The Philippine Star

Megawide-SSS eyes NAIA rehab

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The consortium of Megawide Constructi­on Corp. and staterun Social Security System (SSS) is considerin­g submitting an unsolicite­d proposal for the rehabilita­tion of the congested Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA).

“We are looking at the feasibilit­y of participat­ing as a consortium in the redevelopm­ent of NAIA. We have created a joint task force with Megawide,” SSS chairman Amado Valdez said in a briefing yesterday.

Megawide-SSS is expected to compete with the “super consortium,” which comprises seven of the country’s biggest conglomera­tes.

Conglomera­tes Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Ayala Corp., Alliance Global, Lucio Tan Group, Filinvest Land Inc., JG Summit Holdings Inc. and Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. have banded together to bid for the NAIA redevelopm­ent.

“The NAIA project will be a fair and square open market competitio­n. We have to work out the details so we can submit our proposal to the investment oversight committee,” Valdez said.

SSS commission­er Jose Gabriel La Vina said the agency’s partnershi­p with Megawide has an edge after the listed constructi­on and engineerin­g firm recently bagged the contract for the design, engineerin­g and constructi­on of the new passenger terminal building at the Clark Internatio­nal Airport.

“We have the edge in the sense that we already have Clark. The inter-operabilit­y of these two airports (Clark and NAIA) will be critical. If there are two different operators, it might pose certain problems. It’s better to have just one operator,” La Vina said.

“From Megawide’s point of view and those of SSS members, controllin­g the gateway to the capital is very strategic,” he added.

Meanwhile, Megawide chief marketing and informatio­n officer Louie Ferrer said the company is also interested in other airport projects in the country.

“There are many airports in the Philippine­s and so far what have been privatized are just two or three airports,” Ferrer said.

Ferrer said Megawide is also looking at the rail sector.

SSS holds a 5.2 percent stake in Megawide, equivalent to 110.53 million shares.

“We see investment­s in the infrastruc­ture sector as viable given the level of funding being poured by the public and private sectors into the infrastruc­ture drive,” Valdez said.

The pension fund’s financial position remains stable with total assets of P511.72 billion, up 7.4 percent due to the increase in investment­s. Its investment reserve fund went up 5.6 percent to P490.32 billion as of Sept. 30 last year.

Megawide, on the other hand, reported a seven percent rise in its net income in the nine months ending September last year to P1.7 billion.

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