The core issue lies in the nature of the reported profit. Villar Land’s trillion-peso leap was not the result of explosive business growth, increased productivity, or outsized market performance. It came from a revaluation of real estate holdings essentially a change in how the company values its land, not a change in how the business performs.
As Somera points out in his piece “Vantage Point: Villar Land’s net income—a trillion peso mirage?”, the income being celebrated is not cash in hand nor profit from sales but a reappraisal gain, one that does little to reflect the company’s actual earning capacity. The Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) even clarified that such a gain is considered “non-recurring,” a technical term that investors know to treat with caution.
Equally troubling is the apparent inaction from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the PSE, the very institutions tasked with ensuring transparency, fairness, and truthfulness in our financial markets. As Somera asserts in his follow-up article, “[ANALYSIS] SEC and PSE under suspicion of lapses over Villar Land revaluations,” there is growing concern that these regulators failed to adequately review, question, or explain the implications of the revaluation. The PSE merely issued a boilerplate reminder about the difference between recurring and non recurring income.
At a time when the Philippine capital market is striving for global relevance and investor confidence, an episode like this undermines credibility. If companies can inflate net income figures into the trillions with minimal explanation and little regulatory friction, what kind of message does this send to the investing public? Or to international observers?
This is not just about Villar Land. It is about the rules of the game, and whether they still apply to all players equally. The seeming indifference of regulators calls into question the institutional capacity or willingness of the SEC and PSE to fulfill their mandate. If they cannot or will not demand transparency and accountability in cases like this, then they become complicit in undermining the very market they are meant to protect.
If Villar Land’s revaluation had been thoroughly explained, vetted, and scrutinized by regulators and communicated clearly to the investing public, this could have been an opportunity to showcase strategic land banking or portfolio management.
Let the Villar Land episode serve as a wake-up call not just for regulators, but for every stakeholder in the Philippine financial system. Because when a trillion-peso mirage can be passed off as success, we are not building markets, we are building illusions.