More than a venue where securities are traded, the PSE represents a national governance infrastructure in the capital market. It converts savings into productive enterprise, compels disclosure discipline, and determines whether domestic capital stays within the economy or migrates abroad. Economies with deep exchanges develop a middle class and diversified corporate sector. Economies without them remain bank-dependent and concentrated.
Governance therefore exists not only at the level of listed companies but at the level of the exchange itself. The exchange governs trust — and trust governs liquidity. This article serves as a prelude to a forthcoming strategic discussion on strengthening the Philippine capital market over the next three years.
The largest exchanges — the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, the London Stock Exchange, and Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing — now operate as publicly listed corporations while simultaneously exercising quasi-regulatory authority. Their governance challenge is structural: they must expand revenues while regulating the very firms that generate those revenues.
The scale explains the stakes. The United States equity market alone exceeds $40 trillion in market capitalization, with average daily turnover often above $450 billion. At this magnitude, governance risks shift from individual corporate failure to systemic financial stability. Market surveillance systems, consolidated audit trails, and clearinghouse risk management are therefore board-level concerns.
Technology has intensified the challenge. High-frequency trading and algorithmic execution fragment liquidity and raise fairness concerns. Cybersecurity similarly becomes a financial-stability issue — a trading outage can disrupt payment systems, derivatives positions, and pension portfolios worldwide.
The lesson from mature markets is clear: commercialization without governance destroys credibility, but governance without competitiveness drives listings elsewhere. Successful exchanges manage both simultaneously.
ASEAN exchanges confront a different question: credibility before scale.
Across the six major regional bourses — Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines — there are now more than 4,500 listed companies and a combined equity market capitalization of roughly $3-3.5 trillion.
Approximate current profiles:
•Indonesia (IDX): ~900+ listed companies; market cap about $850-900 billion
•Singapore (SGX): ~600-650 listed companies; market cap about $750-800 billion
•Thailand (SET): ~800+ listed companies; market cap about $550-600 billion
•Malaysia (Bursa Malaysia): ~1,000+ listed companies; market cap about $450-500 billion
•Vietnam (HoSE & HNX): ~700+ listed companies; market cap about $250-300 billion
Singapore demonstrates governance-led capital attraction through disclosure discipline and investor protection. Indonesia and Vietnam have expanded participation through retail access and digital onboarding. Malaysia and Thailand strengthened corporate governance codes and sustainability reporting.
The regional lesson is consistent: liquidity is a governance outcome, not a technological one.
The Philippine Stock Exchange
The Philippine Stock Exchange presents a structural paradox. The country enjoys favorable demographics, sustained economic growth, and large entrepreneurial conglomerates. Yet capital market depth remains limited relative to its neighbors.
The PSE’s total market capitalization is approximately $250-270 billion, with roughly 270 listed companies and average daily trading value typically near P5-7 billion (about $90-130 million) — significantly lower than regional peers. The issue simply resonates around market participation and confidence.
Corporations still rely heavily on bank financing rather than equity markets. Listing is often perceived as regulatory exposure rather than strategic capital formation. Institutional investors, meanwhile, require liquidity before allocating capital. Without investors liquidity cannot expand; without liquidity investors do not enter. This circular constraint is fundamentally a governance problem.
The exchange must therefore act both as regulator and market architect — ensuring predictable enforcement, credible disclosures, and accessible listing pathways.
Top Governance Challenges of PSE
Market liquidity constraints: daily trading only about P5-7B versus regional peers often exceeding $1-3 billion equivalent
Limited listed companies: ~270 issuers compared with ~600-1,000 in major ASEAN exchanges
Inconsistent disclosure quality and minority shareholder protection concerns
Listing accessibility, cost efficiency, and regulatory complexity
Limited institutional and foreign investor participation
For the Philippines, strengthening the exchange is not merely financial reform — it is national economic development policy.