Home Blog Page 12608

DoubleDragon logs 71.8% profit growth in 2017

DoubleDragon Properties Corp. reported a 71.8% surge in consolidated net income for 2017 to P2.53 billion from P1.47 billion a year earlier after the company’s recurring revenues grew nearly four times, it told the stock exchange on Friday, March 2.

“I am personally glad for the progress we have made in the past 3 years as it has been essential in putting together the solid building blocks that will serve as the bedrock of a company designed and built to stand the test of time,” said DoubleDragon Chairman Edgar J. Sia II in a statement.

The company recorded recurring revenues of P1.31 billion in 2017, significantly higher than the previous year’s P347.6 million largely because of the growth of its rental revenues. Rental revenues jumped 238.4% to P909.2 million from P268.7 million.

DoubleDragon said rental revenues had accounted for 19.8% of its total revenues “as it continues to shift towards its goal of becoming a 90% recurring revenue company by 2020.”

Hannah M. Yulo, DoubleDragon chief investment officer, said that with 33 hectares of leasable space built to date, the company would “very soon” start to see substantial contribution from recurring revenues.

The company said in just three years, it had completed 332,500 square meters of leasable space, and expects more than 50% of its target leasable portfolio to be online and start to contribute “substantially” by 2019.

The first 25 CityMalls are averaging 95.3% leased out, it said. DoubleDragon expects a total of 50 completed CityMalls by end-2018.

As for its hospitality business, the company said hotel revenues rose 404% year-on-year to P397.5 million as against P78.9 million in 2016 due to the full-year contribution of its hospitality subsidiary, Hotel of Asia Inc.

The company also said its foray into the industrial warehousing business “had seen substantial traction now having secured two of the eight CentralHub sites it intends to initially develop by 2020.”

On Friday, shares in DoubleDragon slipped by 1.7% to P31.80 each. — Victor V. Saulon

BIR files tax evasion raps vs spa owner, shipping firm

The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) on Friday, March 2, filed separate charges against two Manila-based companies for failing to pay long overdue taxes.

Foot Haven Shop owner Peter Q. Garcia and Sea Dragon Shipping & Logistics Inc., along with its president, Marvin G. Gata, are being sued for violating Section 255 of the Tax Code and failing to pay taxes for taxable year 2010, BIR Deputy Commissioner Marissa O. Cabreros told reporters in a press briefing.

Mr. Garcia is being sued for a total amount of P7,521,704.32 while Mr. Gata and Sea Dragon’s tax liability amounted to P15,642,184.32. — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

FINTQ to give away 1 million microinsurance policies

FINTQnologies Corp. (FINTQ), the financial technology arm of Voyager Innovations, Inc., is offering one million free microinsurance policies to the unbanked and underserved Filipinos.

In a statement sent to reporters on Friday, March 2, FINTQ said it will distribute one million microinsurance policies across 42,000 barangays under its KasamaKA Ka-Barangay sa Kaunlaran in partnership with Liga ng mga Barangay sa Pilipinas.

“We all need security and protection from any uncertainties. With this affordable and accessible microinsurance policies under the KasamaKA Microinsurance Program, this will kick start the massive nationwide financial literacy campaign to educate millions of unbanked and underserved Filipinos on the importance of being financially secured and insured,” FINTQ managing director Angelito M. Villanueva was quoted as saying in the statement. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Trump says tough tariffs are coming, riling rivals and allies

President Donald Trump said the U.S. would slap tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to protect national security, prompting threats of retaliation from Canada to China.

Trump said he would impose tariffs of 25% on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum for “a long period of time,” and he expected to sign a formal order next week. He didn’t elaborate on the details of the planned action, including whether any products or countries would be exempted.

“You’re going to have protection for the first time in a long time,” Trump told metals industry executives at a meeting in the White House Thursday.

The planned tariffs, justified on the basis that cut-price metals imports hurt both American producers and national security, now raises the prospect of tit-for-tat curbs on American exports and higher prices for domestic users. While the practical impact may yet turn out to be limited, the political environment for global trade has just taken a turn for the worse.

Asian steel and aluminum stocks took a hammering Friday morning, adding to declines that came before the tariffs were first reported Thursday. Earlier, the S&P 500 Index slumped to session lows, U.S. stocks for companies that consume the metals like Ford Motor Co. fell, and Treasuries climbed as investors reacted to the news, while shares of U.S. steel and aluminum producers jumped.

China didn’t have an immediate official reaction Friday. The U.S. measures “overturn the international trade order,” Wen Xianjun, vice chairman of the China Nonferrous Metals Industry Association, said in a statement. “Other countries, including China, will take relevant retaliatory measures.”

Li Xinchuang, the vice chairman of China Iron and Steel Association, called the move “stupid.”

U.S. allies, seeing their industries threatened, responded with bafflement and dismay.

“Steel and aluminum imports from Japan, which is an ally, do not affect U.S. national security at all,” Japan’s Trade Minister Hiroshige Seko told reporters in Tokyo Friday. “I would like to convey that to the U.S. when I have an opportunity.”

Canada — the biggest foreign supplier of steel to the U.S. — said the measures were unacceptable while the European Union vowed to “ react firmly” with World Trade Organization-compliant countermeasures in the next few days. Australian Trade Minister Steve Ciobo called the move “disappointing” and said his country is seeking an exemption.

The punitive measures would level the unfair playing field that has persisted for years, and make it easier for American companies to expand and hire workers, Trump said.

U.S. companies from beer brewer MillerCoors to candymaker Hershey Co., which use aluminum for manufacturing and packaging, said operations would be hurt by the tariffs.

“We buy as much domestic can sheet aluminum as is available, however, there simply isn’t enough supply to satisfy the demands of American beverage makers like us,” MillerCoors said in a tweet. “American workers and American consumers will suffer as a result of this misguided tariff.”

Soybean Response

A U.S. move on tariffs risks provoking retaliation from China, the world’s biggest steel and aluminum producer. China has already launched a probe into U.S. imports of sorghum, and is studying whether to restrict shipments of U.S. soybeans — targets that could hurt Trump’s support in some farming states. While China accounts for just a fraction of U.S. imports of the metals, it’s accused of flooding the global market and dragging down prices.

What Our Economists Say…

“China’s total exports of steel and aluminum are equal to about 0.5% of GDP, most of that from steel,” said Bloomberg’s Chief Asia Economist Tom Orlik. “Relative to fears from Trump’s campaign trail rhetoric, in which he threatened an across-the-board 45% tariff on all imports from China, these measures are extremely limited.”

Trump announced the tariffs despite lobbying of his administration by foreign governments, and while Chinese President Xi Jinping’s top economic adviser is in the country on a mission to defuse tensions.

The impact of the step hinges in part on which nations will be affected, said Alex Wolf, senior emerging markets economist at Aberdeen Standard Investments in Hong Kong who previously worked at the U.S. State Department.

“It’s not much ado about nothing, but until we see the final scope of the tariffs and the response from global trading partners it’s hard to say it’s the start of a tit-for-tat trade war,” he said. — Bloomberg

National government debt inches up 1.1% in January

Outstanding government debt rose in January as the weaker peso drove up the value of the country’s foreign loans, the Bureau of the Treasury reported late Thursday, March 1.

National government debt totaled P6.726 trillion for the month, 1.1% higher than the P6.652 trillion tallied as of end-December. The debt stock also surged by a tenth from the P6.115 trillion owed in January 2017, data showed.

Bulk of the loans came from domestic sources at P4.431 trillion, down by P10.475 billion from the December level although 12.1% higher year-on-year. Domestic loans went down on the back as the state settled its obligations from issued debt papers.

Government securities accounted for most of the loans, while the P948-million remainder comes from a mix of direct loans availed by agencies, as well as assumed obligations.

Foreign loans accounted for roughly a third of the unsettled debts, which grew by 3.8% to reach P2.295 trillion versus December’s P2.211 trillion.

“For January, external debt escalation was principally due to peso depreciation and the impact of third currency appreciation that raised the value of the US dollar and third-currency denominated indebtedness amounting to P61.21 billion and P6.78 billion, respectively,” the Treasury said in a statement.

BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said “there is nothing to worry about” when the country’s debt goes up “by a very minimal amount.”

With the growing debt stock, the government also increased the amount of guaranteed obligations by 2.4% to P489.454 billion.

The government borrows from local and foreign sources to fund its budget deficit, which for this year is capped at 3% of the country’s gross domestic product. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Customs surpasses February collection goal, hits P43.7 billion

The Bureau of Customs (BOC) reported on Friday, March 2, that it surpassed its revenue collection target for February, posting a surplus of P 1.965 billion as the majority of ports exceeded their revenue goal.

In its press release, Customs Commissioner Isidro Lapeña cited the initial collection report from the agency’s Financial Service, which showed that the BOC collected a total of P43.674 billion revenue in February, 41.55% higher than the P30.854 billion collection in the same period last year and 4.7% higher than the P41.709 billion collection goal set for February.

BoC said the growth to the improved collection of the majority of the BOC ports, notably by the revenues generated by the Manila International Container Port (MICP), Port of Manila (POM) and Batangas.

“Majority or 14 out of the 17 ports of the Bureau of Customs exceeded their collection target for the month and this is mainly because of the intensive campaign against corruption and smuggling,” Mr. Lapeña said in a statement.

Chinese fugitive nabbed at airport, to be deported

The Bureau of Immigration (BI) apprehended a Chinese fugitive wanted for “economic crimes” back in China and plans to deport him back to the country.

Thirty-six year old Jiang Yabo last Monday, Feb. 26, was cornered by operatives of the BI’s Fugitive Search Unit (FSU) at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) after sending off his parents who were leaving for China, according to a statement released by the BI.

“We will deport him for being an undesirable and undocumented alien”, BI Commissioner Jaime Morente said in the statement. He added Mr. Yabo’s passport was already cancelled by the Chinese government. — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

NAIA rehab, upgrade bid heats up

THE GROUP behind the ongoing upgrade of the Mactan-Cebu International Airport will go head-to-head against a consortium made up of some of the country’s biggest conglomerates in the bid to rehabilitate and upgrade Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA), the country’s premier gateway.

Megawide Construction Corp. and India-based GMR Infrastructure Ltd. said in a joint press release on Thursday that they submitted a proposal to rehabilitate NAIA for $3 billion.

“As an experienced private operator, we have a deep understanding of the problem experienced by NAIA and we would like to offer our take on the solution,” the statement quoted Manuel Louie B. Ferrer, corporate information officer of Megawide, as saying.

The engineering-infrastructure company’s share price edged up by 0.71% to close P21.30 apiece on Thursday.

EXPERIENCED
GMR has been operating New Delhi Airport since 2006 as well as Istanbul Atatürk Airport.

Both firms formed a consortium that won the 25-year contract in April 2014 for the P17.52-billion Mactan-Cebu International Airport Passenger Terminal Building project — 83.34% completed as of end-2017 according to the Web site of the Public-Private Partnership Center — and are now undertaking this through GMR-Megawide Cebu Airport Corp.

Their plan challenges the P350-billion unsolicited proposal for the rehabilitation, operation and maintenance of NAIA that was submitted to the Department of Transportation on Feb. 12 by a consortium composed of Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc.s’ Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc.; Ayala Corp.’s AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp.; Filinvest Development Corp.; JG Summit Holdings, Inc.; Alliance Global Group, Inc.; Metro Pacific Investments Corp. and Asia’s Emerging Dragon Corp.

That consortium has tapped airport operator Changi Airports International Pte Ltd as technical partner for rehabilitation work.

The GMR-Megawide proposal seeks to increase airfield capacity to 950-1,000 aircraft movements a day, a 30-37% hike from about 730 currently.

Proposed concession period will run for 18 years, about half the first group’s proposed 35 years.

The planned investment of $3 billion covers all airside, terminal and landside improvements, Megawide-GMR said, explaining that the first phase (for up to two years) will improve NAIA airside capacity and improve the existing terminal, the second phase (third to fourth year) will introduce “key performance measures” while the fifth to sixth year will build “future capacity.”

Immediately upon takeover- GMR-Megawide will improve capacity of airside infrastructure by building full-length parallel taxiways for both runways, constructing additional rapid-exit taxiways for the primary runway, extending the secondary runway and providing “the maximum number of aircraft stands”.

Within 24 months of taking over operations, GMR-Megawide plans to rehabilitate and expand existing terminals, doubling space to over 700,000 square meters.

Once completed, both airside facilities and terminals should be able to handle a total annual throughput of 72 million passengers compared to last year’s 42 million people and the designed capacity of 30.5 million.

Over the 18-year concession period, GMR-Megawide also plans to pay annual concession fees consisting of revenue share with a guaranteed minimum component; will not require any subsidy, equity or guarantee from the government and will hand over all assets to the government free of cost at the end of the concession term.

GMR-Megawide has also chosen US-based The MITRE Corp. as technical partner, especially for research and development in maximizing NAIA’s existing airside facilities.

“This is a technically responsive proposal,” Megawide’s Mr. Ferrer said in the statement.

“We have evaluated multiple options to enhance NAIA’s capacity and efficiency while reducing airside and landside congestion,” he added.

The same statement quoted Andrew Harrison, another authorized representative of the consortium, as saying: “Our detailed master plan takes into account all possible constraints in transforming a fully operational brownfield airport.”

Feb. growth of PHL factory activity slowest in 5 months

BUSINESS for factories in the Philippines bared “marginal” improvement in February, according to the latest monthly monitoring by IHS Markit for Nikkei, Inc. that showed manufacturing growth easing for the third straight month by the second-slowest pace since the country survey began in January 2016.

The seasonally adjusted Nikkei Philippines Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) slipped to 50.8 in February from January’s 51.7, “signalling only a marginal improvement in the health of the sector.”

A PMI reading above 50 suggests improvement in business conditions compared to the previous month, while a score below that signals deterioration.

The manufacturing PMI — a composite index designed to provide a snapshot of the health of the manufacturing sector each month — is composed of five sub-indices, with new orders having the biggest weight of 30%, followed by output (25%), employment (20%), suppliers’ delivery times (15%) and stocks of purchases (10%).

“The latest reading was the joint second-lowest in the survey history,” read the report.

February’s level matched that of September last year and was also the slowest in five consecutive months.

The latest data, collected on Feb. 12-21, showed faster increases in output and new orders that were offset by “the first drop in staffing levels since September 2017.”

“Filipino manufacturing firms recorded a further rise in output during February. The rate of expansion picked up from January, but remained modest overall,” the report said of output, adding that new orders’ “pace of growth was solid, up from the previous month.”

Foreign demand remained subdued, with export sales falling for a second straight month. The report said exports’ “degree of contraction was slightly quicker than recorded in January,” with those surveyed blaming a strong dollar and low overseas demand.

In February, moreover, “the rate of job losses was the fastest in the survey history.”

The report said that managers surveyed referred generally to workers who resigned, “though some mentioned layoffs as part of efforts to cut costs.”

The increase of prices of production inputs “surged to the greatest in the survey history,” read the report that was e-mailed to journalists on Thursday — a day after the central bank said it expected the overall hike in prices of widely used goods and services to have clocked 4-4.8% in February, potentially the fastest clip in more than three years or since October 2014’s 4.3%.

“Companies mainly blamed new excise taxes, higher commodity prices, such as oil, plastics and paper, supply shortages and a weak peso for increased input costs,” the report noted, even as “February data showed tentative signs of recovery in demand after new excise taxes” — under the first of up to five tax reform packages enacted into law in December last year as Republic Act No. 10963 and which took effect on Jan. 1 — “reportedly restricted order book growth at the start of the year.”

“Survey data suggested that the effects of the new excise taxes continued to be felt on the price front. Inflationary pressures intensified during February… The combination of higher prices for raw materials (such as oil, plastics and paper), a weaker exchange rate and new excise taxes were the main drivers for sharp cost increases.”

The report also noted that while “business confidence remained elevated” in the face of higher sales forecasts, it “dipped to the lowest in the survey history.”

“Growth in the Philippines manufacturing economy lost further momentum in February, according to the Nikkei PMI data, setting the sector on course for the weakest quarter in the survey history,” the report quoted Bernard Aw, IHS Markit’s principal economist, as saying.

“…[w]hat’s particularly concerning was the tighter squeeze on profit margins as inflationary pressures built rapidly to survey-record rates,” he noted.

“While the influence of tax reforms is expected to fade in coming months, price pressures could still become more entrenched on rising imported inflation, which will add to calls for the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to raise interest rates.”

Sought for comment, Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez cited seasonal factors for the latest Philippine PMI reading.

“At the macro level, manufacturing growth continues to stay relatively strong,” Mr. Lopez said in a mobile phone message, describing February’s PMI dip as “minimal movement” and the reading itself as “still a healthy number”.

“It is also partly seasonal — normally lower in the first quarter — after the ramp-up in manufacturing volume during the fourth quarter [in time for the Christmas holidays] and with inventories spilling over in the first quarter.”

Mr. Lopez also said that February’s dip “can be partly due to the adjustment process taking place as consumers and manufacturers assess their consumption and production patterns given the recent change in our taxation system.”

“This is expected to be temporary.” — with inputs from Janina C. Lim

Mart asks about Fed’s Powell: Is he hawk, dove?

WASHINGTON — Financial markets barely batted an eye on Tuesday when Jerome Powell’s first public statement as Federal Reserve chief saw daylight, interpreting it as a steady-handed commitment to the US central bank’s policy of gradual interest rate increases.

The calm evaporated about a couple of hours later, at 10:42 a.m. EST (1542 GMT), when Mr. Powell, testifying before a US House of Representatives committee, struck a bullish, and personal, tone on the strength of the economy.

US bond yields jumped as investors raised their bets for four rate increases this year, rather than the three that Fed policy makers projected in late December, and began asking one key question: Is a hawk or a dove now running the Fed?

“The message coming from the written portion of the testimony did not signal any change,” analysts from Barclays wrote on Tuesday, drawing a contrast with Mr. Powell’s live remarks that “point to a risk of a steeper policy rate path.”

Fed policy makers consider their public statements an important tool in shaping public perceptions and, in doing so, making monetary policy more effective.

Fed chiefs try to avoid off-the-cuff remarks that cause impromptu repricing, preferring to hew close to their job of representing the views of the Fed’s rate-setting committee and avoiding disclosing much about their personal opinions.

Veteran Fed analysts were split over whether Mr. Powell had broken that unwritten rule in his remarks, which came just weeks after he took over from Janet Yellen.

“The tone of the testimony was definitely NOT hawkish,” said Cornerstone Macro economist and former Fed staffer Roberto Perli, who emphasized that Mr. Powell’s written comments might be read as a willingness to allow the economy to run hot in order to boost inflation to the Fed’s two percent target on a sustained basis.

“Mr. Powell more confident on growth, putting 2018 dots in play,” is how JP Morgan’s Michael Feroli summed up the day, referring to the quarterly “dot plot” of projected interest rates that Fed policy makers submit.

Mr. Feroli argued that Mr. Powell’s “modestly hawkish” appearance in Congress strengthened the chance that policy makers’ rate outlook would rise when the central bank issues its next set of economic projections next month.

Traders in short-term interest rate futures were shading to the hawkish interpretation on Wednesday, betting squarely on rises in borrowing costs at the Fed’s policy meetings in March, June and September, and putting a high likelihood of a fourth increase sometime in 2018.

The greenback strengthened to a five-week high on the prospect of tighter monetary policy.

Before Mr. Powell’s testimony, investors had seen the Fed as likely to wait until December before raising rates a third time, if indeed it chose to do so at all.

The market moves, however, were hardly dramatic or unprecedented.

Former Fed chief Ben Bernanke famously set off a global bond rout — the “taper tantrum” — in 2013 when he indicated the central bank was about to scale down the bond buying program it began to fight the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

In 2014, at her first press conference as Fed chief, Ms. Yellen jostled markets when she said the central bank could raise interest rates around six months after ending its bond-buying program.

The Fed’s first post-crisis rate increase came in December 2015, more than a year after it ended the bond-buying.

Mr. Powell’s comments on his personal outlook “was basically like him saying, ‘my dot is going up,’” said Tim Duy, an economics professor at the University of Oregon, in contrast to Mr. Bernanke and Ms. Yellen who felt they should never reveal their own “dots.”

The current Fed chief will have a chance to clarify his views when he goes before a Senate panel on Thursday. Mr. Powell may try to stick closer to the script set out in his testimony in which he pledged to gradually raise rates while preventing the economy from overheating. — Reuters

SM Prime hikes capex

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter

SM PRIME Holdings, Inc. (SM Prime) is accelerating its spending program in the next two years to support the continued expansion of its shopping mall and residential projects into the provinces.

In a presentation to investors posted on its Web site, SM Prime said it plans to spend an average of P80 billion over the next two years. This is 60% higher than the P50-55 billion capital expenditure program it disclosed in 2017.

SM Prime’s residential component, SM Development Corp. (SMDC), will get the largest share from the capex program at 46%. The shopping mall business follows with 42%, while commercial businesses will get 9%. The remaining 2% will be spent for hotels and convention centers.

SM Prime said it will fund the spending program through a combination of local borrowings and internal funds.

This year will see the opening of six new SM malls in the country, namely SM Center Imus, SM City Urdaneta, SM City Telabastagan, SM City Legazpi, SM Center Ormoc, and SM Dagupan-Arellano.

This will bring SM Prime’s mall count in the Philippines to 73 after ending 2017 with 67 malls covering 8.03 million square meters of gross floor area.

The company added that it has a land bank of 154.33 hectares for mall developments, which will be good for the next five years.

For shopping malls in China, the company said future expansions will focus in the Fujian province. SM Prime operates seven malls in China with a footprint of 1.3 million square meters.

Meanwhile, SMDC said it is currently constructing 13,876 units which have yet to be sold. The company also has 2,697 unsold units that are ready for occupancy.

The residential business has room to expand as SM Prime reported a land bank of 556.22 hectares for the primary homes segment alone, and another 539.10 hectares for leisure homes.

For the office business, SM Prime is set to launch by the first half of 2018 the ThreeE-ComCenter in the Mall of Asia Complex in Pasay City. The new office building has a GFA of 130,000 sq.m., which the company said is already fully leased out.

Also under construction is the FourE-ComCenter with a GFA of 191,000 sq.m., set to be completed by 2020.

SM Prime is keeping its hotel and convention centers business steady, as it now operates six hotels with more than 1,500 rooms, four SMX convention centers, and three Megatrade Halls with over 37,000 sq.m. of leasable space.

SM Prime booked a net income of P27.6 billion in 2017, 15.8% higher year on year as revenues also climbed 13.9% to P90.9 billion.

Shares in SM Prime gained 45 centavos or 1.27% to close at P35.75 each at the stock exchange on Thursday.

MPIC readies more unsolicited proposals for gov’t

By Krista A. M. Montealegre,
National Correspondent

METRO PACIFIC Investments Corp. (MPIC) is readying more unsolicited infrastructure proposals after sustaining a double-digit growth in core net profit despite continuing regulatory uncertainty.

In a briefing in Makati on Thursday, MPIC President Jose Ma. K. Lim said the local unit of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd. has new proposals in the works covering waste-to-energy facilities and water supply projects.

With President Rodrigo R. Duterte more welcoming of unsolicited proposals compared to the previous administration, MPIC has submitted offers covering three toll road projects cumulatively worth P140 billion, one P15-billion waste-to-energy facility, and four to five water supply deals.

Aside from these projects, MPIC is also part of a “super consortium” that has submitted a P350-billion offer to rehabilitate the Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

Likewise, the conglomerate also made an offer to upgrade the Metro Rail Transit Line-3 even as state-run lenders Development Bank of the Philippines and Land Bank of the Philippines were reportedly considering unloading their stake in the dilapidated railway.

“We’re not prepared to buy those shares unless we have the concession,” Mr. Lim said.

MPIC’s group-wide capital expenditures reached P38 billion last year on top of the P38.9 billion invested to deepen its participation in the power sector and expand into new markets including Indonesia. The company continues to look at possible opportunities for tollway projects in Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia as well as water projects in Vietnam and Indonesia, officials said.

The hospital group is also keen on acquiring more hospitals. MPIC participated in the process of buying Ayala Land, Inc.’s stake in the hospital chain QualiMed, but indicated it was only interested in specific assets such as hospitals in Iloilo and Batangas as well as an outpatient center in the Philippine General Hospital, Metro Pacific Hospital Holdings, Inc. President Augusto P. Palisoc, Jr. said.

In the same briefing, MPIC Chief Finance Officer David Nicol said the conglomerate may push through with a bond issuance in the fourth quarter to finance requirements next year. The company has opened P30 billion in new credit lines sufficient to finance this year’s capital expenditure program.

However, Mr. Nicol said it was too early to provide a guidance on earnings and capex for the full year 2018 as both are related to continuing regulatory frustrations. Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. (MPTC) and Maynilad Water Services, Inc. have been struggling to obtain contractual tariff increases from their respective regulators.

Last month, the Philippine government unexpectedly applied to the High Court in Singapore to have the award in Maynilad’s favor vacated. The appeal process may take a maximum of six months, with MPIC having a “strong belief” of a favorable ruling.

Tariff delays and the arbitration proceedings have also contributed to the delay in MPIC’s plan to sell a portion of its stake in Maynilad to an Asian investor, Mr. Nicol said.

“We are doing our best to support the ‘Build, Build Build’ agenda of the government. However, our investors (many of whom are hardworking Filipino savers and pensioners by the way) and our creditors need confidence that our various concession and franchise agreements will be observed,” MPIC Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan was quoted in the statement as saying.

“We are working hard to resolve these matters. It is our hope that our partners in government could come along with us in the spirit of partnership in which our various projects were conceived,” Mr. Pangilinan said.

Notwithstanding the delays in tariff hikes, MPIC reported a 17% rise in consolidated core net income to P14.1 billion last year from P12.1 billion in 2016.

MPIC’s earnings got a boost from an expanded power portfolio following further investment in Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., significant traffic growth on all roads held by MPTC and continuing growth in the hospital group.

In terms of contribution to the company’s net operating income, power accounted for 52%; toll roads contributed P3.9 billion contributed 22%; water added 21%; hospital provided 4%; and rail, logistics and systems group delivered 1%.

MPIC is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific, along with PLDT, Inc. and Philex Mining. Hastings Holdings, Inc. — a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. — maintains interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

MPIC shares closed flat at P5.63 apiece on Thursday.