For years, PLDT was treated by income investors as something close to a utility with a generous cheque attached. Its networks carried calls, data, and broadband traffic; its shares carried the promise of yield. But the first quarter of 2026 suggests that Manny V. Pangilinan’s telecoms flagship is entering a more austere dividend age: not one of abrupt retreat, but of careful, deliberate trimming. The evidence is hiding in plain sight. PLDT declared a regular common dividend of ₱46 per share for the first quarter of 2026, down from ₱47 per share a year earlier. The decline is only one peso, hardly dramatic. Yet it matters because it confirms the direction of policy. PLDT’s dividend is not being abandoned; it is being rationed. The company’s own numbers explain why. PLDT reported telco core income of ₱8.58 billion in the first quarter, down 2% from ₱8.78 billion in the same period last year. This is the critical measure. Since 2019, PLDT has based its regular dividend payout o...
In the first quarter of 2026, two of the Philippines’ most closely watched food-and-beverage empires delivered a study in contrasts: Ramon Ang’s San Miguel Food and Beverage Inc. showed the strength of scale, while Betty Ang’s Monde Nissin Corp. showed the power of margin recovery and faster growth. Ramon S. Ang is chairman of San Miguel Food and Beverage and chairman and CEO of San Miguel Corp., while Betty T. Ang has been Monde Nissin’s president and director for more than 45 years. SMFB remained the heavyweight. Its first-quarter sales reached ₱103.1 billion , more than four times Monde Nissin’s ₱22.8 billion net sales, underscoring San Miguel’s commanding position across beer, spirits, and food. But the smaller Monde Nissin moved faster: sales rose 9.1% , outpacing SMFB’s 4.3% growth, as demand across its Asia-Pacific branded food business and a rebound in meat alternatives lifted the top line. The divergence was sharper at the profit line. Monde Nissin’s net income jumped 34.1% ...