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Vatican’s ‘vampire’ prints of rarely seen 20th century art on show

VATICAN CITY — They could be called the Vatican’s vampire prints — works by masters such as Henri Matisse, Edvard Munch and Salvador Dali so delicate that they usually lie dormant for years in dark storage in its museums.

Now, 150 etchings, woodcuts, aquatints, lithographs, and other types of 20th century graphic art are being shown in the light of day — many for the first time — at the Braccio Carlo Magno exhibition hall off St. Peter’s Square.

Called The Signs of the Sacred — The Imprints of the Real, the show is a mix of works on spiritual themes, modern interpretations of biblical scenes, still lifes, nature scenes and pieces reflecting everyday life, war, and maternity.

“They definitely don’t love the light,” said Francesca Boschetti, the exhibition’s curator, explaining they can be shown only for a brief period to avoid fading and deterioration.

They are emerging from what Micol Forti, head of the Vatican Museums’ department of modern and contemporary art, calls a “hidden and secret life, spent in the darkness of cabinets and vaults”.

Some of the artists whose works are on display, such as Edvard Munch, most famous for The Scream, lived bohemian and at times hedonistic lifestyles and were not known to be religious.

But they were attracted by spiritual themes and Munch’s Old Man Praying, a 1902 woodcut on Japanese rice paper, is one example.

“In times of personal travails or great social upheaval such as during and between the two world wars, even artists who did not normally do religious themes turned to them as a metaphor for suffering and violence,” Boschetti said.

The exhibition includes Dali’s Christ of Gala, a stereoscopic suite of two lithographs, which the surrealist intended to give a three dimensional effect when viewed together.

The exhibition, which is free of charge, closes at the end of February, when the works will be returned to dark storage with temperature and humidity controls.

The 150 works, which also include pieces by Max Ernst, Paul Klee, Oskar Kokoschka, and Marc Chagall, hail from the Vatican Museums’ contemporary arts collection.

Many were donated, some by the artists themselves, to Pope Paul VI, who reigned from 1963 to 1978. Unlike some of his predecessors, Pope Paul appreciated modern art and founded a collection entirely dedicated to 20th century works. — Reuters

Developer drops plan to use Supercity as vehicle for backdoor listing at PSE

By Denise A. Valdez Reporter

THE plan of Manila Bay Development Corp. (MBDC) to use Supercity Realty Development Corp. (SRDC) as vehicle for a backdoor listing at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) is no longer pushing through.

In a stock exchange disclosure yesterday, listed SRDC said it received a letter from MBDC on Monday indicating it is withdrawing its plans due to market volatility.

“The target new investors, MBDC and (its president George T. Chua), communicated today that due to unfavorable market conditions, they have decided not to proceed with the Property-for-Share Swap Agreement and that the backdoor listing will no longer push through,” SRDC said in the minutes of its annual stockholders’ meeting submitted to the PSE.

As a result, SRDC said it is no longer increasing its authorized capital stock and issuing new shares, which it initially planned to do to accommodate the backdoor listing of MBDC.

“SRDC shall continue to serve institutional or corporate clients and focus on the construction of horizontal residential house and land development works for residential subdivisions,” it added.

SRDC first announced it May that its board of directors approved increasing the company’s authorized capital stock to P1.5 billion divided into 1.5 billion shares from P155 million divided into 155 million shares.

It was also planning to create 990 million new common shares in the firm which the new investors will subscribe to acquire 90% of the company’s resulting outstanding capital stock.

In exchange, MBDC would be giving SRDC 12 parcels of land located within the reclamation area in Parañaque City which has a total land area of 227,510 square meters. SRDC was planning to use it as source of recurring rental income, considering the location’s proximity to several commercial sites.

SRDC’s business is primarily in real estate development, with activities generally involving serving as contractor for land development and housing projects.

MBDC, on the other hand, is focused on developing and leasing reclaimed land in Parañaque City.

SRDC posted a net income of P11.46 million in the first nine months of the year, surging from P1.41 million a year ago, amid an almost five-fold growth in its revenues to P157.91 million.

BSP launches new P20, P5 coins

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas (BSP) has launched the coin version of the P20 denomination which has a longer life span compared to its bill counterpart.

Likewise, the central bank has also revealed the look of the enhanced P5 coin under the BSP’s New Generation Currency (NGC) Coin Series.

“BSP will be issuing a token quantity of about 500,000 pieces before Christmas and will issue in bulk the P20 coins starting the first quarter of next year…and these coins will coexist with the P20 banknotes until the supply in P20 banknotes last around 2021,” BSP Assistant Governor Dahlia D. Luna said in her speech at the launch of the coins held at the central bank on Monday.

Ms. Luna described the P20 coin as a “two-tone featuring brass-plated steel and nickel-plated core.” Meanwhile, the enhanced P5 coin will have a new shape having nine sides.

“Essentially, these design enhancements in the currency will further promote the ease of recognition by the public and at the same time maintaining the highly secure and durable characteristics of the coins in the NGC series,” Ms. Luna.

Meanwhile, BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno assured that having the P20 as part of the coin denominations will not mean depreciation of its value.

Kasi ang P20 bill at P20 coin pareho lang ang purchasing value (Because the P20 bill and the P20 coin have the same purchasing value). There’s no such thing as depreciation,” he said at the briefing that followed the launching program.

Mr. Diokno also said digitization initiatives such as QR PH will likely end the transformation of other denominations from bills to coins.

“Most likely wala na kasi magkakaroon na tayo ng QR PH… ’Yun ang magre-replace ng everything. (Most likely there will be no more [transformation] because we will already have the QR PH. It will replace everything). We will be using that system,” he explained.

Same faces, only revamped for distinction

In his speech, Mr. Diokno said that President Manuel L. Quezon remains to be the face of the coin version of the P20.

“Prominently featured on the obverse of the P20 coin is Manuel L. Quezon, the first president of the Philippine Commonwealth who advocated the adoption of the national language; created the National Economic Council, the precursor of the National Economic and Development Authority; and worked passionately to regain Philippine independence,” he said.

Meanwhile, the flip-side of the coin has the BSP logo, the Malacañan Palace, and the picture of nilad, which is believed to be the origin of the name of the capital city Manila.

“These design elements put emphasis on the cultural and historical significance of coins to Philippine society,” Mr. Diokno added.

Currencies produced by the BSP have featured prominent figures related to the country’s history. In addition to this, the BSP’s NGC also consistently included a native flora in the bills and coins.

Mr. Diokno added that the BSP was recognized for Excellency in the Currency 2019 Coin Awards at the biennial Coin Conference held in Rome, Italy last October. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Transport network companies asked to explain why fares spiked in December

THE Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) said it summoned Transport Network Companies (TNCs) over complaints from commuters that fares have spiked starting December.

In a statement on Tuesday, the LTFRB said it has called for a meeting with TNCs this week to tackle commuters’ complaints of alleged increase in fares.

“According to commuters, some ride-hailing applications have started to charge higher fares since the Christmas season began, particularly this month,” the regulator said.

The LTFRB said ride-hailing firms have a standard rate of P40 as base fare, P10-15 per kilometer, P2 per minute, and a 2x surge limit based on traffic flow.

LTFRB Chairman Martin B. Delgra IIII said the agency is looking into the complaints it received.

“The agency is at the forefront of ensuring public transportation remains safe, convenient, and also affordable,” he added.

The regulator said it aims to settle the matter with accredited TNCs “within this week.”

Grab Philippines Public Relations Manager Arvi Persan P. Lopez told reporters via Viber group message that the company has yet to receive the invitation from the LTFRB.

“We have yet to receive the official invitation from the LTFRB on this subject, but we will definitely comply and attend to this discussion,” he said.

Earlier this year, the Philippine Competition Commission slapped Grab Philippines with a P23.45 million fine for breaching its initial pricing commitments. — Arjay L. Balinbin

BoJ’s next move to dial back stimulus

WIKIPEDIA.ORG

TOKYO — The Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) next move will be to dial back its massive stimulus, according to an increasing number of analysts polled by Reuters, reflecting receding market expectations of imminent monetary easing by the central bank.

But any such withdrawal of stimulus will begin from 2021 at the earliest, the survey showed, a sign that monetary policy in Japan could be in a holding pattern for the time being.

“There’s a chance growth in overseas and Japanese economies could pick up next year,” said Nobuyasu Atago, chief economist at Okasan Securities.

“The yen is stable and stock prices are firm,” which could allow the BoJ to hold off on expanding stimulus, he added.

Twenty-five of 41 economists, or 61% of the total, expect the BoJ’s next move to be a withdrawal of stimulus, the poll taken between Dec. 4-16 showed. That was up from 44% in a survey in November.

Most of them say it could happen in 2021 or later.

Sixteen of the economists, or 39%, think the BoJ will top up stimulus as its next step, down from 56% in last month’s survey.

The BoJ is set to keep monetary policy steady this week as receding fears of a disorderly Brexit and signs of progress in US-China trade talks take some pressure off the central bank to use its dwindling ammunition to underpin growth.

Japan’s core consumer price index, which includes oil products but not fresh foods, is forecast to rise 0.6% this fiscal year and next year — well short of the BoJ’s 2% inflation target.

ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
Japanese policy makers have been under pressure to do more to underpin a fragile economic recovery, hit by the global trade war, typhoons and a sales tax hike that rolled out in October.

The world’s third-largest economy is forecast to have shrunk by an annualized 3.2% in the fourth quarter, which would be the biggest contraction since April-June 2014, the poll found.

“Consumer spending is expected to worsen sharply in the current quarter as the tax increase puts a burden on households,” said Yoshiki Shinke, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.

“Capital spending also likely weakened after having boosted before the tax hike. The economy will pick up next year but the pace of recovery is expected to be moderate.”

Growth will rebound by 0.9% and 1.2% in the first and second quarters of 2020, according to median forecasts. The economy will expand 0.9% in the current fiscal year ending in March 2020 before slowing to 0.5% the following year, the poll predicted.

Some economists responded to the poll before the government announced its plan to compile a 13.2 trillion yen ($122 billion) fiscal package to support growth.

Based on information on media reports of the spending plan, most analysts expect the stimulus package to lift growth by less than one percentage point.

“Labor shortage will be a bottleneck” and dent the effect of the stimulus package as the government could face difficulty executing public works projects smoothly, said Shuji Tonouchi, senior market economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities. — Reuters

Art & Culture (12/18/19)

West Gallery exhibits

THE gallery has a number of exhibits on view until Jan. 4. There is the group show To Scale, featuring works by Francis Bejar, Gino Bueza, Don Dalmacio, Neil DC, Nicole Tee, and Marija Vicente. To Scale brings together six of West Gallery’s favorite young artists in a show that seeks to highlight the ethos of their work, tied together by one physical element: size. Yes, But Bigger, an exhibit of works by Isabel Santos. Here as Elsewhere by Carina Santos is about transitions and that liminal space where home is both “here” and “not here,” where your body does not quite connect with the space you inhabit, but neither does it, entirely, to the space it has left. In Raw Material by Soler Santos gathers imagery from his personal encounters and filters them through his own particular lens. Upcoming exhibitions at West Gallery will feature works by Mariano Ching, Wire Tuazon, Lec Cruz, Gerry Baguio. The exhibitions will open on Jan. 16, 2020. The gallery is located at 48 West Ave., Quezon City.

A gift of theater

GIVE a gift of theater for Christmas — season passes to Repertory Philippines’ show. With a season pass one can watch shows for up to 30% off, and as a special holiday treat, you can buy four season passes and get one for free. Next’s season’s lineup includes the Broadway musical Carousel — touted by TIME Magazine as the greatest musical of the 20th century. REP’s new season has a lot in store for audiences, what with Liesl Batucan on her first year as Rep’s Artistic Director. The season opens with The New York Times’ Critic’s Pick, Stage Kiss, which runs from Feb. 7 to March 1. A witty romantic comedy, it stars Missy Maramara and Tarek el Tayech along with Robbie Guevara, Jamie Wilson, Andres Borromeo, Justine Narciso and Mica Pineda, and is directed by Carlos Siguion-Reyna. From March 13 to April 5, there is the Pulitzer Prize-winning play Anna in the Tropics, a tale of intrigue and passion set in 1929 at a cigar factory in Florida. It is directed by Joey Mendoza and stars Joshua Spafford, Skyzx Labastilla, Paolo O’Hara, Brian Sy, Gab Pangilinan, Gie Onida and Madeleine Nicolas. The Rodgers and Hammerstein Broadway musical Carousel runs from May 1 to 24. Directed by Toff de Venecia, Carousel will feature a star-studded cast led by Nikki Gil in her theater comeback, and Gian Magdangal. The REP Theater for Young Audiences’ musical next year is Snow White and the Prince. A fun and colorful retelling of the classic fairy tale, it will run from Sept. 12, 2020 to Jan. 31, 2021. The children’s musical is directed by Joy Virata. With the Gold Pass, the theater goer can get premium seating in orchestra center for P4,200. One can also watch all three shows plus Snow White and the Prince for P4,900. The Silver Pass offers open seating on the orchestra side and the three Rep shows for P3,150. One can also watch all three shows plus Snow White and The Prince for P3,700. For show-buying, block-buying, and ticket inquiries, contact Rep at 8451-1474 or 0966-905-4013. Purchase tickets by calling TicketWorld at 8891-9999, or through www.ticketworld.com.ph.

How PSEi member stocks performed — December 17, 2019

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, December 17, 2019.

 

US-China trade deal viewed as positive for export sector

By Jenina P. Ibañez

THE INITIAL PHASE of the US-China trade deal will be positive for Philippine exports and capital markets, economists said.

The United States and China on Friday concluded phase one of a trade agreement following a nearly 18-month dispute that saw hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs imposed between the two economies.

The initial deal will reduce US tariffs on China, halving the tariff rate on $120 billion of goods to 7.5% from 15%. It also shelved tariffs on Chinese consumer products due to take effect Sunday.

In turn, China agreed to increase purchases of US agriculture and energy products.

Philippine agricultural exports do not directly compete with the US, according to University of Asia and the Pacific economist and former tariff commissioner George N. Manzano in a phone interview Monday. He expects US exports to China to focus on soybeans and meat.

“(US products) are not directly competing with us except for coconut oil,” he said.

University of the Philippines-Virata School of Business professor and former tariff commissioner Epictetus E. Patalinghug said that the Philippines will benefit as the US and China will likely return to trade volumes nearly as large as the pre-tariff period.

“Filipino exporters supplying components and parts to China which assemble final products to be exported to the US will benefit,” he said in an e-mail.

The United States is the Philippines’ top export destination. According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, exports to the US in the first 10 months totaled $9.65 billion, accounting for 17% of overall Philippine exports.

Exports to China — the country’s fourth-largest export destination — accounted for 13.2% of overall Philippine exports and were worth $8.1 billion year-to-date in October.

The overall easing of trade frictions will improve the world economy, Mr. Manzano said, which can provide a boost to the capital markets.

“Any easing of trade friction is good for the world economy. If you have trade friction, there is a systemic risk on the whole global system. Any easing of that will be good for us.”

“It doesn’t only affect us in terms of our trade. It affects us in terms of capital markets,” he said, adding that the stock price index drops on news of a trade war, regardless of the indirect impact on the Philippines.

In terms of investment, Mr. Patalinghug said Vietnam and Malaysia which host companies that have relocated from China due to the trade war will lose out as China can now export to the US at cheaper rates.

He said that the Philippines will not be affected as China-based companies did not relocate to the country.

But Mr. Manzano said the trade tensions, despite the initial deal, have influenced investors to look outside of China.

“The trade war already has changed the mentality of investors that they need to go out of China, or lower their concentration in China. (They are) looking for other alternatives,” he said.

He said the end of the trade war is not guaranteed and the deal not likely permanent, noting that the temperament of US President Donald Trump “can easily reverse.”

US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said in a statement Friday that the phase one agreement achieves “meaningful, fully-enforceable structural changes and begins rebalancing the US-China trade relationship.”

The US will be maintaining 25% tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese imports. The US also called on China to boost intellectual property protections.

Moving forward, Mr. Manzano said that a US-Philippine free trade agreement will be beneficial, especially after the current Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) status that gives Philippine exports to the US zero or reduced tariffs expires.

“Now is a good time to do that because of disillusionment with China. It will keep the American markets open to us.”

Labor dep’t to reduce worker deployments to Saudi Arabia

THE Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) will reduce deployments of Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) to Saudi Arabia, citing Riyadh’s inaction in settling 9,000 unpaid claims filed by OFWs worth P4.6 billion.

Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said the government “scale down” deployment starting 2020 after Riyadh failed to act on the claims of over 300 employees this year, many of them working for a contractor of the state-run oil firm.

“I would like to inform you that we plan to scale down the deployment to Saudi Arabia starting next year. The purpose of this scaling down is to call the attention of the Saudi government to what we consider as “no action” (in the case of) more than 300 workers of which) over 200 are employed by one of the main contractors of Saudi Aramco… most of those workers have not received their salaries since April 2019 and whose monetary claims have yet to be settled,” he said at a briefing Tuesday.

DoLE said that this was not the only instance that Riyadh has not chosen to intervene on behalf of OFWs and contractors in wage disputes. In 2016, Mr. Bello flew to Saudi Arabia to repatriate more than 13,000 workers from construction firm Saudi Oger who had not been paid for as long as two years. Some 9,000 still have yet to be paid.

Processing of Overseas Employment Certificate (OEC) will be frozen for workers newly-deployed to Saudi Arabia. Returning OFWs will be issued OECs on a case-to-case basis.

The board of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) has yet to determine the extent of the worker deployment freeze, and the industries it will halt deployments to.

Saudi Arabia is the top worker deployment destination, with over 3 million documented and undocumented OFWs employed in the country. It was the second largest source of OFW remittances after the US in the first half. — Gillian M. Cortez

Portion of Quezon City common station declared 96% complete

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said the Area B, which will serve as the common concourse of the Metro Rail Transit (MRT)-Light Rail Transit (LRT) common station project in North Avenue, Quezon City, is now 96% complete.

In a statement Tuesday, the DoTr said the completion rate of Area B is now “96%” complete. “We are expecting the completion of the (entire) common station project by 2021,” it added.

The common station will link four commuter train lines: LRT-1, MRT-3, MRT-7, and eventually, the Metro Manila Subway. It will have three sections that are being built separately: Area A by Foresight Development and Surveying Co. (BFC-FDSC), Area B by Ayala Corp. and Area C by San Miguel Corp., the concessionaire for the MRT-7 project.

“With a previous, lingering dispute on the actual location, the DoTr settled the issue and started the construction of the common station, a 13,700-square meter concourse area that will interconnect the LRT-1, MRT-3, MRT-7, and the Metro Manila Subway,” the transportation department said.

As for updates regarding the Areas A and C of the project, the DoTr said these are in the detailed engineering design phase.

“Now under 24/7 construction, the common station is expected to serve approximately 478,000 passengers daily once operational by 2021,” the DoTr added.

Papaano mo malalaman ‘yung nagagawa kung aasa ka lang sa bunganga. Kaya ako nag-iinspeksyon. At the end of the year, gusto kong gamitin ‘yung bunganga, yung mata, pati na ‘yung tenga ko at nang sa ganun pwede akong gumawa ng judgement (You can’t judge project progress through second-hand reports, which is why I conduct inspections. At the end of the year, I want to rely on all possible information to judge project progress)” Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade was quoted as saying. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Government to fund pay of BARMM teachers’ salaries

DAVAO CITY — The national government will fund the salaries of teachers in parts of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) which were not initially included in the region’s budget.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said that the national government committed to fund the teachers’ salaries worth P1.5 billion in barangays that were not covered by BARMM’s budget.

“There are 100 barangays which are… not included in the regional… transfer to the Bangsamoro region, and as a result of that, the salaries amounting to P1.5 billion a year are not covered by their budget so we committed on the national government side that we will continue to support the salaries of the teachers to those 100 barangays in North Cotabato and Cotabato City,” Mr. Dominguez said in a news conference Monday.

After a January plebiscite, around 76 barangays in North Cotabato and Cotabato City became part of the BARMM.

The newly-established BARMM government has a budget of P65.9 billion for next year.

Mr. Dominguez said the continued budgetary support will also ensure that the education programs of the BARMM are sustained in those areas.

The news conference was held after representatives of the national government and the BARMM met Monday at first meeting of the National Government-Bangsamoro Government Intergovernmental Relations Body.

“Through this Intergovernmental Relations Body, we hope to achieve informed and constructive discussions aimed at exploring the best plausible solutions to transform points of differences into points of cooperation between the National Government and Bangsamoro Government,” Mr. Dominguez said.

Mr. Dominguez said that the members of the secretariat should meet every two months or 60 days to further their discussions. — Beatrice M. Laforga

PEZA to develop ecozones for agribusiness, marine products

THE Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) said it will help develop agro-industrial and marine products-based economic zones through a partnership with the Department of Agriculture (DA).

PEZA said in a statement Tuesday that the two agencies signed a memorandum of agreement intended to industrialize agribusiness.

PEZA Director-General Charito B. Plaza said that the agreement will promote domestic production, manufacturing, and exports — as well as reduce import dependence.

“The partnership with other government agencies and industries is necessary especially with the implementation of Administrative Order No. 18, which aims to accelerate rural progress through robust development of special economic zones in the countryside,” she said.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte in June ordered the expedited development of ecozones in rural areas, placing a moratorium on applications for ecozones in Metro Manila.

The administrative order asks government agencies to hasten human capital and infrastructure development, strengthen ecozones in the countryside, and develop backward and forward linkages for industries in and around the ecozones.

Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said that both agencies hope to improve farm incomes and generate rural work opportunities.

“Both DA and PEZA recognize the need for cooperative effort in promoting and supporting investments to agricultural-oriented activities through the granting of fiscal and non-fiscal incentives and development of agro-industrial, aquamarine, and agro-forestry special ecozones,” he said.

“This is now the time to bring investors to hubs where they can set up rural industries that will unlock the potential of agriculture and agribusiness for the country.”

PEZA also signed an agreement with Canada’s True North Farms, Inc. to establish 50-hectare agro-industrial ecozones in three production sites for cacao geared for the export market.

PEZA said that the project meets the objectives of the 2016-2022 Philippine Cacao Industry Road Map aimed at creating a sustainable and competitive cacao industry while developing the countryside. — Jenina P. Ibañez