On the screen, ABS-CBN still looks like a going concern with options. Its shares last traded at ₱3.39 , even as the company’s September 30th, 2025 consolidated book value worked out to only about ₱1.77 per share , implying a price-to-book multiple of roughly 1.92 times . In markets, that is the sort of rating ordinarily reserved for firms with a comfortable balance-sheet cushion, or at least a credible story about earnings power just around the corner. ABS-CBN has neither in abundance. The balance sheet is the awkward part. ABS-CBN reported ₱38.54bn of total assets as of September 30th, 2025, against ₱36.95bn of total liabilities, leaving just ₱1.59bn of total equity. Put differently, roughly 96% of the asset base already belongs, in one form or another, to somebody else. Equity is not the substance of the enterprise so much as the thin residue left after everyone else has been heard from. Start with the people who keep the machine running. ABS-CBN had ₱13.07bn i...
A Philippine aviation veteran has become something more complicated—and perhaps more interesting: a holding company whose fortunes now rest on a mix of airport meals, runway logistics, water pipes and a prized maintenance joint venture. For most of its modern life, MacroAsia Corporation has been easiest to describe by the noise around it: jet engines, catering trolleys, baggage carts and hangars. Born in 1970 as a mining concern, it reinvented itself in the 1990s as a holding company and spent the next three decades assembling a portfolio that sits close to the choreography of air travel—feeding passengers, handling aircraft, servicing fleets and operating the economic zones around them. Today, however, the listed Philippine group is no longer merely an aviation adjunct. It is a broader infrastructure-and-services platform whose earnings now depend as much on corporate structure and capital allocation as on aircraft movements. That distinction matters. In 2025 MacroAsia’s consoli...