Times Square, Harbour City owner Wharf Reic recovers from Covid to post US$230 million first-half profit
- The company reported a net profit of HK$1.8 billion (US$230 million) for the six months to June versus a loss of HK$1.5 billion a year earlier
- Post-pandemic recovery was impeded by global geopolitical and economic uncertainties, company says
![Wharf Reic, the owner of Times Square shopping mall, benefited from the border reopening to post a profit for the first half. Photo: Robert Ng](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/08/07/07dc8486-5ab2-4c6c-9103-4de4a36cfaec_84d2eec4.jpg?itok=3DYjdWdg&v=1691396797)
Wharf Real Estate Investment Company (Wharf Reic), one of Hong Kong’s biggest commercial landlords, turned around its fortunes in the first half on the back of a post-pandemic rebound in tourism.
The owner of Harbour City and Times Square shopping centres reported a net profit of HK$1.8 billion (US$230 million) for the six months ended June, compared with a loss of HK$1.5 billion a year earlier, according to an exchange filing on Monday. Revenue grew 4.2 per cent to HK$6.5 billion in the comparable period.
Wharf Reic said it would pay an interim dividend of HK$0.67.
“Business environment has improved since the borders reopened in January, but post-pandemic recovery is impeded by global geopolitical and economic uncertainties,” the company said in the filing.
![The business environment in Hong Kong has improved since the border was reopened earlier this year. Photo: Martin Chan The business environment in Hong Kong has improved since the border was reopened earlier this year. Photo: Martin Chan](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/08/07/e54faf71-340a-49a7-ba32-3f98c40ed2de_f554cb5d.jpg)
Wharf said its hotel operations, including The Murray and Marco Polo Hongkong, saw a significant turnaround but lost momentum in the second quarter because of manpower constraints.
Hotel revenue increased by 90 per cent to HK$697 million from HK$366 million in the same period last year. The hotels’ operating profit came in at HK$67 million, reversing a HK$172 million loss a year earlier.
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