There is, at first glance, a straightforward case for Robinsons Retail Holdings (RRHI) . It is the more sprawling retail empire, ending 2025 with 2,763 stores across food, drugstores, department stores, DIY, and specialty formats, versus Puregold Price Club’s (PGOLD) 822 stores across Puregold, S&R, San Roque, and Merkado. RRHI also posted the more handsome gross margin : 24.6% on ₱210.4bn of net sales, compared with PGOLD’s 18.7% on ₱242.5bn . On the surface, the Gokongwei machine appears to be the more elegant retailer, extracting more gross profit from every peso of sales. Yet retailing is not won at the gross line. It is won after rent, labor, logistics, depreciation, interest, and the thousand petty tolls of expansion. And here, the advantage clearly tilts to PGOLD . Its operating income reached ₱17.3bn , equivalent to roughly 7.1% of sales, while RRHI’s stood at ₱10.4bn , or about 4.9% of sales. PGOLD’s consolidated net income was ₱11.34bn , for a 4.7% net margin . R...
Universal Robina Corporation, one of the Philippines’ biggest branded food-and-beverage groups, turned in the sort of year that looks respectable from a distance and more awkward up close. Revenue rose to ₱168.0 billion in 2025, up 3.8% from the year before, suggesting that demand for snacks, beverages, and pantry staples remained intact. But operating income slipped 3.1% to ₱16.13 billion , while net income attributable to equity holders fell to ₱10.20 billion and earnings per share dropped to ₱4.77 from ₱5.39 . The broad impression was of a company that could still sell, but was finding it harder to turn those sales into clean, rising profit. That tension showed up most starkly in cash. URC’s net cash provided by operating activities fell to ₱11.27 billion in 2025 from ₱18.98 billion in 2024—a decline of roughly 41% . The immediate temptation is to blame the collapsing profitability. Yet that would miss the more revealing part of the story. The bigger hit came fr...