How the Lopez family responds to Barito Renewables’ approach for EDC will test whether its corporate pyramid protects control—or respects the capital supplied by everyone else. Corporate pyramids are efficient machines for separating control from ownership. A family can govern a large industrial empire while supplying only a fraction of its underlying equity. Such structures are not inherently objectionable. Outside investors enter them voluntarily, often because a controlling shareholder contributes something valuable: patience, operating expertise, political durability, or a coherent long-term vision. But the bargain carries an obligation. The less capital controllers have at risk, the more carefully they must demonstrate that decisions are being made for all shareholders rather than principally to preserve control. That is why the unsolicited approach by Indonesia’s PT Barito Renewables Energy Tbk, or BREN, for Energy Development Corporation is more than a takeover proposal. I...
Lucio Tan’s Philippine National Bank has matched the dividend yield of the Ty family’s Metrobank. Its protection against bad loans remains another matter. For income-hunting investors, the contest between two of the Philippines’ oldest banking fortunes has acquired a pleasing symmetry. Philippine National Bank (PNB), controlled by Lucio Tan’s LT Group, and Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company (Metrobank or MBT), the flagship bank associated with the Ty family, now offer virtually identical dividend yields. At the share prices recently displayed—₱58.45 for PNB and ₱66.40 for Metrobank—each yields about 7.53% . The equality is mathematically tidy. PNB has announced a dividend of ₱4.40 per share for 2026: two regular payments of ₱1.65 each and a special dividend of ₱1.10. Metrobank has declared a dividend of ₱5.00 per share, consisting of ₱3.00 in regular dividends and ₱2.00 in a special payout. Divide each distribution by its respective share price, and the result is almost indist...