How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System

Chapter 134: The IPO


October 14, 2027 — Bonifacio Global City

The trading floor of TG Motors Headquarters was filled with tension, the kind that came before something historic.

Outside, the skyline shimmered under the early morning sun. From the tall glass windows of the rented TG Motors office tower along 5th Avenue, the skeletal form of TG Tower could be seen a few blocks away, cranes still perched atop its upper floors. Workers were already moving, the steel frame catching light like the bones of a future monument.

But today, everyone's attention was elsewhere — on the dozens of screens flashing stock tickers, NASDAQ feeds, and a live link to the Philippine Stock Exchange.

It was IPO day.

"PSE feed's stable," Hana said, eyes on her tablet. "NASDAQ stream just confirmed synchronization. Both underwriters are green, Morgan Stanley in New York, BDO Capital here in Manila."

Timothy stood quietly behind her, hands in his pockets, dressed sharply in a dark blue suit. Around him, the entire core team had assembled, legal, finance, communications, the same people who had been with him since TG's early days.

"Final pricing?" he asked.

Luis Santiago, CFO of TG Mobility Holdings, stepped forward. "We're going live at $47 per share, equivalent to roughly ₱2,650. Total shares offered — 600 million. We're targeting a $28 billion raise between both listings."

Timothy nodded. "And projected allocation?"

"Seventy percent on NASDAQ, thirty percent on PSE," Luis replied. "U.S. institutions have already oversubscribed. Locally, demand outstripped availability within twelve hours."

"Good," Timothy said simply.

This wasn't just another listing. This was a statement.

Two years ago.

The Philippine Stock Exchange had been in free fall since 2025.

Corruption scandals had driven away international investors, state-backed monopolies had stifled innovation, and the peso had lost nearly 20% of its value in two years. The market had become a ghost town, few listings, fewer IPOs, and even fewer reasons to believe the country's economy could recover.

Until TG Motors announced it would list publicly.

In the weeks leading up to the IPO, newspapers had called it "the return of confidence." Analysts said that if the deal succeeded, it could restore foreign faith in the Philippines' private sector. A homegrown company, fully independent, debt-free, and globally competitive, was about to step onto the same stage as Tesla and BYD.

Even President Lim was scheduled to attend the ceremony at the PSE atrium.

The team gathered around the large LED screen showing the live broadcast. Across the bottom of the feed, a headline scrolled:

TG MOTORS PHILIPPINES — DUAL LISTING: PSE & NASDAQ OPENING CEREMONY

Hana glanced at her watch. "Five minutes."

Reporters outside the building were already shouting questions into cameras. "Will TG Motors revive the Philippine market?" "Is this the biggest IPO in Southeast Asian history?" "What's next after the listing?"

Inside, Timothy stood calm as ever.

"Sir," Luis said, breaking the brief silence. "Just to confirm, post-IPO funding allocation will begin within Q1 2028?"

"Correct," Timothy said. "We're using the capital for gigafactories — ASEAN first, Europe second, then the United States."

The live feed from the PSE atrium filled the screen. Rows of seats, polished marble floors, camera crews, and flashes from every angle. The underwriters were there, the economic ministers, and even a few familiar faces from the corporate sector, the same ones who once doubted TG could compete internationally.

The host's voice boomed through the speakers.

"Today marks a turning point for Philippine innovation. The listing of TG Motors Philippines is not only the largest IPO in the nation's history but a symbol of hope for the revival of our capital markets."

Applause followed. Timothy stood tall in front of the camera as the PSE and NASDAQ feeds went live simultaneously.

"Ladies and gentlemen," the host continued, "we welcome TG Motors' Founder and Chairman — Mr. Timothy Guerrero."

The entire room clapped. Even the team behind him paused their screens for a moment to watch.

Timothy took the podium and began his speech.

"Two years ago, we built TG Motors not to chase global markets, but to prove that the Philippines could create, and lead, industries that matter.

When others left the country because of corruption, we stayed. When investors pulled out, we kept building. Today, this IPO isn't just about raising capital. It's about rebuilding trust, in our people, in our talent, and in what this nation can achieve if given the chance."

The room was silent except for the clicking of cameras.

He looked toward the camera, speaking directly to the investors watching from abroad.

"This listing will fund our next chapter, the construction of gigafactories across ASEAN, Europe, and the United States. From the Philippines, we will power the future of global mobility. This isn't a dream anymore. It's our next step."

Applause thundered through the PSE atrium and the TG Motors office simultaneously.

Hana smiled slightly. "Perfect," she murmured.

A countdown began on the large screen.

5... 4... 3... 2... 1...

Timothy pulled the lever on the ceremonial bell.

A resounding clang echoed across both the PSE and NASDAQ streams. The ticker immediately lit up:

TGMH – TG MOTORS HOLDINGS

Opening Price: $47.00 (₱2,650)

Within minutes, both screens flared with color, the numbers rising faster than expected.

"NASDAQ's up six percent already!" Luis exclaimed. "PSE volume's exploding!"

Hana's tablet vibrated with constant updates. "Foreign inflows are surging. Manila's hitting ₱2,950 — it's climbing past projections!"

Applause filled the office. Even the analysts who had maintained their composure through weeks of preparation couldn't help but cheer.

The PSE hadn't seen green numbers like this in two years.

By 10:00 AM, TG Motors' stock had risen to ₱3,120 — a 17% surge from its opening price.

***

Later that afternoon.

Timothy stood by the window of his office, looking out at the near-finished TG Tower.

"We closed at $58 on NASDAQ, ₱3,110 here," she reported. "Market cap just broke $110 billion. You did it, Tim."

Timothy simply smiled. Two years ago, he was just a broke college student. But now, he was handling what seemed to be a business empire in automotives and semiconductors. It's all thanks to the reconstruction system. If it didn't exist, he would probably still do what he had been doing.

"Also, you have a scheduled interview in GMA News later at 7 in the evening," Hana reminded.

"Oh…interview, it's the first time being interviewed on live television. Let's prepare for it then."

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