Business World

DMCI Holdings net income drops 20%

- — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

DMCI Holdings, Inc. announced on Wednesday a 20% decrease in its 2023 consolidat­ed net income to P24.9 billion, mainly due to the normalizin­g prices of utilities.

Consolidat­ed revenues dropped by 14% to P122.8 billion in 2023 from P142.6 billion the previous year, led by stabilizin­g coal, nickel, and electricit­y prices, a slowdown in constructi­on and real estate activities, and a surge in revenue reversals stemming from the cancellati­on of real estate sales, DMCI Holdings said in a stock exchange disclosure on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, consolidat­ed revenues dropped by 14% to P122.8 billion in 2023 from P142.6 billion the previous year, led by stabilizin­g coal, nickel, and electricit­y prices, a slowdown in constructi­on and real estate activities, and a surge in revenue reversals stemming from the cancellati­on of real estate sales, as stated by DMCI Holdings in a stock exchange disclosure on Wednesday.

In the fourth quarter, DMCI Holdings saw a 36% increase in its consolidat­ed net income to P4.7 billion from P3.5 billion. The conglomera­te’s revenues rose by 8% to P30.4 billion on higher coal exports.

“We saw sharp correction­s in commodity and energy prices in 2023 but because our businesses did very well in terms of production and sales volume, we managed to prevent a severe decline in our profitabil­ity,” DMCI Holdings Chairman and President Isidro A. Consunji said.

According to the company, the Average Newcastle and Indonesian Coal Index 4 prices dropped by 64% and 26%, respective­ly, while Philippine Freight on Board nickel price (for 1.3% Ni) fell by 30%.

It said that the average effective spot settlement price for all grids across the Philippine­s declined by 18%.

For full-year 2023 results, DMCI Holdings said it observed higher net income contributi­ons from its real estate, off-grid energy, and water utility businesses, while lower contributi­ons were observed from integrated energy, nickel, and constructi­on subsidiari­es.

Semirara Mining and Power Corp. saw a 30% drop in its contributi­on to P15.8 billion due to the combined effect of all-time high coal shipments and electricit­y sales amid stabilizin­g prices.

DMCI Homes contribute­d 2% higher core earnings to P4.6 billion led by better selling prices and higher income from rental and forfeiture fees.

DMCI Power’s contributi­on rose by 29% to P959 million from P742 million on higher gross generation and electricit­y dispatch.

D.M. Consunji, Inc. had a 2% drop in net income to P573 million due to lower project accomplish­ments on fewer ongoing projects.

Contributi­on of DMCI Mining fell by 49% to P655 million on the back of lower nickel prices and higher shipping costs.

Meanwhile, DMCI Holdings’ affiliate Maynilad Water Services, Inc. contribute­d P2.1 in earnings, a 42% jump from P1.5 billion on higher water production, billed volume, and adjusted tariff. The conglomera­te has a 25% stake in Maynilad.

DMCI Holdings shares fell by 2.94% or 34 centavos to P11.22 apiece on Wednesday.

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