The Philippine Star

Ayala Corp profit hits record high in 2023

- By RIcHMONd MERcURIO

profit of conglomera­te Ayala Corp. rose by nearly half to reach record high levels in 2023 due to the strong performanc­es of its banking, real estate and power businesses.

Ayala’s core net income, which excludes one-off items, soared by 48 percent year-on-year to P41 billion.

Including one-offs, net income of the company rose by 39 percent to P38.1 billion from the previous year’s P27.4 billion.

The group generated total revenue of P341.9 billion, up 11.5 percent from P306.64 billion in 2022.

“We succeeded in getting aggregate core earnings to exceed the pre-pandemic high. Now we focus on getting better operating and financial results from each of our businesses and on rationaliz­ing the portfolio where it makes sense to do so,” Ayala president and CEO Cezar Consing said.

Net income of its banking unit BPI climbed by 44 percent to P51.7 billion in 2023 due to strong loan growth, higher margins and lower provisions.

Robust property developmen­t and commercial leasing businesses, meanwhile, boosted Ayala Land Inc.’s earnings by 32 percent to P24.5 billion in 2023.

ACEN’s income from operating units, which excludes cash value realizatio­n gains and other one-time noncash adjustment­s, improved to P4.9 billion on the back of new operating capacity and a strengthen­ed net seller position.

Telco operations through Globe, however, posted a 29-percent drop to P24.6 billion due primarily to the one-time gain from the partial sale of its data center business in 2022.

Ayala said AC Health, for its part, continued to progress in scaling its healthcare ecosystem, with acquisitio­ns bolstering growth.

However, the company said AC Health’s net income remained slightly negative due to one-offs and higher manpower and marketing expenses.

AC Industrial­s trimmed its losses excluding one-offs to P1.2 billion from P1.7 billion due to better results from IMI’s core operations and AC Motor’s fourwheel business.

Capital expenditur­es of the Ayala group reached P247.7 billion, 12 percent lower than the previous year as a result of the tapering capex of Globe.

Parent capex was 55 percent lower to P13.2 billion due primarily to Ayala’s purchase of Ayala Land shares and participat­ion in Globe’s stock rights offering, which both happened in 2022.

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