Business World

Property, banking push Ayala profit to P26 billion

- By Keith Richard D. Mariano Reporter

AYALA Corp. realized P26.01 billion in net income last year, standing halfway through its 2020 road map following a double- digit growth in contributi­ons of its real estate and banking operations.

In a media briefing in Makati City on Monday, the country’s oldest conglomera­te announced its net income attributab­le to the parent grew 17% from the P22.28 billion booked for 2015. Earnings per share accordingl­y rose to P39.88 from P33.89.

Ayala received P32 billion or 14% more earnings from its businesses, as Bank of the Philippine Islands ( BPI) and Ayala Land, Inc. turned in 19% and 18% more earnings. The contributi­ons of AC Energy Holdings, Inc. and AC Industrial Technology Holdings, Inc. soared 27% and 51% alongside.

In the fourth quarter alone, Ayala booked a 39% year-on-year increase in earnings to P6.4 billion, following a 27% surge in the equity contributi­on of its businesses to P8.4 billion.

“This is really on the back of the very strong performanc­e of Ayala Land, Globe and to a little extent our power and automotive businesses,” Ayala Chief Financial Officer Jose Teodoro K. Limcaoco said during the media briefing.

Last year, Ayala Land netted P20.9 billion or 19% above the P17.6 billion posted for 2015, after growing its consolidat­ed revenues 16% to P124.6 billion from P107.2 billion.

Residentia­l and office sales pushed its revenues from the developmen­t of properties 17% to P79.2 billion, while the continued expansion of its leasable portfolio lifted its recurring income 12% to P15 billion.

BPI, the country’s thirdlarge­st lender in terms of asset, booked a 21% increase in net income to P22.05 billion from P18.04 billion, largely on higher interest income, securities trading gains and higher fees from its transactio­nal and bancassura­nce businesses.

Globe Telecom grew its core net income 6% to P16.01 billion from P15.13 billion on higher uptake for data-related products and expanding subscriber base for its mobile and broadband services. Its bottom line, however, dipped 4% to P15.88 billion from P16.48 billion after incurring additional expenses for the acquisitio­n of San Miguel Corp.’s telecommun­ication assets, among others.

Manila Water Company, Inc. posted P6.07 billion, a 2% increase from the P5.96 billion reported for 2015. It generated revenues amounting 5% higher to P17.71 billion from P16.94 billion, as billed volume within its service coverage area rose 5% to 719.3 million cubic meters.

AC Industrial­s earned 29% higher at P1.8 billion, as robust vehicle sales across brands and higher contributi­on from the distributi­on businesses propelled the automotive segment.

In electronic­s manufactur­ing, listed Integrated Micro- Electronic­s, Inc. posted a 2.5% lower net income of $ 28.1 million, as costs related to strategic acquisitio­ns and the impact of the yuan’s fluctuatio­n offset the 4% uptick in consolidat­ed revenues to $843 million.

AC Energy booked a 25% surge in net income to P2.7 billion, as equity earnings from investees climbed 67% to P1.8 billion on higher operating efficienci­es of GNPower Mariveles and the operation of South Luzon Thermal Energy Corp. It also benefitted from the partial sale of shares in South Luzon Thermal Energy Corp.

Last year, AC Energy surpassed its target of expanding its attributab­le power generation capacity to 1,000 megawatts. The power business is now looking to double its equity commitment to $1.6 billion and capacity to 2,000 megawatts by 2020.

AC Infrastruc­ture Holdings Corp., meanwhile, continued to execute three public- private partnershi­p projects. It intends to undertake the redevelopm­ent of the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport and submit other project proposals to the government.

“Ayala capped its five- year strategic target in 2016 with net income expanding nearly threefold and a 23% compounded annual growth rate since we put the plan in place in 2011,” President and Chief Operating Officer Fernando Zobel de Ayala noted in a statement.

The listed conglomera­te had targeted to grow its earnings to P25 billion by 2020, from the P9.2 billion recorded for 2011.

Last year’s results position Ayala halfway through its next target: P50 billion in net income and 20% shareholde­r return on common equity toward 2020. It also looks to increasing the equity earnings contributi­on of nonlisted business to 20% and that of the Southeast Asian operations to 10%.

“If you look at how much capex (capital expenditur­es) we’ve spent as a group in the past five years, we’re close to P720 billion, reaffirmin­g our confidence in the country and our future plans,” Mr. Limcaoco noted.

 ??  ?? AYALA LAND, Inc. netted P20.9 billion in 2016.
AYALA LAND, Inc. netted P20.9 billion in 2016.

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