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Sta. Lucia’s Q1 2026: The Inventory Mountain Grows Again, but Margins Save the Quarter

  Sta. Lucia Land’s first-quarter results show a developer earning better margins from fewer climbers In property, as in mountaineering, altitude can be impressive until the air thins. Sta. Lucia Land, Inc. began 2026 with a balance sheet that still looked vast, national, and land-rich. But its first-quarter figures also showed that the company’s central challenge from 2025 has not gone away. The inventory mountain grew again . Cash declined further. Debt was pushed farther into the future, but not extinguished. Demand remained soft. Yet, in a twist that will please accountants more than salesmen, margins improved materially because the properties sold in the quarter were more profitable ones.  The headline number was reassuring at first glance. Net income rose slightly to ₱949.37m in the first quarter of 2026 , from ₱938.05m a year earlier. That was achieved despite total income falling to ₱2.47bn , from ₱2.64bn in the first quarter of 2025. The business, therefore, earned...

Sta. Lucia’s 2025 results: An Inventory Mountain, and Fewer Climbers

  In Philippine property, land is both a promise and a burden. For Sta. Lucia Land, Inc. , the promise remains vast: subdivisions, townhouses, condominiums, condotels, malls, and commercial estates spread across the archipelago. But in 2025, the burden became harder to ignore. The company’s annual results showed a developer still rich in assets, still geographically broad, still backed by a formidable sales network—but suddenly facing a colder real estate market. Revenue fell by about 23% , net income dropped by about 43% , and returns on equity nearly halved to 7.5% from 14.06% a year earlier. Sta. Lucia’s story has long been one of provincial reach. While bigger rivals crowded Metro Manila’s towers and master-planned townships, SLI dug into the country’s secondary cities and growth corridors. It has developed more than 12,000 hectares into over 300 projects across 13 regions and more than 70 cities and municipalities —a sprawling footprint that few Philippine developers can ...