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Lucio Tan’s LTG Still Leans on Tobacco Cash Machine as Volumes Start to Squeeze

Lucio Tan’s LT Group Inc. entered 2026 with a familiar earnings formula: banking supplied the largest profit share, but tobacco remained the quiet cash machine underpinning the conglomerate’s dividend appeal. LTG’s first-quarter net income attributable to shareholders rose 3.5% to ₱7.49 billion , from ₱7.24 billion a year earlier, even as consolidated revenue slipped 1.2% to ₱30.78 billion . The headline result looked steady. Underneath it, however, the quarter showed a more nuanced story: LTG’s tobacco arm remained highly profitable, but the engine is beginning to show volume pressure.  Fortune Tobacco Corp., LTG’s tobacco vehicle, posted ₱2.86 billion in net income in the first quarter, up 1.9% from ₱2.81 billion a year earlier. That made tobacco LTG’s second-biggest earnings contributor after Philippine National Bank, accounting for roughly 38% of attributable income based on management’s segment disclosures. The catch is that the profit increase did not come from stronger ...
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Gokongwei REIT Sidesteps the Dilution Trap After Mall Injection

  RL Commercial REIT Inc., the Gokongwei group’s property trust, entered 2026 with a bigger share base — but also enough new mall income to keep both earnings per share and dividends per share moving higher. RL Commercial REIT Inc. is showing early signs that its latest asset-for-share expansion did what REIT investors want such deals to do: add income faster than it adds shares. The company, known by its ticker RCR , reported first-quarter net income of ₱2.34 billion , up 41% from ₱1.66 billion a year earlier, as revenues jumped following the infusion of nine malls in the third quarter of 2025. Total revenue rose 51% to ₱3.39 billion , driven mainly by the added mall assets and steady portfolio occupancy, according to RCR’s first-quarter 2026 filing.  That mattered because the same mall transaction also expanded RCR’s share count. In August 2025, RCR and sponsor Robinsons Land Corp. executed a property-for-share swap involving nine mall assets with 324,107.75 square meter...

Tony Tan Caktiong’s Global Bet Is Feeding Jollibee Sales — and Eating Into Profit

  Jollibee Foods Corp.’s global expansion is doing exactly what investors once hoped it would do: make the Philippine fast-food giant less dependent on its home market and turn it into a broader international restaurant platform. But in the first quarter of 2026, that same overseas footprint exposed a harder truth — international scale is not yet translating into international earnings power. The company’s international business accounted for 42.4% of global revenues and 43.2% of gross profit in Q1 2026, showing that overseas operations are now a major part of JFC’s sales engine. Yet the same international segment contributed only 13.4% of global operating income and -52.0% of global net income after tax , or NIAT. In plain terms, JFC’s foreign operations are large and growing, but they still dragged down bottom-line profits during the quarter. The contrast is stark. JFC’s Philippine business contributed 86.6% of operating income and 152.0% of global NIAT , meaning the domestic...

Gokongwei’s RLC Has Cash Flow, Retained Earnings to Support Higher Payout

  Robinsons Land Corp. has moved from having a case for a dividend hike to actually delivering one. The Gokongwei-led property developer declared a regular cash dividend of ₱1.00 per share on May 11, 2026 , payable on June 8, 2026 , to shareholders of record as of May 26, 2026 . The dividend will be paid out of unappropriated retained earnings as of Dec. 31, 2025 , according to the company’s disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange.  The payout marks a sharp step-up from RLC’s previous ₱0.75 per-share dividend , representing a 33% increase . Based on RLC’s 4.805 billion outstanding common shares , the new dividend implies a cash distribution of about ₱4.81 billion . Against 2025 earnings per share of ₱2.80 , the dividend translates to a payout ratio of roughly 36% , still moderate for a company with a growing recurring-income base. The higher payout follows a year in which RLC’s earnings quality improved, its balance sheet strengthened and its retained earnings provided a ...

BDO’s Dividend Engine for the Sy Family's SM Still Has Fuel — But Growth Is Getting More Expensive

BDO Unibank Inc., the banking arm long central to the Sy family’s financial empire, entered 2026 with a familiar distinction: it remained a powerful dividend machine for SM Investments Corp. Yet beneath the comfort of record earnings and rising payouts, the country’s largest bank is showing signs that the next leg of dividend growth may be harder won. BDO posted record net income of ₱87.2 billion in 2025 , up 6% from the prior year, as its balance sheet continued to expand across loans, deposits and investment securities. Total resources climbed 11% to ₱5.4 trillion , loans rose 13% to ₱3.7 trillion , deposits increased 10% to ₱4.2 trillion , and equity advanced 12% to ₱644.1 billion . The bank also remained the Philippines’ largest lender by assets, loans, deposits and trust assets, with 1,994 domestic branches and 7,716 ATMs, CDMs and related machines as of end-2025. For SM Investments, which holds 40.6% of BDO’s common shares , the bank remains a major source of recurring income....

Cosco Parent’s Profit Surge Shows Puregold Remains the Co Family’s Cash Engine

Cosco Capital Inc., the listed holding company associated with the Lucio L. Co group, delivered a sharp rise in parent-company earnings in 2025, underscoring a familiar reality for investors: beneath the conglomerate structure, the cash engine remains grocery retail. The company’s separate financial statements show dividend income climbed to ₱3.90 billion in 2025 from ₱2.39 billion a year earlier, a roughly 63% increase that lifted parent-company net income to ₱3.84 billion from ₱2.37 billion in 2024. For Cosco, the parent company’s income statement is less a story of operating margins than of upstreamed cash. As a holding company, Cosco recognizes dividend income when its right to receive payment is established, and its investments in subsidiaries are carried at cost in the separate financial statements. That makes the parent accounts a clean window into which subsidiaries are actually sending cash upstairs. The answer in 2025 was clear: Puregold Price Club Inc. remained the core...

Razon’s Manila Water Delivers Stronger Earnings, But Wawa Deal Recasts Balance Sheet

  Manila Water Co., the utility chaired by billionaire Enrique K. Razon Jr., opened 2026 with the kind of earnings profile investors usually want from a regulated water business: higher tariffs, stable demand, better operating efficiency and stronger contributions from domestic subsidiaries. But beneath the headline profit growth, the quarter also marked a balance-sheet reset, as the company absorbed the financing consequences of its WawaJVCo acquisition. The company’s first-quarter results showed net income attributable to Manila Water shareholders rising 24% to ₱4.42 billion , while consolidated net income climbed 30% to ₱4.84 billion . Total revenues increased 11% to ₱10.63 billion , and EBITDA rose 14% to ₱7.87 billion , lifting EBITDA margin to about 74% . The earnings momentum was led by the East Zone concession and WawaJVCo, now reviewed by management as a combined operating segment after Manila Water completed its acquisition of WawaJVCo in September 2025. The segment’s com...

San Miguel’s Parent Company Keeps Funding the Future as Debt Wall Nears

  San Miguel Corporation’s parent company entered 2026 much as it has operated for years: as the financing nerve center of one of the Philippines’ most ambitious conglomerates, directing capital toward power, food, infrastructure, property, and other strategic subsidiaries while carrying the weight of a large debt stack on its own balance sheet. The 2025 parent-company accounts show a business whose asset base remained broadly stable, with total assets rising slightly to ₱1.275 trillion from ₱1.253 trillion a year earlier. But the stability in assets masked a more leveraged capital structure: total liabilities climbed to ₱789.1 billion from ₱719.7 billion , while equity fell to ₱486.3 billion from ₱533.5 billion .  At the center of the story is a familiar San Miguel theme: funding growth platforms before they fully pay back the parent. Investments in subsidiaries reached ₱855.1 billion in 2025, with major holdings including San Miguel Food and Beverage, SMC Infrastructure...