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Seven-Eleven Q1 2026 Sales Rise, Costs Rise Faster

Philippine Seven’s sales machine is humming again. Its cash machine, for now, is working harder than it looks. At first glance, Philippine Seven Corporation’s first quarter looked like the sort of result a retailer might happily place near the till: more customers, more stores, more sales. Systemwide sales rose by 13.2% to ₱26.09bn , while revenue from contracts with customers climbed 14.2% to ₱24.84bn . Same-store sales growth, the industry’s favored test of whether existing shops are doing more than merely existing, rebounded to 4.4% , a sharp reversal from the 1.2% decline recorded a year earlier. Net income, too, rose—though by a more modest 4.7% to ₱628.8m .  But retail is a business of small margins and large numbers. In the Philippine Seven’s case, the large numbers are getting larger, and not all in the right places. The company’s general and administrative expenses rose 19.2% to ₱7.48bn , handily outpacing revenue growth. What the top line gave, utilities, manpower, logis...
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Sta. Lucia’s Q1 2026: The Inventory Mountain Grows Again, but Margins Save the Quarter

  Sta. Lucia Land’s first-quarter results show a developer earning better margins from fewer climbers In property, as in mountaineering, altitude can be impressive until the air thins. Sta. Lucia Land, Inc. began 2026 with a balance sheet that still looked vast, national, and land-rich. But its first-quarter figures also showed that the company’s central challenge from 2025 has not gone away. The inventory mountain grew again . Cash declined further. Debt was pushed farther into the future, but not extinguished. Demand remained soft. Yet, in a twist that will please accountants more than salesmen, margins improved materially because the properties sold in the quarter were more profitable ones.  The headline number was reassuring at first glance. Net income rose slightly to ₱949.37m in the first quarter of 2026 , from ₱938.05m a year earlier. That was achieved despite total income falling to ₱2.47bn , from ₱2.64bn in the first quarter of 2025. The business, therefore, earned...

The Gaisanos vs. the Cos: Q1 2026 Reveals the Checkout Gap Between Metro Retail and Puregold

  In Q1 2026, the Gaisanos’ MRSGI had a margin. Lucio Co’s Puregold had machinery. In Philippine retailing, scale is not merely a matter of size. It is a machine for turning footfall into profit. The first-quarter results of the Gaisanos’ Metro Retail Stores Group Inc. and Lucio Co’s Puregold Price Club Inc. show two companies operating in the same broad trade, but with very different economics. MRSGI is not standing still: sales rose, food retail improved, and net income nearly doubled from a low base. But Puregold’s quarter was of another order altogether: faster growth, better store productivity, stronger operating leverage and profitability that makes the comparison look less like a rivalry than a lesson in scale. MRSGI reported ₱9.38bn in net sales in the first quarter of 2026, up 5.4% from a year earlier. Food retail grew 6.3% , while general merchandise rose 2.5% . Blended same-store sales increased 2.9% , a respectable performance for a retailer with exposure to both su...

Gaisano’s Narrow Aisles: MRSGI’s Q1 2026 Results

The Cebuano retailer is still growing. But MRSGI’s first-quarter numbers show how hard it is to challenge the empires of the Gokongweis, Sys, and Cos when every peso of sales leaves barely a centavo of profit. In Philippine retailing, scale is destiny. The Sys have malls and supermarkets; the Gokongweis have Robinsons Retail; the Cos have Puregold and S&R. Against these families stands a Cebuano contender: Metro Retail Stores Group Inc. , a Visayas-rooted operator of supermarkets, department stores, and hypermarkets. Its pitch is familiar but formidable—serve the everyday Filipino shopper, expand store by store, and turn regional strength into national relevance. MRSGI’s first-quarter results for 2026 suggest that the company is still very much in the game. Net sales rose 5.4% to ₱9.38bn , from ₱8.90bn a year earlier. Food retail, the steadier half of the business, grew 6.3% , while general merchandise rose 2.5% . Same-store sales increased by 2.9%, a useful sign that growth was no...

Sta. Lucia’s 2025 results: An Inventory Mountain, and Fewer Climbers

  In Philippine property, land is both a promise and a burden. For Sta. Lucia Land, Inc. , the promise remains vast: subdivisions, townhouses, condominiums, condotels, malls, and commercial estates spread across the archipelago. But in 2025, the burden became harder to ignore. The company’s annual results showed a developer still rich in assets, still geographically broad, still backed by a formidable sales network—but suddenly facing a colder real estate market. Revenue fell by about 23% , net income dropped by about 43% , and returns on equity nearly halved to 7.5% from 14.06% a year earlier. Sta. Lucia’s story has long been one of provincial reach. While bigger rivals crowded Metro Manila’s towers and master-planned townships, SLI dug into the country’s secondary cities and growth corridors. It has developed more than 12,000 hectares into over 300 projects across 13 regions and more than 70 cities and municipalities —a sprawling footprint that few Philippine developers can ...

The Lopezes’ Thin Drip at the Top

The Lopezes are fighting over an empire whose operating assets sit far below them, while only a modest stream of dividends reaches the family apex. At first glance, the Lopez family quarrel looks like a fight over power: board seats, patriarchal authority, corporate succession, and the right to speak for one of the Philippines’ oldest business dynasties. Look closer, however, and it becomes something more modern and more uncomfortable: a fight over a pyramid whose jewels sit far below the family holding company, while the cash reaching the summit has become surprisingly thin. The latest spark is First Gen, the listed power producer under First Philippine Holdings and Lopez Holdings, where the family dispute has spilled over into allegations of a ₱50bn hydropower “premium” paid in connection with First Gen’s investment in Prime Infrastructure’s pumped-storage projects. The Lopez majority bloc has questioned the economics and disclosure of the deal; First Gen has responded that the final...