Gulf Today

Coronaviru­s to cost banks $2.1tr by the end of 2021, says S&P

The rating agency expects that around 60% of the losses are likely to be in Asia-pacific, although the highest relative increases — at more than double on average compared with 2019 — will occur in North America and Western Europe

- Associated Press

Global banks face combined loan losses of $2.1 trillion by the end of 2021 as a result of the coronaviru­s crisis, credit ratings agency S&P Global estimates, with a hit of $1.3 trillion this year more than doubling the 2019 level.

Around 60% of the losses are likely to be in Asia-pacific S&P said on Thursday, although the highest relative increases - at more than double on average compared with 2019 - will occur in North America and Western Europe.

“We estimate that the top 200 rated banks represent about two-thirds of global bank lending,” a group of S&P’S top analysts said in a new report.

“For 2020 we estimate that credit losses for these banks would absorb about 75% of their preprovisi­on earnings. Under our base case, this ratio improves to about 40% in 2021.” Asia-pacific is expected to account for $1.2 trillion of the losses in 2021, with three quarters of that from China.

In terms of customer loans, the Chinese banking system is approximat­ely the same size as the US, Japanese, German, and British banking systems combined, and tends to play a more important role in the supply of credit to the economy.

North America’s regions are forecast to account for a further $366 billion of the increase, followed by $228 billion in Western Europe, $142 billion in Eastern European, the Middle East and Africa and $131 billion in Latin America. “Should the COVID-19 pandemic prove to be worse or last longer than S&P’S base case economic forecasts assume, then a combinatio­n of higher credit losses and lower earnings will inevitably hit banks across the world,” S&P’S report said.

Meanwhile, India’s embatled yes Bank, which was on the brink of collapse earlier this year, announced plans Thursday to raise up to 150 billion rupees ($2 billion) in a Mumbai stock listing.

The country’s fourth-largest lender was struggling with bad loans before the Reserve Bank of India took it over in March and drew up a rescue plan backed by eight other banks.

It will now look to bolster its balance sheet through the share offering from July 15 to 17, according to a stock exchange filing.

Liquidity worries have dogged India’s financial system for more than a year ater the nearcollap­se of IL&FS, one of the nation’s biggest “shadow banks” -- finance houses responsibl­e for significan­t consumer lending.

This has made banks reluctant to issue loans and further hindered Asia’s third-largest economy, which has been clobbered by a months-long lockdown brought on by the global coronaviru­s pandemic.

Separately, equity markets slid on Thursday ater US data raised worries about the economy’s recovery and doused enthusiasm that drove a Chinese stock rally for an eighth straight day, while the dollar gained as new coronaviru­s cases hit another record.

The dollar had struggled earlier in the session, with China’s yuan climbing to a four-month peak, as investors poured into Chinese stocks on growing signs of a recovery that also helped lit copper prices to more than a year high.

But concerns about renewed US coronaviru­s lockdowns kept a lid on oil prices, too, and outweighed signs of a pick-up in US gasoline demand. A slowing rate of decline in weekly US jobless claims from a peak in March also gave investors pause.

Rising coronaviru­s cases and slower improvemen­t in the US jobs market amounted to a onetwo punch for the market.

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 nations, retreated ater earlier gains. The index fell 0.8% ater its broadest measure of Asia-pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.66% on the China rally.

Wall Street also fell. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 1.58%, the S&P 500 lost 1.20% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.51%.

In Europe, stocks pared gains to close lower. Europe’s broad Ftseurofir­st 300 index dropped 0.78%.

More than 60,000 new coronaviru­s infections were reported on Wednesday and US deaths rose by more than 900 for a second straight day, the highest since early June.

Jobless claims have been gradually falling, though they remained roughly double their highest point during the 2007-09 Great Recession.

Initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits totalled a seasonally adjusted 1.314 million for the week ended July 4, down from 1.413 million the prior week, the labour Department said.

Oil prices fell about 3% as investors worried that renewed US lockdowns to contain the spread of coronaviru­s would sap fuel consumptio­n.

Brent crude futures fell 0.79% at $42.5 a barrel. US crude slid 2.79% at $39.76 a barrel.

Overnight in Asia, Chinese stocks set their longest winning streak in two years, and the yuan had strengthen­ed past 7%, despite rising tension over Hong Kong and the economic uncertaint­y caused by COVID-19.

It was the Shenzhen blue-chip index’s eighth straight day of gains, adding another 1.5% to its 16% surge this month, and it helped Europe initially on an upward trajectory ater hesitation caused by uninspirin­g German data.

Improving risk sentiment was the dollar’s earlier downward momentum — it was at a one-month low against the euro, a three-week low versus the British pound and a four-month trough against the Swiss franc before rebounding.

 ??  ?? ↑
A girl runs by the New York Stock Exchange. Equity markets slid on Thursday after US data raised worries about the economy’s recovery.
↑ A girl runs by the New York Stock Exchange. Equity markets slid on Thursday after US data raised worries about the economy’s recovery.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain