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The billionaires behind Lego are shopping for real estate in London

THE FUND managing the wealth of the billionaires who own Lego A/S wants to buy more London real estate.
Undeterred by Britain’s plan to exit the European Union, the $16-billion Kirkbi A/S fund earlier this year bought the Porter’s Wharf office property in London’s King’s Cross district, marking its third real estate investment in the UK capital, it told Bloomberg.
“Some investors, including us, are a bit nervous about the development in the UK,” Soren Thorup Sorensen, Kirkbi’s chief executive officer, said by phone. “But there are areas in London that aren’t linked to the financial sector.”
The Lego fund’s latest purchase is in an area dominated by technology, media and telecom companies, which Sorensen is betting will probably be less exposed to the exodus that may hit the London banking community once Brexit takes effect. Sorensen also says Kirkbi is big enough to sit out the short-term jolts stemming from the uncertainty surrounding the UK’s departure.
Buying up London property fits into the Lego fund’s overall goal of expanding its real estate portfolio, which grew 14% last year to $1.2 billion. “We very much hope we will do more in 2018,” Sorensen said. “We will look at Germany, Switzerland and the UK.”
“There may be more uncertainty in 2018 than we have seen in many years, but that also means that someone like us will be able to make good long-term investments,” he said. The fund, based in western Denmark, prefers properties it can develop, he said.
Kirkbi Chairman Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, the grandson of Lego founder Ole Kirk Kristiansen, is Denmark’s second-richest man thanks to the popularity of the plastic bricks that have long been a staple of children’s toy boxes. According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, he’s worth about $5.3 billion. Kirk Kristiansen recently handed more control to his children Agnete Kirk Thinggaard, Sofie Kirk Kristiansen and Thomas Kirk Kristiansen, who each have a fortune of about $4.9 billion.
The fund also owns properties in Denmark, but doesn’t see much potential for more investment there in the near term.
“The property market in Copenhagen has seen a lot of demand, so we think it’s difficult to find projects that will give the returns that we want,” Sorensen said.
Kirkbi’s main assets are a 75% stake in closely held Lego, as well as the toymaker’s trademarks. It also has a 30% stake in Merlin Entertainments Plc (which operates the Legoland parks), stakes in Danish firms ISS A/S and Falck A/S as well as other stocks and bonds.
Sorensen says he plans to be opportunistic when it comes to Kirkbi’s stock investments this year.
“We’re seeing rising interest rates and possibly also higher inflation due to pressure on labor markets in the US and western Europe, and that gives more volatility in stock markets,” he said. “For investors like us, it means that companies we looked at previously have come down to a price level where they are attractive for investment.” — Bloomberg

AUB to launch QR-based digital payment system

ASIA UNITED Bank (AUB) is set to launch its own digital wallet to take advantage of its customer base.
Maria Magdalena V. Surtida, AUB vice-president and credit cards business head, said the Ng-led bank will launch its own QR code-based payment system called AUB Pay.
“We will also have our own AUB Pay local wallet. We will also do that,” Ms. Surtida told BusinessWorld on Wednesday, adding that the lender wants to take advantage of its customer base.
“I think we need to because we have a bank customer base that we would like to take advantage so that they can also use AUB Pay in the same merchants we partnered with for WeChat Pay.”
Similar to WeChat Pay of China’s Tencent Holdings Ltd., AUB Pay will enable the bank’s partner merchants to accept digital payment from local customers.
“To the merchant, it’s more markets. So aside from accepting payments from Chinese tourists, they can now also accept payments from local customers via AUB Pay,” Ms. Surtida added.
Late last year, AUB signed a licensing agreement with Tencent to accredit Philippine merchants to accept payments using WeChat Pay’s QR code-based technology.
Ms. Surtida added in a text message that AUB’s partner merchants can accept payments from AUB Pay using the same platform for WeChat Pay.
Having their own digital wallet will be advantageous for its customer base, according to the bank’s credit card business head, since they do not need to transfer their funds to the already established local digital wallets such as GCash and PayMaya.
“It also means our own base base [doesn’t] need to transfer their funds to a PayMaya or GCash account.”
Ms. Surtida said that AUB Pay will be launched this year. “Give us a few months. It’s in the works already.”
AUB booked a net income of P2.8 billion in 2017, 23% higher than the P2.3 billion logged in the previous year, supported by growth across its businesses.
Shares of AUB closed at P55.59 apiece on Friday, up 30 centavos or 0.51%. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

Cardi B, fast-rising woman of rap, reveals pregnancy

NEW YORK — A day after releasing one of the most eagerly awaited rap debut albums in recent years, rapper Cardi B made another splash — revealing she is pregnant.
The fast-rising 25-year-old star showed off an unambiguous baby bump as she appeared on weekly comedy show Saturday Night Live, becoming a top trending item on social media.
In a teasing confirmation to persistent pregnancy rumors, Cardi B took the stage twice on Saturday Night Live, first concealing her body with a fulsome feather boa as she performed her breakout single “Bodak Yellow.”
When she returned to rap “Be Careful,” a track off her debut album Invasion of Privacy that came out Friday, Cardi B donned a body-hugging white dress and smiled knowingly as the lights shone on her protruding belly.
Cardi B is engaged to Offset of rap trio Migos, who shortly after his fiancee’s television appearance confirmed the pregnancy on Instagram, writing, “We feel so blessed.”
Cardi B, a Bronx native whose real name is Belcalis Almanzar, has quickly found stardom with her hard-driving rhymes that unsentimentally tell a story of a rough life that included a stint as a stripper.
“Bodak Yellow,” released less than a year ago, made her one of the most watched names in rap — a genre dominated by men and, often, by machismo.
She raked in top prizes including single of the year at last year’s BET Hip Hop Awards, leading to high anticipation for her debut album — and she is not letting the pregnancy slow her down.
The rapper is due to perform next weekend at Coachella, the premier US music festival — whose top headliner Beyonce pushed back her appearance by one year as she gave birth to twins in 2017.
The gossip site TMZ earlier reported that Cardi B is due to give birth in early July. —AFP

Grab’s Uber deal still has some obstacles to navigate in SE Asia

SINGAPORE — Regulatory scrutiny could complicate ride-hailing company Grab’s takeover of Uber Technologies’ Southeast Asian business, but there is little the authorities can do to stop Uber from simply exiting the region, lawyers and analysts said.
Days after the deal was announced last week, antitrust agencies in Singapore and Philippines began to review it, with Malaysia saying it would follow suit.
Antitrust lawyers say Singapore-based Grab could try to mollify regulators by offering concessions such as price restrictions and subjecting itself to greater regulations. It could also argue that consumers still have many ride-hailing options to choose from.
“Rather than throwing out the deal, and especially with potential new entrants coming in, I believe that with the right safeguards, with the right commitments, the deal can still go through,” said Gerald Singham, deputy managing partner at law firm Dentons Rodyk.
If the deal falls apart, Uber could depart Singapore and leave Grab as the dominant player regardless, experts said.
Uber is already winding down its regional operations and has asked customers and drivers to transition to Grab’s platform. Five hundred Uber staffers will also move to Grab.
Market share data on the ride-hailing sector is patchy, but mobile data analytics firm App Annie ranks Grab ahead of Uber in all the big economies in Southeast Asia in terms of monthly active users. The exception is Indonesia, where Tencent Holdings-backed Go-Jek was ahead.
“An antitrust issue is all about how can you minimize a monopoly which is hitting pricing power and is bad for consumers. But the reality here is that consumers have other options with the incumbent taxi operators in all markets,” said a person familiar with the Grab deal who was not authorized to speak to the media.
Uber is selling its Southeast Asia operations, including its food-delivery unit, to Grab after a five-year battle that cost the US company $700 million. In return, Uber will get a 27.5% stake in Grab, which is valued at roughly $6 billion.
Grab’s President Ming Maa told Reuters last week that passengers and drivers had plenty of other transportation options, from taxis to public transport.
And Go-Jek plans to enter Singapore soon in its first international expansion, the Straits Times reported this week.
Kala Anandarajah, who leads the competition and antitrust practice at Rajah & Tann Singapore, said that though barriers to entry in the ride-hailing sector were relatively low in Singapore and Southeast Asia, new entrants had to start off big enough to compete effectively with a potential Grab-Uber entity.
Singapore’s antitrust agency told Reuters it would consider Go-Jek and taxi companies such as ComfortDelgro Corp. as part of the market as it determines competition during its investigation of the Grab-Uber deal.
The interim measures proposed by the Competition and Consumer Commission of Singapore require Uber and Grab to maintain their pre-transaction independent pricing and not share any confidential data.
APP SHUTDOWN DELAYED
The commission said on Friday that Uber would put off shutting down its app in Singapore by a week until April 15.
It addded that it was reviewing proposals from both Grab and Uber to address its concerns.
Grab said it had “productive discussions” with the anti-competition agency on the alternative proposals, adding that thousands of former Uber drivers had signed up to Grab’s platform.
Grab has said the deal did not decrease competition and was beneficial to both riders and drivers.
“At this juncture, regulators don’t have much recourse since the assets being transferred from Uber to Grab are of little consequence. So even if the asset transfer is blocked, Grab’s goal, which is to push Uber out of Southeast Asia, has already been achieved,” said Corrine Png, chief executive of research firm Crucial Perspective.
“However, Grab will be careful not to step on the regulators’ toes,” Png added. — Reuters

Robinsons ramps up Summit Hotel expansion

By Arra B. Francia
Reporter

ROBINSONS Land Corp. (RLC) targets to have seven hotels under the Summit brand by 2019, with the fifth project located in Tacloban set to open this month.
The Gokongwei-led property developer said in an e-mail correspondence that it will be opening Summit Hotel Tacloban, which will have 138 rooms on seven floors, this month.
Located next to Robinsons Place Tacloban in Marasbaras, Tacloban City, RLC said the project aims to highlight the idea of “building back better” after the area was hit by supertyphoon Yolanda in 2013.
“We are delighted to expand our boutique hotel presence in the Visayas region with the opening of a new Summit Hotel in Tacloban… We are delighted to be part of Leyte’s continued progress, especially in travel and tourism,” Robinsons Hotels and Resorts Unit General Manager Elizabeth D. Gregorio said in a statement.
RLC looks to attract business travelers from Souther Leyte, Ormoc, Samar, and the greater Visayas, as well as couples and families who would like an “urban escape” near the city.
Amenities in the hotel include a pool and pool bar, function rooms, conference rooms, and an in-house restaurant called Patron Casual Dining. The hotel will feature a tropical Filipino look, with its rooms designed with native woodwork patterns inspired by the traditional bahay kubo.
With the opening of Summit Hotel Tacloban, RLC will have a total of 758 rooms under the Summit brand. The listed firm currently operates four Summit hotels in Tagaytay, Quezon City, and Cebu.
By 2019, the company looks to open two more Summit hotels, called Summit Greenhills in Metro Manila and Summit Naga in the Bicol region.
Summit is among the hotel brands under RLC’s portfolio. The company also operates Go Hotels, its budget hotel brand which it markets as a no-frills and limited service chain. There are currently 15 Go Hotels in the country, with RLC planning to open three more this year.
Also under its network are the international hotel brands Crown Plaza Manila Galleria and Holiday Inn Galleria Manila.
“Summit Hotels and Resort is a full service lifestyle brand designed for business and leisure travelers, featuring unique designs that fit the hotel’s surroundings while putting guests in the middle of great destinations,” RLC said.
RLC’s net income attributable to the parent stood at P4.57 billion in the first nine months of 2017, 1.5% up year on year, as revenues slid by 2.8% to P16.6 billion during the period.

Baht seen under pressure this year

A SEASONAL DOWNTURN in Thailand’s baht driven by dividend outflows and a lack of tourists could be worse than usual this year amid rising global bond yields and less liquidity, according to Kasikornbank Pcl.
A drop-off in tourists after the Songkran festival in mid-April and payouts to foreign stock investors usually spell declines for the currency in May. Last year was the first time the baht managed to rally in that month since 2009.
Rising developed-market bond yields and the gradual winding down of stimulus by the European Central Bank could prompt overseas investors to rebalance their portfolios away from emerging markets like Thailand, said Kobsidthi Silpachai, head of capital market research at Kasikornbank in Bangkok.
“The baht may see bigger downward pressure this year than usual,” he said. “Many clients are asking about this dividend season, while exporters are hoping for some light at the end of the tunnel.”
A decline in the baht may provide some relief to Thai exporters that have complained about an 11% rally against the dollar over the last 12 months. Some 87 billion baht ($2.8 billion) of stock dividends will be paid out to non-resident investors in April and May this year, Kasikornbank estimates.
If the dollar rises beyond its 50-day moving average against the baht, that could open the way for the Thai currency to test its support area between the March 2 low at 31.587 and the 31.638 trough on Feb. 22. Beyond that, the next support lies at the low of 31.957 reached on Feb. 9. — Bloomberg

China property tycoons bet big that gambling will come to Hainan province

IN CHINA’s southernmost province of Hainan, inside a glittering skyscraper shaped like a sail, Zeng Xianyun has been waiting for Xi Jinping, in more ways than one.
This week, the Chinese president will visit the island and hotel magnates like Zeng hope the leader will come bearing gifts: new tax concessions to attract more tourists to this tropical destination nestled along the South China Sea near the Vietnam border. Local entrepreneurs and global firms like MGM Resorts International have spent big on sea-side developments here.
Many of these investors are making a wager of their own: Someday in the future, Hainan could be teeming with Chinese gamblers, who will give an adrenaline shot to a tourism-dependent economy that hasn’t fully lived up to expectations. Right now, gaming remains banned across mainland China and the island only attracts a fraction of the country’s tourism outlay.
Xi will speak at the island’s Boao Forum and mark the 40th anniversary of China’s economic opening. While Hainan’s elite aren’t expecting him to immediately announce any wholesale legalization of gambling, they are hopeful the policies he unveils will help draw more tourists. And in doing so set off a policy roadmap that eventually ends with regulated casinos.
Any move to ramp up tourism in Hainan or open it up to gambling would reverberate within the global travel industry. Chinese jet-setters take about 130 million trips overseas each year, the government estimates, spending lavishly from Las Vegas to Bali and Paris.
Outside the mainland, in Macau, where casinos are permitted, the bulk of revenue still goes to foreign operators like Las Vegas Sands Corp. and MGM. A more nationalist angle on the question of gambling and tourism is now finding its moment, dovetailing with Xi’s emphasis on a resurgent China taking its place on the world stage.
The question, according to Zeng, is not why the house always wins, but why that house should be foreign. He hopes China can legalize the gaming industry and make Hainan the first mainland province with casinos to reduce the capital outflows.
“We need to take the issue seriously instead of avoiding it,” said Zeng, who is chairman of Phoenix Island, an artificial archipelago off Hainan’s southeastern shore that has a cruise ship terminal, luxury hotels and apartments. “We can’t let this big cake be eaten all by foreign capital.”
BALCONY BATHTUBS
Zeng’s development was built with a total investment of 20 billion yuan ($3.2 billion), of which he put up 45% and another 45% came from the state-owned infrastructure firm China Communications Construction Co. The property’s skyline is dominated by glinting hotels with steel facades, some of which house luxury condominiums with bathtubs on the balconies. Zeng said he could open a casino in under 30 days if given the permission.
The Boao Forum comes at a time when Washington and Beijing are engaged in trade war brinkmanship over tariffs. China has said the Hainan conference will demonstrate the country’s future prospects for economic growth.
Meanwhile, the drumbeat for casino development in Hainan has grown in recent months. Earlier this year, Bloomberg citing people familiar with the matter reported that government agencies under a party reform group headed by Xi are considering allowing online gaming and sports betting in Hainan, a policy shift that could open the door to physical casinos in the long run.
A balmy climate and sandy beaches are why Hainan, roughly the size of Switzerland, is often dubbed China’s Hawaii. Yet, it has been grappling with its dashed economic potential for almost a decade. It was eight years ago that Beijing designated the island China’s “test case” in developing an “internationally competitive tourist destination.”
At the time, the government said Hainan could explore lotteries related to international sporting events. The news drove speculation that the island could eventually open up to the gambling industry. Then came an investment flurry that pushed up property prices.
The bubble burst by 2012, when it became clear that specific policy concessions for Hainan weren’t imminent, whether legalized gaming or exemption from China’s heavy import duties. Property prices have tumbled from their peak.
Eight years on, new highways, high-speed railways and hotel chains are everywhere in Hainan, but its success as an international hot spot is muddled at best. The island drew about 55 million tourists last year, only about 1% of the 5 billion trips made domestically in China. Its visitor numbers are much lower than Asian destinations like Bali or Phuket.
“Hainan has extremely high hopes for President Xi’s visit and hope to receive some supportive policies,” said Liu Feng, a researcher of Hainan Normal University Maritime Silk Road Research Institute. “Designating the island as a tax-free zone, or even just increasing the number of duty-free shopping locations, will inject vitality into Hainan’s tourism development.”
Xi’s visit is timed for the province’s 30th anniversary. Building it up would allow China to keep more of its tourists at home. This would hurt not just Macau but other countries like Vietnam and Australia that have sunk billions into attracting Chinese gamblers.
Yet, for now, some worry that Chinese regulations make it hard for tourism to flourish in Hainan.
Higher-end cultural offerings are stymied by a censorship regime suspicious of foreign film and art, as well as onerous duties on imports. Property developer Zhang Baoquan, who’s spent more than 10 billion yuan building a complex combining hotels, convention space and a shopping mall in Hainan, dreams of hosting art fairs and film festivals if the province had some kind of a free-trade zone.
Zhang believes policy concessions such as those on a free-trade zone may be on the horizon with Xi’s visit. “The tax support will be the most helpful policies for Hainan,” he said. “This year will be a turning point for this place.”
Meanwhile, MGM through a joint venture with China’s Diaoyutai State Guesthouse has made investments in Hainan and hopes to open two more hotels there.
The MGM Grand Sanya in Hainan has about 675 rooms, and is one of the best performing hotels in the Sanya area, said William Scott, general manager of MGM’s joint venture with Diaoyutai State Guesthouse.
Hainan’s government has commissioned a group of eight scholars to study how to develop gambling tourism there — and how to legalize gambling in China. One member of the group, Pei Guangyi, associate professor at the School of Economics and Management at Hainan Normal University, published a paper in March arguing China should legalize gaming to reduce capital outflows through foreign casinos and introduce a body of regulations.
“Since you can’t stop Chinese people from gambling it is a better solution to make sure that foreign or private capital do not overly profit from it,” he said. — Bloomberg

Star Wars spin-off to be presented at the Cannes film festival

PARIS — The latest spin-off in the Star Wars saga, dedicated to Han Solo, will be screened at Cannes next month, the film festival announced Friday.
Solo: A Star Wars Story will grace the festival’s red carpet ahead of its release in France and the US.
“Presented out of competition, the latest film of the Star Wars galaxy (directed) by Ron Howard brings together Han Solo, his faithful Chewbacca, the crooked Lando Calrissian, the Millenium Falcon and of course the droids,” the festival said on its website.
Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith was the last in the franchise to air at Cannes in 2005.
The latest installment takes the audience back to the youth of the famous smuggler and pilot Han Solo, played by US actor Alden Ehrenreich.
It is the second spin-off derived from the famous science fiction series, after Rogue One was released in December 2016 which made more than $1 billion at the box office.
The Cannes International Film Festival will run from May 8 to 19. — AFP

Sewing tapped to steer Deutsche Bank through chaos

THE ERA of investment bankers calling the shots at Deutsche Bank appears to be over.
Christian Sewing — a three-decade veteran of the Frankfurt-based lender and retail banking executive — was named to succeed to Briton John Cryan after a meeting of the bank’s supervisory board late Sunday. The decision ended a dramatic few weeks of turmoil at Europe’s largest investment bank as Cryan fought for his position and Chairman Paul Achleitner quietly approached potential replacements.
Sewing’s ascent marks the return of a German national as sole CEO for the first time in 16 years. As part of the overhaul, Garth Ritchie will lead the investment bank — which remains at the core of the bank’s problems — and was elevated to co-deputy CEO with Chief Administrative Officer Karl von Rohr.
At first glance, Sewing, 47, seems chosen to complete the task that outgoing CEO Cryan began but failed to complete quickly enough — that of shrinking Deutsche’s investment bank and making a coherent whole out of its domestic retail and commercial operations. In an interview earlier this year, he had sided with Cryan, saying that “the basic direction the bank is taking is the right one. We shouldn’t play around with the strategy.”
Having joined Deutsche as an apprentice in the homely Westphalian town of Bielefeld, Sewing marks a contrast with globe-trotters such as former CEOs Josef Ackermann and Anshu Jain. He’s worked most of his life at Deutsche Bank — except for a two-year stint at a smaller lender — and commutes back to his wife and four children in Osnabrueck on weekends, more than 200 miles away from the German financial capital.
BURNISHED STANDING
Sewing burnished his standing within the bank in recent years by managing the downsizing of its domestic operations, and by curtailing the excesses of its investment bankers. He notably cut 188 branches and about 4,000 jobs from the German retail unit without provoking a strong backlash from German media, for whom Deutsche is a favorite punching-bag.
Sewing also took charge of the internal probe into alleged money-laundering at Deutsche’s Russian business, prompting the bank to shutter its securities unit there, with over 1,000 employees.
In recent weeks, Achleitner had intensified his search for a new CEO, looking for a leader who speaks German and works well with regulators, people familiar with the matter said. That opened the way for internal candidates Sewing, co-deputy CEO Marcus Schenck and Chief Financial Officer James von Moltke. But it didn’t stop the bank and its backers sounding out external ones including Bank of America Corp.’s Christian Meissner and ex-JPMorgan Chase & Co. executive Matt Zames, people familiar with the matter said last week.
“Sewing may not necessarily have been the top candidate, but he was there and stood ready,” Hans-Peter Burghof, a banking and finance professor at the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, Germany, said by phone. “It is too early to say what strategy Sewing would pursue because it depends on the bank’s big investors as well. Several of them are quite keen on investment banking and see it offering a better chance to return to profit than retail banking.”
Sewing’s promotion raises big questions over the future of Deutsche’s investment bank, the source of most of its profits, but also of its most expensive governance scandals. The bank had to pay $7.2 billion last year to settle a US Justice Department probe into its mis-selling of mortgage-backed securities before the financial crisis, and it has also incurred heavy fines for manipulating benchmark interest rates and lax anti-money laundering controls in Russia.
Having been pipped by Sewing to the top job, Schenck will now leave the bank, making way for Ritchie to take over at the head of the division which the company has been considering scaling back.
CRUCIAL ROLE
Ritchie joined Deutsche 22 years ago, working his way up to co-head of equities a decade ago. Generally media-shy, he played a crucial role liaising with clients and regulators during the bank’s crisis of confidence in late 2016, when the prospect of heavy US fines briefly appeared to threaten Deutsche’s viability (and prompted his father in Johannesburg to call to ask him if he still had a job). Ritchie’s firefighting at that time made a lasting impression on Achleitner, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Speaking on the bank’s pre-crisis expansion in an interview last year, Ritchie admitted the rapid growth is still hurting the bank. “We grew very fast with mercenaries and acquired teams, and they grew banks within banks,” he said. “Our biggest mistake was not putting those teams together.”
However, one of the great cultural conflicts that undermined Cryan’s final days seems unlikely to go away with Ritchie’s promotion: Ritchie had supported Schenck’s push for bigger bonus payouts to investment bank staff for 2017.
Von Rohr, who alongside Ritchie was named co-deputy CEO, moved up under Cryan in 2015, becoming chief administrative officer with management board responsibility for corporate governance, human resources and legal. He also became the bank’s labor relations director.
Investors gave a muted reaction to Sewing’s appointment. One top-five shareholder described him as an “OK” choice that they wouldn’t oppose. A second said Sewing will be good for the bank but added that the appointment showed Achleitner wasn’t able to find a better external candidate. Those who fret about his relatively low profile outside Germany overlook his stints in Singapore, Hong Kong, London and Toronto, a person close to Sewing said, noting that his role as deputy chief risk officer exposed him, with a high degree of authority, to all areas of the business. — Bloomberg

MPCALA taps Leighton for Cavite segment of CALAX

MPCALA HOLDINGS, Inc. has tapped Leighton Asia to build the Cavite segment of the Cavite-Laguna Expressway (CALAX).
MPCALA Holdings President Luigi L. Bautista said in a text message the company signed the contract with Leighton Asia, which is part of CIMIC Group’s construction company CPB Contractors, on March 22.
“MPCALA Holdings signed the construction contract with Leighton last March 22,” Mr. Bautista said.
He said construction on the Cavite segment will begin once right-of-way issues have been resolved.
Leighton Asia, in a separate statement, said revenue to the company from the project is approximately A$182 million or around P7.3 billion.
The Cavite segment involves the construction of a 28-kilometer, four-lane expressway, including bridges, interchanges, toll plazas and ancillary facilities.
Leighton Asia said construction is expected to start within the second quarter, and completed by 2020.
MPCALA Holdings, which is part of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC), is the private concessionaire for the CALAX project.
The P35.68-billion CALAX project covers a 44.6-kilometer four-lane toll road between the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx)-Mamplasan interchange and the Cavite Expressway (CAVITEx). The project aims to reduce travel time from CAVITEx to SLEx by 45 minutes.
Last year, MPCALA signed the contract with DM Consunji, Inc. for the construction of the Laguna segment.
MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of Hong-Kong based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

PHL among Asia's biggest remittance recipients

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