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...
Belle Corp.’s first-quarter filing points to firmer gaming activity at City of Dreams Manila, suggesting the pressure that dogged Entertainment City through much of 2025 may be starting to ease — a signal investors will be watching closely ahead of Bloomberry’s own quarterly report. One of the earliest clues on how Metro Manila’s casino district began 2026 arrived not from a pure gaming operator, but from its landlord. Belle Corp., the property company tied to City of Dreams Manila, reported that its share in gaming revenue from the integrated resort rose 12% in the first quarter to ₱485.7 million , while lease income from the property held essentially steady at ₱587.6 million . For investors searching for signs that the Bay Area gaming market is finding firmer footing after a difficult 2025, that combination matters: the fixed real-estate income stayed intact, while the variable casino-linked piece improved. The figures do not give a full property-level income statement for City of D...