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,...
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...