Business World

Loan rules for SPEs to widen credit access

- K.A.N. Vidal

UNIONBANK of the Philippine­s welcomed the move of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to ease rules on the lending ceiling imposed on banks to accommodat­e financing for big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects.

During a roundtable discussion, UnionBank President and Chief Executive Officer Edwin R. Bautista said the central bank’s move is a good thing as this will help firms involved in constructi­ng big-ticket projects.

The BSP allowed firms implementi­ng major infrastruc­ture projects to have a separate single borrower’s limit (SBL) as they secure funding from banks and quasi-banks.

The SBL is intended to limit the credit exposure to a single client to a maximum of 25% of a bank’s net worth to minimize risks for the lender in the case of default, as relying too heavily on one borrower could damage the bank’s performanc­e and bottom line.

Mr. Bautista explained that the easing of SBL rules will be beneficial for conglomera­tes involved in the constructi­on of projects part of the government’s “Build Build Build” initiative, as some of them have already borrowed funds to grow their businesses.

“Many of the entities who are bidding for those big projects are the conglomera­tes and the same [ firms] who have also borrowed to fund their own expansions. If you didn’t give them relief, some of them will hit their SBLs,” Mr. Bautista said in a mix of Filipino and English.

The new rules allow project contractor­s — which the BSP called special purpose entities (SPEs) — to have a separate 25% exposure cap from lenders. This effectivel­y gives them a bigger loan line to tap, as it would be treated separately from credit secured by their parent firms.

SPEs are usually composed of several conglomera­tes forming a consortium as they bag big- ticket constructi­on contracts from the government.

Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc., UnionBank’s parent company, is one of the con-

glomerates which are part of the “super- consortium” proposing to rehabilita­te the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport. Other companies which are part of the group include Ayala Corp., Alliance Global Group, Inc., Asia Emerging Dragon, Filinvest Developmen­t Corp., JG Summit Holdings Inc. and Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp.

The country’s monetary authority said the move is “in support of the government’s Build, Build, Build initiative,” referring to the plan of the government to spend as much as P8 trillion from 2016 to 2022 on high- impact infrastruc­ture projects nationwide.

“The country needs the infrastruc­ture... roads, ports and bridges. That’s a good thing. That will also spread out the growth outside Manila,” Mr. Bautista added.

UnionBank recorded a P2.9billion net profit in the first quarter of the year, 31.8% higher than the P2.2 billion it booked in the same period in 2017. The Aboitizled lender said it “sustain[ ed] double-digit growth in terms of customer businesses.”

The Aboitiz-led bank will raise P10 billion in additional capital through a stock rights offer as approved by its board of directors to boost its buffers and fund continued growth.

UnionBank shares closed at P91.25 each on Monday, gaining P1.05 or 1.16% from Friday’s finish.

 ??  ?? UNIONBANK of the Philippine­s said the new rules will help firms get more credit for the projects.
UNIONBANK of the Philippine­s said the new rules will help firms get more credit for the projects.

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