Ayala Land Premier by Titus Raypon

Ayala Land Premier by Titus Raypon This page is prepared by Augustus A. Raypon, Premier Property Specialist of Ayala Land Premier

17/06/2026

Enclosed by expansive greens and thoughtfully designed spaces, find a place where life unfolds with ease and intention.

At Crescent Grove Vermosa, wellness, nature, and refined living converge in a serene residential estate crafted for meaningful moments and lasting fulfillment.

✨ One Vertis Plaza: The Ultimate Smart Business Move ✨Stop renting the past. Own the future at Quezon City’s premier cor...
03/06/2026

✨ One Vertis Plaza: The Ultimate Smart Business Move ✨

Stop renting the past. Own the future at Quezon City’s premier corporate tower by Ayala Land Premier ~ the first and only premium-grade office tower in Vertis North.

✅ Ready for Move-In | Premium-grade & LEED-certified
✅ Prime Hub | Steps from Ayala Malls, MRT-3, and the future - Subway
✅ Flexible Spaces | Single units (from 114 sqm) to Full Floors
✅ Massive Perks | Up to 46% Cash Discount for a limited time!

Elevate your business where vision meets value. Don’t miss out on the last available full floor in One Vertis Plaza!

📩 DM me for a private presentation or sample computations!

AUGUSTUS “TITUS” RAYPON
Ayala Land Premier - Property Specialist
Recognized Real Estates Salesperson
SMS/Viber/WhatsApp: 0917-324-8487
Email: [email protected] / [email protected]

31/05/2026

How BGC Became So Rich

In 1992 the Philippine government passed Republic Act 7227.

Most Filipinos have never heard of it. It has no memorable name. It generated no significant public debate. It was a piece of post-Cold War administrative legislation signed by President Corazon Aquino to deal with a logistical problem. The United States military was withdrawing from its Philippine bases and somebody needed to figure out what to do with the land.

The answer to that question produced the most valuable piece of urban real estate ever created in Philippine history.

The land that became Bonifacio Global City was originally acquired by the United States government in 1902 as Fort McKinley. For nearly a century it sat behind military fences as an active army base in the geographic center of what would eventually become the most economically significant urban corridor in Southeast Asia. When the bases closed the BCDA was created specifically to convert that land from military use into productive civilian development.

In 1995 a consortium led by Metro Pacific won the right to develop 150 hectares of the former Fort Bonifacio in a joint venture with the BCDA called the Fort Bonifacio Development Corporation. The transaction was described at the time as the deal of the century. The private group paid 30.4 billion pesos for a 55% stake in the development rights over land that was essentially a decommissioned military base with no existing commercial infrastructure, no residential population, no retail, and no reason for any sophisticated investor to believe it would become what it eventually became.

The 1997 Asian financial crisis hit almost immediately after the deal closed. Construction stalled. Confidence collapsed. The development that was supposed to transform a military base into a world-class business district looked, for several years, like one of the most expensive mistakes in Philippine real estate history.

Then Ayala Land and the Campos Group bought Metro Pacific's controlling stake in 2003.

What happened over the next two decades is a case study that every serious property investor in the Philippines should understand with the same precision that Warren Buffett understands the companies he owns.

Ayala Land did not just develop BGC. They master-planned it with the discipline and long-term vision that had produced Ayala Center in Makati and Ayala Alabang in Muntinlupa. Wide pedestrian-friendly streets. Underground utilities. A consistent building setback standard that no other Philippine business district had enforced. International-standard retail anchored by high street brands. Residential towers designed for the upper middle class professional market that was emerging as the Philippine economy recovered and accelerated through the 2000s.

The results compounded in one direction without interruption.

By 2019 land prices in BGC were ranging between 480,000 and 1,200,000 pesos per square meter according to verified market data. Residential condominium prices today range from 200,000 to 400,000 pesos per square meter with premium towers at the upper end of that range. The address that was a military base in 1992 and a construction site in 1997 and a troubled development in 2001 became the most expensive and most sought after urban address in the Philippines by 2015 and has held that position without serious challenge since.

The families and developers who held their BGC positions through the Asian financial crisis, through the political uncertainty of the early 2000s, and through every subsequent moment of doubt that created pressure to sell, built wealth that no other asset class in the Philippine market produced over the same period.

The ones who sold during the crisis locked in losses on an asset that would have made them significantly wealthier than anything they deployed the proceeds into subsequently.

This is the pattern that repeats across every major Philippine real estate wealth creation event in the past fifty years. Alabang in 1977. BGC in 1995. Nuvali in 2008. The pattern is identical every single time.

A master-planned development in a location that the conventional wisdom dismisses as too far, too early, or too risky. A price that feels aggressive for what exists there today. A holding period that tests the conviction of everyone who bought. And a terminal value that makes every entry price look incomprehensibly cheap in retrospect regardless of when during the development cycle the purchase was made.

The question that every investor reading this should be asking right now is not whether BGC was a great investment.

The data settled that question twenty years ago.

The question is which address in the Philippine real estate landscape today is in the same position that BGC was in 1995 or 2003. Dismissed by the conventional wisdom. Priced aggressively for its current state of development. Backed by a master-planning commitment from a developer with the track record and capital to execute across decades. And available today at a price that will look as obviously cheap in 2045 as every BGC entry point looks today.

That address exists.

It is being sold right now.

And the investors who identify it correctly and hold it with the same conviction that the BGC developers held through the Asian financial crisis will be writing this exact same post about a completely different address thirty years from now.

The BGC story is not history.

It is a template.

And the next chapter is currently being written at a price most people still think is too expensive for what it is right now.

28/05/2026

In 1977 Ayala Land launched the first lots in Ayala Alabang Village at 240 pesos per square meter.

At that price a 1,000 square meter lot cost 240,000 pesos. A significant sum in 1977 but within reach of a professional couple, a successful small business owner, or a mid-career executive willing to commit to what was then widely considered a geographic gamble. Alabang was not just far from Manila in 1977. It was psychologically far. The South Luzon Expressway was incomplete. The area was dominated by farmland, sugarcane fields, and the kind of provincial quiet that made Metro Manila professionals question whether buying there was ambition or folly.

Most people passed.

A specific group of people did not.

That same 1,000 square meter lot purchased at 240 pesos per square meter in 1977 for 240,000 pesos is today valued at approximately 200,000 to 250,000 pesos per square meter according to verified 2025 Leechiu Property Consultants and JPatag Real Estate data. That is a current market value of approximately 200,000,000 to 250,000,000 pesos.

From 240,000 pesos to 200,000,000 pesos in 48 years.

That is an appreciation of approximately 833 times the original purchase price. An annualized return of approximately 16% per year sustained across nearly five decades without a single active management decision required beyond the original purchase and the subsequent refusal to sell.

No stock market investment in Philippine history has matched that return on a single asset held passively across the same period. No bond. No business. No cryptocurrency. A piece of land in Alabang purchased when Alabang was considered too far from everywhere worth being.

But the more analytically important question is not what the return was.

It is who made it and why.

The families who bought in Ayala Alabang in the late 1970s and early 1980s were not primarily real estate speculators. They were professionals and entrepreneurs who made one decision that was at odds with the conventional wisdom of their social circle and held that decision with enough conviction to ignore every subsequent opportunity to exit. They were doctors and lawyers who bought lots at 800 to 1,200 pesos per square meter in the early 1980s when prices had already risen from the 1977 launch and everyone around them said they had missed the opportunity. They were business owners who bought in the mid-1980s during the Aquino political crisis when property markets were soft, confidence was shaken, and the path of least resistance was to wait for certainty that never fully arrived.

Every entry point that felt expensive at the time looks incomprehensibly cheap today.

The 1977 buyer paid 240 pesos per square meter and thought they were being bold.

The 1983 buyer paid approximately 2,000 to 3,000 pesos per square meter and thought they were paying a premium.

The 1995 buyer paid approximately 15,000 to 20,000 pesos per square meter and was told by their banker they were overpaying for a southern address.

The 2003 buyer paid approximately 18,000 to 22,000 pesos per square meter when Philstar reported the village had already appreciated 83 times from its 1977 launch price.

Every single one of them was right. Every single one of them made money that their peers who waited for a better entry point never made. Because the better entry point never came. It never comes. The chart of Ayala Alabang land prices across 48 years is a straight line pointing up with occasional flattening during crises that resolved within two to three years and resumed their trajectory as if the interruption never happened.

The pattern is not unique to Ayala Alabang.

It is the pattern of every premium master-planned residential community that Ayala Land has ever developed in the Philippines. Greenbelt. BGC. Nuvali. Anvaya. Mirala. The entry price always felt high at the time. The holding price always looks obvious in retrospect. The families who held without selling across multiple political cycles, multiple economic crises, and multiple moments of genuine uncertainty are the families whose net worth statements today reflect a number they could not have produced through any other asset class at any comparable risk level.

Here is the forward implication that every serious investor reading this should be thinking about right now.

Ayala Land currently has active master-planned developments in Arca South in Taguig, Evo City in Kawit Cavite, and the Bulacan Aerotropolis corridor adjacent to the New Manila International Airport currently under construction. Each of these addresses is today where Alabang was in 1977. Far from the established center. Dismissed by the conventional wisdom as either premature or overpriced for their current state of development. Surrounded by the same combination of skepticism and indifference that surrounded every address that subsequently produced generational wealth for the families who bought early and held without selling.

The 240 pesos per square meter moment of 2026 is not in Alabang.

It is in the address that most people are currently dismissing as too far, too early, or too expensive for what it is right now.

That address exists. It is being priced and sold today. And the families who identify it correctly and hold it with the same conviction that the Alabang buyers of 1977 held their decision will be writing this exact same post about a completely different address in 2074.

The land that makes families wealthy in the Philippines has never been the land that everyone agreed was worth buying.

It has always been the land that everyone agreed was not worth buying yet.

18/05/2026

In his latest column for , Colliers Philippines' Joey Roi Bondoc talks about how South Luzon remains a key economic driver.

This region, he explained, benefits from "its proximity to Metro Manila and sustained public infrastructure investments that are improving its accessibility and raising land values within its emerging corridors."



Read: https://plus.inquirer.net/property/south-luzon-reinforces-position-as-a-pivotal-investment-destination/
To learn more about the people, spaces, structures, and ideas shaping our built world, visit https://plus.inquirer.net/category/property/ or https://business.inquirer.net/property and follow us on Facebook (), Instagram (), and TikTok ()

Your Private Sanctuary Awaits at Crescent Grove Vermosa 🌿Looking for a life of quiet luxury? Secure your spot in a highl...
13/05/2026

Your Private Sanctuary Awaits at Crescent Grove Vermosa 🌿

Looking for a life of quiet luxury? Secure your spot in a highly exclusive community by Ayala Land Premier. Located in Imus, Cavite, you’re just a 20-minute drive from Alabang but a world away from the noise.

With only approximately 200 lots available, this master-planned enclave features dedicated amenities for both relaxation and active living.

Limited-time Terms:

✨ 0% Interest for 60 months

✨ Monthly starts at just ₱44k/month

Don't miss out on Vermosa’s most prestigious address.
📩 DM me for a private presentation or sample computations!

AUGUSTUS "TITUS" RAYPON
Ayala Land Premier - Property Specialist
Recognized Real Estates Salesperson
SMS/Viber/WhatsApp: 0917-324-8487
Email: [email protected] / [email protected]

12/05/2026

Southern Metro Manila and the South Luzon corridor have evolved into one of the Philippines’ most resilient residential investment markets. Once seen as Metro Manila’s suburban edge, the area

11/05/2026

Why 15-minute cities matter more than ever today

As traffic, inflation, and climate pressures reshape urban life, walkable “15-minute cities” are emerging as practical solutions. Ayala Land’s mixed-use estates aim to keep work, essentials, and leisure closer to home—making daily life more convenient, resilient, and connected.

Story link in the comments

09/05/2026

Good news for motorists who regularly sit through the south crawl. Link at the comment section!

Address

20F Ayala Tower One & Exchange Plaza
Makati
1605

Telephone

+639173248487

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