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Gokongwei’s Robinsons Retail Posts Strong Sales, But Debt Burden Weighs Before PSE Exit

  Robinsons Retail Holdings Inc. is approaching its planned exit from the Philippine Stock Exchange with a message that is both reassuring and complicated: the stores are still growing, but the balance sheet is now doing more of the explaining. The Gokongwei-led retailer posted a strong first quarter operationally, with consolidated net sales rising 10.3% to ₱52.8 billion , supported by 4.1% same-store sales growth , new store contributions and the full-quarter consolidation of Premiumbikes. Core net income rose 6.2% to ₱1.3 billion , suggesting that the underlying retail engine remains healthy even as the company prepares to leave the public market. But the headline profit told a weaker story. Net income attributable to equity holders of the parent fell 35.6% to ₱489 million , dragged down by higher interest expense tied to the DFI share buyback and BPI-related debt, deeper losses from associates, lower dividend income and foreign-exchange losses. That tension — strong stores, wea...
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Lucio Co’s Keepers Posts Profit Gain as Cost Pressures Test Liquor Distributor’s Margins

  Lucio Co’s liquor distribution arm, The Keepers Holdings Inc. , delivered a stronger first-quarter profit as Filipinos bought more spirits, but the company’s latest numbers also showed the squeeze facing import-heavy consumer businesses: higher foreign exchange costs, elevated fuel prices, and another round of excise-tax increases. The company reported net sales of ₱4.31 billion in the three months ended March 31, 2026 , up 6.1% from a year earlier, as total cases sold rose 4% . Brandy remained the group’s anchor category, accounting for 81% of sales value and 84% of sales volume .  But the volume growth came at a cost. Gross margin narrowed to 25.5% from 27.0% a year earlier, as the cost of sales rose faster than revenue. Management attributed the margin decline to high foreign-currency rates, elevated fuel costs, and the annual excise tax increase , while noting that the group did not implement price increases during the first three months of 2026 .  That makes Keep...

Razon’s Bloomberry Posts Loss After VIP, Mass Gaming Weakness

  VIP weakness and softer mass play dragged first-quarter gaming revenue lower, while margin compression pushed the casino operator into a quarterly loss Bloomberry Resorts Corp. opened 2026 with a reminder that even a larger casino footprint does not fully shield an operator from a downturn in gaming demand. The Enrique Razon-led casino operator reported a 12.6% year-on-year decline in consolidated gross gaming revenue to ₱14.67 billion in the first quarter, as VIP and mass-market activity weakened across its Philippine gaming floors. Philippine VIP rolling chip volume fell 39.7% , mass table drop declined 9.9% , and slot coin-in slipped 9.6% , underscoring a broad slowdown in casino play rather than a single-segment softness.  The decline pushed Bloomberry into a materially weaker earnings position. Consolidated EBITDA dropped 32.0% to ₱2.98 billion , while EBITDA margin narrowed to 22.7% from 30.5% a year earlier. Net income swung to a ₱125.0 million loss , compared with ...

Lopezes Fail to Turn Around ABS-CBN’s Fortunes as Weak First Quarter Wipes Out Equity

  ABS-CBN Corp.’s long-running turnaround effort suffered another blow in the first quarter of 2026, as weaker advertising, a shrinking cable business, and compressed gross margins pushed the former broadcasting giant into negative equity. The Lopez-led media company reported a ₱813 million net loss for the three months ended March 31, 2026, wider than the ₱500 million loss a year earlier, as consolidated revenue fell 21% to ₱3.33 billion . Gross profit dropped to ₱527 million from ₱1.02 billion , driving the gross profit ratio down to about 15.8% from roughly 24.0% in Q1 2025. The weak quarter erased what remained of ABS-CBN’s equity cushion. Total equity swung to a ₱66 million deficit from ₱747 million positive equity at end-2025, while the company’s accumulated deficit widened to ₱6.65 billion from ₱5.97 billion . The results underscore how difficult it has been for the Lopezes to rebuild ABS-CBN’s earnings base after the loss of its broadcast franchise. Management has s...

DDMPR Q1 Results Show Modest Strength in Core Rental Business

  DDMP REIT Inc. started 2026 with a quarter that looked weaker at the headline level but steadier underneath, as its core rental business continued to inch forward despite a still-challenging office leasing backdrop. The DoubleDragon-backed real estate investment trust reported first-quarter revenue of ₱471.5 million , down 3.1% from a year earlier, while net income fell 5.2% to ₱359.7 million . The decline, however, masked a modestly positive showing from its main business: rent income rose 3.8% to ₱418.7 million , supported by higher rental rates and variable rentals.  For income investors, the quarter offered a familiar DDMPR story: a debt-light REIT with resilient rent, a high dividend, and lingering questions around occupancy, receivables, and the sustainability of payout growth. The company’s total expenses rose 4.3% to ₱111.8 million , led by higher general and administrative costs, including outsourced services, property maintenance, and insurance. That cost increa...

Shell Pilipinas’ Profit Surge Masks Margin Squeeze as War Roils Oil Markets

Shell Pilipinas Corp. delivered the kind of first-quarter profit jump investors typically cheer. Net income more than doubled to ₱1.62 billion in the three months ended March 2026 from ₱743.6 million a year earlier, as revenue climbed and the company booked gains from a sharp rise in oil prices.  Look closer, though, and the quarter tells a more complicated story. The Philippine fuel retailer’s headline earnings were boosted by inventory holding gains and commodity hedging gains after the Middle East crisis sent oil prices sharply higher in March. But the same price surge also exposed a weaker underlying business: core earnings plunged 87.6% to ₱107.8 million from ₱871.4 million a year earlier, as fuel marketing margins were squeezed by price-lag losses. That divergence — strong reported profit, weak recurring profit — makes Shell Pilipinas’ first-quarter results a study in how oil-market volatility can flatter earnings while pressuring the day-to-day economics of selling fue...

Ramon Ang’s Petron Takes Pain Amid War-Time Sales Boom

Petron Corp. sold more fuel at higher prices in the first quarter. The trouble was that every peso of sales bought shareholders less profit. The Philippines’ largest oil company reported a 27% jump in first-quarter revenue to ₱246.0 billion , boosted by higher sales volume and surging fuel prices after the Israel-U.S.-Iran conflict roiled global oil markets. Sales volume rose 13% to 34.62 million barrels , helped by stronger trading transactions, resilient retail demand and LPG growth. But the top-line strength masked a sharp deterioration underneath: gross profit fell 22% to ₱10.52 billion , operating income dropped 36% to ₱6.06 billion , and consolidated net income slumped 56% to ₱1.78 billion .  The result was a quarter that looked big in nominal terms but thin in economic substance. Petron sold more and sold at higher prices, yet earned materially less per peso of sales. Its gross margin narrowed to 4.3% from 6.9% a year earlier , a decline of about 266 basis points , as cost o...

GMA Network’s Election-Ad Hangover Exposes Pressure on Broadcast Model

  GMA Network Inc.’s first-quarter results delivered a blunt reminder of how dependent Philippine free-to-air broadcasters remain on advertising cycles: when political placements disappear, earnings can fall much faster than sales. The Quezon City-based media company posted ₱3.36 billion in revenue for the three months ended March 31, 2026 , down 28% from ₱4.68 billion a year earlier, as advertising revenue dropped 31% to ₱2.98 billion . Management attributed the decline mainly to the absence of the significant election-related placements that boosted the comparable quarter in 2025.  The fall in revenue rippled sharply through the income statement. EBITDA slid 62% to ₱632 million , while net income plunged 87% to ₱102 million from ₱801 million a year earlier. The results show the downside of operating leverage in a business where production costs, personnel expenses, programming commitments, and broadcast infrastructure do not fall as quickly as advertising sales. GMA did...