Skip to main content

Posts

Cosco Parent’s Profit Surge Shows Puregold Remains the Co Family’s Cash Engine

Cosco Capital Inc., the listed holding company associated with the Lucio L. Co group, delivered a sharp rise in parent-company earnings in 2025, underscoring a familiar reality for investors: beneath the conglomerate structure, the cash engine remains grocery retail. The company’s separate financial statements show dividend income climbed to ₱3.90 billion in 2025 from ₱2.39 billion a year earlier, a roughly 63% increase that lifted parent-company net income to ₱3.84 billion from ₱2.37 billion in 2024. For Cosco, the parent company’s income statement is less a story of operating margins than of upstreamed cash. As a holding company, Cosco recognizes dividend income when its right to receive payment is established, and its investments in subsidiaries are carried at cost in the separate financial statements. That makes the parent accounts a clean window into which subsidiaries are actually sending cash upstairs. The answer in 2025 was clear: Puregold Price Club Inc. remained the core...
Recent posts

Razon’s Manila Water Delivers Stronger Earnings, But Wawa Deal Recasts Balance Sheet

  Manila Water Co., the utility chaired by billionaire Enrique K. Razon Jr., opened 2026 with the kind of earnings profile investors usually want from a regulated water business: higher tariffs, stable demand, better operating efficiency and stronger contributions from domestic subsidiaries. But beneath the headline profit growth, the quarter also marked a balance-sheet reset, as the company absorbed the financing consequences of its WawaJVCo acquisition. The company’s first-quarter results showed net income attributable to Manila Water shareholders rising 24% to ₱4.42 billion , while consolidated net income climbed 30% to ₱4.84 billion . Total revenues increased 11% to ₱10.63 billion , and EBITDA rose 14% to ₱7.87 billion , lifting EBITDA margin to about 74% . The earnings momentum was led by the East Zone concession and WawaJVCo, now reviewed by management as a combined operating segment after Manila Water completed its acquisition of WawaJVCo in September 2025. The segment’s com...

San Miguel’s Parent Company Keeps Funding the Future as Debt Wall Nears

  San Miguel Corporation’s parent company entered 2026 much as it has operated for years: as the financing nerve center of one of the Philippines’ most ambitious conglomerates, directing capital toward power, food, infrastructure, property, and other strategic subsidiaries while carrying the weight of a large debt stack on its own balance sheet. The 2025 parent-company accounts show a business whose asset base remained broadly stable, with total assets rising slightly to ₱1.275 trillion from ₱1.253 trillion a year earlier. But the stability in assets masked a more leveraged capital structure: total liabilities climbed to ₱789.1 billion from ₱719.7 billion , while equity fell to ₱486.3 billion from ₱533.5 billion .  At the center of the story is a familiar San Miguel theme: funding growth platforms before they fully pay back the parent. Investments in subsidiaries reached ₱855.1 billion in 2025, with major holdings including San Miguel Food and Beverage, SMC Infrastructure...

Rockwell’s Profit Surge Shows Lopez Property Arm Has Yet to Catch the Family Fever

  Rockwell Land Corp. delivered the kind of quarter that lets investors look past family drama — at least for now. The Lopez-led property developer posted ₱6.46 billion in consolidated revenue in the first quarter, up 45% from ₱4.45 billion a year earlier, powered by stronger residential project recognition and a sharp rebound in leasing. Revenue from real estate sales climbed to ₱4.46 billion from ₱3.10 billion , while lease income rose to ₱1.02 billion from ₱642 million , the company said in its quarterly filing.  More important for shareholders, profit growth outran the top line. Net income rose 52% to ₱1.43 billion , from ₱943 million a year earlier, while net income attributable to parent shareholders surged 67% to ₱1.29 billion . Earnings per share improved to ₱0.21 , from ₱0.13 .  That makes Rockwell an outlier in the Lopez orbit: a company still presenting a straightforward growth story while the broader clan is absorbed in a messy leadership battle involvin...

OceanaGold’s Golden Run Comes With a Catch: The Dividend Needs High Prices

  OceanaGold Philippines Inc. has turned into one of the Philippine market’s cleaner post-IPO success stories: a miner that listed at a discounted price, rode a powerful gold rally, and quickly became a high-yield cash-return vehicle for investors. The stock began trading on the Philippine Stock Exchange on May 13, 2024 , after a secondary offer of 456 million shares at ₱13.33 each , representing a 20% public float in the company that holds the Didipio gold-copper mine. The IPO raised about ₱6.08 billion , or roughly US$106 million , for OceanaGold’s parent group. Less than two years later, OGP has done what many IPOs fail to do: reward early buyers. Shares closed at ₱37.30 on May 7, 2026 , according to BusinessWorld, almost triple the IPO price before counting dividends. Since listing, OGP has also paid a string of cash dividends, including distributions of about ₱0.378, ₱0.810, ₱0.576, ₱0.418, ₱0.629, ₱0.824 and ₱0.977 per share from 2024 through March 2026, based on dividend tr...

Consunji Tightens the Dividend Tap as Semirara Pause Ripples Through DMC

  The Consunji group’s latest dividend decision carried a message investors could not miss: cash is still ample, but the easy payout cycle is getting harder to defend. DMCI Holdings Inc. declared a ₱0.30-per-share regular cash dividend on May 7, payable June 5 to shareholders of record as of May 21, for a total payout of about ₱3.98 billion . That compares with last year’s March declaration of ₱0.35 regular plus ₱0.25 special , or ₱0.60 per share , totaling about ₱7.97 billion .  The cutback comes as the group’s key earnings engine, Semirara Mining and Power Corp. , has yet to make its usual first-half dividend declaration for 2026. Dividend trackers showed no declared Semirara dividend for 2026 as of early May , while Semirara had approved a ₱1.25 regular dividend and ₱0.75 special dividend in March 2025, payable in April.  For a company long favored by yield investors, that sequence matters. DMC’s payout is not simply a boardroom gesture; it is a reflection of cash fl...

SM Prime’s Profit Machine Keeps Humming. The Condo Engine Is Sputtering.

  SM Prime Holdings Inc. entered 2025 with the kind of problem many property companies would envy: revenue barely moved, but profit still climbed to a record. The Sy family-led developer posted ₱48.85 billion in net income attributable to the parent , up 7% from a year earlier, even as consolidated revenue rose only to ₱141.11 billion from ₱140.39 billion — a gain of about 1% . The result was less a story of explosive expansion than of a company squeezing more earnings out of a vast real-estate platform anchored by malls, rentals, hotels and convention centers. The headline was reassuring: SM Prime is still making more money. The subtext was more complicated: its most cyclical business, residential development, is flashing caution. Recurring Income Does the Heavy Lifting SM Prime’s recurring-income engine remained the center of gravity. Rental income rose 6% to ₱83.57 billion , with malls accounting for most of that stream. The company’s mall segment generated about ₱85.1 billio...