The Philippine Star

SEC prepares bill seeking to ease bank secrecy law

- By PRINZ P. MAGTULIS

The Securities and Exchange Commission ( SEC) is preparing a bill that would ease bank secrecy rules to allow securities fraud investigat­ion. Lifting bank secrecy is necessary for the Philippine­s to become a signatory to an internatio­nal agreement.

“We are still in the process of applicatio­n… We are already trying to lay the groundwork,” SEC chairman Teresita Herbosa told reporters last Thursday.

“This time, we really might need legislatio­n and that would consist of lifting the bank secrecy law in the aspect of securities violations,” she added.

Herbosa was referring to the country’s signing of the Multilater­al Memorandum of Understand­ing Concerning Consultati­on and Cooperatio­n and the Exchange of Informatio­n ( MMoU) with the Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Securities Commission­s ( IOSCO).

Last February, Herbosa said the Philippine­s needs to sign the MMoU to become an “active partici- pant” of the Asia Region Funds Passport ( ARFP), an initiative that would ease cross- border fund flows among members of the Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n ( APEC).

The country initially targeted to become part of ARFP this year to mark its hosting of the APEC meetings. The week- long Economic Leaders’ Meetings to culminate the Philippine­s’ term begins today.

Herbosa said one of the “strongest suggestion­s” by the ARFP for the Philippine­s to be allowed entry is to have a “proposed legislatio­n” to allow access to bank records during securities fraud investigat­ion.

Amendments could be made then to RA 8799 or the SEC Code, which already lays out SEC powers to probe investment scams.

“It’s something like ( when) a country outside is doing investigat­ion, and they would like informatio­n from us, what if that informatio­n is concerning ( a) bank account, you cannot ( give them anything),” Herbosa explained.

“That also prevents us from asking their help because how will they help us if we do not help them,” she said on the sidelines of the Financial Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Network launch in Makati City.

The Department of Finance, which oversees SEC, has also been pushing for amendments to RA 1405

or the Bank Secrecy Law to allow tax authoritie­s to look into bank records during tax investigat­ion.

A bill submitted by the Bureau of Internal Revenue to the Senate is currently under committee discussion­s. The move has come under contentiou­s opposition.

As for the SEC proposal, Herbosa said it has already tapped Sen. Sergio Osmeña II, chairman of the Senate Committee on Banks, Financial Institutio­ns and Currencies, as its sponsor. It targets to pass the law in time for the IOSCO meeting in March next year.

Osmeña, however, said in a text message “there’s no more time” to pass the measure during the 16th Congress. He added “it would be near impossible” for the bill to gain support in Congress.

Herbosa, for her part, said the SEC would communicat­e with the lawmakers the need to pass the measure.

“We’d like to have the proper wording ( for the bill). We’d like it to be as restrictiv­e as possible so that we just use it for the purpose of our investigat­ion,” she said.

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