Toronto Star

Brookfield reports loss of $656M

Firm says investment­s should pick up over year

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Brookfield Asset Management Inc. reported a loss in its latest quarter as it revalued its real estate portfolio lower amid the pandemic.

The Toronto-based company, which keeps its books in U.S. dollars and has many operations outside Canada, said Thursday the loss for the quarter attributab­le to shareholde­rs amounted to $656 million or 43 cents per diluted share for the quarter ended June 30.

The second-quarter loss in its latest quarter compared with a profit of $399 million or 24 cents per diluted share in the same quarter in 2019.

Brookfield said most of its operations continued to generate favourable operating profits.

The company holds large interests in several publicly traded partnershi­ps, including a 53 per cent stake in Brookfield Property Partners, which reported last week that it had been significan­tly affected by closures in its hospitalit­y and retail assets due to the pandemic.

“The good news is that those operating businesses that were impacted are now all recovering, and the balance of the year should be better,” Brookfield said in a letter to shareholde­rs.

Brookfield said that as emergency government aid put in place at the height of the pandemic tapers, it expects companies will increasing­ly be in need of cash and there will be opportunit­ies for it to invest.

It has $77 billion in deployable capital, including $16 billion of cash, financial assets and undrawn lines of credit in BAM and its affiliates, as well as $61 billion of uncalled fund commitment­s from other entities that are available for new transactio­ns.

“Over the next three, six, nine and12 months, we believe many companies will require significan­t equity to repair their balance sheets and continue to grow. With $77 billion of capital available for investing, we expect to participat­e in many of these situations in a variety of ways,” it said.

“We believe markets have recovered to levels that do not reflect the reality of the underlying economic environmen­t. As a result, we are being patient with our capital, but we expect the pace of investment to increase over the next 12 months as opportunit­ies present themselves.”

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