Business World

Regulator warns against possible weakening of competitio­n under FIST law

- Jenina P. Ibañez

THE Philippine Competitio­n Commission (PCC) warned against the possible competitio­n-weakening effects of a recently signed law that will relieve banks of non-performing loans.

“What we have learned from experience­s of crises in the last 50 or so years is that relaxing competitio­n is not the way to go,” PCC Chairman Arsenio M. Balisacan said in a briefing Monday, in response to a question on the recent signing of the Financial Institutio­ns Strategic Transfer (FIST) Act.

“Once the crisis is over, it’s extremely difficult to remove those (policies) that are already in place.”

He did not elaborate on the exact process by which competitio­n will weaken.

The FIST law allows banks to unburden themselves of nonperform­ing loans by transferri­ng them to FIST Corporatio­ns (FISTCs), a type of Asset Management Company specializi­ng in managing distressed assets. The law does not accommodat­e the PCC’s traditiona­l role of approving major acquisitio­ns, during which the commission weighs in on whether the deal reduces competitio­n.

The PCC, Mr. Balisacan added, advocates against setting aside competitio­n policy to survive economic crises. The FIST Act was specifical­ly drafted to help banks deal with the fallout of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.

“In fact, we should strengthen competitio­n because if we allow, for very weak reasons, consolidat­ion that would lead to strengthen­ing of the ability or the incentive to abuse market power then you’ll have already forestalle­d the ability to achieve faster and more sustainabl­e growth in the future,” he said.

Article 6 of the law requires financial institutio­ns and FISTCs to submit a database of their sales and transfers to the PCC every month. A requiremen­t to consult with PCC before an asset transfer was removed.

Banking groups supported the signing of the law, saying that it would help them recover from an increase in non-performing loans during the pandemic and improve lending activity going forward. —

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