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Messi equals Pele’s record of 643 goals for a single club

BARCELONA — Lionel Messi equalled Pele’s haul of 643 goals for Santos after scoring for Barcelona against Valencia in La Liga on Saturday, matching the Brazilian great’s scoring record for a single club.

The Argentine, 33, hit the milestone goal with a diving header just before halftime immediately after his penalty was saved by Valencia keeper Jaume Domenech.

The goal made it 1-1 in Barca’s La Liga game and cancelled out Mouctar Diakhaby’s opener.

Pele scored 643 goals in 665 competitive games for Santos, while Messi needed 748 matches to reach the tally, although he did it in 17 seasons compared to the 19 Pele needed.

Pele, now 80, made his Santos debut aged 15 in 1956 and left in 1974 after winning six Brazilian league titles plus two Copa Libertadores crowns, South America’s equivalent of the Champions League.

Messi, who made his first appearance for Barcelona aged 17 in 2004, has won 10 La Liga titles with the club plus four Champions Leagues. — Reuters

Federer, other top players expected for Australian Open: Tiley

MELBOURNE — Australian Open organizers are confident they will see a full slate of the world’s top players, including six-times champion Roger Federer, at next year’s delayed opening Grand Slam.

Tennis Australia and the Victorian state government said on Saturday the tournament had been pushed back three weeks to start on Feb. 8 after drawn-out negotiations over COVID-19 health security measures.

“We have a commitment from every player in the world to be in Australia,” tournament director Craig Tiley said. “Obviously, it being the start of the season anything can happen with that entry list, but the commitment is there. Every player, including Roger, have committed.”

Federer had cast some doubt as to whether he would be fit enough for the tournament after he had two surgeries on a knee injury last year and missed virtually the entire playing season.

The 39-year-old Swiss told local media this month that his recovery was behind schedule, but Tiley said he had been in touch with the 20-times Grand Slam champion who had begun his usual pre-season training block in Dubai.

“He said to us that Feb. 8 was a more suitable date for him in terms of preparing for the Australian Open,” Mr. Tiley added. “But a lot will depend on how he responds to his surgery in the next two to three weeks.”

The tournament will charter flights to bring all the main draw players to Australia, with qualifying taking place in Dubai and Doha.

Players would undergo regular COVID-19 testing in Australia and be allowed to train for up to five hours a day, something that Tiley said had been a deal breaker.

“We would not be in a position to run the Australian Open if the players were required to stay in their hotel room for two weeks,” he said.

The tournament would be played in front of crowds, with Mr. Tiley expecting them to be around 50% of the 840,000 that attended this year’s tournament.

“We do expect to have good crowds,” he said. “But this is not a year that we try to beat numbers.” — Reuters

NBA navigates path forward with most fans — and their money — stuck at home

LUCRATIVE TV deals and overwhelming popularity will be critical to the National Basketball Association (NBA) as it navigates a new season with few fans able to attend games — and spend their money inside arenas.

Most clubs aren’t ruling out the possibility of welcoming fans at some point this season — and a handful including the Orlando Magic and Utah Jazz are allowing a limited number from the start — but the loss of ticket sales and in-arena revenue will hurt, as COVID-19 ravages North America.

“You could be looking at losses of over $3 billion across the league based on ticket revenue, concessions, corporate boxes, and so on should the pandemic impact the whole of the 2020-21 season as a worst case scenario,” Conrad Wiacek, head of sport analysis at GlobalData, told Reuters.

“NBA teams are guaranteed a loss” with only 72 games compared to a standard 82-game season, said Mr. Wiacek, and GlobalData research suggested the league and teams lost more than $694 million from the 258 cancelled games last season, after the pandemic forced a hiatus in March.

With TV rights deals in place, however, including a reported $1.4 billion yearly contract with Disney, the NBA has plenty of cushion and this month agreed to distribute $30 million to teams to boost liquidity, Sports Business Daily reported.

Andrew Zimbalist, a professor at Smith College who has consulted for players, teams and leagues, said the NBA’s tremendous profitability gave it a strong financial standing, even though it’s too soon to say how much COVID-19 will restrict arena and gate revenue.

“There might be an owner or two in the NBA that’s feeling pinched not so much because of the NBA, but because of other assets,” Mr. Zimbalist said.

“Are all the teams hurting relative to what they’re used to? Yeah, of course, as is just about everybody in the United States.”

BILLIONAIRE OWNER
Even the Dallas Mavericks’ gregarious billionaire owner Mark Cuban, who has taken on nationwide fame as a shrewd investor navigating would-be entrepreneurs on “Shark Tank”, conceded this is one deal he cannot get the best of.

“Am I going to lose a lot of money this year? Yes. No question about it. More than $100 million when this is all said and done? Yes,” Mr. Cuban said this month (https://omny.fm/shows/the-ticket-top-10/hardline-mark-cuban-interview-part-1). “We need to get back into our normal season.”

That said, the challenges of reduced attendance don’t present an “existential crisis” for the NBA, according to Victor Matheson, an expert in sports economics and a professor at College of the Holy Cross.

“The NBA is going to be able to pass about half of those revenue losses on to the players because the collective bargaining agreement specifically says that the salary cap is set as a function of revenues,” Mr. Matheson told Reuters.

While some owners, including Mr. Cuban and Joe Tsai of the Brooklyn Nets, have committed to paying arena workers through the end of 2020, Mr. Matheson said staffers at empty stadiums are likely hurting the most.

“Those ushers, those concession workers, those parking attendants, the front-office staff that have been cut… they’re out of luck and they’re not sitting on a $7 million salary that gets cut by a little bit,” he said. “Nor are they a multi-billionaire.” — Reuters

Five storylines for the 2020-2021 NBA season

LOS ANGELES — Five storylines to track during the 2020-2021 National Basketball Association (NBA) season, which kicks off on Dec. 22.

COVID-19 IMPACT
After successfully completing last season in a bio-secure bubble in Orlando, teams will once again be travelling and players, coaches and staff testing positive for the novel coronavirus is probably inevitable.

The NBA season has already been reduced from 82 to 72 games because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the league will try to complete its 16-team playoffs between May 22 and July 22.

Three teams — Atlanta Hawks, Utah Jazz, and Memphis Grizzlies — have said they will allow a limited number of fans into their arenas.

Asked what would be the determining factor in a team’s success this season, Dallas Mavericks’ Luka Doncic simply said: “Which team is not going to have (COVID-19) positive people.”

LAKERS LOOK TO BUILD DYNASTY
The Los Angeles Lakers emerged victorious last season and are favored to repeat after signing LeBron James and Anthony Davis to contracts during the offseason and adding DeMar DeRozan and Montrezl Harrell.

The storied franchise snapped a 10-year title drought with the success and now has the kind of depth that could see them dominate the league for years to come.

But the team lost rim protectors Dwight Howard and JaVale McGee during the break and will be reliant on newly acquired, 35-year-old Marc Gasol to play key minutes at the center position.

DURANT IN BROOKLYN
The last time Kevin Durant was seen on a basketball court, he was leaving the 2019 NBA Finals with an Achilles tendon injury.

The Golden State Warriors would go on the loose the series to the Toronto Raptors, and Durant joined the Brooklyn Nets soon after, but did not suit up for the team last season as he continued to rehab.

Fans will finally get to see Durant play alongside Kyrie Irving and, if he is fully recovered and stays healthy, the team should prove to be a serious threat in the Eastern Conference.

HARDEN ON THE MOVE?
Former MVP James Harden reportedly wants to leave the Houston Rockets, possibly for the Philadelphia 76ers or Nets — a move that would realign the balance of power in the league.

It is unclear whether a deal can get done and if not, Harden will stay in Houston to play alongside John Wall, who came over from the Washington Wizards in the offseason in exchange for Russell Westbrook.

WARRIORS WITHOUT THOMPSON
The Golden State Warriors were primed to have a bounce back season with sharpshooting guards Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry finally healthy. But then disaster struck.

Thompson tore his Achilles during a practice game in November and will have to sit out for his second consecutive season.

While few expect the Warriors — who won championships in 2015, 2017 and 2018 — to contend for a title, they still have two-time MVP Curry, the scrappy Draymond Green, Kelly Oubre Jr., and second overall draft pick James Wiseman.

It will be up to coach Steve Kerr to figure out how to put the pieces together, while the franchise waits for Thompson to heal. — Reuters

Charlie Woods

The media statement Tiger Woods put out this time last month wasn’t about his showing at the just-concluded Masters. Considering that he limped to a one-under tally following a final-round 76, he was wise not to comment on a 38th-place finish that left him a whopping 19 strokes behind newly minted champion Dustin Johnson. Instead, he disclosed “how excited I am to be playing with Charlie in our first official tournament together.” He was, of course, referring to his son (who, not coincidentally, was last in the limelight when he won the Green Jacket against all odds in 2019) and their impending participation at the PNC Championship.

Normally, casual observers would loathe to mention the two tournaments in the same sentence. However, Woods’ tenor in his press release showed exactly where his sentiments lay: He was pumped to compete with Charlie in a father-son event headlined by major champions out for bragging rights and psychic income. As he noted, “it’s been great watching him progress as a junior golfer, and it will be incredible playing as a team together.” And, given how their first competitive round as a pair turned out yesterday, “incredible” proved to be on the mark.

Indeed, the Woods partnership, along with Mike and Justin Thomas, became the most-watched flight of first-day festivities at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando, Florida. On-site spectators consisting of other participants and their plus-ones numbered in the hundreds, and all wound up thoroughly impressed by Charlie’s performance. In fact, he carried his father for much of the day — including on the third hole, where he carded an eagle using his own ball under a scramble format. The player with 15 Grand Slam tournament wins often became mere spectator, albeit an appreciative one.

Woods remained giddy in the aftermath, his pride evident with every word. Even as he admitted that “I don’t really care about my game,” he gushed when delving on Charlie’s own. “It couldn’t have been a better environment,” he said, and not because they posted a 10-under 62 that had them in sixth and four strokes behind the pace with 18 holes to go. “He hit some of the most incredible golf shots. He had the best time.” Echoed Mike Thomas, “He was impressive. Very impressive.” Added Justin, “I wasn’t surprised. I knew he was going to wow a lot of people. It was cool to see him shape shots, hit it both ways.”

Needless to say, Charlie’s future is both bright and uncertain. What’s clear, though, is that him beaming elder won’t unnecessarily subject him to the limelight. Meanwhile, he has every right to delight in his progress. He’s only 11, but eyes are already on him with ample reason.

 

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

‘Powerful tradecraft’: How foreign cyber-spies compromised America

SPEAKING at a private dinner for tech security executives at the St. Regis Hotel in San Francisco in late February, America’s cyber defense chief boasted how well his organizations protect the country from spies.

US teams were “understanding the adversary better than the adversary understands themselves,” said General Paul Nakasone, boss of the National Security Agency (NSA) and US Cyber Command, according to a Reuters reporter present at the Feb. 26 dinner. His speech has not been previously reported.

Yet even as he spoke, hackers were embedding malicious code into the network of a Texas software company called SolarWinds Corp., according to a timeline published by Microsoft and more than a dozen government and corporate cyber researchers.

A little over three weeks after that dinner, the hackers began a sweeping intelligence operation that has penetrated the heart of America’s government and numerous corporations and other institutions around the world.

The results of that operation came to light on Dec. 13, when Reuters reported that suspected Russian hackers had gained access to US Treasury and Commerce Department emails. Since then, officials and researchers say they believe at least half-a-dozen US government agencies have been infiltrated and thousands of companies infected with malware in what appears to be one of the biggest such hacks ever uncovered.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday Russia was behind the attack, calling it “a grave risk” to the US. Russia has denied involvement.

Revelations of the attack come at a vulnerable time as the US government grapples with a contentious presidential transition and a spiraling public health crisis. And it reflects a new level of sophistication and scale, hitting numerous federal agencies and threatening to inflict far more damage to public trust in America’s cybersecurity infrastructure than previous acts of digital espionage.

Much remains unknown — including the motive or ultimate target.

Seven government officials have told Reuters they are largely in the dark about what information might have been stolen or manipulated — or what it will take to undo the damage. The last known breach of US federal systems by suspected Russian intelligence — when hackers gained access to the unclassified email systems at the White House, the State Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 2014 and 2015 — took years to unwind.

US President Donald Trump on Saturday downplayed the hack and Russia’s involvement, maintaining it was “under control” and that China could be responsible. He accused the “Fake News Media” of exaggerating its extent.

The National Security Council (NSC), however, acknowledged that a “significant cyber incident” had taken place. “There will be an appropriate response to those actors behind this conduct,” said NSC spokesman John Ullyot. He did not respond to a question on whether Mr. Trump had evidence of Chinese involvement in the attack.

Several government agencies, including the NSA and the Department of Homeland Security, have issued technical advisories on the situation. Mr. Nakasone and the NSA declined to comment for this story.

Lawmakers from both parties said they were struggling to get answers from the departments they oversee, including Treasury. One senate staffer said his boss knew more about the attack from the media than the government.

‘POWERFUL TRADECRAFT’
The hack first came into view last week, when US cybersecurity firm FireEye, Inc. disclosed that it had itself been a victim of the very kind of cyberattack that clients pay it to prevent.

Publicly, the incident initially seemed mostly like an embarrassment for FireEye. But hacks of security firms are especially dangerous because their tools often reach deeply into the computer systems of their clients.

Days before the hack was revealed, FireEye researchers knew something troubling was afoot and contacted Microsoft Corp and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), three people involved in those communications told Reuters. Microsoft and the FBI declined to comment.

Their message: FireEye has been hit by an extraordinarily sophisticated cyber-espionage campaign carried out by a nation-state, and its own problems were likely just the tip of the iceberg.

About half a dozen researchers from FireEye and Microsoft, set about investigating, said two sources familiar with the response effort. At the root of the problem, they found, was something that strikes dread in cybersecurity professionals: so-called supply-chain compromises, which in this case involved using software updates to install malware that can spy on systems, exfiltrate information and potentially wreak other types of havoc.

In 2017, Russian operatives used the technique to knock out private and government computer systems across Ukraine, after hiding a piece of malicious code in a widely used accountancy program that was then used to deploy a destructive virus known as NotPetya. Russia has denied that it was involved. The malware quickly infected computers in scores of other countries, crippling businesses and causing hundreds of millions of dollars of damage.

The latest US hack employed a similar technique: SolarWinds said its software updates had been compromised and used to surreptitiously install malicious code in nearly 18,000 customer systems. Its Orion network management software is used by hundreds of thousands of organizations.

Once downloaded, the program signaled back to its operators where it had landed. In some cases where access was especially valuable, the hackers used it to deploy more active malicious software to spread across its host.

In some of the attacks, the intruders combined the administrator privileges granted to SolarWinds with Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform — which stores customers’ data online — to forge authentication “tokens.” Those gave them far longer and wider access to emails and documents than many organizations thought was possible.

Hackers could then steal documents through Microsoft’s Office 365, the online version of its most popular business software, the NSA said on Thursday in an unusual technical public advisory. Also on Thursday, Microsoft announced it found malicious code in its systems.

A separate advisory issued by the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on Dec. 17 said that the SolarWinds software was not the only vehicle being used in the attacks and that the same group had likely used other methods to implant malware.

“This is powerful tradecraft, and needs to be understood to defend important networks,” Rob Joyce, a senior NSA cybersecurity adviser, said on Twitter.

It is unknown how or when SolarWinds was first compromised. According to researchers at Microsoft and other firms that have investigated the hack, intruders first began tampering with SolarWinds’ code as early as October 2019, a few months before it was in a position to launch an attack. 

‘HARDENING OUR NETWORKS’
Pressure is growing on the White House to act.

Republican Senator Marco Rubio said “America must retaliate, and not just with sanctions.” Mitt Romney, also a Republican, likened the attack to repeatedly allowing Russian bombers to fly undetected over America. Senator Dick Durbin, a Democrat, has called it “virtually a declaration of war.”

Democratic lawmakers said they had received little information from the Trump administration beyond what’s in the media. “Their briefings were obtuse, sorely lacking in details and really seemed an attempt to provide us with the barest of minimum in information that they had to give us,” Democratic Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz told reporters after a classified briefing.

Ullyot, the National Security Council spokesman, declined to comment on the congressional briefings. The White House was “focused on investigating the circumstances surrounding this incident, and working with our interagency partners to mitigate the situation,” he said in a statement to Reuters.

President-elect Joe Biden has warned that his administration would impose “substantial costs” on those responsible. House of Representatives Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, also a Democrat, said Mr. Biden “must make hardening our networks — both public and private infrastructure — a major priority.”

The attack puts a spotlight on those cyber defenses, reviving criticism that the US intelligence agencies are more interested in offensive cyber operations than protecting government infrastructure.

“The attacker has the advantage over defenders. Decades worth of money, patents and effort have done nothing to change that,” said Jason Healey, a cyber conflict researcher at Columbia University and former White House security official in the George W. Bush administration.

“Now we learn with the SolarWinds hack that if anything, the defenders are falling farther behind. The overriding priority must be to flip this, so that defenders have the easier time.” — Reuters

UK gov’t imposes harsher lockdown on London

LONDON — Prime Minister Boris Johnson imposed an effective lockdown on over 16 million people in England and reversed plans to ease curbs over Christmas, saying Britain was dealing with a new coronavirus strain up to 70% more transmissible than the original.

Although Mr. Johnson and his scientific advisors believe vaccines will still be effective, and the new strain is not more deadly or more serious in terms of the illness caused, he said on Saturday the government had to take urgent action.

The number of cases in England has soared in the last two weeks because of the virus variant.

Mr. Johnson tore up plans to allow three households to mix indoors for five days over the festive period, and said London and southeast England, which are currently in the highest level of a three-tier system of rules, would now be placed in a new Tier 4 level, similar to those of a recent national lockdown.

“It is with a very heavy heart I must tell you we cannot continue with Christmas as planned,” Mr. Johnson told a news conference. “I sincerely believe there is no alternative open to me.”

People in Tier 4 — 16.4 million and about a third of the population of England — will be required to stay at home except for essential reasons such as work, and non-essential retail will close, as will indoor leisure and entertainment.

Social mixing will be limited to meeting one other person in an outdoor space. The new rules will come into effect from midnight on Saturday.

Mr. Johnson, whose initial response to the pandemic has been criticized for being too slow, had resisted calls to change plans for the Christmas relaxation, saying on Wednesday it would be “frankly inhuman” to ban it.

However, those now in Tier 4 will not be allowed to mix with others over Christmas. And everyone else in England will now be allowed to see friends and family only on Christmas Day itself, Dec. 25.

“At this time of national crisis, the British people want clear, decisive leadership,” opposition Labor leader Keir Starmer said on Twitter. “All we get from Boris Johnson is confusion and indecision.”

Within minutes of Mr. Johnson’s announcement, shoppers hit the streets for a final attempt to stock up on Christmas presents and supplies.

“It was fairly quiet all day, then suddenly there was this mass of people,” said one sales assistant at a large department store at Westfield shopping centre in West London, one of Europe’s largest.

The UK’s other nations, whose response to the pandemic differs from that of England at times, also took action.

Scotland said on Saturday it would impose a ban on travel to the rest of the United Kingdom, and the Christmas easing would be limited to Dec. 25 only. All of Wales will go into Tier 4 from midnight, but two households can mix on Christmas Day.

Business leaders said the government needed to provide emergency financial support.

“The consequences of this decision will be severe,” said Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium.

‘TAKEN OFF’
Like other countries in Europe, Britain is battling to contain new waves of the virus. It reported 27,052 new coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases on Saturday, taking the total over 2 million, and 534 more deaths, taking the overall official toll to more than 67,000.

There has been a surge in infections sparked by the new virus strain — VUI202012/01.

“This virus has taken off, it’s moving fast and it’s leading inevitably to a sharp increase in hospital admissions,” Britain’s Chief Scientific Officer Patrick Vallance said.

England’s Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said the authorities had alerted the World Health Organization (WHO) and were continuing to analyze the data.

“There’s no evidence to suggest it is more lethal or causes more severe illness,” Mr. Johnson said. “There’s no evidence to suggest the vaccine will be any less effective against the new variant.

Other countries have also reported variants of the virus. South Africa said on Friday one such strain was driving a second wave of infections there. — Reuters

Global COVID-19 cases surpass 75 million

GLOBAL coronavirus infections surpassed the 75 million mark on Saturday, according to a Reuters tally, as several nations around the world begin vaccinating against the virus.

Britain this month became the first Western country to start immunizing with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine developed by Pfizer and its German partner BioNtech, followed by the United States which has now also approved a vaccine from Moderna .

There have been 18.65 million new cases in the past month, the highest reported for a 30-day period since the pandemic started.

Europe remains the region with the most cases — 21.6 million cases — followed by North America with 17.9 million, Latin America with 14.5 million and Asia with 13 million.

In Europe, a million new cases were recorded over just five days, with Russia and France reporting more than 2 million cases since the coronavirus outbreak began. The United Kingdom and Italy both have approximately 1.9 million cases each.

The United States became the first country in the world to record more than 300,000 deaths on Monday. The nation is reporting more than 2,500 deaths daily, according to a Reuters analysis of data from the previous seven days.

Hospitals across the US have begun giving the first shots of the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine.

The United States remains the country with most cases – more than 17 million since the outbreak started – followed by India and Brazil respectively. With just 4% of the world’s population, the US has about 23% of all global cases.

Brazil registered a single-day record of 70,000 new cases on Wednesday, joining the United States and India as the only countries to have reported more than 7 million total infections. With almost 180,000 confirmed fatalities, the South American nation has the second-highest death toll in the world.

On Saturday, India exceeded 10 million coronavirus infections. India has prepared to deliver 600 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines to the most vulnerable people in the next six to eight months. — Reuters

Singapore probes 13 infections among quarantine cases at hotel

Singapore is investigating 13 cases of COVID-19 infections among people who served their quarantine at a hotel along the city’s Orchard Road shopping strip.

The cases, all imported, had “high genetic similarity” despite the victims arriving from 10 different countries, the government said in a statement on Saturday. Singapore said it conducts whole genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis on all COVID-19 cases, and it takes about four weeks to culture the virus and complete the sequencing.

The people were confirmed between Nov. 2–11 to have COVID-19, and had stayed at the Mandarin Orchard Singapore hotel between Oct. 22 and Nov. 11. They arrived from places including Bahrain, Canada, Indonesia, Myanmar, Netherlands, the Philippines, South Korea, the UAE, the UK, and the US.

“Epidemiological investigations were immediately initiated to determine if there is a potential link between these 13 cases, and to study if transmission could have occurred locally, and not from their country of origin,” according to the statement. From “preliminary investigations, we cannot exclude that transmissions could have occurred at Mandarin Orchard Singapore.”

Authorities are conducting analysis on more cases beyond Nov. 11. The hotel had stopped taking visitors for quarantine purposes since Dec. 13. Those currently serving their so-called stay-home notice will be sent to another facility, the government said.

The Mandarin Orchard is one of the hotels approved by authorities to offer staycation packages to Singapore residents eager for a break and unable to leave the country because of travel restrictions. While those on quarantine are housed on dedicated floors and segregated from other guests, the hotel will check out all occupants as a precautionary measure, and close all restaurants and event spaces.

The health ministry is also testing about 500 employees of the hotel for COVID-19.

For the past two months, the number of infections in the community has been at or near zero in the city-state of 5.7 million people. — Wes Goodman/Bloomberg

Looking for gift ideas for the holidays? Give your loved ones peace of mind

The year has not gone according to plan for anyone. If nothing else, 2020 highlighted how unpredictable life can be, and many Filipinos had to live with the weight of that uncertainty. In the worst cases, many have lost jobs, even their lives.

Yet, the Filipino spirit is nothing if not resilient. Given the current state of affairs, celebrations are all the more meaningful, and with the holiday season right around the corner, there is no better time to spread joy among loved ones and ease their worries.

This is why award-winning life insurance provider FWD is offering Filipinos the most fitting gift to end the year: a convenient, affordable, and accessible way to give your loved ones peace of mind.

FWD’s Set for Health and Set for Tomorrow Short Term Cover insurance plans are now available for online purchase at shop.fwd.com.ph, joining the lineup of best-value protection products for a wide variety of financial goals.

Set for Health is the only multi-claim critical illness insurance plan available online in the Philippines, that rewards you for staying healthy and covers you up to P1,000,000. Set for Tomorrow Short Term Cover is the only life insurance plan with rewards that you can buy online and provides coverage up to P5,000,000. Both plans are entitled to exclusive rewards of an FWD Card issued by Security Bank with zero maintaining balance and 1-year unlimited consultation at The Medical City Ortigas.

Interested customers can avail the benefits of cost, convenience, speed, safety, and service in one site, via an end-to-end online purchase platform—from discovery to application, to payment to the issuance of policy. Customers can also make payments based on their preferred option, via credit card, debit card, or GCash.

FWD’s online shop provides ease and simplicity to customers through a seamless process that can be done in 5 minutes. No lengthy medical questions. No medical exams. Transparency of product details is ensured, with all information available for customers right at the tips of their fingers.

FWD Life Insurance Corporation (FWD Insurance), part of pan-Asian FWD Group, had recently been honored at two prestigious international insurance awards for their leadership in technology and innovation in the insurance industry. FWD Insurance won the Digital Insurance Initiative of the Year at the 5th Asian Banking & Finance Insurance Asia Awards (IAA) while the International Data Corporation’s Financial Insights Innovation Awards (IDC-FIIA) 2020 named FWD Group as Best New Insurer in Asia.

To learn more, visit shop.fwd.com.ph.

BTr sells P6.56 billion in Premyo bonds

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) on Friday said it has raised P6.56 billion from the latest issuance of one-year peso denominated Premyo bonds.

“We are delighted that the Premyo bond sales reached P6.56 billion, exceeding not only the P3-billion target, but also surpassing the P4.96 billion we raised last year,” National Treasurer Rosalia V. De Leon said at the bond’s raffle draw streamed on the BTr Facebook page.

The papers, which require a minimum investment of P500, carry a coupon rate of 1.25%. Holders of Premyo bonds can also win cash prizes in quarterly raffle draws.

Ms. De Leon said interest was strong both domestically and abroad, particularly from overseas Filipinos and corporations.

“Investments were generated from 70 countries and overseas Filipinos accounted for 15.7% of the total number of transactions,” she said.

“We are also pleased to share that some corporations are now taking advantage of Premyo bonds as a meaningful way of rewarding employees during the Christmas season.”

Amid pandemic restriction measures, the bonds were made available through online selling platforms such as Bonds.PH and the Overseas Filipino Bank.

“Around 17.6% of individual accounts were made using our mobile app Bonds.PH and the Overseas Filipino Bank application,” Ms. De Leon said.

Moreover, Ms. De Leon said their offer period coincided with the 12.12 sale of major online retail platforms.

“Despite this, we are pleased to note that an increasing number of Filipinos still prioritized their future over the ephemeral joy of shopping,” she said.

The bond offer period ran from Nov. 11 to Dec. 11.

Selling agents for the offering include the Development Bank of the Philippines, BDO Capital and Investment Corp., First Metro Investment Corp., Philippine National Bank Capital, UnionBank of the Philippines and Land Bank of the Philippines.

The government’s gross borrowings reached P3.224 trillion in the 10 months to October. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

BSP to develop loan application form for MSMEs

By Luz Wendy T. Noble, Reporter

The central bank on Friday unveiled projects that will expand credit accessibility for small businesses next year, including a nationwide survey to gauge their needs and the development of standardized loan applications for the sector.

“We all recognize the critical role of MSMEs (micro-, small and medium-sized enterprise) as drivers of economic growth. The sector, however, has been constrained with access to formal finance,” Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in an online briefing.

Mr. Diokno said they have identified constraints to lending and initiated plans to address pain points for banks and MSMEs.

In 2021, the BSP will conduct a nationwide MSME survey meant to address the information gap in the sector.

“Banks have generally viewed MSMEs as unbankable due to limited information on their market operations and viability, which lead to perceptions of high risks,” Mr. Diokno said.

Getting financing from a bank requires collateral and credit history to assess credit worthiness. Most MSMEs do not have these, which may prevent them from pursuing credit applications.

In this regard, Mr. Diokno said the survey, which will be rolled out in September 2021, aims to provide deeper insights into the MSME market to allow financial institutions to better gauge their needs.

“The demand-side survey is expected to generate more granular data on MSME access to finance; and new insights on MSME preferences and practices in managing their finances,” Mr. Diokno said.

The survey is co-initiated and funded by the Asian Development Bank. The multi-lateral agency was responsible for publishing the terms of reference for the engagement of the research firm for the project.

Meanwhile, Mr. Diokno said the standard, simplified loan forms for MSMEs, together with policies and guidelines, are also expected to be created in 2021. Industry adoption is expected to start by 2022.

“This is also intended to improve banks’ risk assessment and hasten turnaround time for loan applications,” Mr. Diokno said.

Earlier, the BSP also unveiled its plans to streamline the process for supply chain financing of MSMEs, allowing suppliers to credit access more easily, provided they are verified suppliers of large firms.

MSMEs make up about 99% of the roughly one million registered businesses in 2018, based on data from the Department of Trade and Industry.

Despite this, credit extended to the sector is only about 2.47% or P208.201 billion of the banks’ total loanable funds in the first quarter. This is lower than the 10% required under Republic Act No. 6977 or the Magna Carta for MSMEs.

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