Now, the $64 question is not whether ISM will allow them to walk up the stage in early June but whether ISM will disseminate that information to all schools, including the American universities which have already accepted the three seniors for the school year that starts in September.
The local bank did not turn to the Bangko Sentral for an emergency loan for two reasons. One was sheer pride. The other was, well, everybody and his mother would have known about it.
As a bonus, the new SVP might end up as HSBC Philippines first Filipino chief executive officer, something that current CEO Warner Manning has been quietly pushing for.
One, Al Yuchengco isnt giving away the P250 million but just lending it to PPI. That means plan holders will end up paying the loan anyway, after being appropriately grateful to Mr. Yuchencgo.
Two, the money may help planholders pay their childrens tuition for the 2005-2006 school year or for the first semester of 2005 but more money will have to be raised if PPI intends to pay the tuition paid for in advanced by planholders for the succeeding years.
Last week, the Monetary Board, which was chaired by Say Tetangco as Bangko Sentral officer-in-charge (since Governor Rafael Buenaventura is still in the United States), has agreed to allow banks to sell linked products or derivatives.
Theres also talk that the Bangko Sentral will soon drop the moratorium on the opening of bank branches now that its objective to encourage mergers and acquisitions among banks has been achieved.
While there are still banks out there that are mismanaged and may, therefore, face closure, these are too small to affect the industry on the whole.