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BSP gov warned over P275 B sovereign fund
By Nidz Godino
“Key to me is the governance issue,” Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Felipe Medalla voiced caution over legislative proposal to create a sovereign wealth fund overseen by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, saying transparency over its governance would be key concern for him would be how fund would be managed and by whom, and to what extent it would affect independence of central bank. Medalla cited Malaysia’s experience with scandal-tainted state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) as the “biggest risk” in creating such fund.
1MDB raised billions of dollars in bonds, ostensibly for investment projects and joint ventures, between 2009 and 2013. Malaysian authorities believe more than $4.5 billion were allegedly misappropriated from the fund by high-level officials and their associates in an elaborate globe-spanning criminal scheme.
The legislation, whose principal authors include President Marcos’ cousin, the current house speaker, and his eldest son, also a member of the lower house representing his home province, names Philippine president as chairman of the board that will oversee the fund.
The fund would serve as another source of liquidity for development projects. It would be created using 275 billion pesos ($4.91 billion) in seed money from five agencies, including state-run pension funds. Subsequent contributions would come from other government institutions, including BSP.
“If they say we will take the central bank’s dollars… we will have less ammunition the next time there is international volatility,” Medalla said.
The bill proposes fund may invest in various types of instruments including, cash, foreign currencies, metals, tradeable commodities, bonds, Islamic investments and listed or unlisted equities.
A lower house committee has approved the bill, and its backers are targeting to complete its third and final reading before Christmas break on December 17. The senate has yet to file counterpart measure, which is required to pass legislation, along with the president’s approval.
Investment analyst Aaron Say told media bill should be “close to airtight in transparency”.
