The Philippine Star

BSP, BAP bat for faster clearing of checks

- By PRINZ P. MAGTULIS

A bill that will fast track the clearing process of checks from the present three to five days to just one day is being finalized by regulators and stakeholde­rs and is expected to be filed in Congress within the year, a central bank official said.

ÒThe BSP ( Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) and BAP (Bankers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s) formed a technical working group to draft the bill. They are finalizing it and will be submitting the proposed bill for the considerat­ion of the Monetary Board,” BSP Deputy Governor Juan de Zuñiga told The STAR last Friday.

“We are looking at filing the bill in Congress by the end of the year,” he added.

The bill will amend certain provisions

of Republic Act 2031 or the Negotiable Instrument­s Law, which provided that clearing of checks will be facilitate­d only once “original copies” of the document are received by clearing houses.

Under the Negotiable Instrument­s Law, submission of negotiable instrument­s such as bank checks should be done personally “by the holder or by some person authorized to receive payment on his behalf,” in a “proper place” and “during banking hours.”

“Under the check truncation (process), the electronic image of a check will be sufficient basis for clearing,” De Zuñiga explained.

“In that way, if for example, you deposit a check to your account, it will no longer take three-to five days. It will already be credited the next day,” he added.

Faster clearance of checks will be in line with global practices, De Zuñiga said, explaining further that a reduced time of transactio­n “mitigates risks of unsettleme­nts and uncertaint­ies.”

“If the clearing period is three days or five days, there is uncertaint­y on the part of the check issuer if the check he issued will be cleared,” De Zuñiga explained.

“In the same way, counterpar­ties want earlier settlement. If for example, you issued a check to buy a house, the real estate company would want to make sure immediatel­y if the checking account has enough funds,” he added.

Latest data from the Philippine Clearing House Corp. website showed there were a total of 172.44 million in checks cleared in 2010, 2.71 percent higher than the previous year’s 167.89 million.

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