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A Template for the Lopezes: How the Gokongweis Shut Down Uncle John’s Pet Project

  For years, the Batangas petrochemical complex stood as one of the boldest expressions of the late John Gokongwei Jr.’s industrial ambition: a capital-heavy wager that the Philippines could build a domestic plastics feedstock chain instead of importing its way through the value ladder. In January 2024, the company was still inaugurating the expanded facility with government fanfare, with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. calling it a realization of the elder Gokongwei’s vision. Barely a year later, the same conglomerate was shutting it down, moving to preserve the site and weighing a sale or joint venture instead. What changed was not just the market. It was the family’s willingness to keep financing a business that had become, in public-market terms, indefensible. The Gokongwei-controlled parent, JG Summit Holdings Inc., poured ₱97.429838049 billion more into JG Summit Olefins Corp. in 2025, then booked an impairment loss of ₱169.150975122 billion on that same investment in its pa...
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Gotianun’s Holdco FDC Faces ₱16.8 Billion Debt Maturity

  Filinvest Development Corp. is entering 2026 with the sort of problem that matters more at the top than in the operating units below. The Gotianun family’s listed holding company has roughly ₱16.8 billion of parent-level debt coming due this year, just as the Philippine rate cycle has turned less forgiving. At the group level, FDC still looks solid. The company reported ₱120.6 billion in 2025 revenues and other income and ₱15.0 billion in net income attributable to parent. But conglomerates do not refinance debt with consolidated earnings. They refinance it with cash that is actually available at the holding company. That is what makes the parent-company accounts more revealing than the headline group numbers. The most visible public marker inside FDC’s 2026 maturity wall is its ₱10 billion fixed-rate bond due Aug. 7, 2026 . PhilRatings still assigns that obligation a PRS Aaa rating with a Stable outlook and also rates FDC itself at PRS Aaa (corp.) , the top of its domestic ...

Lucio Tan’s LT Group Drew 82.7% of 2025 Parent Dividend Income From Tobacco

For all the sprawl of Lucio Tan’s LT Group Inc.—from banking to booze to property—the conglomerate’s cash engine in 2025 boiled down to a single business: cigarettes. According to LT Group’s parent-company financial statements, Fortune Tobacco Corp. (FTC) supplied ₱13.4 billion of dividends to the holding company last year, accounting for 82.71% of total dividend income. The scale of that reliance underscores how the Tan empire’s cash flows remain tethered to the tobacco franchise even as the group projects diversification across multiple sectors. Tobacco Dominance LT Group reported total dividend income of ₱16.18 billion in 2025 , up from ₱14.82 billion a year earlier. Of that total, FTC’s contribution dwarfed every other source. The next-largest stream came from Shareholdings Inc. , which delivered ₱2.71 billion , or 16.76% of the total—widely seen as a conduit for banking-related cash flows rather than a standalone operating business. A small ₱85.9 million (about 0.53% ) came f...

Ginebra’s Q1 Signal: Growth Held Up on Pricing Power as Sales Volume Fell 3%

  Ginebra San Miguel Inc.’s first-quarter numbers offered a familiar kind of comfort to investors: earnings rose, margins widened, and the balance sheet remained flush with cash. But beneath the reassuring headline was a subtler message about the Philippine liquor maker’s growth engine. Revenue is still moving higher — just not because consumers are buying more bottles.  The company posted first-quarter sales of ₱16.73 billion , up 3%  year over year, while net income climbed 9% to ₱2.29 billion . That kind of spread — profits growing faster than revenue — usually signals operating strength, and in Ginebra’s case, it did. Gross profit rose 11% to ₱4.51 billion , as cost of sales was effectively flat despite excise-tax pressure, helped by lower material inputs. Operating margin improved to 17% from 15% a year ago.  Yet the more revealing figure sat in the KPI section: volume growth was negative 3% . In other words, the top line advanced not because demand expanded...

Sy Flexes Muscle: Shows SM Investments Can Keep Raising Dividends — and Buying Back Stock

SM Investments Corp. is making a case that few Philippine conglomerates can match: it is not only growing earnings, but doing so with enough balance-sheet room to raise dividends, retire debt and repurchase shares at the same time . The latest numbers suggest that is not a one-off windfall, but an increasingly durable feature of the company’s model. In 2025, the parent company received PHP38.6 billion in dividends from its underlying businesses while distributing only PHP16.0 billion to its own shareholders, leaving a substantial buffer for capital returns and deleveraging. That cash-flow asymmetry is the heart of the investment case. At the parent-company level, SM Investments declared and paid PHP15.97 billion in dividends in 2025, even as it collected PHP38.59 billion in upstream dividends. The rest did not sit idle. The company used cash to reduce debt aggressively, including PHP25.47 billion of long-term debt repayments, and spent PHP5.13 billion on treasury share purchases,...

At the Top of the Lopez Pyramid, the Cash Runs Thin: Lopez Inc. received only 247M divs in 2025

  If the most consequential arguments in the Lopez clan end up at Lopez Inc., the irony is hard to miss: the private company at the very top of the empire received only about ₱247.37 million in dividends in 2025, even though the operating assets below it generated a far larger stream of cash several layers down.   The Lopez corporate structure still has the look of an old Philippine dynasty: a private family holding company at the apex, a listed intermediary beneath it, and below that the industrial assets that do the real work. But follow the money rather than the org chart, and a different picture emerges. The crown jewels are not parked at the summit. They sit lower in the stack, inside First Philippine Holdings Corp. (FPH) — the group company that owns the Lopez interests in clean and renewable energy, property, and other operating businesses. FPH says it directly and indirectly owns 67.84% of First Gen Corp. , holds 44,382,436 shares of Meralco — about 3.94% of the ut...

For the Gokongwei, Aboitiz and Consunji Empires, Utilities Are the Real Cash Register

  In the Philippines’ largest conglomerates, the most important businesses are not always the ones on the billboards. At the parent-company level, the Gokongweis, the Aboitizes and the Consunjis all leaned in 2025 on a quieter engine of wealth: dividends remitted from electricity and water franchises, or from utility-like assets built to throw off cash with a regularity consumer brands, property and cyclical industrials often cannot match.  That matters because listed holding companies ultimately live on upstream cash. Their job is not simply to own assets, but to convert those assets into funds that can service debt, pay shareholders and finance the next round of bets. By that measure, 2025 offered a striking lesson in how the country’s old-line business families now make money: the parent-level cash machine is increasingly powered by regulated or utility-style franchises, not just by food, real estate, airlines or construction.  For JG Summit Holdings Inc. , the surpris...