CBC’s clean loan book spared it from the credit-cost pain seen at peers, but a ₱4.1bn trading, securities and FX loss—and steep FVOCI marks—revealed how turbulent markets bruised an otherwise solid quarter. For a bank, there are many ways to make money look easy. The simplest is to lend well, collect cheaply, and avoid nasty surprises. In the first quarter of 2026, China Banking Corporation did much of that. Net income rose 4.3% year on year to ₱6.8bn , net interest income jumped 13.8% to ₱19.5bn , and its net interest margin widened to 4.61% from 4.49% . Loans grew, deposits grew, and bad loans stayed tame. On the surface, it was the sort of quarter a conservative bank would happily frame. Yet beneath the tidy headline lay a messy truth: China Bank’s earnings were rescued not by treasury skill, but by credit calm. The bank booked a striking ₱4.1bn net loss from trading, securities and foreign exchange , wider than the ₱3.7bn loss recorded a year earlier. The line is not ...
For most banks, a quarter in which net income rises, margins widen, and credit growth continues would count as a respectable outing. For Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company , the first quarter of 2026 was exactly that—until one looked below the net-income line. There, in the usually neglected province of “other comprehensive income”, the bond market left a conspicuous bruise. Metrobank reported ₱12.81bn in consolidated net income for the quarter ended March 31st 2026, up 2.4% from ₱12.51bn a year earlier. Net income attributable to the parent climbed 2.9% to ₱12.60bn , lifting basic and diluted earnings per share to ₱2.80 , from ₱2.72 in the same period last year. On the surface, this was the sort of quarter large banks like to present: steady, profitable, and comfortably capitalized. Yet the more interesting story was not about profit but about capital. Metrobank booked a ₱16.40bn net unrealized loss on debt securities at fair value through other comprehensive income , or ...