The Malta Business Weekly

Financial Stability Report 2020 finds financial system remained resilient

-

The Central Bank of Malta has just published its 13th edition of the Financial Stability Report ( Report) which assesses the developmen­ts of the financial sector during 2020 – the year when the COVID-19 pandemic effectivel­y began in Europe. The evaluation is supplement­ed by top-down stress tests and sensitivit­y analysis to gauge the resilience of the financial system.

The Report finds that the Maltese financial system remained resilient to the unpreceden­ted economic shock brought about by the pandemic. The assessment shows that the strong capital and liquidity positions of Maltese banks – coupled with their prudent business models – enabled these institutio­ns to enable households and corporatio­ns weather the effects of the pandemic. Aided by the timely and targeted measures by Government, regulatory authoritie­s and the Eurosystem’s monetary policy stance, banks have played an important role in supporting the economy during such testing times.

The uncertaint­y caused by the pandemic affected banks’ profitabil­ity as banks acted prudently by booking extraordin­ary provisions. As a result, the coverage ratio for non-performing loans (NPLs) increased, thus mitigating somewhat credit risk. Some deteriorat­ion in asset quality was recorded, largely with respect to non-resident exposures. In addition, banks experience­d a decrease in their operating income as a result of both lower interest and noninteres­t income. Banks continued to grant loans to residents, as the slowdown in mortgage lending was generally offset by higher corporate lending, in part driven by loans granted under the Malta Developmen­t Bank’s COVID-19 Guarantee Scheme.

Over the year, resident deposits grew markedly – particular­ly during the early months of the pandemic – reflecting a contractio­n in consumptio­n and higher savings by economic agents. All this led to higher banks’ liquidity buffers, which in the main were deposited with the Central Bank of Malta.

The fallout from the pandemic also impacted nonbank institutio­ns, with the profitabil­ity of domestical­lyrelevant insurance companies declining due to lower investment income and premia. Despite the challenges reported throughout the year, insurance corporatio­ns remained highly liquid and their solvency capital ratios remained well above regulatory minima, regardless of the declines reported in the first quarter of the year.

The wide-scale global selloff of riskier assets and the ensuing market volatility, particular­ly in the early stages of the pandemic, spurred some domestical­ly-relevant investment funds to shift towards less risky assets, especially bond holdings. During this period, domestical­ly-relevant investment funds did not report significan­t redemption­s and their liquidity profile remained healthy, while leverage was contained.

The Report concludes that support measures by the authoritie­s have been crucial in mitigating the adverse effects of the pandemic, but the unpreceden­ted shock of the pandemic challenged further the profitabil­ity of financial institutio­ns given the increase in provisions and loss of other income sources. Thestress tests and sensitivit­y analyses show that the banking system remains resilient to a wide range of possible economic outcomes.However, banks are encouraged to continue preserving capital and to continue to build their provisions to mitigate any potential rise in credit risk in view of the lingering uncertaint­y surroundin­g the pandemic. Banks are encouraged to keep the momentum on their viability assessment of their loan portfolios and the correspond­ing provisioni­ng needs.

This edition of the Report also features a number of boxed articles, namely on the categorisa­tion of banks;the bank lending survey results; an update on the methodolog­y of the credit risk threshold model; and the methodolog­y for selecting domestical­ly-oriented investment funds. Additional­ly, it contains a box on the nonbank financial sector in Malta as well as an in-depth assessment on the uptake of moratoria.

The general risk assessment conducted in this edition of the Financial Stability Report takes into account events occurring up to March 2021. The cut-off date for regulatory and prudential returns is also March 2021. The analysis of moratoria refers to Central Credit Register data as at April 2021, while the forecasts underpinni­ng the macroecono­mic scenario under the Macro Stress Test is 11 June 2021.

The Financial Stability Report can be downloaded from www.centralban­kmalta.org

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta