A good stock exchange does not merely list companies. It disciplines them. That is why First Gen’s recent clarification on its agreements with Prime Infrastructure should alarm anyone who cares about Philippine capital markets. The company has now confirmed that its definitive agreements contain “Change of Management Control” provisions that could force it to sell its hydropower stake at a 25% discount—worth about ₱15.5 billion —and, if that right is exercised, could also expose its remaining gas-plant stake to a further ~₱8 billion discount. That is not gossip. It is a quantified, public admission of a contingent loss with potentially massive consequences for shareholders. Once a listed company itself can put a peso figure on a governance-triggered downside of that scale, the matter ceases to be a private dispute and becomes a capital-markets issue. The temptation is to dismiss this as merely another installment in the Lopez family feud. That would be a mistake. First Gen’s own clari...
For years, Monde Nissin was a tale of two pantries. In one sat the dependable staples of the Filipino table—Lucky Me!, SkyFlakes, Fita, M.Y. San Grahams—brands with the quiet power of habit and repetition. In the other sat Quorn, the British meat-alternative business whose promise once seemed modern and global, but whose subsequent impairments and restructuring bills turned what should have been a growth story into an expensive lesson in category exuberance. Monde’s 2025 Annual Report suggests that the company has at last become less a hostage to that second pantry. The core business remains sturdy; the balance sheet is lighter; and the market, still scarred by Quorn’s past, may not yet have fully caught up. The numbers tell the tale plainly enough. In 2025, Monde posted ₱86.48bn in sales, up 4.0% from 2024, while reported net income rose to ₱8.60bn from just ₱0.45bn a year earlier. Core income after tax at ownership, the company’s preferred measure of recurring profitability,...