In a softer property market, Robinsons Land’s recurring-income model looked sturdier than Ayala Land’s larger but more development-heavy franchise. In Philippine property, size has long conferred prestige. Ayala Land, Inc. (ALI) is the country’s great estate builder: a trillion-peso balance sheet, a portfolio stitched together across residential towers, estates, malls, offices, hotels, logistics parks, and an increasingly sophisticated REIT ecosystem. Robinsons Land Corporation (RLC) is smaller, less sprawling, and less frequently cast as the sector’s bellwether. Yet in the first quarter of 2026, the less glamorous company had the better quarter. RLC’s revenues rose, profits rose, cash flow improved, leverage fell, and liquidity strengthened; ALI, though still the larger franchise, was pulled down by a softer property-development cycle and higher financing charges. The headline numbers tell the story briskly. RLC’s consolidated revenues increased 11% year-on-year to ₱12.28bn , while ...
Residential sales are quickening, financing costs are easing, and the balance sheet is flush. But the price of growth is showing up in margins. Robinsons Land Corporation entered 2026 with the air of a property company that has learned to enjoy several kinds of weather. In the first quarter, consolidated revenues rose by 11% year on year to ₱12.28bn , helped by a sturdier mall business, resilient offices, brisker hotel trade, and, most strikingly, a jump in residential sales. Net income climbed 9% to ₱4.40bn . Yet the result was less exuberant when viewed through the eyes of common shareholders: net income attributable to the parent rose by just 2% to ₱3.54bn , and earnings per share inched up to ₱0.74 from ₱0.72 . The headline, then, is not simply that Robinsons Land is growing. It is that the composition of its growth is changing. Its recurring-income machine remains formidable: rental income still accounted for 48% of revenues , increasing 5% to ₱5.87bn . But the livelie...