SM Investments’ latest quarter suggests that the Philippines’ most important conglomerate is not merely growing. It is becoming more distributable. In the Philippine corporate landscape, few institutions resemble a national economic barometer as closely as SM Investments Corporation . Its tills ring in supermarkets and department stores; its malls absorb weekend foot traffic and weekday errands; its banks finance households and firms; its portfolio companies touch logistics, energy, mining, and other arteries of commerce. When SM does well, it is often because the Filipino consumer, the landlord, the lender, and the capital allocator are all, to varying degrees, doing well too. The company’s first-quarter results for 2026 were not spectacular in the way a technology stock’s numbers might be spectacular. There was no sudden doubling of sales, no breathless narrative of disruption. Instead, SM produced something more characteristic of a mature conglomerate with formidable market po...
Synergy Grid’s parent company is less an operating business than a listed sluice gate for cash from the Philippine power grid There are companies that build, companies that borrow, and companies that harvest. Synergy Grid & Development Phils., Inc., known on the stock exchange as SGP , belongs to the last category. Its 2025 parent-company accounts reveal a remarkably simple machine: collect dividends from interests tied to National Grid Corporation of the Philippines, keep head-office costs modest, and send much of the cash onward to shareholders. In 2025, that machine worked rather well. Parent-company net income more than doubled to ₱3.57bn , from ₱1.75bn a year earlier, almost entirely because dividend income rose to ₱3.58bn , from ₱1.78bn . SGP is not, in the conventional sense, a bustling operating company. Its parent income statement contains no great variety of commercial life. Management income was ₱48m , unchanged from 2024; interest income was ₱25.5m ; divide...