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URC gets PCC nod to buy sugar operations of Roxas Holdings

UNIVERSAL Robina Corp. (URC) is set to complete its acquisition of sugar milling assets from Roxas Holdings, Inc. after obtaining regulatory approval last week.

The food and beverage manufacturer told the stock exchange on Monday it had received the go-ahead from the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) to buy Roxas Holdings’ operations in Negros Occidental.

Roxas Holdings made the same disclosure, noting URC and itself will “aim to secure the other closing conditions, as may be applicable, and shall work towards closing the asset sale transaction at the soonest possible time.”

URC and Roxas Holdings first announced in June their plans to sell the latter’s assets in La Carlota City, Negros Occidental. The transaction involves buying Roxas Holdings’ shares in Najalin Agri-Ventures, Inc.

The PCC said it approved the deal as it sees no substantial lessening of competition emerging from the transaction.

“The acquisition… presents a different market environment considering the many players, planters’ strength in numbers translated as bargaining power, and the competitive constraints throughout the country’s sugar producer capital,” it said in a statement.

To recall, the PCC rejected a plan by URC to buy the operations of Roxas Holdings and Central Azucarera Don Pedro, Inc. in Batangas last year.

It said that unlike in the case of Batangas where sugar planters only had a choice between two players, sugarcane farmers in Negros work in associations with bargaining power, and therefore, are able to get the best price for their produce.

Once the companies finish other closing conditions, URC will take control of Roxas Holdings’ Negros operations, including all buildings, machineries and equipment, laboratory equipment, and the land on which these stand.

The company intends to continue using these facilities for sugar milling and bio-ethanol production.

“The acquisition by URC of the sugar milling and bio-ethanol distillery assets will create synergies in the sugar industry in Negros Occidental. This transaction is expected to enhance capability of URC to provide good milling services to the sugarcane planters,” it said.

For Roxas Holdings, the proceeds from the sale will be used to prepay long-term debt and reduce short-term debt.

“The paring down of existing debts is expected to result in a stronger balance sheet for the [Roxas Holdings] Group, and in capacity to rebuild its operations in Nasugbu, Batangas,” it said.

In the six months ending June, the attributable net earnings of URC grew 8% to P5.53 billion, while the attributable net loss of Roxas Holdings was reduced 34% to P427.77 million.

On Monday, shares in URC climbed P1.10 or 0.79% to P140 each, while shares in Roxas Holdings picked up 22 centavos or 12.79% to P1.94 each. — Denise A. Valdez

Ben&Ben announces — then retracts — name of fan group

After learning its first choice was also a K-pop fandom name, it chose the name Liwanag

FOLK-POP outfit Ben&Ben has finally settled on what to name its fandom after several back and forths. This came after announcing then retracting the original name, Lights, on the same day, Sept. 3, after realizing that Lights was already an existing K-pop fandom name.

The new name, Liwanag, the Filipino term for “light,” still carries the band’s message that Ben&Ben and their fans “can be bearers of hope in these dark times,” according to a press release.

“Fandom” is the term used today in place of the old-fashioned “fans club.”

Ben&Ben is a nine-piece OPM band known for hit songs such as “Pagtingin” and “Maybe the Night,” among others. The band recently started a weekly YouTube show called BBTV with its first episode uploaded on Aug. 5. The first episode showed the band talking about their love for K-Pop.

“Liwanag is the new, official fandom name of Ben&Ben! We have heard your suggestions. We want to honor our Filipino heritage, at higit sa lahat, kayo ang Liwanag namin (and more than anything else, you are our Liwanag),” the band announced on Sept. 4.

Lights is the fandom name of Highlight, a South Korean boy group which originally debuted under the name Beast in 2009 and continued as Highlight in 2017. The group is currently inactive as its members are in various stages of completing their country’s mandatory military service.

Upon Ben&Ben’s announcement of Lights as its fandom name, fans of Highlight took to Twitter to inform the band that there was already a fandom with the same name.

“Highlight announced their official fandom name ‘Light’ more than three years ago. You should know how important fandom names are in K-pop culture, so please do consider choosing another fandom name,” Twitter user @seoblicious posted as a reply on Ben&Ben’s announcement.

The World of Fandoms

K-pop, a genre of Korean pop music that is currently taking the world by storm, has some of the most dedicated fans in the world, with fandom names serving as an extension of their fan identities: top Korean boy group BTS, whose latest single “Dynamite” debuted atop the Billboard Hot 100 (the first South Korean group to do so), has ARMY as its fandom name, girl group BlackPink’s fandom is named Blinks, another top boy group, EXO, has EXO-Ls, and girl group Twice has ONCEs.

People who saw the rise of K-pop during the early 2010s will remember — or may still be part of — the fandoms of Girls Generation (SONE), Super Junior (ELF), Big Bang (VIP), and 2NE1 (BlackJacks), among many others.

Many fandom names are abbreviations like BTS’ ARMY which stands for “Adorable Representative MC for Youth” (note that BTS stands for “Bulletproof Boy Scouts”), Super Junior’s ELF stands for “Everlasting Friends,” etc.

Most fans belonging to a fandom will identify themselves as such and entertainment companies have started trademarking fandom names and logos, as in the case of SM Entertainment under whose umbrella are EXO, Super Junior, and Girls Generation, and Big Hit Entertainment’s BTS, among others.

After informing Ben&Ben of the existing K-pop fandom name, the band immediately retracted the name Lights and apologized for the confusion it generated.

“Hello. We have decided to suspend our fandom name ‘Lights’ until further notice, as many have informed us that there is already an existing K-pop fandom with the same name. We apologize for the confusion and dismay that this has caused to the parties involved,” the nine-piece band said in a Twitter post, before adding that they did not “realize that it may cause trouble being that Ben&Ben is an OPM band from the Philippines.”

“We hold high respect for K-pop culture and K-pop fandoms,” the band said.

“Thank you for listening to LIGHTs @BenAndBenMusic. Hopefully, you will find a better fandom name that will suit you and your fans and please continue to make high quality music,” a Twitter account named @HIGHLIGHT_PH said in response to the retraction. — Zarlene B. Chua

IMI unit applies to list at New York stock market

A SUBSIDIARY of Ayala-led Integrated Micro-Electronics, Inc. (IMI) is planning to list at the New York Stock Exchange through an initial public offering.

In a disclosure on the Philippine Stock Exchange on Monday, IMI said its unit VIA optronics AG has filed a registration statement with the US Securities and Exchange Commission last week.

The company wants to do an initial public offering of its American Depositary Shares representing ordinary shares in its capital. The amount of shares and the offer price for each have not been finalized as of Monday.

American Depositary Shares are shares in non-US companies that may be bought by US investors.

VIA has tapped Berenberg Bank as its sole bookrunner for the offering. When the plan proceeds, its shares will be listed under the ticker symbol “VIAO”.

Prior to Monday’s disclosure, an article attributed to Renaissance Capital has been posted on the Nasdaq Stock Market’s website last Friday, claiming VIA intends to raise $100 million from the proposed offering. IMI did not verify this claim when confirmed by BusinessWorld.

VIA is a supplier of display solutions based in Germany and is 76.01%-owned by IMI. Together with STI, Ltd., the two companies booked a combined revenue of $109 million in the first semester, as VIA recorded a 47% growth in quarter-on-quarter sales.

IMI swung to a $21.53 million net loss during the period, reversing its net profit of $5.78 million the previous year, due to operational and trade disruptions brought by the coronavirus pandemic.

The company is a provider of electronic products to automotive, industrial and aerospace industries, with manufacturing plants in the Philippines, China, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Serbia, United Kingdom, and the United States.

Shares in IMI at the Philippine Stock Exchange gained 47 centavos or 8.82% to close at P5.80 each on Monday. — Denise A. Valdez

Netflix’s Reed Hastings conquered Hollywood with a PowerPoint presentation

By Lucas Shaw, Bloomberg

ABOUT three years ago, Reed Hastings set out to answer a question that had bedeviled Hollywood for the past decade: How did a small DVD-by-mail company build the most popular TV service in the world?

Mr. Hastings, the co-founder and chief executive officer of Netflix, Inc., was never fond of revisiting his past. “There’s not a nostalgic bone in his body,” says Patty McCord, a former employee and longtime friend. But after outmaneuvering media barons, tech conglomerates, and startups to build a global entertainment colossus, Mr. Hastings agreed to write a book.

He didn’t want to write a gushy memoir, what Mr. Hastings calls “CEO pontification books,” in which corporate bigwigs chronicle their rise to the top of the business world, offering their life as a model for aspiring entrepreneurs. They’ve all left him dissatisfied. “Every time I read one, I wonder, ‘What’s the reality? What’s it really like?’” he says, speaking from his home in Santa Cruz, California. Take The Ride of a Lifetime, Bob Iger’s reflection on his time at Walt Disney, Co., now Netflix’s chief competitor. The book offered great insights about Iger’s early days at ABC, but, in Mr. Hastings’s view, everything was a little too tidy. “He covered all the acquisitions that went well and none of the disastrous ones.”

Inspired by books such as The HP Way and Beyond Entrepreneurship, Mr. Hastings chose to write about what he says is the real key to Netflix’s success: its culture. That topic will strike some as hopelessly dull. Who wants to read a tome about travel and expense policies? But the Netflix culture is already an object of fascination for Silicon Valley and Hollywood — ever since Mr. Hastings released a 127-page PowerPoint presentation on the topic in 2009. That slide deck has since been viewed more than 20 million times and hailed by Facebook, Inc. Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg as perhaps the most important document ever to come out of Silicon Valley.

Mr. Hastings, 59, is hoping his new book will have a similar impact. No Rules Rules, co-written with Erin Meyer, expands upon the PowerPoint presentation, outlining a 10-step plan to replicate the Netflix culture of “freedom and responsibility.” “The goal is to give back and influence young organizations about a set of principles we think are valuable,” Mr. Hastings says.

Though Mr. Hastings didn’t set out to write about himself, No Rules Rules serves many of the same functions as a memoir, reflecting what he has learned in his 30-year journey from young, ambitious entrepreneur to one of the world’s richest people. It also offers a glimpse inside the mind of a man who is affectionately called a robot by his employees. Mr. Hastings is brilliant and focused, an engineer who predicted the future of Hollywood 20 years ago and has seldom erred in executing his vision. But he is also unsentimental and less outgoing than your typical entertainment mogul.

“Erin dragged many very personal stories out of me,” he says, while describing his personal journey as only “marginally interesting” and unlikely to change anyone’s life. “A good book about culture may change some other organization in a positive way.”

When Mr. Hastings first released the culture slideshow, Ms. McCord was convinced it would damage the company. The presentation encouraged employees to openly criticize one another for the sake of transparency, and it recommended that managers get rid of workers whose performance was “merely adequate.” She was in charge of recruiting and human resources at the time and recalls thinking, “Oh God. You’ll scare away all our candidates.”

Ultimately, however, it filtered out the candidates who were wrong for the company. “It made discussion and hiring very different,” Ms. McCord says. “It wasn’t just talking about whether or not you were qualified but whether or not you liked to be independent. Do you deliver when you say you will?”

The approach boiled down to a simple idea: Hire the very best people and get out of their way. Netflix employees are paid far more than they would earn at almost any other company, receiving unlimited vacation, generous parental leave, and no official limit on expenses. The company’s decentralized decision-making lets people take big swings without approval from above. Mr. Hastings is fond of talking about how few decisions he makes, suggesting that his job is little more than cutting ribbons and kissing babies.

But former employees have complained about the downside. While Netflix’s practices may filter out some underperformers, the approach can feel impersonal and leaves the ever-present specter of losing your job.

“It does hurt when people say it was terrible at Netflix,” says Mr. Hastings, but he’s confident that most employees enjoy the workplace. “The percentage of people leaving is at its lowest it’s ever been.” (Some of that, he acknowledges, is due to high compensation and some is due to the pandemic.)

Netflix’s high-performance culture was forged during a round of layoffs in 2001, just after the dot-com bubble popped. The company needed to raise money to prop up its unprofitable business and had to fire a third of its staff to stay solvent. The layoffs, though painful, had no effect on the company’s performance. If anything, the company was better off. Mr. Hastings and Ms. McCord soon realized that Netflix could do more with less.

A Boston native, Mr. Hastings traveled across the country in 1985 to study computer science at Stanford University, the sun in Silicon Valley’s solar system. After graduating, he worked at a couple of technology firms before coming up with the idea for Purify, which identified errors in computer programs. He built a prototype of the product by himself before approaching other people to help — one of whom was Raymond Peck, then dating Mr. Hastings’s co-worker.

The early years of that startup were fun, Peck says. Mr. Hastings would host hot-tub parties and beer bashes for the small group of employees. But even then he showed an ambition that amazed his colleagues. Mr. Hastings’s view for the business “was almost evangelical — the fervor he had for doing great and amazing things,” Mr. Peck says.

Mr. Hastings would often ask Ms. McCord to rate him as a boss. She had joined the company after stints at Borland Software and Sun Microsystems, where management threw chairs across the room, Ms. McCord says. On the jerk meter, you barely flicker, she would tell him.

Most of Mr. Hastings’s fellow CEOs were more interested in taking their staff on private jets, but he just wanted to write code. “It was a very geeky software company,” says Ms. McCord. “Reed wrote the first program — he was the geek of the geeks.”

Pure Software — as it was then known — was successful enough that it started buying other companies, and that’s when things got complicated. New employees didn’t assimilate, creating a company with many fiefdoms and cultures. Mr. Hastings began to compromise in hiring, bringing on “B people” instead of “A people.” Pure shuffled through five heads of sales in five years.

He tried to compensate by micromanaging. Everywhere he went, he’d ask people what they were doing and try to offer assistance. Ms. McCord would give tours of the offices to prospective hires and point out Mr. Hastings’s cubicle. “You like it when he’s in his cubicle because it means he’s not in yours,” she would say. (Mr. Hastings has no office at Netflix; he just floats around from room to room.)

Not long after Pure went public in 1995, it acquired a company called Atria that was similarly sized and generated a lot of money. But the software was flawed, and the company’s leaders blamed the customers instead of fixing it, Mr. Peck recalls. Not long after that, Mr. Hastings sold the company — then called Pure Atria — to Rational Software and walked out the door.

“We had built something amazing, and then because of market forces and his inability to continue that culture, that got destroyed,” Peck says.

Mr. Hastings never planned to run Netflix. He took his money from Pure and made a series of investments, of which Netflix was just one. He had taught math in Swaziland after college and planned to explore the world of education. He joined the California Board of Education in 1996 and that led to a campaign to expand access to charter schools in the state. He has since spent more than $100 million on education initiatives.

Netflix’s first CEO was Marc Randolph, a former employee of Mr. Hastings’s at Pure. But he had an entrepreneur’s mindset, and was better suited to starting companies than building them. So Mr. Hastings, who was already on Netflix’s board, stepped in to help steer the ship. They ran the company together for a couple of years, and then Mr. Hastings took over full time.

Given a second chance at leading, Mr. Hastings swore not to repeat the same mistakes. He has avoided acquisitions and tried to make no compromises when hiring the best people — even when it led to being sued for poaching.

As Netflix has grown, what started as a technology company led by engineers has morphed into an entertainment company led by thousands of people trained in Hollywood studios. The two sides have often disagreed, including over how best to market Netflix’s shows and movies. (The engineers prefer to only use algorithms to target an audience, while Hollywood executives like billboards and parties.) Yet Mr. Hastings says any lingering tension has been resolved in Los Angeles’s favor. The company now spends two-thirds of its money on content, and has more employees in Los Angeles than Silicon Valley.

In the last decade, Mr. Hastings has made just one huge blunder: splitting Netflix’s original DVD-by-mail business from the streaming business and renaming it Qwikster. But even then, he knew that the future of TV was online.

Netflix’s rivals in tech and media have tried all sorts of approaches, but Mr. Hastings has stuck to a few general principles. Its service doesn’t sell ads. It doesn’t rely on user-generated content (Netflix doesn’t want to be YouTube or TikTok). And it hasn’t strayed into tangential businesses such as gaming or music or theme parks.

The singular goal was adding more subscribers to its service.

“They have a really long-term strategy,” says Peter Chernin, a veteran media executive and investor. “They focused on growth with the assumption that growth will lead to great profitability.”

That focus is about to be tested. In July, Mr. Hastings announced that Ted Sarandos, his longtime lieutenant, would be his co-CEO. This formalized an arrangement that had been functioning in practice for many years, and reflected the company’s shift from Silicon Valley to Hollywood.

Mr. Sarandos used to travel to Silicon Valley every week to meet with the engineers. Now it’s the reverse, with Mr. Hastings visiting Los Angeles. When movie stars and directors think about Netflix, they don’t think about him. You won’t find him on red carpets like Amazon.com, Inc.’s Jeff Bezos or at premieres like Apple Inc. boss Tim Cook. That’s Mr. Sarandos’ role.

Co-CEO arrangements are unusual and rarely successful. Mr. Sarandos, for all his skills as an executive, is in some ways the opposite of Mr. Hastings. Mr. Hastings is an intellectual; Mr. Sarandos, a schmoozer and pop-culture encyclopedia. While Mr. Hastings is analytical and unemotional, Mr. Sarandos is more prone to making decisions based on personal relationships.

Mr. Hastings dismisses the concerns, noting that Mr. Sarandos has been a huge evangelist for the culture he created, and the company’s anchor in its transition to Hollywood. Mr. Hastings has also reassured employees and investors he’s not going anywhere soon. “It’s not like I want go sailing,” he says. He still wakes up everyday to look at a dashboard of new sign-ups and top-performing shows.

Yet the promotion of Mr. Sarandos and the writing of the book are clear signals that Mr. Hastings has begun to map out Netflix’s future without him at the top.

“I love the work of Netflix, but it’s also true it won’t be forever,” he says. Mr. Hastings points to Microsoft Corp. as his model: “Look at Microsoft, now 20 years from Bill Gates. There’s still a lot of Bill Gates in Microsoft. There’s a lot of evidence you can make a big imprint that lasts for a long time.” — Bloomberg

House clears San Miguel’s airport city plan in Bulacan

THE House of Representatives approved on final reading a bill that will grant San Miguel Aerocity, Inc. the authority over the construction and management of an airport and an adjacent “airport city”  in Bulacan.

With 218 lawmakers voting yes to the measure and six who voted no, House Bill 7507 was approved on third and final reading based on plenary proceedings notes provided to the media on Monday.

The bill not only grants San Miguel Aerocity a franchise to construct and operate a domestic and international airport in Bulacan, but will also allow the company to develop and create a so-called airport city nearby.

The franchise will be in effect for 50 years from the effectivity of the act, inclusive of a 10-year maximum period for the design, planning, and construction of the airport and the airport city, “unless sooner revoked or cancelled,” the bill read.

The grantee is also ordered to operate and maintain the airport city “in a satisfactory manner at all times” and “shall conform to the ethics of honest enterprise and not use the airport for subversive and treasonable acts.”

On Aug. 27, the House ways and means committee approved a seperate bill (House Bill 7241) that will exempt the grantee from taxes during the 10-year construction period.

San Miguel Aerocity is a subsidiary of San Miguel Holdings Corp.

Gabriela party-list Rep. Arlene D. Brosas, who was one of the six who voted against granting the franchise, said in a statement on Monday that the airport will affect 700 families, mostly fisherfolk, who reside in Brgy. Taliptip in Bulakan, Bulacan.

She said the project could threaten our country’s food security as P30-million worth of fishery and marine products will be affected while 24.5-hectares of mangroves will be destroyed. — Gillian M. Cortez

ASEAN Music festival goes online

EXPERIENCE Southeast Asian music from Sept. 19 to 20 as the ASEAN Music Showcase Festival holds its first run digitally via Facebook and YouTube, featuring 20 artists from Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and the Philippines.

“We are a subregion in Asia best known to the world for our tropical vacation destinations and our delicious food — but not our music… and we want to change that,” the festival’s website reads.

The inaugural digital festival will have performances by Singapore’s Linying, Marian Carmel, Coming Up Roses, and J.M3; Thailand’s TONTRAKUL, Valentina Ploy, STOIC, and H 3 F; Malaysia’s Bayangan, Buddha Beat, Golden Mammoth, and Mutesite; Indonesia’s Tanayu, Bangkutaman, Rangkai, and Oslo Ibrahim; and the Philippines’ Pikoy, Cheats, Uprising Records Artists, and August Wahh.

The music showcase is meant to “create a platform that elevates Southeast Asia’s music scene to the world stage,” according to a release — a music scene with its array of genres and subgenres “virtually invisible to the world,” said the event’s website.

Created by concert and festival promoters from the region alongside conference organizers and music influencers, the festival will also be holding virtual networking meetings with “some of the biggest and most promising music business professionals in the world, as well as up-and-coming and established artists in Asia,” on Sept. 21.

The ASEAN Music Showcase Festival will run from Sept. 19 to 20 via Facebook and YouTube on their official media pages. — ZBC

Warehouse logistics grows amid e-commerce boom

By Denise A. Valdez, Senior Reporter

THE WAREHOUSE logistics industry is seen to grow by as much as 9% in the next three years, as the e-commerce boom shows no signs of slowing down.

Property consultancy firm Lobien Realty Group (LRG) noted demand for warehouses has been increasing as retailers shift to e-commerce as consumers prefer online shopping amid the pandemic.

“[T]he logistics industry is one of the luckiest sectors, because there is still growth in that segment, and that’s because of the growth in e-commerce,” LRG Chief Executive Officer Sheila Lobien told BusinessWorld last week.

“Everyone now is somehow forced to buy things online, and warehousing facilities are really needed. The logistics support has to complement the growth in e-commerce,” she added.

Citing an industry study, Ms. Lobien said the logistics sector is projected to grow 8% to 9% annually in the near term, and the rising demand for warehouses is likely to support this expectation.

“In other segments, we don’t see any growth this year. However in that particular segment, yes it’s that high level. Which is good news because it’s still moving, the market is moving,” she said.

Any expected growth will need support from the government, particularly through the continuous rollout of infrastructure projects to improve the country’s road network.

Ms. Lobien said land values in Metro Manila have been doubling in the past five years, which pushed developers to look for warehousing sites outside the capital.

The challenge in this setup, however, is the accessibility of warehouse facilities to both retailers and consumers. Ms. Lobien said the sustained development of road infrastructure in the next five years would be crucial in the growth of the sector.

“The Build, Build, Build project has to be supported, because it will go hand in hand (with the growth of the logistics industry). The country will be more attractive if we have good networks, roads. That’s the challenge,” Ms. Lobien said.

A 2017 survey by the Department of Trade and Industry showed the Philippines had higher logistics costs compared with regional peers Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand. Logistics costs stood at 27.16% as a percentage of sales.

The government aims to improve this by eliminating red tape and working with the private sector, among other initiatives.

Mitsubishi Motors identifies Southeast Asia as growth driver

MITSUBISHI Motors Corp. (MMC) introduced its hybrid SUV Outlander PHEV in the Philippines as part of its plan to expand in the Southeast Asian region.

“ASEAN is MMC’s growth driver in the three-year mid-term business plan announced in July this year,” said MMC Co-Chief Operating Officer Yoichiro Yatabe in a press release on Monday.

“Not only will we support the development of the country’s automotive industry and economy, but will also foster the communities to protect the environment for a sustainable future.”

The company said the Philippines is the second region where it introduced the Outlander PHEV, after Indonesia. Sales began on Sept. 5 at Peak Motors Philippines, Inc. in Manila Bay.

Introduced to 60 countries since 2013, the vehicle has total sales of 260,000 units by August.

The vehicle has a twin-motor 4WD system and a EV-based PHEV architecture with a front electric motor, a rear electric motor and no gearbox.

MMC sales fell 42.8% to 3,149 units in July, compared with the same month last year, data from the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. said. It had the second biggest market share at 15%. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Gov’t makes full award of T-bills as strong demand keeps rates low

THE government made a full award of the Treasury bills (T-bills) it offered on Monday even as some tenors fetched higher rates as demand for the short-term securities remained strong.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) on Monday borrowed P20 billion as planned via the T-bills as the offer was almost thrice oversubscribed, with bids reaching P56.687 billion. Yields on the short-term papers ended mixed.

Broken down, the BTr raised P5 billion as planned via the 91-day debt papers out of total tenders worth P19.028 billion. The three-month papers fetched an average rate of 1.167%, down by 1.3 basis points (bps) from the 1.18% logged at last week’s auction.

The government also made a full award of the 182-day T-bills, awarding the programmed P5 billion, as the papers fetched bids worth P11.008 billion. This, even as the six-month securities were quoted at an average yield of 1.518%, up 9.7 bps from 1.421% previously.

The Treasury likewise accepted the programmed P10 billion for the 364-day papers as the tenor attracted tenders worth P26.651 billion. The one-year T-bills fetched an average rate of 1.807%, up 1.9 bps from last week’s 1.788%.

The Treasury made a full award of its T-bill offering as rates were still low despite higher yields on the longer tenors, National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said on Monday.

“Rates remain low, even with adjustment on 182-day [T-bills]. Good demand remains with volume received in the auction,” Ms. De Leon told reporters via Viber after the auction.

Sought for comment, a trader said the 91-day T-bills were quoted at a lower rate as investors prefer the shorter tenor over longer ones amid an uncertain environment.

“The 91-day securities had a lower yield mostly because of the lower inflation rate in August. It will also mature before yearend, giving investors [time] to evaluate [their finance options],” the trader said via Viber.

Inflation eased to a three-month low in August amid improved supply as the economy reopened from another two-week strict lockdown meant to contain a coronavirus pandemic, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported on Friday.

Prices of widely used goods rose by 2.4% last month, bringing the eight-month average to 2.5%. The August print was slower than the 2.7% logged in July but faster than the 1.7% seen in August 2019.

A second trader said investors want to maximize gains from the 91-day papers as they expect the Treasury to accept slightly higher rates, with the central bank signaling steady borrowing costs in the meantime.

“Most players opted to park their excess liquidity at the shortest available tenor in 91-day bills mainly due to expectations of relatively higher interest rates in the coming months as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is expected to pause on its easing ways,” the second trader said via Viber.

“For the longer ones, maybe because of the difference against BSP’s online rate (1.75%), at least for those who have access to it. So the six-month to one-year bills are adjusting higher at the moment,” the trader added.

The BSP’s policy-setting Monetary Board held benchmark rates steady at its review last month on benign inflation and signs of economic recovery following the easing of restriction measures meant to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

Rates on the central bank’s overnight reverse repurchase, lending and deposit facilities are at record lows of 2.25%, 2.75% and 1.75%, respectively.

The Treasury is looking to raise P160 billion from the domestic market this month: P100 billion via weekly auctions of T-bills and P60 billion via Treasury bonds to be offered fortnightly.

The government is looking to borrow around P3 trillion this year from local and foreign lenders to help fund its budget deficit expected to hit 9.6% of the country’s gross domestic product. — KKTJ

How Disney should handle Black Panther 2 after Chadwick Boseman’s death

SOON after learning that Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman had died at age 43, fans urged Marvel Studios not to recast the role, setting up a dilemma for the studio planning a sequel to Hollywood’s first major superhero film with a predominantly Black cast.

Writers, academics, and activists — speaking to Reuters about the film’s cultural impact and Boseman’s performance — believe Marvel and its parent company, Walt Disney, Co., should honor Boseman’s legacy with a storyline that anoints a new Black Panther from the film’s existing cast or elsewhere in the Marvel Universe.

“They should really consider following the storyline of the comic book and advancing Letitia Wright (who plays Shuri, the tech genius sister of Boseman’s character) into that central role,” said Jamil Smith, a senior writer at Rolling Stone.

“We’ve seen her in action. We’ve seen her in the middle of these fights. Why would we not think she’d have the courage and strength to become the next Black Panther?”

That strategy could help ease in fans who would have a hard time seeing a different male actor continue the role.

“Maybe the answer, for those of us who aren’t yet ready to see someone else in that suit, is to pass the reins a little earlier than they had expected and allow Shuri to take on the mantle maybe for a Black Panther 2,” said April Reign, #OscarsSoWhite creator and vice-president of content strategy for Ensemble, a content studio.

Other approaches could celebrate Boseman’s legacy. “Does (his character) come back as little Black Panther?” said Nicol Turner Lee, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “Does Disney honor the imagination of the young boys and girls who looked up to him?”

Disney and Marvel declined to comment. The studio has focused on paying tribute to Boseman, broadcasting the film commercial-free  on Disney-owned ABC, followed by an ABC News special about the actor. According to a report in the Hollywood Reporter, executives were caught by surprise and few people were aware of Boseman’s battle with cancer.

WAKANDA FOREVER
Black Panther, based on the pioneering Marvel Comics character that first appeared in 1966, generated $1.35 billion in box-office sales, three Academy Awards, and a best picture Oscar nomination, and acclaim for its titular star, who died on Aug. 28. Marvel was planning to begin production of Black Panther 2 in March, according to the Hollywood Reporter, for a scheduled May 6, 2022, release.

Although other studios have experienced the sudden deaths of franchise stars — and have recast, for other reasons, titular roles like Batman and Spider-Man —Marvel’s decision holds more weight because Black Panther was a much-celebrated Black superhero movie, starring an actor beloved by fans for the dignity he brought to the role.

The 2018 film broke new ground with its predominantly Black cast, helmed by a Black director. Boseman played the character of King T’Challa, who presides over the futuristic African nation of Wakanda. Produced with a $200 million budget, it was praised for its diversity, after years of criticism about the lack of actors and filmmakers of color in Hollywood.

“It shattered at that time for Disney just the myth that you cannot package and distribute feature films with Black people as the starring roles,” said Lee. “For me, Black Panther represents the fact that inclusivity sells.”

Black Panther also hit theaters at a time of rising US racial tension. President Donald Trump had recently questioned why the United States would want to have immigrants from Haiti and African nations, referring to some as “shithole countries.” The previous August, he had said “both sides” were to blame for violence between white nationalists and counterprotesters at a rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Then came Wakanda.

Black Panther the film was a huge cultural landmark,” said Alan Jenkins, a professor of practice at Harvard Law School. “One part of what made the film so important was the world of Wakanda and the idea of an African nation unchained by colonialism, slave trade, exploitation. It had dignity, brilliance and technology.”

Today Black Panther is even more relevant, as Black Americans disproportionately suffer from COVID-19 and die at the hands of police, cultural experts say. The aspirational Wakanda provides an antidote to that

“The film certainly didn’t cause the activism of today — that was from the tragic killing of George Floyd and others,” said Mr. Jenkins. “But it contributed to an environment where we can see new realities and imagine a world that is more just and equitable than the one in which we live.” — Reuters

Ayala Land estates positioned for resurgence

AYALA LAND, Inc. (ALI) believes its estate developments are well-positioned for resurgence after the pandemic.

“We maintain an optimistic view of the future of our estates as these are designed for the long term and are all grounded on sustainability,” Ayala Land Estates Assistant Vice-President Cris Zuluaga said in a statement.

One such development is Vermosa, a 725-hectare mixed-use estate in Cavite. Vermosa, which will have a one-of-a-kind sports complex, “seeks to promote a community with a balanced and active lifestyle” that is important amid the pandemic.

“The potential for growth in this area of Cavite continues to be unmistakable despite the impact of the pandemic to construction and development, but we are now back on track with the easing of quarantine guidelines,” Ms. Zuluaga said. 

Nuvali, a 2,290-hectare eco-city development spanning the cities of Sta. Rosa, Cabuyao and Calamba in Laguna, is expected to become the next business and lifestyle district south of Makati.

ALI is offering commercial lots at Nuvali, particularly in the upcoming commercial districts East Bloc and Lakeside Evozone.

“Soon, confidence will return; economic activities will increase, and so our efforts today are focused on ensuring that our developments are well-positioned for resurgence and remain as strong platforms for growth,” Ms. Zuluaga said.

Other ALI estates include Arca South in Taguig, and Alviera in Porac, Pampanga.

ABS-CBN launches new educational platform

‘JUST LOVE KIDS’ provides multimedia materials for young learners and is the newest offering under Online Kapamilya Live — PHILSTAR/MICHAEL VARCAS

ABS-CBN Corp. announced Monday its new digital platform meant to provide educational multimedia materials for young learners.

The new platform called “Just Love Kids” will be available in the network’s website starting Friday, Sept. 11. It will offer supplementary educational videos, music, and activities for young learners who take online classes, ABS-CBN said in an e-mailed statement.

This is meant “to support parents in teaching their kids and reinforce values relevant to Filipino families,” the network added.

The materials — suitable for preschool, primary, and intermediate learners — include value-laden Star Cinema movies, ABS-CBN shows, and programs from Knowledge Channel, kids channel YeY, streaming app iWant TFC, and The Filipino Channel or TFC.

Printable worksheets and activities will also be available.

The online educational platform is the network’s newest offering after it launched in July the Online Kapamilya Live, where it live streams its programs.

The network is currently focusing on businesses that do not require a legislative franchise.

Apart from digital channels, ABS-CBN also focuses on cable, international licensing and distribution, and production of content for streaming services.

The network announced last month the shutdown of 12 of its news programs in the provinces.

ABS-CBN has reported an attributable net loss of P3.16 billion for the second quarter from a profit of P695.80 million in the same period in 2019.

Its  total revenues for the second quarter dropped 55.17% to P4.68 billion from P10.44 billion posted a year earlier. — Arjay L. Balinbin