Philippine poultry giant Vitarich Corporation has taken a significant step forward in its growth ambitions, completing the USD 4.8 million buyout of Broilers Club Inc. (BCI), a breeder farm operation nestled in Davao del Sur, Mindanao.
The Definitive Agreement was signed on February 23, 2026, drawing the curtain on a deal that hands Vitarich full ownership of BCI's farm assets.
At the heart of the acquisition sits a 4.6 hectare plot of land in Sta Cruz, Davao del Sur, together with fully operational breeder farm facilities and equipment. BCI, which also trades under the name Southern Sunrise Agriventures, was founded back in 2018 with a focused remit of producing hatching eggs for poultry aggregators across the region.
The numbers speak for themselves. With BCI now firmly under its wing, Vitarich anticipates an 8% boost in breeder output, translating into a steadier and more dependable flow of broiler chicks to markets nationwide. Going forward, BCI will channel 100% of its day old chick production exclusively to Vitarich, with all earnings folded into the parent company's financial books.
The move is very much part of a bigger picture. Vitarich has been quietly but deliberately building a more resilient supply chain in response to growing poultry demand across the Philippines and wider Southeast Asia. Bringing BCI's operations in house not only tightens the company's grip on its production pipeline but also shields it from the kind of supply disruptions and feed cost pressures that have rattled the industry in recent years. Vertical integration, in short, is proving to be a smart play.
The transaction received full backing from Vitarich's board of directors, acting on the recommendation of its Organisational and Business Development Committee, signalling strong internal confidence in the strategy.
On the financial side, the US$4.8mn consideration was spread across share acquisition, loan reimbursements, land payments, and converted shareholder advances. An initial US$0.17mn was paid upfront as option money, US$ 2.38mn was settled at closing, and the remaining US$2.22mn will follow once share and land title transfers are completed.
Notably, the deal sat comfortably below the US$59.6mn threshold requiring Philippine Competition Commission scrutiny, allowing it to proceed without regulatory intervention.