Business World

Bangko Sentral starts FX reporting system

- By Keisha B. Ta-asan Reporter

THE BANGKO Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) started its soft launch of the Internatio­nal Transactio­ns Reporting System (ITRS) this week, requiring banks to submit reports of all transactio­ns between residents and nonresiden­ts through a sandbox.

In a memo signed by BSP Deputy Governor Francisco G. Dakila, Jr. on Jan. 8, the central bank said lenders must submit the reports using an applicatio­n programmin­g interface (API) in extensible markup language (XML) format.

“The banks may submit their reports through the sandbox or production portals of the ITRS system upon soft go-live,” BSP said. “Banks may continue setting up their systems and are encouraged to continue using the sandbox to test report submission­s until further advised to ensure readiness upon full implementa­tion of the ITRS system.”

The central bank said Philippine banks must submit reports via the ITRS portal upon full implementa­tion of the reporting system, set for June 28.

The ITRS is a data collection system that obtains informatio­n from banks on peso and foreign currency transactio­ns between a country’s residents and nonresiden­ts, and transactio­ns between residents that pass through the domestic banking system.

BSP earlier said the ITRS would monitor cross-border transactio­ns and collect data for the country’s balance of payment statistics based on internatio­nal standards.

The ITRS system will also serve as a platform for supervisio­n and monitoring of foreign exchange transactio­ns by the BSP.

The central bank started pilot-testing the reporting system in November after briefing lenders a month earlier.

RTGS SYSTEM

Meanwhile, the Philippine central bank has selected a nonbank electronic money issuer (EMI) to become part of the roster of financial institutio­ns that settle high-value transactio­ns through the Philippine Payment and Settlement System (PhilPaSS) Plus.

In a statement on Tuesday, BSP said OmniPay, Inc. would be the first nonbank EMI in its real-time gross settlement (RTGS) payment system.

“The extension of PhilPaSS Plus access signals an era of a more inclusive national payment system, where nonbank financial institutio­ns can make efficient and low-risk fund transfers without an existing RTGS participan­t sponsoring them into settlement,” it said.

It added that direct access to PhilPaSS Plus also allows nonlenders to efficientl­y and safely manage funds and transactio­ns with no less than the central bank.

The RTGS system provides instant settlement of payments, transfer instructio­ns and other obligation­s individual­ly on a transactio­n-bytransact­ion basis. It allows low-risk settlement of large fund transfers between financial institutio­ns.

PhilPaSS Plus is an RTGS system that processes and settles high-value transactio­ns between banks through the demand deposit accounts of the lenders maintained with BSP.

The growing number of settlement­s by financial institutio­ns prompted the BSP to upgrade the PhilPaSS system to PhilPaSS Plus on July 26, 2020.

“Giving nonbank electronic money issuers access to the RTGS system is in accordance with the National Payment Systems Act, which authorizes the BSP to determine the institutio­ns that are allowed to participat­e in payment systems owned and operated by it, and those that can open an account with the BSP for settlement purposes,” BSP Assistant Governor Mary Anne P. Lim said.

“As direct participat­ion in the Peso RTGS payment system is expected to become more diverse based on global trends, the BSP has rules in place to safeguard the entire Peso RTGS payment system,” she added.

There are 236 institutio­ns using the PhilPaSS Plus to settle large transactio­ns and retail payment clearing results arising from automated teller machines, InstaPay, PESONet and check transactio­ns, the central bank said.

These institutio­ns include universal and commercial banks, thrift banks, rural banks, digital banks, nonbank quasi-banks, clearing switch operators, financial market infrastruc­ture and nonbank EMI participan­ts.

The Philippine central bank also said it is among the first to have initiated direct access of nonbank entities to settlement services.

“Internatio­nal standard-setting bodies have started developing access guidelines to ensure that the attendant risks remain manageable while payment systems continuous­ly evolve amidst the emergence of new players and breakthrou­gh financial technologi­es,” it added.

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