Published: 16:05, August 13, 2020 | Updated: 20:06, June 5, 2023
Swire Pacific looks to mainland, HKSAR for recovery after loss
By Bloomberg

Swire Pacific Ltd, the 204-year-old British trading firm based in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, said its recovery is tied to growth in Asia’s financial hub and the Chinese mainland after months of political turmoil and the coronavirus pandemic tipped it into its first half-yearly loss since 2008.

The group, whose businesses span real estate, beverages and aviation and which controls Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd, reported a net loss of HK$7.74 billion (US$1 billion) for the six months through June

The group, whose businesses span real estate, beverages and aviation and which controls Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd, reported a net loss of HK$7.74 billion (US$1 billion) for the six months through June.

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“We believe the long-term success of Swire Pacific will reflect the continued growth of the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong, and we are well placed to take advantage of new opportunities that might arise,” Chairman Merlin Swire said in a stock exchange filing on Thursday.

The conglomerate is among local firms worst hit by Hong Kong’s troubles that started more than a year ago. Anti-government protests stemming from the extradition bill incident, a recession and the latest blow from the coronavirus pandemic have hit some of its core businesses including aviation.

 Jardine Matheson Holdings Ltd, the other British trading house with roots in Hong Kong, last month reported a 49 percent drop in underlying profit and said uncertainty is likely to persist.

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On Wednesday, Swire’s crown jewel Cathay, which contributed about 8.4 percent of the group’s profit last year, reported a first-half net loss of HK$9.9 billion and said passenger revenue tumbled 72 percent. In June, the carrier unveiled a HK$39 billion bailout that gives the Hong Kong government a 6.08 percent stake in the company and two observers on its board.

The first six months of 2020 were the most challenging Cathay had ever faced in its 70-year history, Swire said in his statement. Property and beverages businesses helped limit Swire Pacific’s losses, he said.

READ MORE: Cathay warns biggest crisis to persist after US$1.3b loss

Shares of Swire have plunged 42 percent this year, compared with about a 10 percent drop in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. The stock gained 1.3 percent to HK$41.85 as of 1:26 pm local time on Thursday.