Philippine Daily Inquirer

BENGZON ASKS SEC TO BLOCK NEPHEW’S MEDICAL CITY TAKEOVER BID

- By Daxim L. Lucas

The chief of The Medical City, one of the Philippine­s’ largest and most establishe­d healthcare institutio­ns, wants the country’s corporate watchdog to nullify the voting power of the hospital’s majority owners who allegedly acquired their stakes illegally.

In an interview with the Inquirer, Dr. Alfredo Bengzon said a group of shareholde­rs represente­d by his own nephew, Jose Xavier “Eckie” Gonzales, had so far accumulate­d a combined 54percent stake in the Ortigasbas­ed hospital, but had done so in violation of the requiremen­ts of the securities laws.

In particular, Bengzon said Gonzales and the Singapore- based Clermont Group acquired shares of the hospital from other stockholde­rs without disclosing that they were acting in concert, and thus avoiding corporate regulation­s that would have compelled them to make a “tender offer” to buy out other owners —a requiremen­t imposed on publicly listed corporatio­ns.

The Supreme Court ruled firms were considered “public” companies if they have assets in excess of P50 million and have 200 or more holders, at least 200 of which hold at least 100 shares of a class of equity securities.

“No one knew they were acting together on this,” he said, denying statements made by Gonzales’ allies that the hospital chief was aware of the share acquisitio­n plan since 2013 when his nephew brought in the new shareholde­rs to help buttress the firm’s finances. “I’ve had eight meetings with Eckie over this since last year to ask him about it, and he’s always denied it.”

The dispute came to a head in May, Bengzon said, when Gonzales and Clermont expressed their joint opposition to the proposed buy-in of the Ayala group—involving P2 billion in fresh capital—for a minority stake in The Medical City.

“Ayala wanted to pay up two times book value for the shares,” Bengzon said, explaining that Gonzales’ proposal for their camp’s own capital infusion significan­tly undervalue­d the halfa-century-old hospital

For allegedly keeping creeping accumulati­on of

shares from other owners, the Medical City chief wants the Securities and Exchange Commission to void the voting rights of Gonzales and Clermont, which he believes the group intends to use to take control of the firm once it holds a general stockholde­rs’ meeting.

Bengzon said his group currently controls the hospital’s 15person board with nine allies, while Gonzales’ side has five backers. Onemember is undecided.

He said Ayala remained interested in acquiring a stake in the hospital but wanted the internal dispute settled first.

“Ayala’s values are in lock step with ours. Wesee eye to eye on how a healthcare institutio­n should be run,” he said. “[Gonzales and Clermont] are portfolio guys. They’re finance guys. It’s about money for them.”

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