Two Philippine property firms sell aspiration. One has turned it into a fast-growing urban village machine; the other into a quieter luxury balance sheet. In Philippine property law, “premium” is an elastic term. It can mean a marble lobby, a Makati address, a concierge, a mall with a better perfume cloud, or simply the ability to borrow billions without looking desperate. In the first quarter of 2026, Rockwell Land and Shang Properties offered two different definitions of the term. Rockwell looked like the more energetic builder: bigger, faster-growing, and more aggressive. Shang looked like the more patrician owner: slower, richer in equity, and cushioned by hotels, malls and trophy addresses. The numbers tell the first story plainly. Rockwell reported ₱6.455bn in consolidated revenue , up 45% from a year earlier, while net income rose to ₱1.433bn and income attributable to the parent climbed 67% to ₱1.291bn . Its growth came mainly from residential development, which supplied ₱...
The Philippine ingredients maker has left its capex headache behind. Now comes the harder problem: selling more. For much of the past few years, investors in D&L Industries had a simple question: when would the Batangas plant stop consuming capital and start producing returns? In the first quarter of 2026, the answer became clearer. The new facility, once the centerpiece of a heavy investment cycle and a drag on financial ratios, has now logged its sixth consecutive profitable quarter . Capital spending, no longer the main strain on the balance sheet, has faded from the foreground. But business stories rarely end when construction does. With the plant finally contributing, a more prosaic but more important question has taken its place: can D&L grow revenues again? The company’s first-quarter results offered a study in contrasts. Net income rose 5% year on year to ₱716.7m , a respectable showing in a volatile environment. Gross margin improved to 13.4% , from 12.7% a year...