The Philippine Star

Senate to speed up passage of FIST bill

- By PAOLO ROMERO – With Delon Porcalla

The Senate will speed up the passage of the proposed Financial Institutio­ns Strategic Transfer (FIST) Act, which aims to ensure stability in the banking system, extend a lifeline to distressed businesses and save millions of jobs, Sen. Grace Poe said yesterday.

Poe, who chairs the Senate committee on banks and financial institutio­ns, issued the statement after President Duterte certified as urgent the bill that allows banks and financial institutio­ns to unload non- performing assets and bad loans to FIST companies.

“Banks play a critical role as they could throw a lifeline to businesses and their workers amid the pandemic,” Poe said. “Providing the local banking system with the support it needs will insulate it from a buildup of bad loans, which could impose costs on the poor.”

She added that the country must be better prepared for the economic impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic “that has no end yet in sight.”

The senator earlier said the proposed FIST Act could extend a lifeline to distressed businesses, help serve around 600,000 micro, small and medium enterprise­s ( MSMEs), and save over 3.5 million jobs as the country continues to battle the pandemic.

She noted the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority estimate that the bill could possibly free up P1.19 trillion worth of loans from the sale of non-performing assets to management companies called FIST corporatio­ns.

Poe said the figures were arrived at using data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) as well as assumption­s from the banking sector represente­d by the Bankers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s during the hearings.

“When we get to the bottom of it, this law’s primary objective is really to keep the banking sector above water during this crisis. Before the banks can help MSMEs, we must help the banks first,” she pointed out.

While BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno has assured the committee that the country’s banking system has built- in buffers, Poe said there is a limit to its risk- bearing capacity.

“Our banks have a limit of how much they can carry. The swift enactment of this law will promote investor and depositor confidence, and mitigate the effects of the crisis,” Poe said.

“Let’s stop playing catchup with the pandemic and prepare the policy for the worse. We know what’s coming,” she said, noting that the bill is an improved version of the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) Act of 2002, which was enacted as a response to the Asian financial crisis.

“We say ‘improved’ because we are deliberati­ng it half a decade earlier this time around before we even see the full brunt of the crisis,” Poe added.

The covered institutio­ns from the SPV law will be expanded under the bill to include lending companies and other institutio­ns licensed by the BSP to grant credit.

She said lending companies are the ones lending to MSMEs so they also need to be aided under the measure.

The bill also offers longer applicabil­ity period for up to 36 months for assets that have become non-performing as of Dec. 31, 2021 which will give sufficient time to financial institutio­ns to assess the need to offload assets.

As a safeguard against abuse of the system, the bill states that one-person corporatio­ns are prohibited to set up their own FIST corporatio­ns. Further, to ensure that limited government resources will not be used for risky endeavors, government financial institutio­ns will not be allowed to set up their own FIST corporatio­ns.

To address possible violations of the anti-dummy law, foreign participat­ion in foreclosur­e sales of lands is also removed.

The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice are given the power and responsibi­lity to investigat­e violations.

Once enacted into law, the measure can be immediatel­y implemente­d even without the promulgati­on of implementi­ng rules and regulation­s.

Meanwhile, the House of Representa­tives under the leadership of Speaker Lord Allan Velasco yesterday expressed support for the proposed amendments that Malacañang wants in the AntiMoney Laundering Law.

“The House is committed to approve the amendments to the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2001 under House Bill 6174 to address concerns on our anti-money laundering law,” the Marinduque congressma­n said.

The Speaker promised that the chamber “will see to it that the measure which aims to curb the cost of doing financial transactio­ns of our overseas Filipino workers and the business sector, will be approved expeditiou­sly once plenary sessions resume next month.”

The proposed FIST Act, on the other hand, has been approved on third and final reading by the larger chamber last June, according to Velasco.

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