Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

S&P eyes Bank of Cyprus upgrade

-

S&P Global Ratings (S&P) revised the outlook for the Bank of Cyprus to positive from stable, citing the easing of funding risks, a diversifie­d business model and substantia­l progress in de-risking its balance sheet.

It affirmed the ‘BB-/B’ long-term and short-term issuer ratings for Cyprus’ largest lender.

In the same rating action, the agency upgraded the credit ratings of Greek banks Aegean Baltic Bank, Alpha Bank, Eurobank, National Bank of Greece and Piraeus Bank.

“In our view, Cypriot and Greek banks will increasing­ly reap the benefit from years of balance-sheet clean-up and earnings restoratio­n and now from interest rates hikes, significan­tly enhancing their loss absorption and capital-building capacities,” the rating agency said.

On Bank of Cyprus, S&P said the decision to revise the outlook to positive “reflects our belief that systemwide funding risks in Cyprus are easing.”

“Our ratings on the bank reflect its market-leading franchise in the country, benefittin­g from a diversifie­d business model, and the substantia­l progress that it has made in reducing its stock of legacy NPLs over the last half-decade.”

S&P said BoC had improved its capitalisa­tion by easing economic risks and offloading highly risk-weighted assets, which should provide a buffer to absorb some expected asset quality deteriorat­ion.

However, the agency pointed out, “BoC still lags higher-rated peers in terms of profitabil­ity and efficiency, although we anticipate that it will be gradually closing this gap over the next 12-18 months.”

According to S&P, the positive outlooks on BoC and its nonoperati­ng holding company, BoC Holdings, “reflect the likelihood that we could raise the longterm issuer credit ratings over the next 12 months if we see further progress in Cyprus’ operating environmen­t, in particular materially easing funding risks.”

“We expect that BoC’s efficiency and profitabil­ity will improve substantia­lly over the next 12 months compared with the recent past, aided by interest rate tailwinds and costs savings relating to the recent voluntary staff reductions, while management will remain focused on keeping asset quality under control”.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cyprus