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It operates kiosk and food cart franchises in many marketplaces and malls in the major cities of the Philippines. Nacho King is the largest and only nationwide Tex-Mex retailer in the Philippines, and also exports its products internationally, primarily to markets in Asia. The business was founded in 1995 and began selling franchises in 1996.
Food products Makati: 1951 Food and drink P A Converge ICT Solutions: Telecommunications Fixed line telecommunications Pasig: 2009 Broadband, pay TV and IPTV P A Cosmetique Asia Corporation: Consumer goods Manufacturing Quezon City: 2001 Personal care, health care and food products P A Cotabato Light and Power Company: Utilities Conventional ...
Sugar companies of the Philippines (4 P) Pages in category "Food and drink companies of the Philippines" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total.
The company’s major activities include warehousing, food processing, research and quality control, marketing services, and trading. In April 1979, the Human Settlements Development Corporation took over the ownership and management of the company. [1] FTI became a major subsidiary agency of the National Food Authority (NFA). [1]
San Miguel Food and Beverage, Inc., (formerly known as 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 network of offices, farms, manufacturing, processing and ...
Liwayway Holdings Company Limited, doing business as Oishi (/ oʊ ˈ w ɪ ʃ iː / OH-wih-SHEE), is a snack company based in the Philippines. [1] Its headquarters are in Pasay in Metro Manila. [2] As of 2018, it is headed by Carlos Chan. [3] In China, the company is known as Oishi Shanghaojia (上好佳OISHI). [4]
Dali is the first company in the Philippines to pioneer hard discount retailing in the country, with a focus on underprivileged communities as its primary market. Its stores are leanly staffed, often with just two cashiers and no baggers, which helps reduce labor and stocking costs.
In 1955, the company introduced Café Bueno, the first soluble coffee in the Philippine market. By the late 1950s, Café Puro became the second most popular coffee brand in the country next to Nestlé. Huang also established Philippine Food Industries (Philfoods) in 1953 and Filipinas Biscuit Corporation (Fibisco) in 1959. [1]