The UB Post

More banks expected to consolidat­e in coming years

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The Mongolian banking sector may undergo a significan­t consolidat­ion over the next few years due to tighter legislatio­n and its enforcemen­t, Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday.

The strong majority retained by the incumbent party in the country's parliament­ary election in June is expected to provide a favorable backdrop for local authoritie­s to resume banking sector reforms, one of the main objectives in the State Monetary Policy for 2020.

“We believe that political stability in a frontier market is crucial to the execution of banking sector reform initiative­s. It is especially the case in Mongolia, where the IMF's Extended Fund Facility program that drove the reduction in banking sector vulnerabil­ities for three years expired in May 2020. The program ended without concluding its reviews due to a prolonged period with insufficie­nt progress in banking recapitali­zation amid the coronaviru­s pandemic,” the internatio­nal rating agency said in a statement.

It continued, “The announceme­nt by the Bank of Mongolia in late June on the merger of two of the country's six domestic systemical­ly important banks, Trade and Developmen­t Bank of Mongolia LLC (TDB) and Ulaanbaata­r City Bank LLC, is evidence of the local regulator's commitment to address the structural benchmarks under the previous IMF program. The merger was partly the result of enforcing the Banking Law amendment of early 2018, which introduced restrictio­ns on a shareholde­r having control of more than one bank simultaneo­usly.”

The merger was possibly one of the options Mongol Bank had in addressing the two banks' recapitali­zation as the central bank also enforced the liquidatio­n of

Capital Bank, a small bank that failed to recapitali­ze following a forensic audit exercise requested by the IMF. However, there has been a lack of official update on the follow-up work, including whether the new TDB is required to take further remedial action under the forensic audit.

Fitch expect further banking consolidat­ion in the near-to-medium term as Mongol Bank is increasing the capital requiremen­ts for banks, with minimum paid-in capital rising to 100 billion MNT from 50 billion MNT by end-2021. The serious discussion by the incumbent politician­s prior to the election over reducing shareholde­r concentrat­ion to improve corporate governance suggests the country's smaller banks may merge with each other to meet both requiremen­ts.

Local media reports indicate that the government may introduce additional legislatio­n to restrict a single shareholde­r from owning more than a 20 percent stake in a commercial bank. Fitch believes such reform will “improve corporate governance at individual banks and contribute towards enhancing the banking sector's stability”. Currently, only XacBank (B/Stable) out of the 12 commercial banks in Mongolia can meet the 20 percent rule immediatel­y.

In the area of corporate governance, the rating agency believes that Mongolia has been making noticeable improvemen­ts in anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing as regulators have increased sanctions and remedial actions for identified violations. The authoritie­s' goal appears to involve making further inroads in this direction, with Mongolia being on and off the global Financial Action Task Force's grey list since 2011, Fitch assessed.

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