The Borneo Post

RAM Ratings: Interest waiver to hit banks’ earnings

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KUCHING: The three-month interest waiver proposed by the Ministry of Finance (MOF) recently for loan moratorium recipients under the Pemulih relief programme will impinge on banks’ earnings recovery this year, RAM Ratings opines.

The move will apply to individual borrowers in the bottom 50 per cent (B50) income bracket.

RAM Ratings does not however expect the waiver per se to trigger immediate adverse rating action in respect of its portfolio of domestic banks.

“The interest exemption from October to December 2021 for B50 borrowers will erode the fourth quarter of 2021 (4Q21) earnings of banks although they are still anticipate­d to turn in a profit for the full year,” RAM’s Financial Institutio­n Ratings cohead Wong Yin Ching said.

“While those with a greater loan exposure to the lower income group will be more severely affected, this is unlikely to be a threat to banks’ capitalisa­tion on the whole.

“Troubled credits are presently obscured by forbearanc­e measures but bad loans are envisaged to rise as relief programmes are gradually phased out.

“Banks need to preserve their capital to cushion against expected higher credit losses.”

The three-month interest waiver for B50 borrowers is in addition to the six-month loan repayment moratorium under the Pemulih fiscal package implemente­d on July 7, 2021 for all individual, microenter­prise and small and medium enterprise borrowers on an opt-in basis.

Prior to the MOF announceme­nt, about 26 per cent of the eight anchor banking groups’ domestic loans were under relief based on data shared during the most recent bank result briefings in late August.

The bulk of the individual borrowers had chosen the deferment of repayments as opposed to reduced instalment­s.

Interest will continue to accrue on all relief loans, save for the abovesaid B50 loans which, under the recent proposal, may be exempt from interest for three months.

The impact of the interest waiver is difficult to assess at this time as banks await further clarity on this latest relief measure in terms of scope and eligibilit­y. The definition of B50 is still unclear.

As a rough proxy, borrowers earning less than RM5,000 per month are estimated to account for around 18 per cent of total loans in the banking industry.

 ?? — Bernama photo ?? Customers are seen queuing up in front of a local bank. The three-month interest waiver proposed by the MOF recently for loan moratorium recipients under the Pemulih relief programme will impinge on banks’ earnings recovery this year, RAM Ratings opines.
— Bernama photo Customers are seen queuing up in front of a local bank. The three-month interest waiver proposed by the MOF recently for loan moratorium recipients under the Pemulih relief programme will impinge on banks’ earnings recovery this year, RAM Ratings opines.

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