PHILIPPINE CHIEF. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in Malacañang.PHILIPPINE CHIEF. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in Malacañang.

[Vantage Point] The solar tale: Jurisprudence slays Leviste’s thinly veiled tact

2026/01/20 08:00

Leandro Leviste has vociferously rejected allegations that he illegally sold the franchise of his solar energy company to the Manny Pangilinan-led Meralco group for personal gain. With a simple truth that dismantles Leviste’s technical denials and corporate distancing, this column exposes the central failure of his clean-energy empire: that permissions were turned into profit, while power delivery collapsed.

Whether or not a franchise was formally sold misses the point entirely. Thousands of megawatts were promised, monetized, and traded long before they were built — leaving consumers to shoulder the cost of delay, with regulators scrambling only after public scrutiny forced action. In a sector where every missed deadline carries a price, we argue that this was not a misunderstanding of law, but a breakdown of accountability — one that reveals how easily infrastructure can be converted into financial exit when enforcement comes too late.

In recent weeks, Batangas 1st District Representative Leandro Legarda Leviste has launched a near-constant media offensive. From prime-time television interviews to radio call-ins, livestreams, and daily social-media posts, the freshman congressman has made himself nearly omnipresent just as his solar companies began facing government penalties. 

The message is consistent: he did not sell a franchise; the company that held it no longer operates; the Meralco group bought a different entity, and the accusations are misguided. The repetition is deliberate. But Vantage Point believes that saturation is not persuasion and that in public life, credibility is not built by airtime but by coherence. The more Leviste speaks, the clearer it becomes that his defense relies on technical fragments rather than a full accounting of what unfolded.

The controversy confronting him was never about whether a franchise document changed hands. It was about whether regulatory permission — granted early, amplified by political proximity, and accumulated across related entities — was transformed into private value before public obligations were fulfilled. 

Framing the issue as a literal sale of a franchise may be convenient, but it sidesteps the deeper concern: how a clean-energy platform was monetized, while delivery lagged far behind. It is that gap — between promise and performance — that no amount of explanation can dissolve.

Where Leviste’s defense falls short

Leviste’s defense revolves around a narrowing strategy. He insists he did not sell a franchise. He emphasizes that Solar Para sa Bayan Corporation (SPBC), the grantee of Republic Act 11357’s 25-year franchise, is now defunct. He notes that SP New Energy Corp. (SPNEC), the listed company acquired by the Meralco group, is legally separate and distinct. Each claim, taken individually, may be accurate. Together, they attempt to convert a systemic failure into a debate over corporate labels.

But infrastructure does not fail on paper. It fails in real time — when megawatts promised in planning models do not arrive, when reserve margins tighten, and when consumers absorb higher costs not through a surcharge but through everyday bills. In regulated industries, outcomes matter more than architecture.

Philippine jurisprudence has long recognized this distinction. Courts have succinctly held that when corporate structures are used to obscure economic reality or defeat public policy, analysis must move beyond form and examine substance. The law does not reward fragmentation when fragmentation exists only to dilute accountability.

A congressional franchise is not a mere document. It is a state-granted economic privilege that confers early access to regulated territory, credibility with investors, and leverage in project development. Its value lies not in whether it is sold, but in what it enables. Once such permission exists, it shapes land acquisition, service-contract origination, and market expectation long before any asset becomes operational.

This is why the argument that SPBC ceased operations in 2022 does not resolve the controversy. Republic Act 11357 was enacted in 2019, during the Rodrigo Duterte administration, at a time when renewable energy access was scarce and regulatory positioning carried enormous value. For several critical years, that franchise existed while land was consolidated, projects mapped, and capacity promised. Corporate dormancy cannot retroactively erase advantages already extracted.

Nor does the insistence that SPNEC is “separate and distinct” from SPBC answer the core question. Courts do not accept separateness as a mantra. They examine whether entities share beneficial ownership, pursue a common commercial objective, and transfer value — tangible or intangible — across corporate lines. When those elements align, formal boundaries lose their force.

Must Read

[Vantage Point] Why global investors see PH flood control scandal as systemic red flag

Substance over form is not a slogan, but settled law

Philippine jurisprudence has long rejected defenses built purely on corporate compartmentalization. In Kukan International Corp. v. Reyes (G.R. No. 182729, 2010), the Supreme Court reaffirmed that when corporate structures are used to defeat public convenience or shield parties from accountability, courts are duty-bound to look beyond form and examine substance.

The Court’s reasoning is clear: legal separateness cannot be invoked when it becomes an instrument of injustice.

That principle has been reiterated in cases involving public utilities and franchises, where the Court has consistently ruled that state-granted privileges must be interpreted in light of public interest, not private structuring.

Economic reality

A franchise is not merely a statutory document. It is a public concession — and as I’ve earlier explained, an extraordinary permission to operate in a sector where entry is otherwise restricted. In ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corp. v. Comelec (G.R. No. 133486), the Court emphasized that franchises are imbued with public interest and cannot be treated as ordinary corporate assets divorced from their social function.

That doctrine matters here.

Leviste argues that SPBC, the holder of the Republic Act 11357 grant, ceased operations in 2022 and that the franchise therefore has become irrelevant. But jurisprudence does not evaluate privileges retroactively.

In Republic v. Meralco (G.R. No. 141314), the Court ruled that benefits derived from a franchise during its effective period remain legally and economically relevant even if later circumstances change. You cannot deny the effect of authority simply because it no longer exists at the moment scrutiny begins.

In plain terms: a privilege enjoyed cannot be disowned once it has served its purpose.

Must Read

Ombudsman Remulla says Leviste being probed for ‘selling’ solar franchise to Pangilinan

Timing is not a footnote, but the case

Republic Act 11357 was enacted in 2019, during the Duterte administration, when Leviste’s mother, Senator Loren Legarda, was a sitting lawmaker. That fact alone proves nothing illegal — but in jurisprudence, timing determines consequence.

From 2019 to 2022, that franchise existed during the formative period of Leviste’s renewable-energy expansion. Land was consolidated. Solar zones were identified. Service contracts multiplied. Market expectations formed. By the time the franchise holder became dormant, the ecosystem it enabled had already taken shape.

Courts have consistently held that corporate restructuring after value creation does not negate accountability for how that value arose. In Concept Builders v. NLRC (G.R. No. 108734), the Supreme Court ruled that when one corporation is used to avoid obligations incurred through another, the veil may be pierced even absent fraud, if public policy is compromised.

That is precisely the issue regulators now confront.

Leviste repeatedly emphasizes that SPNEC, the company sold to Meralco’s renewable unit, is “separate and distinct” from SPBC. But legal separateness is not conclusive. It is evidentiary.

Courts ask whether entities share ownership, control, purpose, and benefit. When these align, separateness becomes fiction.

This is why jurisprudence refers not to corporate form, but to economic unity.

Markets understand this instinctively. Investors did not value SPNEC based on steel already standing in the field. They valued it based on pipeline, permissions, scale, and projected capacity — expectations rooted in regulatory access.

What was monetized was not electricity. It was belief.

Why divestment does not dissolve responsibility

Leviste also argues that penalties imposed by the Department of Energy (DOE) should be directed at SPNEC, now controlled by Meralco, because he has already divested.

That defense fails under long-settled doctrine.

In Cruz v. Dalisay (G.R. No. 146303), the Supreme Court held that liability does not evaporate simply because ownership changes after obligations are incurred. Responsibility attaches at the moment commitments are made, not when consequences arrive.

Infrastructure contracts are not day trades. They bind timelines, public planning, and national security assumptions.

The DOE’s own data shows that nearly 12,000 megawatts of renewable capacity associated with Leviste-linked entities failed to come online as scheduled — roughly 63% of canceled capacity in the 2024-2025 enforcement sweep. Actual delivery hovered near 2%.

From my vantage point, this is not a criminal charge, but more of governance failure. And governance failures in utilities carry consequences far beyond corporate balance sheets.

Why consumers paid long before penalties arrived

Electricity pricing does not wait for investigations to conclude. Grid planning assumes awarded capacity will be delivered. When megawatts do not arrive, the system compensates through higher-cost dispatch and thinner reserves.

There is no surcharge labeled “undelivered solar.” The cost appears structurally — spread across the system.

This is why the DOE itself has estimated that, had canceled renewable contracts been delivered, electricity prices could have been roughly ₱2 per kilowatt-hour lower by 2030. That difference reflects capacity that existed in planning models, but not in reality.

In Tatad v. Secretary of Energy (G.R. No. 124360), the Supreme Court warned that energy policy failures ultimately burden consumers, and that regulatory discretion must be exercised with urgency precisely because delay has economic cost.

That warning now reads less like theory and more like prophecy.

Must Read

[Vantage Point] The rise and fall of Dennis Uy

Enforcement after exposure is not reform

What troubles markets most is not that penalties were eventually imposed. It is that enforcement required public pressure to occur.

By October 2025, missed milestones were already evident. Projects were dormant. Deadlines had lapsed. None of this was hidden. Yet the system moved slowly, treating accumulation of nonperformance as administrative friction rather than systemic risk.

It took the Vantage Point exposé to force the question regulators had deferred: how did so much promised power become monetizable before it was ever built? Only then did penalties harden. Only then did accountability accelerate. But jurisprudence is clear: enforcement that arrives after damage is not deterrence — it is admission.

Why this was never about a franchise

Leviste’s defense focuses on what he did not do. He did not sell a franchise. He did not own the company at penalty time. He did not control operations anymore.

But public-utility law does not ask what was not done. It asks what resulted:

  • Permissions were granted.
  • Capacity was promised.
  • Execution failed.
  • Value was monetized.
  • Consumers absorbed the cost.

No corporate rearrangement changes that sequence.

This column does not allege illegality. It asserts something more fundamental: that Philippine infrastructure governance remains vulnerable when permission is rewarded faster than performance.

Clean energy cannot function as a speculative asset class. It must function as infrastructure.

Until execution — not access, not proximity, not narrative — becomes the currency of credibility, our country will continue repeating the same cycle: promise first, enforcement later, and the public paying in between.

That is why this was never about a franchise. It was about whether the system rewards building — or merely being early enough to sell the idea of it. And that is the true reckoning that Philippine energy policy can no longer postpone. – Rappler.com

Related Vantage Point articles on the Leandro Leviste solar energy business:

  • [Vantage Point] The Leviste gambit: Monetizing clean energy for political gains?
  • [Vantage Point] The Leviste solar saga – why markets should be worried
  • [Vantage Point] Consumers pay for DOE’s delayed action on Leviste firms 

Some recent Vantage Point articles on green energy and sustainable financing:

  • [Vantage Point] The truth about net-zero emissions
  • [Vantage Point] BPI’s blue bonds: Saving our seas or rebranding an old development gap?
  • [Vantage Point] Why the Philippines should slow down on offshore wind transition

Click here for other Vantage Point articles.

Must Read

[Rappler’s Best] Impeachment season again

Market Opportunity
PrompTale AI Logo
PrompTale AI Price(TALE)
$0.001309
$0.001309$0.001309
-3.03%
USD
PrompTale AI (TALE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

UK Looks to US to Adopt More Crypto-Friendly Approach

UK Looks to US to Adopt More Crypto-Friendly Approach

The post UK Looks to US to Adopt More Crypto-Friendly Approach appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The UK and US are reportedly preparing to deepen cooperation on digital assets, with Britain looking to copy the Trump administration’s crypto-friendly stance in a bid to boost innovation.  UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent discussed on Tuesday how the two nations could strengthen their coordination on crypto, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.  The discussions also involved representatives from crypto companies, including Coinbase, Circle Internet Group and Ripple, with executives from the Bank of America, Barclays and Citi also attending, according to the report. The agreement was made “last-minute” after crypto advocacy groups urged the UK government on Thursday to adopt a more open stance toward the industry, claiming its cautious approach to the sector has left the country lagging in innovation and policy.  Source: Rachel Reeves Deal to include stablecoins, look to unlock adoption Any deal between the countries is likely to include stablecoins, the Financial Times reported, an area of crypto that US President Donald Trump made a policy priority and in which his family has significant business interests. The Financial Times reported on Monday that UK crypto advocacy groups also slammed the Bank of England’s proposal to limit individual stablecoin holdings to between 10,000 British pounds ($13,650) and 20,000 pounds ($27,300), claiming it would be difficult and expensive to implement. UK banks appear to have slowed adoption too, with around 40% of 2,000 recently surveyed crypto investors saying that their banks had either blocked or delayed a payment to a crypto provider.  Many of these actions have been linked to concerns over volatility, fraud and scams. The UK has made some progress on crypto regulation recently, proposing a framework in May that would see crypto exchanges, dealers, and agents treated similarly to traditional finance firms, with…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:21
Crucial Fed Rate Cut: October Probability Surges to 94%

Crucial Fed Rate Cut: October Probability Surges to 94%

BitcoinWorld Crucial Fed Rate Cut: October Probability Surges to 94% The financial world is buzzing with a significant development: the probability of a Fed rate cut in October has just seen a dramatic increase. This isn’t just a minor shift; it’s a monumental change that could ripple through global markets, including the dynamic cryptocurrency space. For anyone tracking economic indicators and their impact on investments, this update from the U.S. interest rate futures market is absolutely crucial. What Just Happened? Unpacking the FOMC Statement’s Impact Following the latest Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) statement, market sentiment has decisively shifted. Before the announcement, the U.S. interest rate futures market had priced in a 71.6% chance of an October rate cut. However, after the statement, this figure surged to an astounding 94%. This jump indicates that traders and analysts are now overwhelmingly confident that the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates next month. Such a high probability suggests a strong consensus emerging from the Fed’s latest communications and economic outlook. A Fed rate cut typically means cheaper borrowing costs for businesses and consumers, which can stimulate economic activity. But what does this really signify for investors, especially those in the digital asset realm? Why is a Fed Rate Cut So Significant for Markets? When the Federal Reserve adjusts interest rates, it sends powerful signals across the entire financial ecosystem. A rate cut generally implies a more accommodative monetary policy, often enacted to boost economic growth or combat deflationary pressures. Impact on Traditional Markets: Stocks: Lower interest rates can make borrowing cheaper for companies, potentially boosting earnings and making stocks more attractive compared to bonds. Bonds: Existing bonds with higher yields might become more valuable, but new bonds will likely offer lower returns. Dollar Strength: A rate cut can weaken the U.S. dollar, making exports cheaper and potentially benefiting multinational corporations. Potential for Cryptocurrency Markets: The cryptocurrency market, while often seen as uncorrelated, can still react significantly to macro-economic shifts. A Fed rate cut could be interpreted as: Increased Risk Appetite: With traditional investments offering lower returns, investors might seek higher-yielding or more volatile assets like cryptocurrencies. Inflation Hedge Narrative: If rate cuts are perceived as a precursor to inflation, assets like Bitcoin, often dubbed “digital gold,” could gain traction as an inflation hedge. Liquidity Influx: A more accommodative monetary environment generally means more liquidity in the financial system, some of which could flow into digital assets. Looking Ahead: What Could This Mean for Your Portfolio? While the 94% probability for a Fed rate cut in October is compelling, it’s essential to consider the nuances. Market probabilities can shift, and the Fed’s ultimate decision will depend on incoming economic data. Actionable Insights: Stay Informed: Continue to monitor economic reports, inflation data, and future Fed statements. Diversify: A diversified portfolio can help mitigate risks associated with sudden market shifts. Assess Risk Tolerance: Understand how a potential rate cut might affect your specific investments and adjust your strategy accordingly. This increased likelihood of a Fed rate cut presents both opportunities and challenges. It underscores the interconnectedness of traditional finance and the emerging digital asset space. Investors should remain vigilant and prepared for potential volatility. The financial landscape is always evolving, and the significant surge in the probability of an October Fed rate cut is a clear signal of impending change. From stimulating economic growth to potentially fueling interest in digital assets, the implications are vast. Staying informed and strategically positioned will be key as we approach this crucial decision point. The market is now almost certain of a rate cut, and understanding its potential ripple effects is paramount for every investor. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) Q1: What is the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)? A1: The FOMC is the monetary policymaking body of the Federal Reserve System. It sets the federal funds rate, which influences other interest rates and economic conditions. Q2: How does a Fed rate cut impact the U.S. dollar? A2: A rate cut typically makes the U.S. dollar less attractive to foreign investors seeking higher returns, potentially leading to a weakening of the dollar against other currencies. Q3: Why might a Fed rate cut be good for cryptocurrency? A3: Lower interest rates can reduce the appeal of traditional investments, encouraging investors to seek higher returns in alternative assets like cryptocurrencies. It can also be seen as a sign of increased liquidity or potential inflation, benefiting assets like Bitcoin. Q4: Is a 94% probability a guarantee of a rate cut? A4: While a 94% probability is very high, it is not a guarantee. Market probabilities reflect current sentiment and data, but the Federal Reserve’s final decision will depend on all available economic information leading up to their meeting. Q5: What should investors do in response to this news? A5: Investors should stay informed about economic developments, review their portfolio diversification, and assess their risk tolerance. Consider how potential changes in interest rates might affect different asset classes and adjust strategies as needed. Did you find this analysis helpful? Share this article with your network to keep others informed about the potential impact of the upcoming Fed rate cut and its implications for the financial markets! To learn more about the latest crypto market trends, explore our article on key developments shaping Bitcoin price action. This post Crucial Fed Rate Cut: October Probability Surges to 94% first appeared on BitcoinWorld.
Share
Coinstats2025/09/18 02:25
Pump Fun Fund Launches $3M Hackathon: Market-Driven Startups

Pump Fun Fund Launches $3M Hackathon: Market-Driven Startups

The post Pump Fun Fund Launches $3M Hackathon: Market-Driven Startups appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In a bid to evolve beyond its roots as a memecoin launchpad
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/01/20 20:06