Homes pull up Megaworld 1st-half earnings by 9%
Strong real estate sales lifted the first-semester profit of property giant Megaworld Corp. by 9 percent to P8.55 billion as more customers took interest in its township projects.
The billionaire Andrew Tan-led company on Wednesday said revenues jumped by 22 percent to P39.1 billion.
Real estate sales reached P24.82 billion, a 30-percent surge on high demand for residential properties in Megaworld’s township developments, particularly in Taguig City, Cavite, Bulacan, Palawan and Cebu.
“We continue to see robust demand for our residential properties outside of Metro Manila,” Megaworld president Lourdes Gutierrez-Alfonso said in a statement.
In the second quarter alone, Megaworld launched P18 billion worth of residential projects, mostly in areas beyond the capital region.
The company aims to expand its residential portfolio to 35 townships by the end of the year from 33 currently.
Article continues after this advertisementRevenues from its hospitality segment via Megaworld Hotels and Resorts swelled by 38 percent to P2.36 billion as meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions activities recovered along with local tourism.
Article continues after this advertisementMegaworld in April announced its upcoming Mactan Expo Center in Cebu province, which will have a 2,500-seating capacity.
The P1.5-billion project set for completion next year is said to be the first standalone convention center in Cebu.
In June, Megaworld also unveiled the 1,530-room Grand Westside Hotel, which it claimed to be the largest hotel in the Philippines, within Westside City in Parañaque City.
As for the mall segment, Megaworld Lifestyle Malls saw revenues climb by 19 percent to P3.02 billion on higher tenant sales and increased foot traffic.
Leasing revenues rose by 6 percent to P9.33 billion.
Meanwhile, revenues of Megaworld Premier Offices were flat at P6.31 billion due to “headwinds in the Philippine office industry.”
Earlier, real estate investment management firm Colliers Philippines said the office vacancy rate in Metro Manila stood at 18.3 percent. —Meg J. Adonis