Panasonic Manufacturing Philippines Corp. is leaning into financial caution as competition in the local appliance market intensifies, trimming its dividend per share after a year of muted growth but preserving a cash-rich, debt-free balance sheet that gives it room to defend its core categories. For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2026 , PMPC reported net sales of ₱16.14 billion , down 4.5% from ₱16.90 billion a year earlier, while net income fell 9.3% to ₱472.9 million from ₱521.5 million. Earnings per share declined to ₱1.12 from ₱1.23. The company’s board later approved a cash dividend of ₱0.6791 per share , lower than the prior year’s ₱0.7393 per share dividend. The softer payout mirrors the year’s less buoyant operating backdrop. Management cited port congestion, typhoon-affected dealers, weakening demand in the final quarter, and lower export sales , particularly the drop-off in Taiwan transactions, as factors behind the revenue decline. Yet PMPC’s results were no...
DoubleDragon did not pocket its REIT windfall. It scattered it across the country. Now investors have a harder question: which of those projects can actually become the next REIT? When DoubleDragon Corp. sold down part of DDMP REIT Inc. in 2021, it did more than cash in on a mature office landlord. It created a template for how a Philippine property sponsor could turn a completed portfolio into fresh development capital — and then scatter that capital across the next layer of assets it hoped would define its future. The number was precise: ₱9.0129 billion in net proceeds from the DDMPR public offering. By March 24, 2022, DoubleDragon had fully disbursed the entire amount under its reinvestment plan, according to the final DDMPR IPO proceeds progress report. DDMPR’s 2025 annual report later confirmed that the sponsors had fully implemented the reinvestment plan. The strategy was simple in theory and messy in practice: sell a stake in a stabilized REIT, then redeploy the mon...