Conglomerates often encourage a dangerous illusion: that companies sharing a surname, a boardroom culture, and a controlling shareholder must share a financial destiny. They do not. The recent divergence between Robinsons Land Corp. (RLC) and Robinsons Retail Holdings, Inc. (RRHI) —both controlled by the Gokongwei family—offers a neat corrective. One spent 2025 becoming sturdier. The other spent it becoming tighter. Both may remain respectable businesses. Only one, however, made itself appreciably safer. Begin with the less glamorous of the two stories, which is usually where prudence hides. RLC, the group’s property arm, ended 2024 with ₱261.83bn in total assets, ₱100.32bn in liabilities, and ₱161.51bn in stockholders’ equity , according to PSE financial reports. By September 30th, 2025 , assets had risen to ₱273.22bn , liabilities had fallen to ₱91.98bn , and equity had climbed to ₱181.24bn . By full-year 2025, commentary based on company disclosures put total assets at about ₱275bn...
Property developers prefer to be admired in hard hats. They like cranes, groundbreakings, and the sort of investor presentation in which every vacant lot is a “future growth node”. Robinsons Land Corporation (RLC), the Philippine property arm controlled by JG Summit Holdings , which owned 65.91% of the company at the end of 2025, is discovering a less glamorous talent: looking safer. In 2025, safety began to look surprisingly attractive. Gross revenues rose 13% to ₱48.52bn , EBITDA increased 10% to ₱25.70bn , EBIT climbed 11% to ₱19.62bn , and net income grew a still respectable but less dazzling 5% to ₱16.17bn . Earnings per share reached ₱2.80 , up from ₱2.73 the year before. The pattern mattered more than the headline. Operating growth was brisk; bottom-line growth was merely good. That was not because the business had weakened, but because 2024 had been flattered by one-off gains that were absent in 2025. That left RLC to earn its keep the old-fashioned way: through te...