Skip to main content

Posts

Rockwell’s Bigger Bet: Higher Leverage, Higher Stakes

  We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. Rockwell Land’s ₱10 billion bond issuance should not be mistaken for a routine refinancing exercise. It is, more clearly, the moment when the company moves into a higher-leverage phase —one driven not just by ambition, but by the need to finance a much larger commercial footprint after its ₱21.6 billion acquisition of a 74.8% stake in Alabang Commercial Corporation, the owner and operator of Alabang Town Center (ATC). The transaction expands Rockwell’s retail and office portfolio by about 58% and adds roughly 137,000 square meters of gross leasable area, which makes the strategic logic easy to understand. What is harder—and far more important for investors—is whether the e...
Recent posts

Shang’s Dividend Cliff Is a Warning, Not a Mystery

We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. When a premium property developer cuts its dividend to the bone, investors should stop asking whether the payout is “cheap” and start asking what the numbers are trying to say.   Shang Properties’ latest dividend declaration is not a routine trimming at the edges. It is a cliff. The board on March 18, 2026 declared a regular cash dividend of just ₱0.01191 per share , payable on April 21, 2026 , to be taken from unrestricted retained earnings as of December 31, 2025 . That compares with ₱0.18260 per share declared in March 2025 and ₱0.09210 per share declared in August 2025 . In plain English, the latest payout is roughly 93.5% below the prior March dividend and more than ...

Converge’s bigger dividend sends the right signal — but not the right yield

We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. Converge ICT’s decision to raise its regular cash dividend to ₱0.49 per share from ₱0.43 previously is best read not as a pivot into a high-yield stock, but as a carefully calibrated statement of financial strength. The increase tells the market that management is comfortable with the company’s earnings power, liquidity, and leverage profile even as it continues to fund a large network expansion program. That confidence is not hard to justify. In 2025, Converge posted ₱44.8 billion in consolidated revenues , up 10.2% year on year , while EBITDA rose 10.0% to ₱27.0 billion and still carried an industry-leading 60.4% margin . Net income climbed 9.6% to ₱11.9 billion , while return...

Can Filinvest Land Keep Paying the Dividend? The 2025 Numbers Say Yes—But With a Clear Asterisk

We’ve been blogging for free. If you enjoy our content, consider supporting us! Disclaimer:  This is for informational purposes and is  not  investment advice. Figures are taken from company disclosures and exchange data; valuation ratios include the author’s calculations based on cited inputs. If investors are looking at Filinvest Land, Inc. primarily as a dividend name, the 2025 results offer more reassurance than alarm. The company kept its cash dividend at ₱0.05 per common share in 2025, the same rate as in 2024, and paid a total cash dividend of about ₱1.123 billion , including the preferred payout. That matters because FLI did not defend the dividend with accounting smoke: it reported ₱4.81 billion in consolidated net income , ₱4.17 billion attributable to the parent , and ₱7.88 billion in operating cash flow for 2025. On the face of it, that is the profile of a company that can still write the check.  The first reason the dividend looks sustainable is that F...

URC’s 5% Dividend Hike Signals Confidence — But Sustainable Growth Still Depends on Margin Recovery

  Universal Robina Corp. has sent the market a clear message: despite a year of margin pressure, it still believes its cash-generation capacity and balance sheet are strong enough to justify a higher payout. The company’s board approved a cash dividend of ₱2.10 per share , payable in May 2026, which is 5% higher year on year . That matters not only because dividend increases are never declared lightly, but because the move comes after a year in which earnings growth was constrained by elevated commodity costs, particularly coffee. At first glance, URC’s 2025 results tell a two-speed story. On one hand, the topline remained healthy. For the first nine months of 2025, URC posted sales of ₱124.6 billion, up 4.8% , driven by growth in branded consumer foods and commodities. For the full year, sales reached ₱168.0 billion, up 4% , with management describing the performance as “volume-led” and broad-based across divisions. On the other hand, profit growth lagged. In the first nine months...

Why Semirara Mining and Power Corporation Still Holds the Edge in the Semirara Coal Auction

The Department of Energy deserves credit for insisting on a competitive rebidding of the Semirara coal blocks instead of granting an outright extension to Semirara Mining and Power Corporation’s current coal operating contract, which expires in July 2027. The DOE has made clear that the Semirara area will be included in the 2026 coal bid round, and that awards will be based on technical, financial, legal, and work-program qualifications rather than on a simple highest-bid-wins formula.  That is the right policy. But good policy does not guarantee intense competition. The more difficult question is whether many serious players will actually want to commit capital to a coal asset at a time when the economics of coal are no longer what they were just a few years ago. Semirara’s own results suggest the answer may be more complicated than the optics of an open auction imply. Coal is clearly no longer in the 2022–2024 supercycle conditions. In 2025, Semirara Mining and Power Corporation ...

DMW’s Dividend Hike Is a Vote of Confidence — but the Next Raise Must Be Earned in Cash

  D.M. Wenceslao has lifted its annual cash dividend again, extending a record of steady shareholder returns. The increase looks justified. Whether the next one comes just as easily is another matter. D.M. Wenceslao & Associates, Inc. has once again done what income investors want well-run property companies to do: share more of the bounty. On March 12, 2026, the board declared a regular cash dividend of ₱0.10 per share , payable on April 28, 2026 to stockholders of record as of April 10, 2026 , for a total payout of ₱339.59 million sourced from 2025 unrestricted retained earnings . That is up from the ₱0.095 per share or ₱322.61 million cash dividend declared in March 2025. The increase is modest in size, but not in significance: it tells the market that management still sees enough resilience in the business to keep moving the payout upward.  The dividend hike is not cosmetic. It rests on a business that has become meaningfully more lease-driven and financially forti...