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Oriental Petroleum: A Quiet Value Stock with Leverage to Rising Oil Prices

We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. At first glance, Oriental Petroleum and Minerals Corp. (OPM) rarely attracts attention in a market dominated by banks, conglomerates, and property developers. Its oil production is modest, trading liquidity is thin, and earnings growth is anything but exciting. Yet beneath the surface, OPM stands out as a textbook value investment —one that combines an unusually strong balance sheet with embedded upside from rising crude prices. Fortress Balance Sheet Sets OPM Apart What differentiates OPM from most Philippine-listed oil and gas plays is not production scale, but financial strength . As of its latest reported results, OPM holds roughly US$90 million in total assets , the overwhelm...
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ICTSI: Bigger dividend, bigger bets — and a geopolitical wildcard for global shipping

We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. International Container Terminal Services, Inc. (ICTSI) enters 2026 on a strong operating run: 2025 delivered double‑digit throughput growth , high‑60s EBITDA margins , and US$1.81 billion in operating cash flow —the kind of fundamentals that typically support both expansion and payouts. Yet the market’s immediate focus is shifting from the rear‑view mirror to capital allocation: ICTSI has just declared a materially higher 2026 cash dividend while simultaneously leaning into an expansion cycle (including the Durban takeover), as a fresh bout of Middle East conflict threatens to reshape shipping routes and logistics costs worldwide.  Dividend surprise: ICTSI raises the cash re...

Semirara’s Coal Contract May Be Too Hot to Disrupt—But Not Too Hot to Renegotiate (and That Can Hurt Margins)

We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. Wars don’t just move armies—they move molecules . And when energy trade routes start pricing in disruption, governments quickly rediscover a political constant: nothing tests public patience faster than rising electricity prices . The ongoing US–Iran conflict has heightened uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world’s most important oil chokepoints—raising the risk premium on delivered crude and LNG through a mix of shipping hesitation, security risk, and insurance repricing. For the Philippines, the consequence is immediate: when imported fuels reprice higher, the government’s room for policy experiments narrows. That shifts the calculus around a seemingly technical ...

LTG’s FY 2025 results show why the Philippine conglomerate has become a dividend machine

  Banking did the heavy lifting, Tanduay delivered a margin surprise, and the holding company kept the cash flowing to shareholders. We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. If you’re trying to understand why LT Group, Inc. (LTG) continues to attract a loyal following among income investors, start with the simplest truth about the company: it is designed to collect cash from operating champions and redeploy—or return—it with consistency . In FY 2025, that design produced another record. LTG reported consolidated net income of ₱42.3 billion , up 9.9% from 2024, and net income attributable to equity holders of ₱31.0 billion , up 7.1% —its fourth consecutive record year , according to its annual report disclosures. Bu...

PLDT's dividend lives on borrowed time

  We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. There’s a familiar scene in every telecom boardroom: a CFO pointing to a clean dividend slide while the network team flips to a map full of red zones—coverage gaps, congestion pockets, fiber buildouts, and the next wave of equipment refresh. The dividend slide always looks tidy. The map never does. PLDT’s FY2025 results delivered a dividend story that sounds comforting: the company generated ₱98.738B in operating cash flow and spent ₱60.336B on capex, leaving a healthy cushion before shareholder payouts. On paper, that’s the kind of year that lets management talk about “sustainability” with a straight face—especially with EBITDA at ₱111.231B and an ~52% margin that stil...

Petron Isn’t an Oil Producer—So Don’t Treat It Like One When Crude Spikes

  We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. When crude oil prices surge, the market reflex is to lump “oil companies” into one bucket and assume they all benefit. Petron doesn’t fit that template. Petron is not an upstream producer that profits directly from higher crude prices; it is primarily a refiner and fuel marketer , meaning its economics hinge on refining margins (“cracks”) , pricing pass‑through, and capital tied up in inventory and receivables—not the crude benchmark alone. That distinction matters because the same crude rally that boosts producers can be a mixed—or even negative—setup for downstream operators like Petron: higher crude can inflate working capital , raise financing needs , and pressure dema...