transatlantic unity, held an 80-minute secure video call with a number of European leaders on Monday from the White House Situation Room to discuss the Ukraine crisis.

Mr. Biden told reporters “I had a very, very, very good meeting” with the Europeans, which included the leaders of Germany, France, Italy, Britain and Poland. He said there was “total unanimity.”

A White House statement said the leaders “discussed their joint efforts to deter further Russian aggression against Ukraine, including preparations to impose massive consequences and severe economic costs on Russia for such actions as well as to reinforce security on NATO’s eastern flank.”

Welcoming a series of deployments announced by alliance members in recent days, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg earlier said NATO would take “all necessary measures.”

“We will always respond to any deterioration of our security environment, including through strengthening our collective defense,” Mr. Stoltenberg said in a statement.

He told a news conference that the enhanced presence on NATO’s eastern flank could also include the deployment of battlegroups in the southeast of the alliance.

So far, NATO has about 4,000 troops in multinational battalions in Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland, backed by tanks, air defenses and intelligence and surveillance units.

US officials said the Pentagon was finalizing efforts to identify specific units that it could deploy to NATO’s eastern flank.

One of the officials said up to 5,000 could be deployed, while a NATO diplomat said Washington was considering gradually transferring some troops stationed in western Europe to eastern Europe in the coming weeks.

Denmark, Spain, France and the Netherlands were all planning or considering sending troops, planes or ships to eastern Europe, NATO said. Ukraine shares borders with four NATO countries: Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania.

A Polish official said Warsaw would draw the line at sending troops to Ukraine.

GROWING TENSIONS
As tensions grow, Britain said it was withdrawing some staff and dependents from its embassy in Ukraine, a day after the United States said it was ordering diplomats’ family members to leave. US diplomats are being allowed to leave voluntarily.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov accused the West of “hysteria” and putting out information “laced with lies”.

“As for specific actions, we see statements by the North Atlantic Alliance about reinforcement, pulling forces and resources to the eastern flank. All this leads to the fact that tensions are growing,” he said.

“This is not happening because of what we, Russia, are doing. This is all happening because of what NATO and the US are doing and due to the information they are spreading.”

Global stock markets skidded as the prospect of a Russian attack quashed demand for riskier assets such as bitcoin, and bolstered the dollar and oil. The rouble hit a 14-month low against the dollar, and Russian stocks and bonds tumbled.

Russia has used its troop build-up to draw the West into discussions after presenting demands to redraw Europe’s security map. It wants NATO never to admit Ukraine and to pull back troops and weapons from former Communist countries in eastern Europe that joined it after the Cold War.

Washington says those demands are non-starters but it is ready to discuss other ideas on arms control, missile deployments and confidence-building measures.

Russia is awaiting a written US response this week after talks last Friday — the fourth round this month — produced no breakthrough. — Reuters

Bigger spend needed for net-zero world than assumed — McKinsey

REUTERS

THE EXTRA amount the world must spend each year to create a “net-zero” emissions economy is equivalent to half all profits currently generated by companies globally, consultancy group McKinsey estimated in a report on the energy transition.

It said its calculation was much higher than most other estimates by economists but stressed such investments could be lucrative and the long-term costs of not doing enough to tackle climate change would be greater.

“We find that the transition would be universal, significant, and front-loaded, with uneven effects on sectors, geographies, and communities, even as it creates growth opportunities,” it concluded.

Although time is running out, reaching net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 would give the world a chance of capping temperature rises at 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels — avoiding the worst fall-out from climate change.

The report’s main finding was that this would require spending on physical assets for energy and land-use systems of about $275 trillion, or $9.2 trillion per year on average — an annual increase of $3.5 trillion on current spending.

“The increase is approximately equivalent, in 2020, to half of global corporate profits, one-quarter of total tax revenue and 7 percent of household spending,” it calculated.

The amount of cumulative spending would be equivalent to about 7.5% of world output from 2021-2050, far higher than the 2-3% of global output which climate economists polled by Reuters in 2021 estimated was needed each year.

McKinsey put the difference down to the fact that it was including a broad view of spending by households, businesses, agriculture and forestry as well as some continued spend on high-emissions assets like fossil fuel–based vehicles.

“While these spending requirements are large and financing has yet to be established, many investments have favorable return profiles and should not be seen as merely costs,” it added. Gernot Wagner, a climate economist at New York University not involved with the report, welcomed its attempt to come up with a comprehensive view of the investments needed.

“Climate policy means massive investment, and a massive rejigging of market forces from the current high-carbon and low-efficiency path onto a low-carbon and high-efficiency one,” said Wagner.

“We just spent trillions of dollars because of COVID relief. So, would it be feasible? Yes. Would it involve massive changes? Of course, that too. Where is the money coming from? Ratepayers, taxpayers or shareholders?”

The McKinsey report noted large uncertainties relating to how such a transition would play out and that some populations and sectors would be more exposed than others to disruption, notably poorer countries and those reliant on fossil fuels.

It added: “The economic and social costs of a delayed or abrupt transition would raise the risk of asset-stranding, worker dislocations, and a backlash that delays the transition.” — Reuters

Red packets from global banks become Hong Kong collectors’ items

UNSPLASH

AS MILLIONS of Hong Kongers prepare to hand out packets stuffed with cash to mark the lunar new year, the hottest envelopes are coming from an unlikely source: global investment banks.

The red packets, often embossed with gold or signs from the Chinese zodiac, are in huge demand on a vibrant secondary market even though banks give them away for free. This year’s design from UBS Group AG is commanding the highest price, selling for more than HK$10 ($1.30) per envelope on Facebook Marketplace and Carousell Pte. That’s more than 50% above second-ranked Credit Suisse Group AG and almost triple the price being paid for those from local rival HSBC Holdings Plc.

Red envelopes containing cash are an annual tradition across much of Asia as a way to bring good luck for the upcoming year of the tiger. Known as laisee in Cantonese and hongbao in Mandarin, they are handed out to everyone from colleagues and customers to friends and family. Designs can take months to evolve with banks often including classic emblems like flowers and goldfish. The ritual is taken so seriously that the final layout usually requires approval from the top executive ranks.

Zodiac symbols, such as the tiger used by Credit Suisse, are even more attractive for collectors because they only come around once every 12 years. Hong Kong companies are estimated to spend as much as HK$300 million ($38.5 million) annually on red packet printing.

While the era of electronic payments has seen the rise of so-called e-laisee, giving out delicately designed paper envelopes remains part of a decades-long practice to pay respect to local customs. Close to 7,000 packet listings were created in the first half of January, double the pace of the year earlier, said Kevin Huang, managing director of Carousell Hong Kong in an email response. The most popular bank searches were for UBS, HSBC and DBS Group Holdings Ltd.

Most buyers online are purchasing them as keepsakes. Saby Cheng, a buyer and seller on Carousell, said she has been collecting banks’ packets for at least four years. While she expected the branded items’ price to rise over the time, she kept most of them and would only resell the surplus.

Spokespeople for UBS, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Deutsche Bank AG, DBS and Morgan Stanley declined to comment while representatives of HSBC and BNP Paribas SA didn’t respond to requests for comment. — Bloomberg

S.Korea’s GDP growth climbs to 11-year high, but recovery uneven

A MAN walks along a nearly empty street in Seoul, South Korea, July 12, 2022. — REUTERS

SEOUL — South Korea’s economy expanded at the fastest pace in 11 years in 2021 helped by a jump in exports and construction activity, tempering declines in capital investment and a slow recovery in the coronavirus-hit service sectors.

Record exports drove the rebound but swathes of the economy have fallen behind. Jobs are still vanishing across manufacturing and service sectors, a reminder that liberal President Moon Jae-in’s promises to boost employment have not materialized.

Hours after Bank of Korea (BOK) data showed the economy expanded 4.0% last year, hundreds of small business owners plan to gather near the National Assembly in Seoul to shave their heads in protest against social distancing rules that have hammered retail and service sector sales.

Sentiment remains pessimistic as South Koreans head to the polls for the 2022 Presidential election slated for March 9.

The main candidates from the ruling and opposition parties have seized on the discontent, making an equitable society a centerpiece of their policy visions.

The BOK expects gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 3.0% this year as Asia’s fourth-largest economy benefits from strength in semiconductor exports and increased public spending, though record domestic coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases this week are a threat to consumption.

“Global demand for our chips is resilient and strong exports will keep (South Korea’s) growth momentum solid,” said Hwang Sang-pil, head of BOK’s Economics Statistics department.

“People are getting used to social distancing curbs. Activity was slower in December but the hit is smaller than before.”

The economy expanded a seasonally adjusted 1.1% in the October-December period from three months earlier, beating the 0.9% expansion tipped in a Reuters poll and up from a 0.3% rise in the third quarter.

From a year earlier, the economy expanded 4.1% in the fourth quarter, also beating a median forecast of 3.7% in the poll.

The BOK on Jan. 14 raised its benchmark interest rate to pre-pandemic levels and signaled it may tighten further as growth and inflationary pressures remain strong.

South Korea’s economy has had a sharp albeit uneven bounce from the coronavirus slump in 2020, when it contracted 0.9%, with exports expanding at their fastest annual pace in 11 years last year while the consumption recovery has been patchy due to social distancing curbs.

A recent Reuters poll of 20 economists forecast the economy will grow 2.9% this year, below the 3.0% projected by the BOK.

Tuesday’s data showed exports were the main driver of growth in the fourth quarter, jumping 4.3% on-quarter.

Growth was also helped by private consumption and construction investment, which expanded 1.7% and 2.9%, respectively.

The service sector grew 1.3% in the fourth quarter, stronger than the third quarter but slower than the second.

Capital investment declined 0.6% on-quarter, following a 2.4% drop in the preceding three months. — Reuters

Titlist Japan advances to quarters with win over Vietnam

JAPAN’S Yuika Sugasawa heads at goal. — REUTERS

Australia beats the Philippines, 4-0

DEFENDING champion Japan beat Vietnam 3-0 at the Women’s Asian Cup in Pune on Monday to book their place in the quarterfinals alongside Australia and South Korea.

Yui Narumiya scored twice, with her goals coming either side of an effort from former Asian Women’s Player of the Year Saki Kumagai.

Victory means Japan goes into their final game in Group C against South Korea on Thursday guaranteed a top-two finish.

Futoshi Ikeda’s side had to wait until the 38th minute to take the lead when Narumiya netted from close range, while Kumagai claimed a rare international goal from similar range five minutes into the second half.

Narumiya beat Vietnam goalkeeper Tran Thi Kim Thanh to her left in the 58th minute to put the seal on a comfortable win for the 2014 and 2018 winners.

The result ensures South Korea also advance after their 2-0 win over Myanmar earlier in the day.

The Koreans struggled to break down their defensively disciplined opponents but finally opened their account five minutes into the second half when Lee Geum-min netted following Cho So-hyun’s cushioned header.

Chelsea midfielder Ji So-yun was instrumental in the second goal six minutes from time when her header back across the target brushed against defender Tun Khin Mo Mo before crossing the line via the inside of the post.

The Australians confirmed their place in the next round when a decisive second-half showing saw Tony Gustavsson’s side defeat Philippines 4-0 in Mumbai.

After a goalless first half, Sam Kerr opened the scoring with a 51st-minute header before Dominique Randle’s own goal two minutes later put the Matildas in control of the Group B encounter.

Emily van Egmond and Mary Fowler were also on target as the Australians defeated a Philippines side directed by former Matildas coach Alen Stajčić.

The win, coupled with their 18-0 thrashing of Indonesia on the opening day, means the Australians are guaranteed a place in the last eight ahead.

Thailand kept alive their hopes of a quarterfinal place with a comfortable 4-0 win over Indonesia.

Kanyanat Chetthabutr scored a hat trick before Dee Makris scored her side’s fourth as the Thais moved level on three points with the Philippines, with Australia on top of the group.

The top two finishers in each of the three groups will advance to the knockout rounds along with the two third-place finishers with the best records.

The competition is doubling up as Asia’s qualifier for next year’s Women’s World Cup, with the continent awarded five guaranteed spots at the finals in Australia and New Zealand.

Australia qualifies for the World Cup as co-host while two other Asian nations will feature in an intercontinental playoff round. — Reuters

Overtime rules come under fire after Chiefs win playoff thriller

THE National Football League’s (NFL) overtime rules have again come under fire after the Buffalo Bills’ high-powered offense never got a chance to touch the ball in the extra period of their crushing playoff loss to the Kansas City Chiefs.

The game on Sunday was an instant classic between two of the most gifted NFL quarterbacks and included three lead changes in the final two minutes of regulation before Patrick Mahomes’ Chiefs prevailed 42-36 over Josh Allen’s Bills.

Unlike most other sports that give challengers from both sides an equal shot at winning in overtime (OT), the NFL uses a coin toss to determine which team gets the ball first.

Under the current overtime format, a team can win on the opening possession only if they score a touchdown. Otherwise, each team gets at least one possession.

After Allen made the wrong call on the coin toss, the Chiefs received the ball and Mahomes needed just eight plays to drive his team 75 yards down the field for the winning touchdown.

“If you are still arguing, in a game like that, it’s not in best interest of EVERYONE that both Mahomes and Allen get the ball in OT I don’t know what to tell you,” former NFL tight end Greg Olsen wrote on Twitter.

“In a game where neither team could stop the other at the end, a literal coin flip determined the ending.”

If a team gets a field goal on the opening possession of overtime, their opponent gets a possession and can win the game with a touchdown or tie it with a field goal. If both teams get field goals, the next team to score wins.

The NFL’s overtime format, which critics argue gives too much value to something as random as a coin toss, has come under scrutiny before, including on the game’s biggest stage.

Five years ago, the New England Patriots beat the Atlanta Falcons when they scored on the opening drive of the only Super Bowl to go to overtime.

In 2019, the Chiefs could only sit and watch as the Patriots advanced to the Super Bowl with a game-winning 75-yard touchdown drive to begin overtime.

That offseason the Chiefs proposed a change to the overtime rules with hopes of giving each team’s offense an opportunity to touch the football. — Reuters

Second half show against Philippines takes Australia into quarters

AUSTRALIA advanced to the quarterfinals of the Women’s Asian Cup on Monday after a decisive second-half showing saw Tony Gustavsson’s side defeat Philippines 4-0 in Mumbai.

After a goalless first half, Sam Kerr opened the scoring with a 51st-minute header before Dominique Randle’s own goal two minutes later put the Matildas in control of the Group B encounter.

Emily van Egmond and Mary Fowler were also on target as the Australians defeated a Philippines side directed by former Matildas coach Alen Stajčić.

The win, coupled with their 18-0 thrashing of Indonesia on the opening day, means the Australians are guaranteed a place in the last eight ahead of their final group game against Thailand on Thursday.

“The first half, they made it difficult for us to break them down, and in the second half we came out and capitalized quite early, which gave us good momentum for the last 45 minutes,” said Van Egmond.

“But credit to the Philippines, they came out and they were disciplined and made it tough for us. But we’re proud of our group of girls, to follow the game plan and get it done.”

South Korea moved a step closer to booking their place in the next round despite laboring to a 2-0 win over Myanmar.

Coach Colin Bell was forced to introduce Chelsea midfielder Ji So-yun from the bench 11 minutes from the end of the first half to invigorate his side as they struggled to break down their defensively disciplined opponents.

The Koreans finally opened their account five minutes into the second half when Cho So-hyun’s cushioned header across the six-yard box was controlled by Lee Geum-min before she scored.

Ji was instrumental in the second strike six minutes from time when her header back across goal brushed against defender Tun Khin Mo Mo before crossing the line via the inside of the post.

South Korea will confirm their place in the next round if Japan defeats Vietnam in the late game in Group C in Pune.

The top two finishers in each of the three groups will advance to the knockout rounds along with the two third-place finishers with the best records.

The competition is doubling up as Asia’s qualifier for next year’s Women’s World Cup, with the continent awarded five guaranteed spots at the finals in Australia and New Zealand.

Australia qualifies for the World Cup as co-host while two other Asian nations will feature in an intercontinental playoff round. — Reuters

At least six killed in Cameroon stadium stampede, says state broadcaster

YAOUNDE — At least six fans died in a stampede at the Yaounde Olembe Stadium in Cameroon on Monday before the host nation’s round of 16 game in the African Cup of Nations against Comoros, the Central African nation’s national broadcaster reported.

It said dozens of others were injured.

Images shared on social media, which Reuters could not immediately authenticate, showed screaming fans being crushed at an entrance gate.

Continental soccer government body CAF said in a statement that it was aware of an incident at the Stadium.

“CAF is currently investigating the situation and trying to get more details on what transpired. We are in constant communication with Cameroon government and the Local Organizing Committee,” it said.

Following a low turnout in the first round games at brand new stadiums built for the continent’s premier men’s soccer tournament, Cameroon authorities have thrown open stadium gates, organized mass transport and given out free tickets to lure fans.

Cameroon beat 10-man Comoros Islands 2-1 in the game to advance to the quarterfinals. — Reuters

Bulls build 28-point edge, hold off Thunder

NIKOLA Vučević scored 26 points and grabbed 15 rebounds to lead the Chicago Bulls to a 111-110 road win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday.

Chicago rookie Ayo Dosunmu made his first nine shots en route to a season-high 24 points. He added five rebounds and eight assists.

After leading by 28 midway through the third quarter, the Bulls had to hold on at the end to win for just the second time in eight games. Chicago snapped a five-game road losing streak.

Short-handed even with the returns of Zach LaVine and Javonte Green and playing on the second night of a road back-to-back, the Bulls sputtered late, getting outscored 32-19 in the fourth quarter.

The Thunder pulled within one with 14.8 seconds left on Josh Giddey’s layup off a feed from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Gilgeous-Alexander (31 points, 10 assists) missed a potential game-tying 3-pointer with 2.3 seconds left. Green hit a free throw with one second remaining to put the game away, though Mike Muscala’s 3-pointer at the buzzer narrowed the final margin.

The Thunder have lost six consecutive games and 13 of their past 15.

A night earlier, Chicago’s starting backcourt of Dosunmu and Cody White did not record any assists in a 114-95 loss to the Orlando Magic.

With LaVine back in the lineup for the first time since Jan. 14, having recovered from a knee injury, the ball moved much more freely.

LaVine finished with 23 points, seven assists and seven rebounds for the Bulls, who had 31 total assists.

Green returned to the lineup after missing 12 games with a groin ailment. He contributed just five points, but the Bulls improved to 9-0 in the past nine games he has played.

Dosunmu got off to a hot start, sinking all five shots he took to score 12 in the first quarter.

Chicago took the lead for good less than seven minutes into the game, with the advantage ballooning to 84-56 midway through the third quarter after the Bulls started the second half on a 26-8 run.

The Bulls started the second half 9 of 12 from the floor, hitting five 3-pointers during the stretch.

Luguentz Dort scored 16 points for the Thunder, who got 14 from Muscala and 12 from Jeremiah Robinson-Earl. — Reuters

Not retiring

Countless times, Tom Brady has been asked how long he plans to keep playing. And, more often than not, he has been quick to say he believes he can continue to suit up at least until he’s 45 years old. The other day, however, he did not have the predisposition to make a clear declaration about his future. He told the assembled media in the aftermath of the Buccaneers’ loss to the Rams that “I’m not thinking about anything past five minutes from now.”

Not that Brady can be blamed for refusing to commit to a future that, just last month, appeared certain. In line with his previous timetable, he remains under contract with the Buccaneers for another year. Still, he deserves to take stock of his situation and plan accordingly, and not just because he’s already widely acknowledged as the “greatest of all time.” Even as his competitive nature has him leaning towards a return, he will want to do so only if he has a solid supporting cast.

Which, in a nutshell, is where the problem lies. With 24 players slated to hit unrestricted free agency, the Buccaneers may not have the wherewithal, financial or otherwise, to run it back the way they did last year. Meanwhile, Brady wants to, in his words, “take it day by day and kind of see where we are at.” Bottom line, he’s not going to lace up his cleats if he’s not going to be within sniffing distance of the hardware. As he argued, “every team is qualified when you get to the final eight, then the final four, then the final two.”

Only time will tell if Brady stays in the active roster or hangs up his jersey for good. The smart bet has him angling for an exit while at the top — and he may well have done so had the Buccaneers succeeded in defending the championship. That they failed to meet their ultimate objective feeds into his inability — or, to be more accurate, refusal — to accept defeat on any level. “It sucks to lose in the end,” he contended. Is he inclined to change the narrative? Fans will know soon enough.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Peso climbs on stock market’s gains, oil prices

THE PESO strengthened versus the greenback on Tuesday, supported by upbeat investor sentiment following stock market gains and the decline in global oil prices.

The local unit closed at P51.26 per dollar on Tuesday, gaining three centavos from its P51.29 finish on Monday, based on data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened Tuesday’s session weaker at P51.35 versus the dollar. Its worst showing was at P51.40, while its intraday best was at P51.20 against the greenback.

Dollars exchanged increased to $1.041 billion on Tuesday from $827.5 million on Monday.

The peso appreciated following gains in the local stock market, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index rose by 35.57 points or 0.49% to close at 7,288.21 on Tuesday. The broader all shares index also increased by 16.97 points or 0.44% to 3,864.48.

The local benchmark climbed even as Asian shares and US futures fell sharply on Tuesday, with investors nervous about the potential for military conflict in Ukraine and ahead of a key Federal Reserve meeting that could offer hints about the timing and pace of rate hikes, Reuters reported.

Benchmarks slid, with most extending losses in afternoon trade. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed 1.43% to its lowest in a month. The Nikkei closed down 1.66%, having earlier touched its lowest level since December 2020.

Meanwhile, a trader said the peso appreciated on the back of the decline in global oil prices.

Reuters reported that oil prices were down by about 2% on Monday, on concerns over quicker-than-expected rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve.

However, Brent crude futures have risen by 61 cents or 0.7% to $86.88 per barrel by 0722 GMT of Tuesday, while the US West Texas Intermediate futures climbed 44 cents or 0.5% to $83.75 a barrel. This, amid escalating tension in Eastern Europe and the Middle East over worries on possibly supply disruptions.

For Wednesday, Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast range of P51.15 to P51.35, while the trader expects the local unit to move within P51.10 to P51.35 per dollar. — LWTN with Reuters

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