Skip to main content

Posts

DDMPR’s 9% Yield Comes With a Catch: The Rent Engine Is Sputtering

DDMP REIT Inc. is still paying like a high-yield income machine. The question for investors is whether the machine’s engine is running as smoothly as the dividend headline suggests. The office landlord behind the DD Meridian Park portfolio ended 2025 with enough distributable income to keep dividends flowing, declaring about ₱0.09337 per share for the year. At a share price of ₱1.02 , that translates to a yield of roughly 9.15% ; at ₱1.06 , the yield is still about 8.81% . Its May 2026 dividend of ₱0.024222 per share , if annualized, points to around ₱0.0969 per share , or about 9.14% at ₱1.06 . DDMPR also declared around 95% of 2025 distributable income , above the REIT law’s minimum distribution threshold.  For dividend hunters in the Philippine market, that is hard to ignore. But beneath the payout, DDMPR’s 2025 results show a portfolio still dealing with the aftershocks of tenant churn, rental concessions, and uneven occupancy. Rental income fell to ₱1.61 billion in 2025 , dow...
Recent posts

ICTSI’s Growth Engine Roars as New Terminals Lift Volumes and Cash Conversion Surges

International Container Terminal Services Inc. began 2026 with the kind of quarter that shows why ports can be a powerful compounding business when volume growth, pricing, and operating discipline move together. The Enrique Razon-led port operator handled 4.08 million TEUs in the first quarter, up 17.7% from a year earlier, as new operations in Durban, South Africa , and Batam, Indonesia , transformed the group’s volume profile. The lift was especially visible in EMEA, where throughput jumped 40.7% , while Asia rose 12.7% and the Americas gained 10.2% .  The new assets did much of the heavy lifting. ICTSI said consolidated volume would have grown by only 1.4% without the contribution of Durban Gateway Terminal and Batu Ampar Container Terminal , underscoring how much of the quarter’s expansion came from recent portfolio additions.  But the quarter was not merely a story of more boxes moving through more gates. Revenue rose faster than volume, with gross revenues from port...

DigiPlus Bets Its Online Gaming Jackpot on a Losing Casino

  As digital revenues slow and margins compress, the BingoPlus operator is using cash from its online gaming boom to buy into a loss-making Manila hotel-casino — while shareholders get a regular dividend, not a windfall payout. DigiPlus Interactive Corp.’s online gaming boom has left it with one of the stronger balance sheets in Philippine gaming. But instead of handing shareholders a special windfall dividend, the company is deploying billions of pesos into a very different wager: a land-based casino operator that is still losing money, renovating heavily, and carrying the burden of a planned integrated-resort transformation. In March, DigiPlus booked a ₱5.9 billion cash outflow for convertible notes issued by Hong Kong-listed International Entertainment Corp., whose key asset is New Coast Hotel Manila, an integrated hotel and casino complex licensed by PAGCOR.  The deal is framed by management as a strategic bridge between DigiPlus’ digital gaming empire — BingoPlus, ArenaPl...

Wilcon’s 6.48% Yield Masks 180-Basis-Point Gross Margin Squeeze

Wilcon Depot Inc. is asking investors to believe in two things at once: that the Philippine home-improvement retailer can keep expanding its store network, and that its thinning margins are temporary rather than structural. The company’s first-quarter numbers gave both bulls and skeptics something to hold on to. Net sales climbed 9.1% to ₱9.17 billion , helped by new stores and a 4.7% rise in same-store comparable sales . Net income also rose, but by a slower 4.9% to ₱563 million , underscoring the main tension in Wilcon’s latest report: revenue growth is still there, but it is no longer flowing cleanly to the bottom line.  The biggest warning sign was gross margin. Wilcon’s gross profit margin fell by about 180 basis points to 37.0% , from 38.8% a year earlier, as the company cited an unfavorable sales mix and a lower contribution from higher-margin exclusive and in-house brands. Those brands accounted for 51.7% of net sales , down from 52.2% in the year-earlier quarter.  F...

Yuchengcos’ House of Investments Becomes a Listed Insurance-Exposure Play

House of Investments Inc. is starting to look like a different animal. Long viewed as a diversified Yuchengco holding company, HI is increasingly becoming a listed route into the group’s insurance and financial-services cash flows. The change is showing up most clearly at the parent-company level, where dividend income — not operating revenue — is now the main earnings engine. In 2025, HI parent booked ₱806.2 million in dividend income , composed of ₱714.7 million from subsidiaries , ₱86.5 million from associates , and ₱5.0 million from entities under common control . Parent net income was ₱855.3 million , meaning dividends accounted for almost all of the parent’s profit base. That is the core of the investment story: HI is no longer just a conglomerate with scattered assets. It is becoming a dividend platform, and the platform is increasingly tilted toward insurance and financial services. The group’s financial-services segment generated about ₱30.99 billion in 2025 revenue and rough...

Injap Sia’s Silence Deepens Unease Over DDMP REIT’s Missing May Dividend

  For a REIT, silence is rarely neutral. DDMP REIT Inc., the DoubleDragon-backed property trust chaired by Edgar “Injap” Sia II, has not shown the usual May dividend rhythm that income investors have come to expect, while publicly indexed records reviewed as of May 5 point to the latest available annual report being for fiscal year 2024, filed in May 2025.  That matters because DDMPR has built part of its investor appeal on predictable cash distributions. In 2024 and 2025, the company declared dividends that led to May payments: ₱0.023137 per share paid May 31, 2024, and ₱0.022568 per share paid May 30, 2025. This year, however, dividend trackers showed only one 2026 payout so far — ₱0.024043 per share, paid in February — and no upcoming dividend declared as of early May.  The absence of a May declaration is not automatically a breach of the REIT framework. Philippine REITs are required to distribute at least 90% of distributable income annually, not necessarily in equal ...

Kuok’s Philippine Flagship, Shang, Faces a Margin Squeeze as Condo Profits Thin

  For years, Shang Properties Inc. carried the hallmarks of its Kuok Group lineage: premium addresses, disciplined balance-sheet management, and a shareholder base accustomed to steady cash returns. But the Philippine developer’s latest results show a sharper pressure point emerging beneath the surface of its high-end brand — condominium margins are thinning fast. The company’s condominium gross margin fell to about 34.3% in 2025 , down from around 53.7% in 2024 and 59.9% in 2023 , marking a steep reset in profitability for one of the group’s most important swing businesses. Condominium revenue also declined about 17% year-on-year to ₱3.62 billion , while the cost of sales rose relative to revenue. Put another way, Shang’s cost-to-revenue ratio in condominium sales jumped to roughly 65.7% in 2025 from about 46.4% a year earlier — a reversal that matters not just for earnings, but for dividends. For a company often viewed by local investors as a premium property name with an attr...

RFM’s Cash Flow Turns Negative as Joey Concepcion Revs Up Growth Spending

  Joey Concepcion has long preached the gospel of entrepreneurship to small businesses. In the first quarter, the RFM Corp. chief appeared to be applying the same playbook inside one of the Philippines’ better-known food companies: sell more, reinvest harder, and accept a little cash-flow discomfort along the way. RFM’s first-quarter numbers had the look of a company leaning into growth. Revenue rose 10% to ₱4.97 billion , while net income climbed 10% to ₱341 million , helped by stronger operations and higher other income. The company said sales were driven by improved volumes across both its Consumer and Institutional segments, with the broader investor read being that volume gains were complemented by pricing actions in key product lines.  But beneath the earnings growth was a more complicated cash-flow story. RFM generated ₱115 million in operating cash flow in the quarter, then spent ₱194 million on property, plant and equipment. On that basis, free cash flow swung negat...