This digital copy is brought to you by
Transcription
This digital copy is brought to you by
by u o y o t t h g u o r b s i y p o c l a t This digi 2 T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY For breaking news updates go to www.theedgemarkets.com ON EDGE T V www.theedgemarkets.com Dr M: Najib must come clean on 1MDB in Parliament Khazanah’s ethical sukuk to benefit schools 1MDB’s board of directors warns against ‘Trial by Media’ The Edge Communications Sdn Bhd (266980-X) Level 3, Menara KLK, No 1 Jalan PJU 7/6, Mutiara Damansara, 47810 Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia Publisher and Group CEO Ho Kay Tat Editorial For News Tips/Press Releases Tel: 03-7721 8219 Fax: 03-7721 8038 Email: [email protected] Senior Managing Editor Azam Aris Executive Editors Kathy Fong, Jenny Ng, Siow Chen Ming, Surinder Jessy, Ooi Inn Leong Associate Editors R B Bhattacharjee, Joyce Goh, Jose Barrock, Vasantha Ganesan Editors Cindy Yeap, Kang Siew Li Assistant Editors Adeline Paul Raj, Tan Choe Choe Chief Copy Editor Halim Yaacob Senior Copy Editors Marica Van Wynen, Lam Seng Fatt, Melanie Proctor Copy Editor Evelyn Chan Art Director Sharon Khoh Design Team Cheryl Loh, Valerie Chin, Aaron Boudville, Aminullah Abdul Karim, Yong Yik Sheng, Tun Mohd Zafian Mohd Za’abah Asst Manager-Editorial Services Madeline Tan Corporate Managing Director Au Foong Yee Deputy Managing Director Lim Shiew Yuin Advertising & Marketing To advertise contact GL: (03) 7721 8000 Fax: (03) 7721 8288 Chief Marketing Officer Sharon Teh (012) 313 9056 General Manager, Digital Media Kingston Low (012) 278 5540 Senior Sales Managers Geetha Perumal (016) 250 8640 Fong Lai Kuan (012) 386 2831 Shereen Wong (016) 233 7388 Peter Hoe (019) 221 5351 Gregory Thu (012) 376 0614 Ad-Traffic Manager Vigneswary Krishnan (03) 7721 8005 Ad Traffic Asst Manager Roger Lee (03) 7721 8004 Executive Ad-Traffic Norma Jasma (03) 7721 8006 Email: [email protected] Operations To order copy Tel: 03-7721 8034 / 8033 Fax: 03-7721 8282 Email: [email protected] PM: Respect Umno elections Says calls for his resignation are against majority wishes KUALA LUMPUR: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said the fact that he is the first Umno president elected through a system that is more open and democratic after the amendment of the party constitution should be respected by all party members. Therefore, he said, calls by several parties for him to relinquish his position are improper as they ignore the wishes of the majority of party members. “As the party president, I am most thankful for your support. Why was I chosen? Through what process? Through the election process in the party, where the party constitution was amended (in 2009),” he said when addressing the guests at the Umno Veterans’ Evening With the President, at the Putra World Trade Centre here yesterday. Najib said the election system for the top leadership now is more open and transparent compared with the previous system, which used the bonus vote and quota system to retain the top party posts. He said that if he had wanted to retain the top leadership post for 22 years like the fourth prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad (1981 to 2003), he would not have agreed with the suggestion to amend the party constitution. Najib said while Umno is facing numerous challenges, he will continue to struggle in the interests of the party and strive to improve whatever weaknesses there are. “We want to look after the party, we cannot destroy our party, [because] our party is our saviour ... the Malays have no where else to go to except for this hallowed party. Do not destroy Umno, love Umno and look after Umno,” he said, adding that every problem can be rectified and resolved through consensus. — Bernama BY SHING-Y I TAN ‘Apple IPhone designs copied by Samsung’ KUALA LUMPUR: “The quality of the works is excellent and the layout of the space is very well done, especially for a private gallery,” said leading Malaysian artist Ahmad Zakii Anwar at the opening of Galeri Z in Taman Melawati, Kuala Lumpur. Ahmad Zakii was one of the many top local artists who attended Galeri Z’s launch over the weekend. Other big names included Latiff Mohidin, Jalaini Abu Hassan, Kow Leong Kiang, Chong Ai Lei, Datuk Sharifah Fatimah Zubir, Awang Damit, Choong Kam Kow, Chong Siew Ying, Hoe Say Yong, Cheng Thak Lui, Chang Fee Ming and Johan Marjonid. Among the corporate guests who attended were Ambank Group chairman Tan Sri Azman Hashim, Willowglen MSC Bhd executive director Simon Wong, and hotel manager Joshua Lim. Boasting more than 500 paintings, drawings, sculptures and prints, Galeri Z marks the unveiling of The Zain Azahari Collection. Consisting of mainly Malaysian and Indonesian art, Zain’s private collection owes its beginnings to a small watercolour painting, given to him as a wedding gift by the late Datuk Syed Ahmad Jamal. The collection may be reflective of Zain’s personal tastes and interests, but it is also a valuable asset to the preservation of predominantly Malaysian and Indonesian art. Works by Khalil Ibrahim, Lat- WASHINGTON: Apple Inc's patented designs on its signature iPhone mobile phone were copied by chief rival Samsung Electronics Inc, a US appeals court ruled yesterday. The appeals court did throw out part of the case, saying that the overall look of the iPhone can't be protected, and asked a lower court to recalculate US$930 million (RM3.32 billion) in damages awarded to Apple in 2013. According to a Samsung court filing, the portion of the damage award that will be tossed is US$382 million, leaving US$548 million that the Suwon, South Korea-based company would potentially have to pay to Apple. Apple and Samsung have dropped all of their global battles except the issue decided yesterday and a second case, also before the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. The second case, involving Apple's contention that it should be allowed to force Samsung to remove certain patented features from Galaxy phones, is still pending. The two cases will determine the eventual outcome of a dispute that's continued for five years and spanned the globe. — Bloomberg More than 500 artworks at Galeri Z (From left) Tong, Zain and Cheong at the launch of Galeri Z on Sunday. iff Mohidin, Jolly Koh, Patrick Ng and Ibrahim Hussein among those by Indonesian artists, like Popo Iskandar, Affandi, Srihadi Soedarsono and Gunawan are on display at Zain’s home and the homes of his immediate family. He has also loaned his collection to national institutions and public galleries. The opening of Galeri Z was also celebrated in conjunction with the launch of the publication of Hati & Jiwa: The Zain Azahari Collection Volume I & II, which documents the works in his collection. The event was opened by the past president of the Malaysian Physicians for Social Responsibility and past co-president of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Datuk Dr Ronald McCoy. While highlighting the importance and quality of Zain’s collection, he also noted the importance for artists to be responsive to social and local issues. Leading art collectors who attended the event include Tan Sri Kamarul Ariffin, Datuk Noor Azman Mohd Nurdin, Dr Steve Wong, Dr Abang Askandar Kamel and wife Dr Hanizah Aman Hashim, lawyer Yoong Sin Min, retired legal consultant Billy Too Hing Yeap, Pakhruddin Sulaiman and wife Fatimah Sulaiman, and Shaik Rizal Sulaiman. The Edge Media Group chairman Datuk Tong Kooi Ong and Dawn Cheong, together with The Edge managing director Au Foong Yee and deputy managing director Lim Shiew Yuin, also attended the event. Maybank hives off PNG operations for RM418m cash BY SANGEE THA AM ARTHALI NG AM KUALA LUMPUR: Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank) is exiting Papua New Guinea (PNG) by hiving off its entire equity stake in Maybank (PNG) Ltd (MPNG) and Mayban Property (PNG) Ltd (MPPL) to Kina Ventures Ltd for RM418 million. In a statement, Maybank president and chief executive officer Datuk Abdul Farid Alias said the decision to dispose of its PNG operations was a result of regular strategic reviews to “re-prioritise” its capital and resources, with the intention of focusing its growth agenda on tar- get regions where it can achieve the best returns from its investments. Maybank has entered into a share sale agreement (SSA) with PNG-based stockbroking firm Kina Securities Ltd and Kina Ventures for the divestment of MPNG and MPPL, according to the statement. “While we have been operating profitably and successfully in PNG over the years, we had to evaluate how best we can use our capital, going forward, especially in light of new and more stringent requirements under the Basel III [global banking framework] regime. “Ultimately, we believe we could achieve greater value creation for our stakeholders by refocusing our resources in the Asean and Greater China regions, where we can realise greater synergies and achieve better returns on capital investment,” Abdul Farid said. In a filing with Bursa Malaysia, Maybank (valuation: 1.45; fundamental: 1.5) said the SSA was signed following the central bank of PNG’s approval on May 12. MPNG, established in 1994, and MPPL, were incorporated in PNG, and were involved in commercial banking activities and property investment, respectively. Both the companies, which were serving the local community and cross-border clients for the past 20 years, will cease to be subsidiaries of MBB with effect from the completion of the proposed disposal. Abdul Farid said despite this, Maybank is still committed to serving customers in PNG, who have cross-border requirements and the bank will ensure a smooth transition to the new shareholders so that customers can enjoy uninterrupted services. Maybank shares gained four sen or 0.43% at RM9.36 yesterday, with a market capitalisation of RM87.2 billion. 4 HOME BUSINESS T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY ‘Good time’ for Rapid jobs The current low oil prices enable cost savings for Petronas BY FATI N RA SY I QAH M USTAZA KUALA LUMPUR: Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) is going ahead with its massive downstream project, the refinery and petrochemical integrated development (Rapid), but the national oil firm is fine-tuning the plan with certain parts of the project to be delayed till a later stage. Petronas president and group chief executive officer (CEO) Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin, who is new at the helm, acknowledges that the Rapid project will be commissioned in mid-2019. “For the refinery, the start-up will be in the middle of 2019. That is the current schedule.” Wan Zulkiflee commented that it is now a “good time” to award engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts for Rapid as the current low oil price environment would enable cost savings. “Commodity prices went down, for us it was a good time to go into the market for EPC contracts because prices are (more) acceptable,” Wan Zulkiflee replied when asked about the impact of low crude oil prices on the Rapid project at the 18th Asia Oil and Gas Conference 2015. “So I think that would be the first impact for us in terms of low oil prices,” he said, adding that Petronas has gone through a rebidding process to get better prices for the RM80 billion Rapid in Pengerang, southern Johor. The CEO revealed that Petronas has already awarded all the infrastructure, the refinery and cracker packages to reputable EPC contractors. However, its petrochemical plant is still in the tendering process. Wan Zulkiflee pointed out that Petronas has also reviewed the specifications of the project’s fa- BY C Y N T H IA B L E MIN cilities, which in turn has helped the national oil corporation see some savings. He noted that Petronas has subsequently made the decision to take certain portions of the petrochemical plant within Rapid into several phases. “We have taken a decision that some of the chain (phases) in the petrochemical plant would be “re-phased”. Basically some of the chains we will do a bit later,” he said, noting that Petronas would deploy more of its own employees for Rapid to reduce dependency on management consultants. Local O&G industry must consolidate BY FATI N RA SY I QAH M USTAZA KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin, Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) president and group chief executive officer, (CEO) opines that oil and gas (O&G) companies which are facing headwinds from fallen crude oil prices should consider mergers as an alternative to strengthen their footing. Speaking at the 18th Asia Oil and Gas Conference 2015 CEO Strategic Dialogue yesterday, Wan Zulkiflee said that as the industry landscape has become increasingly uncertain, “merging may be the best way forward for some” companies. He noted that industry players are taking steps to consolidate their operating assets and technology expertise which have been made through mega mergers. “While mergers come with their own risks, returns can be rewarding if the bets are called right ... At the end of the day, companies that have survived this industry cycle may come out more prepared and resilient for future challenges,” he said. Separately, during his keynote speech at the opening ceremony, Wan Zulkiflee noted that there are ample opportunities for consolidation. “Those with heftier cash reserves and other means to fund acquisitions, and who are guided by a clear strategic focus, will be able to beat competitors to the negotiating table for winning deals. These ma- noeuvres will position them ahead of the pack when oil prices recover. “In this respect, I feel strongly that Malaysian oil and gas companies must extend themselves to explore consolidation opportunities within the fraternity to increase their competitiveness and position the country’s oil and gas industry in good stead when the global market recovers.” He said that following the repercussions of the oil price drop, opportunities have presented themselves as companies make the effort to ensure that processes and cost structures are redesigned for simplicity and to support long-term lower operating costs and higher efficiency. “This, in fact, should be expand- ed beyond individual organisations through collaborative measures to tackle the issue in wider spheres of influence. “I firmly believe that the industry must respond in a cohesive manner to make tangible impacts to lower costs and drive up efficiency levels,” he said. Wan Zulkiflee added that there is still room for optimism “within the gloom and doom”. “I would like to call upon players in the industry to interpret the current scenario through the lens of an optimist; we are now in the mode of realising opportunities amid challenges, to initiate reforms into our economies, build capability for our workforce and explore new ways to increase competitiveness.” EPF: 94.4% members want full withdrawal at 55 BY SU L H I A ZMA N KUALA LUMPUR: The Employees Provident Fund (EPF) announced that 94.4% of the 96,448 respondents it surveyed have indicated their preference for retaining full withdrawal of their savings at 55 years old, with new contributions made thereafter to be drawn only at age 60. According to the EPF chief executive officer Datuk Shahril Ridza Ridzuan in a statement yesterday, the survey results had a 0.35% margin of error at a 95% confidence level, indicating that the results were statistically significant and representative of the opinion of all EPF members. On its initiative to align minimum contributions with the minimum wage legislation, the EPF said 74.6% or 71,950 of members have agreed that this proposal will help increase low-paid employees’ retirement savings. “Members agreed that the proposal was timely as it would address the low savings of employees whose contributions are lower than they should be under the minimum wage legislation. This would make Source: EPF it compulsory for both employers and employees to calculate their EPF contributions based on wages stipulated by the minimum wage legislation,” it said. As for its proposal to extend dividend payments from age 75 to 100, EPF said 61.3% of its members who wish to continue to keep their sav- ings with EPF after they retire, indicated their preference to continue receiving dividends until age 100. The EPF also said 71% of its members have agreed with the proposal to allow its members to switch to syariah-compliant retirement savings from the existing retirement savings scheme, based on ethical BNM wants to pull its reps from Socso and Employees Provident Fund investment guidelines. “There is demand for syariah-compliant retirement savings by our members. Based on the number of responses from the consultation, we are confident the take-up rate for the syariah-compliant retirement savings scheme will be encouraging for both Muslim and non-Muslim members,” said Shahril. The EPF also said 65.7% of its survey respondents were members aged 40 and below; 24.9% were between 41 and 50, 9.2% were between 51 and 60, and 0.2% were above 60. “This demonstrated that younger members are increasingly interested in actively taking charge of their future retirement planning,” the retirement fund noted. The EPF said 83.1% of its respondents were from the private sector, 12.1% from the public sector, and 4.8% from the self-employed group; 57.6% were male and 42.4% were female. “This information can assist us in our plans to engage with the government and to look at the best way of implementing the initiatives,” said Shahril. KUALA LUMPUR: Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) is seeking to pull out its sole representatives from the investment panels of two government agencies, the Social Security Organisation (Socso) and the Employees Provident Fund (EPF), says Deputy Finance Minister Datuk Chua Tee Yong. The central bank’s move comes after the government’s tabling of a controversial proposed amendment to the Retirement Fund Act 2007 in Parliament recently, which would see the removal of BNM’s sole representative from Kumpulan Wang Persaraan (Diperbadankan) (KWAP), also known as the Retirement Fund Inc. Chua clarified yesterday that it was BNM which had asked to be pulled out of KWAP to avoid a conflict of interest, due to the fact that it is a regulator and therefore should not be involved in KWAP’s investments. “BNM has [also] asked to pull out its representatives from Socso and the EPF,” Chua said in his winding up speech on the Retirement Fund (Amendment) Bill 2015 in Parliament. It was previously reported that KWAP is managing a fund size of about RM112 billion. Opposition Members of Parliament Rafizi Ramli, Tony Pua and Wong Chen have all expressed concern in their speeches in Parliament that KWAP had loaned RM4 billion to Finance Ministry-owned SRC International Sdn Bhd, which was used to purchase a stake in a mining company in Mongolia. Earlier, during the same debate, Rafizi had disclosed that he was in possession of leaked Cabinet documents which confirmed that KWAP was one of the companies that would be jointly involved in the development of the Tun Razak Exchange (TRX) by the debt-ridden 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB). Meanwhile, Pua said in the parliament lobby later, that the argument given by the Ministry of Finance (MoF) that it wanted to avoid conflict interest was baseless. “This is nonsense. Going by the same argument, MoF, which is also a regulator, has Treasury’s secretary-general Tan Sri Irwan Serigar Abdullah holding the post of chairman of KWAP [so he shouldn’t be there],” he said. Pua said there may not be any immediate impact resulting from BNM pulling out its representatives from the retirement funds, but warned that there would be “no checks and balances” if something goes wrong. MoF’s revelation yesterday sparked speculation among some opposition MPs that BNM likely wants to “wash its hands” of involvement in dealings that are shrouded in controversy. HOME BUSINESS 5 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY AirAsia X sees lower passenger volume in 1Q Due to capacity management, slowdown in marketing activities 1QFY14,” AAX said. ASK measures an airline’s passenger capacity, and is derived by the total seats flown multiplied by the number of kilometres flown. In line with the airline’s turnaround strategy, which includes a network consolidation exercise for the first half of 2015, AAX said it had implemented frequency cuts on certain routes at the beginning of the year, affecting mainly China and Australia, and had concurrently terminated loss-making routes such as to Adelaide in Australia, and Nagoya in Japan, to optimise capacity. The excess capacity from capacity management was redeployed to short-term wet lease and charter operations to maximise revenue, it added. Moving forward, AAX said its current booking trends are in line with expectations for a recovery in the second half of 2015. In terms of fleet movement, the airline took delivery of two Airbus A330-300s on operating leases in 1Q, bringing its total number of A330-300s to 25 compared with 19 a year ago. BY SU PRI YA SU REN DRAN KUALA LUMPUR: AirAsia X Bhd (AAX), the long-haul low-cost affiliate of AirAsia Bhd, saw its passenger volume, as measured by revenue passenger kilometres (RPK), decline 17% to 4.43 billion in the first quarter ended March (1Q) from 5.34 billion a year ago. In a statement yesterday, AAX attributed the drop in RPK to capacity management and a slowdown in marketing activities during the first three months of this year following the crash of Indonesia AirAsia flight 8501 in December last year. RPK is a measure of the volume of passengers carried by the airline. It is derived from the number of passengers multiplied by the number of kilometres these passengers have flown. “Available seat kilometres (ASK) capacity [had also] decreased by 3% to 6.02 billion in 1QFY15 [from 6.22 billion a year ago], and consequently the load factor during the quarter had dropped 12 percentage points to 74% against 86% in On the performance of its associates, Thai AirAsia X registered strong loads of 82% for 1Q, with 155,961 passengers carried, implying continued positive pickup for popular routes between Thailand, Japan and South Korea. Thai AirAsia X currently operates three A330-300s, while Indonesia AirAsia X has two A330-300s serving Bali-Taipei and Bali-Melbourne respectively. AAX (fundamental: N/A; valuation: N/A) shares closed down 5% to 28.5 sen yesterday, with a market capitalisation of RM1.2 billion. The Edge Research’s fundamental score reflects a company’s profitability and balance sheet strength, calculated based on historical numbers. The valuation score determines if a stock is attractively valued or not, also based on historical numbers. A score of 3 suggests strong fundamentals and attractive valuations. Go to www.theedgemarkets.com for details on a company’s financial dashboard. Scan Associates falls into GN3 status after injunction struck off BY ME E N A L A K S H A N A & S UL H I A Z MA N KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Securities Bhd yesterday classified Scan Associates Bhd as a Guidance Note 3 (GN3) company after the High Court dismissed the company’s application for further injunction to restrain the regulator from classifying it under that category. In a statement yesterday, Bursa Securities said the action was taken in accordance with the ACE Market Listing Requirements (LR) of Bursa Securities. The information technology security solutions provider is the fourth company to be admitted to Bursa’s GN3 list after AsiaEP Resources Bhd, Cybertowers Bhd and R&A Telecommunication Group Bhd. “The Kuala Lumpur High Court today (yesterday) has dismissed the company’s application for further injunction. As such, Bursa Securities today classifies Scan Associates as a GN3 company effective May 18, 2015,” Bursa Securities said. “We would like to emphasise that we will continue to monitor the progress of Scan in respect of its compliance with the ACE Market LR,” it added. Presiding judge Abu Bakar Jais delivered the judgement in chambers yesterday. The case management for the suit will be heard on June 1. Yesterday, Scan Associates executive director Mak Siew Wei said the company’s board of directors will discuss whether to appeal the High Court’s decision. “On our part, the company will consider to appeal against the (High Court’s) decision in the interests of our shareholders,” he told The Edge Financial Daily outside the court after the decision was delivered. “Based on what our auditor told us, and another auditor that we had engaged with, we do not (fall under GN3 status),” said Mak, who owns a 6.19% stake in Scan Associates. On May 8, Bursa Securities had issued a directive to Scan Associates to announce that the company had triggered rules 2.1 (b) and (c) of GN3 based on the company’s fourth-quarter results ended December 2014. Scan Associates had then appointed Messrs Lim, Chong, Phang & Amy to file a lawsuit against Bursa Securities because the company disagreed with the directive issued by the regulator and to seek damages from the regulator. Scan Associates was granted an ad interim injunction by the High Court on May 11 to restrain Bursa Securities from implementing the classification on the company. Scan Associates (fundamental: 0; valuation: 0.3) shares closed unchanged at five sen yesterday, with 35.4 million shares changing hands. It was the top most active stock on Bursa, with a market capitalisation of RM10 million. MOST VIEWED STORIES ON theedgemarkets.com Tabung Haji lost ‘millions of ringgit’ in TH Heavy investment — Rafizi KUALA LUMPUR: Lembaga Tabung Haji’s paper losses from its associate stake in TH Heavy Engineering Bhd could put pilgrims’ savings with the fund at risk, according to opposition lawmaker Rafizi Ramli (pic). PKR vice-president Rafizi said in Parliament yesterday that “millions of ringgit” could be wiped out due to bad investment choices by Tabung Haji. Tabung Haji owns 29.81% in TH Heavy (fundamental: 0.35; valuation: 0.9), formerly known as Ramunia Holdings Bhd. TH Heavy shares fell 1.67% to 29.5 sen yesterday, for a market THE MALAYSIAN INSIDER BY C Y NTHI A B L EMIN 1MDB accuses media of trying to shape public opinion capitalisation of RM330.72 million. According to Rafizi, Tabung Haji had acquired the TH Heavy shares at above RM1 in 2007 and 2008. “It was an interesting oil and gas counter back in 2005, 2006 and 2007, and that (is why) the fund had decided to buy shares in the company,” he said. Correction WITH reference to the article entitled “Analyst: FGV likely to be out of KLCI list” published in The Edge Financial Daily yesterday, FGV’s market capitalisation should be RM7.59 billion and not as reported. The error is regretted. KUALA LUMPUR: 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) has accused the media of trying to shape public opinion against it and added that it will not respond to questions from them. “It is clear from the selective presentation of facts, lack of supporting evidence and biased reporting that an attempt is being made to shape public opinion ahead of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) and the Auditor-General completing their reviews,” said the debt-laden stateowned company in a statement yesterday. It said the search for truth should be conducted by trustworthy, unbiased and impartial parties, and that a “trial by media” is of no benefit to anyone who “is genuinely interested in the truth”. “Accordingly, the board will fully co-operate with and will only reply to questions posed by the bi-partisan PAC, the Auditor-General and relevant regulatory authorities. In the meantime, the board requests all parties to respect the review process being led by the Auditor-General (as directed by the Cabinet) and to await Filepic of a 1MDB signboard. 1MDB has accused the media of selective presentation of facts. the outcome of PAC hearings which commence this week.” The Edge weekly had in its latest issue posed several questions to the current and former directors of 1MDB on various questionable transactions carried out by the company. Among others, the article questioned 1MDB’s joint venture with PetroSaudi International, the firm’s financing of power asset purchases in 2012, and its US$3 billion (RM10.71 billion) bond issuance for the Tun Razak Exchange (TRX). Criticism of the wholly-owned Finance Ministry investment ve- hicle that was set up in 2009 has been mounting of late, most notably from former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and senior banker Datuk Seri Nazir Razak, the chairman of CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, over the entity’s whopping RM42 billion debt and the lack of transparency in its deals. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, the chairman of 1MDB’s board of advisors, had ordered the Auditor-General to conduct a review of the firm’s accounts. He had also told the department to prepare a report for further action and examination by the PAC. Auditor-General Tan Sri Ambrin Buang said the department planned to submit a preliminary report to the PAC by the end of next month. 6 HOME BUSINESS T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY QL blocks dilution of stake in Lay Hong SIS options were not given to the latter’s executive directors BY Y EN N E FOO KUALA LUMPUR: QL Resources Bhd successfully defended its shareholding in Lay Hong Bhd from being diluted by blocking resolutions to grant share issuance scheme (SIS) options to Lay Hong’s executive directors at the latter’s extraordinary general meeting (EGM) yesterday. Lay Hong managing director Yap Hoong Chai and three executive directors Yeap Weng Hong, Yap Chor How and Yeap Fock Hoong who had to abstain from voting, were all denied the SIS options during the meeting. The polls conducted during the EGM saw only 11.11% of shareholders’ vote in favour of granting SIS options to Hoong Chai. Weng Hong, Chor How and Fock Hoong garnered 23.54%, 12.7% and 23.77% of shareholders’ ballot respectively. However, QL, the second biggest shareholder of Lay Hong with a 38.53% stake, voted in favour of the group establishing a SIS and granting SIS options to Lay Hong chairman Datuk Dr Abdul Aziz Mangkat, executive director Ng Kim Tian and non-executive directors Cheng Chin Hong, Gan Lian Peng and Tan Ooi Jin. “We (QL) did not vote for the SIS for the four Lay Hong executive directors because we do not think that they should be issuing shares to themselves,” QL group accountant and investor relations officer Freddie Yap told The Edge Financial Daily yesterday. Yap added that QL (fundamental: 1.1; valuation: 1.1) saw Lay Hong’s move to grant SIS options to its executive directors as a way to dilute QL’s current equity interest in Hoong Chai told reporters after the EGM yesterday that the poll results were both “fair and normal”. Photo by Chu Juck Seng the group, but dismissed the issue as “a small corporate thing”. Meanwhile, Hoong Chai, whose family is a controlling shareholder of Lay Hong with a 42.45% stake, told reporters after the EGM yesterday that the poll results were both “fair and normal given the current situation”, referring to QL’s failed attempt to take over Lay Hong back in December last year. At the time, QL made a takeover offer for Lay Hong at RM3.50 per share after QL’s sole representative and executive director Chia Mak Hooi on Lay Hong’s board was not re-elected during an annual general meeting. “But if you look at it under normal circumstances when the executive directors have brought the company to profitability, they should be rewarded too [with the SIS options],” Hoong Chai said. He also brushed off suggestions that Lay Hong’s move to implement the SIS was to dilute QL’s shareholding in the group. “The message is not correct,” Hoong Chai said. “The impression [in the market] seems to be that they (QL) were booted out [of Lay Hong’s board], but it was the shareholders who chose not to vote him (Chia) in. The Lay Hong board had proposed him to be re-elected,” he added. Apart from the SIS, Lay Hong had proposed a private placement of up to 7.62 million new shares or 15% of the group’s enlarged share capital to third party investors. Both plans would help the poultry farmer comply with the public shareholding spread as required by Bursa Malaysia, but may at the same time dilute QL’s stake in the firm. “We are not trying to dilute QL’s shares. We are using the money to grow the group and make every shareholder feel that the investment in Lay Hong is worth something,” Hoong Chai explained. Hoong Chai also assured investors that the relationship between Lay Hong’s two biggest shareholders remains “very friendly”, with Lay Hong continuing to purchase raw materials from QL. Earlier at the EGM, Lay Hong shareholders voted in favour of the proposed private placement which is expected to raise gross proceeds of up to RM23.1 million. With the private placement, Lay Hong’s public shareholding spread is expected to increase to 26% from 15.42% as at Dec 31, 2014. Separately, Lay Hong (fundamental: 0.75; valuation: 0.8) is optimistic that its results for the financial year ended March 31, 2015 (FY15), which is expected to be announced by the end of this month, to be “much better than last year”. Khazanah to issue first tranche of RM1b socially responsible sukuk BY JEFFREY TA N KUALA LUMPUR: Khazanah Nasional Bhd, via Ihsan Sukuk Bhd, will issue the first tranche of its inaugural sustainable and responsible investment (SRI) sukuk of RM1 billion — at RM100 million — this year. Proceeds from the maiden issuance of the SRI sukuk will be channelled to Khazanah’s non-profit foundation Yayasan Amir to manage its cash flow for the deployment of the Trust School Programme (TSP) for schools identified this year. Ihsan Sukuk is a Malaysian-incorporated independent special purpose vehicle of Khazanah. “The first issuance will be at RM100 million, to roll out 20 schools in 2015. God willing, we will do an annual issuance of the sukuk in the coming years,” Khazanah executive director and chief financial officer Mohd Izani Ghani told a press briefing after the launch of the SRI sukuk here. He said the coupon rate of the SRI sukuk is estimated at 4.3%, which will be finalised soon. According to Mohd Izani, a “diverse” group of some 50 investors, comprising financial institutions, foundations and asset management firms, have indicated their interest to participate in the SRI sukuk. But he declined to reveal who the interested parties are. Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, who launched the SRI sukuk, has called upon Malaysian corporates to support the Islamic bond programme, which will enable the smooth roll-out of the 20 schools. “This sukuk presents a new method for funding for the purpose of education and a means for investors to fulfil their corporate responsibility,” he said. Khazanah said the social impact of this “pay for success” structure is measured using a set of predetermined key performance indicators (KPIs), which will be measured over a five-year period. It said if the KPIs are met at maturity, sukuk holders will forego a pre-agreed percentage of the nominal amount due under the SRI sukuk as part of their social obligation in recognising the positive social impact generated by the TSP. On the other hand, if the KPIs are not met, the sukuk holders will be entitled to the nominal amount due under the SRI sukuk in full. The SRI sukuk has been assigned a preliminary rating of AAA(s) by RAM Rating Services Bhd. NEWS IN BRIEF AmProp signs 21-year Reppa with TNB to build two hydro plants KUALA LUMPUR: AmCorp Properties Bhd (AmProp), which is controlled by veteran banker Tan Sri Azman Hashim with a 70.65% stake, announced yesterday its two wholly-owned units — Contour Mechanism Sdn Bhd and Trident Cartel Sdn Bhd — had signed a 21-year renewable energy power purchase agreement (Reppa) with Tenaga Nasional Bhd (TNB). In a filing with Bursa Malaysia, AmProp (fundamental: 2.4; valuation: 2.1) said under the agreement, it will build and operate two renewable energy mini-hydro power plants, located at Sungei Liang, Raub in Pahang, with a capacity of 10mw each. AmProp expects the construction of the plants to take some 24 months. Thereafter, TNB will purchase the electricity generated from Contour Mechanism’s and Trident Cartel’s mini-hydro power plants for 21 years. The total estimated generation and value of renewable energy generated is approximately 85.42gw hour and RM20.5 million per year, respectively. Contour Mechanism and Trident Cartel are owned by Affluent Merger Sdn Bhd, in which AmProp’s wholly-owned unit Amcorp Power Sdn Bhd has a 100% stake. Following the Reppa, TNB will acquire a 49% equity interest in Affluent Merger, which will reduce AmProp’s effective stake to 51%. AmProp now operates a 4mw mini-hydro power plant in Bentong, Pahang, and a 10.25mw Solar Power Plant in Gemas, Negri Sembilan. In the financial year ended March 31, 2014, AmProp’s contracting, renewable energy and power generation business contributes 56% to its overall revenue and 4% to its pre-tax profit. AmProp closed 0.5% higher to RM1 yesterday, valuing it at RM586.87 million. — by Sulhi Azman MAS to sell stake in Abacus International KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Airline System Bhd (MAS) is selling its indirect 8.84% stake in Abacus International Pte Ltd to Sabre Corp in a move to streamline its businesses and divest non-core assets. The sale is expected to be completed later this year. MAS and 10 other airlines in Asia, which are founding shareholders of Abacus, will be selling their combined 65% stake in Abacus — a global distribution system (GDS) for travel in Asia-Pacific — to Sabre, which currently owns 35% of the company. In a statement yesterday, MAS said Abacus had at end-2013 embarked on a strategic review of the company to determine how it might continue its development and better service its customers and partners. “The result of that exercise will see the airline shareholders sell their collective 65% stake in Abacus to Sabre. Subject to certain regulatory approvals, the transaction will result in Sabre emerging as the sole shareholder of Abacus,” it added. MAS also said it has entered into a new distribution agreement with Abacus to ensure continuity of the GDS support. Abacus today serves more than 100,000 travel agents across the region’s 59 markets. — by Chen Shaua Fui Malton bags RM208m job to build Royale Pavilion Hotel KUALA LUMPUR: Property developer Malton Bhd announced that its wholly-owned unit Domain Resources Sdn Bhd has received a letter of award for a RM208 million contract from Harmoni Perkasa Sdn Bhd to build one block of Royale Pavilion Hotel, along Jalan Bukit Bintang and Jalan Raja Chulan here. In a filing with Bursa Malaysia, Malton (fundamental: 1.1; valuation: 2) said Harmoni Perkasa is a wholly-owned unit of Urusharta Cemerlang Sdn Bhd, of which its chairman Tan Sri Desmond Lim Siew Choon is an indirect substantial shareholder. “A contract to finalise the scope and value of the construction works will be entered into between Domain Resources and Harmoni Perkasa in due course,” Malton said in the filing. Lim holds a 37.06% stake in Malton through Malton Corp Sdn Bhd. He also has a 28.08% stake in Pavilion Real Estate Investment Trust, which owns and runs Pavilion mall. Malton’s share price gained 0.55% at 91.5 sen yesterday, with 665,400 shares traded, with a market capitalisation of RM403.57 million. — by Sulhi Azman The Edge Research’s fundamental score reflects a company’s profitability and balance sheet strength, calculated based on historical numbers. The valuation score determines if a stock is attractively valued or not, also based on historical numbers. A score of 3 suggests strong fundamentals and attractive valuations. Go to www. theedgemarkets.com for details on a company’s financial dashboard. HOME BUSINESS 7 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY Foreign selling extended into third week, says MIDF Research BY SURIN MURUGIAH KUALA LUMPUR: Relatively heavy foreign selling of Malaysian equity continued for the third week in a row for the week ended last Friday, according to MIDF Research. In his weekly fund report yesterday, MIDF Research head Zulkifli Hamzah said foreign investors sold equity listed in the open market on Bursa Malaysia amounting to RM537.7 million on a net basis last week, compared with RM460.4 million the week before. He said foreign selling was heavy in the first three days, peaking last Tuesday when RM223.5 million was offloaded, the 13th day this year that the amount had exceeded RM200 million. “However, we note that foreign investors turned net buyers last Friday, although the amount bought was only RM72 million. Prior to [last] Friday, foreign investors had been selling for seven straight days,” he said. Zulkifli noted that in the last two weeks, foreign investors had offloaded RM1.58 billion in the open market. This has increased the cumulative net foreign outflow this year to RM4.2 billion. In comparison, the cumulative foreign outflow for the entire 2014 was RM6.93 billion, he said. Zulkifli said foreign participation on Bursa declined last week, after two weeks of elevated trading. He said the daily average gross purchase and sale fell below RM1 billion to RM901 million. “Retail investors retreated from the market again, after nibbling the week before. “Retailers sold RM137.9 million last week, but most of the selling was recorded last Friday, when Malakoff was listed. “Participation rate remained depressed at RM644 million, among the lowest this year. Risk aversion is still very high among retail investors,” he said. Zulkifli said for the third week in a row, local institutions supported the market strongly. Local institutions absorbed RM675.6 million last week, the fourth highest in a week this year. He said participation rate was still elevated at RM2 billion. Zulkifli said local institutions have absorbed RM5.36 billion net so far this year. Last year, they mopped up RM8.18 billion net. On the regional markets, Zulkifli said global equity prices demonstrated a commendable degree of resilience last week. He said the focus was more towards the bond market, where prices of sovereign debt securities had slumped in the last few weeks. CIMB: No MSS outside Malaysia and Indonesia Thai unit too small for the exercise, says CEO BY J E FFRE Y TAN KUALA LUMPUR: CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, which announced its first-ever group-wide mutual separation scheme (MSS) last Friday, said it will not implement the MSS outside Malaysia and Indonesia. “No, we have already introduced it in Malaysia and Indonesia. CIMB Thai is too small [for the MSS],” CIMB group chief executive officer Tengku Datuk Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz told The Edge Financial Daily yesterday. His comments came on the sidelines of the launch of Khazanah Nasional Bhd’s first sustainable and responsible investment sukuk worth RM1 billion. When asked about the group’s expected operational cost saving from the MSS, Zafrul declined to reveal any figures. “It depends; it is voluntary. Depending on how many people (CIMB staff ) will accept it (MSS), then we will know,” he said. However, he confirmed that the figures reported by The Edge Financial Daily yesterday were “quite accurate”. The daily, quoting sources, said that the group is looking to cut about RM400 million a year to hit its targeted cost to income ratio of 55% this year. It also noted that staff costs currently make up 55% of the group’s total cost, and that CIMB (fundamental: 1.05; valuation: 1.65) will look at other cost-cutting measures, such as its procurement and strategic review costs to trim its overhead. It was previously reported that employees who are interested in the MSS are expected to submit their applications by May 29. Successful applicants will receive packages based on rank and years of service, as well as options for extended medical cover for three years and participation in programmes. The Edge Research’s fundamental score reflects a company’s profitability and balance sheet strength, calculated based on historical numbers. The valuation score determines if a stock is attractively valued or not, also based on historical numbers. A score of 3 suggests strong fundamentals and attractive valuations. Go to www. theedgemarkets.com for more details on a company’s financial dashboard. 8 HOME BUSINESS T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Star strategises to reduce print reliance Plans to expand its reach in Southeast Asia BY SA NGEETHA AM ARTHALINGAM PETALING JAYA: Media group Star Publications (Malaysia) Bhd has drawn up five strategies to reduce its reliance on revenue from print advertising and shift its focus to digital revenue, as well as expand its reach in Southeast Asia. Chairman Datuk Fu Ah Kiow listed the strategies that Star Publications would adopt, which include making synergistic investments and introducing an audience interest marketing database system next month that allows the customisation of target markets. The others are expanding its advertising and event management segment that organises exhibitions, enhancing corporate governance, and improving efficiency and productivity. Fu said this transition is important at a time when news needs to be distributed in the fastest manner possible through various channels. "While the print segment contributes about 70% to the group's reve- nue, we cannot be overdependent on it to move forward. We are looking at a digital transformation, which entails the presentation of news and content in the right format," he told reporters after the company’s annual general meeting (AGM) yesterday. “We will increase our video content and deliver it in the fastest manner possible via print, radio online and television," he said. The group will launch its Star TV portal in September, a site that will aggregate and collate videos from all its websites, to expand its footprint in Southeast Asia through its present working relationship with foreign publications. Its flagship Star Online and R.AGE portals will be revamped to include more video content, he said. Fu, however, declined to reveal the capital expenditure and revenue growth from the strategies. Star Publications, which will announce its first-quarter results today, reported a 22% drop in net profit to RM111.42 million for the financial year ended December 2014 (FY14) from RM142.88 million in FY13. Revenue was flat at RM1.01 billion versus RM1.03 billion in the same period. Last month, the group announced its 64.1%-owned Singapore-listed unit Cityneon Holdings Ltd was buying Singapore-based Victory Hill Exhibitions Pte Ltd, an exhibition services provider which holds the rights to provide exhibition services for Marvel Comics, from Philadelphia Investments Pte Ltd for S$21 million (RM56.68 million). Fu said the proposed acquisition is expected to be completed "in the next few months" and will contribute "substantially" to group revenue. Meanwhile, Star Publications group managing director Datuk Seri Wong Chun Wai said the group remains “cautiously optimistic” about its financial performance for FY15. Earlier at the AGM, Star Publications shareholders approved the group's change of name to Star Media Group Bhd. Top fund sees bargains in small stocks at 39% discount KUALA LUMPUR: The country’s top performing fund manager is adding to holdings of small cap stocks, betting that a bull market rally will continue as earnings improve and valuations trail larger peers. Kenanga Investors Bhd favours exporters and builders as the US economy recovers and Malaysia boosts spending on infrastructure, chief investment officer Lee Sook Yee said in an interview. The FBM Small Cap Index is valued at 10.2 times estimated earnings, a 39% discount to the FBM KLCI. Smaller companies are involved in more diverse industries with better prospects than larger peers, which are dominated by banks and commodity producers, Lee said. Profits of companies in the small cap measure will increase 21% in the next 12 months, compared with a 3.5% gain for the KLCI, analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg show. “Small caps will continue to outperform the narrower KLCI and lead the recovery,” said Lee, who helps oversee RM5.6 billion. “Even after the outperformance, we continue to see value within this space.” The small cap index rose 0.3% to a three-week high at the close in Kuala Lumpur. It has surged 11% this year, more than triple the KLCI’s 3.5% gain. Lee said exporters are benefiting from the weaker ringgit as well as being “indirect proxies” to the recovery in both the technology industry and US consumer confidence. Inari Amertron Bhd, the semiconductor packager whose main client is US-based Avago Technologies Ltd, is among the best performers on the small cap gauge this year, with a 41% advance. Malaysian Pacific Industries Bhd, a semiconductor company which gets 29% of its revenue from the US, has jumped 48%. The ringgit has fallen 6.1% against the US dollar in the past six months, the second biggest drop after the rupiah, helping to boost overseas earnings for exporters. The US labour market has continued to strengthen, with data last week showing the fewest jobless claims in 15 years, while the Nasdaq Composite in April topped its 2000 dot-com-era high. The Kenanga Growth Fund, set up for long-term capital growth and to outperform the KLCI, has returned 21% annually in the past five years to beat 87 peers with assets of more than US$100 million (RM357 million), according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Kenanga’s top holdings include builders IJM Corp and Gamuda Bhd. IJM, whose net income doubled in 2014 from a year earlier, has risen 8.4% this year. Gamuda, which is helping to develop the Klang Valley Mass Rail Transit system, posted a 33% increase in 2014 net income. The government plans to spend RM48.5 billion on development this year, including the Pan-Borneo Highway and other transport links. Malaysia cut its 2015 economic growth target in January to 4.5% to 5.5% from an earlier projection of as much as 6%, citing the dampening effect of an oil price slide. Oil-related contributions make up almost 30% of annual state revenue. “The larger cap stocks within the KLCI consist mainly of banks, plantation and oil and gas names, and the current macro environment doesn’t favour those few sectors aforementioned,” Lee said. “On the other hand, the small cap universe consists of companies with very diversified business sectors and some of them offer superior earnings growth profiles.” Malayan Banking Bhd and Tenaga Nasional Bhd, the nation’s two biggest listed companies by market value, have gained less than 2% this year. Oil palm planter IOI Corp has fallen 11% in the period after reporting a 75% slump in second-quarter net income. The gauge of smaller companies entered a bull market last month after rebounding more than 20% from its December low. The measure has since dropped 2.6% from its April 21 high. “The small cap index has had a good run year-to-date,” Lee said. “As long as macro conditions remain intact, any corrections are more likely to represent a mid-cycle consolidation rather than a trend reversal.” — Bloomberg GEMFIVE.com aims to go regional in three years KUALA LUMPUR: Local online e-commerce platform GEMFIVE. com, a project by Quek Kon Sean, the youngest son of tycoon Tan Sri Quek Leng Chan, plans to go regional in the next three years and is eyeing Indonesia, Vietnam and Singapore as potential high growth markets. "Some of the countries we think where we have potential for strong growth are Indonesia, Vietnam and Singapore. We hope to have a strong presence in the Southeast Asian market," GEMFIVE.com chief executive officer Moey Tan told reporters after the official launch of GEMFIVE.com yesterday. She said Singapore has one of the highest rates of online retail consumer spend (1% to 1.2%) among Southeast Asian countries — still low — while Malaysia’s is at less than 1%. GEMFIVE.com is owned and operated by GuoLine eMarketing Sdn Bhd, a member of Hong Leong group, which is the principal investor in GEMFIVE.com. The e-commerce site offers more than 300 brands, with products like Tan: We hope to have a strong presence in the Southeast Asian market. Photo by Patrick Goh clothing, baby products, home decor and electronics. “GEMFIVE focuses on curation, value and simplicity. We help customers discover authentic products and exciting brands — many of which are emerging or are not easily accessible locally,” said Tan. She said a GEMFIVE mobile app will be launched soon. R E S U LT S I N B R I E F Pharmaniaga 1Q net profit up 21.3% KUALA LUMPUR: Pharmaniaga Bhd’s net profit rose 21.3% on-year to RM31.79 million or 12.28 sen per share for the first quarter ended March (1QFY15) from RM26.22 million or 10.13 sen per share on higher manufacturing profit margins. Revenue was flat at RM471.9 million against RM468.67 million in 1QFY14. The group also declared a first interim dividend of seven sen per share for the financial year ending December (FY15), payable on June 25. In a statement, Pharmaniaga (fundamental:0.95; valuation:1.70) said its manufacturing division recorded a pre-tax profit of RM28 million compared with RM23 million in 1QFY14, due to the group’s ongoing efforts to strengthen operational efficiencies and reduce manufacturing costs. Chairman Tan Sri Lodin Wok Kamaruddin said Pharmaniaga will maintain its drive to strengthen organic growth while implementing cost optimisation measures. He said manufacturing will remain a key driver of growth for the group as it scales up manufacturing capabilities in Malaysia and Indonesia. Separately, Pharmaniaga said its proposed joint venture agreement with Modern Healthcare Solutions Co Ltd to build a pharmaceutical manufacturing plant in Saudi Arabia lapsed last Friday. “Both parties (Pharmaniaga and Modern) have not determined the new extension date,” said Pharmaniaga. — by Supriya Surendran I-Bhd 1Q earnings jump 68% KUALA LUMPUR: I-Bhd’s net profit jumped 67.7% on-year to RM10.24 million or 0.96 sen a share for the first quarter ended March (1QFY15) from RM6.1 million or 1.27 sen a share, driven by its property development segment. Revenue grew 67.8% on-year to RM75.35 million from RM44.91 million. In a statement, I-Bhd deputy chairman Datuk Eu Hong Chew said he expects both the property development and leisure segments to continue with their positive contributions to the group’s performance. “The results are in line with the group’s growth plan to achieve revenue of RM500 million per year come 2018. By then, we expect the leisure segment’s revenue to be double that of 2014, while having completed our RM1 billion investment property programme,” he said. Eu said the group has now reached a stage where property development will continue to be the major contributor for the group. He noted that in 1QFY15, I-Bhd (valuation: 2.4, fundamental: 3) launched the Paris-inspired “Parisien Tower” service residence, which is the second of three thematic residential tower collections to be rolled out within the 72-acre (29ha) freehold i-City ultrapolis in Shah Alam, Selangor. The launch of the “Hyde Tower” is planned for the second half of the year. — by Joshua Lim P R O P E RT Y S NA P S H TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY T 9 Source: theedgeproperty.com What’s affordable in KLCC? KLCC Top 5 most expensive condominiums/apartments by average transacted price • The prices of condominiums in the KLCC area reflect the prestige of living in the heart of the city. • 3Q2014 recorded an average price per square foot (psf ) of non-landed properties at RM1,052 psf, while the average transaction price of a unit was RM1.68 million. • Based on theedgeproperty.com’s analysis of transactions for the 12 months to 3Q2014, about a quarter of transactions (25.6%) were for units priced above RM2.0 million. The second largest price range by market share was for units priced between RM1.0 – 1.5 million (22.8%). • The most expensive address belongs to The Binjai with an average transacted unit price of RM5 million. Located within the KLCC development, average transacted prices here were RM2,005 psf. • The other most expensive developments are The Pearl, The Troika and Binjai Residency with average transacted unit prices at RM4.70 million, RM2.99 million and RM2.92 million, respectively. • The most affordable development in KLCC is Parkview Service Apartment with an average transacted unit price at RM620,000. The compact units at 431 sq ft are also the smallest in the area. • Other affordable developments are The Orion (RM680,000), Fraser Place (RM790,000) and Soho Suites (RM870,000). Fraser Place and Soho Suites comprise mainly smaller units while The Orion has larger units, but is situated much further away on Jalan Tun Razak, nearer Istana Budaya. • There are sometimes bargains to be found. During the period in review, a 3 bedroom unit at The Orion changed hands for only RM354,000. KLCC Top 5 least expensive condominiums/apartments The Analytics are based on the data available at the date of publication and may be subject to further revision as and when more data is made available to us. For more of such information across Malaysia and Singapore, log onto the theedgeproperty.com. The one-stop portal for all your property needs, theedgeproperty.com offers price and transaction records, trend analysis, research classifieds, and more – all for FREE! Source: theedgeproperty.com by average transacted price Landmarks inks JV for hotels in Bintan BY SU L H I A ZMA N China recovery takes hold as Shenzhen property leads gains KUALA LUMPUR: Resort and property developer Landmarks Bhd has teamed up with Singapore-based ML Hotel Investments Pte Ltd to develop, own and operate two international hotel chains at its flagship Treasure Bay Bintan development in Bintan, Indonesia. In a statement yesterday, Landmarks said its wholly-owned subsidiary PT Bintan Hotel Utama has signed a joint venture (JV) agreement with ML Hotel Investments for the proposed projects. Both hotels, Mercure and ibis Budget, are expected to open in 2017 and will be managed by Accor Group. Mercure will be a mid-scale hotel with its personality rooted in the local culture, while ibis Budget will provide essential comfort at a budget price. When completed, Mercure will be the island’s tallest landmark at 10 stories. It will offer 182 rooms to Treasure Bay Bintan, of which 114 long-term leases will be made available for sale. ibis Budget, meanwhile, will feature 162 rooms. “With this JV and other partnerships with international hospitality brands in the pipeline, we are poised to position Treasure Bay Bintan as Southeast Asia’s leading leisure destination,” said Landmarks chief operating officer Fong Chee Khuen in a statement yesterday. “We are confident that Phase 1 of Treasure Bay Bintan will serve as a catalyst in creating lasting real estate value and augmenting Bintan’s tourism offering, by bringing in unique leisure and entertainment concepts not found anywhere else in the region,” he said. Landmarks (fundamental: 1.65; valuation: 0.9) shares closed at RM1.37 yesterday, with a market capitalisation of RM658.71 million. SHENZHEN: Yi Anwen bought a home for 1.95 million yuan (RM1.12 million) here from embattled developer Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd, which has defaulted on some of its debts while being investigated as part of a corruption probe. Although Yi and hundreds of other buyers in Shenzhen have spent the past six months fighting to take ownership of their homes despite being blocked by the investigation, the 33-year-old engineer, who bought in September, doesn’t want his money back now. “Home prices in Shenzhen have risen so much in the past few months,” Yi said. “Buying a similar home now would cost me about 2.5 million yuan. Refund? No way!” Shenzhen, where home prices have been rising since December, is shaping up as ground zero of a property market recovery that is slowly taking hold in China’s major cities. In Beijing and Tianjin, prices also have been increasing. And the decline in average prices in 70 cities tracked by the government narrowed to the lowest in 10 months in March after policymakers began reversing four years of property curbs and cutting interest rates. . “If simultaneous increases in both price and volume are the criteria of a recovery, that’s what we’re seeing right now, said Alan Jin, a Hong Kong-based real estate analyst at Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd.” JPMorgan Chase & Co, Barclays plc and other banks have raised share price targets for Chinese developers by as much as 41%, underpinning a stock market rally that has pushed valuations to record highs. — Bloomberg 01 01. Artist’s impression of the Mercure hotel swimming pool recreation area. 02. Artist’s impression of the Mercure hotel in Bintan, Indonesia. The Edge Research’s fundamental score reflects a company’s profitability and balance sheet strength, calculated based on historical numbers. The valuation score determines if a stock is attractively valued or not, also based on historical numbers. A score of 3 suggests strong fundamentals and attractive valuations. Go to www.theedgemarkets.com for details on a company’s financial dashboard. 02 12 B R O K E R S’ C A L L T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY CIMB’s MSS comes after a slew of headcount cuts Amway registers significant growth in 1QFY15 bottom line Amway (M) Holdings Bhd (May 18, RM11.04) Maintain buy with a target price (TP) of RM12.30: Amway (M) Holdings’ first quarter of financial year 2015 (1QFY15) results were above our expectations, making up to 38% and 35% of our full-year forecast and consensus’ respectively. Year-on-year top-line revenue showed growth of 51% to RM322 million from RM213.3 million a year ago on the back of pre-goods and services tax (GST) buying and well received pre-GST promotions focusing on high value items. Significant growth (an increase of 44.7%) was seen in the bottom line due to better sales performance. We are maintaining our FY15 and FY16 earnings forecast at RM95.6 million and RM94.4 million respectively with TP of RM12.30. The implementation of the GST has resulted in consumers buying in bulk hence the better quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) sales performance for 1QFY15, up by 40.1% to RM322 million from RM299.9 million in the 4QFY14. Q-o-q bottom line improved by 58.6% of RM36.8 million. The company is on a net cash position of RM227.4 million, and has declared single interim single-tier dividend of 10 sen (payment on June 17). We are looking forward to a gross dividend amounting 65 sen for 2015, translating into a prospective dividend yield of 6.4%. At this juncture, in view of moderating demand, low consumer sentiment, tougher market and economic conditions moving forward we are maintaining our FY15 and FY16 net earnings forecast at RM95.6 million and RM94.4 million respectively. Additional increase in cost due to the GST is absorbed by Amway. Therefore, we expect compression of some margin this year from the aggressive marketing and promotional activities which will be done by the management in order to maintain their leadership status. Our TP is unchanged at RM12.30 based on unchanged discounted cash flow (DCF) methodology (weighted average cost of capital: 7.5%). We have a “buy” recommendation for Amway. — BIMB Securities Sdn Bhd, May 18 CIMB Group Holdings Bhd (May 18, RM5.95) Maintain market perform with a target price (TP) of RM6.02: Last Friday, CIMB Group Holdings announced that it will be offering a mutual separation scheme to its Malaysian and Indonesian employees. This is in attempt to further bring down its operating cost structure as personnel expenses make up a huge chunk of its costs. (financial year 2014 or FY14: 56%). We were not entirely surprised by the move as CIMB aims to be a leaner entity. This comes after a slew of headcount cuts within its investment banking business across the region. To recap, CIMB hopes to achieve return on equity (ROE) in excess of 15% (FY14: 9%), common equity Tier-1 ratio of more than 11% (FY14: 11%), and cost-to-income ratio of less than 50% (FY14: 59%) by 2018. With this exercise, we still reckon that target 2018 (T18) is not an easy task for CIMB to accomplish. Structural and cyclical headwinds clouding the overall banking industry are hindrances to its aspiration — tepid loan or deposits growth, net interest margin (NIM) compression and weak capital market activities. Based on our calculations, CIMB’s net profit needs to accelerate by a staggering four-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) (2014 to 2018) of 26% in order to see its ROE climb above 15%. In our opinion, this is a difficult feat to pull off. PT CIMB Niaga Tbk, its 98%-owned Amway (Malaysia) Holdings Bhd FYE DEC (RM MIL) 2012 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E Revenue 797.5 834.2 888.3 910.4 935.8 Ebit 127.0 145.2 138.2 132.6 131.0 Pretax profit 137.1 145.2 133.1 127.5 125.9 Net profit 99.7 109.0 99.9 95.6 94.4 60.7 66.3 60.7 58.2 57.4 EPS (sen) 10.8 9.3 (8.4) (4.2) (1.3 EPS growth (%) 16.7 15.3 16.7 17.4 17.7 PER (x) 62.5 62.5 65.0 65.0 65.0 DPS (sen) 6.2 6.2 6.4 6.4 6.4 Dividend yield (%) 1.36 1.40 1.35 1.45 1.55 NTA/share (RM) 15.9 17.4 15.6 14.6 14.0 Ebit margin (%) 17.2 17.4 15.0 14.0 13.5 Pre-tax margin (%) 27.3 24.9 25.0 25.0 25.0 Effective tax rate (%) 47.4 47.2 43.3 40.6 37.5 ROE (%) 31.1 32.9 29.3 26.3 23.7 ROA (%) net cash net cash net cash net cash net cash Net gearing (x) Growth ratios Turnover (%) Ebit (%) Pre-tax profit (%) Net profit (%) 8.4 13.8 13.3 10.8 4.6 14.3 5.9 9.3 6.5 (4.8) (8.3) (8.4) 2.5 (4.1) (4.2) (4.2) 2.8 (1.2) (1.3) (1.3) CIMB Group Holdings Bhd FYE DEC (RM MIL) Net interest income Islamic Banking Inc. Non interest income Total income PBT Core net profit (NP) Consensus NP EPS (sen) EPS growth (%) DPS (sen) BV/Share (RM) ROE (%) PER (x) Price/NTA (x) Price/Book (x) Dividend yield (%) 2014A 2015E 2016E 8,655.5 1,461.3 3,931.1 14,048.0 4,276.4 3,159.0 38.1 (30.9) 15.0 4.53 9.3 15.6 1.8 1.3 2.5 9,320.0 1,457.2 4,183.6 14,960.7 5,257.7 3,990.6 4,041.6 46.8 22.9 19.3 4.85 10.1 12.7 1.6 1.2 3.2 9,822.9 1,537.7 4,383.1 15,743.7 5,692.4 4,320.6 4,533.5 49.3 5.2 20.3 5.16 10.0 12.1 1.5 1.2 3.4 Source: Company, AmResearch estimates Indonesia subsidiary, will continue to drag the group’s overall financial performance (contributed 19% of FY14 profit before tax or PBT) as it is likely to grapple with another round of high bad loan provisioning in the second quarter of 2015 (2Q15); its gross non-performing loans ratio is expected to rise and come in between 4% and 4.5% this year (1Q15: 4%). Furthermore, CIMB Niaga’s FY15 NIM is expected to taper below 5% (1Q15: 5.2%) as a result of the shift in its loan portfolio mix to higher quality assets. No changes were made to our forecasts. The group is poised to release its 1Q15 results tomorrow. Our Gordon growth model derives a TP of RM6.02 as unchanged. This is based on 1.24 times FY15 price-to-book ratio (P/B); we utilised: cost of equity of 8.8%, FY15 ROE of 10.1%, and terminal growth of 3%. The lower P/B multiple is to reflect slower growth and weaker ROE generation moving forward. Recall that CIMB was traded at average P/B of two times for the past two years when it generated ROE of more than 15%. Risks to our call are a steeper margin squeeze, a lower-than-expected loan and deposits growth, worse-than-expected deterioration in asset quality, and a further slowdown in capital market activities and adverse currency fluctuations. — Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd, May 18 Source: BIMB securities research LHFB stake sale may cap Carlsberg’s innovation activities Carslberg Brewery (M) Bhd (May 18, RM12.90) Maintain buy with a target price of RM13.90: We maintain our “buy” rating on Carlsberg Brewery with an unchanged discounted cash flow (DCF)-derived fair value of RM13.90 per share. Last Friday, Carlsberg announced that it is selling its entire 70% stake in Luen Heng F&B Sdn Bhd (LHFB) to Capriwood Sdn Bhd for a total cash consideration of RM19.5 million. LHFB’s other 30% equity interest is held by Luen Heng Agency Sdn Bhd. Carlsberg had on Dec 1, 2008, purchased the 70% stake in LHFB for RM2.1 million. LHFB is primarily involved in the importation, distribution and sale of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages including beer, hard liquor, Carlsberg Brewery Malaysia Bhd FYE DEC 31 2013 2014 2015F 2016F 2017F Revenue 1,555.1 Core net profit 183.9 60.2 FD Core EPS (sen) (4.0) FD Core EPS growth (%) Consensus net profit 61.0 DPS (sen) 21.1 PER (x) 15.0 EV/Ebitda (x) 4.7 Div yield (%) 64.2 ROE (%) 1,635.1 211.6 69.2 15.0 71.0 18.3 13.2 5.5 72.2 1,735.6 234.5 76.7 10.8 191.3 77.0 16.5 12.0 6.0 80.9 1,832.4 251.8 82.4 7.4 201.3 83.0 15.4 11.3 6.5 94.6 1,920.8 271.5 88.8 7.8 215.1 90.0 14.3 10.5 7.0 103.0 Source: Company, AmResearch estimates wine as well as other food and nonfood items. According to Carlsberg’s management, the rationale underpinning the disposal was its strategy of focusing on the malt liquor market (MLM), which consists of beer, stout and cider as well as its emphasis on maximising its return on invested capital. As it is, wine and spirits are very capital-intensive investments given the high value of the products and the need to maintain inventories. Additionally, these products offer limited commercial synergies with MLM as they are of a different segment. In Malaysia, MLM products dominate the alcoholic beverage market at 80%, while wine and spirits each has 10%. While we are surprised by this divestment, we understand that Carlsberg will continue to sell selected imported premium beers by LHFB as part of its portfolio. The LHFB purchase effectively gives Carlsberg exclusive distribution and sales rights to a range of imported premium beers such as Hoegaarden, Stella Artois and Budweiser. That said, it may cap Carlsberg’s innovation activities as Carlsberg can no longer immediately or exclusively leverage on LHFB’s labels to quickly adapt to consumers’ ever-changing taste. In financial year 2014 (FY14), LHFB contributed about RM10 million (or 5%) to Carlsberg’s net profit. Based on our back-of-envelope calculations, the disposal could potentially trim 2% to 7% off Carlsberg’s FY15 forecast (FY15F) to FY17F earnings (including the one-off loss of RM10.9 million). We are, however, leaving our FY15F to FY17F earnings unchanged for now pending the release of its first-quarter financial year 2015 (1QFY15) results. The disposal is expected to be completed in the 3QFY15 with the proceeds being reinvested for working capital and commercial expenses. —AmResearch Sdn Bhd, May 18. 14 B R O K E R S’ C A L L T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Good news flow for MRT Line 2 and LRT Line 3 in 2H Ghana FPSO services to contribute significantly to Yinson’s profits Construction: Cost comparison of MRT 2 vs LRT 3 MRT 2 LRT 3 Total TOTAL COST (RM MIL) DISTANCE (KM) COST/KM (RM MIL) UNDERGROUND TUNNEL (KM) AWARD PHASE % OF TUNNELLING PORTION’S LENGTH 25,000 9,000 34,000 52.2 36.0 88 478.9 250.0 13.5 2 15.5 1H16 1H16 26 1 27 Source: CIMB, Public display Construction sector Maintain overweight: We visited the public display of the alignments of the Klang Valley Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) Line 2 and Light Rail Transit (LRT) Line 3. This is a three-month event before the government executes the land acquisition part and prior to the pre-qualification and award phase. Key details we garnered are: (i) the pre-award phase for MRT Line 2 and LRT Line 3 looks likely to gain traction in the second half of 2015 (2H15); (ii) the total estimated cost of both lines is RM34 billion — the cost per km of MRT Line 2 is almost double that of LRT Line 3 as 26% of the total length of MRT Line 2 will be underground compared to LRT Line 3’s 1%; (iii) the award for LRT Line 3’s project development partner (PDP) is targeted for July 2015 (likely 6% PDP fees) while MRT Line 3 has already awarded the PDP role to MMC-Gamuda Joint Venture (JV) Sdn Bhd and (iv) awards for LRT Line 3 could begin from end-2015 at the earliest and MRT Line 2 in 1H16. Although there were no major surprises, indications of timing and major milestones we gathered from our checks with the officials at the show that 2H15 is likely to be a period of good news flow for both MRT Line 2 and LRT Line 3. The revised alignment of MRT Line 2 has resulted in a longer underground portion that accommodates Bandar Malaysia as a feature station of the planned high-speed rail (HSR) link to Singapore. This is positive for Gamuda Bhd as it could mean a larger share of contract value compared with the RM4 billion package for MRT Line 1. We expect the pre-qualification and award phase to feature other contractors under our coverage that have won MRT Line 1 packages, including IJM Corp Bhd and Sunway Bhd. Accumulate potential MRT Line 2 and LRT Line 3 plays ahead of the award phase in 2H15. MRT Line 2’s potential beneficiary list is likely to be broader, similar to the impact of MRT Line 1, while LRT Line 3’s next key event is the award of the PDP role in July this year. We are overall positive as the public display of lines marks the start of the pre-award phase of both projects, estimated to cost a combined RM34 billion. We maintain “overweight”, with Gamuda (the biggest beneficiary of MRT) and Muhibbah Engineering (M) Bhd as top picks. — CIMB Investment Bank, May 18. TBE power plant to boost Malakoff ’s earnings Malakoff Corp (May 18, RM1.80) Maintain outperform with a target price of RM2.18: The performance of Malakoff shares was lukewarm last Friday due to heavy selling pressure, which is contrary to our expectations. Management issued a press statement last Friday evening denying that the group is keen to acquire the power assets of Edra Global Energy Bhd. We believe the knee-jerk reaction is temporary, and we continue to like Malakoff based on its independent power producer (IPP) business model which provides the group with consistent and sustainable revenue streams throughout the power purchase agreement (PPA) concession period with fuel cost pass-through features. We therefore reiterate our “outperform” call on Malakoff with a target price (TP) of RM2.18. The current weakness in Malakoff ’s share price provides an opportunity for investors to accumulate. We expect earnings growth will come from its upcoming 1,000mw coal-fired Tanjung Bin Energy (TBE) power plant, which is scheduled to commence Yinson’s FPSO Adoon. operations on March 1, 2016. Despite earlier hiccups in the construction progress, the issues have been resolved. In addition to the chief executive officer Datuk Seri Syed Faisal Albar’s assurance during the initial public offering analysts’ briefing in April, our recent check with management confirmed that TBE’s progress is on track to commence operations as scheduled. We estimate revenue from TBE to boost the group’s earnings by 46.6% in the financial year ending December 2016 (FY16) and 29% in FY17. Arising from the expectation of higher earnings in FY16 and FY17, dividend yields are correspondingly anticipated to be higher, premised on the group’s dividend policy of a minimum 70% of profit after tax and minority interest payout ratio. We estimate dividend yield will be 4.6% for FY16 and 5.9% for FY17. According to news reports, the Energy Commission is considering extending the concessions of some existing power plants which are expiring in the next few years due to potential startup delays of awarded power plant projects. We opine the group’s Port Dickson power plant stands a good chance to be considered for an extension of its PPA. In addition to the plant’s good condition, its close proximity to the central region would be an added benefit for consideration of the extension. The group is also believed to be a front runner in a waste-to-energy project for Kuala Lumpur at 1,000 tonnes per day and 25mw capacity. Though contribution to the bottom line from this project is expected to be relatively small, it would nevertheless provide an advantage to the group to further explore other waste-to-energy project opportunities and expand its renewable energy portfolio domestically and internationally. We anticipate the group will announce stronger first-quarter FY15 results compared with the previous corresponding quarter as the recovery programme for its Tanjung Bin power plant was completed in March 2014. We continue to like Malakoff based on its IPP business model and reiterate our “outperform” call with a TP of RM2.18. — Public Investment Bank Bhd, May 18. Yinson Holdings Bhd (May 18, RM3.11) Upgrade to buy with a higher target price of RM3.60 from RM2.85: We upgrade Yinson to a “buy” with a higher fair value of RM3.60 per share (from RM2.85 per share), based on our sum-of-parts (SOP) valuation. Our fair value implies a financial year 2016 ending January forecast (FY16F) price- earnings ratio (PER) of 25 times, a premium to the oil and gas industry average of 17 times. We deem this justifiable due to the strong counterparties for its floating, production, storage and offloading vessels (FPSO) and the potential for earnings to double upon the commencement of the Offshore Cape Three Points block (OCTP) FPSO in Ghana. Following a recent meeting with management, we raise our valuation of OCTP as we have imputed a higher internal rate of return of 12.5% as guided by management, compared with our previous assumption of 10%. The OCTP project currently accounts for 48% of our total SOP valuation. Upon the commencement of operations in September 2017, the FPSO is expected to contribute to the bottom line significantly, with approximately RM150 million full-year accretion. We have accounted for four months contribution from the project for FY18F. Earnings for FY19F should double FY15F’s, although this is not currently within our forecast horizon. We are taking a more constructive stance on the OCTP contract. We understand the execution and counterparty risks appear somewhat low given that its customer, Eni SpA, is one of the largest integrated energy companies in the world with a market capitalisation of €61 billion (RM247 million) and a healthy balance sheet (net gearing of 0.3 times). Furthermore, Yinson does not bear the risk of lower crude oil prices potentially causing the production from the FPSO to be economically unfeasible. This is because Yinson is well protected by the contract terms between the two parties. The early termination fees would preserve its net present value currently derived from the project. With 75:25 debt-to-equity funding for the project, the group’s net gearing is expected to increase from 0.32 times currently to more than two times over the next two to three years. This would be progressively offset by the strong earnings and cash flow generated from the FPSOs. Yinson’s plan to divest its nonoil and gas operations (valued at RM273 million) by this year will further help pare down its gearing levels. Meanwhile, we understand that Yinson is actively bidding for more FPSO contracts. One such contract is the Ca Rong Do project in Vietnam by Talisman Energy Inc (now Repsol SA), according to international oil and gas newspaper Upstream. The FPSO will have a production capacity of between 25,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil and 30,000 bpd, plus 60 million standard cu ft per day of gas, with first production targeted in the second quarter of calendar year 2018. The stock currently trades at a FY16F PER of 21 times. The entry of Kencana Capital Sdn Bhd as the second largest shareholder should continue to underpin the sentiment of the stock, given its excellent track record in growing Kencana Petroleum (subsequently SapuraKencana Petroleum Bhd) into one of the largest oil and gas service providers in the country. — AmResearch Sdn Bhd, May 18. Yinson Holdings Bhd FYE JAN (RM MIL) 2015 2016F 2017F 2018F Revenue 1,083.4 Core net profit 144.7 14.0 FD Core EPS (sen) 20.2 FD Core EPS growth (%) Consensus net profit 1.5 DPS (sen) 22.0 PER (x) 15.5 EV/Ebitda (x) 0.5 Div yield (%) 25.0 ROE (%) 33.1 Net gearing (%) 1,124.2 148.1 14.3 2.4 119.2 2.5 21.5 17.5 0.8 10.2 60.4 1,171.8 151.6 14.7 2.4 137.2 2.5 21.0 23.4 0.8 9.6 127.3 1,365.6 209.4 20.3 38.1 137.0 2.5 15.2 16.5 0.8 12.1 156.6 Source: Company, AmResearch H O M E 15 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY Husam sticks to contest for PAS veep KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Husam Musa will stick to defending his PAS vice president’s post and confirmed yesterday his rejection of nominations for him to run for party president or deputy president, despite being eligible to contest either position. In a statement, Husam apologised to the party members and divisions who had nominated him for the top two posts, held by Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang and Mohamad Sabu respectively. “With great apologies to all divisions and members who have great expectations, I only intend to accept the nomination for PAS vice president post that I hold now. “I understand their concerns especially concerning the direction of the Islamic struggle of PAS in Malaysia for many years to come,” Husam said. Husam had received eight n o m i n a t i o n s f o r t h e PA S presidency. His withdrawal from the race for number one now leaves that contest to be waged between former vice president and party veteran Ahmad Awang and incumbent Hadi. Another eligible contender for the presidency, Datuk Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man, had earlier declined to run against Hadi and is now gunning for deputy presidency against incumbent Mohamad. PAS will hold its elections for new office bearers at its 61st muktamar or annual general assembly next month. The elections will be historic as this marks the first time the presidency is being contested. Husam in his statement said it was important that PAS be led by the ulama (clerics) and reminded party members not to fall for the “ploys” of their political enemies. “What has been achieved by PAS’ struggle today is the continuation of approach, strategy and method that were decided by our predecessors through Husam: With great apologies to all divisions and members who have great expectations, I only intend to accept the nomination for PAS vice president post that I hold now. Photo by The Malaysian Insider discussions and consensus at all levels.” But in a nod to continued cooperation with Pakatan Rakyat allies, PKR and DAP, Husam also said that PAS’ approach “to take over the federal government through the ‘PAS for all’ approach to win the hearts of non-Muslims was decided by consensus at all levels and not based on the decision of any individual”. The coming elections are expected to be hotly contested as PAS also struggles to resolve internal differences over the Islamist party’s future and whether it should continue cooperation with the opposition pact. — The Malaysian Insider MPs failling to put nation and people first, say lawyers Instead of fulfilling oath, responsibilities are abdicated to political masters BY V A N B A L AGA N KUALA LUMPUR: Instead of fulfilling their oaths to serve the electorate, members of parliament (MPs) have abdicated their responsibilities to their political masters, constitutional lawyers said, warning that the nation and its people will ultimately suffer if the lawmakers fail to perform their duties. They said it appears that members of the Dewan Rakyat mechanically administer their oaths to discharge their duties, including protecting the Federal Constitution. Senior lawyer Datuk Dominic Puthucheary said the Dewan Rakyat had failed to play its constitutional role because political parties had taken control of the house and turned it into a “Dewan Parti” (political hall). “Representatives to the Dewan Rakyat are elected by voters, but the elected have given their loyalties to political leaders, and the august body has become a Dewan Parti,” said the 82-year-old, who was a one-term Nibong Tebal MP from 1995. He said most elected representatives never understand their roles or bother to find out what they are expected to do as prescribed in the national charter. “For many, it is a career and not to perform a public duty as lawmaker,” he said in response to an impassioned speech by Gua Razaleigh, who had been elected Musang MP Tengku Razaleigh without fail since 1974. Hamzah to his fellow members “The concentration of that to put the nation and the people power in any individual is unconabove anyone else. stitutional. That is not what conThe 222 Dewan Rakyat mem- stitutional democracy is about. bers began sitting yesterday for “Therefore, the members of a month to discuss the affairs of the Dewan Rakyat have to decide the state. whether they want to fulfil the In the March sitting, when pledge that they have taken or debating the royal address, the abdicated their responsibilities Kelantan prince, fondly known to a power outside the Dewan as Ku Li, said Malaysia is in a Rakyat,” said Tengku Razaleigh. state of political Dominic and economic said there is gridlock, and no doubt that Representatives to this could only Tengku Razathe Dewan Rakyat be unlocked by leigh hit the Dewan Rakyat are elected by voters, nail right on members. but the elected have the head in his He expeech, but given their loyalty to sadmitted pressed conthere cern over the political leaders, and needs to be a mounting debt the august body has revamp of the i n c u r r e d b y become a Dewan Parti entire system of 1Malaysia Degovernance. velopment Bhd He also exas a result of pressed dismay obtaining unover the paroauthorised loans as well as the chial attitude of representatives implementation of the goods and from Sabah and Sarawak, who services tax. are more concerned about their “We are facing an unprece- territories and interests instead dented challenge to fulfil the of national issues. pledge to serve the nation and Lawyer R Kenghadharan said the people. any parliamentarian, who is un“This is because the truth is able to adhere to noble values, that the power of the Dewan Rak- would be a misfit and should vayat has constitutionally shifted to cate office as he or she is a gross the leadership of the political par- liability to the democratic proty,” said the 77-year-old Tengku cess. “Such incompetent parliamentarians will seriously damage the democratic process and governance — and we have many of those.” “Unless the people rise to save this institution, we risk our current system of governance collapsing completely and Malaysia becoming a failed state,” he added. Lawyer Edmond Bon said the constitutional idea is that elected representatives vote according to their intellect and conscience to be accountable to the people. Bon said MPs could not act independently, like introducing a motion of no-confidence against the leader of the house, as the party whip is enforced to maintain discipline. He said what was articulated by Tengku Razaleigh had been advocated by civil society for the removal of the concentration of power within the hands of an individual or selected few. Bon also said the proportionate representation system of MPs — based on the percentage of popular votes obtained — should be looked into when parliamentary reforms are undertaken, as done in the West. “We should also allow citizens direct access to the Dewan Rakyat if a respectable number signed a petition to debate public interest issues,” he added. — The Malaysian Insider IN BRIEF Russia to blame for downing MH17, says British investigator KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was almost certainly shot down by a Russian missile in spite of the country’s insistence on the contrary, a British investigator said in a documentary aired by Australia’s 60 Minutes. According to a report by The Mirror, Eliot Higgins and his team spent months uncovering and analysing YouTube videos as well as social media images posted by Russia’s own soldiers, using software previously available only to the military. Using a technique known as “geotagging”, Higgins matched the backgrounds in the images to actual locations on Google Maps. He and his team were reportedly able to trace the path of a BUK surface-to-air missile from Russia’s 53rd Air Defence Brigade base in Kursk to the crash site near Hrabrove in Ukraine. After the crash, it was filmed driving back to the base with one missile missing, the report said. — The Malaysian Insider Dr M: Pandikar is trying to ‘shame’ me KUALA LUMPUR: Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said yesterday that Dewan Rakyat Speaker Tan Sri Pandikar Amin Mulia was trying to “shame” him by denying his intention to resign in a private meeting between both men. “He is shaming me by saying he never told me that. He told me he does not want to be speaker anymore and that he was unhappy with how he was being treated,” he added. “He even told me he had sent in his resignation to the prime minister and will be communicating his decision to the PM,” Dr Mahathir told reporters after the launch of his new book yesterday. — The Malaysian Insider Google enables virtual tour of Melaka museums MELAKA: Thirty-six museums and galleries in Melaka are now accessible via virtual tour through Google, developed by Melaka Museum Corporation and Kezerk Imaging. Kezerk Imaging director Paul Koh said through the project, visitors would be able to obtain all information on the museums and galleries via Google Search and Google Maps. — Bernama Singapore lifts ban on pork from Malaysia SINGAPORE: After an absence of 16 years, pork meat from Malaysia is finally back on supermarket shelves in Singapore. The Straits Times reported yesterday that the island republic’s Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority recently approved the import of frozen pork from its neighbour, but only from one slaughterhouse in Sarawak, for now. — The Malaysian Insider 16 H O M E T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Uphold human rights for Muslims, say lawyers Or they will be discriminated against if religious council’s proposition is allowed BY V A N B A L AGA N KUALA LUMPUR: Muslims in secular Malaysia, who are also subject to Islamic law, will be discriminated against if a religious council’s proposition to exempt them from enjoying all fundamental rights under the Federal Constitution is allowed, lawyers said. They said this would leave only non-Muslims to enjoy such universal human rights. This line of argument also goes against the teachings of Islam which provide that the authorities respect the faith of followers, similar to those accorded in the constitution, they said. What is worrying, they said, is that denying the majority population such rights would have an effect on investor confidence in Malaysia, and political leaders would lose all moral authority to speak up on critical issues in international forums. Lawyer Nizam Bashir told The Malaysian Insider that if such a proposition is upheld by the Federal Court, then Muslims may find that “fundamental liberties” need not be observed by the state legislature when enacting Islamic laws. “The proposition that fundamental liberties are irrelevant when enacting Islamic law appears to be unsupported by the principal source of Islamic law, the Quran,” he said, referring to the Federal Territories Islamic Religious Council (MAIWP). Nizam cited some examples such as the right to privacy (Quran 24:27 and 49:12); the right to reputation (Quran 49:11); freedom of conscience (Quran 2:256 and 10:99); and presumption of innocence (Quran 17:15). He said this in response to MAIWP, which opposes non-Mus- lim lawyers practising syariah law, and last week contended in court that all Islamic enactments are excluded from fundamental liberties in the Federal Constitution. MAIWP lawyer Mohd Hanif Khatri Abdulla said this was a new point of constitutional importance to be raised against Victoria Jayaseele Martin’s appeal in the Federal Court, in which the lawyer is seeking the right to practise Islamic law in the Syariah Court. The case will be heard on Aug 13. Nizam added that one must also not ignore the Universal Islamic Declaration of Human Rights and the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam of which Malaysia is a signatory. Civil rights lawyer Syahredzan Johan said the position adopted by MAIWP is an attempt to rewrite the constitution. “The secularity of the constitution is enshrined in Article 4 which provides that the charter is the highest law of the land and any law that is inconsistent with the Federal constitution is null and void.” Syahredzan said there are no provisos in fundamental liberty clauses which allow these freedoms to be denied to Muslims when it comes to state syariah enactments. “If we were to take MAIWP’s argument, then it would mean that Muslims have lesser fundamental liberties compared with non-Muslims. Lawyer R Kenghadaran said Mohd Hanif was attempting to present a perverse argument, because the legal position was settled that all laws, including syariah-related enactments passed by state assemblies and laws by Parliament (for Federal Territories) could not override any provision in the Constitution. — The Malaysian Insider JOY OF READING … McDonald’s launched the Happy Meal Book Programme yesterday to encourage family togetherness and celebrate the joy of reading. The programme was officially launched by Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datuk Seri Rohani Abdul Karim and is supported by the ministry, McDonald’s said in a statement. During the weekends, McDonald’s will play host to a series of family-oriented activities across selected restaurants nationwide. Activities include storytelling competitions, Book Time with Ronald McDonald, and meeting with aspiring local author’s. Seen here , a young contestant in the storytelling competition in the Green Lane McDonald’s restaurant in Penang impresses the other participants. Photo by McDonald’s Ibrahim Ali loses defamation suit BY A ZRI L A N N UAR SHAH ALAM: The High Court threw out yesterday a defamation suit by Perkasa president Datuk Ibrahim Ali against theSun and two of the English daily’s former editors. Judicial commissioner Gunalan Muniandy said the article was not about Ibrahim, but the Malay rights group which the latter heads. Ibrahim had brought the RM5 million suit against theSun, former managing editor Chong Cheng Hai and ex-deputy editor (special reports and investigations) Terence Fernandez for an article on the Sultan of Selangor’s refusal to launch Perkasa’s first general assembly. The article titled “Sultan keeps Perkasa guessing” was written by Fernandez and appeared on the cover of the paper’s March 17, 2010 edition. Fernandez had said the Sultan of Selangor had withdrawn his consent to launch the assembly as the ruler was concerned with the organisation’s image as a chauvinist party. Justice Gunalan said apart from the fact that Fernandez had focused on Perkasa, he had also contacted Ibrahim for comment, to which the former Pasir Mas member of parliament had refused to respond. The judge also ruled that the arti- cle was justified and protected by qualified privilege. During the trial, the Sultan of Selangor’s senior private secretary Datuk Mohamad Munir Bani testified for the plaintiff, reading a statement issued by the Sultan in 2010, explaining the Sultan’s reservations in launching Perkasa’s first general assembly. His reservations included the fact that the event had a political flavour. In the statement, the ruler also advised the organisation to take note of the feelings of others when championing its cause. When met outside the court, Ibrahim said he would be appealing the case. “We will appeal the case because definitely we are not satisfied. For Fernandez, who is currently editor (investigations) at The Edge Media Group, it was his third and final defamation suit at theSun. He had won two previous suits brought by two businessmen. “Legal suits seem to be the new weapon of choice for those trying to silence the press. I am relieved that justice has prevailed three times over for me. “But if anything, these suits are a reminder that one must write fairly, accurately and without malice. This is the only way to have the law on your side.” IN BRIEF 14 probe papers on by-election completed GEORGE TOWN: Police have completed 14 investigation papers on offences reportedly committed during the recent Permatang Pauh by-election. Penang police chief Datuk Abdul Rahim Hanafi said all the completed investigation papers would he handed over to the head of the legal unit soon. “We had opened 16 investigation papers on election offences committed during the Permatang Pauh by-election. “[Besides the 14 mentioned], two other cases include the one on the PKR deputy president (Mohamed Azmin Ali) calling the Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar a “barua Umno” (Umno stooge) in his ceramah during the by-election campaign, of which the investigation papers are now in the final stage of completion,” he said at a gathering of cadet sergeant trainees. — Bernama Klang residents call for flood mitigation plan KLANG: Several residents’ associations in Klang have urged the Klang Municipal Council to devise a long-term, proactive flood mitigation plan to address recurring flash flood woes in the city. BBK Heights residents’ association secretary Loo Say Beng said a sustainable flood plan is needed to manage and control flood water movement in several areas here. This, he said, might include redirecting flood run-off through the use of proper channels as opposed to merely clearing clogged drains whenever flooding occurs which would not solve the problem.Taman Setia Residents Association president M Sivaguru echoed Loo’s sentiments, saying that a long-term flood mitigation plan is needed in Klang to prevent property damage. — Bernama Alleged rape threat probe papers returned to police KUALA LUMPUR: The Attorney-General’s (AG) Chambers has returned to the police the investigation papers on an alleged rape threat involving a Workers Day rally participant, requesting a further probe, said Kuala Lumpur police chief Datuk Tajuddin Md Isa. “We have submitted the papers and they have been returned to us with a few more instructions, as directed by deputy public prosecutor. We will gather more evidence and try to solve the case,” he said. — The Malaysian Insider 15 years jail for beating friend to death SHAH ALAM: A man who beat his friend during an argument over a RM20 handphone was sentenced yesterday to 15 years’ jail for causing his death. High Court judge Datuk Ahmad Nasfy Yasin ordered M Silvam, 44, to serve the jail sentence from the date of arrest on June 13, 2012. — Bernama H O M E 17 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY Pushback endangers thousands, says UN NEW YORK: Asean countries should focus on saving the lives of the Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants because pushing them back to sea after giving them provisions is incomprehensible and inhumane, said the United Nations as it urged governments in the region to take swift action to protect the migrants’ lives. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said he was appalled at reports that Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia had been pushing boats full of migrants back out to sea, which he added would inevitably lead to many avoidable deaths. “The focus should be on saving lives, not further endangering them,” he said, adding that news that a boat carrying several hundred people in abject condition had been given provisions and then pushed back out to sea by the Thai navy last Thursday was “incomprehensible and inhumane”. Zeid also expressed alarm that countries in the region were threatening to criminalise vulnerable migrants and asylum seekers who had crossed the borders. “Governments in Southeast Asia need to respond to this crisis on the premise that migrants — regardless of their legal status, how they arrive at borders, or where they come from — are people with rights that must be upheld,” he said in a statement. Zeid said the number of people leaving Myanmar and Bangladesh by boat last year was estimated to have climbed to around 53,000. Some 920 migrants, he added, are known to have perished in the Bay of Bengal between September 2014 and March this year. — The Malaysian Insider Two ships rusting away Legal wrangle over Bangladeshi vessels in Port Klang has been dragging on for years Review child rape verdict, says Sarawak group KUCHING: The Sarawak Women for Women Society (SWWS) joined the chorus demanding that the Attorney-General’s Chambers file a review against the acquittal of a 60-year-old man who raped a 14-year-old girl, saying that the court’s decision showed “a clear need for a speedy change to the law”. The teenager became pregnant and in 2012 gave birth to a son. DNA tests showed that the man, Bunya Jalong, was the biological father of the child. “If there is no review, the public is being asked to believe the assertion of the accused that conception could only have occurred through a finger, which scientifically has a low probability,” SWWS president Margaret Bedus said yesterday. — The Malaysian Insider Orang Asli sue TNB over Telom Dam BY V SH A NKA R GA NESH PORT KLANG: Two ships have been rusting away in Malaysian waters as a legal wrangle shows up the hazards facing the agency tasked with enforcing maritime law. The impasse involving two Bangladeshi vessels began five years ago, when the Banga Biraj and its 15 crew came to national attention after they were stranded following an accident in Northport which resulted in a messy compensation tussle. The sailors were found starving and emaciated and after the public was alerted, the Bangladesh High Commission and well-wishers came to their aid. While the men have been taken care of, this vessel is still an island prison as the legal issues surrounding it play out. In 2012, another vessel, the Banga Bodor, was involved in a maritime incident and is in the same predicament. Today, the two stalled ships are languishing in the busy waterways off Port Klang. Both vessels were anchored in deep water off Port Klang, but last month both broke their anchors and drifted dangerously before tugboats from Northport towed them towards unused docks. To make matters worse, the Banga Bodor rammed into another vessel, but fortunately both ships sustained only minor damage. Officials from the Port Klang Authority said that HRC Shipping Ltd from Bangladesh, which owns both ships, has placed skeleton crews on the vessels, the hulls of which are rusting. There are now 10 men on the Bodor and three on the Biraj. The Edge Financial Daily recently visited the ships and found that both have been run aground by the authorities as a safety measure about 1km from Northport’s busy shipping lanes. The crew members said the ships broke anchor when the tide was unusually high but they were unable to do anything as the ships’ engines were not working. “We just drifted and only stopped when we hit the other vessel. Luckily we were pulled to IN BRIEF KUALA LUMPUR: Eleven Orang Asli have filed suit against Tenaga Nasional Bhd, the Pahang government, Orang Asli Development Department director-general and the Malaysian government to challenge the acquisition of their ancestral land for the construction of the Telom Dam in Kuala Lipis. Jeffry Hassan and 10 residents of Kampung Pos Lanai, Kuala Lipis, Pahang filed the lawsuit in the Civil High Court on April 17. The plaintiffs are asking the court to declare, among others, that they have native titles to and are the owners of the land they are now residing on. The court has set July 9 for case management. — Bernama Engineer on drug charge escapes gallows Skeleton crews have been left on the ships, which have become unmanoeuvrable. Photo by V Shankar Ganesh safety,” said one of them. The crew members, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said HRC Shipping rotates the crew for the two ships every six to 12 months. “We have been here doing nothing ever since we came. Nothing works on the ships and we have not received our salaries for the last four months. “As for food, the owners have appointed a local agent who brings us food supplies every week but it’s barely enough.” The vessels are no longer manoeuvrable as their engines are no longer operational, they said. How it began THE saga started when the 11,804-tonne Biraj damaged two container quay cranes while berthing at Northport on Oct 22, 2008. HRC Shipping gave an undertaking to Northport to pay for the damage and the vessel was allowed to sail the following day. However, the company failed to pay for the damage and on a subsequent call to Port Klang on May 4, 2010, the vessel was served a detention order by the Shah Alam High Court following a petition by Northport to recover costs. A Northport spokesman said all rights of claim to the ship were subrogated to its insurance company Takaful Ikhlas Sdn Bhd. Northport was compensated by the insurance company, and Takaful is also believed to have been compensated by the ship’s owners. As for the 9,692-tonne Bodor, this ship needed repairs after it called at Port Klang in 2012. The Marine Department has recently issued a tender notice to scrap the two vessels and the exercise was closed on April 28. A Port Klang Authority (PKA) official said the ships are in bad shape and could even sink. “The tender is very timely and hopefully the five-year problem will finally be solved,” he said. a lawsuit against the department to prevent the sale of the ship. Hence, a department spokesman said, the tender exercise will be delayed. The long delay in disposing of the ships has drawn the ire of many in the maritime industry, who blame the authorities for foot-dragging over the situation. The Marine Department has declined comment in view of the lawsuit. HRC Shipping has not responded to requests for comment made two weeks ago. In effect, said a PKA official, the ships are enjoying free parking at the port. “If they are taken back to Bangladesh, they would definitely be sold off,” he said. The issue could have been resolved long ago if quick action had been taken, he opined. The onus was on the Marine Department as it is the only authority with the jurisdiction to deal with such probShipowners prevent sale lems, said the official. of ships With no end in sight to the issue, However the Marine Department it now looks like the sailors left on has been stopped from selling the the ships could once again go hunships as HRC Shipping has filed gry and live in squalid conditions. PUTRAJAYA: A Filipina IT engineer escaped the hangman’s noose yestrday when the Federal Court reduced the charge against her from trafficking in 1.04kg of heroin and monoacetylmorphine, to possession. A five-member panel of judges chaired by Justice Tan Sri Abdull Hamid Embong allowed Marivelle Gonzales’ appeal to set aside her conviction and death sentence on two counts of trafficking. She was sentenced to 20 years’ jail for each count but ordered the sentences to run concurrently from the date of arrest in March 2010. — Bernama Pakatan to revive shadow Cabinet KUALA LUMPUR: Pakatan Rakyat will revive its shadow Cabinet to strengthen the checks and balances system of the government, said opposition Leader Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail. She said the opposition’s shadow Cabinet committee for each ministry will be represented by a Pakatan member of parliament (MP). Wan Azizah, the MP for Permatang Pauh, said the shadow Cabinet is based on the principles of consensus and created in the interest of the people of various races and religions in the country. — Bernama 18 C O M M E N T T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Yellen takes a back seat to China Some think it is starting to eclipse the US as the most influential player in setting global borrowing costs BY WILLIAM PESEK T raders have been panicking over the sudden rise in global bond yields triggered by the expected tapering of the US Federal Reserve’s stimulus programmes. But an unlikely saviour may emerge to limit the damage: China. That’s the view of researchers at Oxford Economics, who think the world’s second largest economy is starting to eclipse the United States as the most influential player in setting global borrowing costs. As the world’s largest trading nation and holder of currency reserves, China has long held sway over economic activity in places ranging from Brazil to Indonesia. What’s new is that the country’s influence over global bond markets is beginning to eclipse that of the Federal Reserve. While traders still keep a close watch on decisions made by Fed chair Janet Yellen (pic) in Washington, economic shifts in China are starting to matter even more for the global economy. Oxford economist Adam Slater has run the numbers on three distinct growth scenarios for China: (i) growth slowing in a controlled manner; (ii) a hard landing in which growth drops precipitously and (iii) a sudden return toward growth in the 8% range. The first is Oxford’s baseline assumption, to which Slater assigns 55% odds. His models see growth easing to 6.6% this year and toward 5.3% by 2020. In this scenario, China’s ageing population, its slowing urbanisation and President Xi Jinping’s efforts to prioritise domestic consumption will all contribute to gradually slower growth. In that case, Slater says, China’s slowdown won’t necessarily “cause severe disruptions in global markets”. Even if the Fed begins hiking rates in September, China’s moderation will limit the fallout in bond markets. At most, Slater reckons US 10-year yields would rise from 2.2% now to 2.9% by end-2016. Oxford estimates the second scenario — a deep downturn in China — is a 30% proposition and could leave US 10-year rates at 1.7% by the end of next year. It assumes a “severe correction in the property sector combines with acute problems in parts of heavy industry lead- ing to a serious bad loan problem in the banking sector”, Slater says. “Both the supply of and demand for credit drop back, with the high leverage of many Chinese firms contributing to the latter effect.” The after-effects would be broad and powerful, with Chinese property falling at least 10% and local government finances deteriorating even more dramatically. Next, foreign direct investment would plunge; the number of non-performing loans would skyrocket and stock markets from New York to Frankfurt to Singapore would slide. In that case, global gross domestic product (GDP) might average only 2.1% in both 2015 and 2016 instead of the currently expected 2.7% and 3%. That, in turn, would affect the calculations of central banks: the Fed would be less inclined to raise rates; the European Central Bank might keep rates at zero until perhaps 2020, and Japanese bond yields could remain at zero into 2017. Surprisingly strong growth in China is scenario three. In that instance, China would fix its structural problems quickly and painlessly. “A stronger China,” Slater says, “means strong world trade and GDP growth and a faster rise in global bond yields.” In the US, 10year rates could rise toward 4.8% by 2020, while German Bund rates might climb from their current 0.6% to 2.3%. But there’s a reason Oxford considers this the least likely scenario (Slater puts the odds at 15%). China’s economy showed no signs of acceleration at the start of the second quarter: the most recent lending and investment data sig- nalled the opposite. Fixed-asset investment, meanwhile, is the lowest in almost 15 years. Worse, China’s default risks are soaring — a side effect of a US$20 trillion (RM71.4 trillion) surge in credit since 2009 that’s left many borrowers overextended. Bond traders aren’t the only ones keeping a closer eye on China’s US$9.2 trillion economy — Yellen is, too. In February, she told Congress that for all the obsessing about Fed rates, foreign events “can pose risk to the US economic outlook”. In China, she said, “economic growth could slow more than anticipated, as policymakers address financial vulnerabilities and manage the desired transition to less reliance on exports and investment as sources of growth”. If you sense a hint of anxiety in that quote, that’s not an accident. Yellen is aware that she doesn’t have nearly as much control over the fate of the US economy — and the fate of global bond markets — as her reputation might suggest. — Bloomberg View William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own. Southeast Asia must deal with human trafficking crisis BY THE ED I TORS INTERNATIONAL pressure to address a humanitarian crisis in Thailand has exposed another one in Myanmar. Now the world — and especially Southeast Asia — has no choice but to deal with both of them together. The United States and European nations have been urging Thailand to combat human trafficking for some time, and it’s working: Thai authorities recently made several arrests in cases against criminal gangs that smuggle migrants from Myanmar. In response, however, many of those smugglers are abandoning their cargoes, setting adrift possibly thousands of would-be migrants without food, fuel or water. Regional navies have vowed to turn the vessels away, for fear of encouraging others to attempt the journey. Countries such as Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand should certainly heed UN pleas to allow the refugees to land. But this is also the moment to address the trafficking problem at its source. Many if not most of the stranded migrants are Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar’s coastal Rakhine state. More than 120,000 Rohingya have fled Rakhine since 2012, and the pace nearly doubled in the first quarter of 2015. Long considered interlopers imported by the British during colonial times from what is now Bangladesh, the one million-plus Rohingya com- A boat with migrants being towed away from Thailand by a Thai navy vessel, in waters near Koh Lipe island on Saturday. Malaysian vessels intercepted the boat crammed with migrants after the Thai navy towed it away from Thailand, the latest of a number of vessels pushed back to sea by governments who have ignored a UN call for an immediate rescue. Photo by Reuters munity suffers virulent discrimination in Myanmar. Denied full citizenship, they also face restrictions on their freedom to move, marry and worship; earlier this year, they lost the right to vote. Conditions have deteriorated steadily since anti-Muslim riots swept Rakhine in 2012. As many as 150,000 Rohingya remain trapped in displacement camps that lack sanitation, sufficient food and proper medical care. It’s little wonder so many are willing to place their fates in the hands of smugglers, who have held some for ransom and sold others into virtual slavery. The Myanmar government has to do much more to reverse this outflow. The easiest place to start, relatively speaking, is by improving conditions in Rakhine’s refugee camps. While humanitarian agencies are at work again after a one-month halt last year, levels of assistance remain inadequate. Aid groups are limited by the number of local staff they can employ and other logistical hurdles. Authorities also need to reach out to tens of thousands of Rohingya living in apartheid-like conditions in isolated villages, largely cut off from aid and access to livelihoods. More broadly, the government needs to find a way to integrate the Rohingya — many of whom trace their ancestry back generations — into society as full rather than naturalised citizens. The latter are prohibited from owning immovable property, running for office, working for the government, or studying medicine or engineering. The hardest yet most crucial task will be changing hearts and minds across the country. Anti-Rohingya prejudice unites virtually the entire majority Buddhist population and all political parties. At the least, the instigators of the 2012 riots and subsequent attacks should face trial so that the Rohingya can see that the law protects them, too. True reconciliation will require years. In the meantime, authorities must at least clamp down harder on hate speech and stop distorting or obscuring the Rohingyas’ generations-long roots in the country. If Myanmar’s neighbours have a duty to care for refugees fleeing its shores, it is Myanmar’s obligation to give the Rohingya reasons to stay. — Bloomberg View F E AT U R E 1 9 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY Pope Francis extends agenda of change to Vatican diplomacy BY GAVI N JON ES & JAMES MACKENZIE POPE Francis’ hard-hitting criticisms of globalisation and inequality long ago set him out as a leader unafraid of mixing theology and politics. He is now flexing the Vatican’s diplomatic muscle as well. Last year, he helped to broker an historic accord between Cuba and the United States. This past week, his office announced the first formal accord between the Vatican and the State of Palestine. The Pope ruffled even more feathers in Turkey last month by referring to the massacre of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the early 20th century as a “genocide”. After the inward-looking pontificate of his scholarly predecessor, Pope Benedict, Pope Francis has in some ways returned to the active Vatican diplomacy practised by globetrotting Pope John Paul II. Much of his effort has concentrated on improving relations between different faiths and protecting the embattled Middle Eastern Christians. However, in an increasingly fractured geopolitical world, his diplomacy is less obviously aligned to one side in a global stand-off between competing blocs. This is reinforced by his status as the world’s first pope from Latin America, which has given him an entirely different political grounding from any of his European predecessors. “Under this pope, the Vatican’s foreign policy looks South,” said Massimo Franco, a prominent Italian political commentator. He said the Pope has been careful to avoid taking sides on issues like Ukraine, where he has never defined Russia as an aggressor. That approach is intended to ensure that he remains more credible with countries like Syria, Russia and Cuba, all nations where Pope Francis feels he can help local Christians best by steering an independent course. Clearly deeply interested in how the world outside the walls of the Vatican works, he appears determined to use his position and the huge global audience he commands to challenge entrenched diplomatic positions as well. The former secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, a veteran insider whose office formerly controlled both relations with foreign powers and many internal Vatican affairs, has been replaced. His office has been downgraded to resemble a more classical diplomatic service, while Pope Francis has set a bolder, more personal stamp on Vatican foreign policy. “He’s someone who’s capable of praying in the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, and then talking about the Armenian genocide. He’s not someone who’s bound by political correctness,” said former Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini. With many conservative Catholics unhappy about the Pope’s focus on issues like economic injustice and his relatively tolerant tone on sensitive social topics, like homosexuality and the status of divorced people, pronounced views on delicate diplomatic issues could cause further division in the Catholic Church. It is a point where he will be particularly tested in September — on his upcoming visit to the US. After helping to foster last year’s agreement reviving diplomatic relations between Havana and Washington, Pope Francis reaped criticism from many US conservatives, including Marco Rubio, a candidate for the Republican nomination for president. Rubio avoided directly admonishing the Pope, but said he should “take up the cause of freedom and democracy” in Cuba. That kind of veiled criticism reflects the wider unease some Catholics feel at the change the Pope has ushered in. “Bishops complain that he becomes popular by attacking the church,” said Franco. “He speaks directly to the people and doesn’t respect the usual command structures.” — Reuters Corporate Japan answers to nobody Toshiba questioned, Sharp asks lenders for another bailout BY WILLIAM PESEK I t’s been a dreadful week for Japanese corporations. Toshiba was facing questions about its accounting practices; Sharp was asking lenders for another bailout; and Takata couldn’t escape bad news about its airbags. These problems are bad enough on its own. Together, they raise serious questions about the state of Japan’s corporate governance. At a time when the Nikkei stock exchange has been rising (it’s up 36% over the past year), those questions are in urgent need of answers. If Japan’s leading companies are managed as poorly as this past week’s events suggest, there’s little reason to believe the country’s stock market surge is sustainable. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has certainly tried to improve Japan’s corporate governance. Next month, Tokyo will release a national code of conduct for executives. Companies will be asked to include at least two outside directors on their boards or explain why they shouldn’t have to. Abe is also asking companies to invite more women into the executive suite. Diversity in the boardroom, the government hopes, will enhance oversight. In theory, said Nicholas Smith, a Tokyo-based strategist at CLSA, “this should trigger a flurry of fevered business and balance sheet restructuring”. In practice, corporate Japan has barely budged in response to Abe’s reforms — after decades of running their affairs free of outside interference, their inertia has proven too powerful. Take Toshiba, which on May 8 Abe is asking companies to invite more women into the executive suite. Diversity in the boardroom, the government hopes, will enhance oversight. Photo by Reuters ny with no path to growth. The debt-saddled company posted a US$1.9 billion loss for the year that ended March 31. And the company only has itself to blame. Once synonymous with cutting-edge electronics, Sharp’s moves to diversify into software and content businesses have been glacial. Little has changed at the company since 2012, when the company was saved from the brink of bankruptcy by indulgent lenders. Now, Sharp is back, cap in hand, asking for more help. And all it is offering in return is a business plan riddled with gimmicks, like reducing capital to cut tax payments. By any account, Sharp is the type of company that should be allowed to fail. Instead, weak oversight allowed management to run the company into the ground. Takata, for its part, has managed to combine Toshiba’s lack of transparency with Sharp’s chronic complacency. Last week, Toyota, Nissan and Honda said they’re recalling at least 6.5 million vehicles because of faulty airbags supplied by Takata — that can endanger passengers by emitting shrapnel. Those recalls might have occurred much sooner had Takata not needlessly released information about its products in small drips. Even with passenger safety at stake, company executives haven’t offered their full knowledge to the public. In that sense, It wasn’t just a bad week for corporate Japan. It was a bad week for the Japanese government. It should finally recognise that its efforts at corporate reform are falling far short of the mark. — Bloomberg View estimated it will write down US$420 million (RM1.5 billion) of profit over three years, in response to an ongoing internal accounting probe that revealed the company has overstated its profits. Financial markets seemed relieved, but investors should be asking themselves two questions: How could such massive accounting irregularities still happen — almost 14 years after Enron Corp’s implosion and four years after the US$1.7 billion Olympus Corp’s fraud scandal? And how have Japanese authorities responded to Toshiba’s malfeasance? As for how Tokyo has responded to the revelations about Toshiba — it has barely done anything. There have been no investigation of the company, no public chastisement, no parliamentary hearings. Toshiba has even kept its place on the JPX-Nikkei Index 400, which is supposed to list the country’s best-run companies. William Pesek is a Bloomberg View Sharp, meanwhile, proved last columnist. The opinions expressed week that it’s a zombie compa- are his own. Singapore studies to get smarter BY ANSUYA HARJANI FROM Santander to Seoul, urban centres around the world are mapping out ambitious “smart city” blueprints. But Singapore is taking these plans to use technology to make city living more connected — by aiming to become a “smart nation” within the next decade. According to Steve Leonard, executive deputy chairman of the Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore, what sets Singapore apart is the city state’s relative economic and political stability. At 700 sq km, Singapore, of course, is also a much more compact country compared with peers, making it easier to scale up successful initiatives. Last year, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong launched Singapore’s Smart Nation initiative, setting up a Smart Nation Programme Office to coordinate efforts by various government agencies. The government assigned Jurong Lake district as the test bed for smart city initiatives. Singapore’s smart nation initiative involves collaboration among government, academia and the city’s fast-growing community of tech entrepreneurs backed by heavy investments in research and development, Leonard said. Key components of Singapore’s smart nation are transportation and elderly care. The country is home to a rapidly ageing population, with the number of its senior citizens forecast to triple over the next 15 years. “Technology can help them to live independently in their own communities with their own support networks, and give their children peace of mind, especially if we can integrate sensors, apps and remote monitoring to help our seniors to age in place, to connect with other seniors, and to stay in touch with their children, grandchildren and caregivers,” Lee said in a speech at Founders Forum Smart Nation Singapore. Several public hospitals are currently trialling a tele-health rehabilitation system, where data is transmitted wirelessly through sensors attached to patients’ limbs as they carry out therapy sessions at home. This is to eliminate the need for elderly patients to travel and wait for their appointments in hospitals. Being the world’s third most densely populated nation, an efficient transportation system is also central to Singapore’s plans. “Land is scarce in Singapore. Already, we are one of the most densely populated countries in the world, and we can’t keep on building more and more roads indefinitely, becoming like Los Angeles,” said Lee. “We have got to find solutions, using technology, using data, to make our transport more efficient and to improve the commuting experience — through information for commuters; through responsive management of public transport systems; through smart city planning to minimise long and unproductive commutes.” Singapore is currently rolling out sensors across the island to collect data from busy areas, such as traffic junctions, bus stops and taxi queues, which will then be relayed back to the relevant agencies for analysis. This is aimed at helping the government gain insights into urban challenges, and build services to make life for commuters more fluid and less congested. — CNBC For more, visit www.cnbc.com 20 FO CU S T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY T UE F 01. Human remains retrieved from a mass grave at a rubber plantation in Thailand’s southern Songkhla province on May 7. More than 50 Thai police officers have been punished over suspected links to human trafficking networks, the country’s police chief said. Thailand’s prime minister has ordered a probe into the existence of trafficking camps near the Malaysian border. Photos by Reuters BY WH Pra cle mo hum ing “th wh cou It i Tha use ab dol an on sea un to h 02. Workers carrying a body bag with remains retrieved from the mass grave on May 6. ah un 01 The depths of desperation Lid lifted on brutality of traffickers exploiting Muslim Rohingya fleeing persecution in Myanmar BY SI MON ROU GHNEEN B odies buried in the jungle, camps hurriedly abandoned, officials arrested, police suspended from duty, thousands of desperate refugees adrift at sea and pushed back into international waters by foreign navies. Tens of thousands of Muslim Rohingya fleeing discrimination and enslavement in Myanmar are running a gauntlet of extortion, rape, starvation and sometimes execution in the remote jungles of Southern Thailand, a usual way station en route to Malaysia. Two weeks ago, more than 30 bodies were dug up at abandoned camps around Padang Besar near the Thailand-Malaysia frontier. Thailand’s military junta, under pressure internationally over accusations of human trafficking as well as slavery in its fishing industry, scoured the country’s southern reaches for victims of traffickers. The traffickers, themselves Rohingya in some cases, were likely working with support from members of the security forces, Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Prawit Wongsuwan believed. By last Sunday, the impact of Thailand’s hunt was being felt as 600 refugees, mostly Rohingya, washed up near Aceh on the north-western tip of Indonesia. Last Monday, 1,000 more were found dumped in shallow seas near Langkawi in Malaysia, and another 400 drifting in a boat off the west coast of Indonesia. By last Tuesday, both countries were saying that they would not accept any more refugees arriving by sea, with Indonesia sending a boat- load of around 300 back towards Malaysia. “I am still very worried that there are many more boats we don’t know about,” said Chris Lewa, director of the Arakan Project, a non-governmental organisation that monitors Rohingya displacement. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), in the first quarter of this year, around 25,000 people, double that for the same period over the past two years, crossed the Bay of Bengal in the traffickers’ cramped, rickety and sunbaked boats. While most refugees are fleeing voluntarily, they risk being trapped by gangs seeking fees of up to US$2,000 (RM7,140) to smuggle them into Malaysia — money often extorted during anguished phone calls from captives, sometimes during torture, to family members. “Based on interviews with those who have reached Thailand or Malaysia, 300 people are estimated to have died at sea while attempting maritime journeys from the Bay of Bengal in the first quarter of 2015 — and as many as 620 since October 2014 — primarily as a result of starvation, dehydration, and beatings by boat crews,” the UNHCR reported two weeks ago. See related story on Page 26 Such a perilous, brutal exodus is driven by decades of discrimination against the Rohingya, a group not recognised as one of Myanmar’s 135 listed ethnicities and thereby denied most rights. Numbering up to an estimated 1.3 million, most live in poverty in Rakhine state in north-west Myanmar, one of Myan- 02 mar’s poorest regions which is the homeland of around two million Buddhist ethnic Rakhine. And while anti-Rohingya persecution goes back decades — to military operations that forced hundreds of thousands to flee across the border to Bangladesh in the late 1970s — life for the Rohingya has worsened since Myanmar’s civilian government took office in 2011 and introduced a welter of liberalising reforms. At the same time as once-respected defenders of democracy and human rights — such as the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party and former political prisoners known as the 88 Generation — were at last granted many of the freedoms so long denied them by the junta, so too were the likes of Wirathu, leader of a group of anti-Muslim Buddhist monks, as well as various Rakhine political parties. All of these groups describe the Rohingya as Bengali, implying that they are foreigners from Bangladesh. The NLD and the 88 Generation have, in less crude and go to Malaysia,” he said. A year ago, Myanmar held its first nationwide census in three decades, and did not allow the Rohingya to register. The government has also revoked Rohingya voting rights and identity cards, while a set of “race and religion” bills in Parliament will, if passed, ensure additional discrimination against Muslims. Three years on from the violence, almost 150,000 Rohingya languish in refugee camps scattered along the Rakhine coast — ample fodder for the trafficking trade, which in recent months has seen increased numbers fleeing a polarised and unstable Bangladesh. There are rumours of more camps on the Malaysian side of the border, though these, too, may have been disbanded after Malaysian police rounded up around 20 traffickers, mostly Rohingya themselves, according to Lewa. Thai junta leader General Prayuth Chan-o-cha stressed that Thailand is a transit country only for the migrants and wants a regional meeting to help curb the trafficking that has long blighted Thailand’s reputation, with thousands of Burmese migrant workers enslaved on Thai fishing boats in recent years. The general no doubt has an eye on the upcoming publication of the US government’s annual global trafficking survey, which last year saw Thailand demoted and listed among the world’s worst human trafficking countries. — The Edge Review strident terms, fallen in with the anti-Rohingya chestbeating. By mid-2012, communal violence had erupted between the Rohingya and Rakhine, tit-for-tat burnings and killings that later took on all the appearance of an anti-Muslim pogrom. Lewa estimated that more than 100,000 have fled Myanmar since 2012, willing to risk captivity and ransoming to escape the increasingly restive Rakhine state. Rakhine political parties claimed the national government is too soft on the Rohingya and had amalgamated ahead of national elections due in November, while a Rakhine rebel militia known as the Arakan Army had clashed with the national army in recent weeks. “Since the violence, many Rohingya cannot make a living even compared with before 2012,” said Myo Thant, speaking by phone from Sittwe, the Rakhine regional capital and scene of mob violence in 2012. This article first appeared in this “No jobs, no freedom of movement. week’s edition of The Edge Review That’s why people take the risk to at http://www.theedgereview.com abo er, cha lar to g Tha ket the por ing P B I W t e n i 5 t d m 8 p it m n a ( g E i i i ( f e g o 6 li r f a t 8 FO CU S 21 T U E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 1 5 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY People sorting the catch unloaded from a fishing ship at a port in Mahachai, Samut Sakhon province, Thailand. Photo by Reuters Fishy Thai business BY MA RWA A N MAC A N-M ARKAR 01 its ree Roent ing ea in ure nst nce, ish ong der in sed nd mps der, een ice ers, ac- uth and miing has on, ant ing eye the rafaw ong ing his ew om WHEN Thai junta leader General Prayuth Chan-o-cha invoked Article 44 of the military Constitution a month ago, it provoked fears among human rights activists of the sweeping authority of the power dubbed “the dictator’s law”. Defenders welcomed the clause, which placed Prayuth above the courts, Parliament and Cabinet. It is the ideal weapon to clean up Thailand’s mess, they said. Fittingly, Prayuth threatened to use the draconian law to clean up a big stink in Thailand’s billion-US dollar seafood industry, following an European Union (EU) warning on April 21 that it would ban Thai seafood imports within six months unless the fishing sector is brought to heel. But the general has now beaten a hasty retreat, declaring Article 44 unable to fix the sector’s problems. That rare admission says little about the limits of the law, however, and more about the scale of the challenge facing one of the world’s largest seafood exporting nations to get into the bad books of the EU, Thailand’s third-largest seafood market after the United States and Japan. What has got up the EU’s nose is the persistent habit of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing by Thai-owned fishing trawlers. “Failure to take strong action against illegal fishing will carry consequences,” warned Karmenu Vella, the European commissioner for the environment, maritime affairs and fisheries. The IUU Mechanism, as it is known, is an EU drive to make Thai suppliers provide a legitimate record of “traceability” of their ocean catch and eliminate unsustainable fishing activities. The top priority is a “catch certificate” issued by Thailand’s Department of Fisheries as proof that EU standards for imported fish products have been followed. Failure to halt IUU fishing will lead to an EU trade ban. The threat is not new to players in Thailand’s fishing sector, ranging from fisheries department bureaucrats and industry tycoons to shady shipowners. The EU put Thailand on notice two years ago that seafood exports, estimated at 25 billion baht (RM81.6 billion) a year, faced disappearance from European shops. Nor is it news to local and international environmentalists and activists, who have many long-standing beefs over abusive practices in the fishing industry, most glaringly the rapid depletion of fish in the seas off the coast of Thailand due to unregulated commercial fishing. That has driven Thai-owned trawlers to stray into the waters of its Southeast Asian neighbours. Research commissioned by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation pointed to a huge reduction in sea fishing in the past half-century. Since the 1950s, Thai aquaculture production has risen from 200,000 tonnes to 1.4 million tonnes a year, while the catch from coastal trawlers sharply dropped from 300kg of fish per hour in 1961 to 17.8kg per hour in 2010. But this belies the nature of the problem. A study of commercial fishing along a southern stretch of the Gulf of Thailand, commissioned by British development organisation Oxfam, showed that trawlers scraping the seabed with dragnets nowadays end up catching mostly “trash fish”, used for animal feed. Such fish accounted for 62% of the catch in the study, with only 38% intended for sale as food for humans. “The trawlers are destroy- Power struggle in Indonesia BY JOHN MCBETH / JAKARTA INDONESIAN President Joko Widodo is nothing if not ambitious. But adding 35gw to national electricity supply capacity over the next five years — a colossal 66% increase in Indonesia’s current 53GW — may be a few power stations too far. Another 7.4gw is currently under construction as the government seeks to build capacity by 8.7% per year, in order to keep pace with rising demand, much of it from Indonesia’s rapidly growing middle classes, and to increase nationwide power coverage from around 80% to 99% by 2022. Under the Rp608 trillion (RM165.4 billion) five-year programme, state-run utility State Electricity Company (PLN) will install 15gw, leaving the remaining 20gw to better-resourced independent power producers (IPPs). While Indonesia’s Constitution forbids private interests from operating distribution networks, the government may have to bring in outside help to string some of the 62,000km of new transmission lines that it projects will be needed. About 55% of Indonesia’s current installed capacity is generated from coal, 24% from natural gas and 11% from oil. The expansion will add 20.9gw to the 28gw Java-Bali grid and 8.7gw to power-starved Sumatra’s 3gw network. Among projects on the drawing board is a 5gw coal-fired complex — one of the largest in the world — to be built by private developer Java Energy and Chinese investors near Cilacap on Java’s south coast. It is scheduled for completion in 2018. PLN is looking to secure longterm loans directly from international financial agencies to support the programme, instead of channelling the process through the country’s notoriously sluggish bureaucracy. Afrizal, deputy director for electricity business development at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources, suggested recently that the government may also declare a state of crisis to allow the direct appointment of private power providers. But what infrastructure players like to call a “noble quest” still faces several major challenges. One is a predicted shortage of 120,000 engineers over the next five years. The education system is not producing enough, particularly those with real hands-on experience. Indonesia currently has about 750,000 engineers, or 3,000 per million people, the lowest ratio in the region, according to Heru Dewanto, secretary-general of both the Indonesia Institute of Engineers and the Indonesian Electricity Society. Yet, while one arm of govern- ing the seabed by catching such huge amounts,” said Oxfam representative Werapong Prapha. This abundance of “trash fish” has been a bounty for Charoen Pokphand Foods (CPF), an arm of a Thai agribusiness conglomerate that depends on the animal feed for its thriving shrimp trade, including exports to Europe. The EU’s warning puts the company on notice to produce “traceability” documents for its fishmeal exports. The company’s investors apparently believe the threat of trouble ahead is real, despite reassurances by its executives. The day after the EU warning, CPF shares fell 3.7%, their biggest one-day dip this year. The likes of CPF and Thai Union Frozen — the world’s largest canned tuna producer, which also cannot dodge the EU threat — will have to place their faith in a new regulatory push by government fisheries officials to amend an archaic fisheries law with enough loopholes for corrupt trawler owners and boat captains to thrive on. “There is corruption between the fisheries department officials and the boat owners,” alleged Tara Buakamsri, Thailand director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, an environmental lobby. “The big private companies also have bargaining power and apply pressure on the government.” Prayuth’s retreat suggests perhaps that the junta is unwilling to tangle with the big fish. — The Edge Review This article first appeared in this week’s edition of The Edge Review at http://www.theedgereview.com Workers of PT Pertamina Geothermal Energi rotating a valve during a production test at Karaha geothermal well in Tasikmalaya, West Java province of Indonesia. Karaha Geothermal Power Plant is scheduled to supply power to PLN at the end of 2016. Photo by Reuters ment is seeking massive new investment in power and other infrastructure, the Ministry of Manpower is progressively reducing work permits for foreign engineers, who are needed more than ever to fill the skill gap. Ticking off other drawbacks on the list, Dewanto said that over the same five-year time frame, Indonesia’s cement production and steel-making will have to grow dramatically. Then there are transport deficiencies. With 60% of the 42gw allotted to coal-fired generation, an additional 140 million tonnes of coal — 30% of Indonesia’s total output — will be required each year, much of it to be moved by ship and barge from Sumatra and Kalimantan to Java. The problem: Indonesia doesn’t have enough capacity to ship that much extra coal without running landowners haggle over only 15% of the project area. Officials said they hope to get around land issues by making government-owned property available for many future power stations, as has been done with the 5gw mega-plant near Cilacap, which is being built on army land. Other bright spots are the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources’ recent groundbreaking decision to transfer the approval process for private electricity projects to the Investment Coordinating Board, which has launched a new one-stop shop investment service to streamline licencing services for IPPs. Lawson said that this move, along with a series of new regulations, could be gamechangers in transforming the “jungle” and the “quagmire” — terms most commonly used to describe a bureaucratic approval process that has hitherto involved obtaining 52 licences from 22 different desks. — The Edge Review foul of its 2005 Cabotage Law, under which all ships operating in its waters must be under an Indonesian flag. Land acquisition is another nightmare for developers. Despite the passage of the 2012 Property Law, which creates the concept of eminent domain, Indonesian Coal Club vice-chairman Ben Lawson described it as “the biggest obstacle I have ever encountered anywhere in the world”. Even now, the law has yet to be invoked, ostensibly because its so-called “socialisation” period only ended in December. The first test case is shaping up to be the long-delayed US$4 billion (RM14.28 billion), 2gw coal-fired station in Batang, Central Java. A joint venture between Japanese developers and domestic coal This article first appeared in this miner Adaro Energy, it has been week’s edition of The Edge Review held up for three years, while local at http://www.theedgereview.com 22 F E AT U R E T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Date shows what Japan lacks Billionaire property developer’s daughter is an unusual leader in a sector dominated by men A nyone wondering why Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is crusading to get more women running Japan’s male-dominated corporations should meet Miwako Date (pic), daughter of Japanese billionaire property developer Akira Mori. Four years after Date became president of Mori Trust Hotels & Resorts Co, a unit of Mori Trust Co, the company is forecasting hotel revenue to grow 26% cent in the latest fiscal year. That compares with an average 5.4% gain at the five largest hotel operators in the same period, the year ended March 31, according to an estimate by Mizuho Bank Ltd. Mori has picked Date, 43, to take over his Mori Trust Co, the closely-held development firm with ¥149.7 billion (RM4.59 billion) in revenue, 94 office buildings and about 30 hotels — including the Conrad Tokyo, the year-old Courtyard by Marriott Tokyo Station and the Suiran, a Japanese-style luxury hotel in Kyoto, which opened last month in collaboration with Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. “She is very ambitious, and she is very capable,” the 78-year-old Mori, the current chief executive officer, said in an interview in which he credited his daughter with the success of the company’s hotel business and confirmed she’ll take his place in “the near future,” without giving a date. As Abe seeks to increase female managers to 30% Japan-wide by 2020, Date is an unusual leader in a sector BLOOMBERG dominated by men. Although women account for about 40% of the real estate workforce, according to the Statistics Bureau of Japan, only 1.6% of the industry’s managers are female, a report by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare said. It’s 4.9% on average in Japan’s private sector, government data show. “Japan’s largest companies must produce more top female leaders going forward,” said Yasuhiro Matsumoto, a Tokyo-based senior manager at ABeam Consulting Ltd. A woman at the helm of Mori Trust “will be a role model.” Japan can’t truly thrive unless all citizens reach their fullest potential, the prime minister wrote in a Bloomberg commentary published at end-April. “The question is no longer whether to pursue the advancement of women but what positions and roles they should take on, and how soon,” Abe wrote. Date is the granddaughter of the late property tycoon Taikichiro Mori, who six decades ago founded Mori Fudosan Co Ltd. After his 1993 death, sons Minoru and Akira split the company in two — Mori Building Co and Mori Trust, now Japan’s biggest closely held developers. Mori Building, which spent years planning and completing the Roppongi Hills complex in central Tokyo, focuses on multibillion-dollar complexes. Mori Trust sticks to single or twin structures. Date credits her father and grandfather with fostering her ambitions and goals. When she was young, they frequently peppered her with questions, prompting her to think in-depth and “consider the best ways to respond and explain,” she said in an interview in January. Date attended Sacred Heart private girls school in Tokyo, where Empress Michiko was educated. She received a master’s degree in media and governance from Tokyo’s Keio University, and joined Mori Trust in 1998 after a stint at a Japanese consulting firm that helped her establish a track record, Date said. After she entered the family business in her 20s, her father “would present challenges for me and ask me to come up with suggestions and solutions,” said Date. The experience informs her managerial style with employees today, she said. “Instead of giving them a methodology, I tend to also give my people opportunities to resolve issues on their own,” she said. While her career rise may be due to family position, there’s no question about her ability, said Hiro Kosugi, director of Japan sales, marketing and operations at Marriott International Inc, who worked with Date to develop the Courtyard, which Mori Trust operates under franchise. “She would have been successful no matter what,” said Kosugi. “She has that talent, inner strength and vision.” The Tokyo Station property is different from Marriott’s other beige-oriented Courtyards around the world: It features colourful guest quarters with names such as creator’s room, editor’s room, photographer’s room and curator’s room. “She talks a lot about innovations, and Courtyard Tokyo is one of the examples,” said Kosugi. “Instead of running a regular business hotel, she wants to bring in new types of designs and concepts.” The hotel is booked with 88% occupancy in April, higher than the 70% Mori Trust forecast. “She is very talented in visual presentation and she is good with overseeing numbers,” said Kosugi. “She is somebody who really pays attention to details. Because of that, it’s keeping a lot of her managers on their toes.” Japan’s hotel industry had been dominated by domestic brands through the early 1990s, until the opening of a Four Seasons Hotel, the Park Hyatt Tokyo and the Westin Tokyo. After Japan’s asset bubble burst, it took a decade for another round of foreign hotels to come in, and Mori Trust became one of the first to aid their return. In 2002, two years before Date was made managing director in charge of Mori Trust’s property development, she helped persuade the company’s partner in building a new office tower to invite Hilton Worldwide Holding Inc’s Conrad Hotels & Resorts to come and manage its first Tokyo property, which opened in 2005, according to information provided by Mori Trust. Since Date took on the development role, Mori Trust has added 2,000 hotel rooms to its portfolio, 1,200 of them internationally branded. She has plans for more projects ahead of Tokyo’s hosting of the Olympics in 2020, including building more international-brand hotels and renovating some properties, she said. Already Mori Trust is benefiting from a surge in tourism. Visitors to Japan in March totalled a record high 1.53 million, 45% more than the year-earlier period, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization. Date speaks passionately and frankly at public events about Mori Trust’s strategy, standing out in a field of men with more-guarded stances, said Tomohiko Sawayanagi, managing director of hotels and hospitality at Jones Lang LaSalle Inc, who moderated a panel where Date spoke last year. Date’s willingness to franchise,and develop small hotels like the 39-room luxury ryokan (inn) with Starwood in Kyoto, “demonstrate her ability and authority to run international hotels” while being flexible about how to do it. “Even with new ideas, if you can’t make it happen, it doesn’t mean anything,” Date said. — Bloomberg India online retail hierarchy looks far from fixed BY U NA GA L A NI INDIA’S e-commerce hierarchy looks far from fixed. The exponential growth of smartphone users is rapidly changing shopping habits in the nation of 1.2 billion people. Investors have poured in hoping to pick the next Amazon or Alibaba. The opportunity is huge, but low barriers to entry mean it is easy for wannabes to crash the party. Indians are going online to buy everything from electronics to cars. Bangalore-based Flipkart has 40 million registered users and sells between 10% and 20% of all Samsung, Apple and Micromax smartphones in the country through its site. Over the past 13 months investors have pumped US$4.5 billion (RM16.15 billion) into online investments in India, says Morgan Stanley. The bank reckons the country’s Internet market was worth US$11 billion in 2013 and could grow to US$137 billion by 2020. Even then transactions will be just a third of the amount that Alibaba, China’s dominant player, processed in the year to March. Online retailers can choose from essentially two global role models. Seattle-based Amazon.com Inc mostly sells stock that it owns and keeps it in its own warehouses. By contrast, Alibaba acts as a virtual marketplace, connecting buyers to sellers of all sizes from mom-andpop stores to international brands. Though it is still early days, Alibaba’s model is emerging on top in India. Flipkart, which was set up by former Amazon employees Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal in 2007, switched to a marketplace model two years ago. Others have taken a similar approach. India’s aspiring Alibabas come with a few twists, however. They maintain centrally-located warehouses where merchants have the option to store goods. This approach may be a way to sidestep India’s ban on foreign investment in online entities that sell goods directly to customers. Even Amazon operates as a marketplace in India while it lobbies for a relaxation of the law. Home-grown players have relied on foreign capital to keep up with the American giant, which is investing US$2 billion in its Indian operations. Flipkart counts the Qatar Investment Authority amongst its investors. Another big difference is how Indian e-commerce companies generate Online fashion retailer Myntra chief executive officer Mukesh Bansal (left) speaking during a news conference as Flipkart co-founder as Sachin looked on in Bangalore, India on May 12. Over the past 13 months investors have pumped US$4.5 billion into online investments in India, says Morgan Stanley. Photo by Reuters revenue. Alibaba gets most of its income from selling advertising and information on consumer trends to merchants. By comparison, Flipkart, Snapdeal and Amazon India charge a commission on each sale. As competitors race to win market share, India’s online shoppers have been bombarded with big discounts and flash sales. UBS AG estimates it will take the industry until 2020 to generate an operating profit. The discounting is only likely to end when investors stop throwing money at the industry. Meanwhile, Alibaba is shaping up to be a competitor. It is in talks to spend US$1.2 billion on 20% of Micromax Informatics Ltd, India’s second-largest smartphone maker. Earlier this year Alibaba affiliate Ant Financial bought 25% of India’s One97 Communications Ltd, owner of Paytm, for US$575 million. Paytm is the country’s leading mobile wallet with 60 million registered users. It also has a growing marketplace. Since Ant’s investment, Noida-based Paytm has become more aggressive. For three days in April it offered customers up to 100% credit on all fashion purchases. Paytm stands out because it has mimicked Alibaba by waiving commissions. Instead, it levies a fee when users transfer money out of its wallet and offers an escrow service so that customers only pay for goods once they are satisfied with the order. Rival Indian marketplaces cannot offer such a service without a special licence from the central bank. As more customers shift to paying online, Paytm may have an advantage. For Indian e-commerce leaders, China offers a cautionary tale. America’s eBay Inc briefly occupied the top spot in the People’s Republic after it acquired EachNet.com in 2003. Within three years it had been overtaken by Alibaba. It’s unclear if the Chinese giant will be able to repeat the trick beyond its own shores. But with or without the Alibaba, India’s online retailers face a long hard and unprofitable slog. — Reuters W O R L D B U S I N E S S 23 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY BHP Billiton hunts for deep water oil assets MELBOURNE: BHP Billiton Ltd is looking to take advantage of a slump in oil prices to pick up assets, where it can use its deep water drilling expertise to boost growth as it slows expansion in onshore shale, its petroleum head said. The world’s biggest miner has slashed its US onshore drilling and development by more than half, South32 says work to do on growth as debut misses estimates flagging last week that it will spend just US$1.5 billion (RM5.36 billion) in financial year 2016, down from US$3.4 billion in the current year. “We’re not going to rely on the US shale. We’re going to have to expand back into the conventional business,” BHP petroleum president Tim Cutt told reporters yesterday, on the sidelines of an Australian oil and gas conference. The shift reflects BHP’s view that oil prices will rebound after around 2018, as a supply gap opens up due to a lack of new sources of cheap supply, while it sees US natural gas prices holding below US$5 per million British thermal units until at least 2020. “We want to look for assets, where we could bring our technological advantage — where we could do it faster, we could do it cheaper,” Cutt said, pointing to BHP’s skills drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. The company is unlikely to look at taking over any oil producers as that would require paying a premium. — Reuters Greek endgame nears for Tsipras BY DAVI D STRI N GER & RI SHA A D SA L A MAT SYDNEY: South32 Ltd, the miner spun off from BHP Billiton Ltd, missed analyst estimates on its Sydney trading debut, with investors valuing it at about US$9.1 billion (RM32.49 billion) amid concern about its growth potential. South32’s market value is below the US$11.2 billion median estimate from among seven forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. It’s the world’s biggest manganese ore producer and operator of the largest silver mine. “We have to do some work to work out how we take the assets forward in terms of growth potential,” chief executive officer Graham Kerr said yesterday, in an interview with Trending Business on Bloomberg Television. “From day one, they sit very comfortably in the cost curve and they’ve been cashgenerative through the cycle.” Perth-based South32 is examining expansion options at its South African thermal coal unit and its manganese and silver operations, Kerr said. Jefferies Group LLC said the company had limited organic growth potential and needs to consider expansion projects and acquisitions. BHP, the world’s biggest miner, separated 12 assets into South32 as it sought to focus on its most profitable iron ore, coal, copper and petroleum operations. Investors are seeking clarity on South32’s future and have concerns over the impact of weaker Chinese growth on the outlook for industrial metals, according to Evan Lucas, a market strategist at IG Ltd. “It’s about the risk inside it. Where do you find the next asset? What’s the strategic direction of South32 once some of those assets expire?” The debut valuation confirmed the Perth-based company as mining’s biggest spin-off in almost a decade. It began trading yesterday at A$2.13 (RM6.09) a share, giving it a market valuation of A$11.3 billion. South32 closed at A$2.05 in Sydney, or A$10.9 billion. — Bloomberg Banks running short of collateral they need to stay alive European policymakers are losing patience with Tsipras, who said last Thursday that he won’t compromise on any of his key demands. Photo by Reuters BY NIKOS CHRYS O LO RAS & VASSILIS KARAM ANI S ATHENS: Greek banks are running short of the collateral they need to stay alive, a crisis that could help force Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ hand, after weeks of brinkmanship with creditors. As deposits flee the financial system, lenders use collateral parked at the Greek central bank to tap more and more emergency liquidity every week. In a worst-case scenario, that lifeline will be maxed out within three weeks, pushing banks towards insolvency, some economists said. “The point where collateral is exhausted is likely to be near,” JPMorgan Chase Bank analysts Malcolm Barr and David Mackie wrote in a note to clients last Friday. “Pressures on central government cash flow, pressures on the banking system and the political timetable are all converging in late May to early June.” European policymakers are los- ing patience with Tsipras, who said last Thursday that he won’t compromise on any of his key demands. While talks are centring on whether to give Greece more money, the European Central Bank could raise the stakes — if it increases the discount on the collateral Greek banks’ pledge — in exchange for cash under its Emergency Liquidity Assistance programme. Such a move might inadvertently prompt a further outflow of bank deposits and pressure Tsipras to choose between doing a deal and putting his country on the road to capital controls. — Bloomberg Bond turmoil signals new era of return-free risk BY SWAHA PAT TANAI K LONDON: US and German government bonds are gyrating as they rarely do. Yields are shooting higher for no apparent reason, and sometimes falling back within hours for equally unclear motives. Such turbulence in the biggest and most liquid bond markets is ushering in a new era. The traditional concept of risk-free returns has been turned on its head. Ten-year Bund yields have multiplied by 16 times, to a high of 0.8% on May 7 from 0.05% on April 17. And German bond prices, which move inversely to yields, have suffered a larger drop than in 99% of the three-week periods of the last 25 years, UBS Wealth Management strategists calculated. Meanwhile, comparable US yields have risen by more than a quarter in less than four weeks, peaking at 2.37%. The brutal moves are creating what Jan Straatman, global chief investment officer at Lombard Odier Investment Managers, calls “return-free risk”. Investors have two problems as a result. IN BRIEF Japan to join bidding to sell Australia stealth submarine fleet TOKYO: Japan will join competitive bidding to sell Australia a fleet of stealth submarines, the government said yesterday, a move expected to require Tokyo to supply Canberra with classified data. The development comes as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe moves to strengthen security ties with the United States and some countries in the region, including Australia in the face of China’s rapid military modernisation and maritime expansion. “We have decided to participate” in the bidding to replace Australia’s ageing fleet, chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga said. The “competitive assessment” will see Germany’s ThyssenKrupp and France’s state-controlled naval contractor DCNS separately competing with a Japanese government-led bid for contractors, such as Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. — Reuters London house prices dip as election concerns hit market LONDON: Asking prices of London homes fell the most in nine months in May, as concern about potential property tax changes before the election cooled demand. Prices dropped 2.3% from April — led by top-priced Kensington and Chelsea — and were up 1.5% from a year earlier, property website operator Rightmove said yesterday. That’s the smallest annual gain in more than four years. Nationally, prices slipped 0.1%, the first decline in a May since the last general election in 2010. Concerns in the run-up to the election surrounding housing policy proposals — particularly those put forward by the opposition Labour Party — unnerved buyers and caused fewer homes to be put in the market. — Bloomberg India needs to open up capital account further A money changer counting US dollar bills at a currency exchange office. Gold is supposed to be a solid store of value, but the price is in thrall to the US dollar’s volatile exchange rate. Photo by Reuters The first is sharply practical. Safety has become expensive or less safe. Holding cash in the form of a rock-solid currency, such as the Swiss franc, is punitive since policy interest rates are close to zero or even negative. Gold is supposed to be a solid store of value, but the price is in thrall to the US dollar’s volatile exchange rate. Now, US and German government bonds are looking risky. These days, the hunt for safety is not a big theme for most investors. They would rather take some risks in return for higher yields. But that brings up the second problem with the new era. High turbulence in supposedly safe bond markets complicates the pricing of risk. The standard asset pricing model relies on a benchmark risk-free interest rate. Riskier investments — from corporate bonds through shares to artworks — are supposed to promise a probable additional return in exchange for additional uncertainty and price volatility. The model is like a compass pointing in the direction of the right price. But this compass goes haywire when safe debt becomes extraordinarily volatile. Investors are left at sea. — Reuters MUMBAI: India needs to continue to move towards making the rupee more convertible for capital transactions by foreign investors, said Reserve Bank of India executive director G Padmanabhan, amid a growing debate over the merits of a freely floating currency. Padmanabhan, who is set to retire from the central bank this month, added that India could not afford to remain isolated from global financial systems with existing caps on capital account transactions. — Reuters Nissan CEO: No reason to change Renault deal TOKYO: The head of Renault-Nissan yesterday said there is “no reason” to change a long-standing partnership between the two companies, after the French government’s controversial move to hike its stake in Renault. — AFP 24 W O R L D B U S I N E S S T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Ezion sued in Singapore Accused of conspiracy to induce A P Moeller-Maersk A/S unit to breach contract BY A ND REA TA N SINGAPORE: Ezion Holdings Ltd was sued by a partner which accused the Singapore-based offshore service provider of a conspiracy to induce an A P Moeller-Maersk A/S unit to breach charter agreements. Ezion created the impression Atlantic Marine Services BV, which it had agreed to charter oil rigs to Maersk Oil, was in financial trouble, the Amsterdam-based company Thai economy grows 0.3% in 1Q, growth forecast lowered claimed in a lawsuit filed last month in the Singapore High Court. A closed hearing is scheduled for June 2. Atlantic Marine said in the suit it agreed to pay inflated charter rates to Ezion for the rig services provided to Maersk Oil to help the Singapore company secure bigger loans. The claims are frivolous and without merit, Ezion’s lawyer Peter Doraisamy said. Maersk Oil, which isn’t a party in the lawsuit, said it has terminated its contract with Atlantic Marine for its failure to meet contractual obligations. Muralli Rajaram, a lawyer representing Atlantic Marine, declined to comment. Ezion’s stock fell 5.1% to S$1.125 (RM3.04) as of 1.45pm local time, poised for the lowest close since April 10. The benchmark Straits Times Index declined 0.2%. Atlantic Marine’s lawsuit “could potentially be viewed as an attempt to save its position as a Maersk Oil middleman,” RHB analyst Lee Yue Jer said in a research note yesterday. “The market has taken a kneejerk negative reaction.” Lee kept his “buy” rating and target price of S$2.10. Ezion, which last week posted a 9.4% fall in first-quarter net income to US$41 million (RM146.37 million), described the operating environment as “challenging” after a drastic drop in oil prices. — Bloomberg Indonesia seen holding rates steady despite weakening growth BY GAYATRI S U ROYO BANGKOK: Thailand’s economy expanded 0.3% on-quarter in January-March, official data showed yesterday, highlighting the task ahead for the military junta that seized power in a coup last year vowing to kickstart growth after months of political instability. And in another blow to the country’s year-old government the National Economic and Social Development Board (NESB) lowered its growth forecast for this year. Year-on-year first-quarter growth came in at 3%, the NESB said. But Krystal Tan, an Asia economist at Capital Economics, said that figure was “exaggerated by a low base in the first quarter of 2014, when growth contracted and political unrest was at its peak”. At the time Bangkok was paralysed by protests against the democratically elected government of Yingluck Shinawatra, whose administration was eventually toppled in the coup. The NESB said it expected the economy to grow 3% to 4% this year, down from an earlier prediction of 3.5% to 4.5%. Growth came in at just 0.7% in 2014, its weakest pace in three years. In February, Thailand’s finance minister said he had been told by junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha to push for at least 4% growth for 2015, something many analysts thought optimistic. The World Bank estimates growth for 2015 will be closer to 3.5%. The ruling junta has vowed to pump billions of dollars into the economy, mainly through long-planned infrastructure schemes but analysts say government spending and increased tourist revenues have failed to offset falling exports and weakening demand at home. — AFP JAKARTA: Indonesia’s central bank is expected to hold its key policy rate steady today although the country’s growth rate has fallen to its weakest since 2009. Growth in Southeast Asia’s largest economy slumped to 4.71% annually in the first quarter, but Bank Indonesia (BI) is in a bind as rising inflationary pressures and a fragile currency crimp its ability to cut rates. Annual headline inflation in April rose to 6.79% from March’s 6.38%, prompting BI to revise its inflation outlook for end-2015 to 4% to 4.2% from below 4%. The central bank’s main focus now could be the rupiah, which has weakened about 5.5% this year and is the emerging Asia’s worst performing currency. It traded around 13,115 to the dollar yesterday. With the exchange rate under scrutiny and a heavy external financing requirements for the rest of 2015, “BI will have to be particularly cautious before solidifying a dovish stance,” said Deutsche Bank economist Taimur Baig in Singapore. Baig expects the benchmark rate to be cut 50 basis points to 7% by year-end, but sees more opportunity for looser monetary policy later. MANILA: Philippine liquor firm Emperador Inc said yesterday it had submitted a bid to buy French cognac maker Louis Royer from Japan’s Suntory Holdings Ltd, and could go to the debt market to fund the deal. The acquisition is unlikely to cost Emperador more than last year’s US$700 million deal to buy the Whyte & Mackay whisky unit of India’s United Spirits Ltd, company director and spokesman Singapore’s GIC in joint venture to buy Seoul mall for US$263m SINGAPORE: Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC said it formed a joint venture partnership with the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) to buy a mall in Seoul from Daesung Industries for US$263 million (RM938.91 million). After the deal closes, GIC and CPPIB will each own a 50% stake in D-Cube Retail Mall. “Our investment in the D-Cube Retail Mall reflects our confidence in the long-term growth of Korean domestic demand and is consistent with our strategy of acquiring high-quality, centrally-located assets with upside potential,” said Loh Wai Keong, managing director and co-head Asia for GIC Real Estate Pte Ltd. — Reuters Changes to Housing Developers Act to kick in from May 25 SINGAPORE: The Ministry of National Development announced yesterday that amendments to the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act and subsidiary legislation will be implemented from May 25, 2015, to improve safeguards and enable prospective private homebuyers to make better-informed purchasing decisions, The Straits Times reported. In April 2013, Parliament approved amendments to the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act to improve and update legislative safeguards for buyers of uncompleted private residential properties. HSBC: Tepid demand continues to weigh on regional growth A woman holding some Indonesian rupiah notes. Bank Indonesia is in a bind as rising inflationary pressures and a fragile currency crimp its ability to cut rates. Photo by Reuters Eighteen of 21 analysts in a Reuters poll expected BI to hold rates steady today, but most who gave longer-term views see a cut later in the year. A day after weak first-quarter growth was announced, Governor Agus Martowardojo said BI will respond with a policy-mix including looser downpayment requirements for consumer loans and relaxed loan-to-deposit ratio for banks, so that they can lend more. Dian Ayu Yustina, an analyst at Bank Danamon, said BI would rely more on such stimulus measures than rate cuts because of worries about the currency. — Reuters Emperador seeks to buy cognac firm BY ENRICO DELA CRUZ IN BRIEF Kingson Sian said. Sian declined to disclose Emperador’s offer citing a confidentiality agreement, and said he was not aware who the other bidders for Louis Royer were. “After the first round, there may be a second round ... There may be a shortlist first, so it’s too early to say,” Sian said when asked when the bidding results were likely to be released. Suntory, one of Japan’s oldest companies, is looking to sell off its smaller assets to consolidate its portfolio and finance its acquisitions, Sian said. Suntory bought US drinks firm Beam in a deal last year valued at about US$15.7 billion. It was the third-biggest acquisition by a Japanese company. Emperador, mainly a brandy producer with a market value of US$4 billion, bought Whyte & Mackay last year as part of a long-term strategy to expand its product portfolio and global reach. — Reuters SINGAPORE: Growth in Asia is unlikely to rebound in the near future as tepid import demand from the West continues to be a drag on exports, a new report released by HSBC said, The Straits Times reported. “Things are decidedly soggy everywhere,” said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economics research at HSBC, in the report. Since roughly 2012, exports have stagnated, registering a third of growth seen in the mid-2000s. Shipments from China, Korea, and Taiwan declined by over 8% in April over the same month a year ago. Yoma Strategic opens water plant in Myanmar SINGAPORE: Property and construction group Yoma Strategic Holdings yesterday announced the opening of its potable water plant at Pun Hlaing Golf Estate in Myanmar, The Straits Times reported. The move is aimed at delivering “high-quality drinking water straight to the taps of residents of the estate”, said the mainboard-listed company. The plant, designed and supplied by global water solutions provider Hyflux, sets apart Pun Hlaing Golf Estate as the first real estate development in Myanmar to have its own Hyflux water treatment plant. W O R L D B U S I N E S S 25 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY Taobao has six months to pull out TAIPEI: Taiwan has given Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd six months to wind down its online marketplace Taobao’s operations on the island after it failed to apply for the permit required for a mainland Chinese company to do business there, Taipei authorities said yesterday. An official at Taiwan’s Investment Commission said a fine of T$240,000 (RM28,195) has also been imposed on Taobao in what is the second case of an Alibaba operation falling foul of the permit rules for mainland China companies this year. Huatai draws China tech bosses to US$4.5b sale BY FOX H U HONG KONG: Huatai Securities Co Ltd, China’s fourth-biggest listed brokerage by revenue, attracted two Internet entrepreneurs as cornerstone investors for a first-time share sale in Hong Kong that will raise as much as US$4.5 billion (RM16.1 billion). The Nanjing-based company agreed to sell as much as US$1.9 billion of the offering to 13 cornerstone investors, according to terms for the deal obtained by Bloomberg. Ma Huateng, the billionaire chairman of China’s second-biggest Internet company Tencent Holdings Ltd, committed to invest US$100 million while news portal NetEase Inc and its founder Lei Ding will buy a US$200 million stake. Chinese brokers are raising funds to boost margin lending after a world-beating rally for the nation’s stocks. At the top of the price range, Huatai’s offering would be Hong Kong’s biggest share sale this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Huatai Securities is offering 1.4 billion shares at HK$20.68 (RM9.53) to HK$24.80 apiece, according to the terms. — Bloomberg In March, Alibaba.com was told to leave Taiwan within six months and fined T$120,000 for a similar reason. While the fine is small and Taiwanese shoppers can continue to order goods via Taobao’s mainland base in future, the permits glitch is an unwelcome headache for Alibaba as its seeks to grow business outside its mainland base. “Mainland companies registered in foreign countries need to apply for mainland business permits in Taiwan,” Investment Commission executive secretary Emile Chang said. “Neither Ali- baba nor Taobao have done so.” Chang said both Taobao and Alibaba.com, the business-to-business online Alibaba platform hit by a similar ruling earlier this year, had applied for regular licences to operate in Taiwan as non-Chinese, foreign-owned. Alibaba.com has a registration in Singapore, while Taobao has a Hong Kong registration. He noted the companies could still apply for Chinese mainland-owned company permits and potentially maintain operations in Taiwan. In a statement provided via its Taiwan Taobao operations, Alibaba IN BRIEF said it is “having positive ongoing discussions with the relevant Taiwanese authorities ... we hope to find a suitable way forward in order to continue to serve the needs of Taiwan consumers and merchants.” News of the Taobao fine was first reported by Chinese and Taiwanese media last Thursday, and confirmed by authorities yesterday. Investment rules in Taiwan are stricter for mainland-owned companies than other foreign-owned firms, largely due to long-standing mistrust between the two political entities. — Reuters Alibaba denounces baseless accusation After Kering files suit for selling counterfeits of its product SHANGHAI: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba yesterday denounced as baseless a lawsuit by French apparel company Kering Group, whose luxury brands include Gucci, which accused it of selling fake products. Kering filed a suit against United States-listed Alibaba in a New York court last week for selling counterfeits of its products worldwide, Chinese state media reported. Kering’s portfolio of luxury and lifestyle brands include Saint Laurent, Alexander McQueen and Puma, according to its website. Copyright infringement is rife in China, but Alibaba said it plans to fight the case. “Unfortunately, Kering Group has chosen the path of wasteful litigation instead of the path of constructive cooperation,” an Alibaba spokeswoman said in a statement provided to AFP. “We believe this complaint has no basis and we will fight it vigorously,” it said. Alibaba’s Taobao platform is Ma gesturing during a talk by Our Hong Kong Foundation in Hong Kong. He says Alibaba has always been committed to combating fake products. Photo by Reuters estimated to hold more than 90% of the consumer-to-consumer market in China, while its Tmall. com is believed to command over half the Chinese market for business-to-consumer transactions. State media said that Kering filed an earlier lawsuit against Alibaba in July last year, but dropped it after the two companies agreed to work together to reduce counterfeiting. “We continue to work in part- nership with numerous brands to help them protect their intellectual property, and we have a strong track record of doing so,” Alibaba said in its statement yesterday. In January, the State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC), which regulates market order in China, delivered an unusual dressing-down of the prominent company, publishing a survey saying only about a third of products sampled from Alibaba’s Taobao were genuine. “We have always been committed to combating fake products and have devoted our efforts to solving this difficult problem,” Alibaba founder Jack Ma said in a meeting with the SAIC, after the survey was released. — AFP Renhe says it has repaid 2015 US dollar bonds due yesterday BY DAVI D YONG HONG KONG: Renhe Commercial Holdings Co Ltd repaid an offshore bond ahead of a deadline that expired yesterday, avoiding default and easing concerns about worsening credit stress in China’s US dollar debt market. The Harbin, Heilongjiang province-based developer’s US$78.71 million (RM281.1 million) of 11.75% notes matured yesterday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The redemption rewarded investors who held out for full payment, after snubbing Renhe’s discounted bond buy-back in December, a deal that Standard & Poor’s said amounted to a default. The payment comes as a relief to China’s US currency debt market, following two defaults in the past month amid signs of more financial stress in the world’s second-biggest economy. Homebuilder Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd last month became the first Chinese developer to miss interest payments on US dollar debentures, while coal importer Winsway Enterprises Holdings Ltd followed on May 8. “The 2015 senior notes are fully repaid,” Rebecca Chan, a Hong Kong-based spokeswoman for Renhe, said via email yesterday. The bonds, sold at 99.08 cents on the US dollar in 2010, last traded at 97.083 cents on the US dollar on May 12, prices compiled by Bloomberg show. Renhe’s US$161.2 million of 13% notes due March 2016 are at 91 cents on the US dollar to yield 25.95%. The securities were sold at 100 cents on the US dollar in September 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Those bonds, and a US$400 million loan due August next year, are the company’s next major debt obligations, according to S&P. Renhe’s cash flow may be insufficient to redeem both of them next year, S&P said in a January assessment. “It’s interesting that the company had the US$78 million to repay” the notes, said Charles Macgregor, head of Asian high-yield research at Lucror Analytics Pte in Singapore. “I suppose that augurs well for holders of the 2016 bonds.” China’s economy grew last quarter at the slowest pace since 2009. Retail sales have cooled, with a 10% gain in April, the least since February 2006. Policymakers have cut interest rates three times since November to stem the slowdown, as well as easing home lending rules to revive the real estate market. High-yield bonds in China have gained 3.83% this quarter-to-date, on track for the best performance since the second quarter of last year, a Bank of America Merrill Lynch index shows. S&P downgraded Renhe’s credit rating to “selective default” in January and raised it to CCC, eight levels below investment grade, after the buy-back. Renhe spent US$660 million to buy back its 2015 and 2016 securities at discounts of as much as 18%. — Bloomberg ICBC ‘unaware’ of S$50b fund plan to finance investments in Brazil SAO PAULO/BEIJING: Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd, the world’s largest bank by assets, said last Friday it is not aware of plans to create a US$50 billion (RM179 billion) fund to finance infrastructure investments in Brazil. Last Wednesday, two Brazilian government sources told Reuters that a memorandum of understanding between ICBC and Brazil’s Caixa Econômica Federal to create the fund will be formally announced next week, when Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visits South America. A third source with direct involvement in the talks confirmed the plan last Thursday. Under the terms of the plan, ICBC would provide the financing for the fund, the sources told Reuters on condition of anonymity. — Reuters China’s April home prices fuel hopes of bottoming out HONG KONG: China’s new home prices fell for the eighth consecutive month in April from a year earlier but were flat from March, adding to hopes that a property downturn, which is weighing heavily on the economy, is beginning to bottom out. But analysts warned any recovery in the market will take some time given a huge inventory of unsold homes, and said the property sector remains the biggest risk to the world’s second-largest economy, which looks set for its worst year in 25 years. — Reuters Foreign investors welcome Chinese regulator’s stance HONG KONG: Foreign investors have welcomed assurances by China’s securities watchdog that their shareholding rights are recognised in the country, in a development that should boost trading on a landmark Hong Kong-Shanghai trading link.The so-called Stock Connect project went live in November, allowing foreign investors to buy and sell Shanghai shares via the Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd for the first time. — Reuters Online gaming company 888 Holdings bids for Bwin.Party LONDON: British online gaming company 888 Holdings plc offered to buy bigger rival Bwin.Party Digital Entertainment plc, raising the prospect of a takeover battle between 888 and GVC Holdings plc. 888, which ended talks on a takeover by William Hill plc earlier this year, said yesterday it saw “significant industrial logic” in combining with Bwin, which put itself up for sale last year. — Reuters 26 WORLD T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Myanmar acknowledges ‘concerns’ over exodus But insists it should not be solely blamed YANGON: Myanmar acknowledged yesterday that the international community had “concerns” about waves of boat people fleeing its shores but insisted it should not be solely blamed for the regional migrant crisis. Information Minister Ye Htut said his country understood “the concerns [of] the international community on the people in the sea”. “Instead of blaming Myanmar for all these problems ... all these issues should be solved by the regional partners,” he added in English following a briefing between government officials and diplomats in Yangon. Tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims, a minority who face daily prejudice and a raft of restrictions in western Myanmar, have long fled in rickety boats across the Bay of Bengal. Indian nurse dies after 42 years in coma following rape NEW DELHI: A nurse died yesterday after 42 years in a coma following a brutal rape, in a case that led India to ease some restrictions on euthanasia. Aruna Shanbaug suffered brain damage and had been in a vegetative state in a Mumbai hospital since being strangled with a dog chain and sexually assaulted by a hospital worker in 1973. The 66-year-old Shanbaug had suffered a bout of pneumonia in recent days and was on a ventilator, officials at King Edward Hospital in Mumbai told the Press Trust of India news agency. Shanbaug was attacked by a ward boy in the basement of the hospital where she was discovered 11 hours later, blind and suffering from a severe brain stem injury. Left bedridden, she spent more than four decades being cared for by a team of doctors and nurses at the hospital. Her attacker was freed after a seven-year jail sentence. “Her actual death happened in 1973 (the date of the attack). Now what has happened is her legal death,” her friend and journalist Pinki Virani told Zee News TV channel. “Our Aruna has given our country a big thing in the form of a law on passive euthanasia,” Virani said. — AFP In recent years they have been joined by growing numbers of economic migrants from neighbouring Bangladesh looking to escape grinding poverty. Myanmar’s part in the grim and often deadly exodus had been largely ignored by its neighbours. But the former army-run nation has faced growing international pressure this month after thousands of migrants were abandoned in overcrowded boats by people smugglers following a crackdown on the trade in Thailand, a key transit point. Thousands of Rohingya and Bangladeshis, many emaciated and exhausted, have since landed on Malaysian and Indonesian shores while others crammed into vessels have been turned back to sea — sparking international outrage. — AFP Rohingyas queueuing up as they move to better shelter in Indonesia. These migrants are largely ignored by regional partners. Photo by Reuters gling following the discovery of a network of secret jungle camps in the south and dozens of shallow graves thought to contain the remains of Myanmar Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants. Thousands of migrants were subsequently abandoned by smuggling gangs, some in remote jungles but many more on rickety boats in the Andaman Sea. Rights groups and observers have long accused Thai officials, including the police and military, of turning a blind eye to human trafficking — and even being complicit in the grim trade. Ko Tong was until recently an influential official in Thailand’s southern province of Satun, a re- gion long known to be a major transit point for people smugglers and traffickers. Thai police had previously suggested he might have fled to Malaysia, but Prawut said there was no evidence he had left the country. Television showed pictures of Ko Tong, balding and dressed in a white t-shirt, appearing at a brief press conference flanked by police officers, some of whom were armed. It is common in Thailand for accused criminals to be presented to the media once they are charged. Local media reported that he denied all the charges against him and said he would only testify in court. — AFP China tells drivers to cool it after horrific road rage BEIJING: The horrific incident shocked the nation when it went viral in China earlier this month: a woman was dragged from her car, thrown to the ground and kicked repeatedly in the face and head in a case of road rage in Sichuan. And it was hardly an isolated event. About 100 million roadrage incidents have been reported since January 2012, according to the Ministry of Public Security. Incidents arising from drivers forcefully changing lanes or disrespecting the right of way rose 10% in the first four months of this year, compared with the same period ‘US, China discussing further sanctions on North Korea’ SEOUL: The US is discussing with China imposing further sanctions against North Korea as the reclusive country is “not even close” to taking steps to rein in its nuclear weapons programme, US Secretary of State John Kerry said yesterday. Speaking in the South Korean capital, Kerry said Washington had offered the North the chance of an improved relationship in return for signs of a genuine willingness to end its nuclear programme. “To date, to this moment, particularly with recent provocations, it is clear the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) is not even close to meeting that standard,” Kerry told a joint news conference with South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se. — Reuters ‘China police on trial for fatal beating of woman’ Thai people smuggling ‘kingpin’ hands himself in BANGKOK: A former Thai regional official accused of being a major people trafficking kingpin turned himself in yesterday, police said, as the kingdom continues a belated blitz against the lucrative trade. Pajjuban Aungkachotephan, better known as Ko Tong (Big Brother Tong), had been sought by police for the last week on human trafficking charges. “He surrendered to police this morning in Bangkok,” national police spokesman Lieutenant General Prawut Thavornsiri told AFP. “Police are now taking him to the south for questioning and more investigation,” he added. Thailand began a crackdown on human trafficking and smug- IN BRIEF last year, it said. “People are easily agitated nowadays, feel underappreciated and disrespected, and they take it out on the road by being bullies on the road,” Sun Xiaohong, a prominent female observer of the auto industry for more than a decade, said in an interview. As a result of the public debate over the video, the Security Ministry issued a statement on May 8, calling on drivers to be “civilised”, follow traffic rules and manage their anger. “Offensive driving caused by road rage is a severe violation of law that disrupts order and endangers traffic safety,” the ministry said in the statement. “Drivers should consciously rein in their road rage.” The anger in China is rising in tandem with the 10-fold surge in vehicle ownership over the past decade, causing motorists to fight for everything from parking spaces to right of way. Across the country, zebra crossings are routinely ignored by motorists, angry honking is epidemic and jaywalking is rampant. Road rage caused about 82,000 car accidents last year, a 2.4% increase over 2013, the ministry said. — Bloomberg BEIJING: Three Chinese policemen went on trial yesterday over the fatal beating of a female migrant worker, state media said, a case that sparked an online outcry about violence by law enforcers. Zhou Xiuyun, 47, was assaulted by the police at a construction site in Taiyuan in December as she tried to prevent officers from taking away her husband and son over a dispute with security guards, according to previous media reports. The three were taken to a local police station where Zhou was thrown to the ground while the two men were beaten up, they said. Zhou died the next day in hospital. — AFP Australians face travel ban to PNG’s Bougainville SYDNEY: Papua New Guinea (PNG) has banned Australians from travelling to the politically sensitive autonomous region of Bougainville, officials said yesterday, after Canberra announced plans to open a diplomatic mission there. Australia revealed proposals for a new mission in resource-rich Bougainville last week, ahead of an independence referendum expected to be held within the next five years. PNG Prime Minister Peter O’Neill earlier said the plans came as a shock and he had not been consulted on them. — AFP China police shoot dead killer lion — report BEIJING: Chinese police have shot dead a lion that killed a keeper, state media reported, in the country’s second such zookeeper death this year. Police were called in to shoot the lion to “ensure the safety of tourists”, after the feline fatally injured a keeper who entered its cage for cleaning, according to the official Xinhua news agency. The lion escaped from its enclosure and was at large in the zoo for about two hours, reports said. — AFP W O R L D 27 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY Singapore slams Iran for warning shots SINGAPORE: Singapore yesterday condemned Iranian forces for firing warning shots in the Gulf at a commercial ship registered in the Asian city-state, calling it a “serious violation of international law”. The Maritime and Port Authority (MPA) also urged Tehran to investigate last Thursday’s incident involving the Singapore-flagged Alpine Eternity which it said was in international waters. “With regard to the reported Spain arrests five accused of trying to buy kidney MADRID: Spanish police said yesterday they had arrested five people accused of trying to buy a kidney from an impoverished immigrant for €6,000 (RM24,421.58). Officers in Spain made the arrests working in collaboration with others in Germany and Belgium, a brief police statement said. It did not say exactly when the arrests were made. “The immigrant tried to pull out of the deal while he was undergoing clinical tests, so he was kidnapped, beaten and threatened with death to make him go ahead,” the statement said. The person wanting to buy the organ was the leader of a criminal gang specialised in robberies, who wanted it for a son suffering from kidney disease. Police chiefs and the head of Spain’s National Transplant Organization were due to give more details at a press conference yesterday. In March, 14 European nations in Spain signed the first ever international treaty to fight human organ trafficking. — AFP Texas biker gang battle kills nine WASHINGTON: At least nine outlaw biker gang members were killed in Texas on Sunday when a brawl between rival groups erupted into a pitched gun battle in a parking lot. Police told local reporters that they were amazed that none of the families eating in nearby restaurants was wounded in the crossfire as members of up to five gangs fought. “In 34 years of law enforcement, this is the most violent crime scene I have ever been involved in. There is blood everywhere,” Sergeant Patrick Swanton told the Waco Tribune. “Twenty-five feet away there were families,” he said. “This is one of the worst gun fights we’ve ever had in the city limits. They started shooting at our officers.” The battle broke out at restaurant, part of the Twin Peaks chain of sports bars and a known biker watering hole, in a popular shopping and dining centre in Waco. — AFP shooting incident on May 14, 2015, involving a Singapore-registered tanker ‘Alpine Eternity’ that took place in international waters, Singapore is deeply concerned with such actions,” the MPA said in a statement. “Such interference with navigational rights is a serious violation of international law,” it said. “The freedom of navigation and free flow of commerce are of critical importance to Singapore and other maritime and trading nations,” it added. The MPA said it had “requested the Iranian maritime authorities to investigate the incident and prevent future recurrences”. In the incident, Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces fired warning shots across the bow of the Singapore-flagged tanker before vessels from the United Arab Emirates came to the ship’s aid, according to US officials. After hearing a radio call for help, the United Arab Emirates dispatched coastguard vessels to aid the tanker and the Iranian boats then left the area. The Iranian vessels apparently tried to intercept the ship to settle a legal dispute over an Iranian oil rig that was damaged on March 22. An Iranian official last Friday said the Alpine Eternity, which is operated by Norway’s Transpetrol TM AS, had hit the rig in the Gulf after drifting off course. — AFP EU to back naval force to fight against people smugglers Operation will involve warships and surveillance aircraft BY ALIX RIJCKAE RT BRUSSELS: European Union (EU) ministers were set to approve plans yesterday for an unprecedented naval force to fight people smugglers in the Mediterranean after a series of shipwrecks killed hundreds of migrants. The ambitious operation starting in June will involve the deployment of warships and surveillance aircraft off the coast of Libya, the epicentre of the humanitarian disaster unfolding on Europe’s southern shores. The EU plan also includes the possible destruction of smugglers’ boats before they reach European shores, although that requires a United Nations Security Council resolution backing military action. Federica Mogherini, the EU diplomatic chief, said approval from the European foreign and defence ministers at a “very intense” meeting in Brussels yesterday would help push the United Nations into action. “Today the main point will be taking the decision to establish the EU operation at sea to dismantle the criminal networks that are smuggling people in the Mediterranean,” Mogherini told reporters. “I think that after we take the decision today it is more likely for the Security Council to take a resolution.” She has however insisted there is no question of EU “boots on the ground” in Libya, where political chaos and the rising threat of Islamic State militants make it the main launching point for people risking their lives to cross the sea. More than 5,000 migrants, many escaping civil war in Syria, have died over the past 18 months while trying to cross from North IN BRIEF German cop probed for alleged brutal assaults on refugees BERLIN: German prosecutors are investigating a police officer who allegedly abused two refugees, strangling an Afghan man and forcing a Moroccan to eat rotten pork off the floor. The police officer has been accused of bragging about the brutal assaults in text messages and photos he sent via instant messaging service WhatsApp to his colleagues. Human rights group Pro Asyl condemned the alleged incidents for their “appalling level of racism and inhumanity” and demanded a probe into how many “accomplices in police uniform” knew of the violence. — AFP Serbian man kills six in shooting spree after son’s wedding BELGRADE: A 55-year-old man went on a shooting spree in Serbia in an apparent drunken rage over his son’s wedding, killing six people including the bride and her parents, police said yesterday. The killing frenzy in the northern town of Kanjiza on Sunday was blamed on “troubled family relations,” an Interior Ministry spokeswoman told AFP. Local media reported that the man had been drinking heavily before taking up his hunting rifle and shooting dead the six victims, a day after the wedding he had allegedly opposed. — AFP Macedonia PM rallies supporters as protesters dig in NATO secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg listening to EU diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini (R) during a joint meeting of EU foreign and defence ministers at the EU Council in Brussels yesterday. Photo by Reuters Africa, often on flimsy rubber dinghies or crowded fishing boats. Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain have already promised to deploy warships for the mission, a rare joint military venture for the 28-nation European bloc that prefers political and financial gambits. “The Royal Navy is already saving lives at sea but we need to agree action today to get after the criminal gangs,” British Defence Minister Michael Fallon said as he arrived for the talks. German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen said that while rescue operations at sea would remain the EU’s first priority, it had to tackle the roots of the problem. “Even if sea rescue operations will stay our top priority, we have to address at the same time the causes, which bring people to venture on this high-risk escape over the sea,” she said. Rights groups have however criticised the military plan, saying it will not solve the problem of complex smuggling networks and of a huge number of people fleeing war and poverty. The headquarters of the mission, called EU Navfor Med, is to be in Rome and will be led by Italian Rear Admiral Enrico Credendino, a European diplomat told AFP. — AFP SKOPJE: Macedonian opposition supporters set up a protest camp outside the offices of embattled Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski as thousands of his supporters were expected to turn out for a counter rally yesterday night. More than 20,000 opposition protesters marched through the capital Skopje on Sunday to demand that Gruevski step down, accusing him of corruption, mass wiretapping and of fomenting ethnic tensions to hang onto power. Opposition leader Zoran Zaev called on demonstrators to stay on the streets in front of Gruevski’s neoclassical government headquarters “until he goes”. — AFP Famous US thrill seeker dies in jumping accident LOS ANGELES: A world-renowned extreme athlete died along with another man during a stunt at the Yosemite National Park in California, US media said on Sunday. Tributes poured in from all over the globe for Dean Potter, 43, following his death on Saturday. He and fellow BASE jumper Graham Hunt, 29, were killed during a jump at Taft Point, ABC News said, citing Yosemite National Park spokesman Scott Gediman. Reports filtered through to park officials on Saturday of an accident and a helicopter spotted the two bodies on Sunday. — AFP 28 live it! T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY T UE WELLBEING . THE ARTS . WINE+DINE . STYLE+DESIGN . LEISURE Personal ASSISTANT hyp Ng as can rig COMPI L ED BY S HALINI YEAP ing of S be clu WORK. LIFE. BALANCE is D Messages in TREAT your palate to some culinary delights while you enjoy a live band performance on a Tuesday night with Tujo’s Cloudy Bay Seafood and Duck Trail promotion. The two options available are the Cloudy Bay Sauvignon Blanc and Seafood menu which includes a bottle of the wine paired with grilled tiger prawns in lemon honey mustard, and the Cloudy Bay Pinot and Duck menu which includes a bottle of the wine paired with herbed tabouleh and smoked duck. The bottle of wine for both menus is RM300++ for two persons with an additional RM76 for two mains. Tujo is located at Ascott, 9 Jalan Pinang, KL. For more information, visit www.tujo.my or call (03) 2161 7789. Kl Swing! brings you the weekly Tuesday Night Swing at Sid’s Pub, Bangsar South. Not a swing dancer but have always wanted to give it a go? A 30 minute taster class will take place at 9pm for beginners to learn the ropes of swing dancing. There will be no cover charge, but a contribution of RM10 is requested and you are encouraged to purchase drinks to support the venue. So, if you are a swing dancer or would like to give it a go, wear comfortable footwear to the Tuesday Night Swing tonight at Sid’s Pub, Bangsar South located at Jalan 112h, Kampung Kerinchi, KL. More details on the event can be found on www.klswing.com. YOUR DNA With genetic testing now more easily available, you can find out why your diet is not working or if you are doing the right things to prevent heart disease BY J OAN NG A fter Hollywood film star Angelina Jolie went public about her preventive breast surgery, genetic testing for BRCA mutations doubled in the US. Jolie, who has a family history of breast and ovarian cancers, also has a BRCA1 gene mutation that dramatically raises her risk of cancer. She removed her breasts and ovaries, and in the process spurred many other women to do the same. In fact, genetic testing is slowly entering the mainstream. There is enough scientific and clinical evidence such that some medical centres in the US have made it part of routine practice. And although these tests cannot tell you everything yet, they can tell you something new. Josephine Ng, a nu- tritional therapist and functional medicine practitioner at COMO Shambhala Urban Escape, found this out when she sent her DNA for a battery of tests in August last year. “I found out that caffeine affects my bones,” she says. Her risk of osteoporosis increases if she consumes too much caffeine. Since undergoing the tests, she has been trying to limit herself to one cup of coffee a day. She also found that she has a cancer-related gene deletion, which she mitigates by eating plenty of broccoli, kale and onions. Ng’s test results came from DNA Life, a joint venture between Danish testing facility, Nordic Laboratories, and South African DNA specialist, DNAlysis Biotechnology. And COMO Shambhala has partnered DNA Life to make these tests easily available in Singapore. In April, COMO Shambhala announced that it will offer four nutrigenomic tests at its centre in Orchard Road. Testing requires a simple mouth swab. And Ng, who had attended a training programme conducted by DNA Life, will help clients interpret the results of the tests and suggest diet, exercise and lifestyle strategies based not just on the results but also on an individual’s case history. “Taking a case history is crucial,” she says. “That’s how I can understand what is going on in a person’s life, what is his lifestyle, and what are his dietary preference and family history.” The four tests If you have been trying unsuccessfully to lose weight for years, DNA Diet might be a useful test for you. A weight management-focused test, it covers 13 gene variations that impact obesity risk and weight loss. Your genes can influence how you absorb fat or burn carbohydrates, for instance. The test will show how your genetic profile might impact your response to the three most scientifically proven and effective weight management plans: low-fat, low-carb and Mediterranean. You will also find out how much exercise you need to achieve and maintain weight loss. DNA Diet is particularly recommended Ng says the usefulness of DNA testing lies in the ability to create a personalised healthcare plan. Photo by Bryan Tay/The Edge Singapore for those with a family history of obesity, those with obesity-related health issues, those who lose weight on dieting but put back all the weight later on and those who eat well but cannot lose weight. Women who suffer from oestrogen-dominant conditions, such as endometriosis, premenstrual syndrome and uterine fibroids, would benefit from DNA Oestrogen. It tests 10 genes that affect or are related to the oestrogen in your body. Women with a family history of breast, uterine or ovarian cancer would also benefit, as well as men with a family history of prostate cancer. Meanwhile, DNA Sport analyses 13 genes and can determine whether you will make a better endurance athlete or are more likely to have power in your punch like Manny Pacquiao. It also shows the speed of your body’s recovery and genetic susceptibilities to tendon and other soft tissue injuries. And it will provide an optimal strategy for training and diet. Professional athletes will probably find the results most useful, but sports enthusiasts who want to minimise injuries or those who have a family history of live it! 29 T U E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 1 5 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY WELLBEING . THE ARTS . WINE+DINE . STYLE+DESIGN . LEISURE hypertension can also gain valuable insights. Ng also recommends this test for children as it can measure athletic potential, which can indicate how far a child can go with the right training. Until May 31, COMO Shambhala is offering each of these three tests at a launch price of S$520 (RM1,400). Thereafter, the tests will be priced at S$940 each. Each package includes two consultations with Ng. The most comprehensive test of the lot is DNA Health, which looks at 28 genes that have significant roles in the onset of chronic diseases such as coronary heart disease and diabetes. Those who would benefit most are those with existing chronic health conditions such as hypertension, high cholesterol and heart disease, as well as those with a family history of cardiovascular conditions, insulin resistance and diabetes, bone-related conditions such as osteoporosis and osteoarthritis, and allergic asthma. According to Ng, this is potentially the most useful of all the tests. Even seemingly healthy people would be able to use the test results to make better diet and lifestyle choices, helping to prevent many diseases. COMO Shambhala is not offering this test as part of a package, but the test and two consultations with Ng are likely to cost about S$1,108. What can you expect? The usefulness of DNA testing lies in the ability to create a personalised healthcare plan, says Ng. Doctors typically recommend onesize-fits-all solutions. “To lower cholesterol, they prescribe statins. If you are overweight, they suggest you exercise,” she says. However, the result of such prescriptions often differs from one patient to another. Ng says she has seen results so far among clients who took the DNA Diet test. “The diet works quite well if you are obese. But of course, no test can guarantee you can lose weight,” she says, adding that a lot of the work still has to be done by clients. “DNA Health is also very good. I have found instances where people have unusual symptoms, such as chemical sensitivities to perfumes or preservatives.” In fact, the tests that DNA Life runs and the results it returns are all backed by rigorous research and clinical evidence, Ng says. This means that there is strong evidence to support a lifestyle change based on the test results. To be qualified to administer the results, she had to attend a three-day training programme conducted by a university professor. “It’s a very technical programme and you need to be a nutritionist or doctor — someone with medical training,” she says. As genetic testing gains popularity, Ng sees the market growing. She says there are already quite a number of other testing companies out there that test all sorts of genes — even those that may not be very useful because not enough research has been done on them. And while DNA Life interprets the results with actionable points, not all genetic testing companies do this. Indeed, after Jolie underwent her double mastectomy, some experts warned about the risks of unnecessary surgery from misinterpreted test results. The good thing about the DNA Life tests is that the recommendations are generally sound ones, no matter what your genetic imperfection: eat well, exercise and get a good night’s sleep. Ng says her test results mostly confirmed a lifestyle that was already ingrained in her as a nutritionist and functional medicine practitioner. “Because of my gene deletion, I have to eat certain vegetables. But I was already eating those anyway,” she says. “It was a confirmation that more or less what I have been doing is right for me.” — The Edge Singapore t PICK OF THE DAY THE recently launched Acer Iconia Talk S combines both mobile phone and tablet functionalities in a single device. The dual SIM card feature allows users the flexibility to manage two accounts at once while the narrow bezel display ensures an immersive viewing experience on the 6.9in high definition touch screen display. The device weighs only 275g and is a pocket-friendly tablet with a slim body design. Priced at RM799, the Acer Iconia Talk S is now available at all Acer stores. More details can be obtained from www.facebook.com/AcerMalaysia or by contacting the Acer Product Infoline at 1800-88-1288. re ity, ues, put who roenme om hat n in ory uld mily 13 you or our ows nd nd rond bly rts juy of An example of the results from a DNA Diet test. 30 live it! T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY WELLBEING . THE ARTS . WINE+DINE . STYLE+DESIGN . LEISURE Zen TODAY No thief, however skilful, can rob one of knowledge, and that is why knowledge is the best and safest treasure to acquire. — L Frank Baum HOPPING on the KFit bandwagon BY SU A N N QUA H W anting to be healthy and getting more exercise are a perennial resolution — this is why gyms register the most number of new participants in January, although that doesn’t mean people regularly go. The reasons for letting things slip in the fitness department vary, and are often justified. Plus, being tied down for a lengthy period of time and forced to settle for a fitness regime at a gym you don’t entirely like anymore can be quite a punishing experience. Enter KFit, Asia’s new kid on the fitness block and a possible solution to the age-old problem of wasting money on gym memberships that you end up not utilising. Started by the co-founder of Groupon Malaysia, Joel Neoh, KFit claims to be the answer to high gym membership fees. Instead of paying for a year’s subscription, all users have to do is sign up for a monthly membership on KFit’s website, start searching for classes that they’re interested in— the list includes yoga, weightlifting and hundreds more — make a reservation and then off you go. It’s like a Netflix for fitness, if you will. With just several clicks of a button, users will have access to a comprehensive list of exercise options, so that workout sessions are varied and full of new and exciting challenges. Apparently, about 90% of Asians do not have gym memberships, and this is exactly what makes KFit so appealing. Now available in Malaysia, Hong Kong and Singapore, the website is a tantalising offer for the majority of people wanting to dabble in various fitness options instead of committing to a single gym for an entire year. By the end of this year, KFit aims to become available in Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, China and India as well. Monthly subscription prices in these cities will be dependent on the cost of living and fitness activities, respectively. Here in Malaysia, it costs RM99 per month to become a part of KFit — the upsides are that there are no upfront fees, no contracts and memberships can be terminated at any time. The cost of the monthly membership is split between KFit and the participating gyms, depending on where members utilise their memberships. It claims to be the answer for small gym owners that only have one or two outlets – KFit helps promote them to the masses and reach a wider target audience than they normally would. KFit not only links gyms, but also dance studios, sports complexes, such as futsal and badminton courts, and all sorts of fitness activities around the city in its quest to make fitness accessible and enjoyable to everyone. For the bigger players in the fitness industry, KFit helps gym and studio owners fill up classes. The list of options made available provides for different training levels to cater to various needs in addition to enabling people to invite friends to join classes with them, making workouts even more enjoyable. Within just a couple of months of KFit’s launch, almost 100,000 people have already registered their interest in the service, which is only website-based at the moment but will soon be coming to mobiles in the form of apps. For more info on KFit or to request an invite to join, visit www.kfit.com. S P O RT S 3 1 TU E SDAY MAY 1 9 , 20 15 • T HEED G E FINA NCIA L DA ILY TV app for SEA Games Event in Singapore will be streamed live on YouTube and smart phones SINGAPORE: The Southeast Asian (SEA) Games to be held in June in high-tech Singapore will be streamed live on dedicated mobile apps and YouTube, organisers said yesterday. More than 600 hours of the 39-sport competition from June 5 to 16 will be streamed live on the “SEA Games TV” apps for Android and iOS mobile devices, the Singapore SEA Games organising committee said in a statement. Sixteen sports will also be streamed live on popular video Germany’s Audi rules out entry into Formula One racing FRANKFURT: Germany’s Audi has no plans to enter Formula One, the company said yeseterday, seeking to end speculation that the sports car maker was tempted to broaden its commitment to motor racing. “This is not a topic for us,” a spokesman for the premium brand, which is owned by Volkswagen, said. German daily Handelsblatt yesterday reported that Audi Chief Executive Rupert Stadler had ruled out an entry into Formula One after speculation of a partnership with former champions Red Bull. “Formula One needs to solve its problems on its own,” Handelsblatt quoted Stadler as saying in its Monday edition. The sport, in which Ferrari and Mercedes race, is seeking to make cars faster and louder again to maintain its allure. Last week Stadler was quoted as saying Formula One remained an option for Audi. He told Britain’s Auto Express magazine website that “in life you must keep things open”, in response to a question about the sport. There has long been speculation about whether Audi might be tempted into Formula One, and it increased after Volkswagen’s Chairman Ferdinand Piech quit last month. Piech was seen as being strongly opposed to Formula One where top teams have annual budgets of over US$200 million (RM714 million). Audi competes in the Le Mans annual endurance race, the German Touring Car series and the fledgling Formula E competition for electric powered cars. — Reuters sharing and streaming site YouTube, along with the opening and closing ceremonies, the statement said. “The digital platforms allow the organisers to go beyond venue capacity and geographical boundaries and to reach out to the entire region,” it said. Lim Teck Yin, chairman of the organising committee, said the intent of the digital platforms was to keep regional sports fans “updated and excited about the games, no matter where they live”. Organisers last week said costs for the Games will come in at S$324.5 million (RM877.83 million). The biennial SEA Games is a smorgasbord of different sports ranging from the popular football, swimming and athletics as well as more exotic sports followed passionately in Southeast Asia. Among them is the Chinese martial art wushu, and sepak takraw — a cross between volleyball and football where players use their feet, legs and head to lob a rattan ball into the opposing court. Singapore last hosted the Games in 1993. The centrepiece of this year’s event will be the city state’s state-of-the-art 55,000-seater National Stadium which opened its doors last June. The Games involve all 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) — Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam — plus non-ASEAN state East Timor which first participated in the Games in 2003. — AFP Nicol bags top Penang TYT Prime Award Trophy B U T T E R W O R T H : Na t i o n a l squash queen Datuk Nicol David has once again won the Penang TYT Prime Award Trophy, repeating her outstanding achievement during the seven seasons since 2004. Nicol who was also named Penang sportswoman of the year 2014 could not be present to receive the award, which was presented by the Penang Yang di-Pertua Negeri Tun Abdul Rahman Abbas at the Sports Awards Ceremony at The Light Hotel on Sunday night. Nicol who just finished the British Open semi-final challenge in Hull, England, on Saturday, was represented by her father, Desmond David. National diver Ooi Tze Liang emerged as the new Sportsman of Penang by his historical success in bringing home the country’s first gold in the men’s diving event at last year’s Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. The 22-year-old athlete was represented by his father Ooi Hong Cherng, 57, as Ooi is undergoing training in China in preparation for the SEA Games next month. Nicol and Ooi each received a championship trophy, a trophy, a certificate of appreciation and RM3,000 cash. Meanwhile, two young athletes, karate’s Ooi San Hong, 15, and squash’s Nur Aliah Izzati Muhammad Anis, 15, were awarded the Sportsman and Sportswoman of Hope 2014. Ooi won a bronze medal with his first appearance in the 14th Asian Karate Championship last year, while Nur Aliah Izzati won a silver medal in the Asian Junior Squash Championship in Iran. The Do Karate Team emerged the best men’s team after showing encouraging performance by winning a gold medal in the third South East-Asian Championship Karate in Vietnam last year. — Bernama Nadal woes raise French Open flag for rivals Nadal serving to Wawrinka of Switzerland during their men’s quarter-final match at the Rome Open tennis. The Spaniard has been virtually unbeatable at Roland Garros. Photo by Reuters BY JUSTIN DAVI S ROME: For the past 10 years Rafael Nadal has been virtually unbeatable at Roland Garros, but that could all change at this year’s French Open as the Spaniard’s woes continue on clay. Nadal, stunned in the final of the Madrid Masters a week ago by Britain’s Andy Murray, has won only one tournament — Buenos Aires — on his favourite surface this year. Having already lost twice this year to Italian Fabio Fognini, Serbian rival Novak Djokovic and Murray, the 14-time Grand Slam winner was eliminated from the quarter-finals of the Italian Open by Stan Wawrinka, who also beat Nadal to the Australian Open title in 2014. If Nadal’s defeat to Murray was confirmation that things were not quite going to plan, his failure to reach the latter stages in Rome means he will likely miss out on a top four seeding for Roland Garros. Seedings for the second Grand Slam of the year, which begins on May 24, will be announced by the French Open organisers shortly, and Nadal is unlikely to be given the luxury of a top four seeding, mean- ing he could meet one of his main rivals as early as the quarter-finals. Barring 2009, when Sweden’s Robin Soderling upset him in Paris, Nadal has won the French Open every year since 2005, stretching his record to nine titles in 2014 last year with victory over Djokovic. It goes without saying Nadal’s struggles have not gone unnoticed. Djokovic overwhelmed Swiss Roger Federer to defend his Italian Open title on Sunday. Although neither have dismissed Nadal, they admit his virtually barren run on clay has surprised them. “I think to be honest it surprised everybody considering his record on clay courts over the years,” said Djokovic. “It’s something that hasn’t happened in the last 10 years. But he’s human as well and does have his periods where he’s not confident or not winning matches. “This is the surface that always allowed him to regain his confidence if he was losing more on hard courts than clay courts. Whenever he would get to the clay season he would win matches and then feel like he’s back on the right path. “This year is quite different and it will be interesting to see how he bounces back for Roland Garros, the most successful tournament he has ever played in his career.” — AFP IN BRIEF Shimomura wants no roof for Tokyo 2020 stadium TOKYO: Tokyo’s sparkling new National Stadium, the centre piece for the 2020 Olympic Games and 2019 rugby World Cup, should ditch its plan for a retractable roof to save money, Japan’s sports minister proposed yesterday. Hakubun Shimomura added that he wanted around 35% of the seats at the 80,000 seat stadium to be temporary ones in another cost-cutting measure and also to shorten construction time at the ¥170 billion (RM5.08 billion) facility. Shimomura also called on the local government to contribute ¥50 billion but Tokyo Governor Yoichi Masuzoe said local residents and the metropolitan assembly needed to be convinced first, Kyodo News reported. — Reuters Ex-tennis star Bob Hewitt jailed for rape in S Africa PRETORIA: Australian-born former tennis Grand Slam champion Bob Hewitt was sentenced to six years in jail in South Africa yesterday for raping and assaulting young girls he coached in the 1980s and 1990s. Hewitt, 75, had pleaded not guilty to the two charges of rape and one of sexual assault that were brought against him by three women in 2013. Hewitt won numerous Grand Slam doubles titles during his career in the 1960s and 1970s and was named to the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1992. But his name was removed from the hall of fame in 2012, following sexual abuse allegations. — AFP Djokovic dominant, Raonic drops out of top 5 PARIS: World No 1 Novak Djokovic tightened his grip at the top of the ATP rankings published yesterday after his straight sets Italian Open win over Roger Federer. The Swiss, defeated 6-4, 6-3 by the Serb champ on Sunday, remains second ahead of Scot Andy Murray. Rafael Nadal, knocked out in the quarter-finals in Rome, sits on seventh just behind Canadian Milos Raonic, who dropped two places. As a result Tomas Berdych of Czech Republic and Kei Nishikori of Japan moved up to fourth and fifth place respectively. — AFP Sharapova overtakes Halep into second place PARIS: Maria Sharapova of Russia jumped into second place in the Serena-Williams-dominated WTA rankings published yesterday thanks to her third Italian Open crown. The double Roland Garros winner leapfrogs Romanian Simona Halep after her 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 Sunday win over Spain’s Carla Suarez, who jumped two places to sit on eighth. Wiliams, who sat the Rome Open out due to an elbow injury, continues to dominate the women’s rankings while her sister Venus is 15th. Further down, Ekaterina Makarova of Russia and Andrea Petkovic both dropped to ninth and 10th respectively. — AFP 3 2 S P O RT S T UESDAY M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 5 • TH EEDGE FI N AN C I AL DAI LY Is 65 the magic number for Malaysian football? NFDP director: Each player is given one year to improve themselves BY T VI GN ESH BUKIT JALIL: Does the future of Malaysian football rest on the shoulders of 65 youngsters? The National Football Development Programme (NFDP) has produced 65 teenagers who are Malaysia’s hopes for the Under-17 World Cup in India in 2017 and beyond. NFDP director Lim Teong Kim said there are 25 key players between the ages of 12 and 13 from the three sports schools — Bukit Jalil Sports School, Tunku Mahkota Ismail Sports School and Gambang Sports School. Lim said that these 25 are the best of the 65 players in this age group. “The NFDP scout selected these 25 players but they are not promised a permanent spot in the team. “Each player is given one year to improve themselves which means if the player cannot make the cut in one year, they could be replaced by others,” he said, explaining that is why the talent pool is large at 65 people. “So it is very competitive among the players and this is what we want to instil into the players at this age — which is to have the winning mentality,” said Lim. He said there have been changes in the past year in terms of number of games the young players have been playing. “The number of games played is very crucial for players at the age of seven to 17 years old. The more games they play, the more they become exposed and the more a player can improve himself. “We also give them practical homework when they are on their Sunderland’s Johnson to deny child sex charges LONDON: Sunderland winger Adam Johnson will deny three charges of sexual activity with a child and one count of grooming, a court in north-east England was told yesterday. Johnson, 27, was arrested in March on suspicion of sexual activity with a 15-year-old girl. His solicitor, Paul Morris, told a hearing at Peterlee Magistrates’ Court that Johnson intends to deny the charges when they are formally put before him. Johnson, who has been capped 12 times by England, appeared at court accompanied by his partner, Stacey Flounders, and was bailed to appear before Durham Crown Court on June 3. He left without speaking to reporters. — AFP Lim: Why don’t the officials learn to adapt to the new culture the foreign coaches try to instil? Photo from www. goal.com three-week or four-week break. “Our training is just not playing football well but also changing their mindsets. We are now teaching them work ethics and good values.” Lim believes the NFDP is the answer to pulling Malaysian football out of the doldrums but admitted this would take time. “The programme is progressing slowly but we are on track with our achievement,” Lim told The Edge Financial Daily. The national team was condemned to their lowest position in history as they fell in the FIFA rankings to 166 — below countries such as Bhutan, Gambia, Belize, Indonesia, Singapore and Myanmar. This collaboration between the Youth and Sports Ministry and the National Sports Council seeks to inculcate a footballing culture similar to that in England, where children start playing as young as seven years old. However Lim admits that in reviving Malaysian football, focus must also be on the coaches and officials to ensure they are on board. “Our style of playing is totally wrong. Our football is too slow compared to other top Asian Leagues. “The officials also need to change their mentalities. When they hire a foreigner as a coach, advisor or technical director, the officials here expect the foreigners to adapt to the Malaysian culture,” said the former Bayern Munich development coach. Lim added that everyone knows that the Malaysian culture does not work but still officials insist otherwise. “Why don’t the officials learn to adapt to the new culture the foreign coaches try to instil?” He said. Lim also said it is important for the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) and State Football Associa- tions to see the importance of youth development. The irony is that these are the organisations which should be emphasising youth development but their demonstration of a lack of commitment in this area saw the government cough up RM40 million to kick off the NFDP. In its enthusiasm to find young talents however, the NFDP did not factor in the post-NFDP life of most of the trainees, especially those who do not make the cut to the national team. Lim said that FAM should organise more leagues in the age group (18 to 21 years old) where the good players would have better chances of making it into the senior team. “We have been talking about this with FAM technical director Fritz Schmid who is working with us on the development programme,” Lim said. Messi eulogised after leading Barca to La Liga triumph BY IAIN RO G E RS MADRID: Spain’s biggest selling sports daily Marca summed it up in yesterday’s headline after Barcelona wrapped up the fifth La Liga title in seven years and their 23rd overall on Sunday: “Messi’s League”. The Argentina forward scored a typically brilliant goal to secure a 1-0 win at Atletico Madrid, exactly a year after last season’s champions pipped Barca to the title with a 1-1 draw at the Nou Camp on the final day of the campaign. Barca’s latest triumph was the first part of a possible treble of Champions League, domestic league and Cup crowns, which Barca became the only Spanish club to achieve in 2008/09 under Pep Guardiola. Messi’s goal was his 41st in 37 La Liga appearances this term, four behind top scorer Cristiano Ronaldo, whose Real Madrid side are four points adrift of their arch-rivals with one game left. Messi has also made an incredible 17 assists and it has been his scintillating form since the turn of the year, after he broke the La Liga scoring record in November, that has been the main driving force behind Barca’s treble charge. They meet Juventus in the Champions League final on June 6, a week after hosting Athletic Bilbao for the King’s Cup final, an impressive achievement for coach Luis Enrique in his first season in charge. “Right now I am thinking about all those who have helped us win this title, without exception,” Luis Enrique told a news conference after the match at the Calderon. “There are still two titles up for grabs and then we will know what mark we can award ourselves, but winning this league makes us very happy,” added the former Barca and Spain midfielder. Barca’s defence, marshalled by Chile goalkeeper Claudio Bravo, has also played its part, conceding a mere 19 goals in 37 La Liga games, while Real leaked 35. But club talisman Messi predictably dominated yesterday’s front pages after the 27-year-old again proved decisive when it mattered most. Exchanging passes with Pedro, he found the tiny amount of space he needed in the crowd of defenders and clipped a precise shot into the corner to seal what was undoubtedly “Messi’s League”. — Reuters IN BRIEF Sport furious over late Flamengo equaliser SAO PAULO: Flamengo came back from 2-0 down to grab a point against Sport at the Maracana stadium on Sunday but their injury-time equaliser sparked accusations of poor sportsmanship. The equalising goal, scored by Everton in the sixth minute of injury time, came after Flamengo had refused to return the ball to Sport, who had kicked it out of play when one of their players went down with what looked like cramp. The Flamengo players claimed their opponents were wasting time but Sport’s Diego Souza, who scored his side’s opener, was furious after the final whistle. — Reuters Luis Enrique eyes new era of Barcelona dominance MADRID: Barcelona coach Luis Enrique believes his side’s 23rd La Liga title can be the launching pad for another prolonged period of success and a potential treble this season. Barca face Athletic Bilbao on home soil in the Copa del Rey final on May 30 before taking on Juventus in the Champions League final a week later. Luis Enrique was recruited along with seven new players last summer after Barca’s first trophyless campaign in six years and he lauded their response in what he described a season of “transition”. — AFP Benfica win back-to-back Portuguese titles LISBON: Benfica won the Portuguese title for the 34th time on Sunday after a 0-0 draw away to Vitoria Guimaraes combined with a 1-1 draw for nearest challengers Porto at Belenenses. The Lisbon giants, coached by Jorge Jesus, can no longer be caught by bitter rivals Porto, who are three points behind with one game remaining and crucially lose out in the head-to-head between the sides. It is the first time that Benfica have won back-to-back titles in 31 years and the third time they have won it under Jesus. — AFP Kaka inspires 4-0 thrashing of LA Galaxy LOS ANGELES: Defending champions LA Galaxy suffered a humiliating 4-0 defeat to Major League Soccer newcomers Orlando City on Sunday, with an inspired Kaka creating a goal and scoring a penalty. With three wins from 12 games, Galaxy are level on points with Sporting Kansas City, who hold the sixth play-off spot. Former World Player of the Year Kaka started the move which led to Orlando’s 12th minute opener, Brek Shea heading a Rafael Ramos cross back across goal where Eric Avila nodded home. — Reuters