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MONDE’s bigger dividend is a statement of confidence — and perhaps only the beginning

Monde Nissin Corp. has done more than raise its dividend. It has sent a message. By approving a regular cash dividend of ₱0.24 per share on March 25, 2026 , payable on May 21, 2026, to stockholders of record as of April 24, 2026 , the company has delivered what looks like a deliberate vote of confidence in the strength of its balance sheet and the direction of its business. The source of payment is explicitly identified as unrestricted retained earnings as of December 31, 2025 , which matters because it tells investors this is not a symbolic gesture financed by strain, but a distribution backed by accumulated capacity.  The increase is significant by any practical measure. The new ₱0.24-per-share payout is 60 percent higher than the ₱0.15-per-share dividend MONDE declared in March 2025 and  50 percent higher than the ₱0.16-per-share dividend approved in November 2025. On a yearly basis, MONDE’s regular cash dividends rose from ₱0.26 per share in 2024 —made up of ₱0.12 ...
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Apex Mining’s Golden Year — and the Discipline Needed to Make It Last

  If there was any doubt that 2025 would go down as a landmark year for Apex Mining Co., Inc. (APX), the numbers have settled the argument. The company delivered record consolidated revenues of ₱21.34 billion and net income of ₱7.66 billion , up roughly 41% and 77% , respectively, from 2024. Basic earnings per share climbed to ₱1.35 , while comprehensive income reached ₱8.88 billion . On the surface, this looks like a company firing on all cylinders. And to a significant extent, it is. But the more interesting story is not simply that APX had a very good year. It is that 2025 showed what a Philippine mining company can look like when a favorable commodity cycle meets operational competence, better balance-sheet management, and a long enough reserve base to give investors confidence that the gains are not merely fleeting. At the same time, it also reminded the market that even a stellar mining year must be read with one eye on geology, policy, and price volatility. The headline dri...

A Buyback Won’t Fix What’s Brewing in URC’s Coffee Business

  Universal Robina Corp.’s latest share buyback is a useful signal, but it is not yet a persuasive solution. On March 23, 2026, URC repurchased 235,000 shares at ₱62.45 to ₱63.35 apiece, bringing its cumulative buybacks to 67.07 million shares and total repurchases to ₱6.651 billion out of an ₱8.0 billion authorization. That certainly tells the market management sees value at current prices. But markets do not re-rate a stock for financial engineering alone. They re-rate it when the underlying business shows durable pricing power and earnings recovery. That is where the real problem begins. URC’s own FY2025 earnings release says sales rose 4% to ₱168.0 billion , yet operating income fell 4% to ₱16.0 billion and core net income slipped 4% to ₱11.0 billion . The company explicitly identified the main culprit: “prolonged abnormally elevated coffee input costs.” Just as important, URC also disclosed that ex-coffee , it actually delivered high single-digit operating income growth...

What retail investors can control

There is a certain futility in trying to trade the Philippine market as if one were sitting on the policy committee of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas or in the middle of the global oil trade. Retail investors do not control the peso-dollar exchange rate, and they certainly do not control the price of crude. The BSP’s own data show the peso averaging ₱59.16 per dollar in January 2026 and ₱58.28 in February 2026 , while bank indicative retail rates have already shown the dollar at ₱60.00 buying and ₱60.50 selling as of March 23, 2026. Oil is even more unruly: the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed Brent moving from roughly $89.84 to $103.23 per barrel and WTI from about $83.71 to $98.48 over just a few trading days in March, while the International Energy Agency described the latest Middle East shock as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market . That is precisely why the small investor must focus on the part of the game he actually can play. ...

Belle’s Softer Year Still Shows Why Casino Leisure Remains a Powerful Franchise

There is a temptation in markets to read a weaker year as a weaker business, but Belle Corporation’s 2025 results suggest something more nuanced: not a broken story, but a maturing one—still anchored on a premium leisure platform, still cash-generative, and still strategically positioned for the next cycle. In 2025, Belle posted consolidated revenues of about ₱5.29 billion and net income of about ₱2.11 billion , both lower year on year, with management explicitly attributing the softer performance largely to the gaming industry’s underperformance during the period. Yet the real message in the numbers is not merely that earnings eased, but that Belle’s economic center of gravity remains remarkably intact. The company’s lease revenues from City of Dreams Manila amounted to roughly ₱2.35 billion , while its gaming revenue share from the integrated resort contributed about ₱1.90 billion in 2025, meaning these two lines alone still represented around 80% of group revenues . That is not a...

Why the market is still marking down $FDC despite record profits

Filinvest Development Corp. has just delivered what most listed companies would gladly advertise as a triumph: record 2025 net income attributable to parent of ₱15.0 billion , up 23.7 percent from 2024, with consolidated net income rising 20.2 percent to ₱18.9 billion and total revenues and other income reaching ₱120.6 billion . Yet the stock market’s verdict has been noticeably colder. As of March 19, 2026 , FDC closed at ₱4.20 , while market data showed the stock down 10.64 percent over three months , 12.50 percent over six months , and 12.32 percent over one year . In other words, this is one of those cases where the income statement is smiling while the share price is frowning.  The easiest explanation would be to say the market is missing the story. But markets, especially when they refuse to reward strong earnings, are usually signaling something more subtle: they are questioning not whether profits were earned, but how those profits were earned and how durable those pro...

Max’s Group and the Half-Life of Market Hype, from Boom to Bust

There was a time when Max’s Group looked less like a sleepy restaurant stock and more like the next great Philippine consumer platform. In 2014, the market was not merely buying fried chicken, pancakes, and pizza. The market was buying a story — the story of a newly enlarged listed restaurant company, transformed from Pancake House into Max’s Group, armed with a portfolio of beloved brands, a national footprint, and the promise of aggressive expansion.  That excitement was not irrational, at least not at first. The corporate transformation was dramatic. Max’s acquired control of Pancake House in early 2014, and the listed company then absorbed 20 Max’s-related entities in a roughly ₱4.05-billion share-swap that effectively turned Pancake House into the public vehicle for the broader Max’s restaurant empire. By the second half of 2014, the company had changed its name to Max’s Group Inc., and the market was suddenly staring at a much larger restaurant platform rather than a single l...