Concepcion Industrial Corporation’s balance sheet still looks like the sort of document that income investors like to frame on the wall: ₱2.39bn of cash, only ₱73.35mn of short-term borrowings, no long-term bank debt, a current ratio of 2.04x, and an acid-test ratio of 1.35x . ₱7.77bn of equity provides further ballast, while 2025 operating cash flow of ₱1.26bn comfortably covered the ₱393.7mn cash dividend , leaving the group with both liquidity and room for manoeuvre. That, however, may not be the question the market asks next. The more awkward question is not whether CIC can pay ₱1.00 a share today , but whether investors will continue to believe ₱1.00 deserves to be capitalised as the normal dividend. CIC’s own record offers a reason for doubt: the group paid ₱0.50 in 2023 , then ₱0.70 in 2024 , before returning to ₱1.00 in 2025 and declaring ₱1.00 again in 2026 . If earnings quality keeps deteriorating, the market may stop valuing CIC on the restored payout and begin re-ratin...
For years, GMA Network was easy to love as a dividend stock. The yield was visible, the cash returns were generous, and the company’s dominant broadcast franchise gave investors confidence that even a no-growth story could still pay handsomely. But markets rarely cling to yesterday’s narrative when the cash story begins to change. GMA7’s latest dividend declaration — ₱0.40 per share for 2026, down from ₱0.50 in 2025 — may look small in absolute terms, yet it matters far more as a signal: the payout trend is now unmistakably lower. That trend did not begin this year. GMA7’s regular cash dividend has moved from ₱1.45 in 2022 to ₱1.10 in 2023 , then to ₱0.60 in 2024 , ₱0.50 in 2025 , and now ₱0.40 in 2026 . That is not a one-off adjustment; it is a multi-year reset in shareholder distributions. Investors who continue to treat GMA7 as though its old payout profile were intact may be anchoring to a story the numbers have already revised. To be fair, the company’s nine-month 2025 results ...