In most emerging markets, utilities are valued for their predictability. They collect monthly bills, raise tariffs only after a fight, and borrow prodigiously in the hope that investors will mistake ballast for glamour. Maynilad Water Services, newly listed on the Philippine Stock Exchange in November 2025, is trying to prove that a water monopoly can be both dull and ambitious at once: a regulated utility with the instincts of an infrastructure developer. Its 2025 annual report reads like the ledger of a company that has just acquired a larger sense of itself. The IPO brought fresh capital and public scrutiny; the operating business delivered sturdy growth; yet the central question remains whether today’s vast investment program will one day yield stronger cash flow, higher returns, and better per-share economics. Maynilad begins from an enviable position. It serves what it describes as the largest water concession in Southeast Asia, covering 540 square kilometers across M...
First Gen’s “poison pill” may be dressed up as a key-man clause. But for investors, its real meaning is simpler: the company has tied billions of pesos of shareholder value to the continued primacy of one executive in the middle of an active family power struggle. Enrique Razon Jr’s compliment to Federico “Piki” Lopez was flattering enough. Prime Infrastructure, First Gen says, insisted on a “change of management control” clause because it trusted Mr. Lopez and his team to execute two large pumped-storage hydro projects safely, efficiently, and on schedule. First Gen has even cast the arrangement as a “vote of confidence” from Mr. Razon — proof, in effect, that the company’s leadership was indispensable. Yet the test of fiduciary responsibility is not whether a chief executive is admired by a counterparty. It is whether he converts that admiration into terms that protect the owners of the company he serves. On that standard, First Gen’s defense of its so-called poison pill ...