Filinvest Land’s first-quarter numbers reveal a business trying to turn Philippine property’s long cycle into recurring cash Filinvest Land, Inc. is often described as a property developer. That is true, but incomplete. Its first-quarter 2026 results show a more interesting organism: part housebuilder, part landlord, part infrastructure-like rent collector, part balance-sheet manager. In the three months to March 2026, FLI reported ₱6.02bn in total revenue , up from ₱5.76bn a year earlier, and ₱1.10bn in net income , up 3.5% from ₱1.06bn . The progress was respectable rather than rousing. But beneath the modest headline lies the real story: FLI is trying to make a capital-hungry development machine behave more like a durable income compounder. At one end of the machine is the old business of land, permits, concrete, and installment payments. Real-estate sales rose 6.1% year on year to ₱3.92bn , still the group’s largest revenue source. Management attributed the increase to acce...
No fair-value gains, but plenty still hidden in plain sight. DoubleDragon’s first-quarter report for 2026 contains a line meant to reassure investors. The company booked no unrealized fair value gains on investment properties during the period, unlike the same quarter last year, when such gains contributed ₱1.93bn to income. In a sector where paper revaluations can flatter profits, that sounds like progress. Yet the reassurance comes with an asterisk. A remarkably large portion of DoubleDragon’s revenue came not from rent, hotel rooms, or property sales, but from a broad and insufficiently explained bucket called “Others – net.” That bucket was not small. DoubleDragon reported ₱4.66bn in consolidated revenue for Q1 2026, up 4.6% from ₱4.45bn a year earlier. But “Others – net” accounted for ₱2.82bn , or 60.5% of total revenue , compared with ₱872.5m in Q1 2025. In other words, more than half of the quarter’s revenue sat inside a line item that the report describes only generally, ...