Feb 232014
 

MANILA, Philippines – Robinsons Land Corp. (RLC), the property firm of tycoon John Gokongwei, expects its profits to recover in the second half of its fiscal year that will end in September.

The listed property firm is looking to tap the debt markets in the next few months to fund the continuous expansion of its shopping malls and office space, its top executive said.

“I’m very optimistic and positive about the second half of the fiscal year for RLC,” said RLC president and CEO Frederick Go.

“Obviously, we had some challenges in the first half of the year but those are one-off like Typhoon Haiyan and the fire at the department store,” Go said.

The Gokongwei family’s property development arm recorded a 13-percent decline in earnings to P1.03 billion in the fourth quarter of 2013 from P1.18 billion a year ago.

RLC incurred losses from Typhoon Yolanda and a mall fire that negatively affected the operations of Robinsons Place Tacloban and Robinsons Galleria, respectively.

Business ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1

Non-recurring losses in the first quarter will likely be offset by the property boom.

“The market looks good. Demand is strong across-the-board: for retail, office, condominium units and hotel rooms,” Go said.

New office buildings and the opening of new shopping malls will also boost the company’s rental revenues, he said.

With the opening of Robinsons Place Antipolo and Robinsons Place Las Piñas late this year, RLC will end 2014 with 39 shopping centers.

RLC is jacking up its capital spending by a fifth to P16 billion in fiscal year 2014 to fasttrack the construction of malls, office buildings and hotels.

Go said RLC will tap the debt market in the next 60-90 days to fund around half of the capital expenditures.

“The bulk (of the proceeds) is going to the malls and office buildings. Hotels are smaller part of the pie,” Go said.                               

Dec 282013
 
Robinsons Land earns P4.48 B

MANILA, Philippines – Robinsons Land Corp. (RLC), the property arm of the Gokongwei family’s JG Summit Holdings Inc., posted an unaudited net income of P4.48 billion in its fiscal year ending September 2013, up by only  5.5 percent from the previous year as residential construction remained sluggish. Sources said RLC’s revenues rose 18 percent to P15.98 billion from October 2012 to September this year, mainly on the strength of its shopping mall operations. Operating profit amounted to P5.98 billion, 14 percent higher than the P5.24 billion recorded in the same period last year. In the fourth quarter alone, RLC’s net earnings fell 2.8 percent to P832 million, while revenues went up 3.3 percent to P3.58 billion. The shopping centers division chipped in P1.98 billion in revenues or 16 percent more than the P1.71 billion contributed a year ago. The income drop  was due to lower residential revenues as a result of low project  completion rate and increased loss from the reversal of derivative assets. Business ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1 Revenues from residential projects fell 13 percent in July to September this year to P868 million, while hotel revenues were flat at P361 million.  The office buildings segment pumped in P367 million in revenues, down two percent due to lack of new inventory. Pre-sales, however, remained positive with reservation sales  growing nearly 50 percent to P8.62 billion. Construction of new malls and office buildings has been delayed until next year.  RLC’s  gross leasable area for shopping malls Read More …

Jun 272013
 
JG Summit allots record $1.03 B for capex

MANILA, Philippines – Tycoon John Gokongwei’s investment vehicle JG Summit Holdings Inc. is jacking up its capital spending to a record $1.03 billion this year to support the expansion program of its operating units. Bulk of the capital expenditures would be taken up by property unit Robinsons Land Corp. (RLC) to take advantage of the property boom. “Capital spending for 2013 is budgeted to reach over $1 billion with RLC accounting for the biggest share of 31 percent or $320 million,” JG Summit president and chief operating officer Lance Y. Gokongwei said during the company’s annual stockholders meeting. Gokongwei said it would be the largest capital spending of JG Summit thus far. Last year, the conglomerate spent $926 million for the expansion program of its subsidiaries. Gokongwei said RLC would build four new shopping malls, two office buildings and three Go Hotels. It would also support the completion of at least eight condominium buildings. Airline firm Cebu Air Inc., which owns and operates budget carrier Cebu Pacific, would take up $275 million for the acquisition of five new Airbus aircraft as it lines up new routes. Business ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1 Snacks and beverage giant Universal Robina Corp. would spend $120 million while JG Summit Petrochemicals Corp. is backed by $300 million in capital. “We are gaining traction for our food products in other countries such as Malaysia, Singapore, China, Hong Kong and Indonesia,” Gokongwei said. JG Summit would start commissioning its naphtha cracker plant late Read More …