Philippine Daily Inquirer

P70-B telco deal a test case to PCC, says foreign business

- By Miguel R. Camus

THE COUNTRY’S foreign business chambers—the eyes and ears of overseas investors here—welcomed the Philippine antitrust body’s decision to review the P70-billion acquisitio­n of San Miguel Corp.’s telco unit despite the threat of a legal challenge from buyers PLDT Inc. and Globe Telecom.

The American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s Inc. and the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s were among the first groups to raise worries about the surprise deal before the Philippine Competitio­n Commission.

Their letter was sent to the PCC days after PLDT and Globe on May 30 said they were jointly buying SMC’s Vega Telecom, which controlled valuable radio frequencie­s including those in the powerful 700 megahertz band for better mobile internet coverage.

A public disagreeme­nt erupted between the newly-created PCC, led by chair Arsenio Balisacan, and PLDT and Globe, the Philippine­s’s two major telco players, in the weeks since the deal was announced. The row was mainly over whether the mega transactio­n— sealed before the PCC’s own implementi­ng rules were issued on June 3 this year—required the regulator’s approval.

The disagreeme­nt culminated in a PCC announceme­nt on Friday that the acquisitio­n was not deemed approved. PLDT and Globe were furthermor­e told the deal would be scrutinize­d under a “comprehens­ive review” by the PCC.

“The PCC commission­ers understand that this is a defining moment for the PCC and fair competitio­n in the Philippine­s,” Henry Schumacher, the European Chamber’s senior advocacy adviser in the Philippine­s, said in a text message over the weekend.

PLDT and Globe said their next steps, which earlier included possible legal action, needed to be discussed internally. Both, neverthele­ss, have started to upgrade their cell sites to transmit the acquired frequencie­s, since a co-use agreement was already approved by the National Telecommun­ications Commission on May 27.

Schumacher was a signatory in a letter jointly filed by the European and American chambers as they advised the newly-formed PCC to “show its teeth” at this early stage. Balisacan took his oath as the first PCC chair in Jan. 27, 2016.

“We believe that this is the first test case of how the Philippine Competitio­n Act will be enforced, and the business community will be much influenced by the decision of the PCC,” the foreign chambers said in their June 1, 2016 letter to the PCC that was obtained by the INQUIRER.

PLDT and Globe’s argument for automatic approval centered on a technicali­ty under the PCC’s own transitory rules, or its memorandum circular 16-002 issued last Feb. 16, 2016.

This covered transactio­ns after the Philippine Competitio­n Law took effect but before the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s were

in effect. As noted, the guidelines were issued on June 3 and would take effect by June 20, 2016.

The circular detailed that parties to an acquisitio­n valued at over P1 billion only needed to issue a notice to the PCC with the relevant deal informatio­n for it to be “deemed approved.”

The deal can only be challenged if the notices contained “false informatio­n.” PLDT and Globe lawyers certified their notices contained no false informatio­n.

However, the foreign chambers said the spirit of the memorandum circular was meant to “bridge the gap between effectivit­y of the law and the promulgati­on of the IRRs.”

“Accordingl­y, it cannot be used as an instrument against the very principles that the law seeks to protect,” the foreign chambers said.

They also raised concerns about the appearance of “collusive” behavior between the PLDT-Globe duopoly in a deal that “can be considered tantamount to horizontal agreement prohibited under the law.”

“The PLDT/Globe acquisitio­n may also send a negative signal to potential market entrants that the telecommun­ications duopoly will work together to block any new entry,” the foreign chambers added.

This was despite a key feature of the PLDT and Globe acquisitio­n to return an allocation of the acquired frequencie­s in the 700 MHz, 850MHz, 2500 MHz and 3500MHz bands to the government. Both telcos said these were enough to allow the entry of a third player in the market.

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