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Sabin Aboitiz leads firm into Phl's first 'techglomerate'

Aboitiz Group president and CEO Sabin Aboitiz plays a crucial role in strengthening international business partnerships and ensuring AEV continues to lead through innovation, sustainability and inclusive growth.
Aboitiz Group president and CEO Sabin Aboitiz plays a crucial role in strengthening international business partnerships and ensuring AEV continues to lead through innovation, sustainability and inclusive growth.
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Sabin Aboitiz, who took over as President and CEO of Aboitiz Equity Ventures in 2020, is steering the conglomerate through a massive transformation aimed at turning it into the Philippines' first "techglomerate." Despite past setbacks in its digital shift, Aboitiz is pushing forward with plans to modernize the company’s operations, from energy to banking, as it adapts to the future of business.

His ambition is to reshape a legacy conglomerate into what he describes as a “25-year-old athlete” — agile, fast, and future-ready.

“We have to be legacy yet we have to be very agile. That’s actually where we are today doing that,” said Aboitiz in an exclusive interview with Christine Tan on CNBC’s Managing Asia.

From power to banking, infrastructure to consumer retail, Aboitiz is retooling each arm of the business with digital transformation at the center of it all. But as he openly admits, the journey hasn’t been easy.

“Ten years ago, we started what we called at that time the digital transformation and we failed miserably. I guess we’re a little bit ahead of our time or we didn’t understand what was needed to be successful. So what we’ve learned is that, there was one reason why we failed, and that’s because the minds were not open,” Aboitiz recalled.

It was the pandemic that shook things up and accelerated change. The business environment forced open minds and exposed gaps, prompting faster adoption of innovation across the organization.

“The pandemic, the surroundings, have changed people," he said. “2025 is our check to see whether our minds are really open or not. Or if things are actually starting to happen on their own without us pushing for it.”

Despite the lack of a consolidated financial figure for the group-wide transformation, Sabin is pragmatic about the costs.

“You throw away as little as possible because you will throw away some money… The payback can be financial or in other ways.”

He treats this as a necessity.

“It is an investment that you have no choice but to make. If not, you for sure, will be behind.”

Diversification

The Aboitiz Group’s electricity generation business has long been a pillar of its profitability. But the pandemic-era slump served as a wake-up call that even its strongest segments are vulnerable.

“Well it shows that things are just not under your control,” Aboitiz recalled. “We always talk about diversifying a bit, and it accelerated it.”

That shift in mindset paved the way for strategic moves, including a partnership with Japanese energy giant JERA, and one of the biggest acquisitions in Philippine consumer business history: the $1.8 billion purchase of Coca-Cola Beverages Philippines in 2024.

“We believe that the growing middle class of the country and the high growth rates are benefitting consumer [business].”

Aboitiz is also bullish on infrastructure projects with a consumer edge, especially airports — a pivot driven by the country’s tourism potential.

“We want to be there because tourism is something that we can — the country can — definitely compete against anybody in the world."

After acquiring Mactan-Cebu International Airport, the group won concessions to operate Laguindingan and Bohol airports.

“The airport business is directly proportionate to the number of tourists that come in."

With fixed costs and variable returns tied to passenger volume, Aboitiz sees airports as gateways to economic growth and as consumer hubs with real estate potential — from hotels to mixed-use developments.

A more simple conglomerate

Despite its expansion, Aboitiz is not interested in complexity for its own sake. He now aims to simplify the group's structure and focus on areas with clear synergies, scalability, and growth.

“We’re doing a simplification… Let’s make sure that we can focus on what’s important, what’s gonna give us the growth, what’s going to give us the cash flow… and where we can find the talent.”

That discipline also extends to the company’s foray into consumer banking. In 2022, Aboitiz acquired Citibank’s Philippine operations, further embedding the group in the financial lives of Filipinos.

Bridging the private sector and the government

Sabin also plays a crucial national role as lead convener of the Private Sector Advisory Council (PSAC), which advises President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on how private enterprise can support public policy goals.

“This president really believes in the private sector,” he said. “We have 30 CEOs of the biggest companies in the Philippines divided into 6 different areas… we are allowed to present what we think is important.”

When asked why he would take on such a role, he answered, “If you have this opportunity to help your country, why wouldn’t you do it?”

“On a personal basis, what I learned from being exposed to the government, to all these industries, to all these CEOs is learning that I think very very few will have the privilege of… it’s been fantastic for me.”

True to legacy

As the fourth-generation leader of a Filipino business dynasty, Sabin Aboitiz brings both the weight of legacy and the hunger for reinvention. He’s spent his entire professional life within the group, working across its various businesses before rising to CEO.

Asked for the best leadership advice he’s ever received, his answer was simple:

“Don’t try to be someone else. Just be who you are.”

It’s a fitting philosophy for a leader trying to turn a 100-year-old family business into a high-speed, tech-powered force for the future.

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