We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer: This is for informational purposes and is not investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. If there’s one phrase that captures Megawide Construction Corporation’s nine-month performance to September 30, 2025, it’s this: profit resilience amid a cyclical slowdown . The company managed to keep earnings in the black— ₱501 million in net income —even as revenues pulled back to ₱12.3 billion , down ₱4.04 billion year-on-year . That headline result deserves both applause and scrutiny. Applause, because a construction-heavy group surviving a downshift without collapsing margins is not trivial. Scrutiny, because the numbers also reveal an uncomfortable truth: Megawide is still largely tethered to a business that is inherently lumpy, and it is carrying a financing s...
We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer: This is for informational purposes and is not investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. By the numbers, Pryce Corporation (PPC) is having a vintage year. By the market’s temperament, it still trades like it has something to prove. Pryce Corporation’s third-quarter filing reads like the kind of report investors usually reward: nine-month net income surged 35.1% year-on-year to ₱2.99 billion , while revenues rose 10.6% to ₱16.97 billion . The headline isn’t just growth—it’s quality of growth, with profitability ratios moving in the right direction: net margin improved to 20.8% , ROE climbed to 17.33% , and ROA rose to 12.26% . And yet, for all this fundamental muscle, PPC often sits in that familiar Philippine-market category: the steady earner that still looks c...