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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2022
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Port beats profits 19% via $677k debt slash
‘Peaceful resolution’ targeted over food price control dispute
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
THE OPERATOR of Nassau’s main commercial shipping port beat its original full-year profit target by 19 percent aided by a $30m preference share refinancing that slashed 2022’s debt servicing costs by $677,000. Dion Bethell, Arawak Port Development Company’s (APD) president and chief financial officer, in written replies to Tribune Business questions confirmed that taking out, and replacing, the preference shares with cheaper bank debt had played a major role in exceeding the prior year’s bottom line as well as performance targets set a year earlier. The BISX-listed port operator and owner’s unaudited financial statements for the year to end-June 2022 reveal that its $7.407m total comprehensive income beat the original profit forecast of $6.208m, as set out in its 2021 annual report, by almost $1.2m or some 19.3 percent. And the bottom line was some 11 percent ahead of 2021’s $6.672m
• $30m preference refinance key bottom line boost • BISX-listed APD exceeds initial targets by $1.2m • Close to pre-COVID TEU volumes in ‘22 full year as APD came close to matching preCOVID-19 financial performance comparatives for the full 12-month period. Mr Bethell confirmed that “financial year 2022 revenue, net income and cargo volumes are still below pre-pandemic levels”. For the full year to end-June 2022, he said revenues and net income were some 3 percent and 9 percent, respectively, below 2019 levels which was the last full year before the pandemic struck in March 2020. Twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU) container throughput volumes closed
out the year down just 2 percent compared to 2019, although for the months of January and June they were actually ahead of comparatives from that pre-COVID year. Meanwhile, total vehicle imports for the 12 months to end-June were 29 percent off from 2019 levels while bulk tonnage was some 7 percent ahead due to ongoing resort and investmentrelated construction. However, APD’s operating income and earnings before interest provide an insight into how the
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Minister pledges to seek ‘common ground’ on NHI By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE MINISTER of health has pledged to seek “common ground” with Bahamian private doctors who have urged the Government to “hit the pause button” over its proposed National Health Insurance (NHI) reforms. Dr Michael Darville, responding to the Medical Association of The Bahamas (MAB) statement that it “cannot support the Bill” recently tabled in the House of Assembly, told Tribune Business it was made clear that the legislation was “not set in stone” when he introduced it.
DR MICHAEL DARVILLE He reiterated in a written statement subsequently issued to this newspaper that the NHI Bill is “by no means is in its final form, and sought to ease
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NAD ‘won’t be bullied’ over airport ad award By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net LYNDEN Pindling International Airport’s (LPIA) operator “will not be bullied” over the award of its multi-million advertising concession, and said assertions that its selection breached the National Investment Policy are “simply untrue”. Vernice Walkine, Nassau Airport Development Company’s (NAD) president and chief executive, in a statement responding to continued criticism over the bid’s award to RG Media (Bahamas) hit out at the previous holder of the
contract for “unjustifiably casting aspersions” on its replacement and the tender process. “The contract was awarded following a clearly outlined and transparent RFP (request for proposal) process conducted by NAD, the rules of which were specific, defined and agreed in writing by all proposers,” Ms Walkine said in response to a series of Tribune Business articles on the airport advertising concession. “It is therefore disappointing that Bahamas Airport Advertising (BAA) would wish to publicly cast
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FOOD retailers and wholesalers were yesterday said to be hoping to seal a “win, win win” and “peaceful resolution” to their price control dispute with the Government when they meet three senior Cabinet ministers tomorrow morning. John Bostwick, attorney for the Retail Grocers Association (RGA), told Tribune Business the sector believes that reaching agreement on its expanded 50-strong list of price controlled products will generate “a happy Christmas for the Bahamian public” - a sign that foods traditionally popular during the festive season have been added to the mix. Voicing optimism that the pharmaceutical sector’s successful price control negotiations with the Davis administration will rub off on the food industry’s separate talks, he added that its revised proposal had been crafted from “a consensus”
JOHN BOSTWICK reached reached among 180 businesses that include wholesale and manufacturer associations and their representatives. Mr Bostwick said the RGA’s 130 merchant members would view success as achieving a solution they can live with, rather than an initial Davis administration proposal “they could not survive”, adding: “They felt caught between a rock and a hard place, and coming out from behind that rock will be good enough.”
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