In the Philippines’ small fraternity of listed holding companies, A. Soriano Corporation (ANSCOR) looks, at first glance, like a relic from an older business age: an investment house with old-family roots, a sprawling portfolio, and an address in Makati. Yet its modern shape is more interesting than that. ANSCOR is less a sleepy conglomerate than a hybrid machine—part public-markets investor, part owner of operating businesses, part collector of dividends and fees from a web of subsidiaries and associates. In 2025, the group reported ₱36.2bn in consolidated assets, ₱19.5bn in revenues and gains, and ₱5.53bn in net income , while the parent company itself earned ₱5.60bn and kept enough unrestricted retained earnings to declare a ₱0.50-a-share regular cash dividend for payment on April 8th 2026 . To understand ANSCOR, one must resist the temptation to treat it as a simple industrial company. Its most visible operating assets are concrete enough: Phelps Dodge Philippines En...
There is a temptation, when a company posts handsome headline earnings, to stop reading just as the numbers become interesting. First Gen’s 2025 results invite exactly that mistake. The group reported a stronger consolidated profit, helped in no small part by the sale of 60% of its gas business to Prime Infra and the resulting gain on sale, deconsolidation effects, and associate income. Yet the more revealing story lies elsewhere: in Energy Development Corporation, or EDC, the renewable-energy platform that now carries a larger share of First Gen’s strategic identity—and, increasingly, its valuation burden. EDC is not merely one asset among many. It is the center of gravity of First Gen’s continuing business. In 2025, EDC contributed about US$785.7m of First Gen’s consolidated electricity-sale revenues, or roughly 87% of the total, and it accounted for around 1,464.76 MW of installed renewable capacity. After the gas-business sell-down reduced First Gen’s consolidated po...