I. Overview
In the Philippines, the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, is the primary government agency responsible for the registration, supervision, and regulation of corporations, partnerships, associations, and capital market participants. Checking whether a company is registered with the SEC is a basic but important step before entering into business transactions, investing money, signing contracts, accepting employment, extending credit, or dealing with an entity that claims to be a legitimate corporation or partnership.
SEC registration is not the same as a business permit, tax registration, license to operate, or authority to solicit investments. A company may be registered with the SEC but still lack other permits required for its specific activity. Conversely, a sole proprietorship may be legally registered with the Department of Trade and Industry rather than the SEC. Understanding these distinctions is essential.
This article explains how to verify SEC registration in the Philippine context, what information to look for, what SEC registration proves, what it does not prove, and what red flags should be considered.
II. What SEC Registration Means in the Philippines
SEC registration generally means that an entity has been recognized by the SEC as having juridical personality or lawful existence under Philippine law, depending on the type of entity involved.
For corporations, registration with the SEC gives the corporation a legal personality separate from its stockholders, directors, officers, and incorporators. This allows the corporation to own property, sue and be sued, enter into contracts, and conduct business under its registered name, subject to applicable laws.
For partnerships, SEC registration gives public notice of the partnership’s existence and basic details, such as its name, partners, capital, and business purpose.
For associations and non-stock corporations, SEC registration establishes their legal existence as juridical entities, subject to the limitations in their articles of incorporation, bylaws, and applicable law.
However, SEC registration alone does not mean that the company is financially sound, trustworthy, licensed for all activities, authorized to solicit investments, or compliant with every government requirement.
III. Entities Registered with the SEC
The SEC commonly handles the registration of the following:
Stock corporations These are corporations organized for profit, with capital stock divided into shares.
Non-stock corporations These include foundations, associations, religious corporations, civic organizations, charitable entities, and other corporations not organized primarily for profit.
Partnerships These may be general partnerships, limited partnerships, or professional partnerships.
Foreign corporations doing business in the Philippines Foreign corporations must generally secure a license from the SEC before doing business in the Philippines.
One Person Corporations A One Person Corporation is a corporation with a single stockholder, subject to the requirements and restrictions of the Revised Corporation Code.
Capital market participants and regulated entities These may include brokers, dealers, investment houses, financing companies, lending companies, investment companies, and similar entities, depending on the applicable law and license.
IV. Entities Not Usually Registered with the SEC
Not every business is supposed to be registered with the SEC. In the Philippines, the proper registration agency depends on the business form.
A sole proprietorship is usually registered with the Department of Trade and Industry, not the SEC. A person operating under a business name may have a DTI certificate but no SEC registration because the business is not a corporation or partnership.
A cooperative is usually registered with the Cooperative Development Authority, not the SEC.
Certain specialized entities may require registration or licensing from other agencies, such as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, Insurance Commission, Department of Labor and Employment, Department of Health, Department of Education, Food and Drug Administration, Energy Regulatory Commission, or local government units.
Thus, the first question is not merely “Is this business SEC-registered?” but “What type of entity is this, and which agency should regulate it?”
V. Why Checking SEC Registration Matters
Verifying SEC registration helps determine whether the entity legally exists under the name it uses. This is important in several situations.
For contracts, it helps confirm whether the party signing the agreement has juridical personality.
For investments, it helps screen against fraudulent investment schemes, although further checks are required.
For employment, it may help confirm whether the employer is a legitimate registered entity.
For loans and credit transactions, it helps identify the legal debtor and its official address.
For property transactions, it helps confirm whether the corporation or partnership has legal capacity to buy, sell, lease, mortgage, or otherwise deal with property.
For suppliers and customers, it helps reduce the risk of dealing with fictitious, misrepresented, or unauthorized entities.
For litigation or demand letters, it helps identify the correct registered name and address of the entity.
VI. Ways to Check if a Company Is Registered with the SEC
There are several practical ways to verify SEC registration in the Philippines.
1. Search the SEC’s Online Company Registration or Verification Systems
The SEC has online systems that allow users to search for registered entities. These systems may show basic information such as the company name, SEC registration number, date of registration, company type, and status.
When using an SEC online search tool, check the exact spelling of the company name. Corporate names may contain commas, abbreviations, punctuation, or suffixes such as “Inc.,” “Corporation,” “Corp.,” “Company,” “Co.,” “Ltd.,” or “OPC.” A slight difference in the name may produce no result or may show a different entity.
It is also useful to search using variations of the name, especially if the company uses a trade name, brand name, or shortened name in public.
2. Request the Company’s SEC Registration Number
A legitimate SEC-registered corporation or partnership should be able to provide its SEC registration number. This number appears on its Certificate of Incorporation, Certificate of Filing of Articles of Partnership, Certificate of Registration, or similar SEC-issued document.
The registration number should be cross-checked against SEC records when possible. A company merely displaying a number on a website, receipt, brochure, or social media page should not be accepted at face value without verification.
3. Ask for the Certificate of Incorporation or Certificate of Registration
A corporation should have a Certificate of Incorporation issued by the SEC. A partnership should have a Certificate of Filing of Articles of Partnership or equivalent registration document.
The certificate should show the official registered name of the entity, the SEC registration number, and the date of registration. It should also appear consistent with the entity type being claimed.
A certificate alone, however, may be outdated, incomplete, altered, or misused. It should be checked together with current SEC status, business permits, licenses, and other records.
4. Check the Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws, or Articles of Partnership
The Articles of Incorporation or Articles of Partnership contain important information about the entity. These may include the corporate name, principal office, purpose, incorporators, directors, trustees, partners, capital structure, and term of existence.
The stated business purpose is important. A company registered for a general business purpose may not automatically be authorized to engage in regulated activities such as lending, financing, insurance, banking, securities brokerage, investment solicitation, recruitment, education, health services, or public utilities.
5. Request a Certified True Copy from the SEC
For higher-risk transactions, it is advisable to obtain certified documents directly from the SEC. Certified true copies may be requested for documents such as the Certificate of Incorporation, Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws, General Information Sheet, and other filed documents.
Certified copies are useful in due diligence, litigation, bank compliance, property transactions, mergers and acquisitions, credit review, and regulatory verification.
6. Check the General Information Sheet
A corporation is generally required to file a General Information Sheet, commonly called a GIS, with the SEC. The GIS provides updated information on directors, trustees, officers, stockholders, principal office, corporate structure, and other matters.
The GIS is one of the most useful documents for identifying who currently appears in SEC records as the company’s directors, officers, or stockholders.
However, a GIS reflects what was filed with the SEC. It may not capture very recent internal changes if the company has not yet filed updated records or if there are disputes among shareholders, directors, or officers.
7. Check SEC Status
It is not enough to confirm that a company was once registered. The entity’s current status matters.
A company may be:
- Active;
- Registered but non-compliant;
- Suspended;
- Revoked;
- Dissolved;
- In the process of liquidation;
- Merged into another company;
- Amended under a new name;
- Under regulatory proceedings; or
- Subject to penalties or restrictions.
An entity whose registration has been revoked or suspended may have limited or no authority to continue business under its registered status.
8. Check Whether the Company Has Authority for Regulated Activities
Many businesses need more than SEC registration. If the company is engaged in a regulated activity, it may need a specific license, secondary registration, certificate of authority, or permit.
For example:
A lending company generally needs SEC registration and authority under laws governing lending companies.
A financing company generally needs SEC registration and authority as a financing company.
An entity selling or offering securities may need SEC registration of securities, a license, permit, or exemption, depending on the transaction.
A company offering investment contracts, pooled investment schemes, high-yield investment opportunities, or passive income arrangements may require SEC authority.
A broker, dealer, investment adviser, investment house, or fund manager may require specific SEC licensing.
A company engaged in banking, quasi-banking, money service business, e-money, remittance, or virtual asset services may also fall under Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas regulation.
An insurance-related entity may fall under the Insurance Commission.
An employment or recruitment agency may need authority from the Department of Migrant Workers, Department of Labor and Employment, or other relevant agency.
Thus, when a company says it is “SEC-registered,” the next question should be: registered for what purpose, and does it have the license required for the actual activity it is offering?
VII. SEC Registration Versus Business Permit
A common misunderstanding is that SEC registration is the same as a business permit. It is not.
SEC registration establishes the legal existence of a corporation or partnership. A mayor’s permit or business permit from the local government unit authorizes the business to operate in a locality, subject to local ordinances and requirements.
A corporation may be SEC-registered but still lack a valid business permit. Conversely, a business may have a local permit under a trade name but not be SEC-registered because it is a sole proprietorship.
For due diligence, both should usually be checked.
VIII. SEC Registration Versus BIR Registration
SEC registration is also different from registration with the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
BIR registration relates to taxation. A company must register with the BIR to obtain a Tax Identification Number, authority to print receipts or invoices, books of accounts, and tax compliance obligations.
A company may be SEC-registered but non-compliant with BIR requirements. Likewise, a person may have a BIR registration for a business activity without being an SEC-registered corporation.
For commercial dealings, the company should usually be able to provide its BIR Certificate of Registration, official receipts or invoices, and tax identification details.
IX. SEC Registration Versus Barangay Clearance and Other Permits
Businesses may also need barangay clearance, zoning clearance, sanitary permits, fire safety inspection certificates, occupational permits, industry-specific licenses, and other clearances.
SEC registration does not replace these requirements.
A complete verification process should consider the nature of the business, its location, its industry, and the transaction involved.
X. How to Interpret an SEC Registration Result
When an SEC search or document confirms a company’s registration, review the following details carefully.
1. Exact Registered Name
The name must match the company you are dealing with. Be cautious of entities using names that are very similar to established companies.
A fraudster may use a name that differs only slightly from a legitimate registered corporation.
2. SEC Registration Number
The registration number should match the company’s documents. If the number belongs to another entity, this is a serious red flag.
3. Date of Registration
The date of registration shows when the entity was formed. A newly registered company is not necessarily suspicious, but it may require closer due diligence, especially for large transactions or investment offerings.
4. Principal Office Address
Check whether the registered address matches the address used in contracts, invoices, websites, proposals, and official communications.
A mismatch is not automatically illegal because companies may have branch offices, operating offices, or updated addresses. However, unexplained inconsistencies should be clarified.
5. Corporate Purpose
Review whether the company’s stated purpose covers the activity it is conducting. A broad corporate purpose may permit many business activities, but regulated activities still require specific authority.
6. Directors, Trustees, Officers, or Partners
Identify the persons authorized to act for the entity. A person claiming to represent a company should be able to show proper authority, such as a board resolution, secretary’s certificate, special power of attorney, partnership authority, or official appointment.
7. Current Status
Confirm whether the company is active, suspended, revoked, dissolved, or otherwise restricted.
8. Secondary Licenses
If the business involves lending, financing, securities, investment solicitation, brokerage, funds, or other regulated activities, check for the necessary secondary license or authority.
XI. Red Flags When Checking SEC Registration
Several warning signs may suggest that a company’s claimed registration is unreliable or insufficient.
1. The Company Refuses to Provide Its SEC Registration Number
A legitimate corporation or partnership should generally have no reason to hide its registration number.
2. The Name Does Not Appear in SEC Records
This may mean the company is not SEC-registered, uses a different legal name, is a sole proprietorship, or is misrepresenting itself.
3. The Company Uses a Brand Name Instead of Its Legal Name
A brand name may be different from the registered corporate name. Always ask for the exact legal name.
4. The SEC Registration Belongs to a Different Company
Some fraudulent operators misuse the registration number or certificate of a legitimate entity.
5. The Company Claims That SEC Registration Alone Authorizes Investments
This is a major red flag. SEC registration as a corporation does not automatically authorize investment solicitation.
6. The Company Promises High Returns with Little or No Risk
This may indicate an investment scam, Ponzi scheme, or unauthorized securities offering.
7. The Company Says It Has a “Pending” SEC Registration
A pending application does not mean the entity is already registered.
8. The Company’s Documents Look Altered or Inconsistent
Watch for mismatched fonts, unclear seals, cropped certificates, inconsistent names, incorrect addresses, or suspicious formatting.
9. The Company Pressures You to Act Immediately
Urgency tactics are common in fraudulent schemes.
10. The Company Cannot Show Other Permits
Depending on the activity, lack of BIR registration, business permit, license, or industry authority may be significant.
XII. SEC Registration and Investment Scams
One of the most important legal points is that SEC registration does not automatically authorize a company to solicit investments from the public.
A corporation may be registered with the SEC for ordinary business purposes but may not be authorized to sell securities, offer investment contracts, operate an investment scheme, or collect funds from the public in exchange for promised returns.
Under Philippine securities regulation, many arrangements may be considered securities even if they are not called shares or bonds. These may include investment contracts, profit-sharing arrangements, pooled funds, passive income programs, or schemes where investors place money in a common enterprise and expect profits primarily from the efforts of others.
Therefore, when dealing with investment offers, checking basic SEC registration is only the first step. It is also necessary to check whether:
- The securities are registered;
- The offering is exempt or covered by a valid exemption;
- The persons selling the securities are licensed or authorized;
- The company has a permit or authority for the specific offering;
- The SEC has issued advisories against the entity;
- The business model is legitimate and sustainable;
- The promised returns are realistic;
- There is a written contract; and
- The investor understands the risks.
A company that says “We are SEC-registered” may be telling only a partial truth.
XIII. SEC Advisories
The SEC issues advisories warning the public against entities or individuals that may be engaging in unauthorized investment-taking, illegal lending, fraudulent schemes, or other unlawful activities.
Before investing or transacting with a company, especially one offering returns, commissions, referral bonuses, cryptocurrency-related income, forex trading, online trading, franchising income, cooperative-style pooling, or passive earning packages, it is prudent to check whether the SEC has issued an advisory involving the company, its officers, its brand, or related names.
An SEC advisory is not the same as a final court judgment, but it is a serious warning that should not be ignored.
XIV. Foreign Corporations
A foreign corporation that wishes to do business in the Philippines generally needs a license from the SEC. The issue is whether the foreign corporation is “doing business” in the Philippines under applicable law.
A foreign company may have customers in the Philippines without necessarily being licensed locally, depending on the nature, continuity, and extent of its activities. However, if it maintains an office, appoints agents, performs continuing commercial acts, enters into local operations, or otherwise conducts business in the Philippines, SEC licensing may be required.
When dealing with a foreign corporation, check whether it has:
- A Philippine SEC license to do business;
- A branch office, representative office, regional headquarters, or regional operating headquarters registration, if applicable;
- Local tax registration;
- Local permits;
- Authority from industry regulators, if required; and
- A Philippine representative with proper authority.
A foreign corporation doing business in the Philippines without the required license may face limitations in suing before Philippine courts and may be subject to regulatory consequences.
XV. One Person Corporations
A One Person Corporation, or OPC, is a special form of corporation under the Revised Corporation Code. It has only one stockholder, who may also act as sole director and president, subject to restrictions.
When checking an OPC, confirm:
- The registered corporate name, usually containing “OPC”;
- SEC registration number;
- Name of the single stockholder;
- Nominee and alternate nominee, where applicable;
- Corporate purpose;
- Principal office;
- Current SEC status; and
- Whether the OPC is allowed to engage in the activity it conducts.
Certain entities, such as banks, quasi-banks, pre-need companies, trust companies, insurance companies, publicly listed companies, non-chartered government-owned or controlled corporations, and professionals for the purpose of exercising their profession, may be restricted from organizing as OPCs.
XVI. Non-Stock Corporations, Foundations, and NGOs
Non-stock corporations, foundations, and NGOs are often SEC-registered. However, SEC registration does not automatically mean that donations are tax-deductible, that the entity is accredited by a government agency, or that it has authority to conduct every charitable, educational, religious, or social activity it advertises.
For foundations and non-profit entities, check:
- SEC registration;
- Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws;
- Trustees and officers;
- Current GIS;
- Accreditation, if required;
- BIR tax-exempt status, if claimed;
- Donee institution status, if claimed;
- Fundraising authority, if applicable;
- Relevant permits for schools, health services, shelters, or social welfare activities; and
- SEC or regulatory advisories.
XVII. Lending and Financing Companies
Lending and financing companies are commonly checked through the SEC because they are subject to SEC regulation.
A lending company should not merely be SEC-registered as a corporation. It should also have authority to operate as a lending company. The same general principle applies to financing companies.
When checking a lending or financing company, verify:
- SEC corporate registration;
- Certificate of Authority, if required;
- Registered business name;
- Official lending or financing company status;
- Branches and operating addresses;
- Interest, fees, and disclosure practices;
- Compliance with debt collection regulations;
- Complaints or advisories; and
- Whether the company uses abusive, deceptive, or unfair collection methods.
Borrowers should be cautious of online lending apps or lenders that misuse personal data, shame borrowers, contact third parties, impose hidden charges, or operate without proper authority.
XVIII. Corporations With Similar Names
A company may use a name similar to another entity. SEC name approval reduces but does not eliminate confusion. Businesses may also use trade names, product names, branch names, or online page names that differ from their legal names.
When checking registration, always distinguish among:
- Corporate name;
- Business name;
- Trade name;
- Brand name;
- Website name;
- App name;
- Store name;
- Branch name;
- Franchise name; and
- Social media page name.
The legal party to a contract should be the registered entity, not merely the brand.
XIX. Documents to Request from a Company
For basic verification, request:
- SEC Certificate of Incorporation or Registration;
- SEC registration number;
- Articles of Incorporation or Articles of Partnership;
- Bylaws, if a corporation;
- Latest General Information Sheet;
- Mayor’s permit or business permit;
- BIR Certificate of Registration;
- Official receipt or invoice details;
- Valid IDs of signatories;
- Board resolution, secretary’s certificate, or authority of representative;
- Relevant licenses, permits, or certificates of authority;
- Audited financial statements, if appropriate;
- Proof of address; and
- Regulatory approvals, if applicable.
For investment transactions, request additional documents, including offering documents, risk disclosures, SEC permits, licenses of salespersons, contracts, audited financial statements, and proof of authority to offer securities.
XX. How to Verify a Company Before Signing a Contract
Before signing a contract with a company, take the following steps:
- Get the exact registered name.
- Search for the company in SEC records.
- Confirm the SEC registration number.
- Review the company’s current status.
- Compare the registered address with the contract address.
- Ask for the latest GIS or equivalent document.
- Verify the signatory’s authority.
- Check whether the transaction is within the company’s stated purpose.
- Confirm business permits and tax registration.
- Check for special licenses if the activity is regulated.
- Search for advisories, complaints, litigation, or public warnings.
- Keep copies of all documents reviewed.
The person signing for a corporation should usually show authority through a secretary’s certificate, board resolution, or other proper authorization. Without authority, the corporation may later dispute the signatory’s power to bind it.
XXI. How to Verify a Company Before Investing
Before investing, perform stricter due diligence.
Check whether:
- The entity is SEC-registered;
- The investment product is registered or exempt;
- The company has authority to solicit investments;
- The persons selling the investment are licensed or authorized;
- The promised returns are realistic;
- There is a written explanation of risks;
- There is a clear source of revenue;
- Investor funds are segregated or protected;
- There are audited financial statements;
- There are SEC advisories against the entity;
- The structure resembles a Ponzi or pyramid scheme;
- Returns depend mainly on recruitment;
- The company refuses to disclose financial records; and
- The transaction documents are complete.
The safest rule is that SEC registration of the corporation is not proof that the investment offer is legal.
XXII. How to Verify a Company Before Employment
Employees and job applicants may check SEC registration to confirm whether the employer exists as a corporation or partnership.
However, employment legitimacy also requires other checks, such as:
- DOLE compliance;
- Business permit;
- BIR registration;
- SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG registration;
- Valid employment contracts;
- Proper recruitment authority, if overseas employment is involved;
- Absence of placement fee violations;
- Real office address;
- Clear payroll arrangements; and
- No suspicious requests for upfront payments.
A job offer from an SEC-registered company may still be fraudulent if the recruiter is unauthorized or if the job requires illegal fees, identity theft, money mule activity, or fake training payments.
XXIII. How to Verify a Company Before Buying Property
If a corporation is buying, selling, leasing, or mortgaging property, check:
- SEC registration;
- Articles of Incorporation;
- Corporate powers relating to real property;
- GIS;
- Board resolution authorizing the transaction;
- Secretary’s certificate;
- Authority of signatories;
- Tax identification;
- Valid IDs of officers;
- Property title;
- Encumbrances;
- Tax declarations;
- BIR and local tax compliance; and
- Any required regulatory approvals.
For foreign-owned corporations, constitutional and statutory restrictions on land ownership must also be considered.
XXIV. What SEC Registration Does Not Prove
SEC registration does not automatically prove that:
- The company is financially stable;
- The company is honest;
- The company has no debts;
- The company has no pending cases;
- The company pays taxes correctly;
- The company has a valid business permit;
- The company is authorized to solicit investments;
- The company’s products are legal;
- The company’s officers are trustworthy;
- The company is compliant with labor laws;
- The company owns the assets it claims to own;
- The company’s website or social media page is authentic;
- The company is not involved in fraud; or
- The transaction is safe.
SEC registration is evidence of legal registration, not a guarantee of commercial reliability.
XXV. Common Mistakes When Checking SEC Registration
1. Relying Only on a Screenshot
Screenshots can be edited. Always verify through official records or certified documents when the transaction is important.
2. Checking Only the Brand Name
The registered legal name may be different from the brand.
3. Ignoring the Company Status
An entity may be registered but revoked, suspended, or dissolved.
4. Assuming SEC Registration Authorizes Investment Solicitation
This is one of the most dangerous mistakes.
5. Ignoring the Signatory’s Authority
Even if the company exists, the person signing may lack authority.
6. Failing to Check Secondary Licenses
Businesses in regulated sectors need more than basic SEC registration.
7. Confusing DTI and SEC Registration
A sole proprietorship is usually DTI-registered, not SEC-registered.
8. Not Checking Related Names
Scammers may operate under multiple names, brands, pages, and affiliates.
XXVI. Practical Checklist
A practical SEC verification checklist should include the following:
- Exact legal name of the entity;
- Entity type;
- SEC registration number;
- Date of registration;
- Current SEC status;
- Principal office address;
- Articles of Incorporation or Partnership;
- Bylaws, if applicable;
- Latest General Information Sheet;
- Directors, trustees, officers, or partners;
- Authorized signatory;
- Secretary’s certificate or board resolution;
- Business permit;
- BIR Certificate of Registration;
- Special license or secondary registration;
- SEC advisories;
- Public complaints or warnings;
- Consistency of documents;
- Real office or operating address;
- Written contract; and
- Clear explanation of the transaction.
XXVII. Legal Consequences of Misrepresenting SEC Registration
A person or entity that falsely claims SEC registration, misuses another company’s registration, forges SEC documents, or conducts business under a misleading identity may face civil, criminal, and administrative consequences.
Possible consequences may include:
- SEC enforcement action;
- Revocation or suspension of registration;
- Administrative fines;
- Criminal complaints for falsification, estafa, securities violations, or related offenses;
- Civil liability for damages;
- Injunctions;
- Disqualification of directors or officers;
- Tax consequences;
- Local government penalties; and
- Regulatory action by other agencies.
Where investment solicitation is involved, liability may be more serious, especially if the transaction involves securities, investment contracts, or fraudulent schemes.
XXVIII. Role of Lawyers in SEC Verification
A lawyer may assist in:
- Reviewing SEC documents;
- Confirming corporate existence and status;
- Checking authority of officers;
- Drafting or reviewing contracts;
- Conducting legal due diligence;
- Verifying investment legality;
- Reviewing corporate powers;
- Preparing board resolutions or secretary’s certificates;
- Checking regulatory licenses;
- Assessing liability risks;
- Filing complaints with the SEC;
- Handling disputes involving unauthorized representatives; and
- Advising on whether a transaction should proceed.
Legal review is especially advisable for investments, acquisitions, loans, real estate transactions, franchise arrangements, joint ventures, and large supply contracts.
XXIX. Sample Questions to Ask a Company
Before dealing with a company, ask:
- What is your exact SEC-registered name?
- What is your SEC registration number?
- May I see your Certificate of Incorporation or Registration?
- May I see your latest General Information Sheet?
- Who are your current directors, officers, partners, or trustees?
- Who is authorized to sign this transaction?
- Do you have a secretary’s certificate or board resolution?
- What is your registered office address?
- Do you have a current business permit?
- Are you registered with the BIR?
- Does your business require a special license?
- Are you authorized to offer this investment, loan, service, or product?
- Have you been the subject of an SEC advisory?
- Are your securities, investment contracts, or offering documents registered or exempt?
- Can you provide certified copies of your SEC records?
XXX. Best Practices
For ordinary transactions, basic SEC verification may be enough. For high-value, regulated, or risky transactions, deeper due diligence is necessary.
Best practices include:
- Verify using official records;
- Get documents directly from the company and, when needed, from the SEC;
- Match all names exactly;
- Check current status, not just historical registration;
- Confirm authority of signatories;
- Check other permits and licenses;
- Be cautious with investment offers;
- Avoid relying on social media claims;
- Keep written records;
- Use certified true copies for important transactions;
- Consult counsel for high-risk matters; and
- Do not proceed when material inconsistencies remain unexplained.
XXXI. Conclusion
Checking whether a company is registered with the SEC is an essential first step in Philippine legal and commercial due diligence. It helps confirm whether the entity legally exists as a corporation, partnership, or other SEC-registered organization. However, SEC registration should not be treated as a complete guarantee of legality, authority, solvency, or trustworthiness.
The proper approach is to verify the company’s exact registered name, SEC registration number, current status, corporate documents, officers, address, and authority to transact. For regulated activities, especially lending, financing, securities, and investment solicitation, additional licenses or SEC authority must be checked. For contracts, the authority of the signatory must be confirmed. For investments, the legality of the offering must be examined separately from the company’s basic registration.
In the Philippines, the safest rule is simple: SEC registration proves that an entity may exist in SEC records, but it does not by itself prove that every activity, offer, or transaction of that entity is lawful.