For most banks, a quarter in which net income rises, margins widen, and credit growth continues would count as a respectable outing. For Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company , the first quarter of 2026 was exactly that—until one looked below the net-income line. There, in the usually neglected province of “other comprehensive income”, the bond market left a conspicuous bruise. Metrobank reported ₱12.81bn in consolidated net income for the quarter ended March 31st 2026, up 2.4% from ₱12.51bn a year earlier. Net income attributable to the parent climbed 2.9% to ₱12.60bn , lifting basic and diluted earnings per share to ₱2.80 , from ₱2.72 in the same period last year. On the surface, this was the sort of quarter large banks like to present: steady, profitable, and comfortably capitalized. Yet the more interesting story was not about profit but about capital. Metrobank booked a ₱16.40bn net unrealized loss on debt securities at fair value through other comprehensive income , or ...
Q1 2026 underscored why BDO still dominates in scale, while BPI leads in efficiency and returns. In Philippine banking, size and finesse rarely travel in equal measure. BDO Unibank, the country’s largest lender, resembles a financial archipelago unto itself: vast, deposit-rich and deeply embedded in the cash flows of households, malls, merchants and corporations. Bank of the Philippine Islands, older and more patrician, looks less like a sprawl and more like a carefully tuned machine. The first quarter of 2026 offered a useful contrast. Both banks made more money than a year earlier. Both were bruised by bond-market losses. But the manner of their performance revealed two quite different banking models. BDO still won on scale; BPI won on efficiency. BDO reported net profit of ₱20.2bn , up 2.1% year on year , while BPI earned ₱17.0bn , up about 1.8% . On the surface, the larger bank won. Yet profit is only the first sentence of the story. BDO generated pre-impairment operating...