Sunday Times E-Paper

EPF, ETF lose hundreds of millions by investing in loss-making Laugfs Gas

By Kapila Bandara

Privately-held Laugfs Gas, which is haemorrhaging red ink and taking heat from domestic cooking gas users and opposition politicians, has also caused multi-million rupee losses for the two main social security nets of Sri Lankan workers battered by unbearable living costs.

Financial statements show that Laugfs Gas, whose 2020/2021 annual report is titled ‘Igniting Hope’ in big, bold letters, has state shareholders including the Employees Provident Fund, the Employees Trust Fund Board, the Bank of Ceylon, and some well known private investors.

Shareholdings of some public institutions in Laugfs Gas, have sharply declined in value by hundreds of millions of rupees. Their latest value is yet to be known.

Laugfs Gas has piled up multi-billion rupee bank debts.

The EPF has a 17.28% interest in Laugfs Gas as a shareholder with voting rights, while the ETF has a 0.06% interest. The State-owned Bank of Ceylon has a 6.8% interest as a non-voting shareholder.

An EPF statement shows that the fund’s equity holding with voting rights in Laugfs Gas has a market value of Rs 1.29 billion as of June 30 this year. The purchase cost was Rs 1.89 billion.

The EPF’s non-voting rights shares are worth Rs 254.38 million as of June, while the purchase cost was Rs 459.43 million.

rent liabilities increased by 14% to Rs. 23.82 billion as trade payables and shortterm borrowings ballooned. Total interest-bearing debt increased to Rs. 31.56 billion.

In the year, the proportion of short-term debt increased to 43% of group debt.

The auditor also raises a flag saying, the group reported total interest-bearing borrowings of Rs. 31.56 billion, of which Rs.16.94 billion is current liabilities and the balance amount of Rs. 14.61 billion is non- current liabilities.

Known for its yellow gas canisters, Laugfs Gas claims a 27% market share for domestic gas in Sri Lanka.

Among the top 20 shareholders in Laugfs Gas, is the Hatton National Bank/Almas Organisation (PVT) of Imtiaz Buhardeen with a 1.38% interest. Hatton National Bank/Carlines Holdings, also of Imtiaz Buhardeen, hold 0.74% voting shares of Laugfs Gas.

Civil engineering company Access Engineering, led by founder Sumal Perera, holds 0.04%.

The EPF is also an investor in Access Engineering, holding shares worth Rs 468.95 million.

Laugfs Holdings is the biggest shareholder of Laugfs Gas with a 74.02% stake.

The consolidated loss in the quarter to June 30, increased by 401% to Rs 901.71 million, while Laugfs Gas loss more than doubled to Rs 658.81 million. Revenue climbed by 3% from the year before quarter to Rs 3.06 billion, a quarterly filing to the Colombo Stock Exchange shows.

The energy business has booked a loss of Rs 539.43 million. The loss in transport and logistics is Rs 11.24 million. The trading business loss is Rs 262.70 million.

These results are not audited. Finance costs increased by 28% on year to Rs 333.87 million.

Liabilities were at Rs 45.15 billion and assets were Rs 45.15 billion.

Among the current liabilities, or those that need to be settled in a year, are interest bearing loans and borrowings of Rs 13.22 billion. Noncurrent liabilities include interest bearing loans and borrowings of Rs 6.06 billion. These add up to Rs 19.28 billion.

In the cash flow statement, Laugfs Gas reported cash of Rs 43.62 million, sharply down from Rs 260.54 million at the start of the quarter.

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2021-10-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

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