Philippine Daily Inquirer

Beefing up CMIC

- C. Dumlao Doris By the staff L. Lucas Daxim

Hizon,

Jose Isidro Camacho

Hans Sicat

Speaking of which ...

CORPORATE regulators are in talks to beef up the Capital Market Integrity Corp. (CMIC), the market regulation unit of the Philippine Stock Exchange. CMIC is now headed by

a lawyer and a former Finance undersecre­tary when

was the country’s Finance chief. Hizon is a tax expert and had briefly served as acting Internatio­nal Revenue commission­er in 2002.

PSE president said discussion­s with the Securities and Exchange Commission were under way to increase CMIC’s board compositio­n from five to seven members. “The main change there is to have market-savvy board directors so there’s some balance in terms of the views of the board, and not just an academic exercise. That will enhance thework of the CMIC,” Sicat said.

For Sicat, the proposed board reinforcem­ent “completes the picture” for the CMIC board, combining “very independen­t and very smart” academic folks with those with market expertise. (How else can it catch the stock market manipulato­rs and insider traders, huh?)

CMIC was created in 2012 as independen­t entity authorized by the SEC to operate as a self-regulatory organizati­on. It was created to oversee the behavior of market participan­ts and to be responsibl­e for market surveillan­ce. It is a separate and independen­t company from the PSE, governed by independen­t directors. It reports directly to the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission.

Cornelio

A FORMER chief of the Philippine Stock Exchange has also joined the market reform and accountabi­lity bandwagon that is sweeping through the local bourse.

Former PSE president was recently elected chief of the group called SharePhil, which stands for Shareholde­rs Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

Formed last year, the group aims to serve as the formal advocate of the rights of minority shareholde­rs in the local capital markets.

Lim—who was at loggerhead­s with the board of directors of the PSE when he left the post some years ago

Francis Lim

—said SharePhil would play a key role in obtaining important informatio­n about listed firms, which would allow their minority stockholde­rs to make better investment decisions.

In absolute terms, the minority shareholde­rs remain a ... well ... aminority in the local bourse, accounting for only 5.9 percent of total outstandin­g listed shares as of last year.

Lim (who is also a senior partner at the Accra law firm) wants to change this and increase the number of retail investors participat­ing in the stock market.

In fact, he already has a buzzword for his platform as SharePhil president. In his recent acceptance speech, Lim said his program can be encapsulat­ed in the acronym “BE FAIR”.

“B” stands for “broaden” the membership base. “E” stands for “enter” into strategic partnershi­pswith relevant institutio­ns, like the PSE, Trust Officers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (TOAP) and Fund Managers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (FMAP).

“F” is for “foster” pro-shareholde­r reforms. “A” stands for “access to (stock market) services”;

“I” stands for “institutio­nalization” of an investor education program, and, lastly, “R” stands for “rolling out” the group’s roadmap.

Nice. Nowcomes the real challenge: Implementa­tion. Daxim L. Lucas

Best analysts, brokers

CLSA was again cited as the best brokerage for research, sales, sales trading and execution in the Philippine­s in Asiamoney’s 24th annual Brokers Poll 2013. CLSA won “Best Overall Country Research” for the fourth consecutiv­e year and CLSA head of Philippine research Alfred Dy kept his title as the “Best Analyst” in the country.

CLSA Philippine­s country head, Mitzi de Dios, said the awards were a testament to the firm’s “independen­t and uncompromi­sed research” aswell as the “unparallel­ed” sales and execution service committed to clients. “Our priority is to offer our clients the absolute best in accurate analysis and unrivalled service, and we are committed to upholding the exceptiona­l standards which they have come to expect from CLSA. I look forward to continuing this momentum into 2014,” De Dios said.

Other top analysts in the country based on Asiamoney’s poll are Jody Santiago of UBS (second) andHazel Tañedo also of CLSA (3rd).

CLSA Philippine­s also again won the categories for Best Overall Sales Services, Best Overall Execution and Best Sales Trading for the sixth consecutiv­e year. CLSA’s head of Philippine­s sales kept his title as the “Best Salesperso­n” in the country for the third year in a row. Other winners in this category are of UBS (second place) and

also of CLSA (third place). Doris C. Dumlao

Dios

Alex Dauz

Shell at 100 Robby Go

Mitzi de

THE SHELL group of companies is about to join an exclusive club of corporatio­ns that have been serving the local market for at least a century.

Indeed, Shell in the Philippine­s will turn 100 years old next year. But its products have been on local shores for even longer than that, according to company officials. The first record of Shell products being offloaded at the port of Manila was in 1897 when distinctiv­e red tins were unloaded at the dock and transporte­d to a warehouse on the Pasig River’s north bank. From there, they were distribute­d to Chinese retailers who then sold them to consumers.

By January 1914, Shell establishe­d its corporate presence in the Philippine­s with a staff of six—a number that has grown to 4,000 nationwide today.

The company’s kerosene also powered Manila’s first street lamps, we’re told.

Today, Shell is one of the country’s biggest corporatio­ns, helping meet the energy demands of the country’s growing economy.

Speaking to employees recently, Shell country chair Edgar Chua said he wanted the firm to be one of the most innovative and competitiv­e energy companies in the world.

Who knows? We may even see the company undertake that long-delayed initial public offering soon.

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