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Sharing our way out of a crisis

ALMOST TWO WEEKS have passed since the historic Senate hearing for the legalization of motorcycle taxis. In internet speak, that means four to five different news cycles; or in the old language, yesteryear’s news. But here’s why you should still care.

This affects us all, whether or not you use the service.

I fought for motorcycle taxis not because I ride one. I have done, of course, but I ended up getting my own Vespa instead when it started getting impossible to get an Angkas. So I basically privatized my way out of the problem. But that doesn’t mean the problem doesn’t exist. In fact, I know that deep in my heart, I’ve only added to it by introducing yet another motorized private vehicle to the road — especially when there was an option (and more importantly, a willingness) to share. And that is the most heartbreaking thing about this whole fiasco: We were told that we’re not allowed to share.

We all saw what happened when Uber left. Service quality plummeted, prices skyrocketed. New car sales skyrocketed. And the 50,000 to 60,000 cars that were once used for TNVS either went to their competitor or, worse, back to a private individual where one car services one family. You could call it a coincidence, of course, but the last two years since that fateful day have been the worst years on record for traffic but the best years for Grab. And now, we’re back in the exact same spot, talking about the exact same issue (just swapping four wheels for two) — proposing the exact same regulations, but hoping for a different result.

What our regulators need to understand is that you cannot regulate your way out of a crisis. It’s like trying to regulate hunger, pain or feelings. You need to go to the root cause. And the root cause of us riding motorcycle taxis is that there’s no better option out there. It’s that simple. So if you rob us of that, those who have the means will privatize their way out of the problem and create a bigger one by buying their own motorcycle, while those who can’t will just have to suffer — period. Think of coding; think of Uber leaving.

But don’t get me wrong. I’m not trying to totally disregard the concerns of the regulators here. They do have some points. It’s just that, if it’s really as dangerous as they say, why do we allow anyone to ride or sell a motorcycle in the first place? How exactly does it make it any less dangerous when you don’t charge your passenger for the ride? What kind of forcefield does it deactivate? Regulators will argue that it is because it is a common carrier and it comes with an increased responsibility; and we (meaning any road user born before yesterday) will just take one glance at a regulated jeepney, bus, taxi, tricycle and truck and say, “Sige, kami na lang maga-adjust (okay, we’ll adjust).”

Also, think of the message a ban sends to innovators, especially at a time when we should be turning to tech as a weapon against traffic. We are basically telling them: Your ideas are NOT welcome here. I mean, who knows what the next big thing will be? If none of us saw Uber coming, or Netflix, Spotify, Viber, online banking, etc., who is to say that the next great app to disrupt or revolutionize the buses, jeepneys or tricycles is not at the tip of some developer’s keyboard? But because we created such an inhospitable (dare I say hostile) environment for them, they will either not develop it or take it somewhere else.

I said in my Senate speech that change is the only way out of this mess. That’s still true; We can’t do it without change, but there’s also one other way. We can also share our way out of it. It’s our only hope. Because try and imagine a world without shared resources. We would literally have to generate our own individual electricity and fetch our own water from our own private well. A shared economy, plus our ability to cooperate in large numbers and turn our thoughts into things, has seen Sapiens evolve from one of the most vulnerable species in the animal kingdom to the most dominant one. It’s time we use it against our new predators, like traffic.

It’s 2020, for crying out loud. When I was a kid, I thought we would be in flying cars by now. Instead, here we are going backwards. We love to talk about progress but we chain ourselves to the past with a public service act that was written in 1936. We now live in an exponential era, and we need laws that can keep up.

The good news here is that there is a piece of legislation that is being drafted by Senator Grace Poe as we speak. Now I know what some of you are thinking, but for whatever criticism I have seen about Senator Poe, she understands this issue. The mere fact that she still remains the only one to give the riding public a voice here speaks volumes, and has earned her my full support. But it needs a lot more than that. It needs you.

But I hate motorcycle riders. They are so unruly and are a menace on the road.

I hear you. I too have had my vehicle scratched by a careless motorcycle rider before. I’ve also had my car scratched by an unruly jeepney driver and got rear-ended by a bus that ran out of brakes. The point here is, kamotes (as they have come to be known) come in all shapes and sizes. They are not exclusive to two wheels. In fact, they get exponentially worse as they increase to four, 10, 18, etc. The problem is not the vehicle type but the nut behind the wheel. That is what you need to fix, and that is done at the LTO level with stricter licensing and driver education and enforcement. Let’s not confuse the issue.

In fact, if anything, creating a space and a legal framework for these motorcycle taxis will allow for mandatory training at a level that is on par with the rest of the world. That’s if we demand it, of course; which we can, so long as we start now. Because every day that we procrastinate, the habal-habal community grows, and so will the number of private motorcyclists that will have just privatized their way out of the problem and will no longer be answerable to anyone.

It will only be a matter of time before we will totally lose control of this and the animals take over the zoo, so to speak.

 

James Deakin is a multimedia, award-winning automotive journalist; events host; inspirational speaker; key opinion leader; brand ambassador; road safety advocate; TV host; and presenter at CNN Philippines.

New Zealand seeking Mindanao green energy, agriculture partnerships

By Maya M. Padillo
Correspondent

DAVAO CITY — The New Zealand government wants to bring its expertise in two sectors, renewable energy (RE) and agriculture, in Mindanao through various partnership schemes, according to its new envoy.

“We are interested in working together on areas where we have strengths and one of those is the renewable energy. That is one of the areas we want to work and support in Mindanao,” Ambassador Peter Kell said in an interview late Thursday on the sidelines of a scholarship promotion event.

He said New Zealand is particularly interested in helping develop green energy sources in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) as a way of supporting government efforts on peace and economic development in the restive region.

Mr. Kell noted that 80% of New Zealand’s energy supply is currently from hydropower, geothermal, wind, and solar, and the government is aiming for a 100% green mix by 2035.

“That means we have to up the proportion of our RE… If there are other projects where we can draw our strengths on RE, then we will be very interested,” he said.

Honorary Consul of New Zealand in Mindanao Vicente T. Lao, also chair of the Mindanao Business Council, said biomass is another RE source that can be explored with New Zealand.

Mindanao, he said, has a lot of potential biomass input from the banana farms and other agriculture areas.

“The technology we have in biomass is not that advanced. We have so much biomass in Mindanao and it’s just being thrown away right now. I think we have a good potential in biomass generation,” Mr. Lao said.

AGRICULTURE
In agriculture, New Zealand’s biggest trade sector, Mr. Kell said he will be building on initiatives made by his predecessor, David Strachan, including strengthening cooperation with the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA)

Among the programs under discussion with stakeholders involves BARMM areas.

“The talks were done with my predecessor and I am here to continue those discussions,” he said.

The envoy also announced that the New Zealand government has provided $2.4 million in financial aid package for the training of mango sprayers and growers in Mindanao.

“Protocols such as what we need to spray properly, what kind of chemicals that you can spray with, and when to stop spraying,” Mr. Lao said.

In December, MinDA, representing the Philippine government, signed a three-year co-investment project with the New Zealand Embassy and NZ G2G Partnerships Ltd. for mango exports.

One of the items under the program is a feasibility study for setting up quality assurance systems for fresh mango to ensure compliance with sanitary and phytosanitary standards.

Mr. Lao said exporting mangoes will mean much higher income for growers with prices of up to P400/kilo compared with an average P50/kilo farm gate price for the domestic market.

Mr. Kell was in Davao City on Jan. 20-31 to promote the New Zealand Scholarship program in various local academic institutions.

Agriculture and green energy are among the priority sectors for the post-graduate study, along with disaster risk management, and public sector management, including peace and conflict, and indigenous studies.

Pampering for those in a rush

AFTER the success of its main The Retreat Spa, intergrated casino-resort Okada Manila has decided to create a spa concept for people who want to relax but have little time on their hands. The result is the Sole Retreat.

“The Retreat was made for a complete spa experience so it can take a few hours, but Sole Retreat is for people who might have a flight in a few hours but still want to get a massage,” Vikki Aquino, director for spa, fitness, and recreation told BusinessWorld during the launch on Jan. 23.

Located at the third level of the resort’s Coral Wing, the Sole Retreat Foot Spa and Reflexology Center, offers reflexology treatments, massages, nail services, and facial treatments.

It offers two kinds of reflexology treatments: the Ingham method which uses a “rhythmic finger and thumb walking” technique to give the benefits of pressure point therapy sans the pain. The therapist who did the reflexology treatment for this writer said this method is best for beginners to reflexology treatments.

(It did hurt a bit, especially on the arch of my right foot — the therapist said it’s because my shoulders are stiff.)

They also have the Asian reflexology method which uses “deep finger, thumb-knuckle pressure and rubbing technique” where pain represents the sensitivity of nerve endings which, according to a release, should lessen after further sessions.

Reflexology is a centuries-old practice which started in China and Egypt where by pressing into the foot’s “zones” that is said to correspond to areas or organs in the body.

The center is equipped with 22 seats (or “thrones,” as the center likes to call them) in a common treatment room and five seats in a private lounge.

Each seat can fully recline and is adjustable for those having a full-body dry massage, facial, or nail service.

The facial and nail treatments can be done concurrently with the reflexology treatment.

“The treatments can be done without disrobing though we do provide massage pajamas for those who want it,” Ms. Aquino said.

Sole Retreat also allows children to avail of its services provided they reach a height limit of at least 110 centimeters. The Retreat, on the other hand, can only be accessed by people aged 16 and above. This, Ms. Aquino said, makes Sole Retreat perfect for spa parties or family events.

Foot therapies start at P2,750 for 20 minutes, to P5,550 for 60 minutes. Additional services such as a full back massage can cost P2,250 for 30 minutes, while “naked” manicures and pedicures cost P1,300 each.

Facials such as the Ultra Sonic Peel cost P4,900 for a 45-minute session.

The spa also offers set treatments starting from P11,500 which combines reflexology, massage, and “naked” manicure and pedicure.

For more information, call the Sole Retreat at 8555-5778 or e-mail thesoleretreat@okadamanila.com. the Sole Retreat is open daily from noon to midnight. — Zsarlene B. Chua

PAGCOR income falls 71%

THE Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR) reported a 71.4% drop in its net income in 2019 to P9.014 billion despite posting double-digit gains in its gaming operations.

Last year’s decline in net profit was a reversal of the company’s performance in 2018 when its bottom line surged by 536% after a one-time gain from the sale of a 16-hectare site in Entertainment City for P37.3 billion to Bloomberry Resorts Corp.

Broken down, income from gaming operations rose 11.6% to P75.75 billion last year from P67.85 billion in the previous year.

Of this amount, about half or P35.92 billion were remitted to the national government as its share of revenues while 5% or P3.78 billion were paid as franchise tax.

Net of gaming taxes and contributions, total income reached P39.64 billion, down 42.1% from the figure in the previous year.

PAGCOR’s total expenses went down by 17.3% to P30.48 billion from 2018’s P36.86 billion.

The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment. — Beatrice M. Laforga

Toyota leads PHL car market upswing in 2019

RECOVERING from the effects of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN), which helped to contract the market in 2018 due to a general increase in vehicle prices, the Philippine automotive market finished 2019 with a 2.4% growth rate capped by a strong fourth quarter from most industry players.

In a speech at the recent Toyota Motor Philippines Corporation (TMP) media thanksgiving party, company chairman Alfred Ty said, “As industry leader, it is Toyota’s role to drive the industry back to sustainable growth. We will continue to be this country’s solid partner in nation-building. In fact, as of end-2019, TMP has paid a total of P384.3 billion (in) cumulative taxes since the start of our operations.”

He added that TMP was able to maintain its 2,195-strong Filipino work force, not counting those employed by its network of 71 dealers nationwide. The company also beefed up its efforts to stimulate the market through various customer service and value-added activities, driving the sales of 162,011 units and cornering market share of 39.5% for the year. Of the total, 54,028 were produced locally in TMP’s Sta. Rosa manufacturing plant in Laguna.

Toyota’s locally assembled passenger car, the Vios, entered under the Comprehensive Automotive Reform (CARS) program, remained as the country’s best-selling vehicle with 33,181 units sold. This puts the brand on track to deliver its commitment under the program. Said Sherwin Chualim, first vice-president for marketing division, “We sincerely appreciate the motoring public for their trust and confidence in Toyota throughout the years.”

HYUNDAI ANGELES CITY DEALERSHIP UNVEILED
Angeles City, Pampanga is the site of Hyundai’s newest dealership. Known as a commercial, financial and industrial hub, and the entertainment and gaming center of Central Luzon, Angeles now hosts Hyundai Angeles, the second passenger car dealership in the region of the South Korean global brand. It is the third Central Luzon showroom operated by the Hizon Group, which is among first four pioneer dealers of Hyundai in the country.

“We are right where we should be,” said Hyundai Asia Resources, Inc. President and CEO Maria Fe Perez-Agudo. “The third Hyundai dealership under the Hizon Group is designed to respond to the needs of the booming business, tourism, and transport industries of Angeles.”

Hyundai Angeles Pampanga Deputy COO Yves Amiel Hizon affirmed: “My mom said my father saw the future of Hyundai. (He) had faith. Hyundai Pampanga opened in December 2001 and is currently third in its area in market share. Hyundai Tarlac, which opened in November 2007, ranks second.” This third-generation Hizon is now bent on carrying on his father’s legacy by bringing Hyundai Angeles to success in this new decade.

Sidelights of the inauguration were the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU), allocating some 700 units of the Hyundai H-100 Class 1 Modern Jeepney to local transport groups; and the turnover of an H-100 ambulance to the local government. Both activities signify Hyundai’s solid support for the national PUV modernization program.

Last year, HARI sold 33,763 units and generated 2.9% growth in December versus the same month in 2018, enabling it to maintain its position in the market as one of the top automotive brands in the Philippine market. Customers can visit Hyundai Angeles on MacArthur Highway, Balibago, Angeles City, Pampanga.

AUTOHUB OPENS NEXTHUB AUTO CARE
To strengthen its position as the country’s “premier multi-brand automotive distributor and service provider,” the Autohub Group inaugurated maintenance and repair shop NextHub Auto Care.

The establishment positions itself as an alternative after-market service center for out-of-warranty or inactive customers whose vehicles need repairs. The 2,200-sqm. facility houses 17 bays which can collectively service 50 cars per day. The facility promises to provide top-notch and accessible services at reasonable prices.

Basic services such as oil change, tire and battery checkup, steering and suspension, brake checks, among others, are available at NextHub. The new service center also offers a selection of car accessories, vehicle insurance renewal, new and used car sales, spare parts for all car brands, and even an in-hub convenience store. Highly skilled technicians are equipped with advanced tools, ensuring high-quality service from start to finish.

NextHub Auto Care is part of Autohub’s AIM Up (Accelerate, Innovate, Move Up) campaign. “We wanted to take the ‘three-star shop’ mentality of our car buyers to the next level. We will cater to all after-warranty cars and to those who opt to have their cars serviced at shops other than casa. Our price is very competitive, and we have high-grade facilities that could accommodate all your car repair needs,” said a company release.

NextHub Auto Care is located at Cabrera Road, Brgy. San Juan, Taytay, Rizal, at the back of Nissan Taytay. For more information, follow NextHub Auto Care on Facebook, or call 0917-867-6479.

NISSAN GOES MOBILE WITH ‘SERVICE ON WHEELS’
Nissan Philippines now makes house calls or on-site after-sales service and repair with its “Service on Wheels” program, a mobile solution that “provides excellent vehicle care and services to more customers outside Nissan service centers.”

The program allows participating Nissan dealerships to deploy dedicated service vehicles manned by two Nissan-certified technicians. The vehicles are customized to contain various tools and equipment to provide a number of services including light periodic maintenance, vehicle diagnosis, replacement of consumable items such as tires, brakes, and batteries; light repairs; and emergency roadside assistance.

The service will be available in select Nissan dealerships across the Philippines.

Said Atsushi Najima, president and managing director of Nissan Philippines: “Service on Wheels is a way for (us) to extend our expertise in vehicle care outside our service centers. This gives a new and exciting dimension to our reliable services by delivering satisfaction to our customers, wherever they are.”

For more information, call the Nissan Customer Assistance Center Hotline at (+632) 8403-6593 or (0927) 600-9557 or any Nissan dealership.

Cocoa seen weakening by end-2020, but still set for annual gain

KRISTIANA PINNE/UNSPLASH

LONDON — London cocoa futures will fall 6% by the end of the year, weakened by the prospect of rising production in Ivory Coast and Ghana, a Reuters poll of nine traders and analysts showed.

However, prices should still post an annual gain following a sharp rise this month, it indicated.

London prices were seen ending 2020 at 1,850 pounds a tonne, down 6% from Wednesday’s close, according to the median forecast of survey participants, but still 4% higher than the market close at the end of last year.

Respondents expected there would be a more balanced market in 2020/21, with a median forecast of a marginal deficit of 5,000 tonnes compared with a more significant shortfall of 70,000 tonnes in 2019/20.

They noted the decision by Ivory Coast and Ghana to charge a Living Income Differential (LID) effective the 2020/21 season could weigh on the future price.

The world’s top two producers announced in July 2019 that 2020/21 purchases must include the LID, a $400 premium to the futures price, in a bid to tackle pervasive farmer poverty.

Funds raised will be used to help increase payments to farmers.

“There will be continued volatility in the futures market influenced by the LID in Ivory Coast and Ghana,” one respondent said, adding higher farmer prices could boost production.

Ivory Coast cocoa production in 2020/21 was seen rising to 2.25 million tonnes from a median forecast of 2.20 million in the current season, while Ghana’s 2020/21 crop was projected at 905,000 tonnes, up from 875,000 tonnes.

New York cocoa prices were also seen falling from current levels while still posting an annual gain, with an end-year projection of $2,600 a tonne, down 5% from Wednesday’s close but up 2% from a year earlier. — Reuters

Treasury bill rates to end mixed ahead of inflation, policy meet

YIELDS ON Treasury bills (T-bills) on offer today will likely end mixed as investors may stay on the sidelines ahead of inflation data due Wednesday and the Monetary Board’s (MB) position on policy rate the following day.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) will offer P20 billion in T-bills on Monday, broken down into P6 billion each for 91-day and 182-day T-bills and P8 billion for the 364-day papers.

The auction for five-year Treasury bonds earlier scheduled on Tuesday was canceled since the offer period for the 23rd retail Treasury bonds is still ongoing until Thursday.

Sought for comment, a bond trader said the three-month and six-month papers will likely fetch lower rates while the yield on the one-year T-bills may just move sideways.

“Factors to consider are the recent outbreak of coronavirus, the CPI (consumer price index) data to be released [this] week and the MB meeting later in the week,” the trader said via telephone.

At the secondary market, yields on the 91-, 182- and 364-day T-bills were at 3.303% 3.474% and 3.896% on Friday.

Last week, the government fully awarded P20 billion in T-bills as planned as rates declined across-the-board on strong demand.

Specifically, P6 billion was raised from the three-month papers out of the P18.832 billion bids, at an average rate of 3.297%, lower than the 3.39% yield fetched in the Jan. 20 auction.

The government borrowed another P6 billion as programmed via the six-month papers out of tenders worth P11.995 billion. The yield on 182-day T-bills also dropped to 3.597% from the previous 3.652% rate.

For the 364-day securities, the Treasury accepted P8 billion as planned out of total bids worth P13.689 billion. The average rate for the one-year papers likewise declined to 3.963% from 3.971% previously.

Michael L. Ricafort, chief economist at the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said the T-bill yields will likely be “steady” or move slightly lower amid easing of global interest rates due to rising concerns on the new virus outbreak and a potential global economic slowdown.

“In view of the recent decline in global oil prices and lower benchmark interest rates/bond yields in the US and other developed due to global economic growth concerns over the novel coronavirus, the markets are also anticipating the possibility of monetary easing in the upcoming monetary policy-setting meeting on Feb. 6, 2020, a day after the Feb. 5 announcement of the inflation data, as both of these events may be the biggest market catalysts for the week,” Mr. Ricafort said on Sunday via mobile phone message.

On Sunday, the Department of Health (DoH) reported the first novel coronavirus acute respiratory disease (2019-nCoV ARD) death outside of China, as another patient positive for the virus died on Feb. 1. This brought the confirmed cases in the Philippines to two.

The DoH said the first 2019-nCoV ARD fatality in the country was a 44-year-old man who traveled to the Philippines from Wuhan, China with the 38-year-old woman who was confirmed positive for the virus last week.

As of Sunday, the DoH said there are 36 persons under investigation for the virus.

Economic managers last week were quick to assure that the outbreak will have a minimal impact on the tourism sector as travels abroad will be limited, adding that it is still too early to measure its effect on the economy.

For private economists like UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc.’s research department, the country’s trade and tourism sectors will take a hit over the long term if the outbreak lasts at least six months.

Meanwhile, the Philippine Statistics Authority will report on Wednesday, Feb. 5, inflation data for January, while the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Monetary Board will have its first rate-setting for the year the day after on Thursday, Feb. 6.

BusinessWorld’s poll of 13 economists yielded a median estimate of 2.7% for January headline inflation, with analysts citing upside risks from the Taal Volcano eruption and a rise in some food prices still due to the African Swine Fever.

If realized, the reading will mark the third straight month of an uptick in inflation and will be faster than the 2.5% seen in December. However, this is still slower compared to the 4.4% pace in January 2019 and also falls closer to the lower end of the 2.5-3.3% range given by the BSP. This is also well within the 2-4% target for the year.

Meanwhile, 10 out of the 13 economists who joined the inflation poll were of the view that the BSP Monetary Board will ease rates by another 25 basis points (bps) this Feb. 6.

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno last week said the central bank is still looking to bring down rates by around 50 bps in 2020. He said a 25-bp cut could also be considered as early as this quarter.

The BSP last year cut rates by a total of 75 bps, partially unwinding the 175 bps worth of hikes implemented in 2018 to quell multi-year high inflation.

Benchmark rates currently stand at 3.5% for the overnight deposit facility, four percent for overnight reverse repurchase and 4.5% for overnight lending.

The Treasury has set a P420-billion local borrowing program this quarter, broken down into P240 billion in T-bills and P180 billion via Treasury bonds.

The government plans to raise P1.4 trillion this year from local and foreign lenders to plug its budget deficit, which is expected to widen to as much as 3.2% of gross domestic product. — B.M. Laforga

Obsession

Grand Seiko celebrates 60 years of handcrafted watch precision, elegance, and Japanese authenticity. Grand Seiko is a luxury brand that offers timepieces made by skilled craftsmen by hand in two exclusive watchmaking studios, using parts produced in-house.

JAPAN SEEMS to have an obsession with time: its trains hardly ever come late, and when they do, the transportation authorities find it so atrocious that they feel the need to issue an apology. When BusinessWorld asked Grand Seiko Craftsman Takuya Nishinaka about the relationship between Japanese people and time during the 60th anniversary celebration of Grand Seiko held in the Lexus Showroom at BGC last week, Mr. Nishinaka chose not to answer the question. This is understandable — in order to answer the question, Mr. Nishinaka would have to delve deep into the history of the Japanese empire: including its meeting with the West, its navy, its school system, and its trains.

Grand Seiko exists as a brand under the Seiko holding company, which made its name in watches. The company’s history is tied to the Meiji Era, which saw Japan as an emerging power in the world stage. Scholars place the start of the Meiji period in 1868, the year the Emperor Meiji was crowned. Seiko, meanwhile, was founded in 1881. Grand Seiko, as a watch and as a brand, was first launched in 1960 to challenge the dominance of Swiss watchmakers in the market. It is still hand-assembled to this day, and all its parts come from its own manufacture. Mr. Nishinaka, through an interpreter talked about this as an advantage. “If something wrong happens, we can solve it by ourselves, because all the parts are from us, and all parts are assembled by ourselves. It’s one of the merits of manufacture.”

The brand has three collections, each designed with the premium craftsmanship combined with timekeeping technology: The Heritage Collection offers a selection of classic watches that once again brings to life the designs and style of the earliest Grand Seiko timepieces, re-interpreted with the very latest movements, manufacturing techniques and craftsmanship. The Elegance Collection has the strength and resilience to be worn every day while offering a special level of refinement that makes them the perfect choice for those landmark occasions in life where everything has to be just right. The Sports Collection diversifies the Grand Seiko brand to reach those who want to reflect a more active lifestyle, offering from divers to chronographs.

With a global theme that brings thoughtfulness to The Nature of Time, the launch also highlights the latest sought-after timepiece by global enthusiasts, the GS Snowflake. The luxury watch, familiar to collectors as the SBGA211, has a distinct dial inspired by the beauty that surrounds the dial workshop of the Grand Seiko Shinshu Watch Studio in Japan. This unique pattern resembles the snow surface blown by the rough wind in the severe winter of the Shinshu area, where the watch is made. This aesthetic, in addition to the Japanese precision movement that Grand Seiko is known for, offers a gorgeous timepiece that has a glide motion which mimics graceful movement.

Asked about the marriage between hand-assembly and the constant new technology frequently the hallmark of Japan, Mr. Nishinaka said, “It’s very difficult to answer your question here because this is also our challenge.”

Seiko’s longtime business partner in the Philippines, Timeplus Corp. President Karl Dy, meanwhile, announced in a press release, “We are proud to bring in the Grand Seiko concept store to the country, especially with the expertise that has been shared with us by Craftsman Nishinaka, to demonstrate the technology that goes inside each timepiece. Aside from the Snowflake, we are planning to bring in more styles in the future for our collections from the proud 60-year history of the brand.”

Previously, watch enthusiasts have had to search for the watches abroad. Some pieces are in the country, sold under Seiko boutiques (such as the one in SM Aura).

But back to time: According to a paper titled “Japanese Clocks and the History of Punctuality in Modern Japan” by Takehiko Hashimoto in the East Asian Science, Technology and Society International Journal, the Japanese obsession with time began in the tail end of the aforementioned Meiji period. Opening Japan’s borders brought in many engineers and professionals from the West, who were frustrated with the Japanese indifference to time as governed in the West: through cogs in clocks. Japan, prior to that period, measured time according to incense, temple bells, and the seasons (although clocks have been present in Japan at least since the 16th century). Punctuality was achieved through the government’s strict policies on time, starting them early by enforcing them in the new public school systems, the sudden large numbers of factories, the newly constructed railways, and government offices.

Mr. Nishinaka has won several awards and certificates for his craft, like the Gold Medal on Japan Technical Skill Olympics in Watch Repairing in 2012, and the 1st Level National Certificate of Skilled Watch Craftsman. As part of his job, he also trains new craftsmen for the company. He can be said to have time on his hands: he makes watches that show humankind’s attempts to grasp the concept of time — and each attempt costs hundreds of thousands of pesos The Snowflake, for example, can cost €6,000, or P339,000.

Answering a question about his own relationship with time (and not Japan’s), he had this to say: “Time is very important. We cannot buy time.” — Joseph L. Garcia

Do you really need an international driver’s license?

With very few exceptions, you don’t. I’ve rented cars and driven in several countries with only my Philippine driver’s license.

Yesterday I saw an ad on my Instagram feed from a website that offers international driver’s permit (IDP). They’ll mail you a printed one, and a digital one in two hours with the fees going from $56 (one year) to $66 (three years) for both.

Two things irked me about this ad. One, it felt like I was being spied on because I had just googled car rental rates in a particular country on Sixt where I already have an account. Two, as a Filipino tourist, I’ve never been asked to present an international driver’s permit. I’ve rented cars — and driven those cars just to be clear — in several countries with only my valid Philippine driver’s license and passport. (For other nationalities who use characters — and not Roman alphabet — in  their language, an IDP is required for translation purposes in addition to their local license).

These websites might be the biggest and longest-running scams targeting independent travelers who don’t take organized tours and are unsure about driving abroad, because when you inquire if you need one, they never give you a straight answer. I was given a link to a list of countries, which I knew was wrong based on my own experience of renting cars there. So you end getting an IDP for a country that doesn’t require it.

With few exceptions — like Japan, I am told — you really don’t need it.

But, all right, I’m playing. I went to the website on my laptop and immediately a chat box popped up. “I’m online! Let me know if you need any help,” Sara the customer service rep said. 

“Do you really need an international driver’s permit for, say, Turkey or the Czech Republic?” I wrote. I already knew the answer because I’ve driven in those two countries as a tourist.

“It’s highly recommended to have an international driver’s license with you when you travel as many car leasing companies and authorities require you to have one,” she said.

See how she didn’t answer with a yes or no? “It’s highly recommended…”

It’s like asking someone selling magic diet pills if they would make you lose weight faster and they respond with, “They’re highly recommended…”

Deniability. They’re not exactly saying yes because the true answer is probably no. They’re also putting doubt in your mind about using your local driver’s license on two counts — that car-leasing companies would deny you rental, and that cops require you to have one.

I’ve rented cars from Sixt, Budget, Dollar, Europcar and Enterprise in Istanbul, Antalya and Bodrum in Turkey; in Prague, Santorini and Paris; and in the Balkans in Sarajevo, Bosnia, and Herzegovina; Tivat in Montenegro; and Dubrovnik in Croatia. Not a single one of these companies in these cities asked me for an international driver’s license.

You do have to have the actual driver’s license card with you, not the receipt. In 2016 or 2017— that Jurassic Period in LTO when issuance of the actual cards was delayed from months to a year — a rental in Istanbul had to be transferred to a friend’s name because all I had was the LTO receipt. He laughed at me, saying, “What the hell is that paper?”

On whether authorities would require you to have an international permit, well, if the rental company isn’t requiring you to have an IDP for them to release a vehicle to you, the cops won’t either. In 2017, I drove in three Balkan countries that were beside each other because I didn’t want to depend on buses (they don’t have cross-country trains like most European countries). Besides, I wanted my own schedule, to stop where and when I wanted to, and to skip tourist sights I wasn’t interested in.

I collected my first car at Sarajevo airport and me being a Manila driver beat the red light two intersections later. Two Bosnian cops pulled me over. In my head, I was like, “Oh shit! Tanya, you’re not in Manila anymore. You’re in Bosnia where your phone doesn’t work (apparently Globe has no telco partners in Bosnia, Montenegro and Macedonia — I don’t remember about Serbia — but in Croatia it did).” 

Anyway, the cops did not ask me to show an international driver’s license. I handed over the rental agreement and my Philippine driver’s license.

They didn’t speak English, I didn’t speak Serbo-Croatian, so I played the stupid tourist and apologized. I showed them the address I was looking for, and in the end they not only let me go, they also convoyed me to my airbnb because I was truly lost.

Oh, the misadventures when driving abroad! Maybe I’ll write about that in the next column.

* * *

Tanya T. Lara is the Philippine Star’s Property Report editor and Lifestyle assistant editor. When she’s not getting depressed over Metro Manila traffic, she writes about her travels on her blog at www.findingmyway.net. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @iamtanyalara.

Vivant allots at least P1B for energy projects this year, expects to break P2-B profit mark

THE energy unit of Vivant Corp. is setting aside at least P1 billion in capital expenditure this year as it plans to bid for power generation projects in off-grid areas, including those in Palawan.

The budget this year comes as the listed company is bullish about its financial performance in 2019 when its new power plant projects started to turn in revenues.

“For the first time, there’s a good sense we could break the P2-billion mark,” Emil Andre M. Garcia, chief operating officer of Vivant Energy Corp., told reporters last week. He was referring to the expected income of Vivant Corp., in which he is one of the directors.

“But again, the numbers are still being finalized but it was a good year,” he added.

Mr. Garcia is also optimistic about 2020 as the company embarks on new projects.

“We’re joining the bid for Paleco (Palawan Electric Cooperative). There’s an invitation to bid for El Nido which we’ll join as well,” he added about plans to enter the popular tourist destination in Palawan, the off-grid island province in Luzon.

Mr. Garcia said the subsidiary is also bidding for projects in the island of Marinduque.

“With all of that, I’m sure we can get at least one or two more projects,” he said. “We hope to groundbreak within this year.”

He placed the target capacity for the Paleco bid at 20 megawatts (MW), while that of El Nido at 10 MW. He said the Marinduque bid could reach a total capacity of 16 MW, which is broken to three projects with the biggest component at 8 MW.

Asked about the budget for the projects, he said: “We could go over a billion [pesos].”

Aside from the projects that are up for bidding, Vivant Energy targets to start this year a diesel-fired power facility in Bantayan, an island town north of Cebu City.

“We’ll start construction there in April,” Mr. Garcia said.

The project involves the construction and operation of a 23-MW power generation facility, namely: two bunker fuel-fired units each with a capacity of 7.5 MW; and three bunker fuel-fired units each with a capacity of 2.8 MW.

The facility is under a 15-year contract to supply 15 MW of net dependable capacity to Bantayan Electric Cooperative, which awarded the project to partners Vivant Integrated Diesel Corp. and Gigawatt Power, Inc. in Oct. 2019.

The company is also building a facility using a hybrid of solar, diesel and battery technologies to serve the municipalities of Linapacan and Culion in Palawan.

The project is under Culna Renewable Energy Corp., a partnership among Vivant Renewable Energy Corp., Gigawatt Power and WEnergy Global Pte. Ltd.

In Culion, the facility is a diesel-solar-battery hybrid with a respective capacity of 2.42 MW, 2.8 MW, and 4.78 MW, respectively, at a cost of P632 million.

In Linapacan, the diesel-solar hybrid will have a respective capacity of 540 kilowatts and 330 kilowatts. The cost is placed at P125 million.

Shem Jose W. Garcia, Vivant Corp. head corporate communications and business development innovation, described 2019 as a “really good year” for the listed company. — Victor V. Saulon

ADM sees no significant coronavirus impact

CHICAGO — The coronavirus that is quickly spreading across China and beyond is not expected to have a significant business impact on global grain trader Archer Daniels Midland at this point, Chief Executive Officer Juan Luciano said on Thursday.

The company, which operates in China, however, could be impacted if the coronavirus outbreak impacts the global gross domestic product, Luciano said during a post-earnings conference call with analysts.

“We are in a very fundamental business, which is the business of food,” Luciano told analysts. “So I think that we will be impacted to the extent that GDP, the global GDP will be impacted — and that will depend on the magnitude” of the outbreak.

Luciano said that consumer dining and entertainment habits will likely shift, where people will stay at home instead of going outside.

“Maybe pulp consumer products could be impacted in demand, but people will have to eat inside anyway. So in that sense, more the packaged goods will probably pick up a little bit,” Luciano said.

“At this point in time, we don’t expect a significant impact in our business,” he said.

The International Monetary Fund said it is closely monitoring China’s coronavirus outbreak, but it is too soon to quantify the global potential economic impact.

Oreo cookie maker Mondelez International Inc. expects its first-quarter revenue to be impacted by the virus while Starbucks Corp. has closed thousands of restaurants in China.

Infections from coronavirus spread to more than 8,100 people globally on Thursday, surpassing the 2002-2003 SARS epidemic’s total in a fast-spreading health crisis forecast to pummel the world’s second-largest economy.

The vast majority of patients are in China where the virus originated in an illegal wildlife market in Wuhan city and has also claimed 170 lives, latest official data showed.

ADM has approximately 1,100 employees in China, and no employees have fallen ill, Luciano said.

The Chicago-based company also holds a significant stake in the Asia-focused Wilmar International Ltd., which shuttered its two facilities in Wuhan for the Chinese Lunar New Year. Its facility in Shanghai is closed until Feb. 9, Luciano said.

It is unclear when those facilities will reopen, he said.

On Wednesday, Wilmar said it has sufficient inventory to meet normal business demand, and is working with its suppliers and distributors to ensure a stead supply of products.

ADM reported its fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday after markets closed. — Reuters

Yields on government debt drop on virus, rate cut bets

YIELDS ON benchmark government securities (GS) dropped last week amid continued concerns on the impact of the novel coronavirus acute respiratory disease (2019-nCoV ARD) on the global economy, dovish statements from the US Federal Reserve and the market’s anticipation of further rate cuts by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) this year.

Bond yields, which move opposite to prices, fell by an average of 7.2 basis points (bps) week on week, according to data on the PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates as of Jan. 31 published on the Philippine Dealing System’s website.

At the secondary market, rates of the 91- and 182-day Treasury bills (T-bill) fell by 0.4 bp (to 3.303%) and 4.4 bps (to 3.474%), respectively. The 364-day T-bills went the opposite direction, increasing by 2.6 bps to fetch 3.896%.

At the belly of the curve, the two-, three-, four-, five-, and seven-year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) rallied, with their yields declining by 4.1 bps (4.062%), 2.5 bps (4.232%), 3.8 bps (4.328%), 6.9 bps (4.382%), and 13.6 bps (4.427%), respectively.

Long-term debt papers also rallied with rates of the 10-, 20-, and 25-year T-bonds declining by 14.2 bps (4.456%), 16.9 bps (5.051%), and 15 bps (5.161%).

“Local yields fell broadly, mainly driven by market fears over the possible economic impact of the novel coronavirus to global economic activity. Moreover, yields likewise declined following dovish remarks from the Federal Reserve with its strong commitment to bring US inflation within the two-percent target,” a bond trader said in an e-mail interview, noting the declines were “amplified toward the long-end of the yield curve.”

“Yields were down across-the- board [last] week on speculation that the BSP will soon cut rates, and due to lower US Treasury yields,” Security Bank Corp. First Vice-President and Head of Institutional Sales Carlyn Therese X. Dulay said in a separate e-mail.

Ms. Dulay noted that yields also went down due to the “resounding success” of the government’s 23rd offer of retail Treasury bonds (RTBs).

The coronavirus outbreak started in Wuhan, China, with the death toll rising to 304 as of Feb. 1, with more than 14,000 cases recorded.

On Sunday, the Department of Health (DoH) reported the first 2019-nCoV ARD death outside of China, as another patient positive for the virus died on Feb. 1. This brought the confirmed cases in the Philippines to two.

The DoH said the first 2019-nCoV ARD fatality in the country was a 44-year-old man who traveled to the Philippines from Wuhan, China with the 38-year-old woman who was confirmed positive for the virus last week.

As of Sunday, the DoH said there are 36 persons under investigation for the virus.

Meanwhile, the Bureau of the Treasury awarded P134 billion worth of three-year RTBs at the rate-setting auction for the papers out of the total bids worth P149.827 billion. This was almost five times the initial offer of P30 billion, which prompted the government to upsize the acceptance.

The papers were quoted at a coupon of 4.375%, higher compared to the 4.25% coupon fetched for the three-year RTBs issued last April 2017 or RTB 3-08. Proceeds from the issue will be used for general budgetary purposes including the state’s critical infrastructure projects and social services.

The three-year RTBs are now being offered to the general investing public for minimum denominations of P5,000, with the public offer period set to run until Feb. 6, unless the Treasury closes it earlier.

On the other hand, BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said the central bank is still looking to cut rates by at least 50 bps this year, with a 25-bp cut possible as early as this quarter.

The BSP’s Monetary Board will hold its first policy meeting for the year this Thursday. Its other review for the quarter is on March 19.

Mr. Diokno said the BSP’s policy decision will mainly depend on inflation and other data and need not follow the US Federal Reserve’s move to keep rates steady at their first review on Jan. 28-29.

Moving forward, Security Bank’s Ms. Dulay expects GS yields to continue its downward trend this week “as market players reposition.”

For the bond trader: “Local yields might show an upward bias amid likely stronger local inflation report for January 2020, which might be offset by the impact of a possible policy rate cut from the BSP and likely weaker US labor reports.”

“The increase in yields, however, might be capped by lingering concerns over the novel coronavirus and rising bets of a US rate reduction this year,” the bond trader added. — Edwin C. Aruta, Jr.