Ayala Land and Megaworld both build urban ecosystems. But in the first quarter of 2026, the smaller builder looked surprisingly more efficient. In Philippine property, scale is usually treated as destiny. The bigger the landbank, the grander the estate, the larger the mall, the stronger the developer’s gravitational pull. By that measure, Ayala Land, Inc. should tower over most rivals. At the end of March 2026, it had ₱ 1.015 trillion in assets, more than twice Megaworld Corporation’s ₱492.8 billion. Its investment properties, inventories, and capital program all spoke the language of national scale. Yet the first quarter of 2026 offered a useful reminder: in property, bigness and profitability do not always move in step. ALI generated ₱37.5bn in revenue , far ahead of Megaworld’s ₱21.6bn . But at the level that matters most to common shareholders, the two were almost neck-and-neck: ALI reported ₱5.37bn in net income attributable to parent shareholders , while Megaworld rep...