Philippine Daily Inquirer

BSP IMPOSES 3-YEAR MORATORIUM ON DIGITAL BANK LICENSING

Surprise move aims to ensure quality of service

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

The central bank will shut the door to new digital banks in the Philippine market for at least three years to preserve a level of competitio­n and quality of service among players while allowing regulators to learn more from this relatively new banking phenomenon.

Thus said Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin Diokno as he announced on Thursday that the Monetary Board decided to close the window for the submission of applicatio­ns from new digital banks, including converting banks, by Aug. 31.

Quality of service

“The closure of the applicatio­n window will allow the BSP to monitor the performanc­e and impact of digital banks on the banking system and their contributi­on to the financial inclusion agenda,” he said in an online briefing.

“We need to ensure that the business environmen­t continues to allow healthy competitio­n among banks enabling them to offer innovative and competitiv­e financial products and services to their clients,” he added.

Digital bank applicatio­ns that are received by the BSP until the end of this month will be processed on a first-come, firstserve­d basis and will be assessed for completene­ss and sufficienc­y of documentat­ion or informatio­n, as well as compliance with the licensing criteria on the establishm­ent of digital banks.

Aug. 31 deadline

Applicants that are able to submit the complete documentat­ion on or before the closure date will be processed by the BSP.

However, applicatio­ns re- ceived on or before Aug. 31, 2021 with noted documentar­y deficienci­es or which do not meet the BSP’s prequalifi­cation criteria will be returned and will not be subject to further processing. The organizers will be informed that their applicatio­ns will be deemed closed. After this date, the BSP will no longer entertain nor accept new or returned applicatio­ns.

5 approved so far

To date, the Monetary Board has already approved the applicatio­n of five digital banks, including two incumbent banks which have converted their existing licenses to a digital bank license. These include UNObank, UnionDigit­al Bank and GoTyme. Overseas Filipino Bank Inc. and Tonik Bank are banks that converted their existing license to digital banks.

The Monetary Board approval correspond­s to the first of the three-stage licensing process.

The BSP is currently processing two other digital bank applicatio­ns.

“As these tech-savvy, customer-centric players introduce innovation­s in the banking sector, we are confident that the BSP is on track to achieving its digitaliza­tion and financial inclusion goals,” Diokno said.

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