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Aboitiz Equity Ventures Runs on Power—and the Parent Company’s 2025 Books Show It

  If there is a single line that explains Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc. at the parent-company level, it is this: the holding company is still fundamentally powered by utility and power generation , and Aboitiz Power Corp. remains the engine under the hood. In 2025, the parent company booked ₱18.20 billion in dividend income out of ₱19.79 billion in total revenues—meaning roughly 92% of parent-company revenue came from dividends rather than direct operating activity. And the biggest contributor by far was Aboitiz Power , which remitted ₱8.99 billion to the parent—almost half of the total dividend stream.  That matters because the parent-company statements of AEV do not read like those of a factory, retailer, or bank. They read like the financial nerve center of a conglomerate: a balance sheet dominated by investments, an income statement driven by upstream cash distributions, and a cash-flow statement that shows how those remittances are recycled into dividends, debt ser...
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Consunji-Led Semirara Taps ₱5 Billion Credit Line as Stockpiles Rise and Collections Slow

  The Philippines’ biggest coal miner entered 2026 with a familiar strength — profit — and an unfamiliar tell: it had to lean on bank funding just as its usual first-half dividend window passed without a payout. Semirara Mining and Power Corp. reported ₱3.82 billion in first-quarter net income, down 12% from a year earlier, while cash on hand more than doubled to ₱10.58 billion . But the stronger cash balance came with a catch: the company also drew ₱5.0 billion in new loan proceeds during the quarter, even as receivables swelled to ₱10.08 billion and inventories climbed to ₱18.69 billion .  That combination — robust earnings, weakening cash conversion, and fresh borrowing — is not the profile investors have grown used to from Semirara. For years, the company has been treated by many local shareholders as a kind of cyclical cash machine: a miner-power producer with a habit of sending money back in the spring and, often, again later in the year. Its own investor-relations ...

Meralco Emerges as JG Summit’s Largest Dividend Engine After Gokongwei’s Long Bet

  For years, JG Summit Holdings Inc. was known first for the businesses the Gokongwei family built and controlled — from Universal Robina Corp. to Robinsons Land Corp. and Cebu Air Inc. But in 2025, the most important cash engine at the parent company came from a different corner of the portfolio: Manila Electric Co.   At the parent-company level, Meralco delivered about ₱7.45 billion in dividends to JG Summit in 2025, made up of a ₱4.08 billion payout declared in February and another ₱3.37 billion declared in July . That was enough to overtake Universal Robina Corp. , JG Summit’s flagship food unit, which contributed about ₱5.11 billion through two dividends of ₱2.43 billion and ₱2.68 billion . In other words, the Gokongweis’ long-standing stake in the country’s biggest power distributor produced roughly ₱2.34 billion more cash for the parent than its core branded-food subsidiary. The numbers underscore how valuable the Meralco investment has become for the holding c...

Maynilad’s Q1 Results Echo an Earlier PLDT Playbook

The water utility’s latest quarter points to a familiar Philippine infrastructure equation: resilient demand, heavy capital spending, meaningful leverage, and dividends that can run ahead of near-term free cash flow. Maynilad Water Services Inc. delivered the kind of first-quarter numbers that normally reassure investors in a defensive utility. Revenue rose 6.2% to ₱9.09 billion in the three months ended March 31, while net income climbed 10.3% to ₱3.99 billion , helped by higher billed volumes, tariff support, and a broader customer base. The company also kept improving service indicators, with billed volume up to 136.1 million cubic meters , non-revenue water down to 30.7% at period-end, and service coverage inching higher.  Yet the quarter also revived an older Manila market archetype — the infrastructure company that pays while it builds. Beneath the headline earnings growth sat a capital structure and cash-flow profile that increasingly resembles PLDT Inc. in its heaviest ...

The Banks Were the Real Cash Cows of the Ty, Zobel and Sy Empires

  Using publicly disclosed 2025 dividend declarations and ownership stakes, Metrobank, BPI and BDO emerge as the biggest identifiable cash spigots to the parent holding companies of GT Capital, Ayala Corp. and SM Investments. When investors look at Philippine conglomerates, the eye usually goes first to malls, property launches, auto sales or telecom towers. But at the parent-company level, the more revealing question is simpler: which subsidiaries actually throw cash up to the holding company? On that test, the answer for the Ty, Zobel and Sy groups is strikingly similar. Their banks — Metrobank for GT Capital Holdings Inc., Bank of the Philippine Islands for Ayala Corp., and BDO Unibank for SM Investments Corp. — were the biggest identifiable dividend engines feeding the top of the house in 2025.  Start with GT Capital . The Ty family holding company’s ownership map ties it directly to Metrobank , and Metrobank’s own disclosures show that GT Capital owns 37.2% of the bank...

How BPI Changed After the Ayalas Made the Gokongweis Junior Partners

Two years after Bank of the Philippine Islands absorbed Robinsons Bank, the 2025 annual report shows a bank that is bigger, broader, and more lucrative — but also one carrying more credit risk, thinner buffers, and a more demanding balancing act. The deal that turned the Gokongwei group into a roughly 6% shareholder in Bank of the Philippine Islands was sold in 2022 as a way to expand BPI’s customer base, deposit franchise, and product reach, while opening the Ayala-led lender to a new corporate ecosystem spanning retail, property, food, and aviation. The merger formally took effect on January 1, 2024 , after regulatory approvals, with BPI as the surviving entity. Two annual cycles later, BPI’s 2025 Integrated Report and year-end earnings suggest that the broad strategic thesis has worked: the bank is larger, more visible, more digitally scaled, and paying bigger dividends. But the numbers also show the price of that expansion — higher bad-loan ratios, a much steeper provisioning bill...

PAL’s Engines Are Humming Again. The Harder Question Is Whether Shareholders Get Paid

  Philippine Airlines parent PAL Holdings Inc. has delivered the kind of first-quarter result that usually revives a familiar investor question: if the airline’s operating machine is finally working better, does the dividend drought end next? The short answer, based on the numbers, is that the business engine is improving faster than the bottom line suggests — but the leap from stronger operations to cash distributions still looks premature. The quarter’s headline figures were solid. Gross revenue rose to ₱52.43 billion in the three months ended March 31, 2026, from ₱46.95 billion a year earlier , while gross expense increased to ₱46.07 billion from ₱42.29 billion . On simple arithmetic, that means the spread between revenue and gross expense widened to about ₱6.36 billion , up from roughly ₱4.66 billion in the year-earlier quarter — a sign that PAL’s core commercial engine is gaining efficiency even in a still-costly airline environment. That is the most important takeaway from...

GT Capital Parent Profit Rides on Dividends as Metrobank, Toyota Fuel 2025 Standalone Results

  GT Capital Holdings Inc.’s parent company delivered a quietly powerful 2025 result, showing how the Philippine conglomerate’s core value still sits less in day-to-day operating revenue and more in the steady extraction of cash from its crown-jewel holdings. On a standalone basis, the holding company posted ₱13.50 billion in net income and ₱14.61 billion in total comprehensive income , with the year’s earnings underpinned by ₱17.35 billion to ₱17.97 billion in dividend income , according to the parent audited financial statements and the company’s 2025 financial reports. The picture that emerges is of a parent entity functioning exactly as a holding company is supposed to: lean at the center, liquid enough to keep funding obligations, and overwhelmingly reliant on dividends from strategic stakes rather than operating turnover generated at the top company level.  The most important detail in those numbers is where the money came from. Metrobank was the biggest dividend contri...