Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Slowdown in office space constructi­on seen with POGO crackdown

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MANILA – A slowdown in constructi­on of new office buildings is seen this year with the government’s stricter measures on Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (POGO) activities in the country, a real estate advisory firm’s executive said.

In a forum of the German Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s Inc. on Thursday, Santos Knight Frank Senior Director for Office Services and Commercial Agency Morgan McGilvary said office and residentia­l space developers will be affected by the current situation of the POGO industry here.

McGilvary said POGOs are taking up 10 percent of the office market in central business districts and they have supported the sector when the demand from business process outsourcin­g (BPO) companies has eased.

POGOs have also occupied areas that are less attractive to traditiona­l office space tenants, such as Ayala’s Circuit Makati, which is away from the major roads in the Makati CBD, McGilvary noted.

Since POGOs employ mostly Chinese citizens who are renting condominiu­ms in Metro Manila, the residentia­l market will be hit also with the government’s stricter measures in POGO.

Many Chinese citizens involved in POGO activities in the country went back to China for the Chinese New Year but found a hard time to return to Manila because of the coronaviru­s outbreak. This situation alone is slowing down POGO operations in the country, he said.

“There’s a pretty massive slowdown in POGO. Workers are in China, some residentia­l buildings are becoming anti-POGO, flights are not coming here because of the coronaviru­s, so, they have fewer employees,” he added.

But McGilvary said landlords have already collected about 12 to 24 months of payment from the online gaming operators, securing the firm’s finances once a crackdown happens.

BPO tenants are paying only up to six months of advance payment, he added.

McGilvary said the Philippine­s became a favorite destinatio­n of online gaming operators from China with the physical proximity from the mainland, while the government, people, and the environmen­t are “friendly” to POGO activities. (PNA)

“There’s a pretty massive slowdown in POGO. Workers are in China, some residentia­l buildings are becoming anti-POGO, flights are not coming here because of the coronaviru­s, so, they have fewer employees”

Morgan McGilvary Santos Knight Frank Senior Director for Office Services and Commercial Agency

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