Why should we, at a time of global disorder, care about the boardroom war in the once-formidable Lopez empire? Because like governments, big business shapes public behavior. But unlike governments, big business conducts its top-level affairs largely away from the prying eyes of citizens.
Rappler’s series on the Lopez family, written by veteran business journalist Lala Rimando, demystifies the conglomerate that has been a household name for more than half a century — from when ABS-CBN was first introduced on TV. In sharp, engaging prose layered with context and devoid of jargon, Lala navigates the labyrinth of tough choices that the Lopez family has made over the years — and the joys and perils that resulted from those choices.
The latest casualty of such choices is domestic peace, following the ouster of Federico “Piki” Lopez from his seat as president and CEO of the family’s holding company, Lopez Incorporated, by his cousins led by former ABS-CBN CEO Eugenio “Gabby” Lopez III.
Piki’s camp says this happened because he refused to further subsidize the bleeding sister-company, ABS-CBN. Gabby’s camp says it removed Piki over questionable transactions that have hurt the family’s holdings. (Piki has won a court order that temporarily maintains the status quo.)
The Lopez feud, as pointed out by Val Villanueva in this piece, is a “stress test of a governance model that has, until now, been assumed to work.” At stake is the “integrity of decision-making over billions in strategic energy transactions — and the trust that premium investors assign to the group’s crown jewels.”
Beyond the boardrooms, of course, is the war that has made all of us miserable.
In his Easter message on Sunday, April 5, Pope Leo said: “Let those who have weapons lay them down.” It appears his plea will fall on deaf ears. The weekend saw American commandos rescue an airman who was stranded in Iran after the latter downed US jets, with Donald Trump threatening Iranians (“you crazy bastards”) with more attacks.
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– Rappler.com
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