Li Ka-shing’s two flagships defy gloom with interim results that beat forecasts, as Hong Kong’s recovery trickles into earnings
- Hutchison reported a 41 per cent jump in first-half net profit to HK$18.3 billion (US$2.35 billion) while revenue rose 12 per cent to HK$212.4 billion
- CK Asset said first-half profit increased 30.8 per cent to HK$8.35 billion, while its recognised revenue from property sales shrank 24 per cent to HK$14.8 billion
CK Hutchison Holdings and CK Asset Holdings, the two flagship companies of Hong Kong’s richest family, defied naysayers with interim results that beat expectations, as the city’s tentative recovery from its worst recession on record translated to increased spending on everything from groceries to real estate.
The two companies said they would pay dividends to the legions of shareholders who own their shares owing to their weighting as constituents of Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng stock index. Hutchison will raise its interim dividend by 30 per cent to 80 Hong Kong cents per share, while CK Asset increased its payout by 20 per cent to 41 cents per share.
Shares of both companies were mixed ahead of the after-hours results announcement. Hutchison shares rose 0.1 per cent higher to HK$56.40, while CK Asset closed 1.7 per cent lower at HK$52.50.
“The ports business had an excellent time during the first half,” said Hutchison’s co-managing director, Canning Fok Kin-ning, during a call with analysts. “Other [segments] were more stable.”
The retail sector was another good performer, with its Ebitda rising 45 per cent to HK$6.73 billion.
Victor Li told analysts in a webcast that shares buy-back and debt reduction were the company’s two major capital allocation focuses, on top of telecoms, retail shops and infrastructure investments.
Hong Kong’s property market has regained its upwards swing in recent months, after fumbling early last year. Still, CK Asset’s first-half real estate income in Hong Kong shrank 90 per cent to HK$609 million, as it did not launch any mass market homes during the period.
“The group recorded a lower contribution from property sales in Hong Kong during the period as compared to the same period last year, since the contracted sales of various projects had not yet been recognised,” CK Asset said.
Revenue from hotels and serviced apartments increased 20 per cent to HK$1.19 billion, as Hong Kong’s hospitality industry made a tentative recovery from the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Average occupancy at the Harbour Grand, Harbour Plaza hotels and resorts edged up to 30 per cent in the first half, from 20.1 per cent at the end of last year.
“Once the pandemic eases, our quality asset will show solid returns,” Li said. “I’ve gone through Sars [the Severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak of 2003] and I remember the tough time and the lessons learned: it [eventually] went away, tourists came back and business recovered.”