Higher rates fattened RCBC’s lending spread. They also punished the value of its bond book. For banks, higher interest rates are both tonic and toxin. They can widen the gap between what a lender earns on loans and securities and what it pays depositors. But they can also bruise the value of bonds already sitting on the balance sheet. RCBC’s first-quarter 2026 results captured that paradox neatly. Yuchengco’s bank reported net income of ₱2.7 billion , up 11.6% year on year , as net interest income surged. Yet its total comprehensive income was only ₱223 million , sharply reduced by a ₱2.54 billion fair-value loss on debt instruments classified at fair value through other comprehensive income, or FVOCI . The profit-and-loss account told the cheerful half of the story. RCBC’s net interest income rose to ₱15.4 billion from ₱12.3 billion , an increase of about 25% . Its net interest margin improved to 5.2% from 4.8% , a substantial move in a business where margins are usually m...
H ow higher BSP rates punctured SGP’s income-stock rally There are days when the stock market merely changes its mind. Then there are days when it slams the door. On June 22nd, Synergy Grid and Development Phils., Inc. — SGP to the market — suffered the latter. The stock closed at ₱29.00 , down ₱3.50 , or 10.77% , from its previous close of ₱32.50 . Volume reached 19.04 million shares , far above ordinary trading levels, while the day’s range stretched from ₱31.50 to ₱27.00 . For a company often treated as a placid infrastructure-income proxy, the violence of the move was striking. The immediate temptation is to search for a smoking gun: a regulatory shock, a dividend cut, a disclosure tucked away in the afternoon. None was obvious in the visible PSE feed. Recently disclosed items included an annual corporate governance report in late May, a quarterly report in mid-May, and earlier material information filings, but no clear June 22nd bombshell in the visible list. The better explanati...