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...
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...