Colonial Repeats Its Sales And Records A Profit Of €492m In 2014

2 March 2015 – Expansión

An extraordinary year for Colonial.

The real estate group closed 2014 with a profit of €492 million, following the loss of €547 million it recorded in 2013. The key driver behind the turnaround in its results was the deconsolidation of Asentia, the subsidiary into which the company grouped its toxic assets. Colonial’s assets were also revalued, by 9.6% in comparable terms, to €5,757 million, which also had an effect on the income statement.

The group’s turnover amounted to €211.48 million, down 0.8%, although in comparable terms, revenues increased by 3.2%.

Colonial’s share price decreased by 2.53% in trading on Friday, to close at €0.655.

Original story: Expansión

Translation: Carmel Drake

Barceló Doubled Its Profit In 2014 To Generate c. €50m

12 February 2015 – Expansión

Barceló recorded a profit of c. €50 million in 2014, whereby doubling its result from the previous year. The co-chairman of the hotel chain, Simón Pedro Barceló announced the result yesterday (the group’s definitive results for the year are still pending) and attributed the increase to “a significant increase in EBITDA (from €183 million to €215 million) and the incorporation of ten new hotels in Mexico and the Dominican Republic. Moreover, 2014 was the first full year to include the results of its new travel division.

Turnover exceeded €2,000 million, of which €1,100 million was generated by the travel sector and €900 million from hotels. The total figure amounted to €1,800 million in 2013. The co-chairman of Barceló said that it is too soon to say how the tourism sector will evolve over the course of the year, but he noted that “the Caribbean and Mexico have had a strong start to the year and although we do not know what will happen during the summer months, we believe that we will outperform the results recorded in 2014 by 10%”.

According to the latest information released by the Mallorcan company, Barceló has 140 hotels in 17 countries containing 37,380 rooms. Half of them are located in Europe and the remainder are in America, primarily in the US and the Caribbean. It also has 400 travel agencies operating in 22 countries.

New acquisitions

The group, which returned to the travel agency segment last year through its acquisition of Orizonia, together with Globalia, has not ruled out growth through further acquisitions. Yesterday, Simon Pedro Barceló confirmed that “new corporate transactions have not been ruled out” in the travel agency sector.

The family business owns 39% of its hotels outright, and leases or manages the remainder. Its goal is to be “a great hotel company”, said Barceló yesterday, which is why the company is continually adding new hotels to its portfolio. “We have just signed an agreement to lease a new 4 star hotel with 250 rooms in Berlin”, he said.

Barceló, who was giving a lecture at ESADE, was very optimistic about the future of the economy and the tourism sector in particular and encouraged employers to work together with entities that are independent and able.

Original story: Expansión (by Marisa Ángeles)

Translation: Carmel Drake

ING España’s Mortgage Portfolio Increased By 5% In 2014

12 February 2015 – Expansión

ING Direct España increased its client portfolio and balance sheet again last year. The bank was the only entity that managed to increase its mortgage book, with an increase of 5.1% to €9,949 million. It is offering one of the best mortgages in the market, having lowered its spread over Euribor to 1.49%.

The growth in its portfolio of other loans was even more significant; it rose by 29.7% to €961 million. ING Direct launched a new strategy in September 2013 to gain a foothold in the SME segment. As a result, its balance sheet increased by 12.3% to €25,277 million in 2014, whilst its funds and pension plans soared by 45.8% to €4,148 million. Its client portfolio in Spain grew by 7.3% to 3.1 million.

Despite these figures, ING Direct España’s bottom line for the year is unknown, since the Dutch entity does not provide a breakdown of its gains and losses by country.

At the global level, the group made a profit of €1,251 million in 2014, down by 64.7% due to extraordinary items and a change in the perimeter. Excluding the impact of extraordinary items, its net profit amounted to €3,424 million, i.e. 8.5% more than in 2013.

ING finished paying back the aid it received during the crisis (€10,000 million) in 2014, and so it announced yesterday that it will begin paying dividends to shareholders again, with the first payment of €0.12 per share being disbursed in May. Yesterday, ING’s shares increased by 3.62% to €11.62.

Original story: Expansión (by M. Romani)

Translation: Carmel Drake