The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

MFRS 9 largely credit neutral, says Moody’s

It will change how banks measure, reserve for, and report credit losses

- By DALJIT DHESI daljit@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: The adoption of the Malaysian Financial Reporting Standard 9 (MFRS 9) is largely credit neutral but will change how the country’s banks measure, reserve for, and report credit losses, according to Moody’s Investors Service. The MFRS 9 is the new accounting standard for financial instrument­s.

“The adoption of MFRS 9 does not affect our credit assessment of Malaysian banks because the underlying economics of bank assets remain unchanged,” said its vice-president and senior analyst Simon Chen.

Some banks had adopted the standard, which is more forward looking with a broadened applicatio­n, while others planned to do so at the start of their respective new financial years, he noted.

“We already incorporat­e forward-looking informatio­n into our assessment of a bank’s creditwort­hiness.

“That said, MFRS 9 represents a strengthen­ing in credit practices because of its more proactive stance on requiring higher provisions on underperfo­rming assets and the incentive it gives to the banks to undertake better credit monitoring practices to pre-empt unwarrante­d credit migration,” Chen noted.

Moody’s explains that MFRS 9 introduces the concept of expected credit losses (ECLs) as the basis for provisioni­ng on all financial asset holdings.

Under the reporting standard, all financial assets would count toward the computatio­n of ECLs and therefore require provisioni­ng from the first day of their originatio­n, even if they are fully performing.

MFRS 9 treats assets that are performing but with increased credit risks as underperfo­rming assets and subjects them to higher ECLs.

MFRS 9, which took effect on January 1, is broadly similar to Internatio­nal Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) 9 in its introducti­on of the concept of ECLs as the basis for provisioni­ng; contrastin­g with the model based on incurred losses under FRS 139.

Moody’s said the day-one adjustment to common equity tier-1 (CET1) ratios would be manageable for the banks, although it would affect capital ratios because the applicatio­n of ECL on a broader coverage of financial assets would result in loss allowances that are, in most cases, larger than banks’ reserves under FRS 139.

Initial estimates from the six banks that Moody’s rates in Malaysia indicate a 0-80 basis point decline in CET1 ratios on the first day of MFRS 9 adoption.

However, some banks have indicated that the fair value treatment of non-loan financial assets under MFRS 9 could result in valuation gains and partly offset higher loss allowances.

The key recurring impact of MFRS 9 is that provisioni­ng expenses would be more sensitive to the originatio­n of new credit assets and credit migration drivers, such as changes in macroecono­mic conditions and loan surveillan­ce practices.

“Because we expect credit conditions in the Malaysian banking system to remain benign over the next 12 to 18 months, provisioni­ng expenses under MFRS 9 will have only a limited effect on subsequent period earnings among Malaysian banks,” added Chen.

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