KARACHI: Pakistani banks, with stable deposit-based funding
structure, are poised to benefit during the current and next year from a spurt
in loan growth fuelled by the economic stimulus measures of the present
government and China-funded infrastructure projects, rating firm Moody’s said.
“The
rating agency's view that their (banks) earnings will benefit from the
country's economic growth over the next 12 to 18 months,” Moody’s said in a
statement issued late Wednesday. The ratings agency has a stable outlook for
Pakistani banks as a whole.
"Accelerating
economic growth, boosted by progress in structural reforms and China-funded
infrastructure projects, will stimulate lending growth at the country's banks
and support loan performance," said Constantinos Kypreos, Moody's vice
president in a report ‘Banking System Outlook -- Pakistan: Accelerating
Economy, Resilient Earnings and Stable Funding Drive Stable Outlook.’
“The
outlook expresses Moody's expectation of how bank creditworthiness will evolve
in this system over the next 12 to 18 months.” Kypreos, however, warned that
the banking system will remain “challenged by its heavy exposure to the
low-rated Pakistan government (B3 stable), as well as the banks' only modest
capital levels.”
Moody's
expects Pakistan’s real GDP to expand by 4.9 percent and 5.0 percent in the
fiscal years ending June 2017 and 2018, and “the China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC) project will continue to support manufacturing and construction
activities, and will be a key driver of growth.”
Accordingly,
the rating agency expects bank lending to expand by between 12 percent and 14
percent during 2017-18. “At the same time, the economic recovery remains
fragile due to the risks from potential political instability, deterioration in
domestic security, or disruption of the government's reform agenda,” it added.
"The
biggest challenge facing the banking system is their high level of government
exposures; holdings of government securities stood at an estimated Rs7.0
trillion ($66 billion) at the end of September 2016, up 14 percent
year-on-year," said Corina Moustra, associate analyst at Moody’s.
"The
amount is equivalent to around 46% of total assets, or 7.2 times the system's
Tier 1 capital as of September 2016, and this caps banks' ratings at that of
the sovereign." The rating agency said asset risks for Pakistan's banks
will remain high partly due to high credit concentrations, but problem loans
are likely to decline overall as economic conditions improve, easing to around
10 percent of total loans over our outlook horizon from 11.3 percent at the end
of September 2016.
Capital
buffers will also remain modest, and Moody's expects the system's reported Tier
1 ratio to remain broadly stable at around 13.6 percent. “However, when
applying a 100 percent risk weight to sovereign securities, in line with the
rating agency's global standards, the system's Tier 1 ratio declines to 6.9
percent, pointing to its capital vulnerability, which is also illustrated by
Moody's forward-looking solvency analysis,” it said.
Profitability
is strong and compares well against emerging market peers. Furthermore, faster
lending growth and moderate provisioning requirements will support
profitability over the outlook horizon, mitigating pressures stemming from
lower yields on government securities and thinning margins.
“Large
volumes of low-cost customer deposits are a credit strength for the system, and
the banks' reliance on costly and confidence-sensitive market funding will
remain low,” Moody’s said. “Remittances from workers overseas will drive
deposit growth, while the banks will continue to maintain good liquidity
buffers.”
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