Jamaica Gleaner

$10b hit for X Fund

But company sees path to recovery through non-tourism projects

- Huntley Medley/ Associate Business Editor

THERE HAVE been ample indication­s of the formidable challenges to the heavily tourism and hospitalit­y skewed investment holdings of Sagicor Real Estate X Fund Limited under the pandemic.

But its newly released financials showing a $9.99-billion loss for 2020, compared to a $38-million loss the year before, laid bare the extent of the ravages of the economic downturn on the fortunes of the Sagicor Groupcontr­olled property company.

The $10 billion hit for stockholde­rs was two-thirds of the nearly $15 billion in losses made by X Fund on its continuing operations.

X Fund’s management is, however, expressing optimism, buoyed by a pipeline of nontourism property projects which are said to be ready for execution, short-term i nvestment of its windfall earnings f rom share liquidatio­n i n an associated company this year bearing early fruit, and its lone hotel in Florida described as being set for a financial turnaround this year.

The Sagicor X Fund group consists of the Jamaican domiciled X Fund Properties Limited, USAbased X Fund Properties LLC, and Jamaican Jamziv Mobay Portfolio Limited. With X Fund’s 61 per cent

ownership of Jamziv, which earned US$96 million, or $14 billion in local currency, from the sale in January of Sagicor Group’s 20 million shares in internatio­nal chain Playa Hotels and Resorts, the fund earned about US$60 million or almost $9 billion from that transactio­n. That cash is already turning over good short-term returns, Sagicor Group president and CEO Chris Zacca told the Financial Gleaner on Tuesday.

Jamziv booked a $5.5-billion loss on the Playa assets for 2020 compared to a $100-million loss the year before. During the year it also recorded a $390-million loss on the dilution of Playa shares in June when the internatio­nal hotel chain did a share sale and debt financing transactio­n. Sagicor’s January 2021 sell-off of Playa stocks has disconnect­ed X Fund from Playa’s volatility risks and source of losses, that are expected to continue throughout 2021.

“The only tourism exposure we have right now is the Doubletree by Hilton in Orlando, and happily, that is seeing a rebound. The numbers are coming up strongly and we expect to have a positive year this year. Overall, I am optimistic about the performanc­e of the company this year,” Zacca said of X Fund.

With tourism now l ooking nothing like t he “profitable business venture with strong growth potential” descriptio­n which X Fund, i n its fourthquar­ter results posted by the Jamaica Stock Exchange Monday night, ascribed to its investment­s in the tourism sector before the pandemic, the focus is now on residentia­l and commercial real estate to build equity and drive revenues and profits.

“We have a strong pipeline of commercial real estate projects. We are focusing on warehousin­g and logistics. We are looking at residentia­l real estate across the spectrum,” Zacca said.

While declining to be drawn on the specifics of individual projects, he disclosed that X Fund was looking at the possibilit­y of partnering with the Sigma Funds managed by Sagicor to bring some residentia­l projects to market.

Zacca said the roll-out of new real estate projects would be announced over time.

“We are not exiting tourism. We have DTO [Doubletree Orlando] and if something comes up in the future in tourism or attraction­s that make sense, we will look at it,” he said.

In the early months of 2020, when the coronaviru­s was taking its toll on the globe, X Fund reported that business activity ground to a halt at Playa hotels in Jamaica, Mexico and the

Dominican Republic, while its DTO property saw significan­tly reduced business.

Cash resources declined from $2.1 billion at March 2020 to $1.3 billion by December. The company booked a near $8-billion impairment of its Playa assets over the year and was able to pay off debts from selling its swanky Jewel Grande Montego property at a $380-million loss within the Sagicor Group family, to Sagicor Pool Investment Fund Limited, for $1.6 billion.

Total revenues were down to roughly $2.6 billion from $6.3 billion the year before, a near 60 per cent decline; while EBITDA, or earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on, excluding impairment charges and loss on dilution of associate, was a deficit of $5.7 billion, down from $1.7 billion in 2019.

Sagicor X Fund reported that a 46 per cent cut in hotel operating expenses to $2.4 billion helped to cushion the blow from the fall-off in revenues.

Total assets also fell to $32 billion from $42.2 billion, while X Fund’s stockholde­r equity slumped to $15.17 billion from $25.54 billion in 2019.

Zacca, however, said the indicators for the company’s solvency were positive and should serve to propel X Fund forward and into better performanc­e in 2021.

Since the start of the year, the stock has traded within the $8 band. X Fund closed at $8.25 on Tuesday, valuing the company at $18.5 billion, the same place it closed on the first trading day for 2021.

The top X Fund shareholde­rs are Sagicor Pooled Pension Investment Funds (51.5 per cent), Sagicor Group Jamaica Limited (21.11 per cent) and Sagicor Segregated Funds (8.09 per cent).

 ??  ?? Managing Director of Alternativ­e Power Sources Limited Damion Lyn (centre) explains the functional­ities of the newly installed inverter to Mp-clarendon South Western and Opposition spokesman on agricultur­e Lothan Cousins (left) and Minister of Agricultur­e Floyd Green, during a tour of the upgraded Ebony Park Pump Station in Clarendon on February 24. The solar-powered pump station will self-supply 75 per cent of its energy needs, which is projected to result in a 43 per cent reduction in annual operating costs, and $4.8 million of savings. The Ebony Park Pump Station, which is operated by state agency National Irrigation Commission, was retrofitte­d at a cost of $32 million.
Managing Director of Alternativ­e Power Sources Limited Damion Lyn (centre) explains the functional­ities of the newly installed inverter to Mp-clarendon South Western and Opposition spokesman on agricultur­e Lothan Cousins (left) and Minister of Agricultur­e Floyd Green, during a tour of the upgraded Ebony Park Pump Station in Clarendon on February 24. The solar-powered pump station will self-supply 75 per cent of its energy needs, which is projected to result in a 43 per cent reduction in annual operating costs, and $4.8 million of savings. The Ebony Park Pump Station, which is operated by state agency National Irrigation Commission, was retrofitte­d at a cost of $32 million.
 ?? FILE ?? Christophe­r Zacca, chairman of Sagicor Real Estate X Fund Limited, and president and CEO of Sagicor Group Jamaica.
FILE Christophe­r Zacca, chairman of Sagicor Real Estate X Fund Limited, and president and CEO of Sagicor Group Jamaica.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica