China Bank-Primark-SM Investments Issue gets Interesting




It’s not often that I take interest in business news. But someone drew my attention to the fracas involving retail giant SM’s investment arm, which has the potential to blow up into something more.

The great Amir Al Bahr wrote a while back about how China Bank’s DOSRI loans problems were sort of shrugged off by the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas or Central Bank). The complainant was a businessman named Wilbert Lee, who owns Primark, a real estate company that runs a chain of malls.

Later on, Lee put in a new complaint (a summons by publication) against SM Investments which gave more detail on the issue. In that complaint, he claimed that SM Investments approached Primark and started a deal so SM could open more Savemore branches. But to get around banking regulations, SM used Primark as a proxy, along with purported dummy companies Premier Towncenter Holdings and Corporate Assets Investments Limited (CAIL), to borrow from China Bank and, I believe, other banks as well.

It appears Lee realized that he was being used and wanted out. Lee claimed in the more recent complaint that SM tried to foil this, but he wouldn’t have any of that. The cases he filed are still pending, but it would be interesting to see how it turns out.

The summons by publication is linked below.



This case seems to remind us that local big business can resort to shady practices when they hit a snag. A while back, I saw a presentation about how Cesar Purisima cornered the BPO market while he was Finance Secretary, but purportedly had to resort to more shady stuff when his own BPO business, Prople, bombed.

I’m also reminded of the documentary Inside Job by Charles Ferguson. The documentary revealed that regulators simply just let go of staring-in-your-eye violations that executives were committing, violations that contributed to the effects of the 2008 financial crisis in the US. Also mentioned is that executives befriended these regulators earlier, so no wonder. This sounds unusual to those who believe that people doing shady stuff don’t go unpunished in the US; but in fact, they do, and it’s been going on for quite a while.

While people call for changes in the local constitution and investment rules to allow foreigners to invest more freely and challenge local moguls, there remains a need to keep watch over anyone in the business world, local or otherwise, and to ensure that regulators do what they’re supposed to do.

Also, some of us GRP bloggers support the idea of the free market. I for one see corruption and other efforts to corner a market in one’s favor as going against the free market since such things make the market less free and less of a market.

2 Replies to “China Bank-Primark-SM Investments Issue gets Interesting”

    1. Unfortunately, for the common Pinoy – this so called “free market” amidst the likes of the SM group is the same freedom an ant has to pick a fight with an elephant. If we want more players, Congress has to let the other big elephants in.

      The global shortage on semiconductors should be enough incentive for Congress to woo the likes of Micron and TSMC in. Why don’t they open up Cagayan Valley and position it as a Silicon haven that’s just a stone’s throw away from Taiwan? But look what’s happening. We are seeing automotive factories shutting down one by one, and letting Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam have all the industrial/technological fun.

      The next president has got to be as visionary as Lee Kuan Yew as possible for there to be even a slim hope for the country to catch up. We are now being left behind by those who missed the bus 3 decades ago. This is what happens when you keep throwing vital state resources at poverty with freebies left and right, rather than having a solid technological/industrial roadmap to relentlessly drive the economy on the right Tiger-economy path beyond simple rent seeking from an ever-growing supply of OFW-funded young game-addicted consumers and elderlies needing hospital care.

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