SUBSCRIBE NOW SUPPORT US

PHL conglomerates face $185-B discipline test – S&P

PHL conglomerates face $185-B discipline test – S&P
Published on

Philippine conglomerates are embarking on a massive investment pivot that will test their financial discipline, according to a recent report from financial analytics firm S&P Global Ratings.

Over the next decade, major business groups in the Philippines and Vietnam are expected to deploy a combined US$185 billion (roughly P10.8 trillion) in new investments — with Philippine conglomerates accounting for a significant share, largely in renewable energy, infrastructure, and emerging sectors such as electric mobility.

S&P said the coming investment wave, about 2.5 times larger than the past decade’s capital spending, will challenge how well these conglomerates balance their growth ambitions with sound financial management.

Capital discipline test

“This US$185-billion pivot will test capital discipline,” S&P noted, emphasizing that execution, funding mix, and project returns will determine how credit profiles evolve in the coming years.

For the Philippines, S&P estimates that conglomerates will invest about US$28 billion (P1.65 trillion) in renewable energy over the next decade, representing roughly 20 percent of their total capital spending plans.

By 2030, these firms could account for 40 to 50 percent of the country’s renewable energy capacity based on current project pipelines.

Coming from a position of strength

S&P said the Philippine corporate sector enters this investment cycle from a position of strength. Local conglomerates maintain robust cash flows and relatively low leverage, with an average debt-to-EBITDA ratio of less than 1× in 2024.

Roughly 55 percent of capital spending in recent years has been funded through operating cash flows and asset sales, limiting dependence on debt.

“Philippine conglomerates benefit from a more developed banking and bond market, allowing them to secure longer tenors and staggered maturities,” S&P said.

Among the groups covered in the study are Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Ayala Corp., JG Summit Holdings, San Miguel Corp. and SM Investments Corp.

While the investments promise to expand capacity and boost competitiveness, S&P warned of execution risks stemming from project delays, cost overruns, or slower-than-expected returns.

New ventures do not lead to overleveraging

Analysts said conglomerates must ensure that the drive to diversify into new ventures does not lead to overleveraging or weaker credit metrics.

“Growth and diversification are positives,” the report noted, “but capital discipline — maintaining healthy balance sheets and transparent governance — will be critical to sustaining credit strength.”

logo
Daily Tribune
tribune.net.ph