You see, a feng shui expert told the parents of Benjamin Construction chairman, Benjamin Lim, that his name will bring him luck.
You see, Ms. Bautistas Filipiniana, which even had a train, was originally meant for a more fragile-looking lady who lived during the time of national hero, Jose Rizal.
In a letter dated June 1, 2004 and addressed to Tidcorp EVP Florencio Gabriel Jr., University of Manila assistant registrar Emily de Leon stated that "the comprehensive examination is not an academic subject in the MBA course of the University based on the records on file in this Office, Mr. Remo is a bona fide graduate of this University as of May 2001 with the degree of Master in Business Administration.
In a subsequent letter dated June 7 and addressed to the Tidcorp board chaired by Finance Secretary Juanita Amatong, Freddy Remo has asked for the "immediate lifting of my suspension with back wages and the dismissal of my case."
Mr. Remo is still waiting for Nitz Amatongs answer.
Naturally, DBP president and chief executive officer Simon Paterno is thrilled no end, not so much because of the World Banks interest but because of the projects win-win feature.
Under the project, DBP serves as a clearing house between SME-suppliers and big corporations. The idea here is to liquefy the purchase orders issued by big corporations to their SME-suppliers through an online auction. The SME-suppliers get their cash right away instead of waiting for the standard 30-to 90-day repayment period. The big corporations will be able to reduce their costs, pass on the savings to their customers. DBP earns a small service fee for each transaction. The buyer of the purchase order initially accredited banks can turn around and sell the Pos at a higher price than what it paid for.
The projects first "big brother" or big corporation is San Miguel Corp., which has trade receivable at any point in time of P13 billion.