DoubleDragon Corp., the Manila-listed property and retail vehicle co-chaired by Edgar "Injap" Sia II and Jollibee founder Tony Tan Caktiong, closed its voluntary tender offer for MerryMart Consumer Corp. at 98.6% ownership. The offer, priced at PHP 0.43 per share, attracted sufficient minority participation to push DoubleDragon past the 90% threshold required for a compulsory acquisition of remaining shares under Philippine Securities Regulation Code rules. MerryMart's float, once 34%, now sits at 1.4%—effectively a rounding error ahead of formal delisting procedures.
DoubleDragon launched the tender in late January after accumulating stakes through open-market purchases since mid-2023. The company framed the bid as operational necessity: MerryMart operates 89 grocery and convenience stores across the Philippines, with a footprint that complements DoubleDragon's 1.2 million square meters of leasable retail space under the CityMall and Central Hub brands. By taking MerryMart private, DoubleDragon eliminates disclosure friction, accelerates store-level decision-making, and consolidates supply-chain leverage across its combined 350+ retail tenants. The tender's success rate—72% of the offered minority stake—suggests shareholders viewed PHP 0.43 as fair or saw limited upside in holding a thinly traded stub.
The move matters because it completes a vertical integration pattern that began when Sia and Tan Caktiong first partnered in 2019 to merge food, retail, and real estate ecosystems. MerryMart's grocery operations now feed directly into DoubleDragon's anchor-tenant strategy, reducing vacancy risk and improving rental yield stability in secondary cities where institutional grocers avoid long leases. DoubleDragon's PHP 12.8 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue gains a captive operator with PHP 8.3 billion in MerryMart sales, though margin compression from grocery economics—MerryMart's 2.1% net margin versus DoubleDragon's 18%—will test integration discipline. The Philippines Stock Exchange will process the delisting application within 60 trading days; compulsory acquisition notices go out within 30 days of the tender close. Allocators tracking Philippine consumer plays should note that this removes one of three pure-play grocery equities from the board, leaving only Puregold Price Club and Robinsons Retail with meaningful liquidity.
Operators should watch for DoubleDragon's Q2 earnings call, expected late July, where management typically discloses same-store sales velocity and store-count guidance. Integration milestones—supply-chain consolidation, store rebranding, SKU rationalization—will surface in footnotes before they hit the income statement. The compulsory acquisition process will close by mid-May; any minority holdouts face a Philippine SEC arbitration track that historically settles within four months. The stock has traded flat since the tender price was announced, implying the market had already priced full acquisition.
DoubleDragon now controls the fifth-largest grocery chain in a market where the top four—SM Markets, Puregold, Robinsons, Alfamart—hold 68% share. The consolidation bet is that owning the landlord and the tenant compresses costs faster than competitors can match. The arithmetic is straightforward: every percentage point of margin MerryMart gains flows through as higher rent-coverage ratios, which DoubleDragon can lever into better refinancing terms on its PHP 28 billion in outstanding notes. The delisting happens whether or not the integration works. The returns depend entirely on whether Sia's operational tempo transfers to grocery economics.