I. Introduction
In the Philippines, checking whether a company is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, is an important legal and commercial step before entering into transactions, investing money, accepting employment, lending funds, buying shares, signing contracts, or dealing with an entity that claims to be a corporation, partnership, one-person corporation, lending company, financing company, investment company, foundation, association, or other SEC-supervised organization.
SEC registration is not merely a formality. It is evidence that an entity has been legally created or recorded under Philippine law. For corporations, registration with the SEC gives the entity a separate juridical personality. For partnerships, SEC registration records the partnership as a legal business arrangement. For entities engaged in regulated financial or investment-related activities, SEC registration may be only the first step; a separate license, permit, secondary registration, certificate of authority, or approval may also be required.
A common mistake is assuming that a company is legitimate simply because it has a website, social media page, business address, certificate image, mayor’s permit, Department of Trade and Industry registration, Bureau of Internal Revenue certificate, or barangay clearance. These documents may be relevant, but they do not necessarily prove that the entity is registered with the SEC or authorized to conduct a regulated business.
This article explains how to check whether a company is registered with the SEC in the Philippine context, what SEC registration means, what it does not mean, what documents to look for, how to verify information, and what legal risks may arise when dealing with unregistered or unauthorized entities.
II. What the SEC Is
The Securities and Exchange Commission is the principal government agency in the Philippines that registers and regulates corporations, partnerships, associations, foundations, securities market participants, and certain financial or investment-related entities.
Among other functions, the SEC:
- Registers corporations, one-person corporations, partnerships, associations, and foundations;
- Regulates securities, securities offerings, brokers, dealers, investment houses, investment companies, and related market participants;
- Issues certificates of incorporation, partnership registration, authority, licenses, and secondary permits where required;
- Monitors compliance with reportorial requirements;
- Enforces corporate and securities laws;
- Issues advisories against unauthorized investment-taking, lending, financing, or securities activities;
- Maintains public records of registered entities.
The SEC’s authority comes from several laws, including the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines, the Securities Regulation Code, and special laws governing lending companies, financing companies, investment companies, foundations, and other regulated entities.
III. Why SEC Registration Matters
SEC registration is important because it establishes whether an entity has been legally registered under Philippine law as a corporation, partnership, association, or other juridical entity within the SEC’s jurisdiction.
For corporations, registration with the SEC is the legal act that gives birth to the corporation as a separate juridical person. Before incorporation, a group of individuals may have agreed to do business together, but the corporation itself does not legally exist until the SEC issues its certificate of incorporation.
For partnerships, SEC registration is generally required when the partnership has capital above the statutory threshold or where registration is otherwise required by law. Even where a partnership may exist by agreement between partners, SEC registration is important for public notice, legal compliance, and commercial credibility.
For regulated businesses, SEC registration matters even more. A company may be incorporated, but still not authorized to engage in certain activities unless it has the required secondary license or authority.
For example, a corporation may be SEC-registered but may not legally:
- Solicit investments from the public without the necessary securities registration or exemption;
- Operate as a lending company without a Certificate of Authority;
- Operate as a financing company without the required authority;
- Act as a broker, dealer, investment adviser, or securities market participant without proper licensing;
- Use certain regulated words in its name or business without approval;
- Conduct quasi-banking, banking, insurance, or other specially regulated activities without clearance from the proper government agency.
Thus, SEC registration answers only one basic question: Does the entity exist in the SEC’s records? It does not automatically answer the separate question: Is the entity authorized to do everything it claims to do?
IV. SEC Registration Versus DTI Registration
A key distinction in Philippine business law is the difference between SEC registration and DTI registration.
The Department of Trade and Industry, or DTI, registers business names of sole proprietors. If a business is owned by one individual and operates as a sole proprietorship, it is usually registered with the DTI, not the SEC.
The SEC, on the other hand, registers corporations, partnerships, associations, foundations, one-person corporations, and certain regulated entities.
A DTI certificate does not create a corporation. It merely registers a business name used by a sole proprietor. Likewise, SEC registration does not replace local permits, tax registration, or other regulatory approvals.
In practical terms:
| Type of business |
Main registration agency |
| Sole proprietorship |
DTI |
| Corporation |
SEC |
| One Person Corporation |
SEC |
| Partnership |
SEC |
| Non-stock corporation |
SEC |
| Foundation |
SEC |
| Lending company |
SEC registration plus SEC Certificate of Authority |
| Financing company |
SEC registration plus SEC authority |
| Investment-related company |
SEC registration plus securities-related authority, if applicable |
This distinction matters because some entities present a DTI certificate as proof that they are a “company.” Legally, however, a DTI-registered sole proprietorship is not a corporation. It has no separate juridical personality from the owner.
V. SEC Registration Versus Business Permit
A mayor’s permit or business permit is issued by the local government unit where the business operates. It authorizes the business to operate within a city or municipality, subject to local ordinances, zoning, taxes, and regulatory requirements.
A business permit is not the same as SEC registration.
A company may have:
- SEC registration but no current business permit;
- A business permit but no SEC registration;
- DTI registration and a business permit, but no SEC registration;
- SEC registration, business permit, BIR registration, and other regulatory licenses;
- SEC registration but no authority to conduct the specific regulated activity it advertises.
For proper due diligence, it is best to check all relevant registrations: SEC, DTI if applicable, BIR, local government permit, and any industry-specific regulator.
VI. What Entities Are Registered with the SEC
The SEC commonly registers or supervises the following:
1. Stock Corporations
These are corporations organized for profit, with capital stock divided into shares. Most ordinary business corporations fall under this category.
Examples include corporations engaged in trading, services, real estate, construction, manufacturing, technology, logistics, consulting, and retail.
2. Non-Stock Corporations
These are corporations without capital stock, usually organized for non-profit, civic, religious, charitable, educational, professional, cultural, or similar purposes.
Examples include associations, clubs, chambers, religious entities, homeowners’ associations under certain circumstances, and non-profit organizations.
3. One Person Corporations
A One Person Corporation, or OPC, is a corporation with a single stockholder, allowed under the Revised Corporation Code, subject to statutory limitations.
An OPC is different from a sole proprietorship. It has separate juridical personality, while a sole proprietorship does not.
4. Partnerships
Partnerships may be general or limited. They are usually formed by two or more persons who contribute money, property, or industry to a common fund with the intention of dividing profits.
5. Foundations
Foundations are generally non-stock, non-profit corporations organized for charitable, religious, educational, cultural, social welfare, or similar purposes. They are subject to particular SEC rules and documentation requirements.
6. Lending Companies
Lending companies must be registered with the SEC and must also have a Certificate of Authority to operate as lending companies.
SEC incorporation alone is not enough.
7. Financing Companies
Financing companies are also subject to special regulation and must have proper authority from the SEC.
8. Investment Companies and Securities Market Participants
Entities engaged in securities-related activities, investment solicitation, fund management, brokerage, dealing, investment advising, securities exchange operations, crowdfunding, or similar activities may require registration or licensing under securities laws.
VII. What SEC Registration Means
SEC registration generally means that the SEC has accepted, recorded, and approved the entity’s formation documents or registration documents.
For a corporation, SEC registration means that:
- The corporation has been incorporated under Philippine law;
- The SEC has issued a certificate of incorporation;
- The corporation has a registered corporate name;
- The corporation has declared purposes in its articles of incorporation;
- The corporation has a principal office address stated in its records;
- The corporation has incorporators, directors, trustees, or officers reflected in its documents;
- The corporation is subject to corporate reportorial and governance requirements.
For a partnership, SEC registration means that:
- The partnership has filed registration documents with the SEC;
- The partnership name has been recorded;
- The partners and capital contributions are documented;
- The partnership exists in SEC records.
For a non-stock corporation or foundation, SEC registration means that:
- The organization has been registered as a juridical entity;
- Its stated non-profit purposes are reflected in its articles;
- It is subject to SEC rules on non-stock corporations and applicable special regulations.
VIII. What SEC Registration Does Not Mean
SEC registration does not automatically mean that a company is honest, solvent, compliant, licensed for all activities, financially sound, tax-compliant, or safe to transact with.
It does not necessarily mean:
- The company is actively operating;
- The company has a valid local business permit;
- The company is registered with the BIR;
- The company is current with its SEC filings;
- The company has paid taxes;
- The company has no complaints;
- The company is authorized to solicit investments;
- The company is authorized to lend money;
- The company is authorized to offer securities;
- The company has a good financial condition;
- The company is not involved in fraud;
- The company has a license from another regulator;
- The company’s officers are trustworthy;
- The company’s advertised business is within its lawful purposes.
This is one of the most important points in Philippine due diligence: SEC registration proves existence, not legitimacy for every claimed activity.
IX. How to Check if a Company Is Registered with the SEC
There are several practical ways to check whether a company is registered with the SEC.
1. Use the SEC Online Search Facility
The SEC maintains online facilities that allow the public to search for registered corporations, partnerships, and other entities. The names and design of these systems may change over time, but the SEC generally provides a way to verify whether a company appears in its database.
When searching, use:
- The exact corporate name;
- Alternative spellings;
- Abbreviations;
- The company’s claimed SEC registration number;
- The principal office address, if available;
- The names of directors, incorporators, or officers, where searchable;
- Keywords from the company name.
Be careful with punctuation and suffixes. Corporate names may include “Inc.,” “Corporation,” “Corp.,” “Co.,” “OPC,” “Ltd.,” “Company,” “Foundation,” “Association,” or other terms.
A search result may show the company’s name, SEC registration number, registration date, status, and other basic information.
2. Search the SEC Company Registration System or Equivalent Portal
The SEC has moved many registration and verification processes online. Depending on the current system, a person may be able to verify an entity through the SEC’s electronic registration, search, or document retrieval platforms.
The result may confirm whether the entity is in SEC records, but more detailed documents may require ordering certified true copies or paying document fees.
3. Request SEC Documents
A more reliable method is to obtain official SEC documents, especially when the transaction involves money, employment, investment, shares, loans, real estate, franchise arrangements, distribution agreements, or long-term commercial commitments.
Useful documents include:
- Certificate of Incorporation;
- Articles of Incorporation;
- By-Laws;
- General Information Sheet;
- Audited Financial Statements;
- Certificate of Filing of Amended Articles;
- Certificate of Filing of Amended By-Laws;
- Latest Certificate of Good Standing, where available;
- Certificate of Authority, if the company is a lending or financing company;
- Secondary license or permit, if the activity requires one;
- SEC-issued order, clearance, or approval, if relevant.
A company may provide copies, but for high-value transactions, certified copies directly from the SEC are preferable.
4. Check the Company’s SEC Registration Number
A legitimate SEC-registered entity should have an SEC registration number. However, the mere presence of a number is not conclusive. Fraudulent actors may invent numbers, copy another company’s number, or display an old certificate.
When checking the SEC registration number:
- Confirm that the number matches the exact company name;
- Check that the name on the SEC record matches the name used in contracts, receipts, websites, and bank accounts;
- Confirm that the registration date makes sense;
- Verify that the company status is active or otherwise not revoked, suspended, or dissolved;
- Be cautious if the entity refuses to provide the number.
5. Check the Exact Corporate Name
The exact name matters.
For example, “ABC Trading Corporation” may be different from:
- ABC Trading Corp.;
- ABC Trading OPC;
- ABC Trading and Services Inc.;
- ABC Holdings Corporation;
- ABC Trading Philippines Corporation;
- ABC Trading Co.;
- ABC Trading Services.
Scammers sometimes use names that are similar to legitimate companies. They may add or omit words to create confusion. They may also use the name of a registered company without authority.
The legal name on the SEC record should match the name on:
- Contract;
- Official receipt;
- Invoice;
- Bank account;
- Website;
- Business permit;
- BIR Certificate of Registration;
- Letterhead;
- Board resolution;
- Secretary’s certificate.
A mismatch does not always prove fraud, but it requires explanation.
6. Check the Registration Status
A company may appear in SEC records but have a problematic status.
Possible issues include:
- Revoked registration;
- Suspended registration;
- Dissolved corporation;
- Expired corporate term for older corporations, if not extended or covered by applicable law;
- Delinquent status due to failure to file reports;
- Non-compliance with reportorial requirements;
- Ongoing SEC enforcement action;
- Cease and desist order;
- Advisory warning the public against dealing with the entity.
A company that was registered years ago may no longer be compliant or active.
7. Check Whether the Company Has a Secondary License
This is crucial. Some businesses require more than basic SEC registration.
A company that merely has a certificate of incorporation may not be authorized to engage in certain activities. The following activities commonly require special authority, licensing, registration, or clearance:
- Lending;
- Financing;
- Investment solicitation;
- Securities brokerage;
- Securities dealing;
- Investment advising;
- Mutual fund or investment company operations;
- Crowdfunding activities;
- Pre-need activities;
- Foundation operations, subject to specific SEC rules;
- Fund management;
- Offering shares, notes, investment contracts, or securities to the public.
A company may state in its articles that it intends to engage in a certain business, but that does not automatically mean it is licensed to perform regulated activities.
8. Check SEC Advisories
The SEC regularly issues advisories warning the public about entities that may be soliciting investments without authority, operating lending or financing schemes improperly, misusing corporate registration, or engaging in fraudulent activities.
An SEC advisory is a serious red flag. It may state that an entity:
- Is not registered with the SEC;
- Is registered but lacks authority to solicit investments;
- Is not authorized to offer securities;
- Is using a Ponzi-like or investment scam model;
- Is promising unrealistic returns;
- Is operating without a required Certificate of Authority;
- Is impersonating a registered company;
- Is violating securities laws.
A registered company can still be the subject of an SEC advisory if it engages in unauthorized activities.
9. Check the Company’s General Information Sheet
The General Information Sheet, or GIS, is an annual filing that usually contains updated information about the corporation, including:
- Corporate name;
- SEC registration number;
- Principal office address;
- Date of annual meeting;
- Fiscal year;
- Directors or trustees;
- Officers;
- Stockholders or members;
- Authorized, subscribed, and paid-up capital;
- Corporate secretary;
- External auditor, if applicable;
- Contact details.
The latest GIS is useful because it shows whether the persons claiming to represent the company are actually listed as officers, directors, trustees, or authorized persons.
However, the GIS is not always conclusive. Authority to sign contracts may also require a board resolution, secretary’s certificate, power of attorney, or other internal authorization.
10. Check the Articles of Incorporation
The Articles of Incorporation identify the corporation’s purpose, name, principal office, incorporators, capital structure, and other foundational details.
The articles help determine whether the company’s claimed business activity is within its corporate purpose.
For example, if a company claims to operate as an investment platform but its articles only mention general trading, advertising, or consultancy, that may raise questions. Even if the articles mention investment-related activities, securities laws may still require secondary registration or approval.
11. Check the By-Laws
The By-Laws contain internal governance rules, such as meetings, officers, voting, corporate powers, and procedures.
By-laws are relevant when checking whether a person has authority to act for the corporation, although actual signing authority usually depends on board approvals, secretary’s certificates, and corporate resolutions.
12. Check Audited Financial Statements
Audited Financial Statements, or AFS, may show the company’s financial condition, assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, equity, and auditor information.
For due diligence, AFS may help answer whether the company appears financially capable of performing its obligations.
However, AFS must be read carefully. A company may be registered but dormant, undercapitalized, insolvent, highly leveraged, or inactive.
13. Verify with the SEC Directly
For important matters, the safest approach is to verify directly with the SEC through its official channels or offices.
This may include:
- Requesting certified documents;
- Asking whether the entity is registered;
- Asking whether it has a secondary license;
- Checking whether it has pending advisories or enforcement actions;
- Verifying whether a certificate, order, or permit is authentic.
Direct SEC verification is especially important where investments, securities, lending, financing, or public solicitation are involved.
X. Information Needed to Check SEC Registration
To check a company effectively, gather as much of the following information as possible:
- Exact registered name;
- Trade name or brand name;
- SEC registration number;
- Date of incorporation or registration;
- Principal office address;
- Names of directors, trustees, partners, incorporators, or officers;
- Tax Identification Number, if available;
- Business permit number;
- BIR Certificate of Registration details;
- Website and social media pages;
- Contracts, receipts, invoices, proposals, or brochures;
- Bank account name;
- Claimed license, authority, or certificate numbers;
- Names of agents, recruiters, brokers, or representatives;
- Nature of the business activity;
- Copies of certificates or documents presented by the company.
The more information available, the easier it is to determine whether the entity in front of you is the same entity registered with the SEC.
XI. Red Flags When Checking SEC Registration
Certain signs should prompt caution.
1. The Company Refuses to Provide Its SEC Registration Number
A legitimate SEC-registered company should ordinarily be able to provide its registered name and SEC registration number.
Refusal does not automatically prove fraud, but it is a warning sign.
2. The Name on the SEC Record Does Not Match the Name Used in Transactions
If the SEC record says “XYZ Holdings Corporation” but the contract says “XYZ Global Investments,” further verification is needed.
3. The Company Is Registered for One Purpose but Engaged in Another
A company registered for general trading may be offering investment contracts, pooled funds, lending, securities, or financial products. This may require additional authority.
4. The Company Shows Only a Screenshot of a Certificate
Screenshots can be edited. Always verify directly.
5. The Company Claims That SEC Registration Alone Allows It to Solicit Investments
This is misleading. Soliciting investments from the public may require registration of securities, licensing, or exemption.
6. The Company Promises Guaranteed High Returns
Promises of unusually high, fixed, or guaranteed returns are major red flags, especially if linked to recruitment, cryptocurrency, forex, trading bots, franchising packages, online platforms, or pooled funds.
7. The Company Uses Another Registered Company’s Details
Scammers may use a real SEC-registered company’s name or registration number to appear legitimate.
8. The Company Uses Personal Bank Accounts
If payments are made to personal accounts instead of an account under the exact registered company name, this should be investigated.
9. The Company Has No Verifiable Office
A registered office address should exist. Virtual offices are not necessarily illegal, but they require closer review.
10. The Company Is Named in an SEC Advisory
An SEC advisory is a strong warning signal.
11. The Company Says It Is “SEC Registered” but Cannot Produce Current Documents
A certificate from years ago is not enough. Current GIS, AFS, permits, and licenses may be needed.
12. The Company Uses Legal-Sounding Words Without Proof
Words such as “licensed,” “accredited,” “authorized,” “regulated,” “approved,” “certified,” or “compliant” should be supported by documents.
XII. Common Misconceptions About SEC Registration
Misconception 1: “SEC registered” means the company is safe.
Not necessarily. SEC registration means the entity is recorded with the SEC. It does not guarantee honesty, profitability, solvency, or legal authority to conduct regulated activities.
Misconception 2: A corporation can do any business if it is SEC registered.
No. A corporation is generally limited by its purposes, regulatory approvals, and applicable laws.
Misconception 3: A DTI certificate is the same as SEC registration.
No. DTI registration is usually for sole proprietorship business names. SEC registration is for corporations, partnerships, and similar entities.
Misconception 4: A mayor’s permit proves SEC registration.
No. A mayor’s permit proves local authority to operate in a locality, not SEC registration.
Misconception 5: A company with a BIR Certificate of Registration is SEC registered.
No. BIR registration relates to tax compliance. It does not prove SEC registration.
Misconception 6: A company with an SEC certificate can solicit investments.
No. Investment solicitation may require securities registration, a secondary license, or another legal basis.
Misconception 7: A company’s Facebook page proves legitimacy.
No. Social media presence is not legal proof of registration or authority.
XIII. Checking SEC Registration for Investment Offers
The highest-risk area is investment solicitation.
Under Philippine securities law, many arrangements may be considered securities even if they are not called “shares” or “stocks.” An “investment contract” may exist when people invest money in a common enterprise with an expectation of profits primarily from the efforts of others.
A company may describe its offering as:
- Profit-sharing;
- Passive income;
- Trading package;
- Franchise package;
- Co-ownership;
- Crypto investment;
- Forex trading pool;
- Casino financing;
- Poultry, agriculture, or livestock investment;
- Real estate pooling;
- Online business package;
- AI trading;
- Mining investment;
- Cooperative-style plan;
- Membership program;
- Crowdfunding;
- Revenue-sharing arrangement.
The label does not control. The substance of the arrangement matters.
When checking a company offering investments, ask:
- Is the company SEC-registered?
- Is the investment product registered with the SEC?
- Does the company have authority to solicit investments?
- Are the persons selling the investment licensed or authorized?
- Is there an SEC advisory against the company?
- Are returns guaranteed?
- Are funds pooled?
- Are profits dependent mainly on the efforts of the company or promoters?
- Is recruitment rewarded?
- Are investors being pressured to pay quickly?
- Are documents complete, written, and verifiable?
- Is the money deposited to a company account or a personal account?
The fact that a company is SEC-registered as a corporation is not enough to make an investment offer lawful.
XIV. Checking SEC Registration for Lending Companies
A lending company must not merely be incorporated. It must have a Certificate of Authority from the SEC to operate as a lending company.
When checking a lending company, verify:
- SEC registration;
- Certificate of Authority number;
- Corporate name;
- Business address;
- Whether the authority is valid;
- Whether the company appears in SEC lists of authorized lending companies;
- Whether there are complaints or advisories;
- Whether the company complies with disclosure rules;
- Whether its interest, fees, collection practices, and documentation are lawful;
- Whether online lending operations comply with applicable privacy and consumer protection rules.
Borrowers should be cautious of online lenders that harass contacts, misuse personal data, impose hidden charges, or operate without proper authority.
XV. Checking SEC Registration for Financing Companies
Financing companies are also specially regulated. Like lending companies, they require proper SEC registration and authority.
When checking a financing company, verify:
- SEC incorporation;
- SEC authority to operate as a financing company;
- Whether the company’s authority is current;
- Whether the company’s name appears in SEC records;
- Whether the persons dealing with you are authorized representatives;
- Whether the financing terms are documented;
- Whether fees, charges, and disclosures are lawful.
XVI. Checking SEC Registration for Foundations and Non-Profits
For foundations, charities, associations, and non-stock corporations, SEC registration proves that the organization is registered as a juridical entity.
However, donors and partners should also check:
- Articles of Incorporation;
- By-Laws;
- SEC registration status;
- Latest GIS;
- Latest AFS;
- Donee institution status, if claimed;
- Accreditation from relevant government agencies, if claimed;
- Tax exemption, if claimed;
- Authority of officers to receive donations;
- Bank account name;
- Actual programs and beneficiaries;
- Governance and conflict-of-interest policies.
A non-stock corporation is not automatically tax-exempt merely because it is non-profit. Tax treatment depends on applicable tax laws and BIR recognition.
XVII. Checking SEC Registration for Foreign Corporations
A foreign corporation that wants to do business in the Philippines generally needs a license from the SEC, unless its activities do not legally constitute “doing business” under Philippine law.
When dealing with a foreign company, check:
- Whether it has a Philippine branch, representative office, regional headquarters, regional operating headquarters, or subsidiary;
- Whether it is licensed by the SEC to do business in the Philippines;
- Whether the local entity is a separate Philippine corporation;
- Whether the person signing has authority;
- Whether the contract is with the foreign parent, Philippine subsidiary, branch, or local representative;
- Whether tax, labor, foreign investment, and regulatory rules are being followed.
A foreign brand operating in the Philippines may not always be the same legal entity as the local contracting party.
XVIII. Checking Whether a Person Is Authorized to Represent the Company
Even if the company is SEC-registered, a separate issue is whether the person signing or negotiating has authority to bind the company.
To verify authority, request:
- Government-issued ID of the representative;
- Board resolution;
- Secretary’s certificate;
- Special power of attorney, if applicable;
- Corporate secretary confirmation;
- Latest GIS showing the person as an officer or director;
- Employment or agency authority;
- Official company email confirmation;
- Contract signed by authorized officers;
- Proof that payments go to the company account.
A person may be an employee, agent, shareholder, director, or promoter without having authority to bind the corporation.
XIX. Documents Commonly Used to Prove SEC Registration
1. Certificate of Incorporation
This is the primary proof that a corporation has been incorporated.
It usually contains:
- Corporate name;
- SEC registration number;
- Date of incorporation;
- SEC certification language;
- Signature or authentication by the SEC.
2. Articles of Incorporation
This document shows the company’s purposes, incorporators, capital structure, principal office, term, and other statutory information.
3. By-Laws
This document provides the internal governance rules of the corporation.
4. General Information Sheet
This provides updated corporate information and is usually filed annually.
5. Audited Financial Statements
This shows financial information and compliance with annual reportorial filing.
6. Certificate of Good Standing or Similar Certification
Where available, this may indicate that the company is in good standing with the SEC. The terminology and availability may vary depending on SEC practice.
7. Certificate of Authority
This is especially important for lending companies, financing companies, and other specially regulated entities.
8. Secondary License
This may apply to securities-related entities and other regulated businesses.
XX. Practical Step-by-Step Guide
Step 1: Get the Exact Name
Ask for the company’s exact registered name. Do not rely on brand names alone.
Example: A business may advertise as “JuanPay,” but the registered company may be “Juan Digital Finance Corporation.”
Step 2: Ask for the SEC Registration Number
Request the SEC registration number and date of incorporation.
Step 3: Search the SEC Database
Use the SEC’s available online search facility or company verification tools to check whether the entity appears.
Step 4: Compare the Details
Check whether the name, registration number, address, and registration date match the documents and representations given to you.
Step 5: Check the Status
Determine whether the company is active, suspended, revoked, dissolved, delinquent, or otherwise flagged.
Step 6: Review the Articles of Incorporation
Check whether the business activity is within the company’s stated purposes.
Step 7: Check for Secondary License
If the company is engaged in lending, financing, investments, securities, or similar regulated activities, ask for and verify the required secondary authority.
Step 8: Check SEC Advisories
Search for SEC advisories involving the company, its officers, trade names, affiliates, or promoters.
Step 9: Request Current Documents
Ask for the latest GIS, AFS, business permit, BIR registration, and relevant licenses.
Step 10: Verify Representative Authority
Request a board resolution, secretary’s certificate, or other proof that the person you are dealing with can bind the company.
Step 11: Verify Payment Details
Payments should generally go to an account under the exact registered company name, not to a personal account or unrelated entity.
Step 12: Document Everything
Keep copies of certificates, screenshots, contracts, messages, receipts, proof of payment, and identification documents.
XXI. How to Interpret SEC Search Results
SEC search results should be read carefully.
1. Exact Match
An exact match between the company name, SEC number, and address is a good starting point.
2. Similar Name
A similar name is not enough. It may refer to another company.
3. No Record Found
This may mean:
- The company is not SEC-registered;
- The search terms are incorrect;
- The company uses a different registered name;
- The company is DTI-registered as a sole proprietorship;
- The company is registered with another agency;
- The database does not display the record;
- Manual verification with the SEC is needed.
4. Registered but Suspended or Revoked
This is a serious concern. A suspended or revoked entity may lack authority to operate or may be non-compliant.
5. Registered but No Secondary License
This is common. The company may legally exist but may not be authorized to conduct regulated activity.
6. Registered Under a Different Purpose
This may indicate that the company’s current business model is not aligned with its corporate purpose or required licenses.
XXII. Legal Consequences of Dealing with an Unregistered Entity
Dealing with an unregistered entity can have serious consequences.
1. Contract Enforcement Issues
If the supposed company does not legally exist, questions may arise as to who is actually bound by the contract. The persons acting for the nonexistent entity may be personally liable.
2. Fraud Risk
Unregistered entities may be used to hide the identities of operators or evade accountability.
3. Regulatory Violations
If the transaction involves securities, lending, financing, or other regulated activities, dealing with an unauthorized entity may expose parties to regulatory, civil, or criminal consequences.
4. Tax and Accounting Problems
Payments to unregistered or improperly documented entities may cause tax documentation issues.
5. Difficulty Recovering Money
If there is no valid company, no real office, no traceable account, or no responsible officer, recovery becomes harder.
6. Employment Risks
Employees may discover that their employer is not properly registered, leading to issues involving payroll, benefits, taxes, and labor claims.
7. Licensing Problems
Franchisees, distributors, borrowers, or investors may enter into arrangements with entities that have no authority to offer the promised product or service.
XXIII. Legal Consequences for Companies Misrepresenting SEC Registration
A person or entity that falsely claims SEC registration or authority may face consequences under several legal theories, depending on the facts.
Possible liabilities may include:
- Administrative sanctions by the SEC;
- Revocation or suspension of registration;
- Cease and desist orders;
- Fines and penalties;
- Criminal liability under securities laws;
- Estafa or fraud charges under the Revised Penal Code, where applicable;
- Civil liability for damages;
- Consumer protection liability;
- Data privacy liability, if personal information is misused;
- Tax consequences;
- Local government permit violations;
- Liability for unauthorized lending or financing operations.
The exact consequences depend on the conduct, representations, documents used, money involved, victims, and applicable law.
XXIV. SEC Registration and Investment Scams
Many investment scams in the Philippines use the phrase “SEC registered” to build trust. The statement may be technically true but legally misleading.
A scammer may say:
- “We are SEC registered.”
- “We have a certificate of incorporation.”
- “We are legal because we have SEC papers.”
- “Our company is recognized by the SEC.”
- “Our documents are complete.”
- “We are registered as a corporation, so our investment program is legal.”
The correct response is to ask:
- Are your securities registered?
- Do you have authority to solicit investments?
- Are your agents licensed?
- Is your investment contract approved or exempt?
- Is there a prospectus, offering memorandum, or disclosure document?
- Where is the SEC approval for this specific investment product?
- Is the company named in any SEC advisory?
A certificate of incorporation is not a license to solicit investments from the public.
XXV. SEC Registration and Corporate Personality
A corporation registered with the SEC has a personality separate and distinct from its stockholders, directors, and officers.
This means:
- The corporation may own property;
- The corporation may sue and be sued;
- The corporation may enter into contracts;
- The corporation may incur obligations;
- Stockholders are generally liable only up to their investment, subject to exceptions;
- Corporate assets are separate from personal assets of shareholders;
- Corporate acts must generally be authorized through proper governance procedures.
However, corporate personality may be disregarded in exceptional cases, such as when the corporation is used to defeat public convenience, justify wrong, protect fraud, or defend crime.
This is commonly referred to as piercing the veil of corporate fiction.
XXVI. Special Concerns for Online Companies
Online businesses often operate through websites, apps, social media pages, chat groups, marketplaces, and payment platforms.
When checking an online company, verify:
- Registered corporate name;
- SEC registration number;
- DTI registration, if sole proprietorship;
- BIR registration;
- Business permit;
- Data privacy compliance, where applicable;
- Physical or principal office address;
- Customer service contact details;
- Terms and conditions;
- Refund policy;
- Name of the legal entity receiving payments;
- Whether the bank or e-wallet account matches the registered entity;
- Whether the business activity needs a special license;
- Whether there are consumer complaints or SEC advisories.
An online presence alone is not proof of legal registration.
XXVII. Special Concerns for Franchising
Many franchise offers involve substantial payments. A company offering franchises may be SEC-registered, but the franchise opportunity still requires due diligence.
Check:
- SEC registration;
- Articles of Incorporation;
- GIS;
- AFS;
- Business permits;
- Trademarks;
- Franchise agreement;
- Refund policy;
- Actual company-owned branches;
- Existing franchisees;
- Litigation history;
- Authority of sales agents;
- Whether promised returns are realistic;
- Whether the scheme is actually an investment contract disguised as a franchise.
A franchise that promises passive guaranteed income may raise securities law issues.
XXVIII. Special Concerns for Real Estate Companies
Real estate developers, brokers, and salespersons may be subject to regulation by agencies other than the SEC.
When dealing with a real estate company, check:
- SEC registration of the developer corporation;
- License to sell, where applicable;
- Certificate of registration for the project;
- Authority of brokers and salespersons;
- HLURB/DHSUD-related requirements, depending on the applicable regulatory regime;
- Title documents;
- Development permits;
- Tax declarations;
- Contract to sell;
- Project escrow or trust arrangements, if relevant;
- Company’s AFS and track record.
SEC registration alone does not prove that a real estate project is authorized for sale.
XXIX. Special Concerns for Employment
Before accepting employment from a company, especially an online, offshore, start-up, or unfamiliar company, check:
- SEC registration;
- Registered name of employer;
- Business address;
- BIR registration;
- Local business permit;
- Authority of the person signing the employment contract;
- Payroll arrangements;
- SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG registration;
- Whether the employer is a Philippine entity or foreign entity;
- Whether the job offer involves illegal recruitment, money mule activity, cryptocurrency transfers, or suspicious financial transactions.
A company’s lack of SEC registration does not automatically mean the job is illegal, especially if it is a sole proprietorship registered with DTI. But the legal identity of the employer must be clear.
XXX. Special Concerns for Suppliers and Contractors
Suppliers and contractors should verify SEC registration before extending credit, delivering goods, signing service agreements, or entering into long-term contracts.
Check:
- SEC registration;
- Articles and GIS;
- Authority of signatory;
- Business permit;
- BIR registration;
- Financial statements;
- Trade references;
- Bank account name;
- Litigation or collection history;
- Whether the company is newly incorporated with low paid-up capital;
- Whether the company has authority for the project;
- Whether a parent company guarantee is needed.
A corporation with minimal capitalization may have limited assets, making collection difficult if it defaults.
XXXI. Special Concerns for Share Purchases
When buying shares in a Philippine corporation, SEC registration is only the starting point.
Review:
- Articles of Incorporation;
- By-Laws;
- Latest GIS;
- Stock and transfer book;
- Subscription agreements;
- Share certificates;
- Board approvals;
- Restrictions on transfer;
- Rights of first refusal;
- Outstanding liabilities;
- AFS;
- Tax issues;
- Pending disputes;
- Corporate approvals for sale;
- Whether the shares are validly issued, fully paid, or subject to restrictions.
A person selling shares must actually own the shares and have the right to sell them.
XXXII. SEC Registration and Tax Registration
A company registered with the SEC must also comply with tax registration requirements.
The BIR Certificate of Registration shows that the entity is registered for tax purposes. It usually reflects tax type, registered address, trade name, line of business, and other tax information.
For due diligence, the SEC and BIR records should be consistent. The name on the SEC certificate should match the name on the BIR certificate, official receipts, invoices, and contracts.
However, BIR registration does not prove that the company is SEC-registered, and SEC registration does not prove tax compliance.
XXXIII. SEC Registration and Local Government Permits
A business operating in a city or municipality generally needs a mayor’s permit or local business permit.
Check whether the local business permit reflects:
- Correct business name;
- Correct address;
- Correct line of business;
- Current year;
- Local government issuing office;
- Owner or corporation name;
- Permit number;
- Authorized activity.
A company may be SEC-registered but still operating without a valid local permit.
XXXIV. SEC Registration and Trade Names
A registered corporation may use a trade name or brand name. However, a trade name is not always the legal name of the entity.
For example:
Brand: BrightPay
Legal entity: Bright Financial Technology Corporation
When signing contracts, issuing receipts, or making payments, the legal entity must be clearly identified.
Always ask: “What is the exact SEC-registered entity behind this brand?”
XXXV. SEC Registration and Corporate Name Reservation
A reserved corporate name is not the same as a registered corporation.
Before incorporation, incorporators may reserve a name. But name reservation only protects or holds the name temporarily. It does not create a corporation.
Do not accept name reservation as proof of SEC registration.
XXXVI. SEC Registration and Pending Application
A company may say that its SEC registration is “under process” or “pending.”
A pending application means the entity may not yet exist as a corporation. Until the SEC issues the certificate of incorporation, the corporation is not fully incorporated.
Contracts signed before incorporation may create issues. Persons acting for a proposed corporation may become personally liable unless the corporation later adopts the contract and the law allows the arrangement.
XXXVII. SEC Registration and Corporate Term
Under the Revised Corporation Code, corporations generally have perpetual existence unless their articles provide otherwise. However, older corporations may have been incorporated under prior rules with fixed corporate terms, subject to extension, amendment, or operation of law.
When dealing with older companies, it is prudent to check whether the corporation remains active and has not expired, dissolved, revoked, or become delinquent.
XXXVIII. SEC Registration and Delinquent Status
The SEC may classify corporations as delinquent for failure to comply with reportorial requirements, such as filing the GIS or AFS.
A delinquent corporation may still appear in SEC records, but its non-compliance is a warning sign.
For important transactions, ask for proof that the company is current with reportorial filings.
XXXIX. SEC Registration and Revocation
If a corporation’s registration is revoked, it may lose its authority to operate as a corporation, subject to rules on winding up and liquidation.
Revocation is a serious matter. A company with revoked registration should not be treated the same as an active compliant corporation.
XL. SEC Registration and Dissolution
A dissolved corporation may continue only for limited purposes, such as winding up, liquidation, or settling affairs, depending on the circumstances.
If a company is dissolved, it generally should not be entering new ordinary business transactions unless legally allowed in connection with winding up.
XLI. SEC Registration and Corporate Address
A company’s SEC records include its principal office. The principal office is important for legal notices, venue, tax registration, and jurisdiction.
Verify whether the company’s claimed office address matches:
- SEC records;
- BIR records;
- Business permit;
- Contract;
- Website;
- Invoices;
- Official receipts;
- GIS.
Discrepancies should be explained.
XLII. SEC Registration and Paid-Up Capital
The articles of incorporation and GIS may show authorized capital stock, subscribed capital, and paid-up capital.
These figures matter because a corporation’s capitalization may indicate its financial capacity.
However, authorized capital is not the same as actual available cash. Paid-up capital may have already been spent. Financial statements are needed for a clearer picture.
XLIII. SEC Registration and Nominee Arrangements
Some companies use nominees or layers of ownership. The SEC GIS may show stockholders of record, but beneficial ownership may require further investigation.
For higher-risk transactions, due diligence may include:
- Beneficial ownership declarations;
- Corporate ownership charts;
- Parent company documents;
- Board approvals;
- Anti-money laundering checks;
- Sanctions screening, where relevant;
- Source of funds review.
XLIV. SEC Registration and Authority to Sign Contracts
A corporation acts through its board of directors, officers, and authorized agents.
For significant contracts, the signatory should produce:
- Secretary’s certificate confirming authority;
- Board resolution approving the transaction;
- Corporate secretary certification;
- Notarized document, where appropriate;
- ID and specimen signature;
- Proof of officer position in the GIS.
The president or general manager may have apparent authority in ordinary transactions, but major acts, loans, property sales, guarantees, or extraordinary contracts often require board authority.
XLV. SEC Registration and Notarized Documents
A notarized contract is not proof that the company is SEC-registered. Notarization only relates to the acknowledgment of the signatory and execution of the document.
A notarized document can still involve a non-existent, unauthorized, or misrepresented entity.
XLVI. SEC Registration and Bank Accounts
A corporate bank account should generally be under the exact registered name of the company.
Be cautious when a supposed company asks payment to:
- A personal bank account;
- An e-wallet under an individual name;
- A different company;
- A foreign account unrelated to the contract;
- A cryptocurrency wallet;
- A payment processor without official receipts;
- A “temporary” account.
This is especially suspicious for investment offers, loans, employment processing fees, franchise fees, and online transactions.
XLVII. SEC Registration and Official Receipts or Invoices
A legitimate business should issue proper tax documents, such as official receipts or invoices, depending on the applicable tax rules.
Check whether the receipt or invoice reflects:
- Exact registered name;
- TIN;
- Registered address;
- Authority to print or equivalent compliance details;
- Date;
- Amount;
- Description of transaction;
- VAT or non-VAT status;
- Serial number;
- Name of customer, where required.
A receipt bearing a different name from the SEC-registered company should be investigated.
XLVIII. SEC Registration and Online Investment Platforms
Online investment platforms often present special risks.
Before depositing money, check:
- SEC registration of the company;
- Secondary license for securities or investment activities;
- Registration of the offered securities;
- Authority of agents;
- SEC advisories;
- Terms of investment;
- Withdrawal conditions;
- Risk disclosures;
- Custody of funds;
- Identity of beneficial owners;
- Bank account name;
- Whether the platform is foreign-based;
- Whether Philippine investors are being targeted;
- Whether returns are guaranteed;
- Whether recruitment commissions are paid.
A platform may be incorporated abroad but still violate Philippine securities laws if it solicits investments from the Philippine public without proper authority.
XLIX. SEC Registration and Cryptocurrency-Related Companies
A company dealing with cryptocurrency, tokens, digital assets, trading platforms, or digital investment schemes may be subject to multiple regulatory concerns.
Check:
- SEC registration;
- Whether the token or scheme is a security;
- Whether investment solicitation is authorized;
- Whether the entity has required licenses from relevant regulators;
- Whether there are SEC advisories;
- Whether there are BSP-related concerns for virtual asset services;
- Whether custody, wallets, and withdrawals are transparent;
- Whether returns are guaranteed;
- Whether funds are pooled;
- Whether recruitment is incentivized.
Calling a product a “token,” “crypto package,” or “digital asset” does not automatically remove it from securities regulation.
L. SEC Registration and Cooperatives
Cooperatives are generally registered with the Cooperative Development Authority, not the SEC.
If an entity claims to be a cooperative, check CDA registration rather than SEC registration. However, if a corporation uses cooperative-like language but is not CDA-registered, further investigation is needed.
Some scams use terms such as “community fund,” “co-op style,” “savings group,” or “profit-sharing community” without proper legal structure.
LI. SEC Registration and Banks, Insurance Companies, and Other Regulated Entities
Certain entities may be registered with the SEC as corporations but regulated primarily by other agencies for their main business.
Examples:
- Banks are regulated by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas;
- Insurance companies are regulated by the Insurance Commission;
- Cooperatives are regulated by the Cooperative Development Authority;
- Real estate projects may involve DHSUD requirements;
- Schools may involve DepEd, CHED, or TESDA;
- Recruitment agencies may involve DMW or DOLE;
- Health maintenance organizations may involve the Insurance Commission;
- Payment systems and virtual asset service providers may involve the BSP.
SEC registration is only one part of the legal review.
LII. When SEC Registration Is Not Required
Not every legitimate business is SEC-registered.
A business may not be SEC-registered if it is:
- A sole proprietorship registered with the DTI;
- A cooperative registered with the CDA;
- A government agency or instrumentality;
- A professional practice registered under separate rules;
- A foreign entity not doing business in the Philippines;
- An informal business, though this may raise other legal issues;
- An entity registered with another specialized regulator.
Therefore, “not found in SEC records” does not always mean illegal. It means the legal form must be identified.
LIII. Questions to Ask a Company Before Transacting
Before dealing with a company, ask:
- What is your exact registered legal name?
- Are you registered with the SEC, DTI, CDA, or another agency?
- What is your SEC registration number?
- When were you incorporated or registered?
- What is your principal office address?
- Can you provide your Certificate of Incorporation?
- Can you provide your latest GIS?
- Can you provide your latest AFS?
- Do you have a valid business permit?
- Are you BIR-registered?
- Do you have a secondary license for this business activity?
- Are you authorized to solicit investments?
- Are your agents licensed or authorized?
- Who is authorized to sign the contract?
- Can you provide a secretary’s certificate or board resolution?
- Whose bank account will receive payment?
- Will you issue an official receipt or invoice?
- Are there pending complaints, advisories, or cases involving the company?
The answers should be supported by documents.
LIV. Checklist for Verifying SEC Registration
Use this practical checklist:
Basic Identity
- Exact corporate name obtained
- SEC registration number obtained
- SEC registration date obtained
- Principal office address obtained
- Trade name or brand name identified
SEC Verification
- Company appears in SEC records
- Registration number matches company name
- Status is active or acceptable
- No revocation or suspension found
- No dissolution issue found
- No SEC advisory found
Documents
- Certificate of Incorporation reviewed
- Articles of Incorporation reviewed
- By-Laws reviewed
- Latest GIS reviewed
- Latest AFS reviewed
- Amendments reviewed, if any
Authority
- Signatory identified
- Signatory appears as officer or authorized representative
- Secretary’s certificate obtained
- Board resolution obtained, if needed
- Corporate secretary verified
Regulatory Licenses
- Lending authority checked, if applicable
- Financing authority checked, if applicable
- Securities registration checked, if applicable
- Investment solicitation authority checked, if applicable
- Other regulator permits checked
Transaction Documents
- Contract uses exact legal name
- Payment account matches company name
- Official receipt or invoice available
- Business permit checked
- BIR registration checked
- Address and contact details verified
Risk Review
- No unrealistic guaranteed returns
- No pressure tactics
- No personal account payments
- No mismatched names
- No unverifiable certificates
- No adverse SEC advisories
- No suspicious recruitment scheme
LV. Sample Due Diligence Language for Contracts
A contract may include representations such as:
“The Company represents and warrants that it is duly organized, validly existing, and in good standing under the laws of the Republic of the Philippines, with full corporate power and authority to own its properties, conduct its business, and enter into this Agreement.”
For regulated businesses, add:
“The Company further represents that it possesses all licenses, permits, approvals, registrations, and authorities required under applicable law for the conduct of its business and the performance of its obligations under this Agreement.”
For investment-related transactions, add:
“The Company represents that the offer, sale, distribution, or solicitation of any securities, investment contracts, or financial products, if any, shall comply with all applicable securities laws, regulations, and SEC requirements.”
For signatory authority, add:
“The person signing this Agreement on behalf of the Company represents that he or she is duly authorized by all necessary corporate action to execute and deliver this Agreement.”
These clauses do not replace verification, but they provide contractual remedies if representations are false.
LVI. What to Do if a Company Is Not SEC-Registered
If a company claiming to be a corporation is not found in SEC records, consider the following steps:
- Ask for the exact registered name;
- Ask whether it is a sole proprietorship, partnership, cooperative, or foreign entity;
- Request DTI, CDA, or other registration if not SEC-registered;
- Verify whether it is using a trade name;
- Ask for tax and local permits;
- Avoid paying money until identity is confirmed;
- Do not rely on screenshots alone;
- Check for advisories or complaints;
- Consult counsel for high-value transactions;
- Report suspicious investment solicitations or fraud to the proper authorities.
If the entity falsely claims to be SEC-registered, that is a serious red flag.
LVII. What to Do if a Company Is SEC-Registered but Unauthorized
If the company is SEC-registered but lacks authority for the activity it conducts, proceed with caution.
This commonly occurs when a corporation is registered for general business but offers investments, loans, financing, or securities without the required license.
Recommended steps:
- Ask for the required secondary license;
- Verify the license directly;
- Check SEC advisories;
- Avoid investing or paying fees until authority is confirmed;
- Keep records of all representations;
- Report suspicious activity to the SEC;
- Seek legal advice for recovery or complaint options.
The statement “registered with the SEC” should not end the inquiry.
LVIII. How to Report Suspicious Companies
Suspicious companies may be reported to the SEC or other relevant agencies depending on the issue.
Report to the SEC if the concern involves:
- Fake SEC registration;
- Unauthorized investment solicitation;
- Securities fraud;
- Lending company violations;
- Financing company violations;
- Misuse of corporate registration;
- Corporate reportorial violations;
- False claims of SEC authority.
Other agencies may be relevant depending on the matter:
- DTI for consumer complaints involving sole proprietorships or trade practices;
- BIR for tax-related concerns;
- LGU for business permit issues;
- BSP for banking, payment, or virtual asset concerns;
- Insurance Commission for insurance or pre-need issues;
- CDA for cooperatives;
- DHSUD for real estate development concerns;
- PNP or NBI for fraud, cybercrime, or estafa;
- NPC for data privacy violations;
- DOLE or DMW for employment and recruitment issues.
LIX. Evidence to Keep
When checking or reporting a company, preserve evidence.
Useful evidence includes:
- Screenshots of website and social media pages;
- Chat messages;
- Emails;
- Contracts;
- Receipts;
- Proof of payment;
- Bank account details;
- Names of agents or promoters;
- Copies of certificates shown;
- Advertisements;
- Investment presentations;
- Videos or webinars;
- Group chat messages;
- Company brochures;
- Promissory notes;
- Loan agreements;
- Official receipts or invoices;
- IDs of representatives, if lawfully obtained;
- SEC search results;
- SEC advisories.
Evidence should be preserved in original form as much as possible.
LX. Practical Examples
Example 1: A Corporation Offering Guaranteed Monthly Returns
A corporation shows a Certificate of Incorporation and says it is “SEC registered.” It offers 10% monthly returns from trading activities.
The correct analysis is:
- It may be SEC-registered as a corporation;
- The investment program may still be unauthorized;
- The offer may involve securities or investment contracts;
- The company needs authority for investment solicitation;
- SEC advisories should be checked;
- The investor should not rely on incorporation alone.
Example 2: An Online Lending App
An online lending app claims to be legitimate and shows a corporate registration number.
The correct analysis is:
- Check SEC registration;
- Check Certificate of Authority as a lending company;
- Check whether the app appears in lists of authorized lending platforms;
- Review privacy and collection practices;
- Confirm business name, corporate name, and payment account.
Example 3: A Supplier Contract
A buyer corporation wants goods on credit and provides a business name.
The supplier should:
- Verify SEC registration;
- Obtain GIS and AFS;
- Confirm signatory authority;
- Check business permit and BIR registration;
- Ensure the contract uses the exact legal name;
- Consider requiring a personal guarantee, security, or down payment.
Example 4: A Foreign Brand
A foreign brand enters into a Philippine distribution agreement through a local company.
The distributor should check:
- Whether the local company is SEC-registered;
- Whether it is authorized by the foreign brand;
- Whether the signatory has authority;
- Whether intellectual property rights are properly licensed;
- Whether import, tax, and regulatory requirements are satisfied.
Example 5: A Foundation Asking for Donations
A foundation asks for donations and presents an SEC certificate.
The donor should check:
- SEC registration;
- Non-stock or foundation status;
- Latest GIS and AFS;
- Donee status, if tax deductibility is claimed;
- Bank account name;
- Program records;
- Board and officer identities.
LXI. Legal Standards Behind the Inquiry
The need to verify SEC registration is grounded in basic principles of Philippine law:
- A corporation exists only upon incorporation under law;
- A corporation has powers limited by law, its articles, and regulatory approvals;
- Securities may not generally be offered or sold to the public without compliance with securities laws;
- Certain businesses require licenses beyond ordinary incorporation;
- Persons dealing with corporations must verify authority in significant transactions;
- Public registration records exist to protect commercial certainty and the public;
- Misrepresentation may give rise to civil, criminal, or administrative liability.
Due diligence is especially important because Philippine law recognizes separate corporate personality, but also imposes responsibility for fraud, unauthorized acts, and regulatory violations.
LXII. Limitations of Public SEC Searches
Public searches may not always provide complete information.
Limitations may include:
- Incomplete online display;
- Delayed updates;
- Similar corporate names;
- Old records requiring manual retrieval;
- Documents available only upon request;
- Status requiring confirmation from SEC;
- Secondary licenses listed separately;
- Advisory searches requiring separate review;
- Foreign corporation records requiring closer analysis;
- Changes in SEC systems or portals.
For high-value or high-risk transactions, obtain official certified documents rather than relying only on online search results.
LXIII. Best Practices for Individuals
Individuals should:
- Never invest based only on the phrase “SEC registered”;
- Verify the exact legal name;
- Confirm registration directly;
- Check for secondary licenses;
- Avoid personal account payments;
- Keep all documents;
- Be suspicious of guaranteed high returns;
- Check advisories;
- Review contracts before signing;
- Avoid pressure tactics;
- Ask for official receipts;
- Consult counsel for large transactions.
LXIV. Best Practices for Businesses
Businesses should:
- Include SEC verification in vendor onboarding;
- Require corporate documents before signing contracts;
- Verify signatory authority;
- Check tax and local permits;
- Review financial statements for credit transactions;
- Confirm licenses for regulated suppliers;
- Use exact legal names in contracts;
- Avoid paying unrelated accounts;
- Keep due diligence records;
- Update verification periodically;
- Monitor counterparties for status changes;
- Include representations and warranties in contracts.
LXV. Best Practices for Investors
Investors should:
- Distinguish incorporation from investment authority;
- Ask whether the securities are registered;
- Ask whether the offering is exempt;
- Ask whether the seller is licensed;
- Read risk disclosures;
- Demand written documents;
- Avoid guaranteed return schemes;
- Avoid recruitment-based compensation plans;
- Verify SEC advisories;
- Avoid investing through personal accounts;
- Understand the business model;
- Check whether returns come from real business activity or new investors’ money.
LXVI. Best Practices for Borrowers
Borrowers dealing with lending companies should:
- Verify SEC Certificate of Authority;
- Read loan terms carefully;
- Check total charges, not only interest;
- Confirm the lender’s legal name;
- Avoid lenders using harassment or public shaming;
- Protect personal data;
- Keep loan documents;
- Require official receipts for payments;
- Report abusive or unauthorized lenders;
- Avoid apps with unclear operators.
LXVII. Best Practices for Donors
Donors dealing with foundations or charities should:
- Verify SEC registration;
- Check the latest GIS and AFS;
- Confirm the bank account name;
- Ask whether donations are tax-deductible;
- Request receipts;
- Review programs and beneficiaries;
- Check officers and trustees;
- Avoid donating to personal accounts unless clearly justified;
- Check for accreditation, where claimed;
- Keep documentation.
LXVIII. Best Practices for Employees
Employees should:
- Identify the exact legal employer;
- Check SEC or DTI registration;
- Confirm business address;
- Review employment contract;
- Check payroll and benefits registration;
- Avoid jobs requiring personal bank accounts to receive third-party money;
- Avoid jobs involving suspicious transfers;
- Verify foreign employers carefully;
- Keep signed documents;
- Report illegal recruitment or labor violations.
LXIX. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is SEC registration proof that a company is legitimate?
It is proof that the entity is registered with the SEC, but it is not proof that every activity it conducts is lawful or authorized.
2. Can a company be SEC-registered and still be a scam?
Yes. A company may be validly incorporated but still engage in fraud, unauthorized investment solicitation, or other illegal conduct.
3. Is a DTI-registered business SEC-registered?
No. DTI registration is usually for sole proprietorship business names. SEC registration applies to corporations, partnerships, and similar entities.
4. Can a corporation operate without a business permit?
A corporation may be SEC-registered but still need local government permits before operating in a city or municipality.
5. Can a company solicit investments just because it is SEC-registered?
No. Investment solicitation may require securities registration, a secondary license, or another legal basis.
6. What if the company has an SEC registration number?
Verify that the number matches the exact company name and that the company has the required authority for its activities.
7. What if no SEC record appears?
The entity may not be SEC-registered, may be registered under another name, may be a sole proprietorship, or may require manual verification.
8. Should I ask for the latest GIS?
Yes. The GIS helps identify current directors, officers, stockholders, address, and corporate details.
9. Should I ask for AFS?
Yes, especially for credit, investment, supply, acquisition, or long-term transactions.
10. Is a certificate image enough?
No. Images can be altered. Verify through official SEC records or certified copies.
LXX. Summary
Checking whether a company is registered with the SEC in the Philippines requires more than asking for a certificate. The process should identify the exact legal entity, confirm its SEC registration number, review its current status, examine its corporate documents, verify the authority of its representatives, and determine whether its specific business activity requires a secondary license or approval.
The most important rule is this:
SEC registration proves that an entity exists in SEC records; it does not automatically prove that the entity is authorized, compliant, solvent, trustworthy, or legally allowed to conduct every activity it advertises.
For ordinary transactions, basic SEC verification may be enough. For investments, lending, financing, securities, franchises, real estate, donations, employment, or high-value contracts, deeper due diligence is necessary. A careful review of SEC records, secondary licenses, business permits, tax registration, financial statements, advisories, and signatory authority can prevent fraud, regulatory problems, and costly disputes.