There was a time when Max’s Group looked less like a sleepy restaurant stock and more like the next great Philippine consumer platform. In 2014, the market was not merely buying fried chicken, pancakes, and pizza. The market was buying a story — the story of a newly enlarged listed restaurant company, transformed from Pancake House into Max’s Group, armed with a portfolio of beloved brands, a national footprint, and the promise of aggressive expansion. That excitement was not irrational, at least not at first. The corporate transformation was dramatic. Max’s acquired control of Pancake House in early 2014, and the listed company then absorbed 20 Max’s-related entities in a roughly ₱4.05-billion share-swap that effectively turned Pancake House into the public vehicle for the broader Max’s restaurant empire. By the second half of 2014, the company had changed its name to Max’s Group Inc., and the market was suddenly staring at a much larger restaurant platform rather than a single l...
There was a time when Metro Retail Stores Group, Inc. carried the promise of a provincial retail champion that could scale into a larger national story. The long-term price chart still tells that tale: a stock that once inspired optimism, only to spend the better part of the next several years drifting lower and then settling into a far humbler range. Today, with MRSGI trading around ₱1.15–₱1.16 and with a 52-week high of just ₱1.34 , the market seems to be saying that whatever excitement fueled the stock in its earlier years is no longer the dominant narrative. We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! That market verdict is not hard to understand. Metro Retail is still growing in the narrow sense of posting higher sales, but it is not delivering the kind of growth that usually sends a stock back to old highs. For the first nine months of 2025, net sales rose 4.1% to ₱28.70 billion and rental income rose 10.9% to ₱307.2 million . Yet manage...