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how to get sectoral clearances Philippines

How to Get Sectoral Clearances for M&A in the Philippines: Step-by-step Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Any merger or acquisition involving a regulated industry in the Philippines triggers a web of sectoral approvals that run alongside, and sometimes ahead of, the competition-law filing with the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC). Understanding how to get sectoral clearances in the Philippines is now more critical than ever: the PCC adjusted its mandatory merger-notification thresholds effective 1 March 2026, meaning deal teams must re-run size tests and coordinate multi-agency filings under tighter scrutiny.

This guide walks in-house counsel, transaction lawyers, M&A project managers and inbound investors through the complete procedure, from regulator mapping and threshold assessment, through parallel filing with the PCC and sectoral agencies, to SPA drafting mechanics that protect both buyer and seller when clearances are delayed or denied. Every step identifies the responsible party, the typical duration and the documents needed for sectoral approval so that deal teams can plan realistic closing timelines.

Overview of the Sectoral Clearance Process and Who It Applies To

Philippine M&A transactions may require approval from two distinct layers of regulators. The first layer is the PCC, which reviews transactions that exceed both the Size of Party (SoP) and Size of Transaction (SoT) thresholds under the Philippine Competition Act (Republic Act No. 10667). The second layer comprises the sectoral regulators whose prior consent is needed whenever a deal changes the ownership or control of a licensed or franchised entity. Failure to secure either layer can result in fines, orders to unwind a transaction, or, in the case of gun-jumping before PCC clearance, criminal liability.

Which M&A Transactions Need Sectoral Clearances (by Sector)

The regulators to notify depend on the target company’s licensed activities. The most common sectoral clearance requirements arise in the following industries:

  • Banking and financial services (BSP). The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas must approve any acquisition that results in a change of control or significant ownership of a bank or quasi-bank, including fit-and-proper vetting of incoming shareholders and directors.
  • Gaming (PAGCOR). The Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation requires transfer clearance when a gaming license, whether domestic or offshore, is assigned or when equity in the licensee changes hands. PAGCOR publishes dedicated operational request forms for these transactions.
  • Telecommunications (NTC and Congress). Transfers of a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity or changes in capital that affect control of a franchise holder may require approval from the National Telecommunications Commission and, for legislative franchises, an act of Congress.
  • Energy (ERC / DOE). Under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), transfers of generation assets or major supply contracts require endorsement from the Department of Energy and, in many cases, approval from the Energy Regulatory Commission.
  • Public companies (SEC). The Securities and Exchange Commission’s Compliance Monitoring Division may require monitoring clearance or Market Surveillance and Research Division (MSRD) review for transactions involving publicly listed corporations.
  • Real estate and infrastructure (DHSUD / EMB / municipal planning). Deals involving nationally significant property or projects may need locational clearance from the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD), an Environmental Compliance Certificate from the Environmental Management Bureau (EMB), and local government zoning permits.

PCC vs Sectoral Licensing: Parallel Obligations and Why Sequencing Matters

PCC notification and sectoral clearances are legally independent: one does not replace the other. A transaction can be subject to both the PCC’s mandatory notification requirement and multiple sectoral licensing approvals simultaneously. The practical challenge for deal teams is that the PCC imposes a suspensory regime, parties may not consummate the transaction until PCC clearance is obtained, while some sectoral regulators will not grant their own clearance until PCC review is complete. Others proceed on an independent track. Mapping these interdependencies early determines whether filings can run in parallel or must be sequenced, and directly affects the M&A timeline in the Philippines.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Sectoral Clearance Requirements

Before filing, deal teams must verify whether each regulatory trigger is engaged. This section summarises the principal eligibility tests.

PCC mandatory notification. A transaction must be notified to the PCC when both the SoP and SoT thresholds are exceeded. From 1 March 2026, these thresholds stand at PHP 9.1 billion (SoP) and PHP 3.8 billion (SoT), as set by PCC Commission Resolution No. 02-2026. The PCC publishes guidelines on how to compute these thresholds using audited financial statements.

BSP. Any person or entity seeking to acquire 10 percent or more of the voting shares of a bank (or any amount that would result in a change of control) must obtain prior BSP approval. Applicants must satisfy fit-and-proper criteria and demonstrate adequate capitalisation.

PAGCOR. Transfer of a gaming license or any equity restructuring that alters the licensee’s ownership requires PAGCOR’s prior written consent. The PAGCOR clearance process involves dedicated transfer and approval forms, including OGLD Form 334 for licensee-to-licensee transfers in the offshore segment.

NTC / Congress. Telecommunications franchise holders operate under legislative franchises granted by Congress. Any transfer of a franchise, or a change in majority ownership of the franchisee, may require both NTC administrative clearance and, for the franchise itself, a new or amendatory act of Congress.

ERC / DOE. Under EPIRA and DOE Rule 5, transfers of generation assets or Certificates of Compliance (COC) need DOE endorsement and, depending on the structure, ERC approval.

SEC. Publicly listed companies involved in M&A may need to obtain SEC monitoring clearance. The SEC’s 2026 Memorandum Circulars (MC No. 9 and MC No. 10 series of 2026) introduced updated guidelines on reportorial requirements, including the filing of audited financial statements and General Information Sheets, that intersect with M&A documentary obligations.

Foreign-ownership constraints. Several sectors cap foreign equity participation (e.g., telecommunications franchises, mass media, certain energy activities). Deal teams must confirm nationality limits before structuring the acquisition as a share or asset purchase.

How to Get Sectoral Clearances in the Philippines: Step-by-Step Procedure

The steps to obtain licensing clearance from multiple regulators follow a broadly consistent sequence, even though each agency has its own forms and processing windows. The procedure below is designed for transactions where both PCC notification and at least one sectoral clearance are required.

Step 1, Map Regulators and Assess Thresholds

Identify every regulated activity conducted by the target company and determine which agencies must grant approval. Concurrently, check whether the PCC’s SoP and SoT thresholds are exceeded by using the PCC’s published guidelines on computing merger notification thresholds and the target’s audited financial statements.

The output of this step should be a regulator responsibility matrix, a table listing each agency, the trigger for its involvement, the responsible team member (in-house counsel, external regulatory adviser, local sponsor representative), and the estimated filing timeline. This matrix becomes the project-management backbone for the entire clearance process.

Step 2, Engage Regulators and Submit Pre-Filing Requests

Where possible, request a pre-filing meeting with each regulator. The PCC’s Mergers and Acquisitions Office (MAO) accepts pre-notification consultations through its e-Notification system, as described in the PCC Citizen’s Charter. PAGCOR’s regulatory division can be engaged through its published operational request forms. BSP typically requires formal correspondence outlining the proposed transaction and the identity of incoming shareholders.

During this step, assemble the universal documentary package (see the Required Documents section below) and prepare any sector-specific supplements. Confidential commercial schedules should be redacted before filing where the regulator’s rules permit, with full versions provided under a confidentiality undertaking.

Step 3, File PCC Notification and Sectoral Applications in Parallel

If PCC thresholds are met, file the PCC notification via the MAO e-Notification system within 30 calendar days from the signing of the definitive agreement. The PCC’s standard review period is 30 calendar days from the determination of sufficiency, though this can be extended under the PCC Rules of Procedure if a Phase 2 review is initiated.

Simultaneously, lodge sectoral applications with each relevant agency. Parallel filing PCC and sectoral clearances is standard practice and significantly compresses the overall M&A timeline in the Philippines. However, deal teams should note that certain sectoral regulators, particularly the BSP, may defer a final decision until PCC clearance is obtained, while others (e.g., local municipal permits) proceed independently.

This is also the point at which SPA drafting mechanics become critical. Well-drafted definitive agreements should include:

  • Conditions precedent. Closing must be conditional on receipt of all required regulatory clearances, expressed in terms such as “final, non-appealable clearance from PCC and each Sectoral Regulator.”
  • Interim operating covenants. The target must continue to operate in the ordinary course during the clearance period, with specified consent thresholds for material actions.
  • Termination rights. If clearances are not obtained within an agreed long-stop date, either party may terminate. A typical formulation: “If Regulatory Clearances have not been obtained by the date falling [X] months after signing, either party may terminate this Agreement by written notice, whereupon escrowed funds shall be returned to the Buyer.”
  • Escrow / holdback mechanics. Deposit a portion of the purchase price in escrow to protect the buyer against regulatory delay or denial, with release mechanics tied to specific clearance milestones.

Step 4, Manage Post-Filing Queries, Remedies and Closing

After filing, regulators may issue supplemental information requests. Response times to these queries significantly affect the overall timeline. Assign a dedicated regulatory liaison for each agency and maintain a shared tracker of outstanding items.

If a regulator imposes conditions, such as divestiture of overlapping assets or operational undertakings, the SPA should contain pre-negotiated remedy mechanics, including the ability to extend the long-stop date by a defined period and, where necessary, a divestiture trustee mechanism.

Closing occurs only after all conditions precedent are satisfied or waived. Ensure that conditional closing language (where the parties agree to close subject to delivery of outstanding but non-critical permits within a post-closing cure period) is used only for genuinely ancillary approvals, not for core sectoral clearances whose absence would undermine the legal basis of the acquisition.

Consolidated M&A Timeline: Philippines Sectoral Clearance Procedure

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Regulator mapping and threshold check (PCC SoP/SoT + sector mapping) In-house counsel + external transaction counsel / regulatory lead 3–7 days
2. Pre-filing meetings and regulator engagement External counsel / regulatory lead; sponsor local representatives 7–14 days (scheduling dependent)
3. PCC notification (MAO e-Notification + initial documents) Filing counsel / corporate secretary PCC standard review: 30 calendar days (extendable for Phase 2 review)
4. Sectoral licensing applications (BSP, PAGCOR, NTC, ERC, SEC, municipal) Sponsor + sectoral counsel / local adviser Varies: PAGCOR certain forms ~10 business days; BSP fit-and-proper review 60–120 days; NTC/franchise matters requiring congressional action, several months
5. Addressing regulator queries and supplemental submissions Filing counsel / adviser 7–60 days (depends on complexity)
6. Closing (after conditions precedent satisfied or waived) Parties / escrow agent Per agreed SPA date; ensure regulatory clearances satisfied

Documents Needed for Sectoral Approval

The following table lists documents that are common to most sectoral filings. Sector-specific requirements are noted beneath the table.

Document Notes
Certified copies of definitive agreements (SPA / Share Purchase Agreement) Signed copies; redacted versions for public filing as necessary
Latest audited financial statements (target and buyer) Most recent 2–3 years; audited; use audited numbers for PCC threshold computation per PCC guidelines
Organisational chart and ownership structure Show ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs) and foreign ownership percentages
Board resolutions / shareholder approvals authorising the transaction Certified by corporate secretary
Proof of payment of filing fees As required by each sectoral regulator
Regulator-specific forms (PCC MAO Request Form; PAGCOR transfer/pull-out form; BSP application templates; NTC transfer petition; ERC/DOE application packs) Downloadable from each regulator’s website, see Sources below
Fit-and-proper documentation (BSP / PAGCOR) CVs, police clearance, NBI clearance, bank references for incoming key persons
Environmental permits / EIA documents EMB rulings and Environmental Compliance Certificates; Protected Area Management Board (PAMB) clearance if NIPAS areas are involved
Locational / zoning clearance Municipal planning office forms; DHSUD locational clearance for nationally significant projects
SEC monitoring clearance / MSRD documents (public companies) SEC Compliance Monitoring Division forms; guided by SEC MC No. 9 series of 2026

Sector-Specific Document Requirements

  • Telecommunications (NTC / Congress). Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity status, legislative franchise acts, transfer petition to the NTC, proof of congressional approval where the franchise itself is being transferred, and detailed corporate and ownership documents demonstrating compliance with nationality limits.
  • Banking (BSP). Fit-and-proper declarations for all proposed directors and officers, proof of regulatory capital adequacy, and BSP application templates. Early indications suggest the BSP review may take 60–120 days or longer for complex ownership structures.
  • Gaming (PAGCOR). Transfer and approval forms (including OGLD Form 334 for licensee-to-licensee transfers), an inventory of gaming equipment and software, and evidence of regulatory compliance. The PAGCOR clearance process for certain operational request forms is published at approximately 10 business days.
  • Energy (ERC / DOE). DOE Certificate of Endorsement, application for ERC change or assignment approval, COC transfer documentation, and evidence of compliance with EPIRA requirements. Rule 5 of the DOE’s implementing rules governs generation-sector transfers.

For public companies undergoing M&A, the Philippines SEC GIS form guide (2026) provides additional detail on General Information Sheet filing requirements that intersect with M&A documentation.

M&A Timeline Philippines: Key Deadlines for Sectoral Clearances

The following consolidated timeline maps the key regulatory deadlines that drive the M&A timeline in the Philippines. Deal teams should treat these as planning anchors, not guarantees, actual processing times depend on deal complexity, regulator workload and the completeness of submissions.

Milestone Deadline / Typical Duration Notes
PCC notification filing deadline 30 calendar days from signing of definitive agreement Mandatory when both SoP and SoT thresholds are exceeded; no consummation before clearance
PCC Phase 1 review 30 calendar days from determination of sufficiency Extendable if PCC initiates Phase 2 review
PAGCOR transfer clearance (selected forms) Approximately 10 business days Applies to certain operational request forms; complex transfers may take longer
BSP fit-and-proper and ownership approval 60–120 days (typical) Complex structures or incomplete submissions may extend this period
NTC administrative clearance 30–90 days (administrative); congressional franchise, several months Franchise transfers requiring an act of Congress follow the legislative calendar
ERC / DOE transfer approval 60–120 days (typical for generation asset transfers) Subject to public comment periods and ERC hearing schedules
SEC monitoring clearance (public companies) Variable; align with SEC MC No. 9 series of 2026 filing cycles Coordinate with annual and interim reportorial deadlines
Municipal locational / zoning clearance 15–45 days Depends on local government unit processing capacity

Wherever possible, file sectoral applications in parallel with the PCC notification. The likely practical effect is a compressed overall timeline of 3–6 months for transactions involving one or two sectoral regulators, extending to 9–12 months or longer where congressional action (telecoms franchise) or complex BSP ownership reviews are required.

Sectoral Clearance Cost: Fees and Tax Considerations

Item Indicative Amount Notes
PCC notification fee No statutory filing fee currently charged Confirm with PCC at time of filing; practice may change
PAGCOR processing fee Variable; administrative fee per form See PAGCOR operational request forms for applicable amounts
BSP application / processing fees Variable Confirm with BSP; fit-and-proper vetting may involve additional costs
NTC administrative processing Variable Franchise transfers involve primarily procedural and counsel costs; confirm with NTC
ERC / DOE filing fees Variable Confirm with ERC and DOE; hearing fees may apply
External counsel and specialist advisers PHP 200,000 – PHP 2,000,000+ (deal dependent) Depends on number of regulators, deal complexity and sector
Taxes on transfer (documentary stamp tax, capital gains tax, VAT) Depends on transaction structure (share vs asset sale) Engage tax counsel early; 2026 tax rule changes may affect withholding and reporting

The distinction between a share sale and an asset sale has significant tax consequences. Share sales typically attract capital gains tax and documentary stamp tax on the shares transferred, while asset sales may trigger VAT on the assets and transfer taxes. Industry observers note that PwC’s 2026 Philippine Tax Alerts and Grant Thornton’s commentary on the SEC’s 2026 Memorandum Circulars flag several reportorial changes that could affect the timing and cost of M&A-related filings. Deal teams should factor these into their financial models early in the due diligence process.

For practical context on local banking requirements that may arise when structuring payment flows, the guide to opening a bank account in the Philippines covers relevant peculiarities of the local banking system.

What Changes in 2026: PCC Threshold Adjustment and Corporate Reporting Updates

The single most significant 2026 development for M&A sectoral clearances is the PCC’s threshold adjustment, implemented through PCC Commission Resolution No. 02-2026 and effective 1 March 2026. The revised thresholds are:

  • Size of Party (SoP): PHP 9.1 billion
  • Size of Transaction (SoT): PHP 3.8 billion

Deal teams must re-run their size tests against these new figures for any transaction signed on or after 1 March 2026. The likely practical effect is that some transactions previously above the old thresholds may now fall below them, and vice versa. For borderline deals, industry observers expect that embedding PCC notification as a condition precedent in the SPA remains prudent, even where the parties believe the thresholds are not met, because threshold computations can be contested and errors carry serious consequences.

Separately, the SEC issued MC No. 9 series of 2026 and related circulars updating guidelines on the filing of audited financial statements and General Information Sheets. These changes affect the documentary requirements for public companies involved in M&A and should be integrated into the document-preparation workflow. Deal teams targeting publicly listed companies are advised to review our SEC GIS form guide (2026) for detailed filing instructions.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Gun-jumping: consummating before PCC clearance. Closing a notifiable transaction before the PCC issues clearance is a criminal offence under the Philippine Competition Act. The remedy is straightforward: include a suspensory clause in the SPA that prohibits consummation until PCC clearance is obtained, supported by an escrow mechanism for the purchase price.
  • Underestimating fit-and-proper vetting timelines. BSP and PAGCOR fit-and-proper reviews can take 60–120 days or longer, particularly where incoming shareholders are foreign nationals or complex corporate structures are involved. Pre-file fit-and-proper documentation as early as possible, ideally before the SPA is signed, to compress the critical path.
  • Failing to identify franchise requirements in telecoms. Transfers of legislative franchises require an act of Congress, a process that follows the legislative calendar and can take many months. Map this requirement during Step 1 (regulator mapping) and adjust the SPA long-stop date accordingly. NTC administrative clearance alone is insufficient for franchise transfers.
  • Vague conditions precedent in the SPA. Conditions precedent that refer generally to “regulatory approvals” without specifying each required clearance, the relevant regulator and a defined long-stop date create enforcement uncertainty. Best practice is to list each clearance individually, define what constitutes “final, non-appealable” clearance, and build in extension mechanics: “If Regulatory Clearances have not been obtained by [long-stop date], either party may extend by [X] days or terminate, with escrow to be released to the Buyer.”
  • Overlooking foreign-ownership limits. Several Philippine sectors impose constitutional or statutory caps on foreign equity. Structuring a deal as a share acquisition when the buyer’s foreign-ownership share would breach these limits renders the sectoral clearance application futile. Conduct a foreign-ownership audit during due diligence and consider an asset sale structure where limits cannot be met.
  • Incomplete or inconsistent filings across regulators. Different agencies receiving inconsistent versions of the same transaction documents, due to concurrent drafting or last-minute amendments, can trigger delays and supplemental information requests. Centralise document management and designate a single custodian responsible for ensuring all agencies receive identical, finalised copies of the definitive agreements.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Juanito L. Sañosa, Jr. at Villaraza & Angangco, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Philippine Competition Commission, PCC Adjusts the Merger Notification Thresholds Effective March 2026
  2. PCC Commission Resolution No. 02-2026 (Adjusting Notification Thresholds)
  3. PCC, Mergers and Acquisitions (MAO E-Notification and Filing Guidance)
  4. PAGCOR, Operational Request Forms (Transfer and Pull-Out)
  5. PAGCOR, OGLD Form 334: Transfer Clearance Request and Approval Form
  6. Grant Thornton Philippines, SEC MC No. 9-2026: Guidelines on the Filing of AFS and GIS
  7. PCC, Guidelines on the Computation of Merger Notification Thresholds
  8. PCC Citizen’s Charter (March 2025, 1st Edition)
  9. DOE, Rule 5: Generation Sector
  10. Baker McKenzie, Philippines: PCC Adjusts Thresholds for Mandatory Notification of M&A
  11. PwC Philippines, Tax Alert 2026
  12. Lexology, Telecoms/Franchise/NTC Guidance

FAQs

How do you merge a company in the Philippines?
A Philippine merger involves securing shareholder and board approvals, filing articles of merger with the SEC, obtaining PCC clearance (if size thresholds are exceeded), and securing sectoral clearances from any industry-specific regulators, such as the BSP for banks, PAGCOR for gaming entities and the NTC for telecommunications franchise holders. The step-by-step procedure and consolidated timeline table above set out the full sequence.
For PCC notification, both the Size of Party (PHP 9.1 billion from 1 March 2026) and Size of Transaction (PHP 3.8 billion) thresholds must be exceeded, computed using audited financial statements per PCC guidelines. Sectoral clearance requirements vary by regulator but universally include certified copies of the definitive agreements, audited financial statements, ownership structure charts, board resolutions and regulator-specific application forms. The required documents table above provides a comprehensive checklist.
Telecoms transactions require NTC clearance and, for franchise transfers, an act of Congress. Banking deals need BSP approval. Gaming license transfers require PAGCOR clearance. Energy-sector transactions involving generation assets or COC transfers need DOE endorsement and ERC approval. In all cases, PCC notification may also be required if the size thresholds are met.
Processing times vary significantly: PCC Phase 1 review takes 30 calendar days (extendable), PAGCOR certain forms approximately 10 business days, BSP 60–120 days, NTC administrative matters 30–90 days (franchise matters requiring congressional action may take several months), and ERC/DOE 60–120 days. Parallel filing PCC and sectoral applications is standard practice and is strongly recommended to compress the overall timeline, though some regulators may defer their final decision until PCC clearance is issued.
Foreign buyers can obtain most sectoral clearances, but constitutional and statutory foreign-ownership limits restrict participation in certain sectors. Telecommunications franchises, for instance, are generally limited to entities with at least 60 percent Filipino ownership. Certain energy, mass media and public-utility activities have similar restrictions. Where foreign-ownership caps apply, deal teams should evaluate whether an asset-purchase structure or a minority investment with governance rights can achieve the commercial objective while remaining within legal limits.
If a mandatory PCC notification is not filed within 30 calendar days of signing, the parties face penalties and potential criminal liability. If a sectoral clearance is denied, the transaction cannot lawfully proceed with respect to the regulated activity. A well-drafted SPA will include a long-stop date, termination rights and escrow-release mechanics for this scenario. Where a clearance is denied on remediable grounds, the SPA should provide a cure period, typically 30–60 days, during which the parties can address regulator concerns before termination rights are triggered. Engaging specialist remedial counsel at the earliest sign of regulatory resistance is critical.
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How to Get Sectoral Clearances for M&A in the Philippines: Step-by-step Guide

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