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Aquino flies back to US to scout for overseas prospects

GILAS Pilipinas Women is determined to scoop up more Filipino-foreign reinforcements to bolster its squad bracing for a busy campaign this year highlighted by a title defense bid in the 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games.

Coach Pat Aquino is scheduled to fly back to the United States next month with hopes of convincing some overseas prospects to don Gilas colors following the commitment of Mai-Loni Henson from University of Washington.

“We’ve been very aggressive with our recruitment program in preparation for 2022. There’s a lot of promising Fil-Am players that are willing to help out and represent the country,” Mr. Aquino, also the national program director, told The STAR.

“I’ll check on the players who could potentially play this year,” he added.

At least seven prospects are in the Gilas list led by former WNBA training camp signee Chanelle Molina from Washington State University according to Mr. Aquino.

Also in consideration are Pepperdine University’s Malia Bambrick, Westmont College’s Stephanie Berberabe, George Washington’s Aurea Gingras, Kiera Oakry of University of San Diego, California and Laila Phelia of University of Michigan.

Gilas could also get back the services of Sacramento State’s Gabi Bade, who had already played for the Nationals in the 2019 Jones Cup, after her Cyprus pro league stint.

Their potential Gilas commitment would coincide with the debut of Ms. Henson, who acquired her dual citizenship after a pro stint in France, and the return of Jack Animam from Serbia.

Mses. Henson and Jack Animam will banner the country’s goal for a second straight SEA Games gold medal along with Afril Bernardino, Ella Fajardo, Camille Clarin and skipper Janine Pontejos. — John Bryan Ulanday

Gov’t fully awards Treasury bills as rates drop on strong demand

BW FILE PHOTO

THE GOVERNMENT made a full award of the Treasury bills (T-bills) it auctioned off on Monday as rates declined on pent-up demand from investors.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised P15 billion as planned via the T-bills it auctioned off on Monday as total bids reached P71.05 billion, almost five times the initial offer.

Monday’s bids were also higher than the P52.758 billion logged when the Treasury offered P10 billion in T-bills in December.

Broken down, the Treasury bureau raised the programmed P5 billion via the 91-day debt papers from P24.14 billion in bids. The three-month T-bill fetched an average rate of 1.075%, down by 5 basis points (bps) from the 1.125% seen at the previous offering.

The BTr also borrowed P5 billion as planned from the 182-day securities it offered on Monday as bids reached P24.32 billion. The average rate of the six-month T-bill plummeted by 15.9 bps to 1.269% from 1.428% previously.

Lastly, the government made a full P5-billion award of the 364-day T-bills as the tenor attracted tenders worth P22.59 billion. The average yield on the one-year instrument stood at 1.6%, falling by 4.9 bps from the 1.649% fetched previously.

At the secondary market prior to the auction on Monday, the 91- 182- and 364-day T-bills were quoted at 1.0945%, 1.2693% and 1.6597%, respectively, based on the PHL Bloomberg Valuation Reference Rates published on the Philippine Dealing System’s website.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said in a Viber message the rates dropped on expectations of slower December inflation amid oil price rollbacks.

A BusinessWorld poll of 13 analysts last week said December inflation was likely at 3.9%, or the midpoint of the central bank’s forecast of 3.5% to 4.3% for the month.

The central bank earlier raised its 2022 inflation forecast to 3.4% from 3.3% amid food supply constraints, petitions for transport fare hikes, and global supply chain issues.

Meanwhile, a bond trader in a Viber message said T-bill rates fell due to pent-up demand because there were no T-bill auctions in the last two weeks.

The government plans to borrow P200 billion from the domestic market this month, or P60 billion via T-bills and P140 billion from Treasury bonds (T-bonds).

On Tuesday, the BTr will offer P35 billion in reissued seven-year T-bonds with a remaining life of six years and seven months. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Another bearable escape to Paris

Television Review
Emily in Paris Season 2
Netflix

IT’S been a challenging time for everyone. Escapism is therefore completely acceptable — and can be achieved through a comedy drama set in Paris, which returned for a second season.

In the first season, Chicago-based marketing executive Emily Cooper (played by Lily Collins) moves to Paris, in lieu of her pregnant boss Madeleine Wheeler (played by Kate Walsh), to provide an American perspective at a marketing firm, Savoir. Due to her abrupt assignment, Emily arrives in the city unready, struggling to succeed at the workplace and adjust to the culture in the city.

While achieving viral status, Season 1 drew a lot of negative criticism from the audience, so I went into the second season both hoping that it had made some improvements but keeping my expectations for any drastic turnaround in the story low.

In the 10-episode second season, Emily has pretty much been accepted by, and is getting along with, her French colleagues. It is established that she has been in Paris for almost a year, and, unlike in Season 1, she is no longer continuously praised for always “winning” in every situation.

Much of the plot in the second season surrounds the characters’ relationships, particularly Emily’s entanglement with her neighbor Gabriel (Lucas Bravo), and his girlfriend Camille (Camille Razat). Emily’s life gets more complicated with the introduction of Alfie (Lucien Laviscount), an English banker she meets in French class. At first, Alfie seems to be a very uptight and serious character, and the audience wonders if he is a good or bad guy, but he gets a quick character arc as Emily’s understanding lover.

The story then establishes two love triangles — the first between Emily, the chef Gabriel and his girlfriend Camille; and the other between Emily, Gabriel, and Alfie.

The creators of the show have finally given Emily a major character flaw through her romantic relationships and attitude as a friend. She betrays Camille with her involvement with Gabriel; and she struggles to decide whether she is more in love with Gabriel or Alfie.

The whole season ends with a cliffhanger: will she end her stint in Paris to move back to Chicago and work at the promotion she has always aimed for, or stay in Paris to join her French colleagues as they establish a new company.

Without expecting drastic changes, the viewer can appreciate some improvements including the French speaking actors conversing in their mother tongue more often; the continuation of Emily’s French classes and how she tries to improve; and Gabriel’s career progression as a restaurant owner.

I wished that the creators could have explored French art and culture more through its characters since Emily’s friend and roommate Mindy (Ashley Park) is a singer and busker, Camille is an art curator, and Gabriel is a chef. Emily’s job as a marketing professional and social media manager would have also played more relevant approach to it. A more realistic look into the lifestyle of an expat working in a different country would have been interesting too.

I binged-watched the second season to unwind after a long week, and before the busy Christmas weekend. Since I survived the cringe-y the first season last year, I found this season more bearable and enjoyable. Emily in Paris is a guilty pleasure. Despite not getting invested in the characters, I enjoyed the colorful sights and landscapes, the fashion and costumes, and French music. The story lacks depth, but once in a while, that’s all right.

Emily in Paris Season 2 is now on Netflix. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Smart expands GigaLife App, 5G services

SMART Communications, Inc. is looking to further expand its fifth-generation (5G) services and GigaLife App through new products and services.

In a statement on Monday, the wireless arm of PLDT, Inc. said this includes the launch of its Smart Bro Home Wi-Fi 5G and allowing PLDT Home Fiber subscribers to use its GigaLife App.

“As we enter 2022, we should not only aim to grow the business through our current lens. We also need to lay down the foundation for a future that is already happening now,” Smart Senior Vice-President and Head of Consumer Wireless Business Jane J. Basas said.

Smart currently has 40 million mobile data users.

Aside from its first 5G-powered prepaid Smart Bro Home Wi-Fi 5G, it also launched what is said to be the country’s first-ever 5G pocket Wi-Fi, the Smart Bro Pocket Wi-Fi device.

“Partnerships with global brands such as Apple and Netflix, as well as enhanced prepaid and postpaid offers and digital innovations, will be key to serving our existing customers better and driving new customers to prefer our services in 2022,” Ms. Basas said.

PLDT Home Fiber subscribers may soon use the GigaLife App, which can be used as a one-stop application and engagement platform for other Smart customers. Subscribers can earn “GigaPoints” that can be converted to data offers, products, and devices.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

New York real estate icons struggle as Omicron surges

REUTERS
PEOPLE eat in outdoor seating at Cipriani Downtown restaurant in the Soho district of Manhattan, New York City, US, June 10, 2020. — REUTERS

This was supposed to be the year New York City restaurants, bars and hotels started to recover from the pain of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, as the Omicron variant forces flight cancellations and shutters Broadway shows once more, the timeline for a broader industry comeback is again in question.

It’s a brutal blow to hospitality companies that managed to survive 2020, but spent this year slowly rebuilding amid a slow rebound for tourism. While health experts expect the variant to be short-lived, and those who fall ill have reported less severe symptoms, Omicron could still be the final straw for a new wave of real estate borrowers.

“All of the hotels that were hoping for a big December after a bad 18 months are not going to get the Christmas presents that they necessarily hoped for,” said Neil Shapiro, a partner in Herrick Feinstein’s real estate practice, said in an interview. “Once you have an empty hotel room, you never get that back.”

We look at some of the New York institutions that closed their doors this year, and ones that remain under pressure. Unless otherwise noted, representatives for the companies didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

21 CLUB
This iconic Midtown restaurant opened as a speakeasy on Jan. 1, 1930, and catered to presidents, celebrities and the who’s who of New York before it announced its closure late last year and laid off employees in March 2021. The wrought-iron gate gave way to a hotspot with a secret wine cellar where Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis once partied with Frank Sinatra, and Donald Trump dined after his presidential win. A representative for LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE’s Belmond Ltd., which owned the restaurant, said in a statement to Bloomberg that it hasn’t yet decided how to use the space going forward.

CIPRIANI
The hospitality company with multiple Italian restaurants and event venues faces foreclosure on a $53-million loan backed by two of its New York properties that’s been in default since May 2020. Cancellation of corporate parties and galas — the lifeblood of many upscale bars and restaurants — due to Covid has pressured the company. Cipriani has its roots in Harry’s Bar, a Venetian establishment opened in the 1930s, where Giuseppe Cipriani later invented the Bellini cocktail.

THE PRINCETON CLUB
The storied Midtown social club shut its doors this year after defaulting on $40 million of mortgage debt, but it may yet have found a savior in billionaire Eric Schmidt, whose family’s investment office has bid on the loan. The club faces a cash crunch after it closed for 15 months during the pandemic and lost about one-third of its paying members. Ninety-nine employees risk being laid off, according to a notice filed with the New York Department of Labor, which added that the club is hoping for a “friendly buyer” that will help it reopen.

STANDARD HIGH LINE HOTEL
The owner of the Standard High Line Hotel in New York is countersuing its lenders in a bid to stop a foreclosure on the property. The 338-room hotel, which straddles the High Line on Manhattan’s West Side, fell behind on mortgage payments last year, and was closed from March to September 2020.

TIMES SQUARE EDITION HOTEL
COVID-19 has been particularly hard on mega hotels located in Times Square, a tourist-magnet that sat eerily empty during the worst months of the pandemic. Ian Schrager’s Times Square Edition, a 452-room hotel and retail space once valued at more than $2 billion, is heading to a foreclosure auction after defaulting on a contract with Marriott International, Inc. Neither Marriott nor Schrager are responsible for the debt, and the hotel reopened this summer after the pandemic shut its doors for more than a year.  Bloomberg

PSC weighing option of national team training amid Omicron fears

PSC COMMISSIONER RAMON FERNANDEZ — PSC FB PAGE

THE Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) is currently discussing its options concerning its plan of holding the resumption of the training of the national team on Monday at the PhilSports Complex in Pasig and the Baguio Training Camp amid the alarming sharp increase of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases including the Omicron scare.

The PSC has yet to decide whether or not to push through with its Jan. 10 return date but it didn’t look good that the PBA had already postponed its games this week due to the COVID-19 resurgence.

But Ramon Fernandez, Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) board member and the country’s Hanoi Southeast Asian Games chef de mission, is hoping it would push through as scheduled.

“I think so,” said Mr. Fernandez when asked if the training will push through.

The former PBA star, however, stressed it would have to be in a bubble setup and national athletes would have to adhere to strict health protocols.

The PSC approved the Jan. 10 return date in November last year to allow the national athletes to jump-start their preparation for several international competitions including the Hanoi Southeast Asian Games slated for May 12-23 and the Hangzhou Asian Games set on September 10-25.

The sports-funding agency had, in fact, started renovations of its facilities expecting the decrease of COVID-19 cases. But with the situation worsening at present, there is a chance the training may be delayed. — Joey Villar

BSP: Alternative data in credit scoring to improve access to financial services

BW FILE PHOTO

THE USE of alternative data in assessing borrowers’ capacity to pay their debt could help unbanked and underserved Filipinos gain access to financial services, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said.

“With alternative data, a more complete picture of the client is painted thus allowing for more individuals and businesses to be assessed,” BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said during a webinar by the FinTech Alliance Philippines and TransUnion.

Alternative user information is gathered from social media, mobile data, utilities data, behavioral data, online transactions, geolocation data, and browser data, among others, the BSP said.

Currently, only bank transactions and credit bureau information are used to assess a borrower’s ability to pay their debt.

“The use of alternative data for credit scoring is just one example of how data can be used to benefit consumers. Looking ahead, we must continue to take initiative in fostering an inclusive digital financial ecosystem,” Mr. Diokno said.

The central bank said the use of alternative data for assessing creditworthiness will be helpful for Filipinos and small businesses that do not have a formal credit history.

Customer profiling, improved loan pricing, and lower default rates were cited as benefits of alternative data usage, according to respondents of a central bank survey in September.

Mr. Diokno said this reflects significant potential for alternative data, although it took an average of two years before benefits were realized.

Alternative data usage will help Filipinos that are part of the gig economy as well as farmers to have access to credit, Ellen Joyce L. Suficiencia, director of the BSP Center for Learning and Inclusion Advocacy, earlier said

Ms. Suficiencia noted that data from the Credit Information Corp. showed less than 50% of the adult population has a credit record.

Meanwhile, the BSP has also been working on a credit risk database which is backed by the Japan International Cooperation Agency. The project is aimed to help banks evaluate the creditworthiness of small businesses and prevent lenders from requiring excessive collateral cover. — L.W.T. Noble

50 years on, The Joy of Sex is outdated in parts but still a fun ‘unanxious’ romp

FIRST published in 1972, The Joy of Sex styled itself as a sexual cookbook, with positions and predilections presented as loose recipes.

As any good cookbook author knows, however, sometimes people really need a picture to be able to get a sense of the finished dish. The success of the book owes much to its plentiful graphic sketches, as well as its playful and unanxious approach to sex (“unanxious” is a word the book’s author uses a lot).

For many of us born in the 1970s, ’80s, and early ’90s, The Joy of Sex changed everything. Not in the way it was intended, of course (as a gourmet guide to lovemaking), but rather as the transmitter of the awful realization that not only did our parents have sex, but they were keen to do it joyfully. So keen, in fact, that they had bought, and presumably read, a 250-page erotic guide.

Such was the popularity of the book (it has sold over 12 million copies worldwide and been translated into more than a dozen languages) that it became relatively commonplace for people to have it on their shelves or even coffee tables.

The book’s cover lists Alex Comfort, a physician, novelist and poet, as its editor. But rather than gently editing the sexual advice and escapades of a happily married couple, Comfort later revealed he had written the book himself, with the help of his long-time mistress (also his wife’s best friend and his subsequent wife). His private polaroids and descriptions of sexual positions served as the basis for many of the sketches in the book, along with photographs taken of color illustrator Charles Raymond and his wife Edeltraud that Chris Foss used as references for his line drawings.

Today, this backstory of subterfuge and polaroiding adds to what is already a pretty unusual read. There is liberal talk of grope suits, the buttered bun, the goldfish, and railways (not what you think). At the time of publication, the book was revolutionary — perhaps not in its content, but in its popularity. It followed Alfred Kinsey’s books on sexual behavior in men and women in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

By the early 1970s the sexual revolution was underway, and it is possible that the Joy of Sex both reflected an increased societal focus on sexual pleasure and worked to enhance it.

At its core, the book’s advice is pretty simple. Comfort urges the reader to be open minded about sex, to explore and experiment, and to communicate without judgement. Fifty years on, this is all still good advice.

Qualitative research (focused on themes rather than data) shows that many people see sexual satisfaction as reflecting sexual openness and a willingness to act out desires, as well as the more obvious benchmarks like orgasm and sexual frequency. People who really communicate with their partner about what turns them on (and what doesn’t) and who are ready to talk about the often embarrassing nitty gritty of sex, tend to report having better sex. They also report better relationships overall (perhaps in large part because of the better sex).

And it’s not just that people who are better at communicating in general are also better at communicating about sex — rather, there appears to be something special about talking openly about sexual wants and needs that improves both sexual and overall relationship satisfaction.

Today, there is a lot in the book that is dated, outmoded, or incorrect. Comfort appears fixated with sexual perfectionism. Although he dismisses some sexual myths (such as the inherent superiority of a “vaginal” versus “clitoral” orgasm) he does seem to believe most sexual encounters can (and perhaps should) be characterized by simultaneous orgasms. Subsequent research demonstrates that when we demand sexual perfectionism (in ourselves, or our partners) we tend to enjoy sex a lot less.

The book is very strongly geared towards heterosexual cisgender sex — a modern reimagining of the book would need an enhanced focus on gender and sexual identity diversity, and the many ways we have sex. (Note there have been revised editions and spin-offs including The Joy of Gay Sex and The Joy of Lesbian Sex.)

The advice in the original, however, around open and non-judgmental communication about sex and sexual needs feels relevant to everyone. And Comfort acknowledges there are groups of people for whom other books are needed. Although his language around these issues is awkward under today’s gaze, there is a broad acceptance of same-gender attractions (without citing any evidence Comfort happily claims everyone is bisexual) and aspects of gender fluidity.

There are still more aspects of the book that need revision or updating, but also delightful inclusions in the 1972 edition.

There are the many unusual assumptions. When talking about male turn-ons (termed “releasers”), for example, Comfort confidently declares:

“A horse, seen from behind, is a male ‘releaser’ — it has long hair, big buttocks, and a teetering walk. A cow isn’t.”

In fact, there is a lot of talk of horses, horse symbolism, and riding play throughout the book.

Comfort rails against deodorant and cautions lovers never to wear it.

Elsewhere he helpfully warns:

“[…] the only really disturbing manifestation of love music is when the woman laughs uncontrollably — some do. Don’t be uptight about this.”

Today’s scientific support for The Joy of Sex as a whole is mixed, and the book is dated, and cis-heterosexual and male-centered. But is it still joyful? Yes, it is.

The central message — that sex can be a source of pleasure, love, communion, and play — remains as true today as it was in 1972. There are some good tips in there, too, if you can sort the horses from the cows. So, excuse me, while I read up on the buttered bun.

 

Fiona Kate Barlow is a Senior Research Fellow at The University of Queensland. She is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow.

Maynilad labor union, management sign CBA

MAYNILAD Water Services, Inc. management and its rank-and-file union signed a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) last Nov. 29 for more benefits and subsidies to the workers.

The CBA will cover over 1,000 rank-and-file employees of the water company. The employees will be entitled to annual salary increases for two years, a signing bonus, and an improved health subsidy.

In a press release, the company said Maynilad Water and Sewerage Union–Philippine Transportation and General Workers Organization (MWSU-PGTWO) and management took four negotiation meetings to come to an agreement.

It quoted MWSU-PGTWO President Blesilda B. Tolentino as saying: “We thank the Management of Maynilad for continuing to promote the well-being of employees despite constraints brought on by the pandemic and the revisions to our Concession Agreement. The rank-and-file union commits to fully support the company so it can sustain the delivery of quality service to over 9.8 million Maynilad customers.”

The CBA will be effective for a year, from Jan. 1, 2022 to Jan. 1, 2023.

Maynilad is the water and wastewater services provider for the cities part of the west zone of Metro Manila.

Metro Pacific Investments Corp., which has a majority stake in Maynilad, is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has an interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

ICTSI unit launches new feeder service

THE business unit of International Container Terminal Services, Inc. (ICTSI) in Argentina has launched a new barge feeder service that creates a new and direct link to Brazil and Asia.

ICTSI said in a statement on Monday that TecPlata S.A., its business unit operating at the Port of La Plata, Argentina, and the Port of Sta. Fe introduced the new feeder service on Dec. 9.

“The service will have a minimum of two calls per month between Sta. Fe and La Plata that will provide superior connectivity for a market estimated at 80,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs). It also serves as an alternative river connection to Argentina’s central, northeast and northwest regions,” ICTSI said.

“Aside from providing a lower inland cost alternative, the exclusive feeder service also contributes significantly to the reduction of carbon emissions between Greater Buenos Aires and the country’s hinterland,” the company added.

According to ICTSI, Insuga S.A. and Adecoagro S.A were the first companies to use the new feeder service to export bone meal to Vietnam and milk powder to Singapore, respectively.

“We need this — an operator who brings the barges in at a timely manner. We need security in the transshipment done by the shipping companies to get to the final destination, avoiding traffic, complexity, and costs in transporting the cargo by truck to the Port of Buenos Aires,” Sta. Fe Governor Omar Perotti said during the event that marked the first connection between the two container terminals. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Singapore home prices surge to highest in more than a decade

REUTERS

SINGAPORE home prices rose in the fourth quarter at the fastest pace in more than a decade, the latest marker of a surge that prompted the government to introduce cooling measures last month.

Private property values climbed 5% from the previous quarter, according to Urban Redevelopment Authority flash estimates released on Monday. That’s the highest quarterly growth since the second quarter of 2010 when prices jumped 5.3%. For 2021, prices increased by 10.6%, also the highest since 2010.

Singapore’s price spike underpins the government’s move to impose a fresh round of property curbs, which included raising additional stamp duties for second-home buyers and on foreigners purchasing private residences. If left unchecked, prices are likely to run ahead of economic fundamentals, the government cautioned at the time.

The rebound fed a property frenzy that generated S$32.9 billion ($24 billion) in home sales in the first half of last year, double the amount in Manhattan over the same period, driven by demand from the ultra-rich flocking to the Southeast Asian business hub. Singapore’s central bank last month warned that household debt is higher than pre-pandemic levels, driven by property loans.

“Looking at price surge in the fourth quarter, it explains why the government introduced the property curbs because they had already seen the data and saw this coming,” Nicholas Mak, the Singapore-based head of research and consultancy at APAC Realty Ltd. unit ERA. “If they had not acted earlier, people would have been speculating that cooling measures are on the cards.”

Buyers have been capitalizing on low interest rates and expectations that prices will climb further as the economy recovers. An acceleration in the final quarter helped propel overall growth for the full year to 7.2%, the fastest since 2010.

The property cooling measures will test the market’s resilience. Singapore’s property market has held up well in the last two years despite suffering from the worst recession on record in 2020 and enduring several start-stop virus restrictions last year.

Analysts previously said that the property curbs may be a short-term fix in a market with an insatiable appetite for homes. While the measures may damp prices and sales in the next quarter or two, they may rebound as early as the second half of this year.

Demand may pick up slightly after the Lunar New Year in February though the level of transactions may be lower than in recent months, said Christine Sun, senior vice-president of research and analytics at OrangeTee & Tie.

“Prices may stabilize and rise at a much slower pace in the next few quarters. But values are not likely to fall because developers have bought the land parcels at quite high prices,” she said. — Bloomberg

Thai Bundit will return as Cool Smashers head coach

TAI Bundit (center) in one of his team Cool Smashers pep talks. — PVL

MULTI-TITLED Thai coach Tai Bundit will remain as head coach of Premier Volleyball League (PVL) powerhouse Creamline.

The Cool Smashers management is already arranging the return of Bundit from Thailand in time for the 2022 PVL Open Conference tentatively slated either next month or in March.

“It’s still Coach Tai (Bundit). Creamline is now fixing his working visa to enable him to enter the Philippines,” a source on Monday told The STAR.

Under Mr. Bundit, Creamline has hauled three PVL championships and a pair of runner-up finishes.

But Mr. Bundit and the Cool Smashers will come out on a mission as they aim to reclaim the crown from Jaja Santiago and the Chery Tiggo Crossovers, who topped last year’s Open Conference or the league’s first season as a pro in the Bacarra bubble in Ilocos Norte.

Creamline, along with the rest of PVL teams, are expected to return to practice soon as they prepare for the forthcoming conference.

The Cool Smashers will be bannered by many-time league MVP Alyssa Valdez, who was fresh from her stint in popular online reality show Pinoy Big Brother, two-time Finals MVP Jia Morado, Michele Gumabao, Jema Galanza, Diana Mae Carlos and Risa Sato among others.

Apart from Creamline Cool Smashers and Chery Tiggo, Petro Gazz, Choco Mucho, Sta. Lucia Realty, F2 Logistics, Black Mamba Army, PLDT Home Fibr, Bali Pure, Perlas and Cignal HD are the other teams also joining. — Joey Villar

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