A holding company that collected billions in dividends, borrowed heavily, and still found itself pouring money into a subsidiary it would soon have to gut Conglomerates are meant to be shock absorbers. When one business stumbles, the others carry it. Cash from food, property, and mature investments is supposed to steady the weak leg of the empire until the cycle turns. In 2025, JG Summit Holdings’ parent company discovered the limits of that idea. The parent collected ₱19.604 billion in dividends in 2025. Under normal circumstances, that would have been the sort of number that justifies a holding-company discount: real cash extracted from a sprawling portfolio, available for debt service, redeployment or distributions to shareholders. But 2025 was not normal. The same parent-company cash-flow statement shows ₱45.633 billion of additional investments in subsidiaries . The dividends were not enough even to cover the cash rescue, much less the parent’s operating cash burn. The parent al...
For a distributor of spirits, The Keepers Holdings looks surprisingly sober on paper. Sales are rising, cash generation is strong, and, most strikingly, money parked in short-term instruments is already enough to extinguish the group’s entire trade-and-other-payables line. The worry is not solvency. It is margin. In the liquor business, glamour tends to sit on the label while risk lurks in the warehouse. Importers and distributors live with working-capital demands, fickle consumer tastes and the occasional ambush from foreign exchange. The Keepers Holdings, the Philippine drinks distributor behind a portfolio dominated by Alfonso brandy, finished 2025 with none of the harried look that often accompanies growth in consumer goods. Total assets rose to ₱23.26 billion , equity climbed to ₱19.22 billion and total liabilities stood at a modest ₱4.04 billion ; the company’s debt-to-equity ratio was just 0.21 times , while its current ratio remained a lofty 4.48 times . That is the lang...