The Filipino restaurant group is learning to do more with less. Investors now want proof that discipline can become cash. For years, restaurant chains in emerging markets were judged by a simple metric: how many new stores they could open. Bigger footprints meant bigger brands, and bigger brands promised operating leverage. Max’s Group, Inc. — the operator behind Max’s Restaurant, Pancake House, Yellow Cab, Krispy Kreme, and other familiar names — is now telling a different story. In the first quarter of 2026, the company’s pitch was not expansion, but discipline. The numbers bear that out. Systemwide sales inched up by 1.1% to ₱4.3 billion , while consolidated revenues rose 2.0% to ₱2.87 billion . Same-store sales growth remained positive at 4.2% , even as the group operated with a leaner store network. Management framed this as the product of a “disciplined approach toward quality and productivity” rather than a race to add outlets. That is the encouraging part of the q...
The Philippines’ premier property developer has long been admired for turning land into townships and townships into cash. But in early 2026, the cash machine began to look more like a warehouse. Ayala Land’s balance sheet is, in one sense, a monument to patience. Property companies do not sell widgets. They acquire land, wait, build, wait some more, then sell, lease, or recycle capital through vehicles such as REITs. In good times, inventory is not deadweight; it is embedded optionality. But when demand slows, that same inventory can become a reminder that real estate is a business of duration, leverage, and confidence. At the end of March 2026, Ayala Land carried ₱241.3bn of real estate inventories , up from ₱239.3bn at the end of 2025. The quarterly increase, less than 1%, is not by itself dramatic. The more interesting point is the size: inventories represented roughly a quarter of total assets and more than half of current assets. For a developer of Ayala Land’s scale, this...