http://www.todayonline.com/business/hph-...ns-improve
HPH Trust revives expansion plan as global conditions improve
Trust posts 47% Q1 profit, aims to add one berth each year from 2015 to its port in Shenzhen
PUBLISHED: APRIL 29, 4:12 AM
SINGAPORE — Hutchison Port Holdings Trust (HPH Trust), which posted its first profit increase in five quarters yesterday, is looking to revive a previously-shelved expansion plan as soon as next year, banking on renewed demand for Chinese goods from countries such as the United States and Europe.
HPH Trust aims to add one berth each year from 2015 to its Yantian port in Shenzhen, said Mr Gerry Yim, Chief Executive of Hutchison Port Holdings Management, the manager of the trust. The expansion plan was initially scheduled to begin in 2010 but was postponed as the overall market saw slower growth back then, said Mr Yim.
The expansion is estimated to cost HK$4.5 billion (S$728.9 million).
“That’s the current plan, but if the market is not so good, we’ll push it further,” said Mr Yim. “We have done most of the work, such as land formation, infrastructure; what we have not done is (adding) all of the cranes and finishing of the top surface, putting all these final touches to it.”
Chief Financial Officer Ivor Chow added: “There could also be a scenario where growth accelerates and we have to move (the expansion) forward, so we have to be flexible when it comes to that.”
Backed by Mr Li Ka-shing, Asia’s richest man, HPH Trust said yesterday first-quarter net profit surged 47 per cent on-year to HK$558.9 million. This is the first time it has posted an increase in quarterly profit since the final three months of 2012. Earnings per share also rose 46.9 per cent to 6.42 HK cents.
The shipping industry has struggled with overcapacity and rising fuel prices in the past few years amid a slowdown in global trade.
To tackle this, the world’s largest shipping lines — Maersk Line, the Mediterranean Shipping Company and CMA CGM — agreed last year to forge an operational alliance to better manage capacity and costs on East-West trades. Called the P3 Network, the alliance will see the three firms combine their resources, allowing them to operate larger vessels, among other co-operation.
Said Mr Yim: “We are fully supportive of that because … if you don’t have to berth so many times — one big ship instead of two smaller ones — then you have more volume per ship. That’s more efficient for us and better for them as well.”
He added that the company is expecting its ports in Hong Kong and Shenzhen to handle 5 per cent more container throughput this year, despite concerns over a slowdown in China’s economy.
“The nature of our business is we’re not tied to the gross domestic product of China. We’re tied to the exporting trade of China … (and) that very much depends on the demand from the end-markets in US and Europe. (Even) if the China economy slows down, cost inflation may well be more manageable, so this is not necessarily a bad thing for us.”