“We still continue to battle Covid-19 and as governments make the vaccine available in the different geographies that we serve, we stand ready to support them,” he said.
Health systems around the world are shifting focus from research and development to distribution following vaccine news from Pfizer Inc., Moderna Inc. and AstraZeneca Plc. In India, which is battling the world’s second-worst outbreak, Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd. this week said it is ready to inoculate 1 million people a day after the government unveils the deployment plan.
See: IHH Healthcare reverses into the black with 3Q earnings of RM310.0 mil, reports 'firm recovery' for the quarter
For IHH, the immunisation drive comes at a time when medical tourism, a key revenue stream for hospitals, has disappeared as resurgences force countries to keep borders closed.
Record cases
Hospitals in Malaysia, the company’s home market, may earn 500 million ringgit ($123 million) in revenue from medical tourists this year, the Malaysia Healthcare Travel Council said in September. That’s far short of the 1.7 billion ringgit the industry earned in 2019, and its earlier 2020 target for 2 billion ringgit.
New coronavirus cases in the country hit a record 2,234 on Thursday.
Still, IHH said it expects to meet its target of doubling its return-on-equity in the next five years. Covid-related services in Singapore contributed 10% to its third-quarter revenue, while their share from India was as high as 26%, Loh said.
“We will continue to grow, but in as capital efficient manner as possible,” he said. “Covid-19 doesn’t change that.” The company’s ROE stands at 3% at present.