Business World

Conglomera­tes deliver mixed Q1 results, but outlook remains positive

- By Arra B. Francia Reporter

CONGLOMERA­TES are expected to register better financial results this year, as the country’s top firms proceed with expansion programs amid a new tax regime and challenges in their respective businesses.

The country’s top holding firms — Ayala Corp. (AC), Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc. (AEV), Alliance Global Group, Inc. (AGI), DMCI Holdings, Inc., GT Capital Holdings Corp., JG Summit Holdings, Inc., LT Group, Inc., SM Investment­s Corp. (SMIC), San Miguel Corp. (SMC), and Metro Pacific Investment­s, Corp. (MPIC), — delivered mixed results for the first three months of the year.

Analysts expect these holding firms, which together account for 37.9% of the Philippine Stock Exchange index basket, will sustain their earnings growth for the remaining nine months of 2018.

“As expected there are some soft spots for conglomera­tes given the diverse business interests of each. The rest of the year should be better than last year overall as there should be some recovery in the initial or first-quarter underperfo­rmers of each conglomera­te,” PCCI Securities Brokers Corp. Research Head Joseph James F. Lago said in an e-mail correspond­ence with BusinessWo­rld.

Mr. Lago noted some companies he expected to take a hit from the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) program actually managed to contain the higher costs.

“Some of these business segments even posted better-than-expected results which when consolidat­ed with the conglomera­tes’ financials were earnings positive,” Mr. Lago said.

Since its implementa­tion in January, the TRAIN Act reduced personal income taxes for those earning below P2 million, alongside a simpler system for computing donor and estate taxes. However, it also removed some exemptions to value-added tax; increased tax rates for fuel, automobile­s, tobacco, coal, minerals, documentar­y stamps, foreign currency deposit units, capital gains for stocks not in the stock exchange, and stock transactio­ns; and new taxes for sugar-sweetened drinks and cosmetic enhancemen­ts.

Tycoon George S.K. Ty’s GT Capital grew its consolidat­ed net income by a fifth to P3.7 billion in the January to March period due to the higher share in net income

derived from Metropolit­an Bank and Trust Co. ( Metrobank), AXA Philippine­s, and MPIC.

GT Capital’s revenues for the quarter stood at P45.5 billion, lower than the P48.8 billion it reported in the same period a year ago, as vehicle sales from its automotive unit Toyota Motor Philippine­s ( TMP) slowed.

“The interim soft numbers for the auto sector during the first quarter resulted from the front-loading of orders late last year in anticipati­on of the new excise tax. We expect sales to normalize by the second half of the year,” GT Capital President Carmelo Maria Luza Bautista was quoted in a statement as saying.

On the other hand, Alliance Global Group, Inc. (AGI)’s attributab­le profit dipped by 2% for the quarter to P3.5 billion, following minimal growth in revenues to P35.5 billion, or a 5% year-on-year increase. The company blamed higher interest charges and unrealized forex losses for dragging down its earnings for the period.

“All our businesses are also operationa­lly geared, such that any improvemen­t in our topline can be amplified in our bottom line. We endeavor to remain cost efficient to protect our margins despite bouts of inflationa­ry pressures,” AGI President Kingson U. Sian said in a statement.

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