Philippine Daily Inquirer

Trading houses strong amid volatile market

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla

THE RECENT stock market turbulence has not eroded the capital adequacy of stock brokerage houses trading at the Philippine­s Stock Exchange (PSE), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said.

After reviewing the latest report of the Capital Markets Integrity Corp. (CMIC)—the PSE’s market regulation arm—the SEC said on Friday that trading participan­ts (TPs) remained compliant with the risk-based capital adequacy requiremen­ts (RBCA) mandated by SEC regulation­s.

“This demonstrat­es the strong financial resiliency of the TPs amid the recent sharp volatility in the prices of PSE-listed stocks,” the SEC said.

The RBCA requiremen­ts pertain to the minimum required liquid reserves to protect the firms, their investors, customers and the economy as a whole. The RBCA requiremen­ts ensure broker dealers have enough capital to sustain operating losses while maintainin­g a safe and efficient market.

Of the 132 trading houses that filed their RBCA reports, a total of 98 houses suffered a decrease in net liquid capital due to a drop of stock prices as of Aug. 24, the SEC said, citing the CMIC report.

Meanwhile, the recent shakeout has resulted in 67 brokerage houses experienci­ng a deteriorat­ion in their RBCA ratio; and 22 trading firms seeing their unimpaired paid-up capital godowndue to paper losses in their proprietar­y investment­s, the SEC said.

The market decline also weakened 88 trading houses due to indebtedne­ss relative to their net liquid capital, it reported.

“These findings notwithsta­nding, none of the TPs breached any of these various RBCA thresholds as of Aug. 24, 2015,” the corporate regulator said.

The trading participan­ts are required to comply with several RBCA requiremen­ts such as: a minimumRBC­A ratio of 110 percent; a minimum net liquid capital of P5 million or 5 percent of total indebtedne­ss, whichever is higher; a maximum debt to net liquid capital ratio of 2,000 percent; and, a minimum unimpaired paid-up capital of either P100 million for trading participan­ts who registered after the effectivit­y of the Securities Regulation Code, or P30 million for trading participan­ts already existing before the effectivit­y of the same law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines