Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Monetary Board suspends banks from paying cash dividends and profit repatriati­on from July

Aimed at warding off potential squeezes on liquidity and capital buffers

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Applies to all banks irrespecti­ve of them being domestical­ly establishe­d or branch offices of banks incorporat­ed outside Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka’s banks have been suspended from declaring cash dividends until the financial statements for the year ended December 2021 are finalised and audited.

The measure comes amid the Monetary Board’s move to limit discretion­ary payments of banks in a bid to ward off potential squeezes on liquidity and capital buffers that could stem from pandemicin­duced pressures.

In a fresh directive issued last week, both licensed commercial and specialise­d banks, irrespecti­ve of them being domestical­ly establishe­d or branch offices of banks incorporat­ed outside Sri Lanka, were made compliant, effective from July 1.

“Every licensed bank incorporat­ed or establishe­d in Sri Lanka shall defer payment of cash dividends until the financial statements/interim financial statements for 2021 are finalised and audited by its external auditor,” the directive read.

The Monetary Board issued similar restrains on banks at the onset of the pandemic last year, expecting stress on liquidity and capital buffers, stemming from potential deposit withdrawal­s and bad loans.

However, the timely and proportion­ate regulatory response averted the lockdown-induced economic malaise spilling into the banking sector unduly.

Conversely, the banking sector emerged unscathed with even stronger liquidity and capital buffers as people stockpiled cash in their bank accounts, while the banks went on a capital raising spree, both in the local market and in foreign markets, to bolster their capital adequacy levels as preparatio­n to meet a spurt in demand for low cost loans.

This was seen from increase of banks’ loan-to-deposit ratios during the first quarter ended in March 2021, as they re-opened their lending spigots.

The last week’s directive further prevented licensed commercial banks incorporat­ed outside Sri Lanka from repatriati­ng profits not already declared for the financial years 2020 and 2021 until the financial statements for 2021 were finalised and audited.

Also, banks have also been asked to refrain from re-purchasing their own shares, increasing management allowances and payments to Board of Directors until December 31, 2021.

The Monetary Board also asked banks to exercise prudence and refrain to the extent possible from incurring non-essential expenditur­e identified as advertisin­g, business promotions, gift schemes, entertainm­ent, sponsorshi­ps, travelling and training etc.

The Monetary Board further asked banks to exercise prudence when incurring capital expenditur­e, if any.

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