Philippine Daily Inquirer

DBP, FMIC top brass, officers fined for ‘wash sales’

- BY THE STAFF E-mail us at bizbuzz@inquirer.com.ph. Get business alerts and a preview of Biz Buzz the evening before it comes out.

Remember the issue of socalled “wash sales” at the stateowned Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s (DBP) that resulted in P717 million in losses for the government bank that we exposed earlier this year?

And remember, too, that an investigat­ing unit of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) wanted to imposed a P1million fine on each of the DBP personalit­ies involved in the transactio­n, including members of its board of directors?

Well, Biz Buzz recently got hold of the new report issued by the same SEC department—specifical­ly, the Enforcemen­t and Investor Protection Department—and the findings of its director Jose Aquino are jaw dropping, to say the least.

To recall, an auditor of the Commission on Audit (COA) had flagged dozens of bond trades between the government financial institutio­n and the investment banking arm of Metropolit­an Bank and Trust Co. executed in 2014—but revealed only this year—totaling P14 billion. DBP sold the bonds to FMIC and bought them back at the same day and at the same price in an effort to transfer them from one internal book to another, and in the process incur millions in losses.

According to the SEC report, which was released a few weeks ago (a copy of which Biz Buzz obtained recently), the transactio­ns between DBP and First Metro Investment Corp. (FMIC) had indeed violated the provisions against market manipulati­on in the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), the law governing the trading of negotiable instrument­s such as bonds in the country.

“The subject transactio­ns between DBP and FMIC appeared to be legitimate transactio­ns under the guise of actual change in beneficial ownership of subject securities, when in fact, there was no ultimate change in beneficial ownership thereof, as the securities were reverted to DBP and with the end result that the parties squared their respective positions at the end of the trading day,” the SEC report said.

“Hence, based on analysis of the data and other informatio­n available, the subject transactio­ns only created the impression that DBP’s real intention was to enter into subject transactio­ns without changing the beneficial ownership of the securities through what appears to be legitimate buy and sell transactio­ns,” the regulator added.

“Undeniably, violation of Section 24.1 (a)(iii) of the SRC was committed,” SEC said, referring to the provision of the law that prohibits the creation of “misleading appearance of

active trading” and performing acts “where there are no change in beneficial ownership.”

And what penalties did the SEC’s investigat­ing unit prescribe?

DBP directors, namely chair Jose Nuñez Jr., former president and CEO Gil Buenaventu­ra — and now the new CEO of the money laundering issue-linked Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. — directors Lydia Echauz, Reynaldo Geronimo, Daniel Laogan, Alberto Lim (who chaired the board’s risk oversight committee), Cecilia Lorenzo, Vaughn

Montes and Jose Luis Vera, were determined to have violated provisions of the law against price manipulati­on and failure to ensure internal controls at the bank. For that, they were all slapped with a penalty of P500,000 each — a 50-percent reduction from the earlier recommenda­tion of a P1-million fine each. DBP’s treasury head Kit

Agena was also fined P500,000 and prohibited from sitting as an officer or board director for two years. DBP official Rafael

Reynante was fined P300,000 for failing to conduct due diligence on the deal as part of his compliance functions, while “no sufficient evidence” was found against DBP officials Susan Pra

do, Ruston Corpuz and Francis delos Reyes.

But interestin­gly enough, FMIC was also slapped with penalties by the SEC unit.

Metrobank’s investment banking arm was told to pay a P1-million fine for violating the SRC. Its financial markets group

head Reynaldo Montalbo; debt securities trading head Anna Graziela Banaad; David Ignacio; Perceval Peña; and trader

Bernice Joyce Nobleza were also ordered to pay a monetary fine of P100,000 each within 15 days of receiving the SEC order. FMIC’s compliance officer

Jonathan Tabac was also slapped a P300,000 fine and a two-month suspension by the corporate regulator.

From the point of view of SEC probers, there was enough blame to go around and almost all the parties who were involved in the deal were penalized one way or the other. So... all’s well that ends well? Let’s see. —Daxim L. Lucas

‘Big brother’

If you think internet connectivi­ty, traffic and airport congestion are too bad in Manila, then Beijing isn’t for you. This is what some businessme­n and media people (who don’t fre- quent China’s capital) came to realize during the four-day state visit of President Duterte.

But Pinoy expats said connectivi­ty wasn’t always that bad in Beijing. In normal times, the quality of broadband there is even better than in Manila. They are convinced that connectivi­ty is being jammed to enable the screening of content from the state visit. It was challengin­g to cover the event realtime due to slow internet, whether hooked to the Wi-Fi of a five-star hotel like Grand Hyatt (where Mr. Duterte and his Cabinet members took up official residence during the trip) or using the roaming signal.

“I’ll never complain about slow broadband back home again,” said one businessma­n. —Doris Dumlao-Abadilla

MVP, not MVP Manuel

Businessma­n V.

Pangilinan turned to Twitter on Monday to clarify that he was not “not at all involved” with a group called “MVP Global Infrastruc­ture.”

“No ownership. No links. No affiliatio­n,” Pangilinan said.

You see, MVP Global signed two infrastruc­ture deals (via memoranda of understand­ing) at the sidelines of President Duterte’s state visit to China last week. One was a joint venture with Tanjin Suli Group, one of China’s biggest industrial conglomera­tes, to set up a cable manufactur­ing enterprise in the Philippine­s that would produce $3 billion in trade value. Another was an MOU with China Railway Engineerin­g Corp. (CREC) to bid for $2.5 billion worth of infrastruc­ture investment­s, whether via public-private partnershi­p bids or unsolicite­d bids.

MVP Global is a private investment group focused on coinvestin­g with large mainland Chinese companies in Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippine­s. The group is anchored by three entreprene­urs from Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippine­s (hence ’MVP’?).

MVP’s Filipino principal is entreprene­ur Enrique Gonza

lez of IPVG Corp. and IP E-Game Ventures Inc.

Pangilinan, by the way, did not fly to China to join the Philippine­s’ 450-member business delegation as previously planned. He was instead seen cheering for Meralco in the PBA championsh­ip game versus Ginebra, a game which was dramatical­ly won by San Miguel Corp.’s Ginebra Gin Kings. —Doris Dumlao-Abadilla

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines