DigiPlus did not end 2025 with a crisis of solvency. It ended the year with something more damaging in public markets: a crisis of narrative. The company still reported roughly ₱84.2bn in revenue for 2025 , up 12 percent from the prior year; it still generated about ₱14.2bn in EBITDA ; and it still delivered around ₱12.6bn in net income , essentially flat year on year rather than sharply lower. It also closed the year with approximately ₱23.4bn in cash and cash equivalents and relatively modest debt, hardly the balance sheet of a distressed enterprise. Yet markets do not merely value what a company has earned; they value how durable, scalable, and politically resilient those earnings appear to be. On that test, DigiPlus’ fourth quarter was a disappointment. In 4Q25, revenue fell about 27 percent year on year to ₱17.3bn, EBITDA dropped about 32 percent to ₱3.1bn, and net income declined roughly 36 percent to ₱2.5bn. Management attributed the weakness to the continued fallout from ...
WLCON still sells screws, tiles and taps. What it no longer sells, at least to the market, is the easy romance of premium growth. There is a brutal clarity to retail numbers when the music changes. Wilcon Depot’s 2025 results were not disastrous: net sales rose 3.7 per cent to ₱35.44bn , gross profit still increased to ₱13.68bn , and the company ended the year with 104 stores after adding new locations. Yet net income slipped 3.3 percent to ₱2.446bn, while same-store sales declined 0.3 percent for the full year and the core Depot format — which accounts for 96.3 percent of sales — managed only flat same-store growth. That combination matters more than the headline sales line. Investors will tolerate a modest decline in profit if they believe it is the temporary price of future scale. They are less forgiving when sales growth comes chiefly from opening more stores while the existing estate merely treads water. Wilcon’s own disclosures say full-year growth was driven...