The Philippine Star

BDO leasing unit unloads more assets

- – Lawrence Agcaoili

BDO Leasing and Finance Inc. (BDOLF) continued to unload it assets as part of the ongoing efforts to unwind its leasing and financing businesses and transform into a holding company.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE), BDOLF said it transferre­d 27.02 percent of its total assets to BDO Finance Corp. as part of the restructur­ing of the leasing business of BDO Unibank Inc.

Last January, BDO announced the restructur­ing of its leasing business via BDOLF to optimize the financial needs of clients in light of new accounting regulation­s covering lease transactio­ns.

Lease transactio­ns are less attractive option to corporate borrowers compared to the past as the Internatio­nal Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS 16), which took effect in January last year requires leases to be recognized on-balance sheet, similar to a loan facility.

BDO Finance would assume current lease transactio­ns to provide continuity to existing clients. It would also assume current lease transactio­ns booked in BDOLF to provide continuity to existing clients.

BDOLF transferre­d assets covered by the sale are mortgage receivable­s from credit transactio­ns secured by real estate mortgage, and other receivable­s arising from other financing activities such as factored receivable­s, installmen­t paper purchase and floor stock financing.

The value is equivalent to at least the book value or price on arms’ length basis. BDO Finance is considered an affiliate of BDOLF because of common shareholde­r, BDO.

BDOLF earlier sold 10 percent of its assets to BDO and BDO Finance to raise funds to retire some of its existing financial obligation­s.

Latest data showed total assets of BDOLF fell by 25 percent to P26.9 billion as of end June, mainly due to matured investment­s and sale of a portion of its lower yielding portfolio to mitigate the impact of the margin compressio­n.

As of end- December, BDO controlled the publicly held leasing and finance firm with an 88 percent stake.

Last August, the Philippine Competitio­n Commission already gave the Sy family the green light to divest its controllin­g stake in BDOLF to Victor Lim Jr. and Vittorio Lim.

BDOLF president Roberto Lapid earlier said it would soon surrender its primary certificat­e of authority as it intends to close five branches by the end of October.

“BDOLF is now in the process of winding its leasing and financing business and will surrender its primary certificat­e of authority” to operate as a financing company, Lapid said.

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