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D&L’s Q1 2026 Results: Less Capex Strain, More Revenue Anxiety

  The Philippine ingredients maker has left its capex headache behind. Now comes the harder problem: selling more. For much of the past few years, investors in D&L Industries had a simple question: when would the Batangas plant stop consuming capital and start producing returns? In the first quarter of 2026, the answer became clearer. The new facility, once the centerpiece of a heavy investment cycle and a drag on financial ratios, has now logged its sixth consecutive profitable quarter . Capital spending, no longer the main strain on the balance sheet, has faded from the foreground. But business stories rarely end when construction does. With the plant finally contributing, a more prosaic but more important question has taken its place: can D&L grow revenues again? The company’s first-quarter results offered a study in contrasts. Net income rose 5% year on year to ₱716.7m , a respectable showing in a volatile environment. Gross margin improved to 13.4% , from 12.7% a year...
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D&L’s Expensive Growth

The Philippine specialty manufacturer had a banner year for sales. The harder question is whether those sales can again be converted into cash. In most years, a 36% jump in revenue would be cause for uncomplicated celebration. At D&L Industries , a Philippine maker of food ingredients, oleochemicals, specialty plastics, and outsourced consumer products, sales rose to ₱55.39bn in 2025 , from ₱40.67bn a year earlier. Net income rose too, by 11% to ₱2.59bn . The trouble is that the top line grew much faster than the profit line. Gross profit increased by only 15% to ₱7.21bn , a respectable showing but one that betrayed the nature of the boom: part volume, part pricing, part inflation. D&L sold more, but it also sold costlier molecules. That makes 2025 a useful year for understanding D&L’s business. The company is not a typical consumer manufacturer with brands on supermarket shelves. It is more often hidden inside other firms’ products: the fat in a noodle, the ingredient in ...

The Cost of Credit: Rockwell’s Lopez Advantage Over Gotianun-led Filinvest Land

In Philippine property, family names still matter—but bond coupons matter more. Rockwell Land Corporation, backed by the Lopez group, and Filinvest Land, Inc., led by the Gotianun family, both tap the same domestic capital market, sell into the same property cycle, and borrow in the same currency. Yet in 2026, investors charged them very different prices for money. Rockwell raised three-year bonds at 5.5666% and five-year bonds at 5.8595% in March; Filinvest Land’s subsequent three-year bond came at 7.3993% in June. The gap is not merely a spread. It is the market’s shorthand for confidence, coverage, and cash-flow comfort. The comparison is especially striking because FLI is not obviously the weaker borrower by conventional balance-sheet optics. As of March 31, 2026, FLI reported ₱82.63bn of loans and bonds payable and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.85x . ROCK, with ₱50.57bn of debt outstanding, reported a higher debt-to-equity ratio of 1.04x . On book leverage alone, FLI looks more...

Rockwell’s New Balancing Act: Growth, Leverage and the Cost of Liquidity

The developer’s profits are rising, but so are the claims on its cash. For years, Rockwell Land has sold investors a polished proposition: premium addresses, patient capital, and a brand that turns real estate into lifestyle. Its towers are not merely concrete stacked vertically; they are a promise of curation. In the first quarter of 2026, that promise still looked commercially potent. Revenues rose 45% year on year to ₱6.455bn , while net income climbed 52% to ₱1.433bn . Parent net income grew even faster, up 67% to ₱1.291bn . Yet beneath the sheen of growth lies a less glamorous reality: Rockwell is now managing a large near-term liquidity call at precisely the time it is funding an ambitious development pipeline. The most conspicuous strain sits on the liability side of the balance sheet. As of March 31, 2026, Rockwell carried a ₱7.2bn current payable for share purchase , related to the acquisition/consolidation of Alabang Commercial Corporation, or ACC. It also had ₱9.004bn in cur...

Kuok’s Shang Properties Enters a Heavier Capex Phase

  Shang Properties’ first-quarter results show the company is still earning well, but also still building hard In property, youth is expensive. A new tower may appear in brochures as a finished promise: glass, marble, skyline, and lifestyle compressed into a rendering. On a balance sheet, however, it appears more prosaically—as construction in progress, contractor advances, inventory, payables, and debt. Shang Properties’ results for the first quarter of 2026 are a reminder that even a polished luxury developer must first spend before it can harvest. At first glance, Shang’s quarter looked reassuring. Consolidated revenues rose 13.1% year on year to ₱3.19bn , while income from operations before interest, joint-venture income, and tax rose 12.7% to ₱1.15bn . Its recurring businesses—leasing and hotels—continued to recover, and recognition of residential sales improved. But beneath the tidy operating figures lies a more capital-intensive story: Shang still has meaningful spending ahe...

The Gotianun Balancing Act: Filinvest Land Maintains Q1 Growth as Property Bets Meet Costlier Debt

  Filinvest Land’s first-quarter numbers reveal a business trying to turn Philippine property’s long cycle into recurring cash Filinvest Land, Inc. is often described as a property developer. That is true, but incomplete. Its first-quarter 2026 results show a more interesting organism: part housebuilder, part landlord, part infrastructure-like rent collector, part balance-sheet manager. In the three months to March 2026, FLI reported ₱6.02bn in total revenue , up from ₱5.76bn a year earlier, and ₱1.10bn in net income , up 3.5% from ₱1.06bn . The progress was respectable rather than rousing. But beneath the modest headline lies the real story: FLI is trying to make a capital-hungry development machine behave more like a durable income compounder. At one end of the machine is the old business of land, permits, concrete, and installment payments. Real-estate sales rose 6.1% year on year to ₱3.92bn , still the group’s largest revenue source. Management attributed the increase to acce...