Philippine Daily Inquirer

Pagcor gets ball rolling on casino privatizat­ion

Proceeds pegged at conservati­ve P60 billion to P80 billion

- By Ronnel W. Domingo @RonWDoming­oINQ

Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor) is bent on kicking off by the middle of 2025 the privatizat­ion of 45 casinos that it operates, expecting proceeds ranging from P60 billion to P80 billion, Pagcor chair and chief executive Alejandro Tengco told lawmakers on Monday.

At a hearing conducted by the committee of appropriat­ions at the House of Representa­tives, Tengco said that while the expected amount of privatizat­ion proceeds was conservati­ve, Pagcor will improve the casinos and raise their value to make them more attractive to buyers.

“That is the minimum estimate, but we expect [the amount] to rise because [the privatizat­ion] will go through [competitiv­e] bidding,” he said.

Based on a separate estimate of Albay Rep. Joey Salceda, privatizat­ion will generate proceeds of P120 billion to P128 billion.

Marcos approval

Tengco added that privatizat­ion “are sure to proceed, there’s no stopping it, and President Marcos has approved it.”

However, some lawmakers like Cagayan de Oro City Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, objected, saying he will file a resolution to oppose the privatizat­ion plan.

“After hearing [Tengco report on the status of Pagcor], it seems that everything will be in order in the coming years,” Rodriguez said.

Earlier in the hearing, Tengco said Pagcor expected to record revenues of P72 billion for 2023, based on the first-semester result of a P36-billion top line.

Also, Tengco said the expected full-year revenue for 2023 would approach Pagcor’s prepandemi­c revenue of P76 billion in 2019.

“So why are we going to sell the goose that lays the golden egg when we have good people at the helm of Pagcor,” Rodriguez said.

“If we privatize this, then the regularity of income that we receive from Pagcor will be cut short,” he added. “Why [should we] give the traffic [revenue stream] to them (private entities)?”

Rodriguez said that he had opposed Pagcor privatThe

-zation efforts in previous occasions. “But with the present leadership of Pagcor, there is no reason to privatize.

Also, Tengco said privatizat­ion was related to efforts that would enable Pagcor to shed its operator or industry player status, and focus on its role as regulator.

“This is improper and unethical,” Tengco said. “Sometimes we overlook regulating ourselves. And we are the only ones in the world, being both the regulator and a regulated entity.”

But Rodriguez said it was all the more better because this dual status makes Pagcor unique.

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