Irish Independent

PTSB faces EU conditions to have home loans reclassifi­ed

- Gretchen Friemann

PERMANENT TSB has yet to receive a ruling from the European Central Bank on whether some €900m worth of restructur­ed or split mortgages can be reclassifi­ed as performing, in a move that would likely reduce the bank’s massive sell-off of soured home loans.

The State-backed lender has come under political fire for including these mortgages in its €3.7bn Project Glas non-performing loan portfolio sale.

While Brussels this week signalled its willingnes­s to adopt a lenient stance on the issue, sources said potential bidders will continue to sift through the data on Project Glas until PTSB receives clarity from the ECB.

A spokespers­on for the bank declined to comment. However the Irish Independen­t understand­s Danièle Nouy, head of the ECB’s supervisor­y board, has offered informal feedback on the classifica­tion of split mortgages to PTSB.

On Monday she told the European Parliament, in response to questions by Fine Gael MEP Brian Hayes, the restructur­ed home loans could be reclassifi­ed if they met certain conditions.

In a statement yesterday Mr Hayes said “Ms Nouy has confirmed that the senior part of a split mortgage may be considered as performing as long as certain conditions are met.

“The senior part and the warehoused part must be completely separated from each other; there can be no repayment obligation on the warehoused part until the senior part has been repaid in full. The senior part must also meet certain sustainabi­lity criteria and then it can be considered non-NPL.”

He added the ECB, the European Banking Authority and the Irish Central Bank have reached consensus on this issue, according to indication­s from Ms Nouy.

It is understood PTSB has received a similar message via informal discussion­s with the ECB’s supervisor­y wing.

Whether the bank, which is under intense pressure to reduces its high stack of NPLs, opts to excise all the splits from Project Glas, even if all 4,300 of the loans are judged performing, remains unclear. In a note to clients Goodbody Stockbroke­rs said reclassifi­cation “will come at a cost as management will have to fully provide for the unprovided warehoused element of the loan, meaning a higher level of upfront provision write-offs”.

Owen Callan of Investec said PTSB will take the brunt of the cost hit “upfront” and pointed out splits will continue to weigh on the balance sheet as the assets are “low-yielding” and there is propensity for the borrowers to “re-default”.

 ??  ?? Jeremy Masding, chief executive of State-backed PTSB
Jeremy Masding, chief executive of State-backed PTSB

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