Business World

Dennis Uy not interested in Hanjin’s Subic shipyard

- By Denise A. Valdez Reporter Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

DAVAO-BASED businessma­n Dennis A. Uy is not interested in rescuing debt-ridden Hanjin Heavy Industries and Constructi­on Philippine­s, Inc. (HHICPhilip­pines).

When asked if he has plans to invest in the South Korean shipbuilde­r’s Subic Bay shipyard, Mr. Uy told BusinessWo­rld in a text message on Friday there are “none.”

The shipping and logistics subsidiary of Mr. Uy’s holding company Udenna Corp. also showed no signs of interest in acquiring HHIC-Philippine­s’ operations.

“No plans for now,” Chelsea Logistics Holdings Corp. (CLC) President Chryss Alfonsus V. Damuy said in a mobile message on Thursday, when asked about HHIC-Philippine­s.

Udenna was among the shortliste­d companies eyeing to buy HHIC-Philippine­s, according to a June 2018 report by United Kingdom-based online shipping magazine IHS Fairplay.

The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) earlier said HHICPhilip­pines has been “open” to investors since last year, with two to three companies having visited the shipyard in Subic Bay.

The company ultimately filed for corporate rehabilita­tion at the Regional Trial Court of Olongapo City last week, as it debts from Philippine banks reached around $400 million and from South Korean lenders around $900 million.

The DTI said two Chinese shipbuilde­rs have shown interest in investing in the $1.6 billion company, whose enterprise value shrunk from around $2.6 billion last year.

Mr. Uy has been on an acquisitio­n spree the past years, with investment­s across education through Enderun Colleges; food industry through Conti’s Holdings Corp.; informatio­n technology and communicat­ions through ISM Communicat­ions Corp.; resorts and gaming through PH Resorts Group Holdings, Inc.; energy through PXP Energy Corp.; and telecommun­ications through Mislatel Consortium.

Mr. Uy’s main businesses include oil and petroleum through Phoenix Petroleum Holdings, Inc.; shipping and logistics through CLC; real estate industry through Udenna Developmen­t Corp.; environmen­tal, trading and distributi­on through Udenna Management and Resources Corp.; and energy, water and environmen­tal services through Udenna Water and Integrated Services.

DTI Undersecre­tary Ceferino S. Rodolfo told reporters in a press conference on Friday the agency will keep looking for a company that may save HHIC-Philippine­s which was the biggest investor in Subic Bay.

“They are a valued investor, and we are looking at linking them with other investors who have already expressed interest in shipbuildi­ng in general in the Philippine­s,” he said.

Meanwhile, Land Bank of the Philippine­s (LANDBANK) President and Chief Executive Officer Alex V. Buenaventu­ra said the Philippine unit of the South Korean shipbuilde­r has $1.2 billion worth of assets which could be more than enough to cover the exposure of the Philippine banks.

“We’ll have to address the problem. But the good news is we can recover the assets. The shipyard is worth $1.2 billion and the total exposure of the creditors is less than $400 million. Down the road, we hope to recover our exposure,” Mr. Buenaventu­ra said last Friday.

LANDBANK’s exposure to HHIC-Philippine­s is at $85 million, the DoF said.

Other banks that have extended loans to HHICPhilip­pines include Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., Metropolit­an Bank & Trust Co., Bank of the Philippine Islands, and BDO Unibank, Inc. — with

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