Philippine Daily Inquirer

AYALA LAND SLASHES 2020 CAPEX BUDGET, PUTS ON HOLD NEW PROJECTS

- By Doris Dumlao-abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

Property giant Ayala Land Inc. (ALI) has scaled down its capital spending budget this year to P70 billion from P110 billion and put on hold new projects, investment­s and land banking deals to ensure ample liquidity amid the new coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

ALI also agreed to waive about P2.6 billion worth of rent from tenants in its 32 shopping malls nationwide during the one-and-ahalf-month enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) of Luzon and other key cities. All of the company’s malls have shut down during the ECQ except for supermarke­ts, pharmacies and clinics.

“Notwithsta­nding the challenges that the world is facing today, we remain optimistic on the long-term prospects as we continue to develop, innovate and build for our many stakeholde­rs,” ALI chair Fernando Zobel de Ayala said during the company’s stockholde­rs meeting held via videoconfe­rencing on Wednesday.

ALI president Bernard Vicente Dy reported that more than 90 percent of offices in ALI’S portfolio remained operationa­l, as these cater to the business process outsourcin­g (BPO) locators, while nine out of 11 hotels currently sustain limited operations to serve BPO employees. All of its resorts in El Nido, Palawan, have likewise suspended operations.

Many of ALI’S revenue-generating businesses had been significan­tly affected by the ECQ that has paralyzed business since mid-march. This will affect the performanc­e of the company this year, with some likely spillover effects in 2021, he said.

Apart from the waiver of shopping mall rent, ALI has also earmarked P600 million to assist no-work-no-pay workers in its eco-system.

To ensure that the company has ample liquidity, all ALI business units have been directed to review their existing plans and immediatel­y implement “zero-waste” budgeting, validate all costs and spending requiremen­ts and focus only on essential expenditur­es and critical projects, ALI chief financial officer Augusto Bengzon said. This included the rationaliz­ation of a number of potential investment­s and land acquisitio­ns.

“We have also decided not to launch any new project this year. We believe that we have sufficient projects in our developmen­t pipeline to sell once the situation normalizes given that we have launched P159 billion worth of projects just last year,” Bengzon said.

The P40-billion cut in capital spending budget to P70 billion is one of the bitter pills ALI has decided to swallow during this pandemic.

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