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The Sys Saw SM Investments’ 2025 Earnings Quality as Fairly Strong

  A cleaner read of SM Investments Corp.’s 2025 numbers suggests that the conglomerate’s most dependable engines — banking, mall rentals, and food retail — did most of the work, while weaker residential sales and pressure in discretionary businesses kept a lid on how much faster profit could grow. SM Investments Corp. delivered another year of record profit in 2025, but the more revealing story was not the headline growth rate. It was the composition of that growth. Consolidated earnings rose 10% to ₱90.5 billion on revenues of ₱681.7 billion, up 4% , and the group’s earnings mix remained anchored by banking at 49% , followed by property at 27% , retail at 18%, and portfolio investments at 6% . Those numbers point to a conglomerate whose profit base is increasingly shaped by recurring and essential-demand businesses rather than by the most economically sensitive parts of its portfolio.  That matters because SM is often shorthand for malls and shopping, a proxy for Philippine...
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Atlas Mining, the mining company that SM Investments is considering selling

  Atlas Consolidated Mining & Development Corp. has become an awkward asset at a moment when its biggest blue-chip shareholder appears to be rethinking what belongs inside a modern Philippine conglomerate. In early March, SM Investments Corp. said it was weighing a reduction or possible exit from its Atlas stake, casting the miner as an outlier in a portfolio built around banking, property, retail, logistics, and energy. The timing is telling: copper and gold prices have been firm, but Atlas itself has spent the past two years slipping from profit into loss, even as its operating business continues to throw off cash. Atlas’ 2025 results show why a sale can be framed both as an opportunistic disposal and as a strategic reset. Revenue fell to ₱17.19 billion in 2025 from ₱18.63 billion in 2024 and ₱18.87 billion in 2023, extending a two-year slide in the top line. The company posted a net loss of about ₱246 million in 2025, slightly worse than the ₱231 million loss booked in ...

Before First Gen’s “Poison Pill,” There Was PLDT’s

  In Philippine boardroom warfare, the concept didn’t arrive with Federico “Piki” Lopez. It had an earlier, rougher incarnation in the battle for PLDT, where Antonio “Tonyboy” Cojuangco used a poison pill not simply to fend off raiders, but to make himself the indispensable counterparty in any serious bid for control.   The term is back in circulation because of First Gen Corp., where the Lopez family’s internal feud has dragged a modern version of the tactic into public view. First Gen confirmed in April that its agreements with Enrique Razon Jr.’s Prime Infrastructure contain change-of-management-control provisions that would let Prime Infra force a buyout of First Gen’s hydropower stake at a 25% discount if Piki and his team were removed during a defined period; First Gen added that the gas-plant stake could also be sold at the same discount if the clause were exercised. First Gen said those provisions were requested by Prime Infra and reflected the counterparty’s confide...

Ayala’s Globe Eases Network Spending, but Debt Looks Like the First Call on Cash

  The Ayala group appears to be entering a new phase at Globe Telecom Inc.: after years of heavy network buildout, the Philippine carrier is finally easing capital expenditure. But rather than immediately channeling that breathing room into richer shareholder payouts, the numbers suggest Globe may first use the savings to defend its balance sheet and manage a costlier capital stack.  Ayala Corp., one of Globe’s two principal shareholders, owned 30.64% of the company’s common shares as of Dec. 31, 2025, alongside Singapore Telecom International Pte. Ltd., which held 43.36% . That makes Globe’s capital-allocation choices especially relevant to one of the Philippines’ most closely watched conglomerates, whose listed units are often judged on dividend discipline as much as on growth. There is a clear reason investors are focusing on the spending cycle. Globe’s cash capex fell 18% to ₱46.2 billion in 2025 from ₱56.2 billion in 2024 , with management saying the figure was in line ...

MARC Bounced Back in 2025

After a bruising 2024, Marcventures Holdings, Inc. found its footing in 2025. The rebound was not subtle. It arrived in the blunt language of mining accounts: more tonnage, better realised prices, stronger cash generation and a balance sheet with less strain. In an industry where optimism is often buried under mud, regulation and weather, FY2025 looked refreshingly like a year in which the ore market, and MARC’s operations, finally cooperated. For much of the previous year, the company had the air of a miner waiting for the tide to turn. In 2024 MARC’s revenue had sagged to ₱1.716bn , and net income had slumped to ₱118.1m , as weaker ore prices crimped margins and dulled the benefits of steady shipment volumes. Then, in 2025, the numbers snapped back. Revenue climbed to ₱2.708bn , up 57.8% year on year; net income surged to ₱471.1m , a rise of 298.9% . Total assets expanded to ₱6.225bn , equity rose to ₱5.375bn , and liabilities edged down to ₱850.2m . The result was not merely an imp...

FGEN’s “poison pill”: Was Piki Lopez worried about barbarians at the gate?

  The most revealing feature of First Gen’s recent governance controversy is not the family drama. It is the architecture of control. In its clarification to the Philippine Stock Exchange, First Gen confirmed that its agreements with Prime Infrastructure contain Change of Management Control provisions that could force the company to sell its hydropower stake at a 25 percent discount , worth about ₱15.5bn , and could also expose its remaining gas-plant stake to a further ~₱8bn discount if Prime Infra exercises that right. In corporate language, that is not a trivial covenant. It is a deterrent with teeth. And whatever label one prefers — “key man clause” or “poison pill” — it functions as a defense against a hostile reordering of control. Strictly speaking, First Gen’s clause is not a classic poison pill. It is not a shareholder-rights plan of the Delaware kind, where all investors except a hostile bidder get discounted shares once an ownership threshold is crossed. But in econom...

The Gotianuns compound EastWest's dividend by 19% p.a. from 2022 to 2026

  The quiet compounding machine In Philippine banking, dividends rarely make for gripping prose. Balance sheets matter more than bravado; prudence beats spectacle. Yet at East West Banking Corporation, the Gotianun family’s mid‑tier lender, the numbers are beginning to speak with unusual clarity. From 2022 to 2026, EastWest’s regular cash dividend rose from ₱0.40 per share to ₱0.82 , implying a compound annual growth rate of roughly 19.7% . That is not a one‑off windfall, but a four‑year pattern. The more interesting question is whether the bank’s fundamentals, as laid bare in its 2025 Annual Report , genuinely justify such compounding—or whether the dividend is merely running ahead of the balance sheet. The evidence suggests the former. From caution to confidence The early years tell a restrained story. In 2022 , EastWest paid ₱0.40 per share , equivalent to total cash dividends of roughly ₱900 million , at a time when net income stood at ₱4.6 billion . The payout was conservative...

From consolidation to zero: how ABS-CBN vanished from Lopez Holdings’ balance sheet

The Lopez family’s listed holding company has, over little more than a decade, transformed ABS-CBN from a fully consolidated operating subsidiary into an associate carried at zero on a consolidated equity-accounting basis — a shift that says as much about accounting architecture as it does about the fall of one of the Philippines’ best-known media groups.   There was a time when ABS-CBN sat squarely inside Lopez Holdings’ numbers. In its 2025 annual report, Lopez Holdings explicitly recalls that ABS-CBN had been treated as a subsidiary in 2012 and prior years , meaning its revenues, costs, debt, and losses flowed line by line through the parent’s consolidated accounts. That changed after the adoption of PFRS 10 , when Lopez Holdings said it reassessed control and concluded that it did not control ABS-CBN but did control First Philippine Holdings. From   January 1, 2013 , the group deconsolidated ABS-CBN and began accounting for it under the equity method .  That accounti...