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Cabinet accepts MMC-Gamuda offer

Finance Ministry gives green light for continuati­on of MRT2 undergroun­d works at reduced cost

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PETALING JAYA: Shares of Gamuda Bhd and MMC Corp Bhd jumped after the Finance Ministry gave the green light on the continuati­on of undergroun­d works for the Mass Rapid Transit Sungai Buloh-SerdangPut­rajaya Line (MRT2) project at a reduced cost.

Gamuda’s shares rose 15 sen, or 6.47%, to close at RM2.47, while shares of MMC Corp Bhd gained four sen, or 3.57%, to end at RM1.16 yesterday.

Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said in a statement that the Cabinet has accepted an offer by MMC-Gamuda to reduce the cost of MRT2 undergroun­d works by RM3.6bil, or 21.5%, to RM13.11bil.

Earlier the joint venture had offered a cost reduction of only RM2.13bil, or 12.7%, for the MRT2 undergroun­d works.

“This means that the constructi­on cost (excluding interest during constructi­on, land acquisitio­n costs and other costs) of MRT2 has been successful­ly reduced by RM8.82bil, or 22.4%, from RM39.35bil to RM30.53bil,” Lim said.

As such, the Government has effectivel­y rescinded its previous decision to terminate MMC-Gamuda as contractor for the job.

MMC-Gamuda had previously agreed to cut the cost of the above-ground works by RM5.22bil, which was accepted by the Finance Ministry.

However, its offer to reduce undergroun­d works cost by only RM2.13bil was rejected by the MoF and the decision was made for the contract to be terminated and be re-tendered.

Commenting on the latest developmen­t, AmBank Research said it was positive by vir- tue of MMC-Gamuda having “made amends” with the government.

However, the brokerage pointed out that the cost reduction would mean MMCGamuda would have to carry out the 60% remaining work with an original contract value of RM9.6bil at RM6bil, representi­ng a whopping 37.5% cut effectivel­y.

“While the reduction includes the cancellati­on of two undergroun­d stations, that is, Bandar Malaysia (North) and Bandar Malaysia (South), we doubt if MMC-Gamuda will be able to turn in any meaningful profits from the remaining work at this price,” AmBank Research explained in its report yesterday.

“As such, we are keeping our forecasts that have removed profits from the remaining MRT2 undergroun­d work,” it said.

AmBank Research maintained its “hold” call on Gamuda, with a fair value of RM2.71 for the counter based on 12 times the estimated earnings of 2019.

“While the rollout of public infrastruc­ture projects will resume over the medium term as infrastruc­ture developmen­t remains key to nation-building, we believe the focus will shift to smaller scale/value-for-money basic infrastruc­ture projects such as road upgrading, bridges, schools, drainage, rural water and electricit­y supply and smallish sewerage schemes, from multi-billion mega projects,” AmBank Research said.

“The smaller projects are less economical to large-contractor­s such as Gamuda, given their high fixed overheads.

“Not helping either, is the uncertaint­y arising from the potential expropriat­ion of Gamuda’s toll roads,” it added.

 ??  ?? Works get nod: A file picture showing MMC-Gamuda tunnelling crew from its Tunnelling Training Academy at work. MMC-Gamuda made an offer to reduce the cost of MRT2 undergroun­d works by RM3.6bil, or 21.5%, to RM13.11bil. The offer has been accepted.
Works get nod: A file picture showing MMC-Gamuda tunnelling crew from its Tunnelling Training Academy at work. MMC-Gamuda made an offer to reduce the cost of MRT2 undergroun­d works by RM3.6bil, or 21.5%, to RM13.11bil. The offer has been accepted.

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