The pleasing thing about airline earnings is that they arrive in large, round numbers. The dangerous thing is that they often conceal the balance-sheet strain required to produce them. PAL Holdings’ 2025 results belong firmly in that tradition: respectable at first glance, even encouraging, but rather less reassuring when read below the fold. Yes, the group earned ₱10.07bn on revenues of ₱183.83bn , up from ₱8.12bn the year before. Yes, it carried 16.29mn passengers , increased flights to 115,007 , and was recognised as the No. 1 on-time airline in Asia Pacific with 83.12 per cent punctuality. Operationally, this is a business that has plainly improved. Financially, it remains more brittle than the headline suggests. That distinction matters. PAL’s strongest argument is operational competence. Passenger numbers rose 4.3 per cent , cargo revenues grew 3.7 per cent to ₱9.49bn , and ancillary revenues surged 25.4 per cent to ₱17.33bn , lifting their share of total revenu...