The Manila Times

DoF pushing PH capital market digitaliza­tion

- BY ANNA LEAH E. GONZALES REY ELBO

THE country’s first Electronic Securities Issue Portal (e-SIP) that would allow the online registrati­on and processing of documents in the primary market will clear the way to the streamlini­ng and digitaliza­tion of transactio­n flows in the country’s capital markets.

In a statement on Monday, the Finance department, citing Philippine Dealing System Holdings Corp.’s (PDS Group) report to DoF Secretary and Capital Market Developmen­t Council (CMDC) Chairman Carlos Dominguez 3rd, said that Ayala Land Inc. (ALI) was e-SIP’s pilot user with its offer of a four-year P10-billion bond last April 21.

ALI will also become the first company to list its corporate bond offer in the capital market and the Philippine Dealing and Exchange Corporatio­n (PDex) using the e-SIP.

“Instead of submitting voluminous documentat­ion twice for the PDS Registry and the Philippine Dealing and Exchange Corp, (primary market issuers), (issuers) would now only have to submit once electronic­ally, doing away with the paper-based submission­s,” said Ma. Theresa Ravalo, the president and chief executive officer of the PDS Group’s Philippine Depository and Trust Corp. (PDTC) and the Philippine Securities Settlement Corp. (PSSC) during the

recent CMDC meeting.

The CMDC, a coordinati­ng body tasked to facilitate the developmen­t of the Philippine capital market, is also co-chaired by lawyer Benedicta Du-Baladad, former President of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippine­s (FINEX), and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Emilio Aquino.

“We hope to get more issuers to soon follow ALI and get onboarded onto the system,” Ravalo said in her report.

The e-SIP portal would also allow investors to make their reservatio­ns for the bond issuances through electronic means and enable issuers to expand their reach by selling their securities online.

Because some issuers have yet to familiariz­e themselves with electronic­based transactio­ns, Ravalo said the PDS has made the use of the portal optional.

“What used to be a paper-based process for the issuers and investors, requiring submission of physical documents and, in the case for investors in the provinces, shipment of these documents to head offices for submission to the registry, with the e-SIP portal there is now the option to submit electronic­ally. For the issuers, this would mean wider reach for their investors,” Ravalo said.

Ravalo said e-SIP also reduces the time for the submission of the issuer’s requiremen­ts from three days to only one day.

She said the next step in the e-SIP project is to digitize the paperwork-heavy pre-settlement processes in the corporate bond secondary market.

The PDS is targeting to implement this second phase of the project by the third quarter of 2021.

Dominguez, for his part, said the eSIP project would not only digitize the capital markets but would also benefit the environmen­t as doing away with voluminous paper-based submission­s would save millions of trees.

“This is a very good initiative, and we’d want to see how we are doing on a periodic basis,” Dominguez said.

During the meeting, Consuelo Garcia and Jose Emmanuel Hilado of FINEX presented before CMDC a digital roadmap for the Philippine capital market, which covers government bonds and corporate/bank bonds, trust funds and mutual funds, and common shares and perpetual preferred shares.

Garcia said that a team formed for this effort has agreed that the digital platform for the capital markets would cover primary and secondary transactio­ns, and should connect to other registries such as the national ID system and electronic trading and settlement channels.

According to Hilado, the project aims to digitize the whole life cycle of bonds.

“This will take away the pain points of the retail investors so that we can make it more cost efficient for everyone. If we are able to do this, then we can say that we have democratiz­ed bond investing,” Hilado said.

Hilado said digitaliza­tion will do away with investors filling up forms and going to the banks to process their transactio­ns in order to buy financial instrument­s.

“The ideal set-up is the Bonds.PH app initiated by the Bureau of Treasury in partnershi­p with PDAX (Philippine Digital Asset Exchange), as the developer of the platform and Union Bank as the broker-dealer. The app allowed small investors, including OFWs (overseas Filipino workers), to buy Retail Treasury Bonds and the Premyo Bonds from anywhere using their mobile phones and other devices,” said Hilado.

Due to space limitation­s, Beyond Buzzwords is published on our website at www.manilatime­s.net/business/ columnists-business.

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BEYOND BUZZWORDS

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