There is a difference between a company that withholds dividends because it must and one that does so because it still has better uses for capital. On the evidence of Citicore Renewable Energy Corporation’s 2025 numbers, CREC still belongs in the second camp. For now, at least, this looks less like a business denying shareholders cash and more like one still trying to turn capital into scale. That distinction matters. In the Philippine market, investors are often willing to tolerate light distributions only if they can see a credible buildout story in return. CREC’s report offers such a story in plain arithmetic: the company ended 2025 with 14 operating solar assets and 597.2 MW of installed capacity , while maintaining an extensive pipeline that includes 2,898 MW of solar and 45 MW of wind under construction , plus 540 MW of wind in advanced development . It also secured 1,212 MW of additional renewable energy capacity through the Department of Energy’s Green Energy Auction Pr...
There are moments in capital markets when the most revealing disclosure is the one that never arrives . That is where Lopez Holdings Corporation (LPZ) now appears to stand: a flagship listed holding company whose chairman and chief executive, Federico “Piki” Lopez , was reported to have been removed as president of Lopez Inc. , the group’s private controlling shareholder and ultimate parent, only for a Mandaluyong court to stop the move through injunctive relief. Public reports say the challenged board resolutions were passed on February 27, 2026 , and that the court’s writ dated March 26 barred their enforcement. Those same reports say Lopez Inc. owns 54.74 per cent of LPZ . And yet, on the public record visible through PSE EDGE and on LPZ’s own disclosures page, the recent stream of LPZ filings does not show a case-related clarification or a dedicated material-information filing on this governance rupture. What the public record does show are routine items: a March 12 ...