PCC Public Advisory

 

System Maintenance Advisory: MAO E-Notification System

Please be advised that the MAO E-Notification System will undergo scheduled maintenance to implement system enhancements from 01 April to 06 April 2026. During this period, the system will be temporarily unavailable.

The last day for electronic submissions through the MAO E-Notification System will be on 31 March 2026 (5:00 PM).

If there are submissions due during the scheduled maintenance period, all concerned parties are advised to ensure the early submission of the necessary documents prior to the maintenance dates.

The enhanced MAO E-Notification System will resume normal operations on Tuesday, 07 April 2026.

For any questions or concerns, please contact the Mergers and Acquisitions Office via email at mergers@phcc.gov.ph or by telephone at +632 8771 9722 local 252.

Please be guided accordingly.

 

 

 

Advisory: LMS Rebranding to PCC eCLASS

In line with its rebranding efforts, PCC's Learning Management System (LMS), previously known as iCLP: Online Learning Hub on Competition Law and Policy, will now be called PCC eCLASS: Enhanced Competition Learning Activities Spaces.

Correspondingly, the platform’s domain name will be changed from iclp.phcc.gov.ph to eclass.phcc.gov.ph.

Please be advised that the LMS will be temporarily unavailable from March 27, 2026 (5:00 PM) to March 31, 2026 (11:59 PM) to facilitate this transition.

Beginning April 1, 2026, users may access PCC’s online courses through the new domain.

 

 

 

PCC Advisory: Trunkline Service Interruption

 

/ Commissioner Butuyan speaks on competition law, taming oligopolies

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As part of the Philippine Competition Commission’s (PCC) continuing effort to raise awareness on competition policy and law, PCC Commissioner El Cid R. Butuyan delivered a lecture on Republic Act No. 10667 or the Philippine Competition Act of 2015 at the Silliman University College of Law in Dumaguete City on July 19, 2017.

Butuyan shared with the audience, composed of law students and recent bar passers, the historical context of competition in the country and discussed the importance of preserving a competitive playing field for market players. He noted that the oligopolistic structure in the economy, as demonstrated by the Philippine experience, is paralleled by political dominance.

The PCC Commissioner, who also sits as co-chair of the American Bar Association (ABA) International Committee-Criminal Justice Section, addressed negative or adverse publicity.

“Rightfully so, because the PCC poses as a disruptive force. It is well-positioned to influence firms that, for the longest time, have conducted their business without concern for their rivals or their consumers. The PCC brings forth a paradigm shift where the excesses and inefficiencies brought about by anti-competitive conduct will be kept in check,” he explained.

“As we slowly learn to tame the oligopolies that have long ruled the Philippine economy, we hope that the economic landscape will gradually become more inclusive, participative, and equitable,” he added.

Butuyan served as the head of Investigations and Litigation for the World Bank Integrity Vice-Presidency, where he conducted audits, fact-finding investigations, and litigation on cases relating to anticompetitive practices, corruption, collusion, cartel behavior, coercion, and fraud by multinational and local firms. He was a Faculty Member at Harvard Law School where he taught a course on Transnational Corruption.

*Atty. Butuyan resigned from his position as PCC Commissioner on July 25, 2017.