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GCash’s Parent Is Making Banks Look Less Profitable

Mynt, the company behind GCash, is showing the power of platform finance: fewer branches, more transactions, and far better profit conversion than two established banks. In 1Q26, it generated more revenue, more than twice the profit, and a much fatter margin than RCBC and Security Bank.   A curious thing happened in Philippine finance in the first quarter of 2026. Two established universal banks, RCBC and Security Bank , each  generated roughly ₱17bn in operating income and about ₱2.7bn in net income. Mynt , the parent company of GCash , reported higher revenue of ₱20.9bn and net income of ₱5.6bn.  The comparison is not perfect. Banks and fintech platforms do different things. RCBC and Security Bank take deposits, make loans, manage capital, absorb credit losses, and operate within a dense regulatory framework. Mynt sits at the heart of the daily financial habits of millions of mobile users. Yet the contrast is revealing. In 1Q26, Mynt was not merely bigger than these tw...
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How a Mynt IPO Could Hand Globe a ₱139B Paper Gain—and Ayala ₱12B

  The GCash parent’s listing would not create cash gains if neither shareholder sells. But it could reveal how much hidden value sits inside Globe and Ayala’s balance sheets. The most interesting asset in Philippine telecoms is no longer a tower, a fiber line, or a slice of spectrum. It is a financial app. Mynt, the company behind GCash, is moving toward a public listing after Globe disclosed that Mynt’s board and shareholders had authorized filings for a potential IPO. The proposed offer is expected to represent about 12% of Mynt’s post-IPO capital , through a mix of primary and secondary shares. Reuters earlier reported that Mynt was seeking a valuation of at least US$8bn , although the final price, timing, and structure remain subject to regulators and market conditions. For Globe Telecom and Ayala Corporation , the IPO is not simply a chance for Mynt to raise capital. It is a moment of revelation. Both companies already own pieces of Mynt. Both already show those stakes somewh...

Security Bank’s Q1 2026 Results: NIM Expansion, Provision Drag and Mark-to-Market Pain

  Security Bank widened its net interest margin and lifted core spread income in the first quarter, but higher credit-loss provisions, trading and foreign-exchange losses, and unrealized FVOCI mark-to-market losses kept the results from becoming a clean earnings-growth story. For a bank, a wider net interest margin is usually the closest thing to good weather. Loans and securities earn more than deposits and borrowings cost; the balance sheet breathes easier; profits should follow. In the first quarter of 2026, Security Bank Corporation seemed to enjoy just such a climate. Its net interest margin widened to 5.36% , from 4.51% a year earlier, while net interest income jumped 27.6% to ₱15.16bn . Interest income rose to ₱19.92bn , but the larger story was on the funding side: interest expense fell to ₱4.76bn from ₱6.76bn . Yet the weather did not hold. The bank’s bottom line slipped. Net income fell to ₱2.70bn , down from ₱2.82bn a year earlier; earnings per share declined to ₱3.5...

PLDT’s data-center dividend test

  VITRO REIT will show whether Philippine investors will accept infrastructure growth in exchange for a lower yield. PLDT’s VITRO REIT is not merely a property flotation. It is a test of whether investors will value Philippine data centers as critical infrastructure, operating platforms, and income-producing real estate. The Philippines’ newest real-estate story contains little real estate of the familiar sort. There are no malls to fill, no office towers to lease to call centers, no residential towers to sell by the square meter. The proposed VITRO REIT consists of data halls, racks, cooling systems, power redundancy, and fiber connections—the dull but indispensable plumbing of a digital economy. Its sponsor, ePLDT , a wholly owned subsidiary of PLDT , plans to sell up to 2.2bn existing shares , including the over-allotment option, at up to ₱11 a share , potentially raising ₱24.2bn through a secondary offering. VITRO REIT itself will receive none of the proceeds; the money g...

RCBC vs UBP Q1 2026: Rising Rates Boost Margins but Expose Bond Losses

RCBC vs UBP Q1 2026 Results: How Rising Interest Rates Hit Yuchengco and Aboitiz Banks Differently In banking, interest rates are not simply a blessing or a curse. They come as a bargain. Wider margins can fatten the income statement, while the same market forces can bruise the balance sheet through bond losses that sit quietly in other comprehensive income. In the first quarter of 2026, that bargain looked much kinder to Aboitiz-backed Union Bank of the Philippines than to Yuchengco-led Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation . UBP reported ₱3.83 billion in net income, up 167 percent from a year earlier, while RCBC posted ₱2.7 billion , up 11.6 percent .  The contrast was not that RCBC failed to benefit from the rate environment. It did. The bank’s net interest income rose 25 percent to ₱15.4 billion , a strong performance driven by better yields and a sharp decline in interest expense. Its net interest margin improved to 5.2 percent , from 4.8 percent at year-end 2025. But the ...

RCBC Q1 2026: Yuchengco’s Bank Widens the Margin but Feels the Market’s Mark

  Higher rates fattened RCBC’s lending spread. They also punished the value of its bond book. For banks, higher interest rates are both tonic and toxin. They can widen the gap between what a lender earns on loans and securities and what it pays depositors. But they can also bruise the value of bonds already sitting on the balance sheet. RCBC’s first-quarter 2026 results captured that paradox neatly. Yuchengco’s bank reported net income of ₱2.7 billion , up 11.6% year on year , as net interest income surged. Yet its total comprehensive income was only ₱223 million , sharply reduced by a ₱2.54 billion fair-value loss on debt instruments classified at fair value through other comprehensive income, or FVOCI .  The profit-and-loss account told the cheerful half of the story. RCBC’s net interest income rose to ₱15.4 billion from ₱12.3 billion , an increase of about 25% . Its net interest margin improved to 5.2% from 4.8% , a substantial move in a business where margins are usually m...

The Grid Repricing: SGP’s 10.77% drop signals impact of BSP’s rate reset

H ow higher BSP rates punctured SGP’s income-stock rally There are days when the stock market merely changes its mind. Then there are days when it slams the door. On June 22nd, Synergy Grid and Development Phils., Inc. — SGP to the market — suffered the latter. The stock closed at ₱29.00 , down ₱3.50 , or 10.77% , from its previous close of ₱32.50 . Volume reached 19.04 million shares , far above ordinary trading levels, while the day’s range stretched from ₱31.50 to ₱27.00 . For a company often treated as a placid infrastructure-income proxy, the violence of the move was striking. The immediate temptation is to search for a smoking gun: a regulatory shock, a dividend cut, a disclosure tucked away in the afternoon. None was obvious in the visible PSE feed. Recently disclosed items included an annual corporate governance report in late May, a quarterly report in mid-May, and earlier material information filings, but no clear June 22nd bombshell in the visible list. The better explanati...