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Playing life, not notes

AWARD-WINNING American bassist Victor Wooten introduced his masterclass with an improv solo performance. The rhythm of jazz and bluegrass bass filled this writer’s room for the first 20 minutes. The music fulfilled the atmosphere of a physical live performance despite watching through a laptop screen.

After his solo performance, Mr. Wooten set the instrument aside and began to liken playing music to talking freely.

“I want to be able to play music that free, whether it’s good or not, is not important. What’s important is when I play, is it me?,” Mr. Wooten said in an evening Zoom session on Feb. 20.

“[When] you pay attention to what I’m saying, you don’t really pay attention to whether my voice sounds good or not, because what I’m saying becomes more important,” he added.

For the entire hour and a half, Mr. Wooten discussed playing not only the bass, but what it means to play and share music.

Born in September 1964, Victor Wooten grew up with parents who worked in the Air Force. He was the youngest of five sons who all grew up playing music in the Wooten Brothers Band.

Mr. Wooten has been the bassist for jazz and bluegrass band Béla Fleck and the Flecktones since 1988, and a member of the band bass guitar group SMV. He has also played bass for the metal band Nitro since 2017. He is the founder of independent record label Vix Records. Mr. Wootten is a five-time Grammy award winner including Best Pop Instrumental Performance in 1996 for the song “The Sinister Minister.”

GETTING INTO THE GROOVE
As the session continued, Mr. Wooten shifted from his stool to facing the camera beside a white board. He wrote down the 10 essential elements: notes; rhythm; technique; articulation (playing the notes shorter or longer); variety of feeling, phrasing; use of tone; dynamics or energy; space; and listening.

For half an hour, he discussed the importance of all elements. He stressed that music theory focuses solely on notes, and that playing music uses all the elements.

“When you put all of this together, what you get is the groove,” he said. “You can play the right notes, but with the wrong feel, it won’t groove.”

He recalled a story by American pianist Herbie Hancock who played the wrong chord during a performance with jazz musician Miles Davis. “[Miles] Davis did not care about it. But responded to it,” Mr. Wooten said.

“Getting every piece right is not the goal. It is getting the message across,” he said. “My music is better when I make mistakes. Embrace your mistakes, maybe even celebrate your mistakes. But in every case, go with them.”

Mr. Wooten asked the class participants: What is music to you?

The participants flooded the chat box to complete the statement, “Music is —” with the words such as “life,” “language,” “expression,” and “lifesaver.”

At this point, the award-winning bassist stressed that learning and playing music is beyond getting boxed with the technicalities. He observed that no participant answered that music was about notes or any instrument.

Mr. Wooten made an analogy of how instruments and music theory are like the tools used to fix a car. The tools are available, however it “belongs in the trunk” and are applicable when needed.

“As soon as we pick up the instrument we think, ‘Music is my bass.’ No. Those are tools,” Mr. Wooten said. “We should be playing life. We should be communicating. We should be playing expression.

“Don’t mistake the tools for music. Our goal is to play music, not the tools,” he concluded.

Hosted by the US Embassy in the Philippines, the Philippine International Jazz Festival, and Crossover Online Radio, the virtual masterclass was held in celebration of Philippine National Arts Month and US Black History Month. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Meralco says power bill may drop in March

CUSTOMERS of Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) have a “strong” chance of seeing their electricity bill next month to be lower as it will include the average refund rate of P0.1528 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for “over-recoveries” as ordered by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC), a company official said on Thursday.

“Based on initial projections, there is a strong likelihood that power rates for March 2021 will go down, as this will be the second consecutive month of decrease for the year,” Meralco Vice-President and Head of Corporate Communications Joe R. Zaldarriaga said in a Viber message.

He added that the distribution utility was still waiting for the final bills from its power suppliers.

Mr. Zaldarriaga explained that next month’s power rate would include the average refund rate of P0.1528 per kWh based on the firm’s distribution rate “true-up” or Meralco’s actual weighted average tariff, which is derived by dividing its revenues by the total kilowatt-hour sales.

Over-recoveries happen when the actual weighted average rate breached the price cap based on the ERC-approved interim average rate.

Last week, the ERC announced that it had released the order for Meralco to refund P13.89 billion in over-recoveries based on the power firm’s actual weighted average tariff from July 2015 to Nov. 2020.

The refund would take effect starting March. The total amount must be refunded within 24 months or until fully returned to power consumers, according to the commission.

“Meralco’s refund rate will be reflected as a separate line item in the bills of the customers during the refund period,” Mr. Zaldarriaga said.

According to the Meralco executive, the projected decrease in power rates would continue “the downward trend in electricity costs, as overall rates have gone down by more than P1 per kWh since the start of 2020.”

On Feb. 8, Meralco announced that typical households in Metro Manila should expect to see a P14 drop in power rates this month. It attributed the decrease to lower generation charges. It said that the overall power rate in February stood at P8.6793 per kWh, which was P0.0704 per kWh lower than the rate in January.

Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by 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. — Angelica Y. Yang

San Miguel says prepayment offer for Ilijan plant ‘made in good faith’

SAN MIGUEL Corp. (SMC) said that its offer to pay off the 1,200-megawatt (MW) Ilijan power plant’s capacity charges ahead of schedule was done in good faith, according to a statement issued on Thursday.

This comes a day after state-led Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM) rejected what it described as a “preposterous” settlement in the payment scheme put forward by SMC power unit South Premiere Power Corp. (SPPC).

The agency received the settlement offer from the firm a letter dated Jan. 11. Details of PSALM’s position were shared on Wednesday by the Department of Finance (DoF). The Finance secretary chairs PSALM.

“SMC’s offer to pay off capacity charges for its Ilijan Power Plant, two years ahead of schedule, was made as a gesture of good faith to help boost government resources needed to address the immediate social and economic impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic,” SMC said in its statement.

It explained that the turnover of the Ilijan plant to SPPC was “a natural consequence of prepaying the remaining P20 billion worth of capacity charges.”

SMC said that the remaining capacity charges were down to P14 billion as of end-January, as its unit SPPC had paid a total of P83 billion in capacity charges and P260 billion in generation charges for the plant.

“If all the capacity charges are paid then the selling price of the Ilijan Power Plant would have been deemed paid. In fact, SPPC would have overpaid, as P98 billion would have paid for a brand new, and not a 25-year old, power plant,” SMC said.

The DoF said PSALM rejected SPPC’s offer on Jan. 11 because it contained a “preposterous condition” that was not previously mentioned in the payment scheme suggested in March last year.

According to the Finance department, PSALM President and CEO Irene Joy Besido-Garcia said SPPC’s latest offer contains a condition that calls for PSALM to “cede control and ownership of the Ilijan Power Plant to SPPC upon full settlement of the Monthly Payments, and ahead of the June 2022 date of turnover provided in the Independent Power Producer Administrator agreement.”

The DoF said that PSALM had sent a letter dated Jan. 18 to SPPC, saying that the acceptance of the firm’s prepayment offer under the new condition would “pre-empt any ruling of the judicial court on the matter and will undoubtedly prejudice PSALM’s legal position.”

The state-led entity added that the National Power Corp. and KEPCO Ilijan Corp. already agreed on the transfer date of the Ilijan plant.

“PSALM should not be obligated to fast-track or amend its current arrangements in the Energy Conversion Agreement (ECA) under another contract with a different party in order to accept SPPC’s offer,” the DoF said.

SMC, in its statement on Thursday, said that it is committed to pursue discussions with the government in swiftly resolving the issue. — Angelica Y. Yang

The cash-flush amateurs hunting game cards, handbags and art

LONDON — Stocks, bonds and commodities? Old hat.

Once the preserve of the super-rich, or just the eccentric, all kinds of unusual investments from vintage handbags and shares in fine art to rare Pokemon cards are now the happy hunting ground for stuck-at-home punters.

Often armed with lockdown-era savings, such amateur investors are seeking higher returns beyond conventional markets where rocketing prices are prompting warnings of bubbles. They have in turn driven prices on some “alternative” assets up several hundred percent higher in the past year.

And just like the no-fee trading apps such as Robinhood that enabled hordes of small-time equity traders to rattle seasoned hedge funds during the recent Gamestocks episodes, digital platforms are empowering wannabe investors with as little as $20 to dabble in collectables.

Value can apparently lurk in all sorts of places.

Collectors’ cards based on Nintendo’s 7974.T hit 1990s video game, Pokemon, have exploded in value in the past year.

One first-edition of its fire-flying character Charizard has rocketed 800% in a year, after YouTube star Logan Paul paid $150,000 for one in October. Recent auctions have valued the card at $300,000.

Chicago-based Pokemon enthusiast Zack Browning, who purchased four of the cards in 2016 for less than $5,000 each, estimates his overall Pokemon collection is now worth $3 million-$5 million.

Browning, who embarked on his Pokemon investing career after studying finance at university, described the game card’s resurgence as “astounding and incredible.” He said that parts of the Pokemon market were more predictable than stock markets, which he said were overvalued.

PICK-ME-UPS
Of course measuring profit or loss on a painting or gauging demand for such collectables is a lot harder than in equity or currency markets, given items often have little in common with each other and can be traded only occasionally, such as by auction.

But a luxury investment index published by compiler Knight Frank on Wednesday showed that although top-end assets such as fine art fell in value during the pandemic, “relatively affordable luxury pick-me-ups” did well.

While the AMR All-Art Index, based on auction prices, fell 11% last year, according to Knight Frank, Hermes’ iconic Birkin handbag first launched in the 1980s, rose 17%, ahead of fine wine and classic cars.

Andrew Shirley, who edits the Knight Frank report, said last year’s most expensive Birkin sold for $200,000, with Asian luxury collectors in Asia “very happy to bid on handbags online.”

For people unable to stump up $200,000 per item, there are platforms such as New York-based Otis which launched in 2019.

These platforms buy anything from a Pokemon card to a basketball jersey signed by basketball legend Kobe Bryant, securitize them and then offer investors shares in the items that they can buy and sell.

Last year, Otis offered customers the chance to buy shares in a work by British street artist Banksy at $20 a share. Those shares hit $34 earlier this month, a 70% gain that valued the piece at $722,000, Otis said.

Investors tend to be aged 25 to 45, with disposable incomes of $100,000-plus, Otis founder and Chief Executive Michael Karnjanaprakorn told Reuters.

He said the most expensive item on Otis is a 1986 Basketball card set by sports cards maker Fleer — sold two months ago at $10 a share, it has since surged 305% to over $40. Reuters could not independently verify the price gains.

DON’T INVEST YOUR PENSION
At another collectables platform, Rally, the number of users is doubling every 30 days, according to CEO George Leimer. He said “several hundred thousand” investors used the platform but declined to be more specific.

The platform has also seen sought-after Pokemon cards surge into six-figures, Mr. Leimer said. “The drive behind this is very similar to what we are seeing in the rest of the retail investing world,” he said, pointing to the surge in popularity of Robinhood and other such apps.

But few seem to be banking profits; Leimer said the percentage of investors who withdrew their winnings rather than reinvest was in the “low single digits.”

As more punters flock to alternative assets, many warn of risks.

John-Paul Smith, a former senior equity strategist at Deutsche Bank, now dabbles in buying northern British art. He sees little difference between the behavior of some “alternatives”  investors and the equity frenzy.

“Banksy is pure momentum, it’s like a hot tech stock,” he said. “The psychology is similar in any Market.”

But conceptually, it seems “less foolish” to buy unconventional assets today than at any time in the 30 years Smith says he has followed markets. Not only are stocks expensive, vast central bank and government stimulus will eventually spur inflation, he said.

He urges investors to differentiate between what might be a passion or a hobby and an investment. If they set out solely to profit, they probably won’t, given how esoteric each part of markets like art can be.

“I would not advise anybody (to) put their pension in,” he said, a stance also taken by Pokemon investor Browning. — Reuters

SEC warns public about R.L. Aggregates

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has advised the public not to invest or to stop investing in R.L. Aggregates and Diversified Lending Group, Inc. after it received reports that the lending company has been soliciting investments without authorization or license from the regulator.

According to the SEC, the company offers a daily interest rate of one percent or a monthly interest of 30% for a minimum investment of P1,000 for a lock in period of only three months.

The company founded by Roberto S. Llorente is licensed to operate as a lending company and is not authorized nor licensed to collect investments as prescribed under Sections 8 and 28 of the Securities Regulation Code, the commission said.

It also said that the lending company had been circulating an altered copy of its Articles of Incorporation, which states that the “corporation shall direct solicit, accept or take investments/placements from the public and shall issue investment contracts.”

R.L. Aggregates and Diversified Lending Group’s original incorporation papers prohibit it from collecting and accepting investments from the public.

“The public should be made aware that the issuance of a Certificate of Incorporation and Authority with the commission as a lending company only grants entities juridical personality but does not constitute an authority or license for the corporation to engage in activities that require a secondary license from the SEC such as license to issue, sell, or offer securities to the public,” the SEC said in a statement.

The commission also warned the public that any investment program that promising a huge rate of return with little risk is an indication of a Ponzi scheme, which just pays off old investors using the money put in by newcomers.

“The public is advised to exercise caution in dealing with any individuals or group of persons soliciting investments for and on behalf of R.L. Aggregates and Diversified Lending Group, Inc. or any entities engaged in solicitation activities guised as lending companies,” it added.

Penalties of up to P5 million and/or a 21-year imprisonment await those who will be caught involved in the investment scheme.

The commission said the names of those involved in the scheme will be forwarded to the Bureau of Internal Revenue for further investigation and for respective taxes to be assessed. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

Van Gogh painting to be shown in public for first time

PARIS — A painting of a Paris street scene by Vincent Van Gogh is to be shown to the public for the first time, after spending more than a century behind closed doors in the private collection of a French family. The work, painted by Van Gogh in 1887 while he was lodging with his brother Theo in the French capital, will be put on display by Sotheby’s auction house in Amsterdam, Hong Kong, and Paris, prior to being auctioned off next month. The auction house put an estimated value on the artwork of between 5 million euros ($6.08 million) and 8 million euros. Titled A street scene in Montmartre, the painting depicts a man and woman, strolling arm in arm past a ramshackle fence with a windmill in the background. The painting is part of a series that Van Gogh produced of scenes in Montmartre, a hilly district of Paris now dominated by the Sacre Coeur church. When the artist was there, the church was under construction and the area was a patchwork of fields, houses and windmills on the edge of the city that was starting to attract a bohemian artist set with its cheap rents. The auction house said the painting had been seen in catalogues, but has never itself been on public display. It did not identify the current owner. Sotheby’s said in a statement that very few paintings from Van Gogh’s Montmartre period remain in private hands. Van Gogh arrived in Paris in 1886. He left the city in 1888, saying he had tired of the hectic pace of Paris life. He moved to the south of France, where he cut off part of his ear during an episode of mental illness. The artist later shot himself and died near Paris on July 29, 1890. — Reuters

Manila Water starts building 42nd sewage treatment plant

EAST ZONE water concessionaire Manila Water Co., Inc. has broken ground for its P4.16-billion Aglipay sewage treatment plant in Mandaluyong City that can treat 60 million liters per day.

In a statement on Thursday, Manila Water said the plant is the company’s 42nd sewage treatment facility in its franchise area and will treat wastewater coming from 2,115 hectares of catchment area covering Mandaluyong, San Juan, and Quezon City.

The facility’s capacity can be increased up to 120 million liters of wastewater daily once the construction of a complementing network of 53 kilometers of sewer lines is finished, the company said.

The construction of the Aglipay sewage treatment plant is projected to be done by 2024, and the sewer network by 2025.

The ground-breaking ceremony at the site marked the start of Manila Water’s Mandaluyong West Sewerage System, which is designed to serve a population of up to 652,000.

“Aglipay Sewage Treatment Plant is the first wastewater treatment facility of Manila Water that will utilize the Moving Bed Biofilm Reactor process with Biological Nutrient Removal technology, which will promote treatment efficiency and improve effluent quality,” the water provider said.

Manila Water Operations Chief Operating Officer Abelardo P. Basilio said the project is part of the company’s wastewater masterplan to provide the entire east zone with 100% sewer and sanitation coverage by 2037.

“This masterplan will help ensure the sustained care for our waterways through short-term interventions and long-term technical solutions,” he said.

Manila Water President and Chief Executive Officer Jose Rene Gregory D. Almendras has called for the collaboration among stakeholders for the smooth implementation of the project in order to avoid inconvenience to the public during construction.

“Once completed, Mandaluyong City can boast of a truly world-class sewage treatment facility that will redound to urban growth and greatly help in environmental protection,” he said.

Manila Water also announced that it would implement technical interventions along Buayang Bato and Buhangin Creeks in Mandaluyong City as part of an initiative to clean Metro Manila’s three-river system and their tributaries.

“These interventions include the application of Biomix, a Manila Water Laboratory Services patented cultured bacteria, to Buayang Bato Creek to reduce foul odor and coliform count. Likewise, for Buhangin Creek, artificial turbulence will be applied to help promote movement of water even during dry season,” the company said.

Manila Water provides water and wastewater services in the eastern part of Metro Manila, which includes Marikina, Pasig, Taguig, Makati, San Juan, Mandaluyong, and portions of Quezon City and Manila, and Rizal province. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Cat-and-mouse hijinks return in new Tom & Jerry movie

LOS ANGELES — Tom & Jerry, the rambunctious cat and mouse duo that has entertained audiences since 1940, will appear in a new feature film that finds the cartoon characters threatening to disrupt a celebrity wedding at a posh New York City hotel. The film, a hybrid of animation and live action, debuts Friday in theaters and on the HBO Max streaming service. It stars Chloe Grace Moretz as a newly hired hotel worker who tries to curb the pair’s long-standing behavioral problems. “It really does harken back to the Tom and Jerry that we love,” Ms. Moretz told Reuters in an interview. “They don’t shy away from them bonking each other on the head and dropping the weights on each other and really going at each other.” Tom and Jerry, created in 1940 by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, starred in a series of animated short films followed by various TV shows and feature films over eight decades. Saturday Night Live comedian Colin Jost, who stars in the new movie as one half of the engaged celebrity couple, said he believed it was the right time for the warring animals to return to screens given the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. He described the film as “pure, goofy comedy…They just take out all their feelings with violence,” Mr. Jost said. “I think it’s very refreshing to see right now, and people can let out a lot of their frustrations through these characters.” — Reuters

Quick lending upturn unlikely

THE FINANCIAL Institutions Strategic Transfer (FIST) Law will not be enough for a “turnaround” in credit growth even as it aims to help banks offload non-performing assets (NPAs), ANZ Research said in a note.

“It (FIST Law) is unlikely to trigger a credit cycle until the risk profile of borrowers improves, a development that is contingent upon a broad-based upturn in the business cycle,” ANZ Research Chief Economist Sanjay Mathur said in a note sent on Thursday.

Republic Act No. 11532 signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte last week allows banks to get rid of soured loans and NPAs by selling them to Financial Institutions Strategic Transfer Corporations (FISTCs).

Analysts have said the law could help ease banks’ worries about an increase in bad loans and eventually encourage them to lend.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin E. Diokno has said the law could bring down the country’s nonperforming loan (NPL) ratio by 0.53 to 7 percentage points. Loans and NPAs that will be deemed as nonperforming until Dec. 31, 2022 will be covered by the law.

Soured loans held by banks surged 78.8% year on year as of December to P391.657 billion, resulting to an NPL ratio of 3.61%. The country’s bad loan ratio peaked at 17.6% in 2002 in the aftermath of the Asian Financial Crisis.

Mr. Mathur said a “period of deleveraging” or reducing debt could be necessary before banks are ready to take on risks from new loans. 

“After a robust credit cycle from 2016 to early 2019, the corporate sector has become quite leveraged… Corporate leverage is already treading at a multi-year high and therefore, adding more debt would be risky,” he said.

Outstanding loans by big banks declined for the first time in 14 years by 0.7% in December.  This followed months of already tepid growth, with November data showing credit expansion at a mere 0.5% year on year as banks were cautious amid the crisis despite about $2 trillion in liquidity infused by relief measures from the central bank as well as the reduction of benchmark interest rates to record lows.

Mr. Mathur also noted the uncertain economic environment, with the household sector hit by high unemployment, weak remittances, and falling savings.

The real estate sector was likewise severely hit by the pandemic, which also affected the lending landscape as the sector accounts for a third of outstanding credit, he said. These contributed to the tighter credit standards imposed by banks.

“Against such a backdrop, we are of the view that a revival in the credit cycle in the Philippines is a distant prospect, even with the implementation of the FIST law. The economic situation also sheds light on why measures to enhance lending particularly to MSMEs (micro, small, and medium enterprises) have had little success so far,” Mr. Mathur said.  

“Our observation from other economies like India is that transferring NPAs is a time consuming process and is periodically set back by operational issues such as the extent of discount offered on NPAs,” he added.

GUIDE BILL TO SUPPORT FIST
Meanwhile, the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX) said measures such as the Government Financial Institutions Unified Initiatives to Distressed Enterprises for Economic Recovery (GUIDE) Bill would incentivize lending and investment activities to complement the FIST Law.

FINEX President Francisco E. Lim said in a statement that the GUIDE bill will address the supply side of the economy by strengthening financial institutions, which could support the objectives of the FIST Law.

“Its immediate passage will also optimize the benefits of the CREATE (Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises) and FIST Acts and will also help balance the risks to inflation as the government pushes its efforts to pump-prime the economy, restore normalcy in the country’s business sector, reduce unemployment and provide renewed impetus towards robust economic growth,” Mr. Lim said.

The proposed measure will boost the loan programs of government financial institutions such as the Land Bank of the Philippines and the Development Bank of the Philippines meant for small businesses affected by the pandemic. House Bill 7749 was approved on final reading earlier this month.

Meanwhile, CREATE is already awaiting Mr. Duterte’s signature after Congress ratified the bill on Feb. 3. The measure, once enacted, will immediately bring down corporate income tax to 25% from 30% and will streamline fiscal incentives. — L.W.T. Noble

PLDT’s aviation arm PG1 readies for rise of air charter services market

PLDT, Inc. said its aviation arm, Pacific Global One Aviation (PG1), is now preparing itself to take advantage of the rising demand for air charter services.

PG1 “embarks on a major rebrand as it expects the global air charter business to take off in the next three years as the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic plateaus,” PLDT said in an e-mailed statement on Thursday.

The company redesigned its logo, which “signals a new era” in its business, PLDT said.

PG1 is also expanding its service offerings, it noted. “Aside from ferrying corporate clients and individuals with ultra-high net worth, the company can also fly cargo, perform medical evacuations, and lease out space at its hangar for clients who wish to park their own aircraft.”

“We have been getting a lot of inquiries, especially from corporations, on our air transport services. Companies are looking for a safer way to travel as the government gradually eases restrictions and opens up the economy,”  PG1 OIC-President Leo A. Gonzales was quoted as saying in the statement.

For his part, Arnold E. Picar, PG1 general manager, said the company is “positioning itself ahead of the competition.”

“We will be working on mutually beneficial partnerships and collaborations with companies whose target market also aligns with PG1,” he added.

Citing data from global technology and market research company Technavio, PLDT said the global air charter services market is seen to grow by over $7 billion through 2024.

“The biggest driver will be the passenger segment, but there’s a growing demand for cargo services as well,” it said.

PG1 only flies twin-engine aircraft, according to PLDT. Its hangar in Pasay City houses two helicopters and one airplane.

“The Bell 429 can seat five passengers and can fly from Manila to as far as Laoag up north or Cebu down south. The AgustaWestland AW139 is a medium-sized helicopter that can carry eight passengers. It can reach most destinations in Luzon and the Visayas from Metro Manila,” it said.

PG1 also has King Air 350, a twin-engine turboprop that can accommodate eight passengers and fly to all domestic points with airfields of at least a kilometer long, as well as Asian destinations including Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan.

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. — Arjay L. Balinbin 

Top Amazon India executive questioned by police over video series

LUCKNOW, India — Indian police in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh questioned a top Amazon executive for nearly four hours on Tuesday over allegations that one of its political dramas on Prime Video hurt religious sentiments and caused public anger. Shows on streaming platforms such as Netflix and Amazon Prime have often faced complaints in India, a key growth market, for obscenity or hurting sentiment, but the latest controversy involving the Amazon show Tandav is among the highest-profile cases. Tandav, a political drama starring top Bollywood actors, has in several states faced police complaints and court cases alleging the show had depicted Hindu gods and goddesses in a derogatory manner, and hurt religious sentiment. The drama has also faced criticism from lawmakers of India’s Hindu nationalist ruling party. In Uttar Pradesh, police questioned Amazon India’s head of original content for its Prime streaming service Aparna Purohit over similar allegations at a police station on Tuesday. Amazon declined to comment, and Purohit did not take questions from reporters outside the police station. A state police officer told Reuters that Purohit had told police an apology had been issued and scenes that concerned the public had been edited out after its release in January. While the show has angered some, the complaints against the drama and Purohit’s questioning by police have also caused grave concerns among India’s vibrant film industry, where many see this as an attack on free speech. — Reuters

Banks urged to hold off on hiking ATM fees, use excess capital to expand services

BANKS SHOULD USE their excess capital to expand their services instead of increasing fees for cash machine services, a lawmakers said, after the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas tweaked its rules on fees this month.

Anakalusugan party-list Representative Michael T. Defensor said in a statement on Thursday that banks have surplus capital since automated teller machine (ATM) services have increased since the start of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

“The banks should use some of their excess capital to enlarge their ATM networks instead of punishing cardholders with higher user fees to fund their expansion,” he said.

Mr. Defensor noted how one bank seems “awash” with capital, adding “it is paying out a record P18 billion in special dividends to shareholders next month, even after setting aside P41 billion in reserves against potential bad loans.”

He also called the move of the central bank “oppressive” for 58 million ATM card holders nationwide.

The BSP earlier this month said it will adopt a “acquirer-based system” which will allow banks to impose fees on non-clients using its ATM services. The old system only allowed the cardholder’s bank to impose fees for transacting in other banks’ ATMs.

ATM charges are currently around P10 to P15 but fees are expected to reach as high as P18 when the new system will be implemented.

The new protocol will be implemented starting April 7.

The Bankers Association of the Philippines said earlier this month that the new system will allow banks to deliver better services and foster competition between banks. — GMC