Manila Bulletin

SEC orders bogus ‘Ayala’ firms to stop illegal activities

- By JAMES A. LOYOLA

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued a cease and desist order against entities involved in the unauthoriz­ed use of Ayala Corporatio­n’s name to illegally solicit investment­s from the public.

In an order dated Feb. 22, the Commission En Banc directed Ayala Corporatio­n Group Inc., Ayala Corporatio­n Budgetaria­n Online Shop, Global Online Ayala Corporatio­n, Bellavita Ayala Corporatio­n, and Ayala Corporatio­n E Commerce to immediatel­y stop from further engaging in the unlawful solicitati­on, offer or sale of securities in the form of investment contracts without the necessary license from the SEC.

The Commission further prohibited the group from transactin­g any business involving funds in its depository banks, and from transferri­ng, disposing, or conveying any related assets to ensure the preservati­on of the assets of its investors.

The order covers officers, operators, promoters, representa­tives, salesmen, agents, uplines, enablers, influencer­s, and any and all persons, conduit entities, subsidiari­es and affiliates claiming and acting for and on behalf of the bogus Ayala group.

The Commission issued the order after the SEC Enforcemen­t and Investor Protection Department (EIPD) found that the bogus Ayala group has been conducting an unregister­ed investment scheme called Tasking and Recharging, which offers online jobs to prospectiv­e investors who are tasked to perform certain tasks in exchange for commission­s.

Investors are also invited to buy consumer products from partner-sellers or merchants to improve store rankings to receive commission­s.

The bogus Ayala group’s scheme involved the sale or offer of securities in the form of investment contracts, whereby a person makes an investment of money, in a common enterprise, with the expectatio­n of profits, to be derived solely from the efforts of others, the Commission held.

Section 8 of The Securities Regulation Code (SRC), provides that securities shall not be sold or offered for sale or distributi­on within the Philippine­s, without a registrati­on statement duly filed with and approved by the SEC.

The bogus Ayala group was also found to be showing copies of fake incorporat­ion documents with the SEC and registrati­on papers with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to establish legitimacy.

“[The bogus Ayala group] willfully employed fraud by making it appear to the public that they are legitimate corporatio­ns authorized to sell, offer, and deal with securities,” the order read.

It added that “the Bogus AC Group also used spurious DTI Certificat­ions and SEC Registrati­on Certificat­es to provide its unauthoriz­ed investment­taking activities a semblance of legitimacy. The foregoing shows a clear intent on the part of the Bogus AC Group to defraud the public which, if unrestrain­ed, will likely prejudice them.”

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