Krabi Airlines to launch on
November 1
BANGKOK (The Nation): Soon to be Thailand’s newest carrier,
Krabi Airlines is now being set up and plans to begin flight service
to international destinations starting on November 1, just in
time for the start of the 2007-2008 high season.
Civil Aviation Department Director General Chaisak Angkasuwan
said the airline, with four investors, including former Thai Airways
International employee Kosol Vongsrisart, plans to fly to Norway,
Germany and Australia by the end of the year.
The carrier intends to add flights to cities in the US and Japan
within five years, he added.
K. Chaisak said the establishment of the airline, which takes
advantage of Krabi Airport’s upgraded international status, would
be completed very soon.
It will be the first fully scheduled airline using it as a base
of operations, he said.
At first, the airline will service two international routes: to
Oslo and Munich.
In the second phase, between this year and 2009, the airline plans
to fly to Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane in Australia, plus one
city in New Zealand.
K. Chaisak said the airline would use two Boeing 777-200ER aircraft
in its first year, increasing the number of aircraft to five within
five years and up to 10 by 2013.
The airline, targeting tourists from Europe as its main market,
expects to run an average cabin factor of at least 70%, he said.
Over the longer term, starting in 2011 the airline plans to expand
its routes to Vancouver, Canada; Los Angeles and San Francisco,
California; Tokyo and Osaka in Japan; and Seoul.
Meanwhile, Thailand’s open-skies policy is key to encouraging
investors to start an aviation business.
K. Chaisak added that more than 10 airlines were in the process
of being established. Each is required to have a minimum 200 million
baht in registered capital.
Most are intending to serve Asian markets, he said.
Five major hotels to be re-branded
Patong’s Grand Tropicana
Hotel is to become the Courtyard by Marriott Phuket at
Patong Beach.
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PHUKET: Three Phuket hotels will be renamed under the Central
Group’s re-branding of its hotel and resort business, while
another two will be taken over by the Marriott chain of hotels.
Central Karon Village, Central Karon Beach Resort and Central
Kata Resort will be renamed Centara Villas, Centara Karon Resort
and Centara Kata Resort, respectively.
Centara, Central Group’s new hotel brand, comes from the words
“Central”, the 60-year-old brand name in Thailand, and “tara”,
Thai for water or river.
Suthikiat Chirathivat, chairman of the executive board of Central
Plaza Hotel Plc, said he believes the name “Centara”, which
marks a separation of the group’s hotel and resort business
from its retail and food business unit, was more relevant to
Thailand than “Central”.
Three different sub-brands have been created to re-brand the
11 hotels under Centara: five-star properties will include the
word “Grand” in their titles, village properties will be renamed
Centara Villas and spas will be renamed Spa Cenvaree.
The move comes as the Central Group prepares to expand both
locally and internationally, starting with a new 505-room hotel,
the Centara World Hotel, slated to open March 2008 in Bangkok.
The Marriott hotel chain will take over the 399-room Grand Tropicana
Hotel Phuket, in Patong, and rename it the Courtyard by Marriott
Phuket at Patong Beach. The company will also pick up the 256-room
Surin Beach Resort, which will be re-branded as the Courtyard
by Marriott Phuket at Surin Beach.
The Marriott management comes through a deal struck between
Marriott, which also owns the JW Marriott on Phuket’s northern
end, and Destination Properties.
Both hotels will undergo significant renovations during the
process. They are both expected to be finished by early 2008.

Life after the death of the company pension plan
With apologies to Hieronymus
Bosch. |
Saving money from comes naturally to some people
but not to others. Perhaps for most people it is like dieting, postponed
until next month, next year or even later.
Traditionally, employees of companies were automatically part of
a firm’s pension scheme. The employee would contribute about 7.5%
of his salary to the pension fund and the company, in most cases,
would match this sum.
After decades of service the employee would be able to retire with
a pension of around two-thirds his final salary.
This cozy situation has changed for several reasons. Employers have
realized that this does not suit their operations for many reasons.
Often a company’s largest asset will be its pension fund, but this
is not an asset of any real financial value to the company and produces
little benefit.
Companies have also found that their financial commitments to the
pension fund are, in reality, a blank check for a great sum of money
and with pensioners living longer than in the past the pension fund
can become a huge liability.
It is not simply a matter of companies being greedy, it’s more a
matter of survival of the company itself.
Pensions give even the wealthiest governments major problems. After
World War II, the British government introduced an old-age pension
that, for males, paid benefits from the age of 65. At that time,
life expectancy for males was 63 years, now life expectancy is over
70.
Many developed countries are also finding that birth rates are dropping
and consequentially the governments’ ability to pay pensions is
being challenged. Society has changed dramatically over the past
50 years, as have attitudes toward family responsibilities. In the
past, the family was a close-knit unit and one of the benefits was
care of the elderly.
The change, especially in wealthier countries, towards smaller nuclear
families has seen a change in attitudes towards the financial care
of the elderly. People are now expected to take care of their own
finances and with governments increasingly unable to take the burden
this is what the future holds.
Governments these days are often telling their citizens that they
must make provisions for their own retirements. Most governments
still pay pensions, but the amounts paid are more aimed at staving
off starvation than providing a comfortable retirement.
Expatriates now are in a different position; often employers do
not even offer pension plans. Many expats are working in various
parts of the world on contracts and change employers every few years.
Others are running their own businesses, but in many cases the eventual
sale proceeds of the business may well result in inadequate funds
for retirement years.
In reality, many businesses fail and if the business operator was
relying on the business being the future “nest egg”, he is sorely
disappointed. Expats are a diverse group, and are more likely to
be more diverse than almost any other group of people. In Phuket,
we can see the difference ranging from the extremely wealthy to
those who are close to despair.
There are various choices to cover pensions. Offshore insurance
companies offer pension plans, and while the lump-sum investment
plans, such as mutual funds, stocks and bonds, in this sector are
extremely competitive, the pension and savings plans are just the
opposite.
Pension plans suffer from high fees and if they have to be cashed
in early they are subject to crippling early withdrawal charges.
The situation is so bad that since 1990 I have refused to sell pension
products because I believe the average person would be better off
leaving the money in the bank and investing it only when a reasonable
lump sum has been saved.
However, there are usually exceptions to a rule. The pension plan
offered by Close Private Bank is such an exception. The charges
are moderate, the plan is flexible and it offers a fair deal to
customers.
Close Private Bank was formed in the UK in 1873 and has a top investment
grade credit rating. The bank is listed on the London Stock Exchange
and its shares are part of the Financial Times Stock Exchange –
FTSE 250 Index.
The pension scheme is designed for expats through the bank’s Guernsey,
Channel Islands, operation; though it also has an office in Singapore.
The pension has several options and benefits. First, it is portable
– a contributor can take the pension to whichever country he moves
to.
Also, the pension is held in a trust, so that in the event of the
death of the holder, there are no delays in obtaining probate. Having
a pension in trust means that in the event of insolvency or divorce,
creditors may not seize the assets.
The pension plan can be denominated in UK pounds, euros or US dollars.
Contributions can be increased, decreased or, if necessary, stopped
without any penalty. At the outset of the plan a retirement age
is selected, but can be changed at any time.
The assets of the pension can be borrowed, up to 40%, in a pre-agreed
credit facility and the bank supplies a gold Visa card to investors.
Pension plan members receive a valuation twice yearly and the value
of the pension can be checked at any time online.
Close Private Bank is the largest independent merchant bank in the
UK and by using its Guernsey Pension Plan, investors have tax-free
returns.
Investment choices, which can be changed, range from “Cautious to
Neutral” to “Balanced” to “Growth” and there is another option which
simply tracks the Libor – London Interbank Offer Rate in sterling,
euros or US dollars.
This is by far the best pension plan I have seen offered to expatriates.
Richard G Watson runs Global Portfolios Co Ltd, a Phuket-based
personal financial-planning service. He can be reached at Tel: 076-381997,
Fax: 076-383185, Mobile: 081-0814611. Email: imm@loxinfo.co.th
ON THE MOVE
Henry
Gray, from Scotland, has been appointed Area General Manager
of Evason Phuket & Six Senses Spa, which includes oversight
of the Evason Hideaway on Koh Yao Noi, opening in September. Mr
Gray graduated from the Henley College for Hotel Training in Coventry,
England, where he studied Hotel and Catering Management. His experience
includes working in India, Indonesia, Mexico, Canada and the British
Virgin Islands, including 12 years with Amanresorts.
Phuket
native Janejira “Gift” Saywipas, 22, has been promoted
to the position of Classifieds Administrator at the Phuket Gazette.
She is a graduate of the Communication Arts program at the Phranakhon
Rajabhat University in Bangkok.
.
Songphol
Pongrapeeporn, from Bangkok, has been appointed General
Manager of Marketing at Central Festival Phuket. He has a BA and
MBA from Golden Gate University in San Francisco, California. K.
Songphol’s experience in retail marketing and cosmetics includes
working with Shiseido, L’Oreal and Estee Lauder. Most recently he
was the marketing and communications manager for Gaysorn Shopping
Center in Bangkok.
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