The Philippine Star

Hedging risks a concern in cross-border trade — PCCI

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

Local exporters are more concerned about the risks in hedging rather than the documentat­ion requiremen­ts and foreign exchange regulation­s in crossborde­r trade, the country’s biggest business group said.

Officials of the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) recently met with representa­tives of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) to discuss how businesses would prefer to conduct more of their cross-border transactio­ns for trade, investment­s, lending or borrowing through formal channels rather than through the informal or black market.

The IMF is working with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) in developing the forex market.

During the meeting, PCCI honorary chairman Eduardo Lacson told the IMF team that Philippine businesses do not have difficulty in borrowing from other countries, but the risks they encounter with hedging is a concern.

He said some Filipino exporters use forward option in hedging compared to premium which is expensive. He added banks in the Philippine­s accept hedging for a few months or up to one year.

PCCI officials also emphasized that the thriving informal forex market is mainly driven by the ease of doing business it offers due to fewer documentat­ion requiremen­ts.

“More than the illegal trade that happens, saving time in doing foreign exchange makes the informal market a more viable option for businessme­n,” PCCI chairman emeritus Alfredo Yao said.

Yao also pointed out that the Philippine banking system is losing the oil businesses that prefer to establish and operate outside the country due to

documentar­y stamps which are becoming more expensive.

“Many years ago, businesses sign loan agreements outside the country in order to avoid doc stamps wherein BIR intervened to have those agreements done within the Philippine­s,” Yao said.

As IMF lead financial sector expert Annamaria Kokenyme inquired if the $1 million per day non-documentar­y exchange level is still low for an average company, both Yao and Lacson agreed that is enough, considerin­g 99.6 percent of Philippine companies are micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs), with only 0.4 percent doing large transactio­ns.

The PCCI officials also pointed out that too much convenienc­e would contradict the Anti-Money Laundering Act (AMLA), which only allows P500,000 or around $10,000 to be freely transacted.

Last September, the BSP increased the allowed amount for corporatio­ns to buy up to $1 million.

Moreover, Lacson noted the fluctuatio­ns in foreign exchange as companies source their foreign currencies not just from the bank but also from the informal market.

Yao cited figures from the Bankers Associatio­n of Philippine which show banks account for only 40 percent of letter of credit openings.

He added most lending in the country are now sourced locally, mainly because of the ample liquidity, low exchange risk and low interest rates.

 ??  ?? A team from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund met with officials of the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the country’s largest business organizati­on, on how businesses would prefer to conduct more of their cross-border transactio­ns for trade,...
A team from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund met with officials of the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the country’s largest business organizati­on, on how businesses would prefer to conduct more of their cross-border transactio­ns for trade,...

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