Source from (Business Times):
http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/20120712133007/Article/index_html
Published: July 12, 2012
KUALA LUMPUR: Lembaga Tabung Haji (LTH) is well-placed to disburse
higher dividends this year to depositors following attractive returns on
investments coupled with proceeds from the sale of its stake in a
plantation company in Indonesia.
This is a reflection of the national pilgrim fund board's efforts to
ensure depositors' capital remains protected while at the same time
giving them "handsome" returns, said Group Managing Director and Chief
Executive Officer Datuk Ismee Ismail.
He told Bernama in an interview recently that LTH would ensure that
any investment made would bear fruit for them and their depositors at
the end of the day.
"Last year, we declared six per cent dividend (and) hopefully, this
year, we should be able to maintain our performance. We are working very
hard to ensure that Tabung Haji depositors' money, the capital, is
protected and for them to get a decent return
for their savings," he said.
As of February 2012, there were 6.9 million depositors in Tabung Haji.
The higher returns on investment have allowed LTH to continue to
absorb some of the pilgrimage cost for Malaysians that continues to rise
every year due to different external factors, Ismee said.
"Alhamdulillah, in the past few years, we have been subsidising haj
pilgrims. We have been able to do it because of the good returns from
our investments," he said.
This year, he said, the subsidy per person has risen to RM5,175 from
RM4,320 last year due to the rise in accommodation, transportation and
related costs, yet LTH depositors on their first pilgrimage are charged
RM9,980 for the haj package, a rate that has not changed since 2009.
"In the haj training course, we always inform them: if you are a
first-timer and going under muassasah (normal package service), this is
how much Tabung Haji supports. In a way, our higher returns on
investments directly benefit intending haj pilgrims," he said.
He said the fund board's real estate investments in Mecca are also a
long-term strategy to reduce pilgrimage cost as it can use the returns
on investments as cross subsidy.
On the RM3 billion proposed sale of its 95 per cent stake in PT TH
Indo Plantations, Ismee said the buyer has been given until the end of
August to complete the due diligence process.
"Of course, with the sale, this is going to be an exceptional item
for the year and of course, we will be making a handsome profit from
this transaction.
We are going to declare as dividends to depositors, (definitely) it will translate to higher dividends," he said.
LTH first bought the stake in 1997 for between RM800 million to RM1
billion. The Indonesian unit has 83,879 hectares of plantation land in
Riau, Sumatra, out of LTH's total landbank of 210,000 hectares.
Through the proceeds, LTH is planning to increase its interest in
plantations and is looking at Malaysia and Indonesia for possible new investments.
"Th plantation sector is one of LTH's main areas of continued
involvement. From here we will look at opportunities to re-invest in new
areas offering better returns," he said.
"Increasing the landbank will be done over the next few years. We will
continue to look at Malaysia and Indonesia because we are here to stay
in the plantation sector.
"We have the know-how, the expertise and the team. We should just
expand on this experience, for us to be a bigger player in the future,"
Ismee said, adding that LTH's unit, TH Plantations Bhd, will be the
flagship in the plantation sector.
The pilgrimage fund also has another six wholly-owned subsidiaries
in the plantation sector -- TH Agro Sdn Bhd, TH Bakti Sdn Bhd, TH
Estates (Holding) Sdn Bhd, TH Indo Industries Sdn Bhd and TH Ladang
(Sabah & Sarawak) Sdn Bhd. -- BERNAMA