Security Bank widened its net interest margin and lifted core spread income in the first quarter, but higher credit-loss provisions, trading and foreign-exchange losses, and unrealized FVOCI mark-to-market losses kept the results from becoming a clean earnings-growth story. For a bank, a wider net interest margin is usually the closest thing to good weather. Loans and securities earn more than deposits and borrowings cost; the balance sheet breathes easier; profits should follow. In the first quarter of 2026, Security Bank Corporation seemed to enjoy just such a climate. Its net interest margin widened to 5.36% , from 4.51% a year earlier, while net interest income jumped 27.6% to ₱15.16bn . Interest income rose to ₱19.92bn , but the larger story was on the funding side: interest expense fell to ₱4.76bn from ₱6.76bn . Yet the weather did not hold. The bank’s bottom line slipped. Net income fell to ₱2.70bn , down from ₱2.82bn a year earlier; earnings per share declined to ₱3.5...
VITRO REIT will show whether Philippine investors will accept infrastructure growth in exchange for a lower yield. PLDT’s VITRO REIT is not merely a property flotation. It is a test of whether investors will value Philippine data centers as critical infrastructure, operating platforms, and income-producing real estate. The Philippines’ newest real-estate story contains little real estate of the familiar sort. There are no malls to fill, no office towers to lease to call centers, no residential towers to sell by the square meter. The proposed VITRO REIT consists of data halls, racks, cooling systems, power redundancy, and fiber connections—the dull but indispensable plumbing of a digital economy. Its sponsor, ePLDT , a wholly owned subsidiary of PLDT , plans to sell up to 2.2bn existing shares , including the over-allotment option, at up to ₱11 a share , potentially raising ₱24.2bn through a secondary offering. VITRO REIT itself will receive none of the proceeds; the money g...