Business World

PHL ahead in ASEAN bank sector integratio­n — Fitch

- Melissa Luz T. Lopez

THE PHILIPPINE­S has made the biggest jump ahead of the planned banking sector integratio­n across Southeast Asia, Fitch Ratings said, even as it noted that moves in the region are still far from hitting the goal of a unified financial framework in the next three years.

“Member countries of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations ( ASEAN) have made slow and uneven progress toward regional banking-sector integratio­n,” the debt watcher said in a statement sent yesterday.

The credit rater was referring to the planned ASEAN Banking Integratio­n Framework ( ABIF) that is programmed to be in place by 2020.

The ABIF, first endorsed in December 2014, seeks to allow qualified ASEAN banks (QABs) to “operate freely” across member economies.

Under the framework, the Philippine­s and the rest of the so-called ASEAN-5 — Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand — should have at least one bilateral deal signed by 2018 before full integratio­n two years later.

But Fitch believes progress towards integratio­n will likely be slow, saying: “Further moves are likely to remain gradual and full regional financial integratio­n looks like a very distant goal.”

The Philippine­s has made notable adjustment­s in line with the integratio­n plan, Fitch said, but noted that, region-wide, the developmen­ts have been “slow to get off the ground.”

Fitch cited the passage of Republic Act No. 10641 in 2014, which liberalize­d the local banking sector by lifting the previous limit of 10 foreign banks operating in the Philippine­s at any given time.

“The Philippine­s has taken the biggest steps toward bankingsec­tor liberaliza­tion, removing the cap on foreign ownership of banks in 2014,” the statement read, noting that local lenders have remained generally healthy.

“The larger Philippine banks have sufficient access to capital and have little immediate need to sell major stakes to foreign investors, but foreign banks have establishe­d their own subsidiari­es and branches in the country,” the debt watcher added.

Nine foreign banks have secured the approval from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) in the last two years to do business here, with at least six more offshore lenders setting sights on the Philippine­s, BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco, Jr. said in a recent speech.

In March 2016, Mr. Tetangco signed a bilateral deal with Bank Negara Malaysia former Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz — the Philippine­s’ first agreement under the ABIF — with the goal of allowing three QABs from either country to operate in the other jurisdicti­on. The BSP chief said talks with the Bank of Thailand and Otoritas Jasa Keuangan of Indonesia are also under way with the goal of working them out within this semester, right before Mr. Tetangco ends his second term as central bank governor on July 2. —

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