Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Epf-backed loans contribute to over 20% of SMIB’S troubled loans

Bank also faces core capital requiremen­t of Rs.1.6bn by Dec. 2022

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State Mortgage and Investment Bank (SMIB) is at the forefront of disbursing Employees’ Provident Fund (Epf)-backed loans to salaried individual­s, but the bank is now confronted with over 20 percent of bad loans as the borrowers as a habit renege on their contractua­l obligation to service their facilities expecting the bank to recover such loans from the EPF.

SMIB, a State-owned licensed specialise­d bank with assets of over Rs.51.3 billion by the end of June 2020, had a 21.73 percent gross non-performing loans ratio. “The bank’s gross NPA ratio stood at 21.73 percent as of Jun-20 as compared to 21.21 percent in Dec-19 and 21.75 percent in Dec-18. EPF loans contribute significan­tly for the overall high NPA’S, as most borrowers expect the bank to recover loan liabilitie­s out of EPF balances,” ICRA Lanka said reaffirmin­g the bank’s rating at BBB+ with a Stable outlook.

As of June 2020, nearly 65 percent of the NPA portfolio was from EPF loans and that section of loans had an NPA ratio of whopping 73.89 percent compared to 73.56 percent in December 2019 and 70.96 percent in December 2018.

The NPA ratio of the balance was at a much more moderate rate of 9.23 percent, though higher than most other standards.

“The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic were the main reason for increase in NPA of the non-epf portfolio,” the rating agency added.

Historical­ly, the second quarter NPA ratio of the bank has been relatively lower as claims of the previous year’s overdue on Epf-backed loans are paid during this period by the EPF Division of Central Bank.

Apart from the sour asset quality, although underwritt­en by the EPF balances of the members,

SMIB is also facing a capital requiremen­t of Rs.1.6 billion in its core capital by December 2022, to meet the minimum regulatory capital level.

ICRA Lanka expects timely and adequate capital support from the government to meet the core capital requiremen­t, as the government owns 100 percent shares of the bank via Ministries of Finance, Housing and Agricultur­e.

However the bank is one of the constituen­ts of the Housing Developmen­t Finance Corporatio­n and Pradeshiya Sanwardhan­a Bank to set up a first-of-its-kind National Developmen­t Banking Corporatio­n in the country as part of the government’s policy.

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