Nestor Espenilla
Nestor Aldave Espenilla Jr. was a Filipino banker who served as the fourth governor of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas from 2017 until his death in 2019. He began working for the BSP in 1981 and was a deputy governor under his predecessor Amando Tetangco Jr.
Early life
Espenilla was born in Manila to Nestor Espenilla, Sr. and Arminda Aldave-Espenilla, the only son in a family of five. When he was 10 years old, his mother established a small rural bank, the Rural Bank of San Jacinto, Inc., which grew and now has several branches in the province and in neighboring Sorsogon Province. The bank was managed by his three sisters.Education
Espenilla graduated from the Ateneo de Manila High School in 1977. He then graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Economics in 1981 and his Master of Business Administration honors degree from the University of the Philippines Diliman in 1982. He obtained his Master of Science degree in Policy Science from the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) in Tokyo, Japan in 1988.He attempted to become a lawyer after his graduating in his undergraduate program and took evening classes of the University of the Philippines College of Law, but he quit his law studies weeks later because of his full-time job in BSP.
Career
After graduating from the University of the Philippines in 1981, Espenilla was hired by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas as a debt analyst. Known to his co-workers as "Nesting", Espenilla steadily rose through the ranks, earning his stripes in economic research and international operations, before he was appointed by Philippine president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in 2005 as deputy governor for supervision and examination sector under the administration of his predecessor Amando Tetangco Jr. When Philippine president Benigno S. Aquino III took office in 2010, Tetangco's term would have expired, but Aquino reappointed him and his deputies—including Espenilla—to their positions.BSP deputy governor
As deputy governor, Espenilla was responsible for the BSP's regulatory policies with regards to the entire banking system, playing the "bad cop" whenever it deals with banks that were revealed to have violated regulations. Among his accomplishments as deputy governor include the closure of Banco Filipino, a major savings and loan bank owned by the Aguirre family, on 17 March 2011 after an investigation by Espenilla's team revealed that depositors' money had been diverted to entities controlled by the bank's owners and officers. Espenilla also ordered the investigation into and closure of LBC Development Bank, owned by the Araneta family that established courier firm LBC Express. It was revealed in the investigation that the bank incurred P6.09 billion in deposit liabilities after a build-up of cash advances to its affiliate businesses.Espenilla also sat as the BSP's representative to the Anti-Money Laundering Council, the Philippines' financial intelligence, financial counter-terrorism and anti-money laundering agency. He sat as chairperson of the council on behalf of Tetangco. One of his key accomplishments as head of the council was the filing of a petition in the Court of Appeals to freeze the bank accounts of former Marcos administration [Department of Department of Trade and Industry (Philippines)|Trade and Industry (Philippines)|Trade and Industry] minister Roberto Ongpin after it was revealed that he allegedly made two behest loans with the Development Bank of the Philippines totaling P660 million to buy the government-owned bank's shares in Philex Mining Corporation. The Appellate Court froze 100 of Ongpin's bank accounts on 6 December 2012 but lifted the freeze order on 7 May 2013.
In August 2016, Espenilla ordered the P1 billion-fine against Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation, which is owned by the Yuchengco family. The bank was involved in the 2016 Bangladesh Bank robbery, having been used by hackers to launder and withdraw $81 million that was stolen from Bangladesh Bank's account in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Espenilla also led the establishment of the National Retail Payment System, a framework which will be used for the Philippines' gradual shift from cash and check-based payments to electronic means. The shift is expected to improve efficiency in transactions among and between banks and other financial institutions involved in financial technology.