There is something almost cruel in the symmetry of the Lopez family’s current drama. One of the Philippines’ most storied business dynasties — a clan whose name once stood for media power, boardroom reach and elite corporate permanence — now finds itself publicly divided over a listed family stake worth only about ₱9.4 billion at prevailing market prices. The immediate trigger is a leadership battle inside Lopez, Inc. , after a court blocked an attempt to remove Federico “Piki” Lopez as president and replace him with Rafael Lopez , in a dispute involving a faction aligned with Eugenio “Gabby” Lopez III . But beneath the procedural arguments and family alignments lies a harder truth: this is a contest over the last concentrated lever of Lopez control. The arithmetic is stark. The Top 100 shareholders report for Lopez Holdings Corp. shows that Lopez, Inc. holds 2,473,707,550 shares in aggregate, spread across four registered lines. Against 4,491,233,837 outstanding shares ,...
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...