The Philippine Star

E-money issuers now subject to liquidity requiremen­ts

- By LawRence agcaoiLi

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has imposed a minimum capital and liquidity requiremen­ts on electronic money issuers (EMIs) to promote a safe, efficient and inclusive digital finance ecosystem.

The BSP issued Resolution 122 on Jan. 26 approving the amendments to the pertinent provisions of the Manual of Regulation­s for Banks and Manual of Regulation­s for Non-Bank Financial Institutio­ns on the regulation­s government the issuance of e-money and operations of EMIs.

BSP Governor Felipe Medalla said the amendments aim to equip EMIs with tools to answer the evolving needs and behaviors of consumers and in responding to the existing and emerging risks in the financial sector, such as cybersecur­ity and money laundering.

“The revised guidelines reaffirm the BSP’s commitment to uphold the welfare of Filipinos by promoting a safe, secure, and inclusive financial system,” Medalla said.

He said the new regulation­s governing EMIs and operations allow BSP-supervised financial institutio­ns (BSFls) to adopt risk management systems commensura­te to their size, risk profile, complexity of operations, and systemic importance.

“This enables BSFIs to provide financial services attuned to the evolving needs and behavior of consumers and supported by safeguards and controls to ensure that risks remain within manageable levels,” the central bank said.

The revised guidelines set out higher liquidity and capital requiremen­ts for EMIs with significan­t outstandin­g e-money balance and large scale operations, respective­ly.

EMIs with monthly outstandin­g e-money balance of at least P100 million are required to maintain liquid assets in trust accounts equivalent to at least 50 percent of their outstandin­g e-money balance and to cover the remaining balance with placements in bank deposits, government securities, or other liquid assets acceptable to the BSP.

EMIs with outstandin­g emoney balance below P100 million may continue to comply with the liquidity requiremen­ts by holding eligible liquid assets.

Meanwhile, the new rules set out higher minimum capital requiremen­ts for EMIs with largescale operations recognizin­g the higher risk exposures of said entities.

The issuance defines large-scale EMIs as those with 12-month average value of aggregated inflow and outflow transactio­ns equal to or greater than P25 billion.

Under the guidelines, largescale EMIs are required to maintain minimum capital of P200 million while the minimum capital requiremen­t for small-scale EMIs is P100 million.

Consistent with the applicatio­n of the risk-based principle, the BSP lifted the P100,000 monthly aggregate load limit and now allows EMIs to set pre-defined limit and threshold per client category based on the results of their institutio­nal risk assessment and customer due diligence process.

The regulator has given EMIs one year from the effectivit­y of the revised regulation­s to comply.

To date, there are 29 EMI-banks and 41 EMI-others registered with the central bank.

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