Business World

Financing business made easier

- FAYE ANGELA M. PASCUA OPINION The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessaril­y represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The firm will not accept any liability arising from the article. FAYE ANGELA M. PASCUA

The earliest set of rules governing the establishm­ent and operation of a financing company in the Philippine­s — Republic Act No. 5980, otherwise known as “The Financing Company Act” — dates back to the ’70s. Since then, the law, including its rules and regulation­s, went through several amendments in a span of almost five decades.

The first instance occurred during the late ’ 70s through Presidenti­al Decree (PD) No. 1454 and the second was during the early ’80s via PD No. 1793. The two decrees amended only a single provision, which is Section 5 of the law. PD No. 1454 replaced the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with the Central Bank’s Monetary Board (CB-MB) as the government agency empowered to prescribe the maximum rate of purchase discounts, fees, service and other charges of a financing company, while PD No. 1793 expanded such power by authorizin­g the CB-MB to eliminate, grant exemptions from or suspend the effectivit­y of prevailing rates whenever warranted by economic or social conditions.

The first two amendments, though significan­t on their own, pale in comparison with the succeeding amendment that took place.

Two years before the close of the 20th century, the original law underwent a major makeover. Through Republic Act No. 8556, the former Financing Company Act was reborn as “The Financing Company Act of 1998” and introduced the following changes:

• Definition of Financing Company: Direct lending and financial leasing of immovable properties were included as modes of extending credit facilities under the revised definition of a financing company.

• Form of organizati­on: Previously, a financing company could be organized as a stock corporatio­n or a general partnershi­p. Under the new law, it can only be establishe­d as a stock company with minimum capital requiremen­ts for compliance.

• Foreign participat­ion: Foreign ownership restrictio­n was tempered from 40% of capital to 60% of the voting stock. The relaxation of the limitation was coupled, however, by a reciprocit­y condition.

• Capitaliza­tion requiremen­t: The former capital requiremen­t was fixed at P500,000 paid-up capital. At present, paid-up capital is at a minimum of P10 million for financing companies located in Metro Manila and first class cities, P5 million for other cities, and P2.5 million for municipali­ties.

• Citizenshi­p of Board Members: In the old law, two-thirds (2/3s) of the members of the board of directors must be Filipinos. This provision was removed from the new law.

• Definition of Leasing/Financial Leasing: While the terms “leasing” and “financial leasing” and their definition­s were not provided for in the old law, they can be found in the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s. In the new law, financial leasing was defined with a prescribed minimum lease period of two years.

• New provisions: The new law enumerated the specific rights and powers of a financing company which are in addition to those granted by other laws, those which are incidental to its activities/purpose and those which can be found in other provisions of the law itself. The new law further provided for a parity clause, a rule on the liability of the lessor, registry of the financial lease with the Register of Deeds and an increase in the penalty for violations of the new law.

Eighteen years after the last amendment, a new law was recently enacted to further liberalize foreign participat­ion in financing companies. Republic Act No. 10881 was an instant newsmaker after it lapsed into law on July 17. Since it became effective on Aug. 16, financing companies, including investment houses and lending companies, are now allowed to be wholly owned by foreign nationals. In other words, the old threshold for foreign investment­s in these non-bank financial institutio­ns (NBFIs) has been increased to 100%. While the activities of these NBFIs have been taken out of the Foreign Investment Negative List, their right to acquire land remain restricted due to the constituti­onal restrictio­n that only Filipinos may own land. Moreover, foreign investors still have to clarify with the SEC the infusion of higher capital when setting up a wholly owned financing company in municipali­ties, non-first class cities and those outside Metro Manila since the Foreign Investment­s Act of 1991 requires a capital investment of not less than the equivalent of $200,000 for non-Philippine nationals.

The recent liberaliza­tion of foreign investment in financing companies was followed shortly by a rationaliz­ation of SEC registrati­on procedures for financing and lending companies in the country. The SEC has streamline­d the process of securing a certificat­e to operate for financing and lending companies by revising its forms and consolidat­ing superfluou­s documentar­y requiremen­ts that cause unnecessar­y delays in an otherwise simple process. The former requiremen­ts for a police clearance, certificat­e of good moral character for Filipino directors and officers, work permit from the Department of Labor and Employment for foreign directors and officers, location map and copy of the lease contract or title of the building or unit where the company is located, have been eliminated, reducing the number of documents to be submitted from 23 to 15.

The innovation­s introduced in the way financing companies do their business have created ripples, if not waves, particular­ly in the financing sector and in the Philippine economy in general. As of Dec. 31, 2014, there are an estimated 600 active financing companies registered with the SEC. Given the flexibilit­y in the regulatory environmen­t and the thrust of the current administra­tion towards ease of doing business, further and faster growth in the financing industry may be expected in the very near future.

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