VOL. XXX • NO. 303 • 4 SECTIONS 20 PAGES • P18 • MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016 • www.thestandard.com.ph • editorial@thestandard.com.ph
XMAS RUSH. Shoppers, motorists and vendors jostle together on Sunday as they make their way toward Divisoria Market, considered the nation’s bargain capital, in the hope of clinching a good buy two weeks before Christmas Day. Ey Acasio
Clark bribery probed NBI told to look into Impeach-move won’t prosper—Aguirre Immigration payoffs By Rey E. Requejo By Rey E. Requejo
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HE Justice Department has ordered the National Bureau of Investigation to look into reports that millions of pesos were paid to Bureau of Immigration employees to allow more than 70 detained Chinese nationals at the Clark Freeport in Pampanga to escape.
“We will leave no stone unturned and there will be no sacred cows. We will hold those found responsible accountable,” Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II said Sunday. The escapees were among 1,316 Chinese nationals who were recently arrested for working in an illegal online casino owned by gaming mogul Jack Lam. Earlier, Aguirre said reports indicated that BI insiders were offered P100,000 to P250,000 for each released detainee. Those who got free managed to escape supposedly by jumping over the walls of their temporary detention facility at the Fontana Leisure Park and Casino Hotel. More than half of them were either rearrested or have surrendered. Aguirre said the detainees would not have been able to escape without the aid of Immigration employees. “Corruption of any kind has no place in the DoJ family; it has no place in government,” said Aguirre, who exercise administrative super-
vision over the BI and the NBI. He said the BI investigation was in line with President Rodrigo Duterte’s platform to rid government agencies of corruption. Aguirre earlier said the BI would be the next target in his anti-corruption drive after the Bureau of Corrections, saying the agency has been home to various syndicates involved in corruption. President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered Lam arrested for economic sabotage and bribery. Lam, who has been blacklisted, is said to be out of the country, but Aguirre said he could return and continue his businesses provided he settle his tax deficiencies and obtain proper permits from the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. Earlier, it was reported that the one-stop-shop that handled the undocumented Chinese employees at Fontana was headed by the daughter of Pagcor chairwoman Andrea Domingo, who accused
THREE soldiers were killed and 17 others were wounded Saturday after members of the 35th Infantry Battalion encountered more than 150 Abu Sayyaf fighters led by Radullam Sahiron and Yasser Igasan in Patikul, Sulu, Maj. Felimon Tan Jr., spokesman of the Western Mindanao Command, said Sunday. Tan said an undetermined number of ASG fighters were also killed or wounded. The soldiers were supported by close air and artillery support. “Adjacent units also conducted
“They’re just making a big issue from it. If you examine the President’s statement, he merely exercised his freedom of expression,” he said. He also rejected Trillanes’ claim that the President could be held liable for murder after publicly saying he ordered Espinosa’s killing. “That’s the theory of someone who has no knowledge of the law. That’s the problem with someone who pretends to be a lawyer. He is not a lawyer,” Aguirre said. He said there was no demoralization in the National Bureau of Investigation after the President
blocking and pursuit operations,” Tan said. Of the wounded soldiers, two needed to be airlifted to Zamboanga City for further medical attention because of serious injuries. The military has launched intensified operations against the Abu Sayyaf Group in Sulu. The encounter broke out after the government troops assaulted s terrorist encampment past 10 a.m. on Saturday in Bud Taming, Barangay Kabbontakkas. The firefight lasted almost two hourse before the terrorists withdrew, bringing with them a number of their casualties, Tan said. twitter.com/ MlaStandard
publicly rejected its findings on the criminal liability of the CIDG team led by former CIDG Eastern Visayas director Marvin Marcos. “I was able to talk to them [NBI officials] about it and they didn’t say anything negative to me,” he said. In his speech last week, Duterte said he still believed the claims of the CIDG that the killing of Espinosa resulted from a shootout after he fired at them, and despite the NBI findings that it was a rubout. “I will not allow these guys to go to prison even if the NBI says Next page
House sets rush work on ‘sin tax’ By Christine F. Herrera
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Govt soldiers, Sayyaf clash in Patikul: 3 dead By Florante S. Solmerin
ANY MOVES to impeach President Rodrigo Duterte for defending the policemen being held liable for the killing of Albuera, Leyte Mayor Rolando Espinosa will prosper, Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II said Sunday. He downplayed the insinuations by Senators Leila de Lima and Antonio Trillanes IV that Duterte could be held liable and impeached for saying he would not allow the Philippine National Police-Criminal Investigation and Detection Group team who had
been involved in Espinosa’s killing to go to jail. He said Duterte did not violate the Constitution or betray public trust in issuing his statement. “What is impeachable about it? What trust did the President betray?” Aguirre said, He insisted that Duterte made the statement as part of his freedom to express himself. Aguirre, who served as a private prosecutor in the impeachment trial of the late Chief Justice Renato Corona, said the reaction from the President’s critics were exaggerated.
LECHON LINE-UP. Residents of Mlang town in North Cotabato take part in a pig-roasting activity which is among the highlights of the Kawayanan Festival, a month-long celebration. Geonarri O. Solmerano
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Aquino spared from dengue inquiry By Macon R. Araneta FORMER President Benigno Aquino III will not be invited to the Senate Blue Ribbon investigation of the allegedly anomalous procurement of P3.5 billion worth
of dengue vaccines shortly before the May 2016 elections, Senator Richard Gordon said Sunday. “At this point in the investigation we have not invited President Aquino,” said Gordon, chairman of the Blue Ribbon committee.
The purchase of the medicines was made during the time of Health Secretary Janette Garin who was appointed to her post in December 2014 or a month after being designated acting secretary. Next page
Smartmatic wants P2b for poll machines By Rey E. Requejo THE Commission on Elections may be compelled to pay its technology provider Smartmatic P2 billion due to delayed return of
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vote counting machines used in the May elections. Comelec Commissioner Rowena Guanzon revealed Sunday that Smartmatic is now considering the unreturned VCMs as
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WITH three session days left before Congress goes on a monthlong Christmas break, the House is rushing the passage of the amended sin tax and a bill to increase the monthly Social Security System pension by P2,000―but is putting off until next year a measure to reimpose the death penalty. Lawmakers have also put on hold the emergency powers being sought by President Rodrigo Duterte to address the traffic problem, after they rejected Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade’s proposal to appoint him “traffic crisis manager,” which
“good as sold.” The Comelec failed to return the VCMs on time due to the protest filed by losing vice presidential candidate Ferdinand Marcos Jr. Next page
Pump price rise seen at P1 per liter By Alena Mae S. Flores OIL prices will go up by over P1 per liter this week as the global oil market continues to adjust to an impending production cut. “Estimates for the four-day trading period last week showed that increase could be between P1.40 to P1.50 for gasoline, diesel and kero,” a source said. The source said prices are going Next page
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Senator questions EJK report SENATOR Francis Pangilinan said Sunday it was misleading to say he fully agreed to the Senate report that said the summary killings taking place in the country was not state-sponsored. “It appears that the 11 senators who signed the committee report agree with its findings when in fact the affixed signature is followed by the words ‘I dissent,’ which is what I did,” said Pangilinan in his Facebook account. “We also stated that we would be filing a separate opinion and in it we will be stating the basis of our dissent on key points.” Pangilinan made the clarification following reports that he and 10 other members of the Senate committee on justice and human rights, led by Senator Richard Gordon, completely agreed with the committee report that there was no evidence to show that there was a State-sponsored policy to eradicate illegal drugs. The findings virtually cleared President Rodrigo Duterte of any liability in the killings that are taking place as a result of his bloody war against illegal drugs. Pangilinan, the president of the Liberal Party, said he disagreed with some portions of the report. The report was drafted by Gordon and Panfilo Lacson, chairmen of the Senate committees on public order and dangerous drugs, which jointly conducted the Senate hearings on the extrajudicial killings and summary executions. Pangilinan, Gordon and Lacson aside, the other senators who signed the report were Gregorio Honasan II, Loren Legarda, Juan Miguel Zubiri, Nancy Binay, Manny Pacquiao, Alan Peter Cayetano, Franklin Drilon and Vicente Sotto III. Pangilinan said he “will dissent/concur in part.” Cayetano said he had “reservations and amendments,” while Drilon said he signed “with reservations and will interpellate.” Despite signing the report, Lacson said the finding that the killings were not State-sponsored was not conclusive since Gordon barred some witnesses from testifying following his spat with Commission on Human Rights Commissioner Roberto Cadiz. “The report is not conclusive. “It’s just that no evidence was presented to prove the killings were State-sponsored,” Lacson said. He said he was dismayed when Gordon did not allow the witnesses from the CHR to testify. As a result, he said, Gordon stood his ground and never allowed the CHR witnesses to give their testimony during the hearing on extrajudicial killings and summary executions. “That is only one aspect to which I do not agree. Because every time there was a hearing, these witnesses were there. Only the witnesses from Pasay and Antipolo were able to testify,” Lacson said. Those who did not sign the report were Senators Ralph Recto, Leila de Lima, Antonio Trillanes IV, Joseph Victor Ejercito and Grace Poe. Trillanes called Gordon a “lackey” of Duterte and his committee report a “cover-up” for the extrajudicial killings that started and surged when Duterte assumed the presidency. He assailed him for covering up all the evidence linking the President to the killings as an offshoot of his war on drugs that have claimed the lives of more than 5,000 people. Macon Ramos-Araneta
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it was murder,” Duterte said. After all, the NBI is under me [and also] the Department of Justice.” Aguirre earlier vowed to proceed with the preliminary investigation of the case and the other charges against Marcos and the other respondents, saying the President’s remarks would not affect the criminal proceedings. A high-level panel composed of five prosecutors has also been tapped for the probe and the Justice Department is expected to subpoena the respondents soon.
NPO exec clarifies quit bid A
N OFFICIAL of the National Printing Office who led the controversial mass resignation at the agency was allegedly pressured by a member of the agency’s Bids and Awards Committee to resign.
A TASTE OF VENICE. Tourists enjoy a Gondola ride costing 500 per head at the Venice Grand Canal Mall on Upper Mckinley Road, Mckinley Hill, Bonifacio Global City in Taguig on Sunday. Manny Palmero
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up due to “increase in demand, less supply from the Middle East and forex [foreign exchange].” The depreciation of the peso means that the oil companies will need more pesos to pay for their orders. Last week the oil firms cut the price of diesel by P0.25 per liter but did not touch gasoline and kerosene prices. As this developed, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi has directed Undersecretary Donato Marcos to conduct inspections and sampling of liquid petroleum products in various gasoline stations and retail outlets nationwide for compliance with existing Philippine National Standards for fuels, especially focusing on the presence of methanol in their liquid petroleum products. Cusi earlier said that contrary to the Philippine National Stan-
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But Garin, a former congresswoman and a party mate of Aquino at the Liberal Party, insisted on the need for the vaccines due to the rising incidence of dengue cases. But Gordon said the purchase of the vaccines was surrounded by suspicious circumstances. He said he was baffled by the rush to purchase the vaccines when only 250 people a year died from dengue, which affected only 200,000 people or 0.01 percent of the population.
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would give him broad powers, not only over land but also air and sea transport. The lawmakers said they did not see any traffic congestion in airports or seaports nationwide. A freedom of information bill also failed to pass at the committee level. Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez last week called for an all-majoritymember caucus to ask them which of the priority bills should be passed. With only two hearings held, the House committee on ways and means, voting 26-0 passed House Bill 4144 amending the Sin Tax Law that would have imposed a unitary tax on all brands at P30 per pack by Jan. 1, 2017. The panel members approved the bill authored by ABS Rep. Eugene Michael de Vera, who pushed for a two-tier tax system that would increase the tax rate for low-priced brands to P32 from P25 per pack and the rate for high-end brands to P36 per pack from P29. De Vera and panel chairman Quirino Rep. Dakila Carlos Cua were trying to beat the January 1 implementation of the unitary tax system. The day after the proposed amended sin tax bill was approved, the House committee on rules, chaired by House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas immediately scheduled the bill for plenary debate. House Deputy Speaker Pia
dard for petroleum products, some stations were found to contain methanol instead of ethanol. The presence of methanol in the gasoline can cause corrosion in the engine. The department applies standard operating procedures in sampling and testing to determine the compliance of petroleum products. “We look into the quantity and quality of petroleum products being sold to our consumers. Initially, inspection results showed that all gasoline samples passed the calibration test for quantity of fuels. But for quality, only one sample is still being confirmed for having methanol at the DoE laboratory,” Cusi said. He said the department saw the need to intensify this campaign to further protect the consumer. “That is why this activity is simultaneously being done nationwide through the DoE’s Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao Field Offices,” he said.
“We only leased the machines with no bidding and now you say they’re as good as sold? What is this?” she said in Filipino. Guanzon said Comelec Chairman Andres Bautista has granted the request of Smartmatic for a closeddoor meeting with all the commissioners to iron out the problem. But Guanzon said she would not attend the meeting because it might send the wrong signal to the public. She suggested instead an en banc meeting without Smartmatic. “Why should I attend? What will be decided during that meeting? What will be fixed behind closed doors? People might think we are conniving over the P2 billion,” she said. In a separate interview, Bautista said the Comelec requested to defer the delivery of some VCMs to Smartmatic because of the
electoral protest filed by Marcos before the Supreme Court, sitting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal. Marcos has filed election protest against the proclamation of Vice President Leni Robredo who won by a slim margin of 260,000 votes. Bautista said Smartmatic’s move to charge the Comelec P2 billion for the unreturned VCMs is based on the “options to purchase” provision in the contract that the Comelec signed with the poll technology provider. But he said the Comelec had already made a “constructive delivery” or a paper deliver on November 29. On December 1, the poll body announced that it had turned over 97,366 optical mark reader machines and the Election Management Systems but retained 151 OMR machines. At the same time, Bautista said the meeting between Smartmatic and the Comelec was approved by the commissioners, not just by him.
Anthony Leachon, a doctor and an independent health advocate and member of the Dengue Expert Panel convened by the Health department, also questioned how P3.5 billion was allocated for a single vaccine when the entire vaccination program of the department totaled P3 billion. He pointed out the procedural lapses in the dengue vaccination program, the evident conflict of interest in the members of the formulary executive community, and the supposed bloating/overpricing of the particular drug. He cited the time line of the department’s dengue vaccina-
tion program starting from the meeting between Aquino and Sanofi representatives during the Climate Change Summit in Paris on Dec. 2, 2014. Gordon said testing for the new vaccine had not yet been completed when the government procured it. This was supported by Leachon who cited calls from the scientific community for a longer study to ensure the safety of the beneficiaries Gordon said he invited to the next hearing medical experts and officials from the Department of Health and its attached agencies, the Department of
Budget and Management and the Commission on Audit to further clarify the Dengvaxia vaccine’s attributes and testing methods/results to date in the Philippines and how the procurement by the Health department was processed. “Certain issues have been brought to the attention of the committee and the Senate concerning a vaccine called Dengvaxia and there are certain issues that have been presented, issues concerning the capability of the product, the manner of testing whether there were sufficient testing that had happened,” Gordon said.
Cayetano and opposition member Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman questioned the speed with which the bill was being processed. Cayetano moved that the bill be referred first to the House committee on health as the health matters were not discussed by the Cua panel. Lagman accused the House leadership of railroading the bill’s passage. “What are the merits of this measure so much so that we will sideswipe the unitary system? What are the overriding reasons to jettison the unitary system?” Lagman said during the plenary debate. “Rules require the provision of a committee report. As I review the committee report, there is nothing here that discuss the submissions of the resource persons that will justify its adoption. This does not comply with the rules,” Lagman added. “Debate on a multi-tier system has been ongoing. With a higher rate, it will give more revenue and curb the smoking rate,” Cua said. Cayetano, however, said that as a sponsor of the sin tax bill when she was in the Senate, the move to a unitary tax was aimed at protecting people’s health. A two-tier system, she said, would make the cheapest cigarettes available to the poor. “We negate all positive outcomes of the PhilHealth and GHW Law,” Cayetano said, seeking to open debates on the issue in the health committee. But Cua defended the bill, saying the unitary tax system would prejudice farmers from tobacco
producing regions. Lagman, on the other hand, said this issue had already been settled when the Sin Tax law was passed. House Deputy Speaker Fredenil Castro, meanwhile, said he prevailed upon the Speaker to defer the passage of the death penalty bill so that it could be discussed lengthily in the plenary deliberations. The revival of capital punishment is bound to set back the Philippine government’s efforts to bring to justice criminals who have fled abroad, House Senior Deputy Minority Leader and Buhay Rep. Lito Atienza warned Sunday. “Once Congress restores the death penalty, we could lose the ability to bring home and prosecute drug lords, plunderers, embezzlers and even murderers who have slipped out of the country,” Atienza said. Many countries around the world oppose capital punishment, and would refuse to send fugitives back to the Philippines if they could face trial here for felonies that may be punished by death sentences, according to Atienza. “We may have situations wherein Filipinos with arrest warrants issued by Philippine courts are captured overseas, but foreign governments won’t repatriate the escapees on grounds they could be executed here after trial,” Atienza said. The House committee on justice, voting 12-6 with one abstention, approved last week a bill reinstating death verdicts for heinous offenses such as drug trafficking, murder, rape, robbery, carjacking,
kidnapping, bribery, plunder, parricide, infanticide, destructive arson, piracy, and treason. The bill was expected to be submitted for plenary approval shortly, in accordance with President Rodrigo Duterte wish to put 50 convicts to death every month to help deter crime. Meanwhile, Alvarez announced that the House is set to approve this week a joint resolution increasing by P2,000 the monthly pension of the SSS pensioners under the Social Security Act of 1997 after the measure was passed by the committee on government enterprises and privatization on Dec. 6. The first tranche will be given this December. North Cotabato Rep. Jesus N. Sacdalan, committee chairman, said he and Senator Richard Gordon, chairman of the Senate committee on government corporations and public enterprises, met last Tuesday and agreed that the second tranche of the SSS pension hike amounting to P1,000 will be given by 2019. Sacdalan said the committee opted last December 6 to instead pass a joint resolution to ensure speedy approval and implementation of the SSS pension hike proposal. “We will certainly pass it before the holiday break,” Sacdalan said. As of January 2016, there are about 33-million SSS members and 2.15-million retirees receiving their pensions upon retirement, the joint resolution said. House Bill 2653, introduced by House deputy minority leader and Makati City Rep. Luis Campos Jr.,
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Jennifer Tomas, a member of the committee, said she resigned because she sympathized with NPO Deputy Director and BAC Chairman Sherwin Prose Castañeda. “I affixed my signature as solicited on the last minute before the closing hours of the same day, not knowing the content thereof,” said Tomas in her letter to NPO Director Francisco Vales Jr. dated November 28, 2016. Tomas was among the BAC members who resigned en masse led by Castañeda due to alleged pressure. She said she saw and read the resignation letter only after it was officially released at the Records Section. “Except as to the issue on the procurement reforms being undertaken, with all honesty and humility, I have no more personal knowledge or information on what were alleged/stated in the said resignation letter,” Tomas said. She requested Vales to return her to her mother unit. The resignations came following an alleged anomalous transaction involving the printing of the contribution forms of the Social Security System. The NPO gave print orders worth P66 million for the SSS which were awarded to three printers. Francisco Tuyay
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Lam of attempting to bribe her over his unauthorized casino operations in Clark. Domingo’s daughter Karen Domingo-Gandamra reportedly took the post only a month ago, replacing former BI Angeles City field office chief Janice Christine de Jesus-Corres. Corres was reportedly implicated in a complaint filed by her staff for alleged irregularities in the approval of working permits and other documents of Chinese workers at Lam’s Fontana Leisure Parks and Casino. proposes to amend the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010 that currently provides a straight P500 monthly stipend to all indigent Filipinos 60 years old and above. Campos said P2,000 monthly pension is being eyed for “older” indigent seniors as the government sets aside P18 billion for the P500 monthly stipend of 2.8-million poverty-stricken elderly persons. Indigent seniors, Campos said, refer to all Filipinos who are 60 years old and above who are without regular pension from the SSS or the Government Service Insurance System, or lacking a permanent source of income, compensation, or regular and appropriate financial assistance from relatives. In battling for the swift passage of his bill, Campos invoked the mandate of the 1987 Constitution for the state “to care for the elderly through just programs of social security, and to provide improved quality of life for all.” “We have to extend greater financial support to extremely deprived seniors who tend to be weaker and more vulnerable owing to their highly advanced age,” Campos said. “An allowance of P2,000 per month, or P24,000 per annum, would serve as a bigger helping hand to destitute seniors who are at least 70 years old, and who have absolutely no one else to turn to for financial aid,” he said. Besides, Campos said that under the law, Congress is supposed to review the monthly subsidy for impoverished seniors every two years. “Yet, we have not raised the pension in the last six years,” he said.
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
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Solons chide Customs over smuggling
M
EMBERS of a House committee on Sunday criticized the Bureau of Customs for its failure to act on the smuggling of firecrackers and pyrotechnic products which continued to proliferate ahead of the holiday season.
The House committee on public order and safety stressed that the smuggling of firecrackers not only affects the local manufacturing industry but also poses health and safety problems because the imported items are not being subjected to safety and quality standards inspections. During the recent hearing of the committee chaired by Rep. Romeo M. Acop of Antipolo City,
Rep. Arnolfo “Arnie” A. Teves Jr. of Negros Oriental asked if it is the Philippine National Police or the BoC which should be held accountable so the people would know who they will contact whenever they see imported firecrackers being sold. Teves expressed the belief the BoC should be held accountable because imported firecrackers are considered illegal, hence,
those being sold in the country were smuggled. “If nobody will be held accountable, these illegal products would continue to proliferate,” said Teves. Teves said it was his first time to know during the course of the committee hearing that the importation of firecrackers is illegal. Acop said the first line of defense, in so far as smuggled items are concerned, is the BoC. Acop, a lawyer and a former director of the PNP Criminal Investigation and Detection Group said that any law enforcement agency, and pursuant to special laws wherein deputation is needed, the PNP and the National Bureau of Investigation can operate
against the smuggled items. “That is the general rule as far as the law enforcement agencies are concerned,” said Acop. Acop then moved to include the BoC in the committee’s technical working group that will consolidate all five proposals to regulate the manufacture, sale, distribution, and use of firecrackers. Deputy Speaker Gwendolyn “Gwen” Garcia of Cebu said that based on the Joint Memorandum Circular, which enjoins the Department of the Interior and Local Government, Philippine National Police, Armed Forces of the Philippines, departments of Health, of Trade and Industry, and of Finance along with BoC, and local government units in so far as
the confiscation of smuggled firecrackers are concerned, it is the DTI that is tasked to seized the illegal items and charge the importer or trader. “Per Section 3.8.2 of the Joint Memorandum Circular, on cases of imported fireworks and firecrackers being seen in the local market, the DTI will cause the confiscation of the said products and issue formal charges against the trader or importer,” said Garcia. Teves said the PNP should help in the confiscation of the illegal items because the DTI may not have enough personnel to undertake such responsibility. Rep. Arthur R. Defensor of Iloilo said the imported firecrackers
can be confiscated on the spot because these are considered illegal. Defensor said under the existing law, the importation of firecrackers is prohibited, and yet the people see the proliferation of these items. “What must be done is to improve the quality of locally manufactured firecrackers and export them instead of buying smuggled ones,” said Defensor. Jovenson Ong, president of the Philippine Fireworks Association, said based on a DoH report, 57 percent of firecracker-related injuries are due to smuggled firecrackers which are of poor quality and hence, unsafe. He urged the government to stop the smuggling of firecrackers to save the people from harm.
‘Pension hike for indigent seniors’ A BILL has been filed seeking to raise to P2,000 the monthly pension of poverty-stricken senior citizens who are at least 70 years old, House Bill 2653, introduced by House deputy minority leader and Makati City Rep. Luis Campos Jr., proposes to amend the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010 that currently provides a straight P500 monthly stipend to all indigent Filipinos 60 years old and above. In battling for the passage of his bill, Campos invoked the mandate of the 1987 Constitution for the State “to care for the elderly through just programs of social security, and to provide improved quality of life for all.” “An allowance of P2,000 per month, or P24,000 per annum, would serve as a bigger helping hand to the destitute seniors who are at least 70 years old, and who have absolutely no one else to turn to for financial aid,” he said. Campos said that under the law, Congress is supposed to review the monthly subsidy for impoverished seniors every two years for a possible upward revision. “Yet, we have not raised the pension in the last six years,” he said. Campos’ proposal came as the national government prepares to spend some P17.94 billion next year for the P500 monthly (or P6,000 yearly) grant of hard up seniors.
AMPLE SUPPLY. Stalls at a public market in Lucena City teem with fresh meat in preparation for the Christmas holiday feasts. Diana B. Noche
Solon reminds transport board on colorum Chinese rifles arriving —Du30 By Rio N. Araja
TRANSPORTATION regulators are pressed for action on the influx of illegal vehicles using provisional permits of Uber, Grab and other mobileapp based networks. Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Ray Villafuerte on Sunday said that it has been a month since the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board
promised to streamline its regulations amid mounting complaints against abusive drivers and the illegal practice of colorum cars plying the streets. “With every complaint that we hear against Uber and Grab, the LTFRB’s standard response is to say that it will tighten and review its rules covering these transport networking firms. But reassurances alone are not enough. The riding public wants action, not
words,” he said. “What would take LTFRB to buckle down to work on such complaints and illegal practices? It’s failure to act swiftly has only emboldened erring drivers to commit abuses and operators to resort to irregular practices.” The government had exposed the illegal practice of transport network operators of encouraging partner-drivers to operate their car-riding services even
without provisional authority from the LTFRB. Under current rules, the LTFRB said operators of apprehended vehicles have been required to pay P200,000 for operating transport services illegally. No provisions or fines are imposed by the LTFRB against Uber and Grab for activating the accounts of their partnerdrivers even without a franchise.
IN BRIEF Cash reward for 4 persons who found bomb near US Embassy MANILA Mayor Joseph Estrada will be giving today cash rewards to four employees of the Department of Public Works and Highways and Department of Public Services who found the bomb near the United States Embassy last month. The Manila City Hall will likewise give awards to four members of the Manila Police District Explosive Ordnance Division who detonated the bomb. Police have arrested three suspects in connection with the foiled bomb attack. National Capital Region Police Office chief Dir. Oscar Albayalde said one of the suspects, Mohammad Jumao-as, was part of the terrorist cell of the Al-Khilafah in the Philippines that was based in Bulacan. “Our target hardening measures, which include intelligence gathering and counterterrorism measures, will strengthen our security efforts,” Albayalde said. Sandy Araneta
Discipline is key, says MMDA chief METRO Manila Development Authority chairman Tim Orbos on Sunday allayed fears of traffic gridlock crippling Metro Manila during the Christmas holidays, citing reforms and new methodologies his team has set in place to keep movement of people and cargo at normal pace. Addressing North Luzon mediamen in Lingayen, Pangasinan, the brother of former Transportation Secretary Oscar Orbos and Fr. Jerry Orbos said it was “providential to introduce meaningful reforms and innovations under a courageous President Duterte.” He said the Christmas rush was creating a similar traffic problem on provincial roads citing Metro Manila as a microcosm of the national situation. It was during the term of his brother Oscar when the color coding and odd even number schemes were adopted, reducing traffic bottlenecks significantly. However, he said the role of discipline and respect for law and traffic regulation is crucial, but expressed confidence the public feels the government’sseriousness in enforcing the rules and the law, which he said “is a significant factor in getting road movement to normal.”
TRAPEZE. A boy jumps off of a 25-ft. high platform of the Flying Trapeze Philippines at Bonifacio Global City in Taguig. Manny Palmero
By Sandy Araneta THE firearms ordered by Philippines from China are ready to be shipped, a month after the United States decided to stop the sale of 26,000 rif les to Manila, President Rodrigo Duterte said. “China is pressing me that the firearms are ready. I will accept these. They rushed these for us,” Duterte said during a visit to the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ Northern Luzon Command at Camp Aquino in Tarlac City. “The rif les are ready and they want to ship these immediately. So its obvious that China wants to give these to us,” he added. Duterte said the firearms deal will be payable in 25 years. “So it’s really very easy for us,” he said. “We do not need to ask for these from other [countries] because they [China] are willing to give it. It’s not free but it’s a grant actually. If it’s a grant payable in 25 years that is really practically giving.” Duterte said he will likely send Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana to finalize the purchase. “I told the Defense secretary: go to them and get the firearms. I suppose we would send some general to receive,” he said. Duterte visited Beijing in October where he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping. Apart from China, Duterte said the government is also considering getting firearms from Russia.
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Opinion
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
mst.daydesk@gmail.com
Adelle Chua, Editor
EDITORIAL
Cooperating against the terrorists
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N A move that demonstrates the benefits of strong regional cooperation on security issues, Malaysian forces on Saturday killed a leader of the Abu Sayyaf terrorist gang and two of his cohorts in a foiled kidnap attempt in Lahad Datu, Malaysia. Abu Sayyaf commander Abraham Hamid had led the kidnapping of several foreigners from a tourist resort in Mindanao last year, including two Canadian hostages that were later beheaded after demands for millions of dollars were not met. “The death of Hamid is a big blow to the [Abu Sayyaf] as it neutralized one of the
notorious bandits and will degrade their capability for spotting and kidnapping victims in the future,” said Maj. Filemon Tan, regional military spokesman for the Philippines. Tan said Hamid had also been involved in the kidnapping of four Indonesian crewmen in April. Two other fighters were killed alongside Hamid in the
shootout with Malaysian police in Lahad Datu in eastern Sabah, while Sabah security forces have arrested two others, Tan said. Malasian Prime Minister Najib Razak, meanwhile, praised his security forces and said his country would cooperate with the Philippines to fight the recurring kidnappings. In November, the Philippines agreed to allow Malaysia and Indonesia to carry out hot pursuit operations into its territorial waters as the three countries sought to deal more decisively with the kidnapping and piracy. The agreement was announced by Najib after a
meeting with President Rodrigo Duterte, who visited Malaysia last month. “When we reach their waters, they have allowed us to keep chasing these kidnap-forransom groups,” Najib said at the time. Earlier, the President had also come to an agreement with Indonesian President Joko Widodo on strengthening border cooperation. The Abu Sayyaf bandits, who have gone on a lucrative kidnapping spree in recent years, have defied more than a decade of military operations. In fact, the Abu Sayyaf have managed to survive recurring military offensives over the years because of the huge
ransoms they have amassed and the support they draw from those living in their strongholds of Sulu and Basilan, who benefit from the abductions. Clearly, efforts to go it alone in the battle against the bandits have not been enough to dismantle the kidnap-for-ransom cottage industry that the Abu Sayyaf have established over the year. Obtaining the help of our neighbors, who also suffer from the kidnapping menace, was the logical next step. Sometime next year, the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia will begin joint training aimed at securing the Sulu Sea from rampant piracy. The military training will take place in Indonesia’s
Tarakan in North Kalimantan, Malaysia’s Tawau in Sabah, where Lahad Datu is located, and the Philippines’ Bongao Island. Indonesian Defense Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu said the three training locations would later become outposts for a joint task force assigned to help secure Sulu waters. The regional initiative is a step forward, and one that ought to strengthen the country’s own military offensive against the Abu Sayyaf bandits. We look forward to the eventual eradication of these lawless elements, who have for far too long held, not just their victims, but also the country itself hostage.
South Korea’s susceptibility to scandal Bloomberg editorial
PENSEES
all are. A woman gave birth to God, in an event that will be perpetual absurdity to those who do not believe but will be, for those of faith, the most sublime expression of love and of the worth of the human person! True, when the holidays shall have passed, the vexing, trying, divisive issues will be there: Tokhang and the alarming body count, EJKs and the protests of human rights advocates, politics, politicians, their schemes and their machinations, the death penalty and the brutality with which some would want it inflicted. But if we find Bethlehem and we look at the Manger to which the world’s attention has been drawn by the choir of angels, we will behold ourselves— more accurately, the beauty, divinity, holiness and innocence to which we are summoned, into which we are configured and that is promised us as our future. For the child that lay Turn to A5
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We must find Bethlehem again!
FR. RANHILIO CALLANGAN AQUINO THE days of Cesar Augustus were supposed to have been days of peace. World history records Octavian’s reign as the Pax Augusta. The Christmas Proclamation—the liturgical oration announcing the birth of the Lord—recites: anno Imperiii Augusti Octaviani, quadragesimo secundo, toto Orbe in pace composito…In the 42nd year of the reign of Octavian Augustus, the whole world being in peace… But that was how the overlords looked at things. They had subdued the world. And the bloodstained transition from the days of the Republic to the Principate phase of the Empire was now behind them. But, really, all was not well. The Zealots were plotting rebellion, creating mayhem whenever they could, and an irascible and dangerously suspicious Idumean was seated on the throne of the King of the Jews, a puppet perhaps but wielding tremendous powers with the temper of a brat. Of course, this
THE impeachment of South Korean leader Park Geunhye should herald the end of a painful and drawn-out political scandal. As they move forward, Koreans should be thinking about how to avoid another one. With Friday’s 234-to-56 vote in the National Assembly, Park’s powers as president have been suspended. For weeks, she tried to fend off public anger over influence-peddling allegations involving a private confidant, Choi Soon-sil. Park admitted sharing speeches and other information with Choi; prosecutors claim she also encouraged aides to help Choi squeeze millions of dollars in “donations” from large Korean conglomerates, or chaebol. Public outrage pushed Park’s popularity below five percent, and hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets. Even if she had escaped impeachment, she could hardly have accomplished anything further of substance. It seems unlikely that the Constitutional Court, which must ratify Park’s impeachment, would defy such a clear expression of public will. It should now act quickly to eliminate any uncertainty so the next government can take shape without delay. Ideally, an election for a new president can be held within a few months. South Korea’s next leader will want to follow through on Park’s actions to strengthen national security: her decision to station a US missile defense shield in South Korea, for instance, and the deal to increase intelligence-sharing with Japan. And it will be essential to keep sight of the country’s long-term economic needs. As the Choi scandal demonstrated, the chaebol remain as powerful and politically connected as ever. Calls to professionalize their management and ease their stranglehold on the Korean economy have grown louder than ever and should be heeded. Innovative small and medium-sized companies require financing and greater support. And South Korea’s rigid labor market needs to be loosened up. What growth the country has managed recently has been bought at the expense of rising debt, and that’s not a sustainable strategy. Finally, South Korea’s next leader will have to address the country’s special vulnerability to presidential scandal.
was a corner of the Roman Empire that really did not matter that much, except when things got out of hand. And in a still more hidden corner of this nondescript fringe of the dominion, something was happening in an animal shelter that was to change the world. It has happened many times that changes that have reshaped human history started from the fringes. What happened at Bethlehem made destiny of eternity, not wishful thinking—and Bethlehem was really nowhere on the map of the significant! Neither is everything well with us. There are just too many issues that do not only divide us but that threaten to be our undoing us a nation. And the unpredictability and irascibility of those who lead us is not helping at all. It is becoming multiply difficult to tell the difference between reliable news and items spun by trolls and paid hacks. One casts furtive glances in the direction of the military,
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2017 need not find us wallowing in the same mire and filth that have smeared us and made us ashamed even of ourselves.
while conflicting statements about the government position towards the Left swings wildly from warm (almost sizzling!) to cool, if not chilly! There are even announcements of a new kind of allegiance: belief in God and the combatant repudiation of the church. “It is enough that one believes in God. It is not
BenjaminPhilip PhilipG.G.Romualdez Romualdez Benjamin FormerChief ChiefJustice JusticeReynato ReynatoS.S.Puno Puno Former AnitaF.F.Grefal Grefal Anita BaldwinR.R.Felipe Felipe Baldwin EdgarM. M.Valmorida Valmorida Edgar
necessary to be part of a hypocritical church,” thus goes the new credo. High up the ladder of power where the air is rarefied and it becomes so easy to confuse fact with fantasy, the world might look like it is at peace. Down below, one hears the rumbling of discontent, muffled perhaps but, for precisely that reason, more dangerous and insidious. We need to find Bethlehem again: that spot on earth on which heaven came down. It has not vanished, but we have lost our way, because we have chosen the company of rulers and kings and taken up our places in the corridors of power. We have allowed ourselves to be caught in the snares of power-games and power-plays. But somewhere, out in the fringes of significance, God made us know that it was really not that bad with us, that he had not given up on us, that there was, in all of us, a spark of divinity. He took unto himself what we
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Opinion
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
Going federal LARGELY unnoticed due to the current political noise, Executive Secretary Bingbong Medialdea informed the Senate last Thursday morning that the President had formed a 25-member advisory commission in preparation for the revision of the 1987 Constitution. The commission, once formed, is the first step towards the long and arduous path towards revising the fundamental law of the land. Thirty years under a Constitution forged during the “revolutionary” reign of President Corazon Aquino is enough. We have to begin the process of change. That Constitution was forged under precariously transitional times. The “revolutionary” president hand-picked 50 “wise” men and women who were still psychologically and emotionally reacting to the ecesses of the Martial Law regime. The supreme incongruity of that hastily written Constitution lies in having a multi-party system under a presidential structure. Nothing could be more stupid. Thus, in the first presidential elections held in 1992 under the Constitution of the Fifth Republic, we had seven major candidates for the presidency: Fidel Ramos of LakasNUCD, Miriam Defensor Santiago of the People’s Reform Party, Eduardo Cojuangco for the Nationalist People’s Coalition, Ramon Mitra for the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino, Imelda Marcos for the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan, Jovito Salonga for the Liberal Party, and Salvador Laurel for the Nacionalista Party. (Note that that two grand old parties under the two-party system of the 1935 Constitution garnered the lowest number of votes, even if their presidential can-
didates were arguably the most qualified to be president). And so it has always been: from 1992 to 2016 we have had minority presidents. Only Estrada, Aquino and Duterte have had commanding leads over the second placer, but still, they failed to gain a 50-percentplus-one majority vote. We have had Congresses, both in its upper and lower houses, that are patchwork coalitions based on (1) “support” for whoever was the new president; (2) “support” for the new Speaker or Senate President; (3) “support” for their personal and vested interests. Speak not of ideology. But for a few partylist congressmen, the concept of ideology is totally alien. Patchwork as they are, bound only by fleeting and transitory “support,” they crack at the first sign of political crisis. Some presidents, like Gloria Macapagal Arroyo kept the coalition support glued together by the skillful use of pork and perks, but save for Cory whose anointed squeaked through a controversial minority vote win (FVR versus the late Miriam), none of the presidents got their “anointed” to win. Continuity, therefore, became oxymoronic. Policies and programs were laid to waste, simply because their progenitors were politically different. Erap trounced FVR’s JDV; PNoy trounced GMA’s Gibo Teodoro; Duterte shellacked PNoy’s Mar Roxas. And so we are where we are, a boom-and-bust cycle that has become the characteristic pattern of our growth. We need to
break out of it. On top of the economic stagnation (don’t give me those LITO GDP numbers BANAYO that keep increasing marginally but for the last few years, it’s the incidence of mass poverty and the lack of inclusiveness that matters), we have been wobbled politically by the longest-running communist insurgency in the whole world, and a secessionist rebellion(s) that cannot seem to find any settlement despite efforts of practically every president since Diosdado Macapagal. Now we wake up to realize that the drug problem has become so widespread that nothing but the most draconian of solutions from a strong-willed leader with absolute singlemindedness, can hack it. Thus it was that in 2016, despite all the usual political “analysts” opining (I hate to use that verb, but then this is done in mockery) that the mayor from Davao’s boondocks stood no chance against well-oiled political machinery (which I have never believed in as significant enough in national elections since I learned my lessons in the doomed Mitra campaign of 1992) or against celebrity power, people from all strata of society elected Rodrigo Roa Duterte. Why? Because he advocated Change. He personified Change. The past five-and-a-half months of his presidency has shown what real Change can do. Some do not like it, but the majority agree. Change has come. But for Change to become institutional, we need to have a fundamental law that makes continuing Change possible.
SO I SEE
We need a framework of governance that will not only satisfy the needs of the times, such as creating a structure that will provide lasting solutions to our political division. Thus the drive towards a federal system. Further, we need a fundamental law that allows more flexibility in our economic policies, for in a world where capital flows are so dynamic and so movable, we need to catch what we can, and static, even iron-clad restrictions stymie quick actions and reactions. The President has opened the debate. Shall we transform from a highly centralized, unitary system into federal? How “federal” should it be? How do we divide the unitary into autonomous parts? How economically stable, or even viable, will the federal parts be? Should ethno-linguistic differences be the basis for division, or should it be economic capability? Remember that unlike wellknown federations, such as the USA, Germany or India, these have historically began as separate states or colonies joined together, while in the Philippine situation, we are devolving from a system imposed by our colonial masters for centuries, artificially creating a nation out of diverse ethno-linguistic cultures. That unitary structure is not as easy to dismantle, as it is for parts to become a federated whole. But we need to confront these daemons that bedevil our national being. And only Duterte is willing to confront. “L’audace, l’audace, toujours l’audace,” the grand Charles de Gaulle once remarked about his transformative leadership of chaotic France into its First World status. So let the debates begin.
The worst kind of presidential corruption By Tyler Cowen LOTS of people are worried about corruption and conflicts of interest in a Donald Trump administration. Those are grim words, but imprecise ones. To understand what the biggest problems would probably be, some broader perspective is required. Presidential corruption is hardly a new theme in American history. Many of the Founding Fathers, including George Washington, engaged in rampant land speculation. That didn’t work out so badly. Their commercial motives gave them reason to favor independence from Britain and later to finance the building of infrastructure for a growing nation. A more insidious instance of conflict of interest stemmed from the extensive slaveholding of many politicians, which surely made them less eager to embrace abolition. So corruption can have favorable or unfavorable consequences. Which is likely to be the case with Trump? Many of the concerns about him start with his refusal to disclose much about his income, asset holdings and business interests. Even if he does not put his commercial interests before the national good, it will be harder for him to act with full legitimacy and credibility because he’s left so much to wonder about when it comes to his motives. The upshot is that the possibility of conflict of interest will impose the biggest problems for
those areas where a president’s legitimacy and credibility are most important, and also where the president has the most unilateral power. Those factors point to foreign policy as the most significant trouble area. On most domestic issues, the US president faces checks and balances, meaning Congress and the courts could assert control if needed. Furthermore, presidents with lasting influence are those who pass policies that are reaffirmed or extended by subsequent administrations, and that also limits the dangers from bad domestic policy. Standard political economy suggests that the worst forms of corruption usually are decentralized. If you have to pay off 13 different bureaucrats to get a project through, the chance that one of them will hold you up, or that the aggregate of the bribes is simply too costly, is pretty high. Conversely, a single payment at the top can be a way to grease the wheels for big projects, some of which may be beneficial for the nation as a whole (imagine simply passing cash to a president for him to fix the country’s airports). Or consider the value of domestic property as a potential source of conflict of interest. If Trump really put the value of his hotel properties before the national interest, that might encourage a lot of policies to foster urban growth, travel, and tourism. Those policies might not spread their benefits efficiently, but they are hardly the worst outcome imaginable. A lot of the most scathing
critiques of Trump refer to his proposed climate-change policies, but those seemed common to most of the other Republican candidates, and they are not a result of Trump’s particular asset holdings. Note that congressmen currently hold stock and other asset portfolios and they are not required to put them into blind trusts. Maybe that’s not the best system, but it has not brought national ruin, and it is not responsible for most of the ailments facing our legislative branch, such as polarization and gridlock. But when it comes to foreign policy, all of these factors change for the worse, in part because the president has so much unilateral power. It’s hard for a president with perceived conflicts of interest to make credible commitments to allies because the allies can’t be confident that a president will stick to a proposed agreement or course of action. The result is an unraveling of alliances, a decline in international trust and possibly dangerous rearmament and nuclear proliferation. It’s hard for a subsequent president to reverse those losses. Hostile powers or lukewarm neutrals also will be confused if foreign policy is not run in the usual predictable, bureaucratized fashion. That raises the risk of conflict or it makes an amelioration of tensions less likely. Furthermore, imagine what would happen if members of the executive branch invited direct or indirect bribe payments
We must... From A4
2017 need not find us wallowing in the same mire and filth that have smeared us in the manger was, as the Creed professes and made us ashamed even of ourselves, but Deum verum de Deo vero…true God from we must find Bethlehem, and it will not be true God, fully among us...and “homo politicians and their boasts or power or infactus est”...made man! fluence who will lead us but shepherds, they
cronyism, and one even killed himself in response. Part of the problem is the Korean constitution, which limits From A4 presidents to one five-year term yet All of Park’s elected predecessors allows them wide-ranging powers were investigated for corruption or while in office. This encourages
South Korea’s...
from foreign powers. Large, corrupt, and partially hostile countries such as Russia and China—not Denmark—would probably make the biggest offerings. The Founding Fathers were especially worried about foreign bribes when they wrote the emoluments clause of the Constitution. Or imagine that a US president acted to preserve or extend the value of his properties abroad in lieu of pursuing the national interest. That would give the large countries most likely to grant favors and play “crony capitalism” (China?) the most sway with such a president, hardly a desirable filter for influence. To guard against these dangers (and not just for this president-elect), Congress should reassert some of its prerogatives in foreign policy and judge foreign-policy appointments with extra strictness. If there is to be only partial disclosure of a president’s finances, let’s insist on information about international connections, which has a clear constitutional basis. In the meantime, you can at least be glad that no president would want to nuke his own hotels. Bloomberg
BACK CHANNEL ALEJANDRO DEL ROSARIO Ambassador Del Rosario’s column will resume soon.
who live and flourish at society’s fringes, in the periphery of the decent! rannie_aquino@csu.edu.ph rannie_aquino@sanbeda.edu.ph rannie_aquino@outlook.com
overreach: Leaders are driven to ram through big initiatives quickly rather than build consensus. By the time they leave office, presidents can, as Park has, find themselves isolated and dependent on a few, sometimes
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mst.daydesk@gmail.com
OUT OF THE BOX RITA LINDA V. JIMENO
Non-forgiveness, illness WHEN a dear friend succumbed to cancer years ago and when a relative passed on from the same disease, I did not see a common denominator until recently when another friend was diagnosed with cancer. My friend who had died had harbored so much anger and hate at how her husband had philandered, abandoned her and their only son when he began to taste the power of money. See, when they married, she was the one who was economically well off. They lived in a home given by her parents and she alone provided for him and their child. When he finally found a goodpaying job, instead of taking his turn to provide for them, he indulged in drinking, womanizing and gambling. He started coming home very late until he rarely came home. When he did, it was only to sleep for long hours, get fresh clothes, and then hasten to leave again. This angered her so much that one day she threw his clothes out of the house and never let him in again. She could not forgive him as he never said sorry to her. My relative, on the other hand, lost his only son at the young age of nine. The boy was the extended family’s favorite for being extraordinarily bright and charming. Since the boy’s death, my relative never forgave God. He stopped going to church and refused to enter it even when the Mass was being offered for his son. He also stopped participating in religious traditions of the family like the reading of Christ’s passion and death (pabasa) during Lent. Years later, he contracted cancer and died. What bothers me is, I am now witnessMost people ing another friend struggling to fight do not realize the big C. She is rewhat a burden ligious and prayerful but has not forgiven anger and her husband for hatred are until abandoning her and their three children they let them to live with another go. woman. She was left alone to raise their children and send them to school. She refuses to file for a declaration of nullity of their marriage because she said, it would be giving her worthless husband his freedom in a silver platter. She also vowed to fight any attempt on his part to get their marriage voided. Thus, to date, she is tied to him in hate and bitterness. It dawned on me that the common factor in all these three persons was their refusal to forgive. This drove me to research if there is any connection between nonforgiveness and physical illness. I discovered that there have been thousands of papers written on the subject and the common message is that refusal to forgive is poison and bondage. Studies say that if an offended person does not forgive, he turns himself over to the torturers because the one who hates is the one that suffers, not the hated. When we do not forgive, we hold on to bad experience, to the pain, to the trauma. This can cause fear, depression, frustration, anxiety, self-hatred, and loneliness. It’s selfdestructive as the hater clings to self- righteousness and the knife that stabs him. A writer said that non-forgiveness results in emotional, physical and spiritual bondages. He said that 90 percent of all health, marital, family and financial problems come from non-forgiveness. According to Dr. Steven Standiford, chief of surgery at the Cancer Treatment Centers of America, refusing to forgive makes people sick and keeps them that way. Forgiveness therapy is thus now being used to help patients with cancer and other chronic illnesses. Of all cancer patients, 61 percent have forgiveness issues, Dr. Michael Barry, author of The Forgiveness Project, said. Chronic anxiety and anger produce excess adrenaline and cortisol in the body which depletes the production of natural killer cells or antibodies which are the body’s foot soldiers in the fight against cancer, Dr. Barry explained. Most people do not realize what a burden anger and hatred are until they let them go. How can one forgive? He must remember that he too has caused pain to someone at one time or another. No one is without fault or sin, after all. Therapists who help patients unburden themselves of anger tell them that when Jesus was tortured and nailed to the cross, he asked God, his father, to forgive his tormentors “for they know not what they do.” When people hurt us, we react in varying degrees of anger or hate, depending on how seriously or lightly we perceive the offense to be. It will help us release our anger when we realize that the offender may not even know that he has caused us pain. Further, therapists say, God loves us so much that his repeated admonition for us is, “forgive, forgive, forgive” because He knows that anger and hatred can destroy us. This Christmas, the greatest gift we can all give ourselves is forgiveness. It heals the body, restores our peace and connects us with our Creator. We must realize how much He has forgiven us for all our sins and acts of indifference. Email: ritalindaj@gmail.com Visit: www.jimenolaw. com.ph
dubious loyalists. Whoever replaces Park should immediately begin building consensus around a set of constitutional reforms to check presidential powers, while at the same time allowing incumbents
to run for a second term—to encourage continuity of policy and longerterm thinking. The present scandal has been a tragedy for South Korea, but it can also be an opportunity for change.
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016 mst.daydesk@gmail.com
IN BRIEF 10,000 flee rebel-held areas of Aleppo BEIRUT―Fierce fighting and heavy bombardment saw more than 10,000 people flee rebelheld areas of the battleground Syrian city of Aleppo since midnight, a monitoring group said on Sunday. “They fled towards government-held areas in west Aleppo and districts newly controlled by regime forces in the north and center of the city,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. A resident in the city’s southeast told AFP that he saw large crowds of people fleeing during the night towards regime-held districts in west Aleppo. According to the Observatory, fighting raged on several fronts between rebels and regime forces in southeast Aleppo, while regime raids and artillery fire continued to pound rebel-held areas. An AFP correspondent in west Aleppo said that heavy bombardment of the east was heard through the night, and that it was so intense that it rattled windows in western districts. AFP
World
Bombings in Istanbul kill 38 I
STANBUL— Turkey declared a day of national mourning on Sunday after twin bombings targeting police struck the heart of Istanbul near the home stadium of football giants Besiktas, killing 38 people.
16 die in truck bombing in Mogadishu MOGADISHU―At least 16 people died early Sunday in a suicide truck bombing outside the busy sea port of the Somali capital Mogadishu, the director of the ambulance service said. “We assisted 48 wounded people and carried 16 others who were killed in the blast,” said Abdikadir Abdirahman Adem, director of Mogadishu’s AMIN ambulance service. Mogadishu residents described a huge blast that could be heard across the city and a plume of smoke that rose above the skyline. A spokesman for the city administration, Abdifatah Omar Halane, confirmed the blast but gave a lower toll of “nearly 10” killed. He said investigations were underway. The Al-Qaeda aligned Shabaab militant group claimed responsibility in a statement distributed on its Telegram messaging account. AFP
Russian planes strike Syria's Palmyra MOSCOW―Russian war planes carried out over 60 strikes overnight on Syria’s Palmyra after Islamic State jihadists re-entered the famed ancient city, halting the offensive, Russia’s defense ministry said Sunday. “Russian air force planes carried out 64 air strikes against the positions, convoys and advancing reserves of militants,” a defense ministry statement said. “Over the past night, Syrian government troops with active support of the Russian air force thwarted all terrorist attacks on Palmyra,” it said. “The attacking militants actively used car bombs with suicide bombers, armoured vehicles and rocket artillery,” it said, adding that the strikes killed more than 300 militants and destroyed 11 tanks and 31 vehicles. AFP
France gives highest honor to John Kerry PARIS―US Secretary of State John Kerry has been given the Legion d’Honneur, France’s highest honor, with his French counterpart calling him “the most French of American officials”. At a ceremony in Paris on Saturday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault also said the top US diplomat was a “tireless champion of peace”. “Francophone, Francophile, you are certainly the most French of American officials” Ayrault said. Kerry’s French heritage and fondness for the country saw him attacked on the presidential campaign trail in 2004, when he was the Democratic candidate running against Republican George W Bush. Tensions were running high between Paris and Washington over the Iraq war, to the extent that America’s beloved junk food, French Fries, were briefly renamed Freedom Fries, Ayrault said. AFP
SCREENING. Australians In Film Presents 'Lion' Screening and Q&A With Nicole Kidman, Dev Patel, Luke Davis And Garth Davies at the Harmony Gold Theater on December 10, 2016, in Los Angeles, California. AFP
Force returns to Hollywood with 'Rogue One' LOS ANGELES―Fans cheered wildly Saturday as the star-studded world premiere of the hotly anticipated “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” continued the space saga after the last episode shattered box office records. The $200 million spin-off is expected to be the hottest ticket of 2016, recording the secondhighest first day of domestic presales ever, behind last year’s “The Force Awakens.” Police cordoned off the area around the Pantages Theater in Hollywood hosting almost 3,000 guests, setting up metal detectors and deploying scores of officers
and sniffer dogs. “I feel honored to be part of this family, and by that I mean the fans, not just the filmmakers,” British actor Riz Ahmed, who stars as pilot Bodhi Rook, told AFP ahead of the screening. “They are what keep this alive. And it’s them that we’re all looking to, to gauge how we’ve done. I really feel proud of the film, and I hope they connect with it too.” Set just before “A New Hope” -- the original 1977 film -- Gareth Edwards’s “Rogue One” stars Felicity Jones as rebel Jyn Erso alongside Diego Luna, Donnie Yen, Mads Mikkelsen, Alan Tudyk, Ji-
30 dead as tanker in Kenya explodes
Drill targets S. Korea's Blue House
NAIROBI―More than 30 people died when a tanker carrying inflammable materials crashed into other vehicles and burst into flames outside the town of Naivasha in Kenya late on Saturday night, officials said. “At 5am the death toll was 33 but the search is still on,” said Pius Masai of Kenya’s National Disaster Unit. He added that rescuers were continuing to comb the area for bodies. Masai said the accident involved “over 11 vehicles burned” when the tanker rammed into others on the road and caught fire. Kenya’s Red Cross said the driver had lost control of the tanker which then crashed into other vehicles and “burst into flames”. A passenger minibus and a police truck were among the vehicles gutted by the ferocious flames. The accident occurred at Karai at the bottom of a long downward hill on the busy Nairobi-Nakuru highway, the main cross-country road leading from Kenya’s capital to the west of the country and on to Uganda. Police and witnesses said the truck with Ugandan registration plates was traveling fast when it hit a speed bump and then lost control ramming into others. At least 50 people injured in the accident have been received at a private hospital in Naivasha. Witnesses described a fireball engulfing the vehicles with passengers inside. After fire fighters put out the flames rescue workers collected bodies from among the wreckage of charred cars strewn across the highway. AFP
SEOUL―South Korea warned Sunday of “fatal” consequences for Pyongyang’s leadership if provoked into conflict, after North Korean leader Kim JongUn oversaw a military drill simulating an attack on Seoul’s presidential Blue House. Kim watched with binoculars as North Korea’s special operation forces conducted an exercise aimed at “destroying specified targets of the enemy”, including the Blue House, the North’s KCNA news agency said. The ruling Workers’ Party newspaper Rodong Sinmun also carried a two-page report on the drill, showing pictures of a build-
ang Wen and Forest Whitaker. Jyn -- a delinquent with a string of convictions for forgery, assault and theft -- is recruited by the Rebel Alliance for a mission to destroy a planet-sized weapon of mass destruction recently named the Death Star. Mikkelsen told AFP it felt “surreal” to be part of the iconic saga, having grown up with the original trilogy. “People will be surprised that we did a grittier film than the former ones, and more character driven,” he said. As well as the cast and crew, celebrities including actors Mi-
ing resembling the Blue House being overrun by North Korean troops and set ablaze. One photo showed Kim roaring with laughter as he watched the simulated attack. “Well done, the enemy troops will have no space to hide themselves, far from taking any counteraction,” state-run KCNA quoted Kim as saying. No date was given for the military exercise in Sunday’s report. The South Korean military “strongly condemned” the drill, warning there would be fatal consequences if confronted by the North. “If the enemy conducts a provocation based on its rash judg-
chael Douglas and Christian Bale, as well as maverick filmmaker Kevin Smith, walked the red carpet ahead of the screening. The intergalactic tale of good versus evil, friendship, loyalty and love created a defining moment in the history of popular culture, and launched one of the biggest movie franchises ever. The original “Star Wars” (1977) and its 1980 sequel “The Empire Strikes Back” turned Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill—who play its heroes Han Solo, Princess Leia and Luke Skywalker—into Hollywood’s biggest stars. AFP
ment, we will strongly and firmly retaliate with a fatal blow against the North Korean leadership,” the defense ministry’s joint chiefs of staff said in a statement. There are growing concerns of fresh provocations by Pyongyang following Friday’s impeachment of South Korean President Park Geun-Hye which has left the country without a recognized leader. Prime Minister Hwang KyoAhn, who has temporarily taken on the role and authority of acting president, held an emergency cabinet meeting and ordered the military to be extra vigilant against the North. AFP
Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said 166 people were injured. He said a total of 30 policemen, seven civilians and an unidentified person had been killed in the blasts. A car bomb detonated outside the Vodafone Arena football stadium on the shores of the Bosphorus after the Super Lig match between Besiktas and Bursaspor, while less than a minute later a suicide attacker struck a nearby park. The authorities did not say who was behind the blasts, the latest in a year that has seen Istanbul and other cities rocked by a string of attacks blamed on Islamic State jihadists and Kurdish militants. Prime Minister Binali Yildirim ordered flags to fly at half mast while President Recep Tayyip Erdogan postponed a planned trip to Kazakhstan, the state news agency Anadolu reported. Twenty-seven of those killed were police and two were civilians, Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said, adding that 10 suspects had been detained. Soylu said the first blast was caused by a car bomb that struck outside Besiktas’s football stadium. It was followed 45 seconds later by another attack at the nearby Macka Park, carried out by a suicide bomber who blew himself up in the midst of police officers. The Istanbul governor’s office said 155 people were wounded, 19 of them were in intensive care unit, the private NTV broadcaster reported. A forensic team on Sunday inspected the stadium and the park to collect evidence, an AFP journalist said. Municipality trucks meanwhile cleaned up the area. “An act of terror targeted our security forces and citizens at Besiktas tonight,” Erdogan said in a statement after the attacks. Erdogan said the blasts were timed to cause maximum loss of life. “We have witnessed once more here in Istanbul the ugly face of terror which tramples down any form of value and morals,” he said. State broadcaster TRT showed images of the wreckage of a car, engulfed in flames with emergency services swarming around the scene outside the sports venue. AFP
ONSTAGE. Matthew Followill, Caleb Followill, Nathan Followill and Jared Followill of Kings of Leon perform onstage at 106.7 KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas 2016 - Night 1 at The Forum on December 10, 2016, in Inglewood, California. AFP
Sports
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016 sports_mstandard@yahoo.com
Tokyo begins construction of Olympic arena
LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers looks on during the game against the Charlotte Hornets at The Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. AFP
F1 champ Rosberg wants to become a movie star
NICE—Formula one world champion Nico Rosberg was looking forward to a quiet Christmas on Saturday before plotting his next bid for the big time ... as an action hero movie star. “I’d really like that,” the blond and photogenic 31-yearold German told AFP when he revealed his dream of an acting career. “I know some German actors. Perhaps one day, that would be nice. I have some experience because when you are a racing driver, you have to do a lot of filmed commercials. “An action hero...that would make me very happy!” Rosberg stunned Formula One by retiring just five days after wrapping up his maiden world world in Abu Dhabi last month. Since then, his timetable has been filled by promotional obligations, including Saturday’s function with German insurance giants Allianz in Nice, which will end in time for Christmas. “The first true moment of free time will be at Christmas, I’m really excited about it. I will be with my wife, my little girl, we’ll be in Ibiza with a Christmas tree and enjoy a typical turkey dinner,” said Rosberg. “Then I’m going to look for projects where I can use my competitiveness, but we will see in the new year.” Rosberg insisted that he has no regrets about calling time on his career, a decision which left fans disappointed that there would be no further instalments in his fiery relationship with Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton. “I am aware that the majority of people support my decision. There’ll always be people who think otherwise,” said Rosberg. AFP
TOKYO—Construction of the main stadium for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics officially started Sunday, more than a year after the original blueprints were torn up following public outcry over skyrocketing costs. The stadium is due to be completed by the end of November 2019, five months behind schedule. “I believe, after four years, many athletes will challenge their physical limits at this stadium and empower spectators and the society,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said at a ceremony to mark the start of building work. Japan approved the new stadium plans in September after Abe scrapped the initial design by the late Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid as costs soared beyond $2 billion. The 149 billion yen
($1.29 billion) price tag for architect Kengo Kuma’s proposal comes in just under the cap for the contractors, led by construction giant Taisei Corp. The new venue is being built on the site of the former national stadium which was used for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. Concerns that ballooning costs could hit a staggering $30 billion -- four times the initial estimate and almost triple that of the 2012 London Olympics -- have forced organisers to rethink plans for several venues. Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike announced recently that the host city would build a new aquatic centre with 15,000 seats, costing less than the original design for a 20,000-seat arena. Plans to move the canoeing venue outside Tokyo have also been dropped. AFP
James makes history L
OS ANGELES —LeBron James became the first frontcourt player to reach the 7,000 assist milestone as he scored a season-high 44 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 116-105 win over the Charlotte Hornets.
James hit the magic number Saturday in front of a crowd of 20,500 at the Quicken Loans Arena by skipping a nifty pass to teammate Tristan Thompson who was driving to the basket. “The last couple years this is the best I’ve felt. I’ve put a lot of work into my body, into my craft,” James said. The 44 points was his best outing since returning to Cleveland and equalled the 44 points he scored in a game one overtime loss against the Golden State Warriors in the 2015 NBA finals. The Cavaliers delivered two home wins this weekend, and besides eclipsing 7,000
career assists, James also moved into ninth place on the all-time scoring list during the victories over the Miami Heat and the Hornets. James is not showing any signs of slowing down. He says he is taking better care of his body and the results are evident on the court. “I’ve re-arranged a little bit with my diet and things of that nature and it’s worked to my benefit,” he said. “And for me to have back-to-back nights like this after coming off a long road trip, just shows that everything is working in the right direction.”
This was James’ first 40-point game during the regular season since February 26, 2015 when he scored 42 in a home win against the Golden State Warriors. “I didn’t want to play Bron this many minutes,” Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said. “But he came to me and said, ‘Man, coach, I’m fine. Kyrie (Irving) doesn’t have it tonight.’ I was like, ‘No.’ He was like, ‘Man, I’m telling you. I’m fine.’ “And then he started raining threes. They made a comeback but he was playing with great pace and we had to ride him tonight.” Kemba Walker scored 24 points and Cody Zeller had 17 points and nine rebounds for the Hornets, who had their three-game winning streak snapped. “He was phenomenal,” Hornets coach Steve Clifton said of James. “He made three or four threes that he’s going to make. You can’t block them. You can’t contest them.
“When he’s shooting the ball like that, there’s nothing you can do, other than blitz, and that’s what he wants you to do, and then he really makes you look bad.” In Memphis, the host Grizzlies shocked the Golden State Warriors 110-89 for its sixth straight win, holding the Warriors to a season low for points. It was only the second time this season that the Warriors failed to score 100 points. Their previous low for points this season was 97 in a 20-point setback to the Los Angeles Lakers on November 4. Centre Marc Gasol finished with 19 points, eight rebounds, six assists, two blocks and a steal for Memphis, who scored 30 points off 23 Warrior turnovers. In Chicago, Jimmy Butler scored 31 points, Dwyane Wade finished with 28 and Taj Gibson added 13 as Chicago beat Miami 105-100 at the United Center. AFP
Tough Gear’s Rivera rules national slalom MILO Rivera of the Tough Gear Racing Team topped the 11th leg of the 2016 RACE Motorsports Club Phoenix National Slalom Series at Robinsons Novaliches. Dion Ortiz, meanwhile, bagged the novice best time of the day, while Richard Gallardo won the Front Wheel Best Time, The 2016 Phoenix National Slalom Series is powered by Phoenix Premium 98 and Phoenix Accelerate fully synthetic oil and co sponsored by Federal Tyres, Outlast Battery and Robinsons Novaliches. The event is also supported by Starbright Body Kits, Auto Transporter and Aeromed, media partners Stoplight TV, Inside Motoring, DZRJ-Am, Pinoy Speed sa mga Pahayagan and Spin.Ph Sports Interactive Network, C! Magazine, Ride and Drive Philippines, Targa Pilipinas and Auto Industriya. The first leg was participated in by Team Comet of Tarlac, Sukelyas Racing Team, Team Orthodox, Special Stage Baguio City, Team Big Bird and Racing Unli, together with privateers. All events are sanctioned and affiliated by the Automobile Club of the Philippines. The 12th and final leg leg for the year will be on December 11 at Robinsons Starmills Pampanga.. For details, call or text Bing Bang Dulce at 09178119337 or 09228165344, email at racemotorsportsclub@yahoo.com or like the event’s FB page racemotorsportsclub and phoenixpetroleum. Some of the official Results: Novice Stock Injected: 1st Powee Base; 2nd Neil Flores; 3rd Francis Enriquez
Milo Rivera of Tough Gear Racing flashes the no. 1 sign before his race.
Novice Stock Carburated: 1st Joseph Milo Rivera Pro Stock C: 1st Dr. Peewee Ortega Novice Modified Mendiola; 3rd Estefano Rivera A: 1st Dion Ortiz; 2nd Jonash Mendoza Group 2A: 1st Poochie Ortega; 2nd Michael Novice Modified B: 1st Bryan Ngo; 2nd Dion Bautista; 3rd Steven Valenzuela Ortiz; 3rd Robert Macapagal Nov ice Group 2B: Modified C: 1st Dion Ortiz; 2nd Vegil Calayo; 1st Mike Santos 3rd Powee Base Ladies Class: 1st 2nd Steven Valenzuela Jennyfer Moreno; 2nd Gabie Desales; 3rd Aya PRO - A: Vargas Pro Stock A: 1st Milo Ri1st Paul Santos vera; 2nd Dr. Peewee Mendiola 2nd Dr. Peewee Mendiola Pro Stock B: 1st Dr. Peewee Mendiola; 2nd
1st-round pennant to Benilde COLLEGE of St. Benilde prevailed over Emilio Aguinaldo College with wins in the opening singles and doubles to clinch the first round pennant of the 92nd NCAA lawn tennis tournament at the Rizal Tennis Center. Josh Relatores struck down Paul Justine Lavanes, 6-1, 6-0, while Jet Asilo and Carl Catedral teamed up to ease out Jose Barcelon and Frexy Villamo, 6-0, 6-0, in the doubles. With the two-game sweep of CSB, both St. Benilde and EAC decided not to play the reverse singles match between Ricarte Santos and Mikko Ogfimina. San Beda, the defending champion, finished with an 8-1 (win-loss) record. The Red Lions blanked Letran, 3-0, to earn a chance to move into the finals. Ormoc Dawson drew first blood with a win over Mina Zerach, 6-1, 6-1, in the opening singles. Aidyll Ignacio and Patrick Mendoza gave another point in the doubles with their conquest over Al Quiza and Jeffrey Burgos, 6-4, 5-7, 6-2. Peter Atencio
Southwoods claims double triumph at Fil-Am golf meet LOTTO RESULTS
BAGUIO CITY—Manila Southwoods scored a double victory as it won both the Fil and Am Championship titles of the 67th Fil-Am Invitational Golf Tournament presented by San Miguel. Yuto Katsuragawa closed with a three-under for 39 points and led the Fil team to 146 as Southwoods tallied 570 points and a 19-point win over Royal Northwoods which turned in the best score on the last day of play.
Katsuragawa practically burned the fairways of both courses after starting with a two over for 34 points at the BCC fairways. He, however, waxed hot in the second round as he scored a record threeunder for 39 at the short and tricky course punctuated with an eagle at the difficult hole 11. With his four-under and threeunder at John Hay, the 17-year-old finished with an eye popping eight under for 152 points and a 10 shot
win Group 1 and over two team mates: Ira Alido and Kristoffer Arevalo. Alido, 15, settled with a oneunder for 37 and 142 total, edging Arevalo by a point after the latter made an even par for 36. Another 15-year-older Carl Corpus counted for Southwoods with his 34, even as Ryan Monsalve failed to count after a 32. Northwoods took the supporting role despite an impressive
closing round of 151, thanks most in part to Carlo Gatmaytan who matched the best score of six under for 42 points. =Gatmaytan had eight birdies against two bogeys for the score that matched the day three heroics of Jude Eustaquio of Srixon Forest Hills. Richnell Albano had a two under for 38 points, Richard Joson had a one under for 37 and Carlo Villaroman made a 34 for the
team’s seven under performance and 551 total. After a viral infection that saw him out of action on day two, the country’s top amateur player, Rupert Zaragosa closed with a 37 and with the 35 of Dan Cruz and the pair of 34s from Jude Eustaquio and Luigi Miguel Guerero gave Forest Hills 519 to rally Forest Hills past desposed champion San Miguel by two points for third place. Dexter See
6/49 00-00-00-00-00-00 P0.0 M+ 6/42 00-00-00-00-00-00 P0.0 M+ 6 DIGITS 00-00-00-00-00-00 3 DIGITS 00-00-00 2 EZ2 00-00
Riera U. Mallari, Editor Reuel Vidal, Assist aant Editor sports@thestandard.com.ph sports_mstandard@yahoo.com
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Sports
Selection process underway By Peter Atencio THE selection process for athletes seeing action in the two major international meets this year is now going on. Philippine Olympic Committee president Jose “Peping” Cojuangco Jr. said this as national sports associations get ready to send athletes to the 2017 Southeast Asian Games in Kuala Lumpur and to the 5th Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games. “Hindi pa napipili kung sino ang mga atleta. Pipiliin pa lang ang mga deserving,” said Cojuangco. Officially known as the 29th SEA Games, it will be the sixth time that the games will be held in Malaysia from Aug. 19 to 31. A total of 38 sports disciplines will be held. Five sports, including two winter disciplines, will be introduced to the games, namely bridge, cricket, ice hockey, ice skating and Tarung Derajat. The 5th Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games will be held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. Some 21 sports disciplines are on tap when it commences from from Sept. 17 to 27. Cojuangco, who is set to leave for the United States for a medical checkup, said he wants athletes for the two meets to undergo specialized training in the coming months. That is why officials of the POC are looking forward to developing a regional training center to help train the athletes.
VOLLEY QUEENS. Members of the Foton team celebrate their title conquest in the Asics Philippine Superliga Grand Prix presented by PLDT Home Ultera Sunday night at the Philsports Arena. Foton dominated Petron, 25-20, 25-20, 22-25, 25-17, to win the PSL tiara. Roman Prospero
Crawford wants to fight Pacman next O MAHA— Champion Terence Crawford easily defended his WBO and WBC belts by stopping brawler John Molina in the eighth round of their junior welterweight title fight on Saturday.
Crawford dominated the fight from the opening bell landing precision head shots and bruising body blows through the first seven rounds then taking out the challenger with a series of rights late in the eighth round. “I showed everything in this fight,” said Crawford, who improved to 30-0. “Give credit to John Molina because he came to fight.” The 29-year-old Crawford was rarely tested in his third fight of 2016 in front of his hometown fans as he landed 109
punches through eight rounds compared to just 22 for Molina. The 2014 fighter of the year said he wants his next fight to be against Filipino champion Manny Pacquiao. “I would love to fight Pacquiao, but it is a business. Right now I want to fight anyone with a title. I want them belts. “If I can’t get Pacquiao, I want the belts.” Molina showed determination and big heart but he was no match for the quick hands and smooth footwork of Crawford
who was the heavy favourite coming into the fight at CenturyLink Center arena. Crawford pinned a defenseless Molina in the corner, then landed three straight right hands before the referee stepped in and stopped the slaughter as the challenger slumped to the canvas. Crawford started 2016 with an impressive fifth-round knockout of Henry Lundy in February and followed it up five months later with two knockdowns while cruising to a one-sided decision over Viktor Postol to unify the titles in Las Vegas.
The 33-year-old Molina dropped to 29-7. He earned a shot at the titles by upsetting former champion Ruslan Provodnikov in June. But Molina did not come close to making the 140-pound weight for his title shot so he would have been denied the belts if he had done the impossible and won. Meanwhile, Anthony Joshua paved the way for a fight against Wladimir Klitschko next year by making quick work of Eric Molina in a third round win on Saturday. AFP
Teng, Potts SMB struggles past a game Mahindra side, 94 to 91 lead PBA By Jeric Lopez hopefuls AFTER leading their respective collegiate sides to championships, La Salle’s Jeron Teng and San Beda’s Davon Potts take one step closer in their dreams of turning pro as they led the list of applicants for the 2016 PBA D-League Draft. The bluechip wingers banner the 128-man pool as they hope to be picked on Dec. 20 at PBA Cafe in Metrowalk, Pasig City. Of the list, 113 are local while 15 are Fil-foreign applicants. Also throwing their hat in the pool are San Beda standout Robert Bolick, Far Eastern University playmaker Monbert Arong, Letran big man Jom Sollano, and Southwestern University guard Mac Tallo. Ten teams will participate in the 2017 PBA D-League Aspirants’ Cup, set to open on Jan. 19 next year. Without Phoenix defending its title, it will be an interesting race to the plum, with runnersup Cafe France and Tanduay emerging as early favorites. Also joining this conference are Racal, AMA Online Education, Blustar Malaysia, returnees Wangs Basketball and Jose Rizal University, and newcomers Cignal, Province of Batangas, and Manuel L. Quezon University.
MOST people expected it to be a blowout. But instead, an unexpected plot happened. June Mar Fajardo needed all of his season-high 28 points and 15 rebounds to lead San Miguel Beer as it dodged an upset bullet and squeaked past gritty Mahindra, 94-91, to earn a share of first place in the 2016-17 Philippine Basketball Association Philippine Cup at the Smart Araneta Coliseum yesterday.
The Beermen, who many thought will just cruise past their still winless foes, were unexpectedly pushed to the limit by the game Floodbuster, who even led by 13 points multiple times in the opening period. Fajardo, who only missed one shot, shooting 12-of-13 from the field, scored four crucial points down the stretch, with his last two markers being the go-ahead as San Miguel took a slim 89-88 lead with 56 seconds remaining following
a back-and-forth exchange for most of the payoff period. Mahindra kept coming in the dying seconds and had a chance to force overtime, but Alex Mallari missed a wide open triple at the buzzer, allowing San Miguel to survive the legit scare it got. The victory allowed San Miguel to tie Rain or Shine at 3-1 for the leadership, while the luckless Mahindra remained without a win and fell to 0-4 at the bottom.
“Next time, we can’t afford a game like this. We were so complacent,” admitted San Miguel coach Leo Austria. “We are struggling but I hope in the next few games, maka-recover na ‘yung team namin.” Arwind Santos added 18 points, while Alex Cabagnot chipped in 15 markers of the bench for the Beermen. Mahindra lost its first three games by an average of 18 points and in a surprising manner this time around, it showed
up with its best performance of the tournament so far to impose a serious threat on the defending champion. However, it was almost but still not quite for the Floodbuster. San Miguel was caught off guard by Mahindra’s blistering start. The Floodbuster surprisingly started on fire, taking a big 24-11 advantage 11 minutes into the game and held a 26-15 spread at the end of one.
Baby Falcons smother UE juniors; NU Bullpups overwhelm Jr Maroons THE Adamson Baby Falcons banked on the big plays of two-year veteran Gerry Abadiano in the first period to lead them to a 130-47 smothering of University of the East, 130-47, Saturday at the Arena in San Juan. The 6’0” small forward struck hard in the first two quarters, scored big points with top scorer Florencio Serrano and their efforts helped the Baby Falcons complete a first-round sweep of the 79th University Athletic Association of the Philippines juniors’ basketball tournament. “Nagawa ko iyung small things na pinagawa ni coach, lalo na sa rebounds at sa scoring,” said Abadiano, a 12th grader. The Baby Falcons, who are fearsome this season with their tall roster, went on to post the season’s biggest win-
ning margin of 83-points--their seventh straight win. Serrano had a double-double outing of 22 points and 15 rebounds for the Baby Falcons, while teammate Jason Celis chipped in 20. “Hard work paid off. Nu’ng nag-press ang team, maganda ang naging outcome,” said Adamson coach Goldwin Monteverde. Jason Celis added 18 points for the Baby Falcons, who stayed ahead of the defending champion National University Bullpups. The Baby Falcons got off to a hot start and took a 38-12 spread in the first period. Abadiano’s drive, triple and two charities in the last 4:19 helped push Adamson to a 26-4 advantage. They took a 20-point edge off Flores’
putback with 3:50 left. In other games, the Bullpups waylaid University of the Philippines Integrated School, 95-61, with Rhayyan Amsali hitting a game-high 16 points. The Bulpups improved to second with a 6-1 card. Far Eastern University, led by Eric Jabel with 16, downed University of Santo Tomas, 87-76, for its fifth victory in seven matches in third spot. Ateneo, with Romulo Berjay showing the way with 15, prevailed over De La Salle-Zobel, 64-57, capture its fourth win in seven games to remain in fourth. The Junior Maroons and the Junior Archers fell to 2-5 in joint fifth, while the Junior Warriors and the Tiger Cubs remained at the bottom of the standings with identical 1-6 records. Peter Atencio
STANDARD INSURANCE TRIATHLETE. Monica
Torres places third in the top women’s elite and best Philippine woman finisher in the recent Powerman World Series Philippine Duathlon held at Clark Freeport Zone in Pampanga. A top pro Philippine Triathlete, Torres has been a consistent podium finisher in international triathlon and duathlon competitions.
Inaugural PH Ladies’ Masters draws stellar cast
Lee Jeong-hwa
AN early roster of 83 players, including 53 from the Taiwan LPGA Tour, has confirmed participation in the ICTSI Philippine Ladies Masters, guaranteeing a star-studded cast in the inaugural staging of the $80,000 event set Dec. 21-23 at the Alabang Country Club in Muntinlupa. Korean Lee Jeong-hwa, who swept the first two legs of the Ladies Philippine Golf Tour and Taiwan LPGA-sanctioned circuit at Splendido and Manila Southwoods last March, tries to close out the season with another win as she banners the
elite field chasing the top $17,000 purse in the 54-hole tournament sponsored by ICTSI. But Lee braces for a tougher outing this time with current Taiwan LPGA Order of Merit leader Lin Tzu-chi leading the Taiwanese bid in the top-level event serving as the 10th and final leg of this year’s LPGT organized by Pilipinas Golf Tournaments, Inc. Also in the fold are top Taiwan LPGA stalwarts along with former LPGT leg winners, including Hwang Ye-nah, also of Korea, Thais Wannasiri Sirisam-
pant and Amolkan Phalajivin along with regular campaigners Saraporn Chamchoi, Chorphaka Jaengkit, Supakchaya Pattaranakrueang, Chatprapa Siriprakob and Mookharin Ladgratok and Taiwanese Vivian Chen, Diana Luke and Michele Low of Malaysia, Ai Asano of Japan and Korean So Young Jang. Princess Superal, winner of two LPGT legs at Sherwood and Eastridge, banners the local challenge along with three-time LPGT Order of Merit winner Cyna Rodriguez along with leg winners
Chihiro Ikeda, Sarah Ababa, Jayvie Agojo and Fil-Am Cristina Corpus. Amateurs Yuka Saso and Harmie Constantino, who won at Eagle Ridge and Mt. Malarayat this season, and Korean teener Hwang Min Jeong, who also ruled the Mt. Malarayat leg last year, along with Chanelle Avaricio, are also in the roster of the event backed by Custom Clubmakers, adidas, KZG, Sharp, Summit Mineral Water, Srixon, Champion, TaylorMade, Ping, Yamaha and Pacsports.
Fil-Am Demi Runas, a Symetra Tour campaigner, also makes her debut on the local circuit, hoping to make immediate impact along with Canadian Kimberly Risulmi, Indonesian Jessica Lydia, Korean Euna Koh and Malaysian Shareen Lai. Other top Taiwan LPGA players in the cast are Ai Chen Kuo, Meng Chu Chen, Hsin Ning Yeh, Yu Ling Hsieh, Yu Ju Chen, Hsuan Ping Chang, Hsien Wen Huang and Yen Ling Pan, Chia-Pei Lee, Tai Ling Lee, Yi Ching Wu and Pei Wen Huang.
Britain remains bullish on PH B3 IN BRIEF Govt auditing all radio frequencies
THE Department of Information and Communications Technology said it expects to complete the audit of all radio frequencies held by telecom companies and their network performance by February 2017. “I want all these investigations to be presented during the [telecom] summit [by February] because I want to determine the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the time which they were given a chance to make use of the frequencies,” DICT Secretary Rodolfo Salalima said. Salalima ordered the NTC in July to audit all radio frequencies to prevent “warehousing” of spectrum. Spectrum is the ‘real estate’ on which telecommunication operators develop their respective network to deliver services to customers. The amount of spectrum assigned to a company affects the cost of building capacity, overall network performance, ability to offer new multimedia services and general customer experience of wireless services Salalima said NTC was out in the field to determine the speed and efficiency of the telcos’ network as well as the pricing. “We just want to further improve the efficiency, speed and affordability of our services,” he said. Darwin G.
Business
Ray S. Eñano, Editor Roderick T. dela Cruz, Assistant Editor business@manilastandardtoday.com extrastory2000@gmail.com MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
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Sy proposes budget airport By Darwin G. Amojelar
A
LL-ASIA Resources and Reclamation Corp., a consortium led by tycoon Henry Sy and the Tieng family, submitted an unsolicited proposal to the Duterte administration to convert a military airbase in Sangley Point, Cavite into a P3.3-billion budget airport terminal.
AARC vice chairman Edmundo Lim told reporters the proposal was to convert Danilo Atienza Airbase, formerly known as Sangley Air Station and which is currently being used by Philippine Air Force in the northern tip of Cavite, into a general aviation and lowcost airpot terminal. He said the budget terminal would be a part of the proposed Philippine
Global Gateway project worth P1.3 trillion which would decongest the Ninoy Aquino International Airport. Under the project, ARRC planned to build an international airport, seaport, economic zone and real estate components in Sangely Point. Lim said the project aimed to reduce air traffic movements at Naia by 20 percent to 32 ATMs per hour from the
existing 40 ATMs per hour. Lim said Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific expressed interest to transfer some of their domestic flights to the proposed budget terminal. “It is not a very big terminal because you don’t need a very big terminal to handle 1.8 million passengers,” he said. The new budget airport terminal can handle 300 passengers departing and 300 passengers arriving per hour, he said. The total investment of the project, excluding international facilities, is estimated at P3.3 billion. The consortium plans to upgrade the present runway and build a terminal at DAA. “If we get approval by January, the project would be completed by December next year,” Lim said. ARRC also proposed to reclaim 2,500 hectares at Sangley Point.
The new airport would be designed to have a capacity of 90 million passengers and would be completed in five years. ARRC would compete with San Miguel Corp. which proposed to build a new international airport in Bulacan, north of Manila, in a revision from its 2014 proposal for a $10-billion airport on reclaimed parts of Manila Bay. Lim said ARRC’s project was most viable compared to the proposed new airport in Bulacan based on a study made by Japan International Cooperation Agency. Jica said it did not prefer an airport in Angat-Pandi-Bustos and Obando because it would compete with Clark. There was also the risk of flooding and limited possibility of urban development.
Amojelar
PSALM sets Malaya plant sale in March
POWER Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. said it will privatize the 650-megawatt Malaya thermal power plant in Pililla, Rizal by March 2017. PSALM said in an invitation to bid signed by privatization, bids and awards committee chairman Lourdes Alzona the power plant would be privatized on an “as is, where is” basis. The agency gave interested bidders until Dec. 20 to submit their letter of interest. “The committee reserves the right to accept or reject any interested party or bidder or proposal or bids therefrom, or any part thereof, and/or to waive any defects contained therein and accept the offer advantageous to the government, without offering any reason whatsoever,” Alzona said. The bidders can conduct the due diligence from Dec. 6 to March 6, 2017 while a bid conference will be held on Jan. 6, 2017. Actual bid submission is scheduled on March 8, 2017. PSALM manages the assets and liabilities of National Power Corp. as mandated by the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001. Alena Mae S. Flores
Govt asked to focus on retail competition
CONSUMER welfare is getting sidetracked in the ongoing controversy involving the Energy Regulatory Commission, which is in danger of being abolished as announced by Congress. Action for Consumerism and Transparency in Nation Building, a non-government consumer advocate, warned that the controversy might further delay the full implementation of retail competition and open access in the electric power industry. “Who benefits from this turmoil? I am sure it is not the consumer because every time RCOA is delayed, they end up paying the price,” said Jake Silo, spokesperson of Action. He said before the controversy erupted last month, the industry finally gained momentum on RCOA, which suffered years of delay until the current ERC leadership set it in motion earlier this year, after 15 years in the making. In May, the ERC promulgated a definite timeline for mandatory contestability and new safeguards against collusion. There was an attempt to derail these twin moves, but the Supreme Court temporarily set aside an injunction issued by the Pasig regional trial court, citing the grave and irreparable injury it posed on the energy industry, the Philippine economy and electricity end-users. The SC order paved the way for the implementation of mandatory contestability by February next year.
NEW BICOL AIRPORT. President Rodrigo Duterte (center) leads the groundbreaking rites for the P4.7-billion Bicol International Airport in Barangay Alobo, Daraga, Albay. Albay 2nd District Rep. Joey Sarte Salceda (right) said the international airport would sustain the gains of Albay tourism. Shown with Duterte and Salceda are Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade (left) and Albay Gov. Alfrancis Bichara (partly hidden).
PH seen remaining on ‘sweet spot’ in ’17 By Julito G. Rada THE Philippines will remain on a “sweet spot” of high growth and manageable inflation in 2017, as more opportunities open up and outweigh the impact of external headwinds, economic officials told local and foreign fund managers. Government officials, in a conference call held on Dec. 6 by the Investor Relations Office of Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, said the 2017 targets of robust growth and modest inflation were achievable. “Bottom line is that the Philippines is on a solid footing despite fragility of the global operating environment,” Francisco Dakila Jr., managing director for monetary policy at Bangko Sentral, said. The government set an economic growth target of 6.5 percent to 7.5 percent and an inflation target of 2 percent to 4 percent in 2017. Among the major Asian countries, the Philippines emerged as one of the fastest growing economies with average GDP growth of 7 percent in the first nine months of 2016, surpassing China’s 6.7 percent, but behind India’s 7.4 percent. Economic managers
said the performance of the Philippines was expected to continue even as the global economy would enter 2017 with uncertainties arising from key challenges, including the change in political leadership and anticipated rise of interest rates in the US, the continuing process of “Brexit” and slowdown of China and other major economies. The country’s buffers, particularly fiscal and monetary space, will help provide resilience to the domestic economy, officials said. Dakila said inflation, which remained below the targeted ceiling since 2009, was expected to slightly inch up from the estimate of below 2 percent this year to around the midpoint of the official target band next year. National Economic and Development Authority deputy director-general Rosemarie Edillon said there would be additional growth drivers starting 2017. She cited the progress of economic integration of the Asean region―a market of 600 million people, which could spur Philippine exports. The process of Asean economic integration formally kicked off in December 2015.
BSP eases bank branch rules BANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas said it simplified the guidelines on the establishment of bank branches consistent with its policy to promote a competitive banking environment and ease business transactions. Bangko Sentral said in a statement the policy-setting Monetary Board approved the amendments to the guidelines on the establishment of branches to provide banks with more flexibility in expanding their branching network to strategic locations. The new regulation removed the use of theoretical capital and the combined capital requirement tied to geographic location in evaluating branch applications, since the branch network size and location of head office were already embedded in the latest minimum
capital requirement for banks. The board also reaffirmed the general thrust of allowing banks to establish branches anywhere in the Philippines, including in the cities previously considered as restricted areas such as Makati, Mandaluyong, Manila, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Quezon and San Juan. “The move is aligned with the initiatives on banking system liberalization which include the removal of the branch moratorium in restricted areas and the gradual lifting of the suspension on the establishment of new domestic banks,” it said. Anchored on their overall business model and strategic direction, smaller banks may now establish branches in Metro Manila subject to higher capitalization and special licensing fee if said branches are
to be located in the cities previously considered as restricted areas. “The policy initiative is aligned with the BSP’s banking reform agenda that is anchored on the promotion of sound risk management systems and financial stability,” it said. Data from Bangko Sentral showed the total banking offices increased to 10,936 in the second quarter from 10,849 in the first quarter, amid the continuous expansion of big lenders to widen their reach nationwide. Of the total number, universal and commercial banks accounted for 6,133 branches, higher than 6,094 a quarter ago. There were 41 head offices of universal and commercial banks in the entire banking system. Julito G. Rada
MORE LRT-1 TRAINS. A year since assuming the operations and maintenance of Light Rail Transit Line
1, private operator Light Rail Manila Corp. rehabilitated and increased the number of running light rail vehicles to 96 as of end-November 2016. LRMC took over the operation and maintenance of the system in September 2015 with only 77 functioning LRVs. Through the work of its engineering team, LRMC was able to restore almost 20 more LRVs, while waiting for the procurement and arrival of 120 more LRVs in 2018. The increased capacity has enabled LRT-1 to accommodate more passengers and deploy up to 30 trains daily.
B2
Business
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016 extrastory2000@gmail.com
Fed rate hike to affect PH stocks By Jenniffer B. Austria
A
NALYSTS expect the US Federal Reserve meeting to be a major factor influencing the movement of global and local stocks this week.
Investors expect the US Fed to announce a rate hike on Dec. 14, but analysts would also watch for hints on the US Fed’s policy move next year. “With roughly 97-percent chance of a Fed rate hike on 14 December, investors seem to have gained confidence with the Fed’s intention to hike rates sooner rather than later. This would help investors and fund managers realign portfolios with the new level of cost of money and prepare an equity strategy before 2017 starts,” online
brokerage company 2TradeAsia.com said. 2TradeAsia.com said despite the developments here and abroad, the Philippine stock market could finish 2016 on a positive note, as the outlook on the domestic economy remained positive. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas reported last week that the consumer confidence index recorded an all-time high of 9.2 percent in the fourth quarter, from third-quarter’s 2.5 percent. “Optimists outpaced pessimists over government’s latest policy in ending contractualization, salary increases, employment opportunities and better government services. With the yuletide season, consumers see no reason to be negative about the last quarter of the year amid expectations of higher remittances and disposable income,” 2TradeAsia. com said. The Philippine Stock Exchange index, the 30-company bellwether, climbed 2.3 percent last week to close at 7,043.16 on Dec. 9,
while the all-share index gained 1.5 percent to 4,229.39. Except for mining and oil which declined 0.7 percent, other subindices were on an upward trend led by property which jumped 4.2 percent, services which rose 2.6 percent and financials which advanced 1.1 percent. Foreign selling continued as overseas investors were net sellers last week of P707 million. Average daily turnover eased to P6.1 billion from the previous week’s average of P8.6 billion. Top gainers last week were San Miguel Corp. which surged 11.1 percent to P94.90, Security Bank Corp. which jumped 9.8 percent to P201 and PLDT Inc. which increased 7.6 percent to P1,370. Heavy losers were EEI Corp. which declined 5.4 percent to P6.12, DoubleDragon Properties Corp. which dropped 4.8 percent to P38.50 and Cebu Air Inc. which dipped 4.4 percent to P93.45.
Bloomberry eyeing expansion to Japan RESORT and casino operator Bloomberry Resorts Corp. said it is interested in expanding its gaming operations to Japan, which recently took steps towards legalizing the casino business. “Once law is passed [in Japan], that would be a very interesting market. But we don’t know yet the final form and terms,” Bloomberry chairman Enrique Razon Jr. said in a recent interview. “Japan will be a very good market,” Razon said. Japan’s lower house of parlia-
MANILA STANDARD BUSINESS WEEKLY STOCKS REVIEW STOCKS
DECEMBER 5-9, 2016 Close Volume
AG Finance Asia United Bank Banco de Oro Unibank Inc. Bank of PI China Bank Bright Kindle Resources COL Financial Eastwest Bank Filipino Fund Inc. First Abacus I-Remit Inc. Manulife Fin. Corp. MEDCO Holdings Metrobank Natl. Reinsurance Corp. PB Bank Phil Bank of Comm Phil. National Bank Phil. Savings Bank Philippine trust Co. PSE Inc. RCBC `A’ Security Bank Sun Life Financial Union Bank Vantage Equities
3.38 48 114.80 91.40 37.7 1.49 16.5 19.16 6.65 0.67 1.75 760.00 0.660 76.4 0.76 14.1 21.20 54.55 92 110 251.6 35.8 201 1735.00 74.60 1.32
6,000 61,100 28,671,460 9,232,000 352,300 384,000 3,771,950 1,410,800 10,300 91,000 448,000 530 32,859,000 15,011,180 4,093,000 150,200 20,900 324,230 40 1,910 66,250 932,600 3,386,950 805 350,320 98,000
Aboitiz Power Corp. Agrinurture Inc. Alliance Tuna Intl Inc. Alsons Cons. Asiabest Group Basic Energy Corp. Bogo Medelin C. Azuc De Tarlac Cemex Holdings Century Food Chemphil Conc. Aggr. ‘A’ Conc. Aggr. ‘B’ Cirtek Holdings (Chips) Concepcion Crown Asia Da Vinci Capital Del Monte DNL Industries Inc. Emperador Energy Devt. Corp. (EDC) EEI Euro-Med Lab First Gen Corp. First Holdings ‘A’ Ginebra San Miguel Inc. Holcim Philippines Inc. Integ. Micro-Electronics Ionics Inc Jollibee Foods Corp. Liberty Flour LMG Chemicals Mabuhay Vinyl Manila Water Co. Inc. Maxs Group Megawide Mla. Elect. Co `A’ MG Holdings Panasonic Mfg Phil. Corp. Pepsi-Cola Products Phil. Petron Corporation Phil H2O Pilipinas Shell Phinma Corporation Phinma Energy Phoenix Petroleum Phils. Phoenix Semiconductor Pryce Corp. `A’ RFM Corporation Roxas Holdings San Miguel ‘Pure Foods `A’ SPC Power Corp. Swift Foods, Inc. TKC Steel Corp. Universal Robina Victorias Milling Vitarich Corp. Vivant Corp. Vulcan Ind’l.
44.4 4.4 0.93 1.3 21 0.200 85.45 22.15 11.86 17.28 160 92 120 23.4 57.35 1.91 7.18 12.66 11.400 7.23 5.45 6.12 1.85 22.2 68 12.60 16.54 6.06 1.720 217.00 83.20 2.7 3.7 30 25.2 14.82 263.00 0.250 5.18 3.3 9.78 3.1 67.7 11.30 2.07 5.60 1.38 5.11 4.57 2.79 234 4.3 0.141 1.53 171.6 4.69 1.63 31.20 1.09
4,414,100 6,533,000 5,168,000 4,060,000 294,000 1,630,000 990 20,500 79,935,900 5,981,200 370 5,970 590 1,220,200 385,400 1,110,000 652,700 436,000 23,419,700 13,267,400 87,679,400 2,287,500 2,000 8,719,900 937,140 25,500 1,655,100 3,694,300 851,000 3,370,690 9,600 650,000 72,000 14,392,100 1,703,000 9,836,900 981,130 510,000 46,000 1,173,000 19,974,900 11,000 3,072,790 16,800 16,279,000 3,299,300 755,000 28,360,700 6,611,000 313,000 101,840 36,000 4,310,000 681,000 9,727,610 2,656,000 16,307,000 200 50,000
Abacus Cons. `A’ Aboitiz Equity Alliance Global Inc. Anglo Holdings A Anscor `A’ ATN Holdings A ATN Holdings B Ayala Corp `A’ BHI Holdings Inc. Cosco Capital DMCI Holdings Filinvest Dev. Corp. Forum Pacific GT Capital House of Inv. JG Summit Holdings Jolliville Holdings Keppel Holdings `A’ Lopez Holdings Corp. Lodestar Invt. Holdg.Corp. LT Group Metro Pacific Inv. Corp. Pacifica `A’ Prime Media Hldg Prime Orion Republic Glass ‘A’ San Miguel Corp `A’ Seafront `A’ SM Investments Inc. Solid Group Inc. South China Res. Inc. Transgrid Top Frontier Unioil Res. & Hldgs Wellex Industries Zeus Holdings
0.540 74.30 13.26 1.22 5.95 0.305 0.310 732 1000.00 8.46 13.50 8.20 0.810 1274 6.00 72.00 3.8 4.95 738 1.32 13.32 6.48 0.0390 1.130 1.900 2.59 94.90 2.21 650.00 1.17 0.83 187.10 246.000 0.2950 0.1800 0.260
286,487,000 6,450,810 17,635,000 74,000 186,600 3,380,000 110,000 2,188,150 5 5,818,700 39,095,900 1,113,400 2,620,000 662,990 104,800 9,874,340 6,000 2,211,300 7,876,700 85,754,000 30,424,600 114,721,500 115,100,000 20,000 322,000 216,000 2,906,350 308,000 1,661,310 244,000 121,000 50 206,290 1,990,000 110,000 640,000
8990 HLDG Anchor Land Holdings Inc. A. Brown Co., Inc. Araneta Prop `A’ Arthaland Corp. Ayala Land `B’ Belle Corp. `A’ Cebu Holdings Century Property City & Land Dev. Cityland Dev. `A’ Crown Equities Inc. Cyber Bay Corp. Double Dragon Empire East Land Ever Gotesco Global-Estate Filinvest Land,Inc. Interport `A’ Keppel Properties Megaworld MRC Allied Ind.
6.940 6.22 1.12 2.170 0.425 34.950 3 4.96 0.570 1.05 1.340 0.153 0.560 38.5 0.700 0.133 0.95 1.72 1.25 4.42 3.68 0.146
1,999,700 2,000 2,875,000 984,000 344,270,000 58,229,900 19,239,000 14,500 53,517,000 1,212,000 5,399,000 7,800,000 80,685,000 14,776,500 373,000 120,000 6,540,000 88,345,000 4,331,000 21,000 211,599,000 77,410,000
Value FINANCIAL 19,380.00 2,921,600.00 1,103,499,038 837,464,333.00 13,346,190.00 576,210.00 1,995,706.00 26,932,884.00 68,677 60,770 784,560.00 393,230.00 22,008,470.00 1,128,150,193.00 3,216,580.00 2,128,498.00 451,380.00 17,915,043.00 3,680.00 233,610.00 16,841,018.00 32,863,135 639,896,074.00 1,395,240 26,145,072.50 128,080.00 INDUSTRIAL 191,768,615.00 27,873,260.00 4,787,440.00 5,275,060.00 6,529,120.00 325,210.00 84,769.00 429,730.00 912,771,578.00 103,355,450 58,212.00 548,215.50 67,760.00 28,517,330.00 22,250,349 2,094,170.00 6,667,715.00 5,349,150.00 264,110,524.00 95,721,980.00 455,068,120.00 13,966,780.00 3,610.00 193,940,640.00 63,620,728.50 319,214.00 26,225,190.00 22,566,487.00 1,464,890.00 714,903,870.00 744,843.00 1,742,870.00 265,640.00 431,614,150.00 45,083,185.00 142,364,512.00 256,042,742.00 127,310.00 221,565.00 3,876,200.00 192,630,339.00 35,920.00 207,403,201.00 189,860.00 33,290,180.00 18,432,829.00 1,016,530.00 142,136,471.00 29,969,090.00 814,610.00 23,730,592.00 155,490.00 611,330.00 1,020,140.00 1,652,834,897 1,500,130.00 27,166,640.00 6,240.00 54,120.00 HOLDING FIRMS 152,081,410.00 474,258,015.50 229,961,378.00 88,450.00 1,102,636.00 1,030,850.00 33,800.00 1,568,442,650 5,000.00 48,657,807.00 518,812,610.00 9,075,897.00 474,040.00 811,234,885.00 629,278.00 696,681,074.00 23,000.00 10,948,082.00 60,447,558.00 120,709,000.00 394,197,916.00 737,992,347.00 4,371,000.00 22,600.00 612,780.00 551,000.00 260,084,521.00 683,730.00 1,072,896,345.00 283,700.00 100,970.00 9,355.00 49,224,316.00 603,550.00 19,840.00 164,800.00 PROPERTY 13,804,152.00 12,440.00 3,160,240.00 2,130,070.00 152,113,950.00 1,942,967,330.00 55,342,020.00 72,207.00 29,705,240.00 1,278,870.00 7,437,080.00 1,198,730.00 45,188,460.00 559,610,460.00 263,270.00 15,960.00 6,195,480.00 150,010,050.00 5,157,230.00 100,530.00 771,768,290.00 11,098,780.00
NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 2, 2016 Close Volume Value 3.39 47.9 115.20 91.55 37.7 1.45 16.52 19.16
24,000 66,700 12,770,560 10,602,430 336,200 731,000 31,000 1,117,200
78,530.00 3,188,390.00 1,448,496,241 960,251,643.50 12,677,135.00 1,096,900.00 508,666.00 21,380,860.00
0.66 1.78 730.00 0.690 76 0.77 14.1
22,000 5,000 220 31,806,000 21,014,370 924,000 25,800
14,520 8,900.00 159,080.00 21,906,630.00 1,576,501,631.50 716,110.00 362,972.00
56.00 97.35 130 258 35.4 184.1 1749.00 75.15 1.3
377,570 280 250 1,130 852,800 6,926,610 555 143,050 112,000
20,964,335.50 26,036.50 32,362.00 290,298.00 30,348,645 1,268,333,221.00 947,740 7,930,159.50 146,760.00
43 4.52 0.92 1.3 21.3 0.204 85.25 20.00 11.28 17.4 135.2 91.45
8,489,700 16,083,000 2,174,000 8,589,000 122,400 7,240,000 340 37,600 79,884,800 5,607,600 30 3,440
364,730,775.00 72,582,090.00 1,972,460.00 10,652,530.00 2,689,494.00 1,435,750.00 31,197.00 776,049.00 871,208,280.00 96,293,798 4,056.00 309,412.00
23.4 57.5 1.9 7.22 12.06 11.160 7.10 5.15 6.47 1.88 22.2 68.45 12.58 15.70 6.23 1.750 219.00 75.15 2.28 3.7 29.9 26.7 15 258.00 0.250 4.94 3.3 10.12 3.27 68.1 11.30 2.07 5.62 1.36 4.95 4.45 2.86 235 4.6 0.144 1.54 171.5 4.57 1.74
1,143,500 4,710 2,880,000 1,334,100 155,000 16,289,500 4,207,800 71,210,900 689,400 17,000 2,491,900 1,268,100 22,800 1,439,000 3,775,600 1,904,000 3,206,070 1,190 41,000 24,000 8,769,600 1,794,500 2,873,900 1,316,780 240,000 590,800 21,445,000 26,943,200 14,000 4,719,950 37,300 4,675,000 243,300 619,000 8,722,000 1,291,000 110,000 85,010 45,000 4,150,000 1,692,000 10,725,280 47,000 10,643,000
26,741,950.00 274,581 5,539,260.00 9,713,324.00 1,856,962.00 182,959,036.00 29,493,918.00 364,368,062.00 4,451,977.00 30,640.00 53,882,470.00 86,532,505.00 283,072.00 22,555,298.00 22,946,484.00 3,294,800.00 685,749,744.00 90,867.00 93,670.00 90,130.00 262,124,265.00 45,053,010.00 43,422,602.00 344,017,710.00 57,800.00 2,929,612.00 70,204,800.00 265,955,022.00 45,780.00 320,064,032.50 424,400.00 9,674,420.00 1,402,452.00 853,260.00 43,792,370.00 5,683,450.00 317,020.00 19,779,530.00 197,200.00 590,130.00 2,605,210.00 1,831,464,156 213,900.00 18,911,590.00
1.12
245,000
261,310.00
0.395 73.00 13.02 1.19 5.95 0.305 0.320 739.5
22,720,000 11,640,540 27,261,500 21,000 98,600 1,130,000 10,000 1,856,280
9,193,600.00 854,550,148.50 353,768,992.00 24,190.00 569,447.00 346,950.00 3,200.00 1,364,291,950
8.29 13.40 8.24 0.185 1185 6.20 70.80
4,575,500 51,594,600 986,400 450,000 955,430 24,200 10,924,530
38,411,238.00 693,807,142.00 8,027,376.00 85,530.00 1,121,598,215.00 144,975.00 756,299,280.00
5 7.8 1.4 12.94 6.5 0.0380 1.140 1.970 2.50 85.40
2,604,200 43,831,700 85,271,000 27,052,300 136,229,800 13,800,000 100,000 77,000 26,000 1,922,540
12,893,760.00 339,710,761.00 133,326,020.00 355,701,556.00 868,158,005.00 520,100.00 114,500.00 147,740.00 60,080.00 162,250,952.50
650.00 1.15
3,114,650 2,234,000
1,962,267,055.00 2,583,540.00
236.600 0.3050 0.1820 0.255
67,770 1,450,000 260,000 1,730,000
16,196,766.00 430,550.00 48,330.00 459,000.00
6.990
1,147,000
8,010,280.00
1.10 2.200 0.330 33.000 2.93 5.14 0.530 1.09 1.380 0.157 0.540 40.45 0.730 0.137 0.95 1.72 1.17
2,121,000 1,896,000 6,970,000 75,231,100 67,812,000 78,500 63,879,000 2,708,000 20,040,000 7,080,000 10,429,000 6,513,600 184,000 30,000 3,649,000 50,812,000 1,284,000
2,312,410.00 4,031,690.00 2,274,000.00 2,481,049,525.00 198,547,090.00 395,785.00 34,373,230.00 3,270,580.00 28,085,210.00 1,112,430.00 5,568,180.00 279,171,390.00 135,760.00 4,110.00 3,466,220.00 87,705,560.00 1,466,980.00
3.7 0.144
129,656,000 74,870,000
484,814,320.00 10,384,270.00
STOCKS
DECEMBER 5-9, 2016 Close Volume
Phil. Estates Corp. Phil. Realty `A’ Phil. Tob. Flue Cur & Redry Primex Corp. Robinson’s Land `B’ Rockwell Shang Properties Inc. SM Prime Holdings Sta. Lucia Land Inc. Starmalls Suntrust Home Dev. Inc. Vista Land & Lifescapes
0.2500 0.415 31.05 3.29 27.00 1.54 3.23 28.20 1.19 7.3 0.910 5.050
2GO Group’ ABS-CBN Acesite Hotel APC Group, Inc. Apollo Global Asian Terminals Inc. Berjaya Phils. Inc. Bloomberry Boulevard Holdings Calata Corp. Cebu Air Inc. (5J) Centro Esc. Univ. Discovery World DFNN Inc. FEUI Globe Telecom GMA Network Inc. Golden Haven Grand Plaza Hotel Harbor Star I.C.T.S.I. Imperial Res. `A’ Imperial Res. `B’ IPeople Inc. `A’ IP E-Game Ventures Inc. IPM Holdings Island Info ISM Communications Jackstones LBC Express Leisure & Resorts Lorenzo Shipping Macroasia Corp. Manila Broadcasting Manila Jockey Melco Crown Metro Retail NOW Corp. Pacific Online Sys. Corp. PAL Holdings Inc. Paxys Inc. Phil. Seven Corp. Philweb.Com Inc. PLDT Common PremiereHorizon Premium Leisure Puregold Robinsons RTL SBS Phil. Corp. SSI Group STI Holdings Transpacific Broadcast Travellers Waterfront Phils.
7.62 44.3 1.4 0.500 0.044 10.7 5.3 6.30 0.0700 2.7 93.45 9.92 2.4 7.00 950.5 1445 6.16 15.36 17.22 2.04 74.9 15.30 120 12.4 0.0095 9.11 0.200 1.3400 3.57 12.6 5.10 0.87 2.27 20.40 2.05 4.06 3.64 2.420 11.3 5.29 3.09 135.00 13.62 1370.00 0.440 1.180 39.00 73.90 5.44 2.79 0.960 1.92 3.57 0.355
Abra Mining Apex `A’ Atlas Cons. `A’ Atok-Big Wedge `A’ Benguet Corp `A’ Benguet Corp `B’ Century Peak Metals Hldgs Coal Asia Dizon Ferronickel Geograce Res. Phil. Inc. Lepanto `A’ Lepanto `B’ Manila Mining `A’ Manila Mining `B’ Marcventures Hldgs., Inc. Nickelasia Nihao Mineral Resources Omico Oriental Peninsula Res. Oriental Pet. `A’ Oriental Pet. `B’ Petroenergy Res. Corp. Philex `A’ PhilexPetroleum Philodrill Corp. `A’ Semirara Corp. TA Petroleum United Paragon
0.0035 2.83 4.90 10.40 2.2500 2.3000 0.56 0.470 13.60 3.630 0.285 0.194 0.195 0.0120 0.0120 1.99 7.8 3 0.5000 1.1900 0.0120 0.0110 4.08 8.52 3.65 0.0120 131.60 2.89 0.0090
ABS-CBN Holdings Corp. Ayala Corp. Pref `B1’ Ayala Corp. Pref ‘B2’ Alco Preferred B DD PREF First Gen G GLOBE PREF P GMA Holdings Inc. GTCAP PREF A GTCAP PREF B Leisure and Resort PCOR-Preferred A PCOR-Preferred B PF Pref 2 PNX PREF 3A PNX PREF 3B SMC Preferred B SMC Preferred C SMC Preferred D SMC Preferred E SMC Preferred F SMC Preferred H SMC Preferred I
43.8 545 525 102 104 122.5 542 5.95 1021 1030 1.07 1035 1160 1036 107 110 77.2 80.6 77.6 77.55 80.55 78.2 78.5
LR Warrant
2.500
Alterra Capital Makati Fin. Corp. Italpinas Xurpas
2.85 2.85 3.4 9.48
First Metro ETF
116.1
NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 2, 2016 Close Volume Value
Value
550,000 890,000 15,200 1,511,000 8,081,300 1,730,000 119,000 31,875,200 227,825,000 100 510,000 20,271,700
140,150.00 364,900.00 479,610.00 4,821,960.00 219,177,610.00 2,603,690.00 381,500.00 879,199,205.00 274,052,070.00 730.00 466,820.00 101,288,697.00 SERVICES 179,500 1,352,453.00 201,100 8,917,505.00 989,000 1,345,970.00 11,734,000 5,939,350.00 137,200,000 5,800,300.00 100 1,070.00 2,500 12,560 21,650,100 135,900,217.00 57,950,000 4,017,500.00 39,203,000 106,002,130.00 1,854,200 178,586,589.50 26,500 253,411.00 2,000 4,800 2,030,100 14,182,996.00 10,380 9,868,120.00 6,403,589,570,895 443,002,985 1,294,200 7,959,323.00 897,900 13,398,272.00 1,000 17,290 13,312,000 25,652,160.00 4,722,430 176,657,471.00 43,900 667,042 80 9,600 38,500 474,034.00 53,000,000 506,800.00 2,477,300 22,546,344.00 215,100,000 43,270,000.00 708,000 947,280.00 13,000 43,290.00 39,200 520,448.00 6,531,800 34,069,136 142,000 128,750.00 926,000 2,060,820.00 30,700 590,274 89,000 178,600.00 18,563,000 75,948,510.00 5,915,000 21,426,210.00 13,019,000 32,596,290.00 4,900 54,970.00 178,600 966,071 109,000 324,960.00 19,290 2,659,526.00 6,171,500 85,323,210.00 746,955 992,212,820.00 11,700,000 5,127,450.00 30,814,000 36,404,670.00 4,981,000 194,454,580.00 1,796,390 133,533,688.00 4,509,000 24,181,864.00 7,254,000 19,576,820.00 117,571,000 112,610,680.00 3,000 5,520.00 8,034,000 27,652,030.00 1,760,000 605,150.00 MINING & OIL 444,000,000 1,503,500.00 740,000 2,105,930.00 6,267,800 31,152,499.00 12,200 124,905.00 10,000 22,070.00 12,000 27,220.00 800,000 438,690.00 31,810,000 15,229,300.00 4,089,700 58,040,172.00 36,629,000 131,873,990.00 12,790,000 3,663,650.00 9,880,000 1,906,920.00 5,360,000 1,046,150.00 297,300,000 3,442,100.00 4,600,000 66,000.00 4,269,000 8,338,650.00 20,313,900 162,660,647.00 2,352,000 7,060,340.00 11,000 5,570.00 6,682,000 8,110,360.00 50,000,000 574,400.00 135,000,000 1,423,500.00 147,000 594,900.00 7,992,500 63,875,579.00 4,897,000 17,990,050.00 92,800,000 1,194,300.00 2,632,620 346,010,042.00 248,000 717,960.00 21,000,000 180,100.00 PREFERRED 1,088,555 17,121,035.00 7,000 3,815,180.00 29,110 15,362,300 249,710 25,842,471 265,450 27,576,482.00 5,006,140 595,736,985.00 11,690 6,340,480.00 870,200 5,147,528.00 815 832,115.00 9,445 9,702,625.00 303,000 323,180 2,000 2,070,010.00 120 139,200.00 2,800 2,900,625.00 4,000 428,000.00 4,000 440,083.00 6,210 480,771.50 241,720 19,527,744.00 40,200 3,119,552.50 1,400 108,570.00 76,080 6,057,027.50 480,670 37,328,326.50 1,014,730 79,078,427.00 WARRANTS & BONDS 813,000 2,010,680.00 SME 10,749,000 29,371,450.00 47,000 131,970.00 548,000 1,827,030.00 4,899,200 46,724,307.00 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS 80,290 9,188,096.00
0.2600 0.410 33.00 3.11 26.00 1.54 3.25 26.80 1.19 7.1 0.940 5.090
470,000 110,000 2,700 1,116,000 8,020,000 1,098,000 157,000 45,641,200 235,682,000 6,000 881,000 40,392,800
123,600.00 46,050.00 89,350.00 3,486,420.00 208,791,150.00 1,649,510.00 504,600.00 1,220,799,625.00 287,131,440.00 42,610.00 805,180.00 202,009,098.00
7.6 44.5 1.4 0.540 0.042 10.56 5 6.52 0.0700 2.74 97.8 9.94
159,500 437,300 6,180,000 774,000 115,600,000 500 9,400 21,807,300 149,370,000 17,521,000 1,548,330 1,300
1,200,203.00 19,625,590.00 9,918,340.00 412,090.00 4,744,600.00 5,280.00 47,161 141,627,740.00 10,119,610.00 49,112,590.00 154,681,658.50 12,922.00
6.92 990 1390 6.15 15.04
577,400 2,140 495,835 372,900 505,300
3,925,205.00 2,054,500.00 701,918,990 2,294,466.00 7,416,538.00
1.97 72.65 15.40 121 12.24 0.0096 9.11 0.179 1.3800 3.54 13.48 5.52
9,952,000 7,067,820 259,500 1,500 1,900 1,326,000,000 1,961,300 17,950,000 1,111,000 34,000 40,700 14,730,700
19,974,790.00 512,512,738.00 4,333,134 188,680 22,536.00 12,610,700.00 17,875,732.00 3,266,740.00 1,496,770.00 112,300.00 539,960.00 82,934,559
2.19 17.30 2 4.21 3.61 2.660 11.32 5.00 2.93 140.00 13.80 1270.00 0.430 1.180 39.70 76.50 5.16 2.50 0.990
21,000 6,200 261,000 28,637,000 6,295,000 29,637,000 5,900 65,100 54,000 79,660 16,132,700 2,264,000 15,480,000 40,066,000 2,214,000 2,039,570 291,100 2,925,000 135,695,000
43,360.00 106,728 527,950.00 121,097,200.00 22,793,570.00 77,692,510.00 66,248.00 323,601 148,580.00 11,154,778.00 220,119,258.00 2,899,919,700.00 6,851,100.00 46,409,300.00 87,493,450.00 154,817,650.00 1,504,233.00 7,341,730.00 131,987,520.00
3.3 0.330
1,834,000 910,000
5,871,890.00 318,200.00
0.0034 2.93 5.26
813,000,000 1,070,000 6,115,200
2,794,800.00 3,100,630.00 32,615,624.00
2.1800
65,000
143,270.00
0.53 0.465 12.50 3.450 0.280 0.193 0.197 0.0120 0.0120 1.9 7.9 3.07 0.5000 1.1700 0.0120 0.0110 4.17 8.66 3.85 0.0130 131.90 2.91 0.0086
944,000 22,230,000 664,600 59,931,000 377,900 42,150,000 2,470,000 99,900,000 47,800,000 6,576,000 19,405,200 1,951,000 60,000 8,808,000 165,200,000 10,100,000 19,000 4,649,100 14,304,000 125,500,000 1,544,910 418,000 39,000,000
508,050.00 9,865,550.00 8,607,432.00 211,973,770.00 2,346,050.00 8,253,900.00 708,490.00 1,199,100.00 573,600.00 13,206,520.00 157,749,591.00 6,207,320.00 30,200.00 10,894,390.00 1,892,400.00 111,100.00 75,520.00 39,276,025.00 55,061,650.00 1,531,400.00 202,839,188.00 1,252,340.00 334,600.00
44 545 533
639,000 12,510 2,120
28,275,890.00 6,809,900.00 1,128,580
104.2 119 540 5.86 1020 1021 1.07 1080 1160 1037 110 110 77.95 80.6 77.6 78 79.65 77.65 78.2
70,190 5,000 2,100 81,900 30,620 15,545 737,000 85 1,000 13,325 2,010 30 34,310 158,610 21,000 1,000 157,800 99,770 97,300
7,319,875.00 595,000.00 1,133,800.00 480,656.00 31,232,400.00 15,895,255.00 788,590 91,800.00 1,160,000.00 13,797,960.00 220,500.00 3,300.00 2,674,627.00 12,818,459.00 1,631,200.00 78,000.00 12,590,693.00 7,777,707.00 7,584,273.00
2.580
5,792,000
15,343,230.00
2.54 2.81 3.5 9.73
6,893,000 532,000 751,000 4,738,200
17,346,270.00 1,496,180.00 2,617,590.00 46,318,525.00
114.1
32,490
3,698,954.00
WEEKLY MOST TRADED STOCKS Globe Telecom Abra Mining Arthaland Corp. Manila Mining `A’ Abacus Cons. `A’ Sta. Lucia Land Inc. Island Info Megaworld Apollo Global Oriental Pet. `B’
VOLUME 6,403,589,570,895 444,000,000 344,270,000 297,300,000 286,487,000 227,825,000 215,100,000 211,599,000 137,200,000 135,000,000
STOCKS Ayala Land `B’ Universal Robina Ayala Corp `A’ Metrobank Banco de Oro Unibank Inc. SM Investments Inc. PLDT Common Cemex Holdings SM Prime Holdings Bank of PI
VALUE 1,942,967,330.00 1,652,834,897 1,568,442,650 1,128,150,193.00 1,103,499,038 1,072,896,345.00 992,212,820.00 912,771,578.00 879,199,205.00 837,464,333.00
ment passed last week a bill opening the way for casinos to operate in the country. The bill was then sent to the upper house for review. Bloomberry operates Solaire Resort & Casino in Pagcor Entertainment City in the Philippines. Last year, Bloomberry expanded to South Korea with the purchase of Jeju Sun Hotel & Casino and acquisition of two islands―Silmi Island and Muui Island―in a bid to expand its operations outside the Philippines. Meanwhile, Razon said the number of Chinese arrivals in the Philippines significantly improved in October and November on improving relations between Manila and Beijing. “In Solaire, Chinese arrivals into the gaming facility in November grew 130 percent, and 80 percent in October,” Razon said. “You more or less safely attribute that directly to our improved relations with China.” Visitor arrivals to the Philippines from China were affected last year by the Chinese government’s increased anti-corruption drive and territorial dispute over the South China Sea. A third player is entering Pagcor Entertainment City in Parañaque. Razon said Bloomberry was preparing for the competition by making sure it remained lean, mean and effective. Jenniffer B. Austria
8990 keeps income target MASS housing developer 8990 Holdings Inc. said it expects to achieve its net income target P4.8 billion and revenue goal of P12 billion this year, despite the delayed launching of three major residential projects in Davao City. 8990 Holdings president Januario Jesus Atencio said the company would be able to launch only 11 projects this year, from the original target 14. “We can hit our targets. But if we do not make it, it will not be too far from out target numbers,” Atencio said. Atencio said the delay in the launch of three projects was due to the failure of the company to secure permits on time. “The permit is long over due, so I’m not expecting it out. When the Davao City approved the land use plan, it created a new committee that will look into various real estate projects. But it is only now that the local government unit also put people in the committee. So it is only now that our papers are being reviewed,” Atencio said. The company was supposed to book P300 million from the delayed projects. Atencio said despite the delay in Davao projects, the company would likely book P800 million in revenues from the early completion of 600 units of a condominium project in Mandaluyong City. 8990 Holdings reported a net income of P3.19 billion in January to September this year, up by 1 percent from P3.17 billion it booked in the same period last year. Nine-month revenues also climbed 3 percent to P7.18 billion from P6.99 billion a year ago. Jenniffer B. Austria
Manila
Standard
Business
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016 extrastory2000@gmail.com
TODAY
Britain remains bullish on PH By Gabrielle H. Binaday
T
HE Philippines and the UK expect trade and investment opportunities to expand despite Britain’s decision to exit from the European Union, the Finance Department said over the weekend. Visiting UK officials remain bullish on Philippine prospects, with Brexit seen more as an opportunity rather than a risk to investors. Alok Sharma, a member of the British Parliament and Minister for Asia-Pacific of the UK Foreign Office, discussed in a recent meeting with Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III a wide range of issues, including the government’s priority goals, economic opportunities between the two countries and Manila’s war against illegal drugs. Dominguez told Sharma the Philippines was serious in reducing poverty, and developing a country at peace with its foreign neighbors. Sharma was accompanied during the meeting by UK Ambassador to Manila Asif Ahmad and Philip Malone, Deputy Head of the Southeast Asia Department of the UK Foreign Office, along with other British embassy officials. Sharma informed Dominguez he had met with other Philippine officials as well as heads of large Philippine companies here during his visit to explore ways of expanding trade and investment opportunities between Manila and London. “We had a number of really good meetings, actually with big companies here who also invested in the UK. We had discussions with UK companies who invested here in the Philippines. And I think the overall message is that things are moving forward, obviously in terms of our trade that increased, investment has increased,” Sharma said. He said Brexit made no significant impact on British investments overseas and on the British economy, which is “doing very well.” Sharma also said the UK supports the rehabilitation program of the administration’s war on illegal drugs. “There is drug rehabilitation and from our perspective we would very much like to support it. [On drug rehabilitation] that’s where we would like to come and support,” Sharma said. Dominguez said the UK was interested in infrastructure projects, especially in areas outside Mega Manila, low-income communities in Eastern Visayas, Northern Luzon and Mindanao. President Rodrigo Duterte plans to invest $180 billion in infrastructure over the next five years. The government so far approved 17 big-ticket projects in land transport, airport development and flood control. The UK is the largest European investor in the Philippines with British companies such as Shell, Prudential UK and Dunlop Slazenger having sizable investments here. Some 17,000 British nationals live in the Philippines while 250,000 Filipinos reside and work in the UK. About 180,000 British tourists visit the Philippines every year.
THE PHILEX 60TH ANNIVERSARY
With Philex board of directors Wilfredo A. Paras, Atty. Bienvenido E. Laguesma, Juan B. Santos, Oscar J. Hilado, Atty. Marilyn A. Victorio-Aquino, Manuel V. Pangilinan, Eulalio B. Austin, Jr., Atty. Barbara Anne C. Migallos, Michael Victor N. Alimurung, and my co-emcee Atty. Joan A. De Venecia during the ceremonial toast
PHILEX Mining Corporation, one of the largest gold and copper producers in Southeast Asia, is celebrating its sixtieth year as a publicly-listed corporation (PLC). Though the company was incorporated in 1955, it was only on November 23, 1956 that it was listed with the Philippine Stock Exchange. The anniversary celebration kicked off at the Padcal mine camp, Philex’s stronghold in the North, with a tree-planting at the decommissioned and rehabilitated Tailings Storage Facility No. 1 (TSF1). Contrary to popular misconception, the soil that is returned into a decommissioned storage facility, as part of its proper rehabilitation, is fertile enough to grow trees on or even start a forest with. Considering that when Philex first entered the area, the mountains were all barren due to over-logging by previous concessionaires. Now the area is lush with greenery and vegetation. Several activities followed like the Women’s Forum held together with the DIWATA Women in Natural Resources Development group spearheaded by former Ambassador and Foreign Affairs Secretary Delia Albert, medical missions in the host barangays, and a poster-making contest for both elementary and high school students. Philex also saw active participation in the year’s Mining Philippines 2016 conference at the Marriott Grand Ballroom, Resorts World, Pasay City, and at the 63rd Annual National Mine Safety and Environment Conference at Camp John Hay, Baguio City.
Philex President Euls Austin Jr., Philex Chairman MVP, Pan Pacific Corp. ‘s Dai Nagatsuka and Takayasu Kashimura, and Philex CFO Danny Yu
The celebration culminated in a series of events at two fronts: for Padcal, with an anniversary luncheon, blessing and inauguration of the Anniversary Park, and Salayaw (a telling of the company’s history in decades through dance) program; for the Corporate Head Office in Mandaluyong, with a formal dinner held at the Isabela ballroom of the Shangrila Makati. In spite of the many challenges it has faced through the years—the rise and fall of metal prices, the high and low of ore grade and production, coupled with the highly stringent yet seemingly indifferent regulatory environment—Philex has soldiered on through the resilience, dedication, and loyalty of its officers and employees led by its President Euls Austin and Chairman MVP. Here’s to many more years for Philex, as it continues to live the tradition of responsible mining in the country.
KEVIN ACHA
GREEN LIGHT CHRISTMAS time is synonymous to celebrations, sharing and giftgiving. For most corporations, the holiday season poses as an opportune time to give back to the community. The year’s successes and blessings are shared not only with stakeholders and colleagues, but also with our less fortunate brothers and sisters. This brings into mind three things: How much, what, and why do we give? How much do we give? It is an unspoken rule that to whom much is given, much is expected from. Especially in the corporate world. Because bigger corporations have more resources, they are expected to make contributions larger in scope. This is a good reminder for us to set aside a significant amount in line with our resources for CSR related activities and causes. What do we give? Contributions are not limited to financial assistance to our beneficiaries. We may also offer our time and talents with them. My friend in the hospitality industry shared with me that they have projects in partnership with organizations like Habitat for Humanity—wherein associates volunteer their personal time to build homes for informal settlers in time for the holidays. That way, the joy and comfort given to them will last not only for one holiday season, but will extend to a lifetime. Another example includes inviting members of the Don Bosco Tondo Institution’s youth choir or the Philippine School for the Blind to perform Christmas carols at the hotel lobby. It encourages companies and the beneficiaries to work more closely with each other, and get creative in planning fruitful and fun activities. This shows that there is so much more we can give other
The author is an MBA student at the Ramon V. del Rosario College of Business. This essay is part of a journal he kept in fulfillment of the requirements of the course, Lasallian Business Leadership with Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethics. Visit his blog at http:// mkevin11.blogspot.com/ The views expressed here are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the official position of DLSU, its faculty, and its administrators.
With Nickel Asia President Gerry Brimo, Philex President Engr. Euls Austin Jr. and Philex VP for Legal Atty. Joan De Venecia
With Philex Petroleum Corp. director Benjamin Austria, former Ambassador & Secretary of Foreign Affairs Delia Albert and Philex VP for Exploration Redempta Baluda
Philex SVP and Resident Manager Manny Agcaoili and HR Group Manager Joy Sinajon handed the Sexaginta Award for untarnished service to the company for over 30 years and above to Alexander Canengneng, Alberto Agas, Richard Fidello, Albert Ballocanag, Ferdinand Madayag, Alan Gatchalian, Allen Gatchalian,Reynaldo Castillo, Roldan Zamuco
Philex Community Relations VP Victor Francisco during the Tree Planting Activity in Padcal at the TSF3
A Corporate Christmas than money, if we set our hearts into it. Why do we give? Which leads to the next point— are the companies’ hearts really into giving and doing CSR projects? Or is it a mere compliance to business ethics, societal responsibilities, or worse—publicity? The same friend shared that, although they hold several CSR activities for various beneficiaries throughout the year, emphasis is given on all the publicity and getting good media mileage out of the project. Although it is beneficial for the hotel’s image, and a useful tool in getting more potential donors and partners for the beneficiary, it must not be forgotten that the main agenda would be the selfless act of sharing and bringing joy to others. With the availability of CSR events planners now, holding CSRrelated activities are made so much easier. This is very advantageous because ideas are already thrown at us, and it would be easier to get in touch with other parties for planning. However this can also lessen the interaction and sense of involvement of associates. It would be more fulfilling if companies let more people initiate and work on projects themselves. With all these in mind, perhaps we can ask ourselves a new set of questions every Christmas: Who would I like to share my blessings with this Christmas? What can I give them that would make them really happy? How can I keep helping them throughout the year?
Philippine Mine Safety and Environment Association (PMSEA) President Loui Sarmiento; Philex Padcal Legal Division Head Atty. Ed Aratas, Philex former president Ernie Villaluna, Jr. Philex Padcal Resident Manager and SVP Manny Agcaoili, Philex President and CEO Engr. Euls Austin, Jr.,Philex Padcal Mine’s Legal Manager Lionel Wanawan, Tuba, Benguet Mayor Naz Rivera, former Philex Padcal Mine Resident Manager/VP Libby Ricafort, former Philex Chairman and CEO Dr. Walter Brown
Philex Rescue Team recognized for search and rescue operations in times of disaster all over the country. Philex SVP and Resident Manager Manuel Agcaoili (4th from Left) and President and CEO Euls Austin Jr (8th from left) with Philex Rescue Team members: Roosevelt Rosalin, Abel Wandagan, Warner Asan, Norlie Cabacungan, Jonathan Ay-Yato, Hilario Villanueva, Renato Joaquin, Alex Cardinez, Danny Dammit, Wilmer Balawan,Reyes Asan,Drake Ambucay
IN BRIEF MB closes down Jalajala rural bank
THE Monetary Board, the policy-making body of Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, closed a Rizal-based rural bank due to unhealthy financial condition, the 22nd lender shut down this year. The board on Dec. 8 prohibited Eastern Rizal (Jalajala) Rural Bank Inc. from doing business in the Philippines. The board ordered Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp. as receiver to proceed with the takeover and liquidation of the bank. PDIC took over the bank the following day. Eastern Rizal is a three-unit rural bank with head office located at C. Villaran St., Jalajala, Rizal. Its two branches are located in Cainta, Rizal and Marikina City. It is owned by Maribel Serrano (29.57 percent), Ramon Villavicencio (29.42 percent), Mary Ann Sy (28.02 percent), and Hedley Serrano (8.21 percent). The bank’s president and chairman is Maribel Serrano. Eastern Rizal as of Sept. 30, 2016, had 3,216 accounts with total deposit liabilities of P47.8 million. Total insured deposits amounted to P47.4 million. Julito G. Rada
Tiu’s Pure Energy plans P1.58-b IPO
Pure Energy Holdings Corp., an investment holding company engaged in renewable power and bulk water supply and distribution projects, plans to raise P1.58 billion through an initial public offering by the first quarter of 2017.
Documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission obtained by Manila Standard showed Pure Energy would sell 930 million common shares with an option to sell another 46.5 million shares at a price of up to P1.62 apiece. The shares represent 15.6 percent of the company’s authorized capital stock. The company tapped Abacus Capital Securities as sole underwriter of the offering. Pure Energy was founded by businessmen Dexter Tiu and Eric Roxas. Tiu also established Coal Asia Holdings Inc. and Titan Mining & Energy Corp., and is a director of JTKC Equities Inc., Star Equities Inc. and TKC Steel Corp. and vice chair of Zhangzhou Stronghold Steelworks Corp based in Xiamen, China. Jenniffer B. Austria
NGCP studying cable connection
National Grid Corp. of the Philippines assured the government it is studying the most feasible way to implement the Visayas-Mindanao interconnection project. National Grid spokesman Cynthia PerezAlabanza said the interconnection project had been conceptualized as early as the 1980s but did not push through due to a number of reasons. “That’s been around since the 80’s. It did not push through because it’s very difficult. We are already in the fourth route,” Alabanza said. The official said it was only during the power crisis in Mindanao in 2010 that Congress urged National Grid to study the viability of the interconnection project. “The problem is, we need a project driver either load growth, capacity addition, reliability,” Alabanza said. Alena Mae S. Flores
Philex Finance Division Manager Luman Navarro, Silangan Mining President Yulo Perez, Philex SVP and Resident Manager Manny Agcaoili and Philex Supply Chain Manager Bernard Baluda
Philex President and CEO Euls Austin, Jr. (3rd from left) with the recipients of TSF3 Bravery Award to Philex Padcal Asst. Resident Manager Roy Mangali, Mined Division Head Ric Dolipas II, Environmental Quality Monitoring and Enhancement Supervisor Paquito V. Tobias, Mill Operations Supervisor Ryan Pamilagas, Electrical Superintendent Richard Santiago Republic of the Philippines Department of Transportation and Communications CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD IN RE: APPLICATION FOR) ORIGINAL AUTHORITY) TO OPERATE AS AN) INTERNATIONAL AND) DOMESTIC AIRFREIGHT) FORWARDER ) ) AAI LOGISTICS CARGO ) EXPRESS INC., ) Applicant. ) x - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - x
CAB CASE NO. EP-2102-16
NOTICE OF HEARING Pursuant to the provision of Republic Act No. 776, as amended, Notice is hereby given that AAI LOGISTICS CARGO EXPRESS, INC. has applied with the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) an application for original authority to operate as an International and Domestic Airfreight Forwarder. The application shall be given due course by this Board within five (5) working days from completion of all requirements. Parties opposed to the granting of this application must file their written opposition supported by documentary evidence within ten (10) working days from publication hereof, furnishing a copy of the same to the applicant, and if any so desire, appear before the Board. Failure on the part of any interested party to register its opposition on time shall be construed as a waiver of its right to be heard. Thereupon, the Board shall act upon the application on the basis of the records and documentary evidence presented by the parties, unless the Board deems it necessary to receive additional documentary and/or testimonial evidence. The applicant is required to have this Notice of Hearing published at least once a week for two (2) consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general Circulation, and/or have copy thereof sent to existing airfreight forwarders either by personal service or registered mail with return card at least ten (10) workings days from complete submission of the documentary requirements by applicant. Let a copy of the application and this Notice be posted in CAB Bulletin Board beginning this day. November 28, 2016 Pasay City, Philippines
ATTY. MARIA CECILIA C.PAGUIRIGAN Chief, Air Carrier Accounts and Field Audit Division
(MS-DEC. 5 & 12, 2016)
Jimbo Owen Gulle, Editor Roger M. Garcia, Assistant Editor jimbo.gulle@gmail.com
B4
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
LGUs
BLUE CRUSH. A competitor displays his surfing skills during the 14th Annual Surfing Festival held in Lanuza, Surigao del Sur. The men’s longboard finalists (inset) then receive their trophies in the event, which has drawn surfing professionals and enthusiasts from all over the country and abroad.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT UNITS
Lanuza aims to be surfing capital SHEEP RAISING
PH countryside’s next big thing ambiance of an opulent dining set-up, guests of the wedding of first born had an enS LUIS and his newsmen-friends treated Robert’s joyable gastronomic experience themselves to a sumptuous weekend with all the delectable local food lunch—which included lamb chops—at served for the local tongues. Topping the menu is the alla posh hotel in the big city, in the far northwest time favorite “kaldereta” and of the country that day, Robert was at his “pinespes,” or the more familcruising speed for his daily routine, although his iar “pinapaitan,” the “kilawen a karnet’ karnero” and “ilokanoson was getting married in an Aglipayan church. style adobo” that are good for anybody’s plate and palate. Neither Luis nor Robert may As is the custom of the north- pes that their palates crave for. west, the groom’s family looks Luis could have any of these be aware that the average meat after the food needs of all guests, popular preparations of the meat: eater consumes the meat of 21 which include practically every lamb shoulder chops braised in sheep over a lifetime, not includmember of the entire barangay. pomegranate juice, then topped ing four to five lambs that die beRobert was cocksure that with with pumpkin seeds and mint, or fore reaching slaughter age. Each of these animals, say old a few goats, four pigs and some thick Irish stew (lamb with sautéed sheep—apart from baskets of vegetables), or maybe the fancier hands in the industry, was a genfresh vegetables straight from the grilled lamb chops with curry, apple tle, friendly individual with his farm—his family would not be and raisin sauce, or the grilled lamb or her own unique personality, embarrassed by its wedding feast. with brown sugar glaze, a delicately just the same as a pet dog or cat. Filipinos generally do not eat The difference between Luis and sweet brown sugar rub that makes Robert is that the former does not one of the tastiest chops Luis and his lamb and goat meats, but a recent study revealed there is a steady lohave a herd but could easily afford friends will ever eat. to buy for himself and his friends elUp in the country’s northern cal demand for mutton, including egant lamb chops—in various reci- region, sans the elegance and a growing demand for export.
By Honor Blanco Cabie
A
Manila and Canberra have reached an agreement where the latter would export Australian goats and sheep to the Philippines, which would augment the existing local goat herd of about four million (2007 figures) and sheep flock of about 35,000 (2003 figures). Industry sources say that sheep contribute to food production, rural employment and gross national product by converting roughages into meat, wool and skin. Back north, Robert helped his father look after their nearly 300 heads of sheep. His exposure and experience in sheep raising— since he was eight years old, tending on the side their garlic plants in thick mulching hay— brought him and his family to a fruitful and lucrative livelihood venture over the past decades. The sale of nearly 250 heads in the past year alone had given the zealous sheep-raising family about a million pesos from their herd. The family also ventured into goat raising; the father-and-son team
discloses that there is not much difference in raising sheep and goats. In fact, they raise both ruminants in the same farm in their barangay. In recent years, more than 30 researches on sheep produced a framework for the national sheep research and development program. Three distinct groups of sheep were identified, namely the Philippine sheep, the Barbados Blackbelly, and crosses of the two groups, with their quantitative and qualitative traits identified. Shepherding these gentle animals is easy, they said, since they could eat any kind of grass, including corn stover. Some suggest napier, para grass, centrosema, malunggay (Moringa oleifera) and kumpitis or ipil-ipil (Laucaena glauca). Fodder can also include green leaves, cut grass, and legumes, while concentrates can be made from tubers, grains and animal protein. Citing business records, the daily feed consumption of a lamb should be 3.1 percent of its body weight, they said.
BARANGAY EXERCISE.
Bataan Rep. Joet Garcia (center) and Mariveles Mayor AJ Concepcion (right) lead residents of Barangay Alion in Balanga town in an exercise routine during the Congressional Barangay Day last November 25. Butch Gunio.
4 young inventors unveil tech breakthrough in agri By Ferdie G. Domingo SCIENCE CITY OF MUÑOZ, Nueva Ecija—Climate change and global warming have taken their toll on crops, which are now suffering from heat stress. But now there’s a solution in sight for crop heat stress. It comes in the form of a device that tells farmers of the presence of heat stress in crops and how to address them. Called a heat stress analyzer, device is a sensor connected to a mobile app that assesses the crop’s condition accurately, more than the “feel method” or the traditional way farmers use. Engineer Franch Maverick Lorilla, one of the device’s developers, said the HSA monitors the environment condi-
tion of the crop by measuring heat levels, light intensity, relative humidity, and soil moisture. The device analyzes the data through the mobile app, and warns farmers when their crops are being affected by too much heat stress. Lorilla said the HSA also provides statistics, historical trends, and recommendations based on analytics to help users make smarter decisions. He presented the device during the 3rd Agrihackathon symposium at the central experiment station of the Philippine Rice Research Institute here last month. “Not only that, the analyzer is also equipped with pre-installed irrigation systems on the field and other automation components such as sprinklers, exhaust
fans, and growing lights to automatically control crop heat stress,” Lorilla explained. Crop heat stress is a condition that greatly affects plant growth, survival and crop yields. “This is due to the intense heat coming from the sun that causes drought, and the powerful light that affects the proper photosynthesis process of the crops,” he said. The invention was a thesis proposal that evolved into a potential startup business for Lorilla and his fellow inventors Jan Rey Altivo, Rexon Lacaba, and Ket Villacensio from Davao City. Last year, Lorilla’s group established CloudFarm Innovations Inc. after winning a startup competition from a nonprofit organization called IdeaSpace
and have since tested the device. They are fine-tuning the technology with funding provided by the United States Agency for International Development. “When the patent is granted, then we are ready for commercialization,” he said. Nehemia Caballong, PhilRice ICT specialist, said the device also has the potential to help analyze heat stress on rice. The analyzer device has been tested in six farms, including a banana and cacao seedling plantation in Davao and a lettuce farm in San Pablo, Laguna, he said. The event aimed to equip future information and communications technology practitioners with knowledge, experience, and motivation to develop ICT support for agriculture.
LANUZA, Surigao del Sur—The successful staging of the annual surfing festival held in this Pacific town has officially placed this oncesleepy coastal area on the map, as it vies to become one of the country’s major surfing destinations. Held at the Doot Poktoy beach resort, the 14th yearly sporting event has drawn surfing professionals and enthusiasts from all over the country as they displayed their world-class surfing talents in the surfing fest. Lanuza Mayor Salvacion Azarcon said the sporting event has showcased the natural beauty and potential of her town to become an international surfing competition venue and major water sports adventure and tourism spot. The event, which also included an agri-aqua trade fair, coastal clean-ups, surfing clinics, concerts, beach dance concerts, and the Miss Surfing Lanuza pageant, generated added excitement and wide patronage among local and international tourists. Marla Alforque of Mandaue City was crowned as the town’s ambassadresses of goodwill and tourism during the culminating day of the surfing festival. Home-grown veteran Nexyol Ruina topped the Longboard Men’s Open, followed by La Union’s Jay-R Esquivel, while Jefferson Basquina Dela Torre and Allan Bunani shared the runners-up trophy. For the third consecutive year, Piso Alcala of Siargao topped the Men’s Shortboard as fellow Siargaonon champion John Mark Tokong captured second. Urbiztondo surfers Carlito Nogalo and Esquivel made the podium. For the women’s division, Siargao wave-rider Nilbie Blancada dominated the Shortboard category, with Ana Mae Alipayo, Manette Alcala and Susan Escamillia making the winner’s circle. La Union’s Daisy Valdez emerged champion of the Wahine class, edging Ikit Agudo, Manette Alcala and Nilbie Blancada of Siargao. The Siargaonons swept all awards in the Grommet or under-16 Division, with Gabriel Antipasado emerging on top and teammates John Jabi Noguerra, Benjomar Cañon and Benladen Arjona as runners-up. The event is supported by the Provincial Government of Surigao del Sur, the Department of Tourism-Caraga Region, the Congressional Office of the Second District, and the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority.
CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Manila
Standard
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
TODAY
MONDAY, December 12, 2016 Republic of the Philippines Republic of the Philippines DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT OF OF FINANCE FINANCE Roxas Roxas Boulevard Boulevard Comer Comer Pablo Pablo Ocampo, Ocampo, Sr. Sr. Street Street Manila 1004 Manila 1004
DEPARTMENT ORDER NO. 062-2016
DEPARTMENT ORDER NO. 062-2016 November 16, 2016
SUBJECT : IMPLEMENTATION OF THE REVISED SCHEDULE OF ZONAL VALUES OF REAL PROPERTIES IN THE CITY OF MAKATI, NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION (7TH Revision), WITHIN THE JURISDICTION OF REVENUE DISTRICT OFFICE NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI FOR SUBJECT : IMPLEMENTATION OF THE REVISED SCHEDULE OF ZONAL INTERNAL REVENUE TAX PURPOSES.
November 16, 2016
VALUES OFRevenue REAL PROPERTIES THE CITY OF MAKATI, NATIONAL All Internal Officers andINOthers Concerned TH Revision), WITHIN THE JURISDICTION CAPITAL REGION (7 Section 6(E) of Republic Act No. 8424, otherwise known as the “Tax Reform Act of 1997”, authorizes the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to divide the Philippines OF REVENUE DISTRICT OFFICE NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI FOR into different zones or areas and determine for internal revenue tax purposes, the fair INTERNAL REVENUE TAX PURPOSES. market value of the real properties located in each zone or area upon consultation with TO
:
competent appraisers both from the private and public sectors.
TO
: All Internal Revenue Officers and Others Concerned
By virtue of said authority, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue has determined the zonal values of real properties in the City of Makati, National Capital Region (7th Sectionwithin 6(E) the of Republic ActofNo. 8424, otherwise as the Makati, “Tax Reform Act Revision), jurisdiction Revenue District No.known 50 – South Revenue Region 8 – Makati after a public conducted on March 30, 2016 of 1997”,No.authorizes theCity, Commissioner of hearing Internalwas Revenue to divide the Philippines for the purpose. This Order is issued to implement the revised zonal values of real into different or areas and determine for internal revenue taxon purposes, the fair properties forzones purposes of computing any internal revenue tax due sale/transfer or any other disposition of real properties. market value of the real properties located in each zone or area upon consultation with The zonal values both established competent appraisers from theherein privateshall andapply publicprovided sectors.the same is higher than (1) the fair market value as shown in the schedule of values of the provincial or city assessor and (2) the gross selling price/consideration as shown in the duly notarized By virtue of said authority, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue has determined document of sale or transfer of real property.
the zonal values of real properties in the City of Makati, National Capital Region (7th This order shall take effect immediately. Revision), within the jurisdiction of Revenue District No. 50 – South Makati, Revenue Region No. 8 – Makati City, after a public hearing wasCARLOS conducted on March 30, 2016 G. DOMINGUEZ III Secretary of Finance for the purpose. This Order is issued to implement the revised zonal values of real RECOMMENDED BY: properties for purposes of computing any internal revenue tax due on sale/transfer or any other disposition of real properties. CAESAR DULAY herein shall apply provided the same is higher than The zonal values R. established Commissioner of Internal Revenue (1) the fair market001524 value as shown in the schedule of values of the provincial or city assessor and (2) the gross selling price/consideration as shown in the duly notarized DEFINITION OF TERMS document of sale or transfer of real property. RESIDENTIAL
LAND/CONDOMINIUM
COMMERCIAL
LAND DEVOTED PRINCIPALLY TO COMMERCIAL CARLOS G. THE DOMINGUEZ PURPOSES AND GENERALLY FOR OBJECTIIIOF PROFIT. Secretary of Finance
This order shall take effect immediately. HABITATION.
PRINCIPALLY
DEVOTED
TO
RECOMMENDED BY:
INDUSTRIAL
DEVOTED PRINCIPALLY TO INDUSTRY AS CAPITAL.
AGRICULTURAL
DEVOTED PRINCIPALLY TO RAISING OF CROP SUCH AS RICE, CORN, SUGARCANE, TOBACCO, ETC. OR
CAESAR R. DULAY TO PASTURING, INLAND FISHING, SALT-MAKING, AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL USES INCLUDING TIMBERLAND Commissioner of Internal Revenue AND FOREST LAND. 001524 GENERAL PURPOSE RAWLAND, UNDEVELOPED AND UNDERDEVELOPED DEFINITION OF TERMS AREA WHICH HAS POTENTIAL FOR DEVELOPMENT
RESIDENTIAL
CONDOMINIUM
COMMERCIAL
VICINITY
INDUSTRIAL
INTO RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL, LAND/CONDOMINIUM PRINCIPALLY DEVOTED TO INSTITUTIONAL, ETC. MUST NOT BE LESS THAN 5,000 SQUARE METERS.
HABITATION.
IS AN INTEREST IN REAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF A SEPARATE INTERESTS IN A UNIT IN A RESIDENTIAL, INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL OR IN AN LAND DEVOTED PRINCIPALLYBUILDING TO COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL ESTATE AND AN UNDIVIDED INTERESTS IN PURPOSES AND GENERALLY FOR THE OBJECT OF COMMON, DIRECTLY AND INDIRECTLY, IN THE LAND OR THE APPURTENANT INTEREST OF THEIR RESPECTIVE PROFIT. UNITS IN THE COMMON AREAS.
MEANS AN AREA, LOCALITY, NEIGHBORHOOD OR DEVOTED TOADJACENT INDUSTRY AS CAPITAL. OR DISTRICT PRINCIPALLY ABOUT, NEAR, PROXIMATE CONTIGUOUS TO A STREET BEING LOCATED.
DEVOTED PRINCIPALLY TO RAISING OF CROP SUCH CLASSIFICATION RICE, CORN,CODE SUGARCANE, TOBACCO, ETC. OR Residential Regular GL Government Land TO PASTURING, INLAND FISHING, SALT-MAKING, AND Commercial Regular GP USES General PurposesTIMBERLAND OTHER AGRICULTURAL INCLUDING Residential Condominium AND FOREST LAND.I Industrial
AGRICULTURAL
CODE CLASSIFICATION AS CR RC CC CL A
Commercial Condominium
X
Cemetery Lot
APD
Institutional
Area for Priority Development
Agricultural
PS
Parking Slot
A3
Upland
A28
Soy beans Land
A4
Coco Land
A29
Grape vineyard
A5
Citrus Land
A30
Pepper Land
A6
Fishpond
A7
Swamp
A8
Nipa Land
A9
Cotton Land
A10
Cogon
A11
Abaca Land
A12
Orchard
A13
Pineapple Land
A38
Salt Beds
A14
Banana Land
A39
Seashore
GENERAL PURPOSE RAWLAND, UNDEVELOPED AND UNDERDEVELOPED AREA WHICH HAS POTENTIAL FOR DEVELOPMENT AGRICULTURAL LANDS INTO RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL, INSTITUTIONAL, ETC. NOTLand BE LESS THAN 5,000 A1 Riceland Irrigated A26 MUST Bamboo SQUARE METERS. A2 Riceland Unirrigated A27 Peanut Land
CONDOMINIUM
A15 Pasture Land VICINITY
IS AN INTEREST IN REAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF A31 Mineral Land A SEPARATE INTERESTS IN A UNIT IN A RESIDENTIAL, A32 Non Metallic mineral Land INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL BUILDING OR IN AN A33 Coal Deposit INDUSTRIAL ESTATE AND AN UNDIVIDED INTERESTS IN A34 African Oil Land COMMON, DIRECTLY AND INDIRECTLY, IN THE LAND OR A35 Rubber Land THE APPURTENANT INTEREST OF THEIR RESPECTIVE A36 Forest Land/Timber Land UNITS IN THE COMMON AREAS. A37 Horticultural Land A40LOCALITY, Resort AREA,
MEANS AN NEIGHBORHOOD OR DISTRICT ABOUT,A41 NEAR,Sandy/Stony ADJACENT PROXIMATE OR Prawn pondLOCATED. CONTIGUOUS TO A42 A STREET BEING
A16
Corn Land
A17
Sugar Land
A18
Tobacco Land
A43
Sorghum
A19
Cacao
A44
Ipil-ipil
A20
Lanzones
A45
Kangkong
A21
Durian
A46
Zarate
A22
Rambutan
A47
Vegetable Land
A23
Mango
CLASSIFICATION LEGEND:
CODE CLASSIFICATION RR A24
Residential Mangrove Regular
A25
Commercial Regular
CODE CLASSIFICATION A48
Coffee
GL A49
Government Mountainous Land / Hilly Areas
Camote/Cassava
A50
General Purposes
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Residential Condominium
I
Industrial
CCNO. Commercial Condominium RDO 50 SOUTH MAKATI
X
Institutional
CR RC
REVENUE REGION No. 8 - MAKATI CITY
GP
Other Agricultural Lands
BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) CL Cemetery Lot APD Area for Priority Development ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. A Agricultural PS Parking CATION Slot ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ AYALA AVENUE EDSA to Paseo de Roxas CR 550,000.00 AYALA AVENUE Paseo de Roxas to Gil Puyat CR 480,000.00 BAUTISTAAGRICULTURAL LANDS CR 375,000.00 GALLARDO CR 375,000.00 GERONIMO CR 375,000.00 H.V. DELA COSTA CR 400,000.00 L.P.A1 LEVISTE CR 375,000.00 Riceland Irrigated A26 Bamboo Land LAKANDULA CR 375,000.00 MAKATI AVENUE Ayala Ave. to Paseo de Roxas CR 480,000.00 A2 Riceland Unirrigated A27 Peanut LandCR MAKATI AVENUE Paseo to Gil Puyat 450,000.00 PASEO DE ROXAS Ayala Ave. to Makati Ave. CR 480,000.00 A3 Upland A28 Soy beans Land PASEO DE ROXAS Makati Ave. to Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. CR 420,000.00 SAN AGUSTIN CR 375,000.00 A4 Coco Land A29 Grape vineyard SANCHEZ CR 375,000.00 SEDENO CR 375,000.00 A5 Citrus Land A30 Pepper LandCR SOLIMAN 375,000.00 TOLEDO CR 375,000.00 TORDESILLAS 375,000.00 A6 Fishpond A31 Mineral LandCR V.A. RUFINO CR 400,000.00 VALERO 400,000.00 A7 Swamp A32 Non MetallicCRmineral Land VELAZQUEZ CR 375,000.00 VILLAR 375,000.00 A8 Nipa Land A33 Coal DepositCR
A9
Cotton Land
A10 Cogon
BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY 7TH REV. REV. CLASSIFICATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ LIST OF CONDOMINIUMS ........................................................................................................................................ 139 CORPORATE CENTER VALERO CC 100,000.00 LIST OF CONDOMINIUMS PS 78,000.00 6797 AVE. CONDO (SLC Building) AYALA CC 225,000.00 139AYALA CORPORATE CENTER VALEROAVE. CC 100,000.00 PS 145,000.00 PS 78,000.00 88 CORPORATE CENTER VALERO CC 106,000.00 PS 75,000.00 6797 AYALA AVE. CONDO (SLC Building) AYALA AVE. CC 225,000.00 ACCM * VALERO X 100,000.00 PS 145,000.00 ACI GROUP BLDG. * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 190,000.00 PS 133,000.00 88 CORPORATE CENTER VALERO CC 106,000.00 “ACS PLAZA (DEMOLISHED) PS 75,000.00 SHANG SALCEDO PLACE (UC)” H.V. DELA COSTA RC 167,000.00 CC 200,000.00 ACCM * VALERO X 100,000.00 PS 140,000.00 ACI GROUP H.V. DELA DELA COSTA COSTA CC 190,000.00 ACT TOWER*BLDG. * H.V. CC 75,000.00 PS 52,500.00 PS 133,000.00 ADAMSON CENTER L.P. LEVISTE CC 75,000.00 “ACS PLAZA (DEMOLISHED) PS 52,500.00 AGUIRRE BLDG. CC 75,000.00 SHANG SALCEDO PLACE* (UC)” TORDESILLAS H.V. DELA COSTA RC 167,000.00 PS 52,500.00 CC 200,000.00 ALFARO PLACE (formerly Cityland Condo VII) - (146 ALFARO PLACE) L.P. LEVISTE RC 65,000.00 CC 75,000.00 PS 140,000.00 PS 52,500.00 ACTCENTER TOWER* DELA COSTA CC 75,000.00 ALGO (formerly CHAMPACA II CONDO) H.V. L.P. LEVISTE CC 75,000.00 PS 52,500.00 PS 52,500.00 ALPAP I BLDG L.P. LEVISTE CC 75,000.00 ADAMSON CENTER L.P. LEVISTE CC 75,000.00 PS 52,500.00 ALPHA SALCEDO H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 PS 52,500.00 CC 96,000.00 AGUIRRE BLDG. * TORDESILLAS CC 75,000.00 PS 67,000.00 ANTEL CORPORATE CENTER VALERO CC 100,000.00 PS 52,500.00 PS 70,000.00 ALFARO PLACEPLATINUM (formerly Cityland CondoTOWER VII) - (146 ALFARO PLACE) L.P. LEVISTE RC 65,000.00 ANTEL VALERO RC 85,000.00 CC 100,000.00 CC 75,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 52,500.00 ATENEO PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS * H.V. DELA COSTA X 80,000.00 “ATHENAEUM BUILDING ALGO CENTER (formerly CHAMPACA I CONDO) L.P. LEVISTE CC 75,000.00 (ATHENAEUM CONDOMINIUM) **” L.P. LEVISTE RC PS 52,500.00 CC 75,000.00 PS 52,500.00 ALPAP I BLDG L.P. LEVISTE CC 75,000.00 AVIGNON TOWER H.V. DELA COSTA RC 85,000.00 PS 52,500.00 CC 102,000.00 PS 71,500.00 ALPHA SALCEDO H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 AYALA LIFE-FGU CTR. CONDO * AYALA AVE. CC 230,000.00 CC 96,000.00 PS 150,000.00 AYALA TRIANGLE TOWER I & EXCHANGE PLAZA * AYALA AVE. CC 230,000.00 PS 67,000.00 PS 150,000.00 ANTEL CORPORATE CENTER PASEO VALERODE ROXAS CC 100,000.00 BA LEPANTO CC 100,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 70,000.00 *ANTEL Building already but with no assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV in PLATINUM TOWERexists VALERO RC 85,000.00 the 7th revision. CC 100,000.00 ** Zonal value for RC was deleted because the building is purely for office/commercial use. PS 70,000.00 *** Revised values as approved by ECRPV. ATENEO PROFESSI O NAL SCHOOLS * H.V. DELA COSTA X 80,000.00 X - Institution, embassy, church and school. “ATHENAEUM BUILDING BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) (ATHENAEUM CONDOMINIUM) **” L.P. LEVISTE RC ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CC 75,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. PS 52,500.00 ........................................................................................................................................ BANCO DETOWER ORO PLAZA H.V. DELA COSTA AVIGNON RC 85,000.00 (now FIRST E-BANK CONDO CORP.) PASEO DE ROXAS CC 100,000.00 CC 102,000.00 PS 70,000.00 BDO CORPORATE CENTER NORTH TOWER MAKATI AVE. COR H.V. DELA COSTA CC 120,000.00 PS 71,500.00 PS 84,000.00 AYALA LIFE-FGUCENTER CTR.SOUTH CONDO * MAKATI AYALAAVE. AVE.COR H.V. DELA COSTA CC 230,000.00 BDO CORPORATE TOWER CC 120,000.00 PS 84,000.00 PS 150,000.00 BDO EQUITABLE TOWER * PASEO DE ROXAS CC 125,000.00 AYALA TRIANGLE TOWER I & EXCHANGE PLAZA * AYALA AVE. CC 230,000.00 PS 87,500.00 BDO PARKING * VALERO PS 100,000.00 PS 150,000.00 BPI CARD CENTER PASEO DE ROXAS CC 100,000.00 BA LEPANTO PASEO DE ROXAS CC 100,000.00 PS 70,000.00 CAMBRIDGE CENTRE TORDESILLAS CC 75,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 52,500.00 CCH BLDG. (Demolished, now used as Parking Lot)
A34 African Oil Land A35 Rubber Land
L.P. LEVISTE
CC
-
*CENTRUM Building IIalready exists VALERO but with no assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV in RC 65,000.00 CC 75,000.00 the 7th revision. PS 52,500.00 ** Zonal value for RC wasVALERO deleted because the building is purely CHATHAM HOUSE CCfor office/commercial 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 use. CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST * H.V. DELA COSTA X 100,000.00 *** RevisedSALCEDO values MAKATI as approved by ECRPV. CITADINES VALERO RC 150,000.00 CC 180,000.00 X - Institution, embassy, church and school. PS 126,000.00 CITIBANK CENTER **
CLASSIFICATION LEGEND:
RR
1
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
MONDAY, December 12, 2016
PASEO DE ROXAS
RC
-
BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) CC 100,000.00 PS 70,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ CITIBANK TOWER ** PASEO DE ROXAS RC STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CC 110,000.00 PS 77,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M.CITYLAND 10 TOWER I ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC ........................................................................................................................................ CC 55,000.00 PS 42,000.00 BANCO DE ORO PLAZA H.V. DELA COSTA CITYLAND 10 TOWER II ** RC (now FIRST E-BANK CONDO CORP.) PASEO DE ROXAS CC 100,000.00 CC 65,000.00 PS 42,000.00 PS 70,000.00 CITYLAND HERRERA TOWER ** VALERO COR V.A. RUFINO RC BDO CORPORATE CENTER NORTH TOWER MAKATI AVE. COR H.V. DELA COSTA CC 120,000.00 CC 65,000.00 PS 42,000.00 PS 84,000.00 CLASSICA I H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 BDO CORPORATE CENTER SOUTH TOWER MAKATI AVE. COR H.V. DELA COSTA CC 120,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 84,000.00 CLASSICA TOWER H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 BDO EQUITABLE TOWER * PASEO DE ROXAS CC 125,000.00 CC 100,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 87,500.00 COCOLIFE BUILDING * AYALA AVE. CC 230,000.00 BDO PARKING * VALERO PS 100,000.00 PS 150,000.00 BPI CARD CENTER ROXAS value in the 6th revision, CC 100,000.00 * Building already exists PASEO but with DE no assigned assigned ZV in the 7th revision. PS 70,000.00 ** Zonal value for RC was deleted because the building is purely for office/commercial CAMBRIDGE CENTRE TORDESILLAS CC 75,000.00 use. *** Revised values as approved by ECRPV. PS 52,500.00 X - Institution, embassy, church and school. CCH BLDG. (Demolished, now used as Parking Lot) L.P. LEVISTE CC BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) CENTRUM II VALERO RC 65,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CC 75,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. PS 52,500.00 ........................................................................................................................................ CORDOVA CONDOMINIUM VALERO RC 65,000.00 CHATHAM HOUSE VALERO CC 80,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 56,000.00 COSMOPOLITAN TOWER VALERO RC 65,000.00 CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST * H.V. DELA COSTA X 100,000.00 CC 80,000.00 CITADINES SALCEDO MAKATI VALERO RC 150,000.00 PS 56,000.00 COUNTRY SPACE I * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 80,000.00 CC 180,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 126,000.00 CROWN TOWER H.V. DELA COSTA RC 110,000.00 CC 130,000.00CITIBANK CENTER ** PASEO DE ROXAS RC PS 91,000.00 CC 100,000.00DON CHUA LAMKO ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC CC 80,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 56,000.00 CITIBANK TOWER ** PASEO RC EASTON PLACE VALERODE ROXAS RC 75,000.00CC 80,000.00 CC 110,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 77,000.00 ELIZABETH PLACE H.V. DELA COSTA RC 132,000.00 CC 161,000.00CITYLAND 10 TOWER I ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC PS 113,000.00 CC 55,000.00 EURO VILLA III L.P. LEVISTE RC 65,000.00 CC 75,000.00 PS 42,000.00 PS 52,500.00 CITYLAND 10y MERCHANTS TOWERBANKIICENTER) ** ** TORDESILLAS H.V. DELA COSTA RC -FINMAN CENTER (formerl RC CC 80,000.00 CC 65,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 42,000.00 “FORBES TOWER (FRASER PLACE)” VALERO COR V.A. RUFINO RC 135,000.00CITYLAND HERRERA TOWER ** VALERO RC CC 150,000.00 CC 65,000.00 PS 105,000.00 FOUR SEASONS SALCEDO TORDESILLAS RC 135,000.00 PS 42,000.00 CC 150,000.00 CLASSICA I H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 PS 105,000.00 GERCON PLAZA ** MAKATI AVE. RC CC 80,000.00CC 120,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 84,000.00 GF & PARTNERS H.V. DELA DELA COSTA COSTA RC CLASSICA TOWER** H.V. RC 80,000.00 CC 100,000.00 CC 100,000.00 PS 70,000.00 GLOBAL ENTERPRISES BUILDING ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC PS 70,000.00 CC 100,000.00 COCOLIFE BUILDING * AYALA AVE. CC 230,000.00 PS 70,000.00 GLOBE TELECOM VALERO TELEPARK BLDG. ** VALERO RC PS 150,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS
56,000.00
*“GRAND Building but with noCOSTA assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV in SOHOalready MAKATI*”exists H.V. DELA RC 100,000.00 CC 125,500.00 the 7th revision. PS 88,000.00 ** Zonal value for RC wasL.P. deleted because the building is purely GRAND TOWER LEVISTE RCfor office/commercial 70,000.00 CC 80,000.00 use. PS 56,000.00 *** approved by no ECRPV. * Revised Building values alreadyas exists but with assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV in the 7th revision. X** - Institution, embassy, church and school. Zonal value for RC was deleted because the building is purely for office/commercial use. BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV.
1
BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFISTREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH 7TH REV. REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ GT TOWER INTERNATIONAL *** AYALA AVE. COR H.V. DELA COSTA RC ........................................................................................................................................ CC 210,000.00 GT TOWER INTERNATIONAL *** AYALA AVE. COR H.V. DELA COSTA PS RC 147,000.00 HEART TOWER VALERO RC 75,000.00 CC 210,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 147,000.00 PS 56,000.00 INFINITY TOWER (formerl y SOMERSET SALCEDO) H.V. DELA COSTA RC 135,000.00 HEART TOWER VALERO RC 75,000.00 CC 150,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 105,000.00 INSULAR LIFE ** AYALA AVE. RC PS 56,000.00CC 160,000.00 INFINITY TOWER (formerly SOMERSET SALCEDO) H.V. DELA COSTA RC 135,000.00 PS 112,000.00 INT’L. BAPTIST CHURCH OF MANILA * H.V. DELA COSTA X 100,000.00 CC 150,000.00 ISLAND PLAZA L.P. LEVISTE RC 100,000.00 PS 105,000.00 CC 120,000.00 PS 84,000.00 INSULAR LIFE ** AYALA AVE. RC JEWISH SYNAGOGUE * H.V. DELA COSTA X 100,000.00 CC 160,000.00 KPMG CENTER ** AYALA AVE. RC CC 225,000.00 PS 112,000.00 PS 150,000.00 INT’L.DOMAINE BAPTIST CHURCH OF MANILA * TORDESILLAS H.V. DELA COSTA X 100,000.00 LE RC 110,000.00 CC 135,000.00 ISLAND PLAZA L.P. LEVISTE RC 100,000.00 94,500.00 PS CC 120,000.00 VALERO RC 75,000.00 LE GRAND CC 80,000.00 PS 84,000.00 PS 56,000.00 JEWISH SYNAGOGUE X 100,000.00 LE METROPOLE CONDO * H.V. H.V. DELA DELA COSTA COSTA RC 75,000.00 CC 80,000.00 KPMG CENTER ** AYALA AVE. RC PS 56,000.00 CC 225,000.00 LE TRIOMPHE H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 150,000.00 PS 56,000.00 LE DOMAINE TORDESILLAS RC 110,000.00 L’ERMITAGE L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 CC 80,000.00 CC 135,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 94,500.00LIBERTY CENTER ** L.P. LEVISTE RC CC 100,000.00 VALERO RC 75,000.00 LE GRAND PS 70,000.00 CC 80,000.00 LIBERTY PLAZA ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC CC 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 56,000.00 LE METROPOLE CONDO H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 LIRO VILLE APARTMENTS L.P. LEVISTE RC 90,000.00 CC 100,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 56,000.00LKG TOWER ** AYALA AVE. RC CC 200,000.00 LE TRIOMPHE H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 PS 140,000.00 CC 80,000.00 * Building already exists but with no assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV PS 56,000.00 in the 7th revision. RISING CHINA PRICES. A vendor waits fo ** Zonal value for RC wasL.P. deleted because the building is purely L’ERMITAGE LEVISTE RCfor office/commercial 75,000.00 of retail inflation, rose 2.3 percent in Novem use. 80,000.00 *** Revised values as approved by ECRPV. December 9. AFP CC PS 56,000.00 BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) LIBERTY CENTER ** L.P. LEVISTE RC ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CC 100,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. PS 70,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ LPL CENTER L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 LIBERTY PLAZA ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC CC 80,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 LPL MANOR L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 PS 56,000.00 CC 80,000.00 LIRO VILLE APARTMENTS L.P. LEVISTE RC 90,000.00 PS 56,000.00 LPL MANSIONS L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 CC 100,000.00 RANKFURT—The CC 80,000.00 Europ PS 70,000.00 PS 56,000.00 Bank onRC LPL L.P. LEVISTE 75,000.00 LKGPLAZA TOWER ** AYALA AVE. RCThursday -extende CC 80,000.00 bond-buying program to u CC 200,000.00 PS 56,000.00 LYCEUM OF THE PHILS. (SDC) ** L.P. LEVISTEa eurozone economy RC PS 140,000.00 rattled by p
ECB to s
F
CC
100,000.00
PS 70,000.00 uncertainties, but surprised mark * Building already exists but LEVISTE with no assigned value in the 6thRC revision, assigned ZV MAKATI EXECUTIVE CENTER ** L.P. the pace of itsCCasset 70,000.00 purchases. in the 7th revision.
PS 50,000.00 ** Zonal value RC wasVALERO deleted because the building is purelyRC for office/commercial MANHATTAN SQUAREfor CONDO 115,000.00 CC use. The euro retreated on138,000.00 the inflation, t PS 97,000.00 *** Revised values as approved by ECRPV. prospect of more cash being Trump, an MAREIC BLDG. (UC) TORDESILLAS RC 120,000.00 CC 150,000.00 pumped into financial markets Italian Pr PS for some time to come. It105,000.00 was Renzi prom BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) MJ PLAZA ([24]/7 Building) VALERO RC 75,000.00 sitting around $1.06CC in afternoon to predict 80,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ Asian trade, havingPSdallied with would be 56,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY REV.March 201 MONDRAGON BUILDING * H.V. DELA COSTA 80,000.00 $1.08 earlier inCLASSIFIthe CC week. 7TH PS 56,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. But t Sluggish growth, below-target MSE BUILDING * AYALA AVE. CC 150,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ PS 105,000.00 MULTI NATIOCENTER NAL BANCORPORATION CENTER (MULTIBANCOR) ** L.P. AYALA AVE. RC LPL LEVISTE RC 75,000.00CC 150,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 105,000.00 NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY ** TORDESILLAS RC PS 56,000.00CC 80,000.00 LPL MANOR L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 PS 56,000.00 NOBEL PLAZA VALERO RC 75,000.00 CC 80,000.00 CC 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 PS 56,000.00 ONE CENTRAL (NEW) H.V. DELA COSTA RC 155,000.00 LPL MANSIONS L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 200,000.00 CARACAS—All CC William CC 80,000.00 PS 140,000.00 keep driving ONE LAFAYETTE SQUARE CONDO L.P. LEVISTEFaneite needed to RC 101,500.00 PS 56,000.00 CC was 123,500.00 a75,000.00 new LPL PLAZA L.P. LEVISTEhis old bus in Caracas RC PS 86,500.00 carburetor. Surely, in a city of ONE PACIFIC PLACE (NEW) H.V. DELA COSTA RC 120,000.00 CC 80,000.00 140,000.00 two million people,CC that couldn’t PS 56,000.00 PS 98,000.00
Buses grind to By Esteban Rojas
to find? RC LYCEUM OF THE PHILS. (SDC) ** L.P. LEVISTEbe hardvalue Building already exists but with no assigned in thehis 6th revision, But getting hands assigned on a ZV CC 100,000.00 in the 7th revision. spare four months—par for ** Zonal value for RC was deleted because thetook building is purely PSfor office/commercial 70,000.00 use. the course in an economic crisis MAKATI EXECUTIVE CENTER ** L.P. LEVISTE BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) RC that has seen one in two public ........................................................................................................................................ CC grind7TH 70,000.00 buses in Venezuela to REV. a STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFIPS 50,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. halt. ........................................................................................................................................ MANHATTAN SQUARE CONDO VALERO RC 115,000.00 Filling a bus’s tank with petrol ONE SALCEDO PLACE TORDESILLAS COR VELASQUES RC 100,000.00 CC is super138,000.00 CC 120,000.00 in oil-rich Venezuela PS 84,000.00 PS 97,000.00 cheap. But getting the parts to ORIENT MANSION TORDESILLAS RC 75,000.00 run it these days is CC an ordeal. MAREIC BLDG. (UC) TORDESILLAS RC 120,000.00 80,000.00 PS 56,000.00 In Faneite’s case,CC it meant four 150,000.00 OSG HOUSE ** L.P. LEVISTE RC months without work the PS for 105,000.00 CC 70,000.00 PSfour. 50,000.00 MJ PLAZA ([24]/7 Building) VALERO 51-year-old father of RC 75,000.00 PARC REGENT H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 Rampant inflation CC has driven 80,000.00 CC 80,000.00 up the price of tires,PS and PSbatteries56,000.00 56,000.00 PARKLANE CONDOMINIUM H.V. DELA COSTA RC 75,000.00 carburetors. MONDRAGON BUILDING * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 80,000.00 CC 80,000.00 “We couldn’t get hold 56,000.00 of a PS PS 56,000.00 PASEO CENTER ** PASEO DE ROXAS spare. We had toRCspend four MSE BUILDING * AYALA AVE. months looking around,” CC 150,000.00 CC 150,000.00 he told PS 105,000.00 105,000.00 AFP. When he didPSfind one, “it “PASEO PARKVIEW TOWER I & II MULTINATIONAL BANCORPORATI ON CENTERTOWER)” (MULTIBANCOR) * VALERO AYALA AVE. was super expensive.” RC RC 100,000.00 (PASEO PARKVIEW CC 125,000.00 CC 150,000.00 The bus’s owner leases the PS 87,500.00 PS blue105,000.00 PB COM TOWER ** AYALA AVE. vehicle, a battered old RC 1987 230,000.00 NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY ** TORDESILLAS RC model, to him andCC he earns a PS 150,000.00 CC 80,000.00PCCI CORPORATE CENTER ** L.P. LEVISTEcommission based on RC the number CC 80,000.00 This file p of passengers. PS 56,000.00 PS 56,000.00 2016. Acc Luckily for Faneite, NOBEL PLAZA VALERO RC the owner 75,000.00- spare par PDCP BANK CENTER ** L.P. LEVISTE COR V.A. RUFINO RC CCrepair. 80,000.00 80,000.00 paid the bill for theCC Now PS 56,000.00 PS the wheel, 56,000.00 PEAK TOWER L.P. LEVISTEFaneite is back at RC 75,000.00 The go anxiously wondering the fixed exc CC when 80,000.00 ONE CENTRAL (NEW) H.V. DELA COSTA RC 155,000.00 PSagain. 56,000.00 bus will break down CC 200,000.00 help Vene “PHILAMLIFE TOWER Dozens of buses CC and minibus(PASEO DE ROXAS) *” PASEO DE ROXAS 190,000.00 goods, su PS 140,000.00 PS 133,000.00 style public vehicles stand ONE LAFAYETTE SQUARE CONDO L.P. LEVISTE RC 101,500.00 oil. “PHILAMLIFE TOWER abandoned and rusting in But the (PHILAMLIFE SALCEDO) *” L.P. LEVISTE CC 100,000.00 CC 123,500.00 PS 70,000.00 go round wastelands. PSthe fl120,000.00 86,500.00 PLANTERSBANK BUILDING * H.V. DELA COSTA “Fifty percent ofCC eet is PS 84,000.00 Driver ONE PACIFIC PLACE (NEW) H.V. DELA COSTA RC 120,000.00 out of action across the whole 75,000.00 the blac “PLAZA ROYALE “ L.P. LEVISTE RC CC 140,000.00 CC 80,000.00 country,” or about 100,000 cost five PS 56,000.00 PS 98,000.00 vehicles, said Erick Zuleta, PONTE SALCEDO VALERO RC 75,000.00 The p CC 80,000.00 meanwhi president of the National * Building already exists but with no assigned valueFederation. in the 6th PS revision, assigned ZV 56,000.00 Transport PRINCE TOWER RC 75,000.00 equivalen in the 7th revision. TORDESILLAS “And the situation CC is getting 80,000.00 at the offi ** Zonal value for RC was deleted because the building is purelyPSfor office/commercial 56,000.00 worse.” That s use. already exists but with no assigned Oil and * Building valuegas in the 6th revision, assigned ZVVenezuel in the 7th revision. BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) Falling prices for its crucial oil ** Zonal value for RC was deleted because the building is purely for office/commercialsituation ........................................................................................................................................ exports have left Venezuela short it looks. use. of dollars to import supplies. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. Drivin CATION ZV./SQ. M. CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK ........................................................................................................................................ *
CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Manila
Business
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
2
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
2
Standard
B3
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10,TODAY 2016 MONDAY,extrastory2000@gmail.com December 12, 2016 MONDAY, December 12, 2016
BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) BARANGAY: FORBES PARK VILLAGE BARANGAY: COMEMBO BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) BARANGAY: FORBES PARK VILLAGE BARANGAY: COMEMBO ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. RCBC PLAZA * AYALA AVE. CC 230,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ ACACIA RR 40,000.00 AGUHO RR 180,000.00 PS 150,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ AGUHO RR 40,000.00 ANAHAW RR 180,000.00 ROBINSON’S SUMMIT AYALA AVE. AVE. RC RCBC PLAZA * CENTER ** AYALA CC 230,000.00 X 80,000.00 CC 230,000.00 BALETE RR 180,000.00 ACACIA RR 40,000.00 AGUHO RR 180,000.00 PS 150,000.00 ALAGAO RR 40,000.00 PS 150,000.00 BANABA CIRCLE RR 180,000.00 months more than economists CRUDE oil rose a second day, AGUHO RR 40,000.00 SAGITTARIUS CONDOMINIUM H.V. DELA RC 60,000.00 X 80,000.00 ANAHAWROAD RR 180,000.00 ROBINSON’S SUMMIT CENTER ** AYALA AVE.COSTA RC BANABA RR 180,000.00 had expected. The attention now breaching $51 a barrel in New CC 70,000.00 ANAHAW RR 40,000.00 X 80,000.00 BANYAN RR 180,000.00 CC 230,000.00 BALETE RR 180,000.00 PS 50,000.00 shifts to Reserve, York before a meeting between Xthe Federal 80,000.00 BAUHINIA RR 180,000.00 SALCEDO MANSIONS TORDESILLAS RC 75,000.00 ALAGAOOpec and other major producers with traders RR all but 40,000.00 PS 150,000.00 APITONG RR 40,000.00 convinced BANABA CIRCLE RR 180,000.00 CAIMITO RR 180,000.00 CC 80,000.00 X 80,000.00 SAGITTARIUS CONDOMINIUM H.V. DELA COSTA RC 60,000.00 X 80,000.00 the US will end the year with an on output cuts. Asian stocks PS 56,000.00 CAMBRIDGE CIRCLE RR 180,000.00 BANABA ROAD RR 180,000.00 AVOCADO RR 40,000.00 “SALCEDO PARK TOWER hike. 40,000.00 fluctuated at the end of their interest-rate RR 180,000.00 CC 70,000.00 DAPDAP ANAHAW RR BALIMBING RR 40,000.00 RC 80,000.00 (SALCEDO PARK TWIN TOWER)” H.V. DELA COSTA BANYAN RR 180,000.00 cor. McKinley Road CR 381,500.00 “The immediate focus for the best week since September, X 80,000.00 PS 50,000.00 EDSA CC 100,000.00 X 80,000.00 FLAME TREE RR 180,000.00 BANABA RR 40,000.00 market is the discussions between while bonds and the Korean won BAUHINIA RR 180,000.00 PS 70,000.00 SALCEDO MANSIONS L.P. TORDESILLAS RC 75,000.00 HARVARD RR 180,000.00 BAYABAS RR non-Opec 40,000.00 APITONG RR 40,000.00 SALCEDO SQUARE (NEW) LEVISTE RC 165,500.00 Opec and members declined. CAIMITO RR 180,000.00 CAIMITO RR 40,000.00 RR 180,000.00 CC 80,000.00 INSTIA CC 200,000.00 X 80,000.00 said Jonathan CHICO US crude advanced to $51.06 this weekend,” RR 40,000.00 IPIL ROAD RR 180,000.00 PS 150,000.00 PS 56,000.00 CAMBRIDGE CIRCLE RR 180,000.00 a barrel before talks Saturday in Barratt, chief DUHAT RR 40,000.00 SALCEDO TOWER H.V. DELA COSTA RC 100,000.00 AVOCADO RR investment 40,000.00 officer IPIL PLACE RR 180,000.00 “SALCEDO PARK TOWER CC 120,000.00 J. P. RIZAL EXTENSION to Brgy. East Rembo RR 40,000.00 at Bdry Ayers RR Alliance40,000.00 Securities in Vienna amongPateros the Organization DAPDAP RR 180,000.00 JACARANDA RR 180,000.00 BALIMBING PS 84,000.00 CR 80,000.00 KAWAYAN RR 180,000.00 H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 (SALCEDO PARK TWIN TOWER)” Sydney. “The sweet spot for of Petroleum Exporting Countries EDSA cor. McKinley Road CR 381,500.00 SB CARD CENTER ** VALERO RC 80,000.00 XXaround 80,000.00 MAHOGANY RR 180,000.00 $55 a barrel. and 14 other nations. The Asia- prices isRR CC 80,000.00 CC 100,000.00 KAMAGONG 40,000.00 MOLAVE RR 180,000.00 FLAME TREE RR 180,000.00 PS 56,000.00 BANABAPacific equity benchmark swung AnythingRR 40,000.00 higher and the market CR 80,000.00 PS 70,000.00 MC KINLEY RR 180,000.00 SHELL HOUSE ** VALERO RC KASOYas shares in Sydney and Tokyo will see more RR supply.” 40,000.00 HARVARD RR 180,000.00 BAYABAS RR 40,000.00 CC 85,000.00 CR 285,000.00 SALCEDO SQUARE (NEW) L.P. LEVISTE RC 165,500.00 LANGKA I RR data slate 40,000.00 The Asian is full for climbed, while those in South PS 60,000.00 Institution / School / Embassy X 285,000.00 CAIMITO RR 40,000.00 INSTIA RR 180,000.00 LANGKA II RR 40,000.00 CC 200,000.00 SMART TOWER ** AYALA AVE. RC Friday, with China to update on Korea slipped. Bonds from NARRA AVENUE RR 180,000.00 LANZONES RR 40,000.00 CHICO RR 40,000.00 CC 230,000.00 IPIL ROAD RR 180,000.00 PS 150,000.00 PALM AVENUE RR 180,000.00 and producer prices as Australia to Japan fellRizal after Cor. J.P. Ext.the consumerCR 80,000.00 PS 150,000.00 DUHATEuropean Central Bank pledged well as foreign-direct RR 40,000.00 PANDAN RR 180,000.00 SALCEDO TOWER H.V. DELA COSTA RC 100,000.00 X 80,000.00 IPIL PLACE RR 180,000.00 investment. SOLAR CENTURY TOWER ** TORDESILLAS COR H.V. DELA COSTA RC PARK ROAD RR 180,000.00 MABOLO RRTexas 40,000.00 CC 90,000.00 CC 120,000.00 J. P. RIZAL EXTENSION Pateros to Brgy. East Rembo Bdry RR 40,000.00 West Intermediate to cut bond buying, while at the JACARANDA RR 180,000.00 PILI AVENUE RR 180,000.00 MACOPA RR 40,000.00 PS 63,000.00 extending same time extending quantitative crude futures PS 84,000.00 SEN. CR 80,000.00 SPLENDIDO GARDENS SALCEDO H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 MANGGA RR climbed, 40,000.00 GIL PUYAT EXT. RR 180,000.00 KAWAYAN RR 180,000.00 CC 96,000.00 bounce and NARRAeasing until the end of 2017. The Thursday’s RR2.2 percent 40,000.00 TALISAY RR 180,000.00 SB CARD CENTER ** VALERO RC X 80,000.00 PS 67,000.00 MAHOGANY RR 180,000.00 SAMPAGUITA Santol St. to JP Rizal Ext. reducing RR 40,000.00 oil’s retreat this week to won trimmed its biggest weekly RR 180,000.00 CC 80,000.00 TAMARIND TELECOMS PLAZA * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 100,000.00 KAMAGONG RR 40,000.00 CR Russia80,000.00 TANGUILE RR 180,000.00 1.2 percent. will fulfill its advance in two months as the MOLAVE RR 180,000.00 PS 70,000.00 SAMPALOC ST. RR 40,000.00 PS 56,000.00 KASIYAHAN CONDOMINIUM along Mckinley Road RC 205,000.00 CR 80,000.00 THE PEARL BANK CENTER * VALERO CC 100,000.00 pledge to cut output by as much dollar gained ground. SANTOL RR 40,000.00 MC KINLEY RR 180,000.00 PS 143,500.00 SHELL HOUSE ** VALERO RC PS 70,000.00 barrels a day if Opec TALISAY Opec’s shock deal aimed at as 300,000 RR 40,000.00 KASOY RR 40,000.00 THE PICASSO SERVICED RESIDENCES L.P. LEVISTE RC 135,000.00 CC CC 85,000.00 ALL OTHER BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENT * CR 285,000.00TANGUILE RR 40,000.00 on its commitment stabilizing oil prices will return follows through CC 150,000.00 PS LANGKA I RR 40,000.00 YAKAL to focus this weekend, with to curb production, RR 40,000.00 PS 60,000.00 Institution PS 105,000.00 according to / SchoolSTREETS / Embassy X 285,000.00 ALL OTHER RR 180,000.00 Brgy. East Rembo Bdry to JP Rizal Ext. CR 80,000.00 31ST AVENUE LANGKA II RR 40,000.00 “THE REGENCY AT SALCEDO a government offi cial familiar the meeting potentially giving SMART TOWER ** AYALA AVE. RC CR 285,000.00 X 80,000.00 (THE REGENCY)” TORDESILLAS RC 115,000.00 NARRA AVENUE RR 180,000.00LANZONES 40,000.00 ALL OTHER COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS * CC matter. Representatives investors clues as to whether with the RR ALL OTHER STREETS RR 40,000.00 CC 138,000.00 CC 230,000.00 PALM AVENUE RR 180,000.00PS ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 68,000.00Mexico PS 97,000.00 including the agreement Cor. willJ.P.beRizal fulfi lled. of countries Ext. CR 80,000.00 PS 150,000.00 THE WORLD CENTRE * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 130,000.00 ALL CONDOMINIUMS * CCwill meet with and Oman While the ECB’s mixed message PANDAN RR 180,000.00 Note: X 80,000.00- Opec PS 91,000.00 SOLAR CENTURY TOWER ** TORDESILLAS COR H.V. DELA COSTA RC RC members in the Austrian initially wrong-footed the Developer/Owner of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision PS PARK ROAD RR 180,000.00 MABOLO RR 40,000.00-capital. CC 90,000.00 * Building already exists but with no assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV shall request for assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Gold for immediate delivery fell market, it was eventually seen in the 7th revision. * Zonal value for All Condominiums was deleted because there no 40,000.00 indentified AVENUEonofDecember RR index, 180,000.00 RR was Committee Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). 63,000.00 session, declining 0.3 as a signal equities with for a second RISING CHINA A vendor waits for PS clients on a market PILI in Beijing 9, 2016. The consumer price a key gaugeMACOPA ** Zonal value for RC was PRICES. deleted because the building is purely for office/commercial condominium withintothebuy barangay. * There no commercial and business establishment in Barangay Park use.retail SPLENDIDO GARDENS SALCEDO H.V. DELA RCslightly80,000.00 40,000.00 $1,167.91 an ounce. the extension of the current percent toRR SEN. GILisPUYAT RR Forbesby 180,000.00 of inflation, rose 2.3 COSTA percent in November, beating expectations ofEXT. 2.2 percent, according to figures released Beijing on MANGGA X - Institution, embassy, church and school BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) X - Institution, embassy, church and school Bloomberg asset purchase program by three December 9. AFP CC 96,000.00 NARRA RR 40,000.00 TALISAY RR 180,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums to STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. BARANGAY: URDANETA VILLAGE PS 67,000.00 SAMPAGUITA Santol St. to JP Rizal Ext. RR 40,000.00 be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, Developer/Owner TAMARIND RR 180,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for TELECOMS PLAZA * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 100,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ CR 80,000.00of STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee TANGUILE RR 180,000.00 THREE SALCEDO PLACE TORDESILLAS RC 100,000.00 PS 70,000.00 Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). CATION ZV./SQ. M. SAMPALOC ST. RR 40,000.00 CC 120,000.00 KASIYAHAN CONDOMINIUM along Mckinley Road RC 205,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ THE PEARL BANK CENTER * VALERO CC 100,000.00 BARANGAY: EAST REMBO PS 85,000.00 SANTOL RR 40,000.00 RR 150,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ TIFFANY PLACE L.P. LEVISTE RC 110,000.00 PS 143,500.00 PS 70,000.00 APT RIDGE AYALA AVENUE CR 550,000.00 CC 130,000.00 TALISAY RR 40,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. THE PICASSO SERVICED RESIDENCES L.P. LEVISTE RC 135,000.00 ALL OTHER BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENT * CC PS 91,000.00 BEATERIO RR 150,000.00CATION ZV./SQ. M. TANGUILE RR 40,000.00 “TOWER 6789 RR 150,000.00CC 150,000.00 CABILDO ........................................................................................................................................ PS CC 250,000.00 (ALPHALAND MAKATI TOWER) (NEW)” AYALA AVE. YAKAL RR 40,000.00 CERRADA RR 150,000.00 C-5 ROAD RR 35,000.00 PS 105,000.00 PS 150,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 180,000.00 CRUZADA RR 150,000.00 Kalayaan Ave to Brgy. West Rembo Bdry. CR 50,000.00 Brgy. East Rembo Bdry to JP Rizal Ext. CR 80,000.00 31ST AVENUE TRAFALGAR PLAZA ** H.V. DELA COSTA RC “THE REGENCY AT SALCEDO X to use 50,000.00 and dovish members But economist Carsten Brzeski willingness” all available EDSAobservers off-guard by saying hawkish RR 150,000.00 CC Central 70,000.00 RANKFURT—The European CR 285,000.00 X up infl 80,000.00 CADENA DE AMOR bank said: “Today’s tools to drive RR 35,000.00 FAROL RR 150,000.00 (THE REGENCY)” TORDESILLAS RC 115,000.00 PS 50,000.00 it would reduce its bond- of the Governing Council,” said of ING-Diba ation. CAVALRY DRIVE RR 35,000.00 ALL OTHERbuying COMMERCIAL BUILfrom DINGS * 80 billion to 60 analyst Howard CC - IHS Thursday extendedCC its mass TWO LAFAYETTEBank CONDO on TORDESILLAS RC 80,000.00 FONDA RR 150,000.00of ALL OTHER STREETS RR 40,000.00 Archer decisions looked, walked and ECB watchers have warned 138,000.00 COLT RR 35,000.00 CC 100,000.00 MAKATI AVENUE Paseo de Roxas to Ayala Ave. CR 480,000.00 PS billion euros ($65 billion) a Global Insight. quacked like tapering.” that the fragile recovery bond-buying program to underpin ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 68,000.00 PS 97,000.00 PASEO DE ROXAS J. P. RIZAL RR 35,000.00 in the PS 70,000.00 Makati Ave. to Sen. Gil Puyat (Mandarin Site) CR 480,000.00 TWO SALCEDO PLACE TORDESILLAS RC 100,000.00 Brgy. Comembo Bdry. & Brgy. Westeurozone Rembo Bdry. CR 50,000.00 month from April, as well as Some observers have warned Markets might not accept could be undermined RR 150,000.00 THEaWORLD CENTRE * H.V. DELA COSTA CC 130,000.00 ALL CONDOMINIUMS * CC eurozone economy rattled by political CC 120,000.00 X central50,000.00 theMakatiprogram to (Urdaneta that Site) any CRsign the bank was Draghi’s protestations and “give by any sign bank support Note:prolonging Ave. to Sen. Gil Puyat 420,000.00 DE ROXAS PS 85,000.00 PS 91,000.00 PASEO KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 35,000.00RC uncertainties, but AVE. surprised markets December 2017. RR 150,000.00 down the ECB its very own taper is on the wane. UCPB BUILDING ** MAKATI RC by slowing cor of C-5 Road and cor JP Rizal Ext. CR Developer/Owner of condominium project built“tapering”—or after the effectivity ofwinding this revision PS infl50,000.00 REAL Investors responded well to the purchases—could RR 150,000.00 CC 120,000.00 spook bond tantrum,” he warned, referring Euro area ation - hit a MAHINHIN RR 35,000.00 the pace purchases. * Building alreadyof existsits but asset with no assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV RECOLETOS PS 85,000.00 RR 150,000.00 shall requestEuropean for assignment of zonal values (ZV)markets, from the members of the Technical MASAGANA RR 35,000.00 move. stock markets pushing up the cost of to the rise in US treasury yields two-and-a-half-year high in V CORPORATE (NEW) L.P. LEVISTE CC 180,000.00 in the 7thCENTER revision. RECOLETOS CIRCLE RR 150,000.00 * Zonal value forFederal All Condominiums was deletedNovember because there was0.6 no 35,000.00 indentified MAPAYAPA RRat rose on Draghi’s signal that the fi nancing in the single currency when the Reserve moved percent, but Committee of Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). PS 126,000.00 SAN IGNACIO RR 150,000.00 MATAHIMIK RR 35,000.00 ** Zonal valueeuro for RCretreated was deleted because is purely office/commercial condominium barangay. “V. MADRIGAL area’s fragile economy could area. to end itswithin owntheQE program in remains far short 35,000.00 of the central The on thethe building inflation, the for election of DonaldSTA. euro POTENCIANA RR 150,000.00 MASAYA RR (VICENTE AVE. RC * There is no commercial and business establishment “There in Barangay Forbes Park use. MADRIGAL)of**” moreAYALA count on the bank’s continued question of 2013. bank’s target below 2.0 prospect cash being Trump, andCC the resignation RRis no150,000.00 SABER DRIVE RR of just 35,000.00 180,000.00 ofSTO. DOMINGO X - Institution, church andMonetary school BARANGAY: VILLAGE) (continuation) SADDLE 35,000.00 support, ECB president The embassy, International percent. RR TOMAS with bonds also firming. tapering,”RR 150,000.00 Mario pumpedBEL intoAIRfi(SALCEDO nancial markets Italian Prime MatteoSTO. PS Minister 125,000.00 X - Institution, embassy, church anditsschoolasset Draghi told RR 35,000.00 VALERO 2 CARPARK CC most 80,000.00 RR 150,000.00 at 1ST “ByAVENUE extending journalists a Fund welcomed the ECB’s latest Economic activity in the for some time * toVALERO come. It was Renzi prompted observersURDANETA ........................................................................................................................................ PS 56,000.00 2NDAll condominiums were already identified, thus there are RR 35,000.00 no condominiums toTrump purchases for another nine Frankfurt press conference. stimulus efforts, with spokesman eurozone could suffer if sitting around $1.06 in afternoon to predict quantitative easing STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. LIST BARANGAY: URDANETA VILLAGE VALERO PLAZA (formerly CITYLAND CONDO IV) *** VALERO RC 60,000.00 3RD RR 35,000.00 OF CONDOMINIUMS be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, Developer/Owner months but at a reduced monthly “That’s CC not been110,000.00 discussed, it’s protectionist CC 65,000.00 Asian trade, having dallied with would beCATION extended beyond 4TH Gerry Rice saying in Washington implements RR 35,000.00 ZV./SQ. M. itsATRIUM OF MAKATI CONDO Makati Ave. ........................................................................................................................................ PS 45,500.00 condominium projectwas built encouraged after the effectivitypromises of this revision shallUS request 5THofthat RR 35,000.00 rate... the ECB is seemingly not even RC been on100,000.00 the table,” he the IMF in the madeforon the $1.08 earlier in the week. March 2017 expiry date. ........................................................................................................................................ VALERO TOWER VALERO RC 70,000.00 6THassignment RR 35,000.00 VICINITY 7TH REV. compromising between the more added.CLASSIFIby theof zonal bank’s “continued campaign trail. AFP values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of Sluggish growth, below-target But theCC bank80,000.00 caughtSTREET/SUBDIVISION PS 77,000.00 7TH RR 35,000.00 THREE SALCEDO PLACE TORDESILLAS RC 100,000.00 DISCOVERY PRIMEA (new) Ayala Ave. RC 250,000.00 PS 56,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. 8THReal Property Valuation (TCRPV). RR 35,000.00 “VERNIDA IV CC 120,000.00 CC 300,000.00 9TH RR 35,000.00 (VERNIDA CONDOMINIUM IV) **” L.P. LEVISTE RC ........................................................................................................................................ PS 180,000.00 BARANGAY: EAST REMBO PS 85,000.00 10TH RR 35,000.00 CC 70,000.00 LE PARC APARTMENTS Makati Ave. CC 110,000.00 11TH RR 35,000.00 APT RIDGE RR 150,000.00 PS 50,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ TIFFANY PLACE L.P. LEVISTE RC 110,000.00 RC 100,000.00 12TH RR 35,000.00 AYALA AVENUE CR 550,000.00 CC 130,000.00 * Building already exists but with no assigned value in the 6th revision, assigned ZV PS 77,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. 13TH RR 35,000.00 in the 7th revision. ROXAS TRIANGLE CONDO Cruzada cor Paseo de Roxas CC 234,000.00 14TH RR 35,000.00 PS 91,000.00 ONE BEATERIO RR 150,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. 15TH RR 35,000.00 RC 195,000.00 ** Zonal “TOWER 6789 value for RC was deleted because the building is purely for office/commercial CABILDO 16TH RR 35,000.00 RR 150,000.00 PS 164,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ By use. Esteban Rojas 17TH RR 35,000.00 CC 250,000.00 PACIFIC (ALPHALAND MAKATI TOWER) (NEW)” AYALA AVE. Ayala Ave. CC 150,000.00 CERRADAPLAZA RR 150,000.00 C-5 ROAD RR 35,000.00 BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO VILLAGE) (continuation) 18TH RR 35,000.00 RC 125,000.00 PS 150,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ 19TH RR 35,000.00 CARACAS—All William CRUZADA RR 150,000.00 PS 105,000.00 Kalayaan Ave to Brgy. West Rembo Bdry. CR 50,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. TRAFALGAR ** toH.V.keep DELA COSTA RC 20TH RR 35,000.00 SOMERSET OLYMPIA MAKATI Makati Ave. CC 110,000.00 Faneite PLAZA needed driving CATION ZV./SQ. M. X 50,000.00 RR 150,000.00 21ST RR 35,000.00 CC 70,000.00 EDSA RC 100,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ his old bus in Caracas was a new 22ND RR 35,000.00 CADENA DE AMOR RR 35,000.00 PS 77,000.00 WESTGATE PLAZA H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 FAROL RR 150,000.00 PS 50,000.00 23RD RR 35,000.00 carburetor. Surely, in a city of CC 100,000.00 THE MAKATI TUSCANY CONDO Ayala Ave. cor. Fonda CC 138,000.00 CAVALRY DRIVE RR 35,000.00 24TH RR 35,000.00 TWOtwo LAFAYETTE CONDO TORDESILLAS RC 80,000.00 FONDA RR 150,000.00 PS 70,000.00 million people, that couldn’t RC 112,500.00 25TH RR 35,000.00 SHANGHAI, China―China Y TOWER II L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 COLT RR 35,000.00 CC 100,000.00 PS 97,000.00 be hard to find? MAKATI AVENUE Paseo de Roxas to Ayala Ave. CR 480,000.00 26TH RR CC 80,000.00 is to halve the 35,000.00 cash machine THE RITZ TOWERS Ayala Ave. CC 142,000.00 27TH RR 35,000.00 J. P. RIZAL RR 35,000.00 PS 70,000.00 PS 56,000.00 But getting his hands on a Makati Ave. to Sen. Gil Puyat (Mandarin Site) CR 480,000.00 PASEO DE ROXAS limit for certain cardholders RC 120,000.00 28TH RR 35,000.00 ALL OTHER TOWNHOUSES RC 100,000.00 TWO SALCEDO TORDESILLAS for RC 100,000.00 Brgy. Comembo Bdry. & Brgy. West Rembo Bdry. RR CR 50,000.00enclave spare took PLACE four months—par PS 99,500.00 29TH 35,000.00 visiting the gambling PS 70,000.00 RR 150,000.00 CC 120,000.00- THE TWIN TOWERS Ayala Ave. ALL OTHER CONDOMINIUMS RC the course in an economic crisis 30TH RR CC 180,000.00 X in its 35,000.00 50,000.00 of Macau, latest effort to Makati Ave. to Sen. Gil Puyat (Urdaneta Site) CR 420,000.00 PASEO DE ROXAS CC 31ST RR 35,000.00 RC 150,000.00 PS 85,000.00 that has seen one in two public curb massive capital outflows KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 35,000.00 PS ALL OTHERS STREETS RR 35,000.00 PS 126,000.00 RR 150,000.00 buses in Venezuela grind UCPB BUILDING ** MAKATI AVE. to a RC caused by the 50,000.00 falling yuan, cor of C-5 Road and cor JP Rizal Ext. CR URDANETA APARTMENTS Ayala Ave. CC 144,000.00 Note: X - Institution, embassy, church and school. Hong Kong media reported halt. RR 150,000.00 120,000.00to REAL RC 120,000.00 All condominiums were already identified, thus there areCC no condominiums MAHINHIN GUADALUPE NUEVO 35,000.00 BARANGAY: be classified as “Other Developer/Owner Friday. RR PS 101,000.00 Filling a bus’s tankCondominiums” with petrol as of 7th Revision, PS 85,000.00 RECOLETOS RR 150,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for MASAGANA RR 35,000.00 ZUELLIG BLDG. (NEW) Makati Ave. cor Paseo de Roxas CC 230,000.00 From Saturday, punters in assignment oil-rich Venezuela is V CORPORATE CENTER (NEW) LEVISTE STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. of zonalL.P. values (ZV)superfrom the members of theCC Technical180,000.00 Committee RECOLETOS CIRCLE RR 150,000.00 PS 150,000.00 MAPAYAPA RR 35,000.00 using the UnionPay of RealBut Property Valuation CATION ZV./SQ. M. cheap. getting the(TCRPV). parts to PS 126,000.00 SAN ALL TOWNHOUSES * RC system―around half of IGNACIO RR 150,000.00-........................................................................................................................................ MATAHIMIK RR 35,000.00 PS isdays 70% ofisthe assigned to the condominium unit. runZVitforthese anZVordeal. ALL OTHER CONDOMINIUMS CC “V. MADRIGAL ANASTACIO RR 60,000.00 those visiting the city from ZV for penthouse is 110% of CC, or in the absence thereof, 110% of RC. STA. POTENCIANA RR 150,000.00 RC MASAYA RR 35,000.00 Faneite’s it meant ANTIPOLO RR 60,000.00 (VICENTEIn MADRIGAL) **” case, AYALA AVE. four RC the mainland―will only be PS When building that is purely RC in the above list has CC, ZV for CC will be 120% Sra. De Guadalupe to Victor St. CR 120,000.00 months without work for the STO. DOMINGO RR 150,000.00 SABER DRIVE RR 35,000.00patacas CC 180,000.00 able toRRget 5,000 of RC. BALAGTAS 60,000.00 51-year-old father ofVILLAGE four. SADDLE STO. TOMAS RR 150,000.00 (aroundRR from ATMs BARANGAY: DASMARIÑAS PS 125,000.00 Note: BATAAN RR$600) 35,000.00 60,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ Rampant infl ation has driven Jacinto to Corregidor St. every day, CR the120,000.00 South China All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums to 1ST RR 35,000.00 VALERO 2 CARPARK * VALERO CC 80,000.00 URDANETA AVENUE RR 150,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. BO. VISAYA RR 60,000.00 be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, Developer/Owner up the price of tires, batteries and Morning CATION ZV./SQ. M. PS 56,000.00 RRPost reported. 35,000.00 2ND BUENCONSEJO * RR 60,000.00 of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for ........................................................................................................................................ carburetors. The news sent casino stocks CAMINO DELA FE RR 60,000.00 VALERO PLAZA (formerly CITYLAND CONDO IV) *** VALERO RC 60,000.00 LISTassignment 3RD RR 35,000.00 of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of ACACIA RR 180,000.00 OF CONDOMINIUMS plunging, with Sands China “We couldn’t get hold of a CAPAS RR 60,000.00 Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). AMORSOLO RR 180,000.00 CC 65,000.00 4TH RR percent 35,000.00 CORREGIDOR RR 60,000.00 down 4.93 in Hong spare. had to spend four ANTONIO ARNAIZ AVENUEWe (PASAY ROAD) RR 180,000.00 ATRIUM OF MAKATI CONDO Makati Ave. CC 110,000.00 ZV for penthouse is 110% of CC, or in the absence thereof, 110% of RC. DAPITAN RR 60,000.00 PS 45,500.00 AVOCADO RR 180,000.00 Kong, RR Wynn 35,000.00 Macau 5.82 5TH months looking around,” he told DAPITAN EXT. RR 60,000.00 RC 100,000.00 BANYAN ST. * RR 180,000.00 VALERO TOWER VALERO RC 70,000.00 * The zonal value for All Townhouses was deleted because there was no identified percent lower and Galaxy 6TH RR 35,000.00 DEL CARMEN RR 60,000.00 AFP. When he did fi nd one, “it BOUGANVILLA RR 180,000.00 townhouse as per ocular inspection. PS 77,000.00 Entertainment also losing 4.25 CC 80,000.00 E. JACINTO RR 60,000.00 CABALLERO RR 180,000.00 was super expensive.” 7TH RR 35,000.00 CALUMPANG RR 180,000.00 80,000.00 BARANGAY: CEMBO percent CR by the midday break. DISCOVERY PRIMEA (new) Ayala Ave. RC 250,000.00 PS 56,000.00 The bus’s owner leases the CAMPANILLA RR 180,000.00 E. 60,000.00 8THJACINTO EXT. RR 35,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ AFP RR was unable to confirm “VERNIDA IV CARISSA RR 180,000.00 CC 300,000.00 EDSA CR 210,000.00 vehicle, a battered old blue 1987 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. 9TH RR 35,000.00 the report the Monetary 230,000.00 X ESCUELA RR and 60,000.00 (VERNIDA CONDOMINIUM IV) **” and L.P. LEVISTE RC CATION ZV./SQ. M. model, to him he earns a PS 180,000.00 RR 180,000.00 CYPRESS Authority of Macao did EDSA to Gov. Noble St. CR 80,000.00 10TH RR 35,000.00 CC 70,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ DASMARIÑAS AVENUE RR 180,000.00 commission based on the number X not respond to 80,000.00 requests for LE PARC APARTMENTS Makati Ave. CC 110,000.00 ACACIA RR 40,000.00 EDSA cor. of McKinley and A.This Arnaiz Ave. CR 250,000.00 11TH RR 35,000.00 file photo on October 13, 2016 shows abandoned buses in a public buses parking in the Catia neighborhood in Caracas on October 6, F. YABUT RR 60,000.00 PS taken250,000.00 50,000.00 of -passengers. comment. CR 75,000.00 EDSA PASAY ROAD CR RC than 100,000.00 Kalayaan to Burgos CR 120,000.00 2016. According with Erick Zuleta, president of the National Transport Federation, more 100.000 buses are out of service due to the lack ofSt. 12TH RR International 35,000.00 said EDSA Luckily - MCKINLEY 381,500.00 X 80,000.00 UnionPay for Faneite, the owner spare parts.CR FELIPE RR 60,000.00 AFP assigned GLADIOLA RR 180,000.00 * Building already exists but with no assigned value in the 6th revision, ZV PS 77,000.00 BANABA RR 40,000.00 13TH RR 35,000.00 in a statement to AFP that GOV. NOBLE RR 60,000.00 paid the bill for the repair. Now GLORIOSA RR 180,000.00 CACAO RR 40,000.00 in the 7th revision. KALAYAAN AVE. RR 60,000.00 its overseas cash withdrawal ONE ROXAS TRIANGLE CONDO Cruzada cor Paseo de Roxas CC 234,000.00 GRANADA RR 180,000.00 14TH RR 35,000.00 Faneite is back at the wheel, Caracas, Faneite earns about broken-down Ginette Arellano, 42, sits The government’s special low CAIMITO RR buses. 40,000.00 Brgy. Pitogo Bdry.on To South policies Cembo CR 120,000.00 KALACHUCHI RR 180,000.00 “remain the same”–anxiously wondering when the 15TH RR 35,000.00 RC 195,000.00 CAMIAS RR 40,000.00 LA BANDA RR 60,000.00 Waiting for the bus the bus with her son for up to fixedisexchange rate is meant to 5,000 bolivars a day. KALAMANSI 180,000.00 ** Zonal value for RC was deleted because the building purelyRR for office/commercial 10,000 RR yuan per day with CHICO RR 40,000.00 KAMIAS RR 180,000.00 LA CONSOLACION 60,000.00 bus will break down again. 16TH RR 35,000.00 That gives him nearly eight Used to queuing for rations of nine hours to get to Caracas from help Venezuelans afford essential PS 164,000.00 use. an annual cap60,000.00 of 100,000 KASOY RR 180,000.00 ILANG-ILANG RR 40,000.00 MACTAN RR Dozens of buses and minibus- goods, such medicine, Venezuelans and engine LUMBANG RRas tires 180,000.00 17THher hometown of Barquisimeto, RR 35,000.00 MAGALLANES RR 60,000.00 added IPIL dollars RR 65,000.00 yuan ($14,500)―but PACIFIC PLAZAof spending Ayalapower Ave. at the food and CC 150,000.00 X 230,000.00 style public vehicles VILLAGE) stand (continuation) MANGGAHAN RR 60,000.00 offi cial form long lines to catch one about 350 kilometers (217 miles) oil. Brgy. Guadaluperate. Nuevo Bdry to Brgy. Westalso Rembo Bdry RR 40,000.00 J. P. RIZAL ST. fixed exchange BARANGAY: BEL AIR (SALCEDO it complies with regulations 18TH RR 35,000.00 MABOLO RR 180,000.00 RC 125,000.00 Sra. De Guadalupe to Victor St. CR 80,000.00 CR 80,000.00 abandoned and rusting in But it is worth little more than of the dwindling numbers of away. But there just aren’t enough to and laws issued35,000.00 by relevant MACOPA RR 180,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ 19TH RR NSTRA. SRA. DE GUADALUPE RR 60,000.00 JASMIN 40,000.00 PS 105,000.00 MAGNOLIA RR 180,000.00 wastelands. one dollar on the black market, buses. RR On top of that, public buses go round. authorities. ORENSE RR 60,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. KALAMANSI RR 40,000.00 20TH RR 35,000.00 MAHOGANY ROAD RR 180,000.00 “Fifty percent of the fl eet is Sra. De Guadalupe to Victor St. CR 80,000.00 SOMERSET OLYMPIA MAKATI Makati Ave. CC 110,000.00 The move, if it happens, where Venezuelans are forced to Victor Rojas, 25, crosses the are prey to violence in one of the Drivers have to buy spares on MILFLORES RR 180,000.00 Brgy. Guadalupe Nuevo Bdry to Brgy. West Rembo Bdry RR 40,000.00 KALAYAAN AVENUE CATION ZV./SQ. M. 21ST P. BURGOS RR 60,000.00 MORADO 180,000.00 out ofAVENUE action across the whole the black RR appearsRR to be the35,000.00 latest attempt CR 80,000.00 buy much of what they need to city from west to east to get to world’s most dangerous cities. market, where they RC 100,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ Reposo St. to R. Magsaysay St. CR 120,000.00 PALM AVENUE RR 180,000.00 22ND RR 35,000.00 MANGGA 40,000.00 by Chinese authorities to country,” or about 100,000 cost five times live. his job at RR a cinema.77,000.00 Driver Faneite says he has offi cial price. P. URDANETA RR 60,000.00 X the 230,000.00 PS WESTGATE PLAZA H.V. DELA COSTA RC 80,000.00 MOLAVE RR 40,000.00 stem a growing tide of capital P. VICTOR *** RR 60,000.00 23RD RR 35,000.00 vehicles, said Erick Zuleta, PALOMARIA RR 180,000.00 If Faneite wants to buy lunch, it “You waste a 40,000.00 lot of time been the victim of three armed The price bus ticket, NARRA RR CC of a180,000.00 100,000.00 THE MAKATI TUSCANY CONDO Ayala Ave. cor. Fonda CC 138,000.00 CR 120,000.00 PARAISO flowingRR out of China as locals president of the National meanwhile,RR 24TH 35,000.00 eats up half of his earnings. waiting for the minibus to robberies.**** recently rose to the cor.daily Kalayaan Ave. CR 100,000.00 POMELO RR 180,000.00 R. MAGSAYSAY RR investments 60,000.00 PS 70,000.00 seek safer abroad. RC 112,500.00 Transport Federation. SAMPAGUITA 40,000.00 SAGU P. Burgos St. to orense St. CR 120,000.00 when you Nicolas equivalent RR of about180,000.00 10 US cents “It is impossible to operate come,” heRRsaid. “And 25TH Socialist President RR 35,000.00 Capital fl ight is estimated Y TOWER II L.P. LEVISTE RC 75,000.00 SAMPAGUITA RR 180,000.00 SAMPALOC RR 40,000.00 REPOSO RR 60,000.00 “And the situation is getting at the official PS 97,000.00 it is falling to pieces.”26THMaduro has vowed to pull rate. 180,000.00 SANTOL with the current prices,” says do get on,RR RR 35,000.00 SANTAN RR to have reached 40,000.00 P. Burgos St. to Manggahanby St. Bloomberg CR 120,000.00 CC 80,000.00 worse.” SINIGUELAS RR like180,000.00 bus TOWERS drivers’ union leader Hugo Those who have to travel from Venezuelans out of an economic That seems little, but TANGUILE in RITZ THE Ayala Ave. CC 142,000.00 RETIRO RR in 2015 60,000.00 RR 40,000.00 $1 trillion and has 27TH RR 35,000.00 PS 56,000.00 GUADALUPE BLISS TAMARIND 180,000.00 Oil and gas SAMPAGUITA RR during60,000.00 RC often60,000.00 town to town see their trip crisis which he says is a capitalist Venezuela’sRRlop-sided monetary Ocando. continued 2016, despite RC 120,000.00 28TH RR 35,000.00 OTHER TOWNHOUSES RC 100,000.00 SAN NICOLAS RR 60,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 40,000.00 *ALLBuilding already exists butits with no assigned in the 6th revision, assigned ZV Falling prices for crucial oil value He spoke standing in a yard turn into an Odyssey as the few conspiracy. situation nothing is as simple as recent efforts by Beijing to SGT. YABUT CIRCLE RR 60,000.00 in the 7th revision. PS 99,500.00 29TH RR 35,000.00 PS 70,000.00 X - Institution, exports have left Venezuela tighten restrictions on currency where Embassy, a handful ofand mechanics buses available make detours to Maduro, 54, is a former bus Ave. Church School. Dapitan Ext. to Kalayaan CR 120,000.00 X - Institution, embassy, church and short school it looks. ALL OTHER CONDOMINIUMS - THE TWIN 30THdriver. AFP RR 35,000.00 TOWERS Ave.about 20 cover extra CCroutes.180,000.00 of dollars to import supplies. flows. AFP Driving RC his routes in eastern toiled trying to Ayala repair CC 31ST RR 35,000.00 RC 150,000.00 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK PS ALL OTHERS STREETS RR 35,000.00 PS 126,000.00
Oil rises above $51 ahead of Opec talks
ECB to slow down on bond buying
F
Buses grind to a halt in Venezuela’s spare parts crisis
China halving ATM cap in casinos
CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Manila
Standard
TODAY
MONDAY, December 12, 2016
MONDAY, December 12, 2016
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
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REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
BARANGAY: GUADALUPE NUEVO(continuation) BARANGAY: GUADALUPE NUEVO(continuation) ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ CATION ZV./SQ. M. STA. RITA RR 60,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ Orense St. to Escuela St. CR 120,000.00 ALL RR 60,000.00 STA.OTHERS RITA STREETS RR 60,000.00 CR 120,000.00 Orense St. to Escuela St. CR 120,000.00 ALL APARTMENTS RR 60,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 ALL OTHERS STREETS RR 60,000.00ALL CONDOMINIUMS ***** CC RC CR 120,000.00PS ALL APARTMENTS RR 60,000.00 All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums to ALLbe TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, Developer/Owner of condominium ALL CONDOMINIUMS ***** project built after the effectivity of this revision CC shall request for assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of RC Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). PS * BUENCONSEJO is formerly namedBUENCAMINO
All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums to
** ZV for PS in the 7th revision is 70% of the ZV assigned to the condominium unit.
X - Institution, embassy, church and school be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, Developer/Owner
BARANGAY: PEMBO of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of CATION ZV./SQ. M. Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). ........................................................................................................................................ ACACIA RR 30,000.00 ADELFA RR 30,000.00 * AFRICAN BUENCONSEJO is formerly namedBUENCAMINO DAISY RR 30,000.00 AGUILA RR 30,000.00 ALLEY 1 RR 25,000.00 ** ZV for PS in the 7th revision is 70% of the ZV assigned to the condominium unit. ALLEY 2 RR 25,000.00 ALLEY A RR 25,000.00 X - Institution, embassy, church and school ALLEY C RR 25,000.00 AMAPOLA RR 30,000.00 BARANGAY: PEMBO AQUARIUS RR 30,000.00 ARIES RR 30,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ ASTER RR 30,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. AVOCADO RR 30,000.00 AZALEA RR 30,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. BEGONIA RR 30,000.00 BIGNAY RR 30,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ BOUGAINVILLA RR 30,000.00 ACACIA RR 30,000.00 BOUGAINVILLA EXT RR 25,000.00 BRIDAL RR ADELFA * RR 30,000.00BRIDAL BOUQUET RR 30,000.00 AFRICAN DAISY RR 30,000.00 CACTUS RR 30,000.00 CACTUS EXT RR 25,000.00 AGUILA RR 30,000.00 RR CADENA DE AMOR 30,000.00 ALLEY 1 RR 25,000.00 X 80,000.00 CADENA DE AMOR EXT. RR 25,000.00 ALLEY 2 RR 25,000.00 CALACHUCHI RR 30,000.00 ROAD RR 25,000.00 ALLEY IA- CALACHUCHI RR 25,000.00 CAMIA RR 30,000.00 ALLEY C ** RR 25,000.00 CARIAGA RR 30,000.00 CAPRICORN RR 30,000.00 AMAPOLA RR 30,000.00 CARNATION RR 30,000.00 AQUARIUS RR 30,000.00 CHARLIE RR 30,000.00 DAFFODIL RR 30,000.00 ARIES RR 30,000.00 DAHLIA RR 30,000.00 ASTER EXTENSION RR 30,000.00 DAHLIA RR 25,000.00 DAMA DE NOCHE RR 30,000.00 AVOCADO RR 30,000.00 DIAMOND RR 30,000.00 DUHAT RR 30,000.00 AZALEA RR 30,000.00 DUNHILL RR 30,000.00 BEGONIA RR 30,000.00 DURIAN RR 30,000.00 EARTH RR 30,000.00 BIGNAY RR 30,000.00 EMERALD RR 30,000.00 BOUGAINVILLA RR 30,000.00 ESCARLATA RR 30,000.00 ESCUELA RR 30,000.00 BOUGAINVILLA EXT RR 25,000.00 X 50,000.00 BRIDAL * RR GEMINI RR 30,000.00GUMAMELA RR 30,000.00 BRIDAL BOUQUET RR 30,000.00 GUMAMELA EXT. RR 25,000.00 HUDYAT RR 30,000.00 CACTUS RR 30,000.00 ILANG - ILANG RR 30,000.00 CACTUS EXT RR 25,000.00 JADE RR 30,000.00 JADE EXTENSION ** RR RR CADENA DE AMOR 30,000.00 JASMIN RR 30,000.00 X 80,000.00 X 80,000.00
BARANGAY: PEMBO(continuation) CADENA DE AMOR EXT. RR 25,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ CALACHUCHI RR 30,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ROAD I - CALACHUCHI RR 25,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ CAMIA EXT. RR 30,000.00 JASMIN RR 25,000.00 CARIAGA ** cor. Sampaguita St. CR 50,000.00 RR 30,000.00 JUPITER INT. RR 25,000.00 CAPRICORN RR 30,000.00 JUPITER RR 30,000.00 KALAMANSI RR 30,000.00 CARNATION RR 30,000.00 KAMPUPOT RR 30,000.00 KASOY RR 30,000.00 CHARLIE RR 30,000.00 LAS MARIAS RR 30,000.00 DAFFODIL RR 30,000.00 LARIAGA RR 30,000.00 LILAC RR 30,000.00 DAHLIA RR 30,000.00 LIRIO RR 30,000.00 DAHLIA EXTENSION RR 25,000.00 LOTUS RR 30,000.00 LOTUS EXT RR 25,000.00 DAMA DE NOCHE RR 30,000.00 LOWER AZUCENA RR 30,000.00 DIAMOND RR 30,000.00 LUCBAN RR 30,000.00 MANSANAS RR 30,000.00 DUHAT RR 30,000.00 MARANG RR 30,000.00 MARICEL RR 30,000.00 DUNHILL RR 30,000.00 MARS RR 30,000.00 DURIAN RR 30,000.00 MAYA RR 30,000.00 MERCURY RR 30,000.00 EARTH RR 30,000.00 MIRASOL RR 30,000.00 EMERALD RR 30,000.00 MORNING GLORY RR 30,000.00 MULLIEN RR 30,000.00 ESCARLATA RR 30,000.00 30,000.00 NEPTUNE RR ESCUELA RR 30,000.00 ORKIDIA RR 30,000.00 ORKIDIA EXT. RR 25,000.00 X 50,000.00 PANAY RR 30,000.00 PAPAYA RR 30,000.00 GEMINI RR 30,000.00 PARAISO RR 30,000.00 GUMAMELA RR 30,000.00 UPPER PARAISO RR 30,000.00 LOWER PARAISO RR 30,000.00 GUMAMELA EXT. RR 25,000.00 PIONEER RR 30,000.00 HUDYAT RR 30,000.00 PISCES RR 30,000.00 PITIMINI RR 30,000.00 ILANG - ILANG RR 30,000.00 PLUTO RR 30,000.00 JADE RR 30,000.00 ROAD LOT 275 RR 25,000.00 ROAD LOT 276 RR 25,000.00 JADE EXTENSION ** RR ROAD LOT 277 RR 25,000.00 ROSAL RR 30,000.00 JASMIN RR 30,000.00 ROSAS RR 30,000.00 X 80,000.00 RUBY RR 30,000.00 SAMPAGUITA RR 30,000.00 BARANGAY: PEMBO(continuation) Brgy. Rizal Bdry. To Brgy. Comembo Bdry. CR 50,000.00 SAMPAGUITA EXT. RR 25,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ SAMPALOC RR 30,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. SAN JOSE RR 30,000.00 SAN PEDRO RR 30,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. SANTAN RR 30,000.00 SATURN RR 30,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ SENIA *** RR JASMIN EXT. RR 25,000.00 STA MARIA RR 30,000.00 SUNFLOWER RR 30,000.00 cor. Sampaguita St. CR 50,000.00 TAMBULI RR 30,000.00
BARANGAY: PINAGKAISAHAN BARANGAY: PINAGKAISAHAN ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ CATION ZV./SQ. M. AGUTAYA RR 65,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ BALABAC RR 65,000.00 BELLEZA RR 65,000.00 AGUTAYA RR 65,000.00 CANIGARAN (CALIGIRAN) * RR 65,000.00 BALABAC RR 65,000.00 CUYO RR 65,000.00 DANLIG RR 65,000.00 BELLEZA RR 65,000.00 Brgy. Forbes Bdry. to Brgy. Guadalupe Nuevo Brdy. CR 210,000.00 EDSA ENSUENO RR 65,000.00 CANIGARAN (CALIGIRAN) * RR 65,000.00 IRAN RR 65,000.00 CUYO RR 65,000.00 GABONG RR 65,000.00 GRACIA RR 65,000.00 DANLIG RR 65,000.00 EDSA to Limbo St. CR 80,000.00 CR 210,000.00 EDSA HARVARD Brgy. Forbes Bdry. to Brgy. Guadalupe Nuevo Brdy. RR 65,000.00 EDSA to Quingua St. CR 80,000.00 ENSUENO RR 65,000.00 HONDA RR 65,000.00 IRAN RR 65,000.00 EDSA to Galigaran St. CR 80,000.00 HONDA EXT ** RR 65,000.00 GABONG RR 65,000.00 JERVOIS RR 65,000.00 KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 65,000.00 GRACIA RR 65,000.00 EDSA to Bry. Pitogo Bdry. CR 80,000.00 CR 80,000.00 LIMBO (LIMAS) EDSA to Limbo St. RR 65,000.00 HARVARD Kalayaan Ave. to Gracia St. CR 80,000.00 RR 65,000.00 NATIVE RR 65,000.00 EDSA to Quingua St. CR 80,000.00 OTON RR 65,000.00 P. CORTEZ RR 65,000.00 HONDA RR 65,000.00 PINOS RR 65,000.00 EDSA to Galigaran St. CR 80,000.00 QUINGUA RR 65,000.00 TABLAS RR 65,000.00 HONDA EXT ** RR 65,000.00 TOLENTINO RR 65,000.00 ROCKFORT RC 80,000.00 JERVOIS RESIDENCES RR 65,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 65,000.00 KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 65,000.00 CR 80,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 EDSA to Bry. Pitogo Bdry. CR 80,000.00 ALL CONDOMINIUMS RC 60,000.00 LIMBO (LIMAS) RR 65,000.00 CC 70,000.00 PS 50,000.00 Kalayaan Ave. to Gracia St. CR 80,000.00 ALL APARTMENTS RR 60,000.00 NATIVE RR 65,000.00 ALL OTHERS CLASSIFIED AS COMMERCIAL BLDG. CC 80,000.00 BARANGAY: PITOGO OTON RR 65,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ P. CORTEZ RR 65,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. PINOS RR 65,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ QUINGUA RR 65,000.00 AKLAN RR 40,000.00 BASILAN RR 40,000.00 TABLAS RR 65,000.00 BATANES (BATANGAS) * RR 40,000.00 BILIRAN RR 40,000.00 TOLENTINO RR 65,000.00 BOHOL RR 40,000.00 ROCKFORT RESIDENCES RC 80,000.00 CATANDUANES RR 40,000.00 CEBU RR 60,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 65,000.00 CORREGIDOR RR 40,000.00 80,000.00 CR D.V.LAURILLA RR 60,000.00 GUIMARAS RR 40,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 HOMONHON RR 40,000.00 ALL CONDOMINIUMS RC 60,000.00 HUNDRED ISLAND RR 40,000.00 ISLA VERDE RR 40,000.00 CC 70,000.00 JACINTO ** RR KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 60,000.00 PS 50,000.00 Brgy. Pinagkaisahan Bdry. to Guadalupe Nuevo Bdry. CR 80,000.00 ALL APARTMENTS RR 60,000.00 LEYTE RR 40,000.00 LIMASAWA RR 40,000.00 ALL OTHERS CLASSIFIED AS COMMERCIAL BLDG. CC 80,000.00 LUZON
RR 40,000.00 CR 80,000.00 BARANGAY: PITOGO MACTAN RR 40,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ MARINDUQUE RR 40,000.00 MASBATE RR 40,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. MINDORO RR 40,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. NEGROS RR 40,000.00 PALAWAN RR 40,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ Kalayaan Ave. to Panay St. CR 80,000.00 PALAWAN RR 40,000.00 AKLAN EXT. RR 40,000.00 PANAY RR 40,000.00 BASILAN RR 40,000.00 Brgy. Pinagkaisahan bdry. to Palawan St. CR 80,000.00 ROMBLON RR 40,000.00 BATANES (BATANGAS) * RR 40,000.00 SAMAR RR 40,000.00 BILIRAN RR 40,000.00 SARANGANI RR 40,000.00 SECOGON RR 40,000.00 BOHOL RR 40,000.00 SIQUIJOR RR 40,000.00 CATANDUANES RR 40,000.00 SULU RR 40,000.00 SURIGAO RR 40,000.00 CEBU RR 60,000.00 TABLAS RR 40,000.00 TAWI-TAWI RR 40,000.00 CORREGIDOR RR 40,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 40,000.00 D.V.LAURILLA RR 60,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 ALL CONDOMINIUMS**** CC GUIMARAS RR 40,000.00RC HOMONHON RR 40,000.00PS
HUNDRED ISLAND * BATANES is formerly named BATANGAS
RR 40,000.00 ** JACINTO ST. is part of Guadalupe Nuevo ISLA VERDE RR 40,000.00 *** ZV for PS in the 6th revision is 60% of the ZV assigned to the condominium unit. JACINTO ** RR All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums to KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 60,000.00 be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, Developer/Owner of condominium project built the effectivity of this revision request for Brgy. Pi nagkaiafter sahan Bdry. to Guadal upe Nuevo Bdry. CR shall 80,000.00 assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of LEYTE RR 40,000.00 Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). BARANGAY: LIMASAWA RIZAL RR 40,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ LUZON RR 40,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CR 80,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ MACTAN RR 40,000.00 A. BONIFACIO RR 30,000.00 A. MABINI RR 30,000.00 MARINDUQUE RR 40,000.00 ABAD SANTOS RR 30,000.00 MASBATE RR 40,000.00 ADARNA RR 30,000.00 ADELA RR 30,000.00 MINDORO RR 40,000.00 AGUILA RR 30,000.00 AGLIPAY RR 30,000.00 NEGROS RR 40,000.00 Aquino St. to bdry. of Post Proper Southside RR 30,000.00 AGUINALDO PALAWAN RR 40,000.00 AMARILLO RR 30,000.00 AMORSECO RR 30,000.00 Kalayaan Ave. to Panay St. CR 80,000.00 ATIS RR 30,000.00 PALAWAN EXT. RR 40,000.00 AVOCADO RR 30,000.00 BAYABAS RR 30,000.00 PANAY RR 40,000.00 BEGONIA RR 30,000.00 CR 80,000.00 BLUEBOZ Brgy. Pinagkaisahan bdry. to Palawan St. RR 30,000.00 BLUEBERRY RR 30,000.00 ROMBLON RR 40,000.00 BLUEBIRD RR 30,000.00 C. AQUINO RR 30,000.00 SAMAR RR 40,000.00 C. M. RECTO RR 30,000.00 SARANGANI RR 40,000.00 RR 30,000.00 JUPITER INT. RR 25,000.00 CASOY BARANGAY: PEMBO(continuation) CATTLEYA RR 30,000.00 SECOGON RR 40,000.00 JUPITER RR 30,000.00 CHICO ........................................................................................................................................ RR 30,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. SIQUIJOR RR 40,000.00 RR 30,000.00 KALAMANSI RR 30,000.00 COL. RESMA (COL. REGINA) * CATION ZV./SQ. M. D. SILANG RR 30,000.00 SULU RR 40,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ KAMPUPOT RR 30,000.00 DAFFODIL RR 30,000.00 TAÑAQUIN ** RR 30,000.00 KASOY RR 30,000.00 SURIGAO RR 40,000.00 DAISY RR 30,000.00 TARGET RANGE BLVD. ** RR 30,000.00 DALANDAN RR 30,000.00 TARGET RANGE BLVD. EXT. RR 25,000.00 LAS MARIAS RR 30,000.00 TABLAS RR 40,000.00 TARHATA RR 30,000.00 DOÑA AURORA RR 30,000.00 LARIAGA RR 30,000.00 DOÑA LUZ TAURUS RR 30,000.00 RR 30,000.00 TAWI-TAWI RR 40,000.00 TOPAZ RR 30,000.00 RR 30,000.00 LILAC RR 30,000.00 DOVE TULIP (ROAD LOT 278) RR 30,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 40,000.00 30,000.00 RR LIRIO RR 30,000.00 DUHAT UMBEL RR 30,000.00 RR 30,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 UNIVERSE RR 30,000.00 EVERLASTING LOTUS RR 30,000.00 RR 30,000.00 UPPER AZUCENA RR 30,000.00 FLAMINGO ALL CONDOMINIUMS**** CC RR 30,000.00 URANUS RR 30,000.00 LOTUS EXT RR 25,000.00 FLORAVILLE VENUS RR 30,000.00 FORTUNE PLANT RR 30,000.00 RC LOWER AZUCENA RR 30,000.00 GARCIA VIOLETA RR 30,000.00 RR 30,000.00 WALING WALING RR 30,000.00 PS LUCBAN RR 30,000.00 GLADIOLA RR 30,000.00WATERLILY RR 30,000.00 GOLD FINCH (GOLDPIN) ** RR 30,000.00 MANSANAS RR 30,000.00 XYRIS RR 30,000.00 GUYABANO RR 30,000.00 YELLOW RR 30,000.00 MARANG BELL RR 30,000.00 * BATANES is formerly named BATANGAS Sampaguita Ext. to Blueboz St. RR 30,000.00 ZENIA RR 30,000.00 IVORY RR 30,000.00 MARICEL RR 30,000.00 J. P. RIZAL 25,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR ** JACINTO ST. is part of Guadalupe Nuevo RR 30,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES **** CC 70,000.00 J. VARGAS MARS RR 30,000.00 JACINTO RC 60,000.00 RR 30,000.00 *** ZV for PS in the 6th revision is 60% of the ZV assigned to the condominium unit. PS 50,000.00 MAYA RR 30,000.00 JAENA RR 30,000.00 RR 30,000.00 * BRIDAL BOUQUET is the same as BRIDAL MERCURY RR 30,000.00 KILYAWAN All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums to KING FISHER RR 30,000.00 ** JADE ST. is the same as JADE EXTENSION MIRASOL RR 30,000.00 LANZONES RR Developer/Owner 30,000.00 be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, *** SENIA is the same as ZENIA RR 30,000.00 MORNING GLORY RR 30,000.00 LAUREL X - Institution, embassy, church and school of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall 30,000.00 request for LAWIN RR RR 30,000.00 LILAC MULLIEN Developer/Owner of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision RR 30,000.00 assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of shall request for assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the Technical Committee of NEPTUNE RR 30,000.00 LORO RR 30,000.00 Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). ORKIDIA RR 30,000.00 ORKIDIA EXT. RR 25,000.00 BARANGAY: RIZAL
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BARANGAY: RIZAL(continuation) BARANGAY: RIZAL(continuation) ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ CATION ZV./SQ. M. LOVEBIRD RR 30,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ LUNA RR 30,000.00 M. L. QUEZON RR 30,000.00 LOVEBIRD RR 30,000.00 MACOPA RR 30,000.00 LUNA RR 30,000.00 MAGNOLIA Floraville St. to Southsea St. RR 30,000.00 MALVAR RR 30,000.00 M. L. QUEZON RR 30,000.00 MANGGA RR 30,000.00 MANSANAS RR 30,000.00 MACOPA RR 30,000.00 MARCOS RR 30,000.00 MAGNOLIA RR 30,000.00 MARTINEZ Floraville St. to Southsea St. RR 30,000.00 MAYA EXTENSION RR 30,000.00 MALVAR RR 30,000.00 MAYA RR 30,000.00 MANGGA RR 30,000.00 M. H. DEL PILAR RR 30,000.00 MILFLORES RR 30,000.00 MANSANAS RR 30,000.00 MILKWEED RR 30,000.00 MARCOS RR 30,000.00 N. AQUINO RR 30,000.00 ORIOLE RR 30,000.00 MARTINEZ RR 30,000.00 OWL RR 30,000.00 P. HERRERA RR 30,000.00 MAYA EXTENSION RR 30,000.00 PABLO REAL (PAGURIA) *** RR 30,000.00 MAYA CIRCLE RR 30,000.00 PALOMA RR 30,000.00 PASCUA (PASCUAL) **** RR 30,000.00 M. H. DEL PILAR RR 30,000.00 PENGUIN RR 30,000.00 MILFLORES RR 30,000.00 PERFECTO RR 30,000.00 PETUNIA RR 30,000.00 MILKWEED RR 30,000.00 30,000.00 PIPIT RR N. AQUINO RR 30,000.00 PUNAY (PONY) ***** RR 30,000.00 PUGO RR 30,000.00 ORIOLE RR 30,000.00 QUAIL RR 30,000.00 QUIRINO RR 30,000.00 OWL RR 30,000.00 R. MAGSAYSAY RR 30,000.00 P. HERRERA RR 30,000.00 RDLOT360 RR 30,000.00 RDLOT366 RR 30,000.00 PABLO REAL (PAGURIA) *** RR 30,000.00 RICARTE RR 30,000.00 PALOMA CIRCLE RR 30,000.00 ROMA AMOR RR 30,000.00 ROSE RR 30,000.00 PASCUA (PASCUAL) **** RR 30,000.00 ROXAS RR 30,000.00 PENGUIN EXTENSION RR 30,000.00 SAMPAGUITA RR 30,000.00 SAN FRANCISCO RR 30,000.00 PERFECTO RR 30,000.00 SOUTH SEA RR 30,000.00 SPRING RR 30,000.00 PETUNIABEAUTY RR 30,000.00 SWEET ORANGE RR 30,000.00 30,000.00 PIPIT RR T. M. KALAW RR 30,000.00 TAGAK RR 30,000.00 PUNAY (PONY) ***** RR 30,000.00 TIFFANY RR 30,000.00 PUGO RR 30,000.00 TOLENTINO RR 30,000.00 UBAS RR 30,000.00 QUAIL RR 30,000.00 WATER BIRD RR 30,000.00 RISING CHINA PRICES. A vendor waits QUIRINOLILY RR 30,000.00 WATER RR 30,000.00 of retail inflation, percent in Nove WOODPECKER RRrose 2.3 30,000.00 R. MAGSAYSAY RR 30,000.00 December 9. AFPRR XYRIS 30,000.00 YABUT RR 30,000.00 RDLOT360 RR 30,000.00 YELLOW BIRD RR 30,000.00 RDLOT366 RR 30,000.00 371 RR 30,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 30,000.00 RICARTE RR 30,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 ROMA AMOR RR 30,000.00ALL CONDOMINIUMS******* CC RC ROSE RR 30,000.00PS ROXAS RR 30,000.00 * COL. RESMA is the same as COL. REGINA SAMPAGUITA EXTENSION RR 30,000.00 ** GOLD FINCH is the same as GOLD PIN SAN FRANCISCO RR 30,000.00 *** PABLO REAL is the same as PAGURIA RANKFURT—The SEA RR 30,000.00 Euro SOUTH **** PASCUA is the same as PASCUAL Bank on SPRING ***** PUNAY is the same as PONY BEAUTY RR Thursday 30,000.00 exten ****** ZV for PS is 70% of the ZV assigned to the condominium unit. bond-buying program to SWEET ORANGE RR 30,000.00 ******* All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums T. M.to KALAW RR Developer/Owner 30,000.00 a eurozone economy rattled by be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of 7th Revision, of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for TAGAK RR 30,000.00 uncertainties, but surprised ma assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of TIFFANY RR 30,000.00 Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). the pace of its asset purchases. BARANGAY: TOLENTINO SOUTH CEMBO RR 30,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ UBAS RR 30,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY The euro CLASSIFIretreated 7TH on REV. the inflation CATION ZV./SQ. M. WATER BIRD RR prospect of more cash 30,000.00 being Trump, ........................................................................................................................................ WATER LILY RR 30,000.00 Italian pumped into financial markets AGLIPAY RR 50,000.00 AGUINALDO RR for some time to It was Renzi p WOODPECKER RRcome. 50,000.00 30,000.00 CR in afternoon 75,000.00 to pred sitting around $1.06 XYRIS RR 30,000.00 BADAS RR 50,000.00 Asian trade, having with would b BURGOS RR dallied 50,000.00 YABUT RR 30,000.00 $1.08 earlier in the CAPINPIN RR week.50,000.00 March 2 COL SANTOS RR 50,000.00 YELLOW BIRD RR below-target 30,000.00 But Sluggish growth, ESCODA RR 50,000.00 371 RR 30,000.00 GABRIELA SILANG RR 50,000.00 GARCIA RR 50,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 30,000.00 GEN. DEL PILAR Pitogo Boundary to Gomez St. RR 60,000.00 ALL TOWNHOUSES RC 60,000.00 GEN. LUNA RR 50,000.00 GEN. MALVAR RR 60,000.00 ALL CONDOMINIUMS******* Luzon St. to Gomez St. CC GEN. RICARTE Pitogo Boundary to Post Proper Northside RR 60,000.00 RC GOMEZ RR 50,000.00 J.P. RIZAL RR 60,000.00 PS By Esteban Rojas JACINTO RR 50,000.00
ECB to s
F
Buses grind to
CR 75,000.00 KARINGAL RR 50,000.00 * COL. RESMA is the same as COL. REGINA CARACAS—AllRR William LAUREL 50,000.00 LUZON Faneite needed RR to keep 50,000.00 driving ** GOLD FINCH is the same as GOLD PIN MABINI Gen. Del Pilar St. to Gen. Malvar St. RR 50,000.00 his old bus in Caracas was a new MAGSAYSAY RR 50,000.00 *** PABLO REAL is the same as PAGURIA carburetor. Surely, in a city of QUEZON RR 50,000.00 QUIJADA RR 50,000.00 two million people, that couldn’t **** PASCUA is the same as PASCUAL QUIRINO 50,000.00 be hard to find? RR ROMULO RR 50,000.00 ZAMORA ***** PUNAY is the same as PONY But getting his on a RR hands 50,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR 50,000.00 spare took four months—par for ****** ZV for PS is 70% of the ZV assigned to the condominium unit. CR 60,000.00
the course in an economic crisis
BARANGAY: WEST REMBO ******* All condominiums were already identified, thus there are no condominiums that has seen one in two public ........................................................................................................................................ to be classified as “Other Condominiums” as of Revision, Developer/Owner buses in7th Venezuela grind a STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH to REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. halt. of condominium project built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for ........................................................................................................................................ Filling a bus’sRR tank with35,000.00 petrol A. BONIFACIO assignment of zonal values (ZV) from the members of the Technical Committee of A. BONIFACIO EXT. ** RR in oil-rich Venezuela is35,000.00 superReal Property Valuation (TCRPV). A. LUNA RR the parts 35,000.00 cheap. But getting to A. LUNA EXT. ** RR 35,000.00 BARANGAY: SOUTH CEMBO run it these daysRR is an ordeal. A. MABINI 35,000.00 A. RICARTE RR it meant 35,000.00 In Faneite’s case, four ........................................................................................................................................ AGULAN (AGUILAR) * RR 35,000.00 months without work for the STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. B. SERRANO RR 35,000.00 51-year-old father of four. BAYABAS RR 35,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. CR C5-ROAD JP Rizal Ext. to Kalayaan Ave. Rampant inflation has 50,000.00 driven X 50,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ up the price of tires, batteries and CRISOLOGO RR 35,000.00 AGLIPAY RR 50,000.00 carburetors. DAGOHOY RR 35,000.00 DALANDAN 35,000.00 AGUINALDO RRget hold 50,000.00 “We couldn’tRR of a E. AGUINALDO RR 35,000.00 spare. We had RR to spend four JACINTO CR 75,000.00 E. 35,000.00 months looking RR around,” 35,000.00 he told F. BALAGTAS BADAS RR 50,000.00 G. ARELLANO RR find one, 35,000.00 AFP. When he did “it BURGOS RR 50,000.00 G.L. JAENA RR 35,000.00 was super expensive.” G.L. JAENA EXT. ** RR 35,000.00 CAPINPIN RR leases 50,000.00 J. BURGOS RR 35,000.00 The bus’s owner the JP RIZAL EXT. RR 35,000.00 COL SANTOS RR 50,000.00 vehicle, a battered old blue 1987 Brgy. Cembo bdry to Brgy. East Rembo bdry. CR 50,000.00 ESCODA 50,000.00a model, to him RR and he earns X 50,000.00 KABUTE RR 35,000.00 GABRIELA SILANG RRon the number 50,000.00 commission based KAIMITO RR 35,000.00 of passengers. GARCIA RR 50,000.00 KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 35,000.00 Luckily for Faneite, owner CR 80,000.00 GEN. DEL PILAR Pitogo Boundary to Gomez St. RR the 60,000.00 LAPU-LAPU 35,000.00 paid the bill for RR the repair. Now GEN. LUNA RR 50,000.00 LARIOSA RR 35,000.00 Faneite is back at the wheel, M. CORPUZ RR 35,000.00 GEN. MALVAR Luzon St. to Gomez St. RR when 60,000.00 anxiously wondering the MALVAR RR 35,000.00 MANGGA RR 35,000.00 GEN. RICARTE Pitogo Boundary to Post Proper Northside RR 60,000.00 bus will break down again. MANSANAS RR 35,000.00 GOMEZ RR and minibus 50,000.00 Dozens of buses MATABUENA RR 35,000.00 MATATAG 35,000.00 style public RR vehicles 60,000.00 stand J.P. RIZAL RR P. BANEZ RR rusting 35,000.00 abandoned and in JACINTO RR 50,000.00 P. GOMEZ RR 35,000.00 wastelands. PANDAY PIRA RR 35,000.00 CR 75,000.00 PAPAYA “Fifty percentRRof the 35,000.00 fleet is KARINGAL RR 50,000.00 PILI AVENUE RR 35,000.00 out of action across the whole PIO DEL PILAR RR 35,000.00 LAUREL RR 50,000.00 country,” or RR about 100,000 SIR BADEN POWELL 35,000.00 SUHA 35,000.00 LUZON RR vehicles, said RR Erick 50,000.00 Zuleta, T. ALONZO RR 35,000.00 president of the National MABINI Gen. Del Pilar St. to Gen. Malvar St. RR 50,000.00 TEACHER’S CMPD RR 35,000.00 Transport Federation. UPPER PLAZA EXT. RR 35,000.00 MAGSAYSAY RR 50,000.00 UPPER PLAZA ROAD.3 RR 35,000.00 “And the situation is getting QUEZON RR 50,000.00 UPPER PLAZA RR 35,000.00 worse.” ALL OTHERS STREETS RR 35,000.00 QUIJADA RR 50,000.00
This fil 2016. A spare p
The fixed e help V goods, oil. But go rou Driv the bl cost fiv The meanw equiva at the o That Oil and gas Venezu * AGULAN is the same as AGUILAR QUIRINO 50,000.00 Falling prices RR for its crucial oil situatio ** Added in 7th revision ROMULO 50,000.00 exports have leftRR Venezuela short it look X - Institution, embassy, church and school ZAMORA RR supplies. 50,000.00 of dollars to import Driv
ALL OTHER STREETS
RR CR
50,000.00 60,000.00
CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK
CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Manila
Standard
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI Business
4
REVISED ZONAL VALUATION – RDO NO. 50 – SOUTH MAKATI
4
B3
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10,TODAY 2016 extrastory2000@gmail.com MONDAY, December 12, 2016 MONDAY, December 12, 2016
BARANGAY: POST POST PROPER PROPER SOUTHSIDE SOUTHSIDE (continuation) (continuation) BARANGAY: POST POST PROPER PROPER SOUTHSIDE SOUTHSIDE (continuation) (continuation) BARANGAY: POST POST PROPER PROPER NORTHSIDE NORTHSIDE BARANGAY: BARANGAY: BARANGAY: ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI7TH REV. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. CATION ZV./SQ. M. ZONE 6 - WILDCAT * HERMITAGE RR 100,000.00 JAIL SIDE RR 100,000.00 APAG RR 100,000.00 HIGHLAND RR 100,000.00 J.P. RIZAL RR 100,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................................ APITONG RR 100,000.00 HILLSIDE RR 100,000.00 Lawton Ave. to Brgy. West Rembo Bdry. CR 120,000.00 ZONE 6 - WILDCAT * HERMITAGE RR than 100,000.00 economists CRUDE oil rose a second day, months more JAIL SIDE RR 100,000.00 ATIS RR 100,000.00 HORNET RR 100,000.00 X 120,000.00 The100,000.00 attention now breaching $51 a barrel in New had expected. BARTOLOME ** RR 100,000.00 HPA RD. RR LAWTON AVE. Kalayaan Ave. to JP Rizal St. RR 100,000.00 APAG RR 100,000.00 HIGHLAND RR 100,000.00 J.P. RIZAL RR 100,000.00 BAKAWAN RR 100,000.00 ILANG ILANG 100,000.00 Reserve, York before a meeting between shifts to RRthe Federal CR 120,000.00 APITONG RR 100,000.00 HILLSIDE RR all 100,000.00 100,000.00 ** RR 100,000.00 KARANGALAN RR Lawton Ave. CR 120,000.00 CHALLENGER KALAYAAN AVE. Lawton Ave.totoBrgy. Brgy.West EastRembo RemboBdry. Bdry. RR 100,000.00 but convinced Opec and other major producers with traders CHICOS ** RR 100,000.00 LATOUR RR end the 100,000.00 CR 120,000.00 year with an on output cuts. Asian stocks the US will ATIS RR 100,000.00 HORNET RR 100,000.00 X 120,000.00 DADO RR 100,000.00 LAWIN fl ST. RR hike.100,000.00 TEACHERS COMPOUND RR 100,000.00 uctuated at the end of their interest-rate RR 100,000.00 LAWTON AVE. RR 100,000.00 BARTOLOME ** RR 100,000.00 ADDITIONAL STREETS PER URBAN HPA RD.best RR 100,000.00 LAWTON AVE. Kalayaan Ave. to JP Rizal St. RR 100,000.00 DURIAN “The immediate focus for the week since September, FERN ** RR 100,000.00 LOCUST ST. RR 100,000.00 DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT LISTINGS: market is the discussions between while bonds and the Korean won BAKAWAN RR 100,000.00 ILANG ILANG ARELLANO RR 100,000.00 CR 120,000.00 GUAVA RR 100,000.00 LT. GEN. ALFONSO RR 100,000.00 10TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 Opec and non-Opec members declined. ** RR 100,000.00 LYON RR 100,000.00 11TH AVENUE 100,000.00 CHALLENGER ** RR 100,000.00 KARANGALAN RR 100,000.00 KALAYAAN AVE. Lawton Ave. to Brgy. East Rembo Bdry. RR RR 100,000.00 MABINI said Jonathan TIAGA ** RR 100,000.00 MADER US crude advanced to $51.06 this weekend,” RR 100,000.00 14TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 Barratt, chief investment officer a barrel before talks Saturday in CHICOS ** RR 100,000.00 LATOUR RR 100,000.00 ZONE 7 G2 VILLAGE MAPLE RD. RR 100,000.00 CR 120,000.00 1ST AVENUE RR 100,000.00 Alliance100,000.00 Securities in Vienna among the Organization at Ayers RR AGUILA ** RR 100,000.00 MARGAUX 23RD ST. RR 100,000.00 DADO RR 100,000.00 LAWIN of ST.Petroleum Exporting Countries Sydney. RR RR 100,000.00 TEACHERS COMPOUND RR 100,000.00 DOVE RR 100,000.00 MAUTON 100,000.00 “The sweet spot for 24TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 EAGLE RR 100,000.00 MC ANDREW RD. RR 100,000.00 DURIAN RR 100,000.00 LAWTON AVE.14 other nations. The Asia- prices isRRaround100,000.00 $55 a barrel. and 10TH RR 100,000.00 ADDITIONALST. STREETS PER URBAN HERON RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY DR. 100,000.00 11TH ST. RR 100,000.00 and the market c equity benchmark swung AnythingRR FERN ** RR 100,000.00 LOCUSTPacifi ST.PARK RRhigher 100,000.00 100,000.00 KINGFISHER RR 100,000.00 DEVELOPMENT MCKINLEY RD. RR 24TH ST.DEPARTMENT LISTINGS: RR 100,000.00 supply.” as shares in Sydney and Tokyo will see more LAWIN RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY RD. RR 25TH ST. RR 100,000.00 GUAVA RR 100,000.00 LT. GEN. ALFONSO ARELLANO RR data100,000.00 100,000.00 The Asian slate is full for climbed, while those in South 10TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 MARTINEZ RR 100,000.00 MGEN. M. MADALEM RR 100,000.00 26TH ST. RR 100,000.00 Friday, with China to update on Korea slipped. Bonds from MABINI ** RR 100,000.00 LYON RR 100,000.00 MAYA RR 100,000.00 N RD. RR 100,000.00 11TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 27TH ST. RR 100,000.00 consumer and producer prices as Australia to Japan fell after the ORIOLE RR 100,000.00 NAPLES DR. RR 100,000.00 28TH ST. RR 100,000.00 TIAGA ** RR 100,000.00 MADER RR 100,000.00 well as foreign-direct investment. European Central Bank pledged 14TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 OWL RR 100,000.00 NEW CASTLE RR 100,000.00 29TH ST. RR 100,000.00 West RR Intermediate to bond buying, while at the PIGEON RR 100,000.00 OLD LAWTON ZONE 7 - G2 VILLAGE MAPLE RD.cut AVE. RRTexas 100,000.00 100,000.00 2ND AVENUE RR 100,000.00 1ST AVENUE RR 100,000.00 WOODPECKER RR 100,000.00 ORANGE GROVE DR. RR 100,000.00 crude futures climbed, extending same time extending quantitative 30TH ST. RR 100,000.00 AGUILA8 -**UPPERWEST VILLAGE RR 100,000.00 MARGAUX RR2.2 percent 100,000.00 PARK AVENUE RR 100,000.00 23RD ST. ST. RR 100,000.00 ZONE bounce and easing until the end of 2017. The Thursday’s 31ST RR 100,000.00 CAMIA RR 100,000.00 PARKVIEW 100,000.00 oil’s retreat this week to wonRD. trimmed its biggest weekly reducing RR DOVE RR 100,000.00 MAUTON RR 100,000.00 32ND ST. RR 100,000.00 24TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 CARNATION RR 100,000.00 PEBBLEWOOD RR Russia 100,000.00 will fulfill its advance in two months as the 1.2 percent. 34TH ST. RR 100,000.00 EAGLE RR 100,000.00 MC ANDREW RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 PENGUIN ST. RD. 100,000.00 10TH ST. ST. RR 100,000.00 DAHLIA 36TH RR 100,000.00 pledge toRR cut output by as much dollar gained ground. DAISY RR 100,000.00 PINECREST RR 100,000.00 38TH DRIVE N. RR 100,000.00 HERON RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY DR. RR 100,000.00 as 300,000 barrels a day if Opec Opec’s shock deal aimed at 11TH ST. RR 100,000.00 GUMAMELA RR 100,000.00 PINETREE RD. RR 100,000.00 38TH ST. (UNIVERSITY PARKWAY) RR 100,000.00 follows through on its commitment stabilizing oil prices will return LOTUS RR 100,000.00 PRINCETON RR 100,000.00 KINGFISHER RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY PARK RD. RR 100,000.00 39TH RR 100,000.00 24TH ST. ST. RR 100,000.00 MAGNOLIA according to RR 100,000.00 R. PAPAtoST. focus this weekend, with to curb production, RR 100,000.00 3RD AVENUE RR 100,000.00 LAWIN RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY RD. RR 100,000.00 a government offi cial familiar the meeting potentially giving RICHMORE RR 100,000.00 ORCHID RR 100,000.00 25TH ST. ST. RR 100,000.00 40TH RR 100,000.00 with the matter. Representatives investors clues as to whether RIZAL DRIVE RR 100,000.00 SANTAN RR 100,000.00 MARTINEZ RR 100,000.00 MGEN. M. MADALEM RR 100,000.00 4TH RR 100,000.00 26THAVENUE ST. RR 100,000.00 SUNFLOWER ROSALthe ST. agreement will be fulfilled. of countries RR 100,000.00Mexico RR 100,000.00 including 5TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 MAYA RR 100,000.00 N RD. WhileST. RRwill meet 100,000.00 SAMPAGUITA RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 with Opec the ECB’s mixed message and Oman 27THAVENUE ST. RR 100,000.00 WALING-WALING 6TH RR 100,000.00 SARACEN RR 100,000.00capital. ZONE 9 - 16TH ISU VALLAGE members in the Austrian initially wrong-footed the 7TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 ORIOLE RR 100,000.00 NAPLES DR. RR 100,000.00 28TH ST. RR 100,000.00 JUAN LUNA ** SARACEN ST. 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 immediate delivery fell market, it was eventually seen Gold for RR 8TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 SAVOY RR 100,000.00 PADRE ZAMORA ** RR 100,000.00 OWL RR 100,000.00 NEW CASTLE RR 100,000.00 9TH AVENUE 100,000.00 for a second session, declining 0.3 as a signal to buy equities with CHINA PRICES. A vendor waits forRR clients on a market AGUINALDO in Beijing on December 9, 2016. The consumer price index, a key gauge 29THRISING ST. RR 100,000.00 SERVICE RD. RR 100,000.00 ** RR 100,000.00 BACK RR slightly 100,000.00 $1,167.91 an ounce. the extension of the current percent toRR of ALLEY retail inflation, rose 2.3 percent in November, beating expectations of**2.2 percent, according to figures released by Beijing on SOMERSET PIGEON RR 100,000.00 OLD LAWTON AVE. RR 100,000.00 100,000.00 TANDANG SORA RR 100,000.00 2NDDecember AVENUEAVENUE RR 100,000.00 BONIFACIO RR 100,000.00 Bloomberg asset purchase program by three 9. AFP ST. JULIEN RR 100,000.00 PADRE FAURA ** RR 100,000.00 WOODPECKER RR 100,000.00 ORANGE GROVE DR. RR 100,000.00 BURGOS CIRCLE RR 100,000.00 30TH ST. RR 100,000.00 P. ST. TROPEZ RR 100,000.00 BURGOS ** RR 100,000.00 C-5 ROAD (CARLOS P. GARCIA AVE.) RR 100,000.00 ZONEKALAW 8 - UPPERWEST VILLAGE PARK AVENUE RR 100,000.00 TIGER MOUSE ST. RR 100,000.00 ** RR 100,000.00 31ST ST. HILL ST. RR 100,000.00 T.M. CAVALRY RR 100,000.00 TURIN RR 100,000.00 M.H. DEL PILAR ** RR 100,000.00 CAMIA ** RR 100,000.00 PARKVIEW RD. RR 100,000.00 FEDERACION DRIVE RR 100,000.00 UPPER MCKINLEY RD. RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 32ND ST. RR 100,000.00 JACINTO FORBES TOWN ROAD RR 100,000.00 VALENTINE RR 100,000.00 MABINI ** RR 100,000.00 CARNATION RR 100,000.00 PEBBLEWOOD RR 100,000.00 J.P. RR 100,000.00 34THRIZAL ST. EXTENSION RR 100,000.00 ALL VENEZIA DR. RR 100,000.00 LOTS RR 100,000.00 JUSTICIA DRIVE RR 100,000.00 DAHLIA RR 100,000.00 PENGUIN ST. RR 100,000.00 VIIPER RR 100,000.00 36TH ST. AVENUE RR 100,000.00 ZONE 10 - ISG VILLAG KALAYAAN RR 100,000.00 WOODLAND RR 100,000.00 PALKATA ** RR 100,000.00 DAISY RR 100,000.00 PINECREST RR 100,000.00 KATIPUNAN RR 100,000.00 38TH DRIVE CIRCLE N. RR 100,000.00 IPIL IPIL ** WOODPECKER ST. RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 LANE A RR 100,000.00 GUMAMELA RR 100,000.00 PINETREE RD. RR 100,000.00 WOODRIDGE RR 100,000.00 ** RR 100,000.00 38TH ST.B(UNIVERSITY PARKWAY) RR 100,000.00 TALISAY LANE RR 100,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS RR to use 100,000.00 BALETE ** RR 100,000.00 observers off-guard by saying hawkish and dovish members But economist Carsten Brzeski willingness” all available LOTUS RR 100,000.00 PRINCETON RR 100,000.00 LANE C RR 100,000.00 CR 120,000.00 MOLAVE ** RR 100,000.00 39TH ST. RR 100,000.00 it would reduce its bondof the Governing Council,” said of ING-Diba bank said: “Today’s tools to drive up infl ation. LANE D RR 100,000.00 DAPDAP ** RR 100,000.00 MAGNOLIA RR 100,000.00of IHS ST. BONIFACIO, RR *R. PAPA ARANDIA, and watchers TULIAO of100,000.00 ZONE warned 6 buying from 80 billion to 60 analyst Howard Archer decisions looked, EUCALIPTUS, walked andMACOPA ECB have LANE O RR 100,000.00 3RD AVENUE RR 100,000.00 NARRA ** RR 100,000.00 are included in the 6th Revision but now deleted by the Office of the Barangay billion euros ($65 billion) a Global Insight. quacked like tapering.” that the fragile recovery in the LANE P RR 100,000.00 RICHMORE RR 100,000.00 ORCHID RR 100,000.00 Chairman ALL LOTS RR 100,000.00 40TH ST. RR 100,000.00 LANE Q RR 100,000.00 month from April, as well as Some observers have warned Markets might not accept eurozone could be undermined ZONE 11 RIZAL DRIVE RR 100,000.00 SANTAN RR 100,000.00 ** Added in 7th revision LANE R RR 100,000.00 prolonging the program to that any RRsign the bank was Draghi’s protestations and “give by any sign central bank support 4TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 DALANGHITA ** 100,000.00 LANE S RR 100,000.00 *** JADE, of ZONE are included thewane. 6th Revision but now ROSAL RR 100,000.00 SUNFLOWER RR 100,000.00 down December 2017. “tapering”—or winding theST.OPAL ECBanditsRUBY very own 15taper is oninthe BAYABAS ** RR 100,000.00 deleted by the Office of the Barangay Chairman due to MEGAWORLD Project 5TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 ATIS ** Investors responded well to the purchases—could MABOLO ST. RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 spook bond tantrum,” he warned, referring Euro area infl ation SAMPAGUITA ST. RR 100,000.00 hit a WALING-WALING RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY PARKWAY RR 100,000.00 Developer/Owner condominium projecttwo-and-a-half-year and townhouse in all Barangays CHICO ** RR 100,000.00 move. European stock markets markets, pushing up the cost of Note: to the rise in US of treasury yields high in 6TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for assignment of zonal values MCKINLEY ROAD RR 100,000.00 GUYABANO ** ISU RR 100,000.00 SARACEN RR 100,000.00 ZONErose 9 - 16TH VALLAGE on Draghi’s signal that the fi nancing in the single currency when the Federal Reserve moved November at 0.6 percent, but (ZVG) from the Technical Committee of Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). MORNING GLORY ST RR 100,000.00 7TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 MACOPA ** RR 100,000.00 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: euro area’s fragile economy could area. to end its own QE program in remains far short of the central The euro retreated on the infl ation, the election of Donald SARACEN ST. RR 100,000.00 JUAN LUNA ** RR 100,000.00 NARRA EXTENSION RR 100,000.00 ** 8THprospect AVENUE of more cash being Trump, andRR RRthe resignation 100,000.00 ofDURIAN count on the bank’s continued “There RR is no100,000.00 question of 2013. bank’s target of just below 2.0 PILI AVENUE 100,000.00 DUHAT ** RR 100,000.00 SAVOY The International Monetary percent. RR 100,000.00 PADRE ZAMORA ** RR 100,000.00 Mario support, with bonds also fi rming. tapering,” ECB president pumped into fi nancial markets Italian Prime Minister Matteo RIZAL DRIVE RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 9TH AVENUE RR 100,000.00 MANGGA ** CERTAIN GUIDELINES IN THE IMPLEMENTATION “By**** extending its asset Draghi told a FundRD.welcomed ECB’s Economic TRIANGLE DRIVE RR 100,000.00 for some time to come. It was Renzi prompted most observersLANSONES RRFORactivity 100,000.00in the AGUINALDO RR journalists 100,000.00 at SERVICE RR 100,000.00 OF ZONALthe VALUE OF latest REAL PROPERTIES BACK ALLEYaround RR 100,000.00 ALL OTHER STREETS 100,000.00 purchases for another nine Frankfurt RR press conference. stimulus efforts,RDO withNO. spokesman eurozone could suffer if Trump sitting $1.06 in afternoon to predict RR quantitative easingDALANDAN ** 100,000.00 50 SOUTH MAKATI SOMERSET RR 100,000.00 TANDANG SORA RR 100,000.00 CR 120,000.00 months but** at a reduced monthly “That’s RR not been100,000.00 discussed, it’s Gerry Rice saying in Washington implements protectionist Asian trade, having dallied with would be extended beyond itsSANTOL ** BONIFACIO AVENUE RR 100,000.00 X - Institution, embassy, church and school MABOLO ** RR 100,000.00 rate... the ECB is seemingly not even been on the table,” he that the IMF was encouraged promises in the US made on the ST. JULIEN RR 100,000.00 PADRE FAURA ** RR 100,000.00 $1.08 earlier in the week. March 2017 expiry date. 1. NO ZONAL VALUE HAS BEEN PRESCRIBED FOR A PARTICULAR BURGOS CIRCLE 100,000.00 ** 100,000.00 compromising between the more added. RR by the bank’s “continued campaign trail. AFP BARANGAY: POST PROPER SOUTHSIDE Sluggish growth, below-target But theRR bank caughtPOMELO ST. TROPEZ RR 100,000.00 P. BURGOS RR 100,000.00 CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY. CHEZZA ** ** RR 100,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ C-5 ROAD (CARLOS P. GARCIA AVE.) RR 100,000.00 WHERE FOR A LOTS RR 100,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFI- 7TH REV. TIGER MOUSEINST.THE APPROVED SCHEDULE OF ZONAL RR VALUES 100,000.00 T.M. ALL KALAW ** RR 100,000.00 PARTICULAR BARANGAY ZONE 12 - SSU / ASCOM ACOMPOUND, (PHIL.ARMY) CAVALRY HILL ST. RR 100,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. TURIN RR 100,000.00 M.H.LOTS DEL PILAR ** RR 100,000.00 ALL RR 100,000.00 ........................................................................................................................................ A. NO ZONAL VALUE HAS BEEN PRESCRIBED FOR A PARTICULAR FEDERACION DRIVE RR 100,000.00 ZONE 13 - SOUTHERN POLICE DISTRICT COMMAND (SPDC) ZONE 1 - MINIPARK VILLAGE CLASSIFICATION IN A PARTICULAR STREET/SUBDIVISION IN UPPER MCKINLEY RD. RR 100,000.00 JACINTO ** RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 ALL LOTSTOWN ROAD RR 100,000.00 A BARANGAY, THE ZONAL VALUE PRESCRIBED FOR THE FORBES RR 100,000.00 ALL LOTS ZONE VALENTINE RR LOCATED 100,000.00 MABINI14**- BONIFACIO NAVAL STATION RR 100,000.00 ZONE 2 - PALAR SAME CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY IN J.P. RIZAL EXTENSION RR 100,000.00 ALMOND RR 100,000.00 ABRAMS RR 100,000.00 THE OTHER STREET/SUBDIVISION WITHIN THE SAME VENEZIA DR. RR 100,000.00 ALL LOTS RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 BULUSAN RR 100,000.00 BARANGAY OF SIMILAR CONDITIONS SHALL BE USED; AND JUSTICIA DRIVE RR 100,000.00 AVOCADO DAHLIA RR 100,000.00 ISAROG RR 100,000.00 VIIPER RR 100,000.00 ZONE 10 - ISG VILLAG B. NO ZONAL VALUE HAS BEEN PRESCRIBED FOR A RR 100,000.00 KALAYAAN AVENUE RR 100,000.00 EVERLASTING KANLAON RR 100,000.00 CARACAS—All William PARTICULAR CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY IN WOODLAND RR 100,000.00 PALKATA ** RR 100,000.00 GUIJO RR 100,000.00 MAKILING RR 100,000.00 FaneiteCIRCLE needed to keep driving ONE BARANGAY, THE ZONAL VALUE PRESCRIBED FOR KATIPUNAN RR 100,000.00 ILANG-ILANG RR 100,000.00 MARSHALL RR 100,000.00 WOODPECKER ST. CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY RR 100,000.00 IPIL IPIL ** RR 100,000.00 THE SAME LOCATED his old bus in Caracas was a new JASMINE RR 100,000.00 MAYON RR 100,000.00 LANE A RR 100,000.00 IN AN ADJACENT BARANGAY OF SIMILAR CONDITIONS SHALL KARANGALAN RR 100,000.00 Surely, in a city of WOODRIDGE RR 100,000.00 TALISAY ** RR 100,000.00 MT. carburetor. APO RR 100,000.00 BE USED. RR 100,000.00 LANE B million people, that couldn’t RR 100,000.00 MACOPA two PERSHING RR 100,000.00 ALL PREDOMINANT OTHER STREETS USE OF PROPERTY. SHANGHAI, RR 100,000.00 BALETE ** RR 100,000.00 2. China―China ROSAL RR 100,000.00 PINATUBO RR 100,000.00 beChard to find? LANE RR 100,000.00 SAMPGUITA RR 100,000.00 is to halve the120,000.00 cashUSE, machine a.) ALL REAL PROPERTIES REGARDLESS OF ACTUAL CR MOLAVE ** RR 100,000.00 SCORPION ** RR 100,000.00 But getting his hands on a RR 100,000.00 limit forTHE certain LOCATED IN A STREET/BARANGAY/ZONE, USEcardholders OF LANE D RR 100,000.00 WALING-WALING TAAL RR 100,000.00 DAPDAP ** JUSMAG AREA RR 100,000.00 spare took four months—par for ZONE 15 - FORMERLY WHICH ARE PREDOMINANTLY COMMERCIAL SHALL visiting the gambling enclave VULCAN RR 100,000.00 * ARANDIA, BONIFACIO, EUCALIPTUS, MACOPA and TULIAO of ZONEBE 6 LANE RR 100,000.00 NARRA (affected by MEGAWORLD PROJECT) *** theO3 -course CLASSIFIED AS “COMMERCIAL” of FOR PURPOSES OF ZONE PALAR in an economic crisis Macau, inof its latest effort to ** RR 100,000.00 are included in the 6th Revision but now deleted by the Office the Barangay RR ZONAL VALUATION. that ABBOT RR 100,000.00 curb massive capital outflows LANE P has seen one in two public RR 100,000.00 JADE Chairman OPALALL LOTS RR RR 100,000.00 ARCHER RR 100,000.00 buses in Venezuela grind to a b.) THE PREDOMINANT USE OF OTHER CLASSIFICATION OF yuan, caused by the falling RR LANE Q RR 100,000.00 RUBY BERRET RR 100,000.00 PROPERTIES LOCATED IN A STREET/BARANGAY/ZONE, ZONE1611- CONSULAR AREA Hong Kong media reported halt. ZONE ** AddedREGARDLESS in 7th revision OF ACTUAL USE SHALL CENTURION RR 100,000.00 BE CONSIDERED FOR LANE RFilling a bus’s tank with petrol RR 100,000.00 601 Friday. RR 100,000.00 DALANGHITA ** RR 100,000.00 CHIEFTAIN RR 100,000.00 PURPOSES OF ZONAL VALUATION. From punters 602 RR 100,000.00 in oil-rich Venezuela is superLANE S RR 100,000.00 BAYABAS ** CHURCHILL RR 100,000.00 *** JADE, OPAL and RUBY of ZONE 15 are included in the 6thSaturday, Revision butUnionPay now RR 100,000.00 3. ZONAL VALUES OF CONDOMINIUM UNIT/TOWNHOUSE: using the 603 RR 100,000.00 cheap. ABut CRUZADER & B getting the parts to RR 100,000.00 deleted by the Office of the Barangay Chairman due to MEGAWORLD Projecthalf of MABOLO ST. RR 100,000.00 604 RR 100,000.00 system―around IF THE TITLE OF A PARTICULAR CONDOMINIUM UNIT/TOWNHOUE FOXrun it these days is an ordeal. RR 100,000.00 ATIS ** RR 100,000.00 605 RR 100,000.00 IS those visiting the city from GARDEN LLOYD RR 100,000.00 MCKINLEY PARKWAYcase, it meant four RR 100,000.00 606 In Faneite’s Note: Developer/Owner of condominium project and townhouse in all Barangays RR 100,000.00 CHICO ** RR 100,000.00 mainland―will only be HARRY HOPPING RR 100,000.00 a). A CONDOMINIUM CERTIFICATE OFthe TITLE (CCT), THE ZONAL months without work for the 607 RR 100,000.00 built after the effectivity of this revision shall request for assignment zonal values MCKINLEY ROAD RR 100,000.00 able to getofSHALLL 5,000 patacas HORNET RR 100,000.00 VALUE OF THE LAND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS BE GUYABANO ** RR 100,000.00 608 RR 100,000.00 51-year-old father of four. (ZVG) from the Technical Committee of Real Property Valuation (TCRPV). SCORPION RR 100,000.00 TREATED AS ONE: OR (around $600) from ATMs MORNING GLORY ST RR 100,000.00 609 RR 100,000.00 MACOPA ** RR 100,000.00 Rampant inflation has driven SEA LION RR 100,000.00 every day, the South b). A TRANSFER CERTIFICATE OF TITLE (TCT), THE LAND AND :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: China RR 100,000.00 NARRA EXTENSION RR 100,000.00 610 STRIKER RR 100,000.00 up the price of tires, batteries and Post reported. IMPROVEMENT SHALL BE GIVEN Morning SEPARATE VALUES i.e. DURIAN ** RR 100,000.00 611 RR 100,000.00 SWINGFIRE RR 100,000.00 ZONAL VALUE/GROSS SELLING PRICE/FAIR MARKET VALUEstocks carburetors. The news sent casino 612 RR 100,000.00 PILI AVENUE RR 100,000.00 DUHAT ** RR 100,000.00 VALENTINE RR 100,000.00 PER LATEST TAX DECLARATION plunging, WHICHEVER withIS HIGHER Sands China 613 RR 100,000.00 “We couldn’t get hold of a ZONE 4 DRIVE - PALAR RIZAL RR 100,000.00 AND, IN THE ABSENCE OF ZONALdown VALUATION, PROPERTY 614 RR 100,000.00 MANGGA ** RR 100,000.00 4.93 percent in Hong spare. We had to spend four BARON RR 100,000.00 SHALL BE VALUED PURSUANT TO RAMO RR 100,000.00 Kong,2-91.Wynn Macau 5.82 TRIANGLE RR 100,000.00 615 monthsDRIVE looking around,” he told BERRET RR 100,000.00 LANSONES ** RR 100,000.00 616 RR 100,000.00 THE GROUND FLOOR OF THE RESIDENTIAL CONDOMINIUM percent lower and Galaxy CENTUAR RR 100,000.00 he did find one, “it ALLAFP. OTHERWhen STREETS RR 100,000.00 617 RR 100,000.00 SHALL BE CLASSIFIED AS COMMERCIAL ANDalso TWENTY DALANDAN ** RR 100,000.00 Entertainment losing 4.25 CHALLENGER RR 100,000.00 was super expensive.” 619 RR 100,000.00 PERCENT (20%) OF THE ESTABLISHED VALUE SHALL BE percent by the midday break. CR 120,000.00 COMET RR 100,000.00 SANTOL RR 100,000.00 ZONE 17 ** - MANILA TRANMITTER STATION The bus’s owner leases the ADDED THERETO. AFP was unable to confirm CRUISER RR 100,000.00 ALL LOTS RR 100,000.00 X - Institution, church school vehicle, embassy, a battered oldand blue 1987 MABOLO ** RR 100,000.00 4. AREAS FOR PRIORITY DEVELOPMENT (APD). FIREFLY RR 100,000.00 the report and the Monetary ZONE 18 - HEADQUARTERS PHILIPPINE ARMY FOXmodel, to him and he earns a RR 100,000.00 THESE ARE AREAS DECLARED AS SUCH BYof EXISTING Authority Macao did BAYANI RR 100,000.00 POMELOROAD ** RR 100,000.00 BARANGAY: POSTbased PROPER HORNET RR 100,000.00 commission onSOUTHSIDE the number STATUTES AND PERTINENT EXECUTIVE (REVENUE notISSUANCES respond to requests for Lawton Ave. to Libingan ng mga Bayani CR 120,000.00 This file photo on OctoberADDITIONAL 13, 2016 in the Catia neighborhood in Caracas on October 6, CHEZZA ** shows abandoned buses in a public busesRRparking100,000.00 INFANTRY RR taken 100,000.00 REGULATIONS NO. 17-2001). ........................................................................................................................................ of passengers. comment. STREETS PER URBAN DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT LISTINGS: 2016. According with Erick Zuleta, president of the National Transport Federation, more than 100.000 buses are out of service due to the lack of MADER RR 100,000.00 DR. RR 100,000.00 SECOND SALE OF LOT IDENTIFIED AS LOCATED IN THEInternational APD SHALL said UnionPay Luckily for Faneite, the owner spare parts. ALL LOTS RR 100,000.00 STREET/SUBDIVISION VICINITY CLASSIFIREV. 21st MATILDA RR 100,000.00 AFP 7TH 26TH ST. RR 100,000.00 NO LONGER BE VALUED AS AN APD AND BE TREATED AS that in SHALL a statement to AFP paid the bill for the repair. Now SWINGFIRE RR 100,000.00 ZONEAVE. 12 - SSU / ASCOM ACOMPOUND, (PHIL.ARMY) 5TH RR 100,000.00 CATION ZV./SQ. M. AN ORDINARY REAL PROPERTY. its overseas cash withdrawal Faneite is back at the wheel, TODPOLE RR 100,000.00 Ginette Arellano, 42, sits on The government’s special low Caracas, Faneite earns about broken-down ACACIA RR buses. 5. ZONAL VALUE OR FMV ESTABLISHED IN THE“remain SCHEDULE ALL LOTSDR. RRfor the 100,000.00 100,000.00 policies the OF same”–........................................................................................................................................ VICKER RR 100,000.00 anxiously wondering when the fixed exchange the bus OF with her son for up to rate is meant ARANAI to 5,000 bolivars a day. WaitingRR bus 100,000.00 VALUES ASSESSORS. 10,000 yuan per day with WHIPPER RR 100,000.00 bus will break down again. AVIGNON RR 100,000.00 ZONE 13 SOUTHERN POLICE DISTRICT COMMAND (SPDC) nine hours to get to Caracas from help Venezuelans afford essential That gives him nearly eight Used to queuing for rations of THE ZONE 1 - MINIPARK VILLAGE an annual of IN 100,000 ZONAL VALUES ESTABLISHED HEREIN SHALLcap APPLY ZONE 5 - PALAR BAYANI RD. RR 100,000.00 Dozens of buses and minibus- goods, such her hometown of Barquisimeto, as tires and engine dollars of spending power at the food and medicine, Venezuelans ALL LOTS RR 100,000.00 COMPUTING ALL INTERNAL REVENUE (i.e. CAPITAL added ALLIGATOR RR 100,000.00 yuanTAXES ($14,500)―but ALLstyle LOTS public vehicles stand RR 100,000.00 BLUE MARLIN RR 100,000.00 about 350 kilometers WITHHILDING, (217 miles) ESTATE, oil. fixed exchange rate. also formRR long lines to catch one GAINS, CREDITABLE DONOR’S AND AMPARO TIGER RR 100,000.00 it complies with regulations BLUEBERRY ST. 100,000.00 ZONEoffi 14 -cial BONIFACIO NAVAL STATION ZONE 2 - PALAR and rusting in abandoned STAMP TAXES) DUE ONand SALES, EXCHANGES, BOBCAT 100,000.00 away. But thereRRjust aren’t enough BLUEBOZ to But numbers of DOCUMENTARY laws issued by OR relevant ST.it is worth little more than of the dwindling RR 100,000.00 OTHER DISPOSITIONS OF REAL PROVIDED, THAT CENTUAR 100,000.00 ALMOND RR 100,000.00 wastelands. AVE. on the black market, buses. RR 100,000.00 On top of that, public busesPROPERTY, go round. RR one dollar authorities. ABRAMS RR 100,000.00 BONIFACIO THE SAME IS HIGHER THAN (1) THE FAIR MARKET VALUE AS CHALLENGER RR 100,000.00 C-5 ROADwhere (CARLOS P/ Venezuelans GARCIA AVE.) 100,000.00 “Fifty percent of the fleet is The move, if it happens, are preyIN to THE violence in one of the Drivers have to 100,000.00 buy spares on are forced to Victor RR Rojas, 25, crosses the SHOWN AVOCADO RR 100,000.00 SCHEDULE OF VALUES OF THE PROVINCIAL BULUSAN RR 100,000.00 EAGLE RR CAMPUS AVE. RR 100,000.00 out of action across the whole appears to be the latest attempt world’s most dangerous cities. the black market, where they buy much of what they need to city from west to east to get to AND CITY ASSESSRS (i.e. LATEST TAX DECLARATION) AND EASTWIND RR 100,000.00 CHAMPAGNE RR 100,000.00 DAHLIA RR 100,000.00 bySHOWN Chinese authorities to ISAROG RR 100,000.00 country,” or about 100,000 cost five times official price. live. his job at a cinema. Driver Faneite says he has (2) THE GROSS SELLING PRICE AS IN THE DULY ELEPHANT RR the 100,000.00 COMMANSO ST RR 100,000.00 stem a growing tide of capital EVERLASTING RR 100,000.00 vehicles, said Erick Zuleta, NOTARIZED DOCUMENT OF SALE OR EXCHANGE AT THE TIME OF GRASSHOPPER RR The price a bus ticket, If Faneite “You waste a100,000.00 lot of time been the victim of three armed KANLAON RR of 100,000.00 100,000.00 COMMANDO RD.CONSULAR RD. wants to buy lunch, it RR flowing out of China as locals OR EXCHANGE. GRILLE 100,000.00 president of the National meanwhile,RRrecently COUNTRY CLUB CIRof his daily earnings. waiting RR 100,000.00 rose to the eats up half for the minibus to SALE robberies. GUIJO RR 100,000.00 MAKILING RR 100,000.00 COUNTRY CLUB RD. seekOFsafer investments abroad. JAGUAR RR 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE VALUE PROPERTY TO BE Transport Federation. equivalent RR of about100,000.00 10 US cents “It is impossible to operate come,” heRRsaid. “And when you Socialist President Nicolas Capital fl ight is estimated ILANG-ILANG 100,000.00 PANTHER DON CHINO ROCES EXT. (PASONG TAMO) RR 100,000.00 USED IN COMPUTING ESTATE AND DONOR’S TAXES SHALL MARSHALL RR 100,000.00 “And the situation is getting at the official with the current prices,” says do get on,RR it is falling to pieces.” BE Maduro has vowed to pull PIRATE RR rate. 100,000.00 by DETERMINED Bloomberg toBY have reached FAIRGREEN 100,000.00 (1) THE FAIR MARKET VALUE AS THE JASMINE RR 100,000.00 worse.” That seems like little, but FAIRWOOD in bus drivers’ union leader Hugo Those who to travel from COMMISSIONER Venezuelans outOF ofINTERNAL an economic MAYON RR 100,000.00 PUMA RR 100,000.00 $1(i.e.trillion 2015 OR and has RR have 100,000.00 REVENUE ZONAL in VALUES) Oil and gas SARACEN RRlop-sided 100,000.00 crisis which says is a capitalist Venezuela’s monetary Ocando. town to town see their trip (2) KARANGALAN RR often 100,000.00 FLORENCE WAY RR 100,000.00 THE FAIRheMARKET VALUE AS SHOWN IN THE SCHEDULE continued during 2016, despite MT. APO RR 100,000.00 STAGHAUNT RR Falling prices for its crucial oil situation nothing LLOYD RR 100,000.00 OF VALUES OF THE PROVINCIAL/CITY/MUNICIPAL conspiracy. is100,000.00 as simple GARDEN as He spoke standing in a yard turn into an Odyssey as the few recent effortsASSESSOR, by Beijing to MACOPA RR 100,000.00 TIGER MOUSE 100,000.00 GRANT ST. RR 100,000.00 IS HIGHER. PERSHING RR 100,000.00 exports have left Venezuela short it looks. RR tighten restrictions on currency make detours to WHICHEVER Maduro, 54, is a former bus where a handful of mechanics buses available
Oil rises above $51 ahead of Opec talks
ECB to slow down on bond buying
F
RANKFURT—The European Central Bank on Thursday extended its mass bond-buying program to underpin a eurozone economy rattled by political uncertainties, but surprised markets by slowing the pace of its asset purchases.
Buses grind to a halt in Venezuela’s spare parts crisis By Esteban Rojas
China halving ATM cap in casinos
CERTAIN GUIDELINES IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF ZONAL VALUE OF REAL PROPERTIES FOR RDO NO. 50 - SOUTH MAKATI
1. NO ZONAL VALUE HAS BEEN PRESCRIBED FOR A PARTICULAR CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY.
WHERE IN THE APPROVED SCHEDULE OF ZONAL VALUES FOR A PARTICULAR BARANGAY -
A. NO ZONAL VALUE HAS BEEN PRESCRIBED FOR A PARTICULAR CLASSIFICATION IN A PARTICULAR STREET/SUBDIVISION IN A BARANGAY, THE ZONAL VALUE PRESCRIBED FOR THE SAME CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN THE OTHER STREET/SUBDIVISION WITHIN THE SAME BARANGAY OF SIMILAR CONDITIONS SHALL BE USED; AND
B. NO ZONAL VALUE HAS BEEN PRESCRIBED FOR A PARTICULAR CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY IN ONE BARANGAY, THE ZONAL VALUE PRESCRIBED FOR THE SAME CLASSIFICATION OF REAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN AN ADJACENT BARANGAY OF SIMILAR CONDITIONS SHALL BE USED.
ROSALtoiled trying to repair about 20 cover extra RRroutes.100,000.00 of dollars to import supplies. Driving RR his routes in eastern PINATUBO 100,000.00 RR 100,000.00 CYAN**MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK SCORPION RR 100,000.00 SAMPGUITA
2. PREDOMINANT driver. AFP USE OF PROPERTY.
flows. AFP
a.) ALL REAL PROPERTIES REGARDLESS OF ACTUAL USE,
Life FOOD
Isah V. Red, Editor Bernadette Lunas, Writer isahred@gmail.com MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
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CENTURY TUNA Century Tuna endorser James Reid graces the opening of the Marine Conservation Lab
inspires marine conservation and learning
C
ENTURY Tuna, the country’s no.1 tuna, recently led the inauguration of the first-ever Kidzania Marine Conservation Lab at Kidzania Manila, the indoor play city where kids can have fun exploring the adult world through inspiration and learning. The new facility was established by the leading tuna brand in collaboration with the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) Philippines.
At the new Kidzania Marine Conservation Lab, kids learn about marine ecosystems, sustainability, and the need to care for our seas through a mock underwater facility that houses models of marine ecosystems and research workstations. As marine conservationists, kids are tasked to study marine ecosystems and come up with solutions to problems they face. Gracing this significant occasion was Senator Kiko Pangilinan who lauded the effort of Century Pacific Food, Inc., WWF and Kidzania Manila. “The sea is very much a part of our lives, which is why marine conservation is of utmost concern. It is very important that we have an undertaking that will raise awareness among our children on the importance of marine conservation. We are so connected to the ocean—more than we are aware of.” On hand to welcome guests were CPFI CEO and President Christopher Po and GM/Vice President Greg Banzon, WWF President Joel Palma, and KidZania Philippines State Governor Maricel Arenas. James Reid, Century Tuna celebrity
Century Pacific Food Inc CEO and President Chris Po and Nanette Po
Sen. Kiko Pangilinan (rightmost) with WWF ambassadors Mark Nelson and Iza Calzado join the movement to raise awareness among children on the value of marine conservation
ambassador, was at the opening and joined a tour of the new facility. Also present were WWF celebrity ambassadors Iza Calzado and Mark Nelson. Speaking before guests, Po extolled
the crucial role that the facility can play in raising awareness among kids on the value of marine conservation. “More than half of our business is marine-related,” Po states. “Conservation of our marine resources is a
with the marinade, the flavor was noticeably strengthened. The sauce adds flavor and perks up the dish,” Lachenal said. Yuki, the first runner-up, shared that she used Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce to enhance the flavor of her Crispy Pata Tim a la Lea & Perrins, which is her own recipe. Meanwhile, Cruz, the second runnerup, said his simple recipe was made more special by using Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce and the triple stirTasty all-around sauce The participants showed that Lea & fry technique. Perrins Worcestershire Sauce, which can be used as a marinade or a meat Versatile product The cook-off’s twin goals are to protenderizer, can do an amazing job in enhancing the flavors of dishes, be they mote the other uses of the Worcestershire sauce and encourage home cooks seafood, beef, chicken or pork. At the Manila leg of the cook-off, to use Lea & Perrins Worcestershire the top three dishes were Lea & Per- Sauce so that their simple fare can turn rins Tangy Barbecue Ribs by Kathleen into restaurant-quality meals. “We now would like to showcase the Lachenal, Crispy Pata Tim a la Lea & Perrins by Julianne Yuki, and Simple flexibility of our product,” said Kraft Beef Stir Fry in Lea & Perrins by Leon- Heinz Philippines Country Manager Charles Mendoza. ardo Cruz. He added, “What’s good about our Lachenal, who is the Manila area’s grand champion, said her recipe has contest right now is that it turns normal been with her family for years. But or home cooked food into gourmet or including Lea & Perrins Worcester- restaurant food. That is one of the qualishire Sauce in the marinade has fur- ties that we check in the competition.” Considered the biggest live cooking ther improved the taste and texture of the dish. competition for two years now, the “Lea “It’s part of the marinade, which & Perrins Isang Kutsara Nationwide was reused to become the dish’s sauce. Cooking Challenge Year 2” had more We used to treat Worcestershire sauce than 300 participants this year coming as a condiment but when it was mixed from Albay, Cagayan De Oro, Davao, MANY recognize Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce as spice for steaks and other meat dishes. But at the recently concluded cook fest, “Lea & Perrins Isang Kutsara Nationwide Cooking Challenge Year 2,” this brown fermented seasoning went beyond the dining table into the kitchen. Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce became one of the main ingredients in various competition dishes.
challenge we face every day, not just in our company but for all of us who depend on marine resources. So we hope this facility will help inspire our youngsters to take up marine research and conservation.”
Palma also stressed that the Philippines is in the heart of the coral triangle so we cannot overemphasize the need to instill curiosity and interest among our children on the importance of marine resources and conservation.
Countrywide Cooking Showdown
Lea & Perrins Isang Kutsara Nationwide Cooking Challenge Year 2 Metro Manila leg grand winner Kathleen Lachenal (center), first runner-up Julianne Yuki (seventh from left) and second runner-up Leonardo Cruz (second from left)
Iloilo, Cebu and Metro Manila. winning dishes in the other areas were According to the Kraft Heinz Phil- simple fare with distinctive tastes and ippines Advisory Chef Mia Yan, the flavor profiles. In Albay, the winner was Pechay Wrapped Chicken in Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce; in Cagayan De Oro, Skinless Lea & Perrins Pork Longganisa; in Davao, Tasty Lea & Perrins Beef Empanada; in Iloilo, Lea & Perrins Beef Stroganoff Pasta; and in Cebu, Lea & Perrins Sweet & Spicy Wings.
The winning dishes featuring the popular worcestershire sauce brand (from left) Lachenal’s Lea & Perrins Tangy Barbecue Ribs and Yuki’s Crispy Pata Tim a la Lea & Perrins
Competition expansion When asked about plans, Mendoza said, “Hopefully we can continue this next year to show the usage and variety of Lea & Perrins Worcestershire Sauce. With this kind of activity, consumers can gain knowledge that there are other uses for our product.” He enthused that Lea & Perrins
Worcestershire Sauce is the best choice for whipping up regional dishes. “Our sauce can be used in a variety of dishes especially Filipino recipes,” Mendoza shared. Special prizes More than half a million in cash and prizes were given away in this year’s competition alone. Each area visited had three top winners who took home cash and prizes. The area’s grand champion, first runnerup and second runner-up each received P25,000, P15,000 and P10,000, with gift packs, plaque of participation and Lea & Perrins gold, silver and bronze trophy respectively. All non-winners in the six areas were given consolation prize money, plaque of participation and exclusive gift packs from Lea & Perrins as well.
Life
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016 isahred@gmail.com
Cebu’s big brother is here to stay THE JOYCE OF EATING JOYCE BABE PAÑARES
I
T WOULD not be a stretch of the imagination to say that homegrown restaurant Kuya J is one of the fastest growing casual diners in the country. It has come a long way from the time it opened its first branch on Escario St. in Cebu in 2013. Kuya J launched Wednesday last week its 60th branch at the newly inaugurated SM City East Ortigas in Pasig City. That’s an increase of more than 200 percent from only 18 branches in 2015. But Winglip Chang, president and chief executive officer of iKitchen, the company behind Kuya J, is not one to rest on his laurels. Strike while the iron is hot, he said, and he is indeed on a scorching winning streak. With less than three weeks to go before the country ushers in an intense Year of the Fire Rooster, Chang is opening 25 more Kuya J restaurants – or a mind-boggling feat of one new branch a day. And by the end of 2017, the Visayan restaurateur with the indomitable spirit plans to increase Kuya J’s branches to 200. “We thank the public for supporting us. But we are not stopping yet,” Chang said. “The food industry is growing and the economy is growing, and we want to continue growing, too.” The soft-spoken Chang said there is no secret ingredient to Kuya J’s success. “The essence of Kuya J is you get good food and good service without costing you an arm and a leg,” he said. That passion for good Filipino food has translated into dishes that are not only affordable but are truly satisfying and priced reasonably as well. Its latest offering – the Kuya J roast chicken – is giving other chicken houses a run for their money with its flavorful skin and juicy meat, with no need for gravy or dip. The restaurant’s signature dishes: crispy pata, grilled scallops, bulalo, fresh lumpia, sisig, and kare-kare among others, remain fast moving items that have captured the taste and satisfied the cravings of Filipinos over the past three years. And in 2017, Kuya J will start serving Cebu’s
Kuya J’s sinfully delicious crispy pata
iconic lechon belly, which, just like the roast chicken, is savory on its own without need for any sauce. Passion and a good amount of luck, combined with constant innovation and a genuine desire to please customers, have contributed largely to Kuya J’s success. To ensure consistency in the tenderness of the meat and the crispness of the skin of its crispy pata, Chang decided to buy computerized fryers at around P1 million each to improve quality and eliminate human error. The juiciness of Kuya J roast chicken was achieved using combination steamers imported from The Netherlands at almost half a million pesos per unit. The restaurant’s well-loved halo-halo uses shaved ice produced through a special machine from Taiwan, giving the proudly Filipino dessert a new twist. “The investment paid off: in the first month that we offered halohalo, and only had 30 stores back then, we sold 100,000 orders,” Chang said. Kuya J is
also expanding its commissary in San Pedro, Laguna to ensure that the ingredients, especially those sourced from the provinces, remain fresh given the restaurant’s extensive menu with at least 78 items available every day. The scallops, for example are brought in from Cebu where these are blast frozen in the company’s commissary in the province before being shipped across the country. And because all 60 and counting branches are company-owned, Chang said their staff are given regular trainings to achieved consistent service, not to mention a courteous attitude toward customers. Kuya J has indeed come a long way from the Ang Kan-anan ni Kuya J (The Eatery of Kuya J) carinderia in Cebu that made an impression on Chang more than a decade ago for serving delicious dishes consistently. He bought the hole-in-the-wall joint when the original owner migrated to Canada, and decided to retain the name when he transformed it into a casual dining restaurant. “We may have innovated in terms of technology and modernizing our processes, but we have remained true to our vision of what our food should be,” Chang said, adding in jest: “We offer Filipino dishes that your mother will cook for you, if she loves you.” For feedback, send comments to joyce.panares@gmail.com
The restaurant makes its own lumpia wrapper. The secret ingredient? Malunggay leaves to give it more flavor.
Grilled scallops brought in from Cebu
Halo-halo with a twist: the shaved ice gives the dessert an ice cream-like texture.
Photos by Sonny Espiritu
Kuya J does not scrimp on its ingredients, including the heavenly bulalo bone marrow.
Sun Asian Kitchen must-try dishes ASIDE from being one of the best islands in the world, Boracay is also a place for an awesome food experience. One of the must-try restaurants in the island paradise is the Sun Asian Kitchen. With its homey ambiance and delicious Asian and Filipino cuisine, Sun Asian Kitchen offers an unforgettable gastronomic experience that will keep everybody come back for more. Whether you love meat, seafood, Filipino or Asian specialties, Sun Asian Kitchen offers it all. Here are some of the must-try dishes at Sun Asian Kitchen: Chicken Curry. Oozing with flavors and spices, Sun Asian Kitchen’s Chicken Curry—chicken cooked in curry powder, coconut cream, potato and red
Sun Asian Kitchen’s Nasi Goreng
pepper—is something you shouldn’t miss when you go to Boracay. Laksa. The combination of noodles cooked in coconut cream, curry and shrimp paste, served with egg, bean sprouts, tofu, squid balls, chicken and shrimp will surely whet your appetite as you try Sun Asian Kitchen’s version of Laksa, an irresistibly yummy dish from Singapore. Nasi Goreng. Another must-try dish is the Nasi Goreng. Enjoying this traditional Indonesian fried rice chicken, vegetables and spices, topped with either sunny side up or scrambled egg is definitely a great way to kick-start your day in Boracay. Adobong Pusit. Satisfy your craving for adobo as you taste Sun Asian
Kitchen’s Adobong Pusit, the freshest squids cooked in vinegar, onion, garlic and coconut cream. Spicy Crabs and Garlic Shrimp. For seafood lovers, Sun Asian Kitchen’s Spicy Crabs and Garlic Shrimp are a must taste for you. Ready your tummy for sumptuous crabs cooked in chili, garlic, butter, Chinese wine and oyster sauce; and garlic shrimp, topped with crispy bits of garlic and butter sauce that will certainly make you finish it until the last drop. The Sun Asian Kitchen, also home to the famous Boracay Mongolian Grill, is located at Sun Villa Beachfront, between Stations 1 and 2. For inquiries, call (036) 288-1306, (036) 288-5915 or 09989878276.
Seafood lovers would love the flavorful Spicy Crabs dish
B ITES
Potato Chips Classic introduces its new Sour Cream & Onion flavor
New exciting flavors from Jack ‘n Jill AVID chips lovers are in for a delicious snacking experience as Jack ‘n Jill unveils two additions to the Potato Chips Classic family: Plain Salted and Sour Cream & Onion. Following the launch of Potato Chips Classic Plain Salted, the new Sour Cream & Onion variant promises a mouthwatering experience with its right combination of zesty and tangy taste. Made from 100 percent thinly sliced real potatoes and seasoned with well-loved flavors, these new products will excite the taste buds of all potato chips fans. Real Potato Excitement gets bigger with the growing Jack ‘n Jill Potato Chips family giving more Filipinos that burst of flavor and crunch that can get them hooked. Grab your packs of the new Potato Chips Classic Plain Salted and Sour Cream & Onion at leading supermarkets, groceries and convenience stores nationwide.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
Coco Martin glad
‘Super Parental Guardians’ is a big hit
J-Pop singing contest The 2016 J-pop Singing Contest winners and special awardees (from left) Vinar Takumi, Elle Genovata, Shielah Faye S. Labadan, Jhona Sacramento, CMKC, Happy Kevin, Jena Chan and Johannie Velasco.
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HE Embassy of Japan in the Philippines recently celebrated the PhilippineJapan Friendship Month with the 2016 J-Pop Anime Singing Contest Grand Finals at the SM Cinema Centerstage in SM Mall of Asia. The event also coincided with the 60 Years of PhilippinesJapan Friendship festivities.
A joint project of the Embassy of Japan, The Japan Foundation, Manila, and SM Cinema, the 2016 J-pop Anime Singing Contest aims to further promote Japanese language and culture among Filipinos. Now on its 8th year, it also hopes to strengthen the longstanding friendship between Japan and the Philippines
through the mutual fondness for J-pop music and Anime. The Grand Prize, which includes an all-expense paid trip to Japan, was awarded to CMKC who performed “Secret Base” (Kimi ga Kureta Mono) from Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae wo Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai. Happy Kevin placed second for his rendition of “Himawari no Yakusoku by Hata Motohiro” from Stand By Me Doraemon, while Jhona Sacramento took the third place for her version of “Will” by Nakashima Mika. Special awards were also given to other finalists: Doraemon’s Special Award for Vinar Takumi, Jena Chan, and Johannie Velasco; Bandai Namco’s Best for Shielah Faye Labadan and Elle Genovata; Toei’s Favorite for Vinar Takumi; and the Hero’s Choice Award to Jhona Sacramento, Happy Kevin, and CMKC. The Embassy of Japan’s Consul General and Minister for General Affairs Hiroyuki Uchida graced this year’s J-Pop Anime Singing Contest Grand Finals. The program also included special
performances by Doraemon and Friends, Kawaii 5, 2015 J-pop Anime Singing Contest Grand Prize winner Maychell Hernandez, and Embassy of Japan’s No Plan Band. All Nippon Airways, Animation International, Ajinomoto Philippines, Bandai Namco Philippines Inc., Bobson Pure Japanese Denim, Canon Information Technologies, Inc., and Canon Marketing Philippines, Panasonic Philippines Corporation, and Sony Philippines supported the event. Other sponsors included the Center for Pop Music Philippines, HERO TV, the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Philippines, Inc., Lotte Confectionery Pilipinas Corporation, Lyceum of the Philippines University Manila, the Nihongo Center Foundation Inc., SM Cinema, SM Mall of Asia, Toei Animation Philippines, Inc., Yakult Philippines, and Yoshinoya. The 2016 J-pop Anime Singing Contest is one of the many exciting cross-cultural events at the SM Cinema Centerstage at the SM Mall of Asia.
Remembering Lolita Rodriguez By Eton B. Concepcion Stars never die, they just fade away. The country mourned the passing of Lolita Rodriguez, one of Philippine cinema’s legendary actresses, who died at the age of 81 in Hemet, California where she and family migrated in 1977. Born in Majayjay, Laguna to an American father and Filipino mother, Lolita made her movie debut at the age of 18 in Sampaguita Pictures Ating Pagibig in 1953, which starred Tita Duran and Pancho Magalona. She made her first starring role in Sabungera in 1953 and co-starred with Dolphy in the now classic Jack and Jill in 1954. Lolita made a mark in “lovetriangle’ movies in the 60’s with Eddie Rodriguez and Marlene Dauden, like Sapagkat Kami’y Tao Lamang (1963), Kapag Puso’y Sinugatan (1967) and Kasalanan Kaya? (1968). Her most memorable role was the town’s outcast Kuala in the landmark 1974 film Tinimbang ka Ngunit Kulang by Lino Brocka, part of the 70’s golden harvests in Philippine cinema. Rodriguez won her second Famas Best
Actress award for this film, 18 years after her first in Gilda in 1956. Lolita was incomparable in her team-up with the great Brocka in Stardoom (1971), Tubog sa Ginto (1971), Lunes, Martes, Miyerkules, Huwebes, Biyernes, Sabado, Linggo (1976) and Tatlo, Dalawa, Isa (Bukas, Madilim, Bukas) (1974)’ In 1979, Lolita made two Brocka films considered as “acting coup teamup.” First was Ina, Kapatid, Anak, which pitted her for the first time against Charito Solis, with one of the most dramatic confrontational scenes ever in local film. This was followed by the Manila Film Festival entry Ina ka Ng Anak Mo in which Lolita won best actress in a tie with co-star Nora Aunor. Indeed, if there is one local actress that can match Rodriguez’s quiet intensity and depth in style, it is Aunor who got the rare chance to appear with her in the Brocka opus. Aunor was said to have gotten more enamored and awed with the veteran actress whom the Superstar considered her Lolita Rodriguez or Dolores Maiquez Clark in real life was a multi-awarded biggest idol because of her unselfish behavior on the set. actress, she starred in more than 80 films between 1953 and 1992
CROSSWORD PUZZLE Monday, December 12, 2016
ACROSS 1 Serve the purpose 6 Dragged into court 10 Long shoal 14 Ben on “Bonanza” 15 Suits to — — 16 Buddhist monk 17 Brontosaur snack 18 Price increase 19 Type of exam 20 Leaves the dock (2 wds.) 22 Posh 23 Attorney’s deg. 24 Wernher von — of rockets 26 Beset 30 Mountaineer’s aid 32 Not with-it 33 Kentucky settler 34 FDR org. 36 Make muddy 37 Billowing garment 38 Mr. Zatopek 39 Tentacle 40 Lowed 41 “I could — — unfold ...” (Hamlet) 42 Nero or Napoleon
44 Threat ender (2 wds.) 45 Large antelope 46 Cen. fractions 47 Isak’s real name 49 Ancestor 54 Charles Lamb 55 Strad 57 “Hot Lips,” for one 58 Make shore 59 Secret sign 60 Cays 61 Greedy ones 62 Plops down 63 Peek at the cards DOWN 1 Innsbruck locale 2 Field mouse 3 I smell — —! 4 Rural stopovers 5 Blurt out, say (2 wds.) 6 Bwana, in India 7 Gas or tel. 8 Cartoon shriek 9 Fiddle-de- — 10 Decelerate (2 wds.) 11 Telepathic, e.g. 12 “— — Old Cowhand” 13 It may be sweet 21 Every 22 No different 24 Sweeping
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 33 35 37 38 40 41
Foul-smelling Mystique Night racket Dancing with light Catch cold Lovebird Simon and Diamond Vampire’s craving Helm position Field crop Riviera summer Spiteful Whodunit
poison 43 Implores 44 Boston Bruin great 46 Egg parts 47 Sushi ingredient 48 Jai — 49 Type style 50 Wild country 51 Della Street’s penner 52 Between ports 53 Doctor’s advice 55 Road “Beetles” 56 Grandson, maybe
COCO Martin admits his elation over the box-office success of his currently showing movie opposite Vice Ganda titled Super Parental Guardians. “Honestly, I’m overwhelmed by the very warm reception of the crowd,” he avers. “Until now, I can’t believe that the film continuously draws in lots and lots of audience to the theatres. I’m grateful to all of those who already watched and patronized our offering. It’s really heart-warming!” But, for the popular actor, the huge earnings of the movie only comes in second. “Of course, I’m glad that it became a mammoth hit. But more than that, it’s the fact that we were able to entertain the public. It brings so much joy to my heart knowing that we made them smile through our offering. It’s the best reward for all the efforts we’ve exerted just to come up with an entertaining project.” According to official reports, Super Parental Guardians raked in a whopping P75 M on its opening day alone. “As I’ve said earlier, I didn’t expect that it would gross that high, particularly on its first day. But I expected that the audience will love it since we made sure that it would be better than last year’s ‘Beauty and the Bestie.’ Vice and I, together with Direk Joyce (Bernal) studied our material carefully: we doubled the action and comedy. It’s good that it worked with the crowd who really went out of the cinemas rollicking in laughter. Again, my deep thanks to all our supporters,” says Coco. Meanwhile, talks are rife that his blossoming romance with Julia Montes is affected by their busy work schedule. In one of her recent interviews, the pretty lass revealed that they don’t communicate that often at this point. “That’s true! I’m so busy with projects and so is she. Our communication was largely affected. But of course, it’s work. As the old adage goes, strike while the iron is hot, right? Perhaps, time will come when things will cool down and I’ll be able to make it up to people who are dear to me like my family.” Rumor has it that one factor is that Yassi Pressman seems to be the new apple of his eye, something which the Primetime King shed light on. “Oh no! It’s not true that I’m courting her. Actually, Yassi is a nice and kind girl. I hope I’ll be able to share more of my experiences with her before reaching my present stature. She’s got a lot of promise and I wish her career zooms higher,” ends Coco. *** Eric Quizon is proud of his latest show, which he directs and hosts for GMA News TV titled, Happy Life. “I’m so happy with this program because it’s not just your ordinary travel show that showcases the beauty of the Philippines. It has a purpose. In the program, we highlight the value of helping others with the backdrop of eye-popping destinations in the country. It’s a lifestyle show, a style all its own,” he states. Actually, Happy Life chooses a needy family, individual, school or community that will get a reward after passing meticulous scrutiny. “Yes, they should be deserving of the help the show extends. That’s the main twist there. It’s one of the elements that made me accept the directorial and hosting job for this program. It has a heart. We all know that many Filipinos need aid these days when poverty is one huge problem. So, we want to help in our own little way through ‘Happy Life.’ You should watch the initial episode to understand what I’m saying!” Interestingly, the show is produced by former Ilocos Governor Chavit Singson’s White Lion Media Productions, Inc.
Isah V. Red, Editor Nickie Wang, Writer isahred@gmail.com MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2016
Series on infidelity is Kapuso’s centerpiece on its Afternoon Prime ISAH V. RED
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MA Network opened December with an intriguing drama on infidelity in the Afternoon Prime series now making waves since it premiered last week. Ika-6 Na Utos tells the story of Emma, who is fighting to keep her husband from leaving her for another woman. Sunshine Dizon plays Emma, a sweet and cheerful souvenir merchant who falls deeply in love with a pilot whom she eventually marries. Sunshine appreciates GMA Network for giving her always challenging and offbeat roles. “I’m just really blessed and happy because through the years, hindi naman tumigil talaga ang GMA from giving me characters that are unforgettable. Talagang naalagaan nila ako sa aspeto na ‘yun. I’m very happy and grateful for that,” the Kapuso actress said. “Also, what’s nice about Ika-6 na Utos, it’s a story of most women out there who are suffering silently. We hope that with this show, we will be able to help them somehow to realize that marami pa silang pwedeng gawin. Marami pang options sa buhay. Marami ring mga babaeng makaka-relate dito, not only because may pinagdadaaanan sila but also, kwento ito ng babaeng isang anak, isang ina, isang asawa, isang kaibigan,” Sunshine added. Gabby Concepcion is Rome, a pilot whom Emma marries. He stands uf for her despite his mother’s approval. He shares that the show is one that will mark another milestone in his career as an actor as it enables him to experience different things. “This show is a new thing for me. Ang dami kong firsts dito. First time na gaganap ako na piloto. First time ko na magkakaroon ng isang Afternoon show. Maganda ang story and I’m up for a change. First time kong makakatrabaho in a soap sila Sunshine and Ryza.” “Also, at this point in my career, gusto ko naman na bawat teleseryeng gagawin ko ay may message at pwedeng may maibahaging aral sa viewers natin. I feel na mayroon akong responsibilidad sa audience ko. So, sa bawat papanoorin nilang mga teleseryeng gagawin ko, sana mayroon akong message na iiwan sa kanila at kung papaano ako makakatulong sa experience ko or sa experience ng ibang tao sa kanilang sariling buhay.” he added.
Emma’s liberated best friend whom the latter considers her sister; Daria Ramirez as Lourdes, Emma’s weak mother whom she loves and understands the most; Carmen Soriano as Margarita, the sophisticated mother-in-law of Emma who belittles her because of her social class; Marco Alcaraz as Chandler, Rome’s co-pilot and confidante; Mel Martinez as Zeny, the right-hand man of Margarita; and Arianne Bautista as Selma, Georgia’s friend. Laurice Guillen directs Ika-6 Na Utos. *** In the second installment of Lifestyle’s The Crawl, Piolo Pascual and son Iñigo take their curious taste buds to the Northern part of Thailand—Chiang Mai. The father and son team goes on a culinary adventure, and explore the different flavors and food selections that Thailand has to offer on Lifestyle. The Philippines’ ultimate heartthrob will once again venture through streets and cities, and show Filipinos a glimpse of a different culinary culture, including tips on surviving the task and insights on how to maximize the food and travel experience. Food crawling is a form of bonding among people with common passion for food. The Crawl shows another side of Pascual—the adventurous, outgoing, and multifaceted father and friend who loves experiencing what life has to offer, particularly through travel with his new companion. Watch Piolo and Iñigo try out Chiang Mai’s myriad food specialties such as spicy sausage, khao soy, pad thai, kang puk wan, and Madame Butterfly tea from well-known Thai food stops such as Rak Thanam, Comedara, Galae, and Vieng Joom On. Along the trip, they also discover breathtaking tourist attractions like Wat Doi Suthep, Mae Ping River Cruise, Night Street Market, and a lot more. They also enjoy the spectacular Loy Krathong and Yi Peng Festival, paying respect to the Goddess of the Water along with the Thai locals by sending off lanterns. Through the Lucky Lifestyle Viewer promo, two viewers also got the chance to discover the flavors of Chiang Mai in a 5-day, 4-night trip, and also got to meet and dine with Piolo himself. The first run of TheCrawl was shot in Osaka, Japan, also known as “The Kitchen of Japan: Home of great traditional Japanese Cuisine,” which Piolo took a trip to with crawl buddy Lui Villaruz. Don’t miss Piolo and Iñigo’s exciting gastronomical trip to Chiang Mai in Lifestyle’s The Crawl on Dec. 24, Saturday (8 p.m.), and Dec. 25, Sunday (12mn and10:30 a.m.). Lifestyle is available on SKYcable channel 52. For updates, follow Lifestyle on Facebook (facebook.com/ lifestyletvph), Instagram (@ lifestyletvph), and Twitter (@ lifestyletvph).
The lead cast of ‘Ika-6 na Utos’ Gabby Concepcion as Rome, a pilot, Sunshine Dizon, his wife, and Ryza Cenon, his kept woman
Rome and Emma are the perfect combination of a happy couple everyone looks up to. But just like any other relationships, problems and issues arise that put their marriage to the test. Jerome widens his circle of friends as his career takes on a swing to success. Meanwhile, his wife, Emma, quietly makes her best effort on taking good care of the family. Rome, as he mingles among friends in his circle, meets Georgia, (Ryza Cenon), an ambitious interior designer who at an instance flirts with Rome. She eventually agrees to be his mistress.
Ryza considers playing the role of Georgia as an avenue to showcase the other story of a kept woman. “Ang maganda dito kasi ipapakita namin ‘yung side naman ng kabit kung bakit niya ginagawa yun. Hindi naman namin sinasabi na tama ‘yung pagiging kabit. Kumbaga mayroon ding siyang emosyon, tao lang din siya. Nagmamahal lang,” she said. Also in the cast are Mike Tan as Angelo, Flor’s older brother who plans to help Emma and eventually develops Father and son Piolo and Iñigo Pascual bond in the latest episode of ‘The Crawl,’ feelings for her; Rich Asuncion as Flor, which takes viewers into a gastronomical adventure across Thailand
Kylie Verzosa at Christmas Tree lighting in Malacañang lie ational Ky Miss Intern an Palace d n a e rt rigo Dute t at the Malacañ n sident Rod SELFIE. Purering the Christmas eve d za o rs e V
MISS International 2016 Kylie Verzosa was the biggest star at Malacañang Palace’s traditional Christmas Tree lighting ceremony on Dec. 5 that also marked President Rodrigo Duterte’s first Christmas event in the presidential palace. Kylie looked stunning in a red terno created by Francis Libiran adding glamour to an already festive atmosphere around the palace grounds where the giant Christmas Tree was set up. She was greeted by the President upon his arrival and joined some 1,500 guests including government officials and Malacañang employees. The event featured performances by the Philippine Pops
Orchestra, Mandaluyong Children’s Choir, Robert Sena, Isay Alvarez, Richard Poon, and the Office of the President (OP) Chorale. President Duterte obviously enjoyed the moment when Kylie posed for a selfie with him. It was the second selfie between the beauty queen and the highest official of the land Kylie, then competing at the Miss International pageant, met the President who on asstate visit in Japan. President Duterte had wished Kylie to win Miss International for he wanted the country to be known as the land of beautiful women. – Eton B. Concepcion