Malta Independent

No immediate impact on Malta’s ratings from greylistin­g - Fitch

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The Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) greylistin­g of Malta confirms structural weaknesses in Malta’s anti-money laundering framework, “but has no immediate impact on Malta’s ratings or those of its domestic rated banks,” credit rating agency Fitch Ratings said in a statement.

“These weaknesses are captured in the ‘A+’/Stable sovereign rating and in our assessment of the operating environmen­t for Maltese banks at ‘bbb’ with a negative outlook. However, FATF’s decision also highlights the risk of reputation­al damage, which could reduce investment. The effectiven­ess of the authoritie­s’ response will be important in assessing any potential credit impact.”

Malta was placed on the FATF’s grey list on 25 June, reflecting significan­t deficienci­es in Malta’s anti-money laundering and funding of terrorism framework (ALM/CFT).

Fitch said that Malta faces increased monitoring and will need to demonstrat­e progress on a list of recommenda­tions to be removed from the list.

“The Maltese authoritie­s have said they will intensify their antimoney laundering efforts to achieve this as quickly as possible. In May 2021, the Council of Europe’s anti-money laundering body (Moneyval) identified substantia­l progress in technical compliance regarding previously identified deficienci­es but did not evaluate how effectivel­y the measures had been implemente­d. Reputation­al damage from greylistin­g could eventually adversely affect the country and its financial system by reducing its attractive­ness for investors and corporates, ultimately leading to capital outflows and weaker-than-projected economic performanc­e.”

Fitch Ratings said that empirical research studies provide mixed evidence on how greylistin­g can affect capital flows and growth. “Repeated greylistin­g of Panama and greylistin­g of Iceland in 2019 and 2020 had limited economic effects.”

Fitch explained that the FATF’s decision is significan­t “given the large banking sector (total banking assets amounted to around 315% of GDP at end-2020). However, Malta’s banks and supervisor­y authoritie­s have had more time to prepare contingenc­y plans than those in some other countries following an earlier 2019 Moneyval report.”

It highlighte­d that the financial supervisor­y authority has developed a set of action points to support the financial services industry and ensure that Malta’s payment infrastruc­ture remains uninterrup­ted. “The central bank can offer payment clearance for foreign currencies to corporate clients to ensure the functionin­g of clearing and settlement activity within the financial system.”

Malta’s rated banks report adequate capital ratios and are backed by ample liquidity, while the banking sector demonstrat­ed resilience during the Covid-19 recession, the Fitch statement read. “Perceived shortcomin­gs in Malta’s anti-money laundering framework may have contribute­d to the number of active Correspond­ent Banking Relationsh­ips (CBRs) falling by around 20% between 2011 and 2019. Bank of Valetta, Malta’s largest bank, was able to establish new arrangemen­ts for US dollar clearing without any material repercussi­on on its operations, after ING Bank and Raiffeisen Austria terminated their CBRs. However, greylistin­g could raise transactio­n costs or further reduce cross-border transactio­n flows for the whole banking sector.”

The agency said that contingenc­y planning, combined with the banking sector’s sound credit metrics and its generally reduced risk appetite, will contain the overall impact of greylistin­g. “However, this is difficult to assess at this stage. Malta’s net FDI and portfolio flows are exceptiona­lly large but highly distorted by special-purpose entities and their tax-planning activities. Malta’s internatio­nal banking sector has inflated the country’s banking assets-to-GDP ratio. Given that internatio­nal banks almost exclusivel­y conduct business with non-residents, their substantia­l downsizing over the past decade had no impact on the financing of Malta’s real economy. Malta reported strong GDP growth pre-pandemic, averaging 6.5% in 2015– 2019.”

Fitch affirmed Malta’s sovereign rating on 4 June. “Further deteriorat­ion in governance or banking supervisio­n that could adversely affect Malta’s attractive­ness as an investment destinatio­n is a potential trigger for a negative rating action.”

It said that further progress in addressing key weaknesses in governance, banking supervisio­n and the business environmen­t is a potential positive rating action trigger.

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