The market has stopped treating Converge as a fast-growing broadband compounder and started pricing it like a maturing telco. That de-rating is understandable—but with strong fibre assets, high margins, positive operating cash flow and manageable leverage, the sell-off may have gone too far. There are two ways to lose money in a growth stock. One is for the company to fail. The other is for the story to change. Converge ICT Solutions has not failed. Far from it. The company remains one of the Philippines’ most important fixed-broadband infrastructure owners, with a nationwide fibre network, strong operating cash generation, high margins, modest leverage and a fast-growing enterprise arm. Yet its share price has behaved as if something more terminal has happened. The reason is subtler: CNVRG has stopped looking like a pristine “fast-growing pure-play fibre broadband compounder” and has started looking like a maturing broadband operator wrestling with falling ARPU, heavier capital expend...
Ayala-backed Mynt and SM-controlled BDO Unibank, Inc. are two very different machines for turning Filipino credit demand into profit. One earns fat fintech spreads. The other survives on scale, funding discipline and clean loans. Call it the new arithmetic of Philippine finance. On one side is Mynt, the GCash parent in which Ayala Corporation increased exposure through AC Ventures Holding Corp., helping push Mynt’s valuation to about US$5 billion before the planned IPO. On the other hand is BDO Unibank, Inc., the country’s largest bank and the crown jewel of the SM financial ecosystem, with SM Investments Corporation disclosed as BDO’s largest common shareholder at 40.60% as of end-2025. At first glance, the comparison looks unfair. BDO Unibank, Inc. is a universal bank with about ₱3.8 trillion in gross customer loans in the first quarter of 2026. Mynt’s CreditTech loan portfolio was only about ₱64.1 billion as of March 31, 2026. BDO is the aircraft carrier; Mynt’s lend...