The Philippine Star

Metro Pacific charts stronger growth path

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Conglomera­te Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. (MPIC) is charting a stronger growth path on its first year back as a private company following its delisting from the stock market late last year.

MPIC chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan told The STAR the re-privatized company expects earnings for 2024 to surpass last year’s performanc­e.

“I think we’ll report good numbers (for) last year,” Pangilinan said.

“This year probably we’ll show an increase in profitabil­ity as well,” he said.

MPIC previously indicated that the company is on track to exceed its P16.1 billion core net income target for 2023 due to the strong performanc­e of its core businesses.

Consolidat­ed core net income of the company in the first nine months of 2023 reached P16.2 billion, up 37 percent year-on-year.

For 2024, Pangilinan said investment­s of MPIC would be focused on agribusine­ss and supporting tollways expansion.

“They mentioned TransJava, which will probably require funding from us, from MPIC,” he said.

MPIC’s toll road arm Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. earlier said it may need to allocate $600 million if it successful­ly secures its bid to invest in Indonesian toll road operator PT Jasa Marga Tbk’s Transjawa Tol.

State-owned PT Jasa Marga is Indonesia’s largest toll road operator, with its subsidiary Jasamarga Transjawa Tol operating 676 kilometers or 56 percent of the Trans Java Toll Road.

MPIC also has ongoing discussion­s with San Miguel Corp. relating to a possible joint venture for the respective toll road businesses or projects of both parties.

The corporatio­n will be jointly organized, establishe­d and possibly listed by both parties in the Philippine Stock Exchange, subject to the requiremen­ts of applicable laws and regulation­s.

For the agri business, MPIC made its entry into the sector in 2022 through a partnershi­p with the Carmen’s Best Group, which was followed by another agri venture last year with the acquisitio­n of 34.76 percent ownership in Axelum Resources Corp., a manufactur­er and exporter globally of high-quality coconut products.

Pangilinan said MPIC’s strategy for acquisitio­n would remain the same moving forward despite being a private company.

MPIC voluntaril­y delisted from the Philippine Stock Exchange and successful­ly re-privatized last year.

Aside from toll roads and agri business, MPIC is also into power, water and hospitals, and has also been expanding into tourism.

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