GCash’s vast user base, merchant network, and brand ubiquity still form one of the strongest fintech moats in the Philippines. Yet after Payment Solutions' revenue reached ₱50.3 billion in 2025, Q1 2026 showed slowing momentum, exposing the limits of scale in a regulated, low-take-rate payments business. For years, the genius of GCash was that it made money move before it made money itself. A sari-sari store owner could accept a QR code. A daughter in Cebu could receive cash from Manila. A worker could pay a bill, buy load, cash out, send ₱500, or settle dinner without touching a bank branch. Each tiny movement looked mundane. Together, they became one of the biggest pools of transaction value in Philippine finance: ₱17.0 trillion of Payment Solutions GTV in 2025 , up from ₱9.8 trillion in 2023 . That payments machine is still Mynt’s largest business. In 2025, Payment Solutions Adjusted Revenues reached ₱50.3 billion , accounting for 63.2% of Mynt’s total Adjusted Revenues . But ...
How the country’s largest developer is using AREIT capital recycling to fund the next generation of malls, offices and hotels — while quietly directing a slice back into residential development. Ayala Land Inc. has long sold investors a simple proposition: it owns the land, builds the districts, matures the assets, and then finds ways to recycle capital into the next growth cycle. With AREIT Inc., that machine has become more visible — and more financialized. In its latest reinvestment plans, Ayala Land maps out how it intends to redeploy ₱7.87 billion in net proceeds from two recent AREIT share sales: ₱4.18 billion from the sale of 100 million AREIT shares at ₱41.90 per share, received on Nov. 28, 2025, and ₱3.69 billion from the sale of 88 million AREIT shares at ₱42.00 per share, received on Mar. 3, 2026. The proceeds are required to be reinvested in Philippine real estate and/or infrastructure projects under REIT rules, but Ayala Land’s plans make clear it does not intend to ...