The Philippine Star

MJCI secures fresh funding

- By NEIL JEROME C. MORALES

Listed holding firm MJC Investment­s Corp. (MJIC) of the Reyno family is securing fresh funding from a Hong Kong-based investor group.

With this, the company said it can now proceed with its planned tourism hub in Manila after calling off a P2.15-billion share sale last year.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, MJCI said its board of directors “accepted the offer of a group of Hong Kong investors headed by Cheah Teik Seng, through their Philippine corporatio­ns, to subscribe to 450 million shares of the corporatio­n’s common shares with a lock-up period of two years.”

Cheah is a Hong Kong-based investment banker holding seats in the board of various private equity firms in Hong Kong, China and Malaysia.

“Our parent company, Manila Jockey Club Inc., remains as the controllin­g shareholde­r of the corporatio­n,” MJCI said, adding that additional shares will be listed in the local bourse. The transactio­n value was not disclosed. In October, Manila Jockey Club dropped its plan for a P2.15-billion equity deal in exchange for its 51-percent stake in MJCI.

MJCI earlier planned to use fresh capital to build a hotel and entertainm­ent complex at the San Lazaro Business and Tourism Park in Sta. Cruz, Manila and a tourism hub in Occidental Mindoro.

The property was subject of a share swap deal entered into with Manila Jockey Club in exchange for 600.8 million shares of MJCI.

Manila Jockey Club wants to keep a majority stake or at least 51-percent share in the listed holding firm.

MJCI is also building a master-planned tourism complex with a golf course and marina in a 74-hectare coastal resort property in Mamburao, Occidental Mindoro.

In the nine months to September last year, total comprehens­ive income of MJCI slipped to P13.617 million from P20.895 million a year earlier.

Revenues, derived mainly from horse racing operations and real estate sales under a joint venture with property giant Ayala Land Inc., rose 13 percent to P171.135 million but cost of sales and services surged at a faster pace of 30 percent to P99.5 million.

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