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San Miguel Integrated Logistics Services, Inc. (San Miguel Logistics), a subsidiary of San Miguel Corporation, is one of the Philippines’ leading logistics company that offers full range of transportation and logistics services to meet the needs of modern businesses. Operations and Maintenance Group. SMC Repairs and Maintenance Inc.
San Miguel Food and Beverage, Inc., doing business as San Miguel Foods (formerly Pure Foods Corporation and San Miguel Pure Foods Company, Inc.), is a Philippine food and beverage company headquartered in Pasig, Metro Manila. It is the largest food and beverage company in the Philippines, with nearly 3,000 employees deployed in a nationwide ...
Magnolia is a food and beverage brand owned by San Miguel Corporation (SMC) and used by its various subsidiaries. The brand was commercially established by SMC (then known as San Miguel Brewery) as an ice cream brand in 1925.
Magnolia, Inc. was established in 1981 when San Miguel Corporation (SMC) spun off its butter, margarine and processed cheese assets into a joint-venture with New Zealand Dairy Board (NZDB), forming Philippine Dairy Products Corporation (PDPC).
The second incarnation of San Miguel Brewery, Inc. is a subsidiary of San Miguel Corporation, was incorporated on July 26, 2007; the domestic beer business was spun off into San Miguel Brewery, Inc. on October 1, 2007. [4] In 2009, Kirin Holdings Co. Ltd. of Japan acquired 48.3% of San Miguel Brewery, Inc. from SMC for PHP 8.841 per share. [5]
Ramon See Ang (born January 14, 1954), also known by his initials RSA, is a Filipino businessman.He is the president and chief executive officer (CEO) of Top Frontier Investment Holdings, Inc., the largest shareholder of San Miguel Corporation (SMC).
Later that year, San Miguel Corporation bought back the government's stake for P57.6 billion, ending a 26-year period in which the Philippine government was a major voting block in the corporation. [15] In November of the same year, the court ruled that a 72.2% stake in UCPB was owned by the state, because they were bought using coco levy funds ...
In 1981, San Miguel spun off its soft drink businesses to a new company named Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc. (CCBPI). The company was established as a joint-venture between San Miguel Corporation (70%) and The Coca-Cola Company (30%).