COL Financial is adding customers, assets, and inflows even in a difficult market. But the broker’s 2025 results suggest that scale is rising faster than monetization—and that shareholders should not count on a richer payout just yet. In the brokerage business, there are years when the numbers sing and years when they merely hum. COL Financial’s 2025 results belong to the latter category: respectable, quietly impressive in parts, but not quite buoyant enough to justify exuberance. The firm ended the year with 569,365 customer accounts , up 2.94% from 2024, while customers’ net equity climbed 5.23% to ₱123.18bn despite a lackluster local stock market. Net inflows of ₱3.40bn from new and existing investors suggest that clients continued to entrust more money to the platform, and management pointed to strong retention and deeper wallet share among existing accounts. That is the sort of operating data a platform business would ordinarily celebrate. Customer growth ma...
The Asian Financial Crisis did not merely humble the conspicuous losers. It also forced one of Philippine business’s eventual winners into an extended and rather unsentimental workout: raise equity, sell what can be sold, renegotiate what cannot, and, if necessary, surrender even the trophy asset. In Philippine business memory, the aftermath of the 1997–98 Asian Financial Crisis is often told through the ordeals of the most visible dynasties and the most politically charged conglomerates. Yet the period was just as revealing for another camp: the First Pacific–Metro Pacific group led in the Philippines by Manuel V. Pangilinan . The group did not implode. But it most certainly bent. Metro Pacific Corporation (MPC) , then First Pacific’s Philippine flagship outside PLDT and a few other holdings, suffered a genuine balance-sheet squeeze as the peso weakened, interest rates rose, and foreign-currency borrowings suddenly looked less like clever leverage than an expensive misjudgment....