01 July 2015

S.E.C. opens third satellite office in Ortigas Center

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Tuesday has opened its third satellite office in a shopping mall in Ortigas Center as the agency gears for the eventual transfer of its main office.
SEC Chairman Teresita Herbosa said that the said satellite office, measuring about 40 square meters, will serve the public coming from the eastern side of Metro Manila such as those coming from Rizal province.
“We may end the year with five satellite offices by the end of the year,” Herbosa said.
The other two will be in Alabang in Muntinlupa and another in Cebu.
“We are thinking of adding a new office in Davao where we also have a lot of transactions,” she said.  The first two offices are in Ali Mall in Cubao, Quezon City, and another one in Manila, also inside a shopping mall.
SEC said that barely three months after the launch of its Ali Mall office branch in Cubao, Quezon City, with only four staff members, it already had an average of monthly income of P2.2 million in filing fees.
SEC said it already released certificates of registration and amendment certificates.
“Projecting an average annual gross income of P26.5 million, the SEC Ali Mall Satellite Office earns as much as a small town,” the SEC said, citing a portion of the Local Government Code which states that a fourth-class municipality earns an average annual income of P25 million to P35 million.
From 129 walk-in clients in November and 226 in December of 2014, it has grown toACCOMMODATE 393 clients in January 2015, a significant 57.5-percent increase since the previous month, the SEC said.
Such high foot traffic clearly shows that the public appreciates the government’s efforts to bring government services closer to them, it said.  The agency is putting up a lot of satellite offices, which can receive document submission and apply for a new corporate entity, as headquarters will be transferred to the offices at Philippine International Convention Center in Pasay, occupying the offices that were formerly used by the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office. “That will just be temporary,” Herbosa said, adding that the plan to transfer in Bonifacio Global City along with the government financial cluster will still push through.
The SEC processed about 24,000 new corporations last year and regulates about 870,000 corporations, among others. Although the SEC’s earned collections averaged to about P3 billion per year for the past three years, it only runs at an average budget of P400 million per year with about 385 employees.
The remaining balance of the SEC’s collections is remitted to the National Treasury.
“It is worth noting that the SEC was also ranked as the fifth best performing national agency by the Makati Business Club survey last 2014. The Philippine economy’s strong performance in 2014 shows how our country remains as one of the top investment destinations in Southeast Asia. Our financial markets remain bullish under the Aquino administration, with its culture of integrity, transparency and accountability, and its focus on good governance reforms,” Herbosa said.
source:  Business Mirror

M3 money supply up 9.3% at P7.6T

DOMESTIC liquidity in May as measured by M3—the total amount of cash and cash-equivalents circulating within the economy—rose 9.3 percent year-on-year to P7.6 trillion, indicating that liquidity remains sufficient to sustain the economy’s growth trajectory, the central bank said on Tuesday.
Data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed that M3 growth in May was faster than the 9 percent growth posted in April.
Month-on-month and on a seasonally adjusted basis, M3 expanded by 0.7 percent, the central bank said.
The BSP said money supply continued to increase on the back of sustained demand for credit as domestic claims in May grew from a month ago.
Domestic claims grew by 9.6 percent in May from 9.3 percent in April as credits to the private sector continued to increase, although at a slower pace relative to the previous month, the BSP said.
The bulk of the bank loans during the month were channeled into key production sectors such as real estate, renting, and business services, manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, utilities, and financial intermediation.
By contrast, the BSP data showed lending for the public sector contracted by 3.5 percent after declining by 7.9 percent in April.
“Going forward, the BSP will closely monitor monetary conditions to ensure that liquidity in the financial system remains in line with the BSP’s price and financial stability objectives,” the BSP concluded.
source:  Manila Times

Aquino Gains P1,8M in 2014; Net Worth Up at P68.3M

President Benigno Aquino III earned P1.8 million in 2014 based on his latest Statement of Assets and Liabilities and Net Worth (SALN).
From P66,494,183 million in 2013, President Aquino’s income in 2014 stood at P68,311,644 million.
Aquino’s latest SALN shows a new addition to his real estate assets, which is an inherited residential lot in Antipolo worth P507,393.
Also declared as his real properties are a residential lot in Tarlac worth P718,200 (purchased), a residential house and lot in Quezon City worth P24,310,760 (inherited), commercial lots in San Juan worth P7,016,906 (inherited), an agriculture lot in Tarlac worth P113,750 (purchased), and an agriculture lot in Capas, Tarlac worth P2,818 (inherited).
The total value of his real properties is P32,669,827.
Among Aquino’s declared personal properties include a motor vehicle worth P3 million; cash on hand and in banks worth P30,088,988; receivables worth P552,829.
Aquino’s “other assets” are worth P2 million.
The total value of his non-property assets is P35,641,817.
The President has no liability or debt.
Aquino recorded the same net worth in 2012 and 2011 amounting to P65.13 million.
The President has a monthly salary of P120,000.
source:  NewsCentral.PH