For companies in telecoms, maturity is usually easy to spot. Growth slows, capital spending eases, management learns the language of “harvest”, and investors are offered the consolations of yield. Converge, the Philippine broadband operator, is not there yet. Its 2025 annual report instead depicts a business that is doing many things right—growing revenues, adding customers, keeping margins sturdy, and paying down debt—while still behaving less like a cash-yielding utility and more like a builder of digital infrastructure. That distinction matters. In 2025 Converge generated record consolidated revenues of ₱44.8bn , up 10.2% from the previous year, while EBITDA rose 10.0% to ₱27.0bn and net income climbed 9.6% to ₱11.9bn ; EBITDA margin remained a lofty 60.4% , and management highlighted an industry-leading 17.7% return on invested capital . Those are not the numbers of a company losing operational discipline. They are the numbers of one that appears to be executing well. The...
Flush with cash, light on debt, and generous to shareholders, SPC Power has begun to look less like a cyclical utility and more like a yield vehicle with optionality. The question is whether it can keep paying like one while also reinventing itself for the next phase of the Philippine power market. SPC Power’s 2025 annual report tells a story that investors in mature power businesses particularly enjoy: a company whose earnings rose sharply, whose cash swelled, and whose board remained unabashedly willing to return money to shareholders. On the numbers alone, the case is easy to sketch. At the group level, total comprehensive income rose 42.3% in 2025 to ₱2.224bn, while earnings per share climbed to ₱1.49 from ₱0.99 a year earlier, and return on equity improved to 19.7% from 13.9%. At the parent-company level, net income reached ₱2.079bn, up from ₱1.428bn in 2024 and just ₱303m in 2023. What makes those results especially striking is that they were not driven by a booming top lin...