Hawke's Bay Today

NZ banks’ credit to spike 12 times 2019 level

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New Zealand banks’ credit losses will rise to about 12 times those in 2019 before easing because of the coronaviru­s crisis, according to internatio­nal ratings agency Standard & Poor’s.

“A contractin­g economy, rising unemployme­nt and weak consumer and business sentiment will affect banks’ asset quality metrics,” said S&P analyst Lisa Barrett in an S&P publicatio­n on global banks.

“We forecast that annual credit losses will peak at about 80 basis points of gross loans by fiscal 2021, about 12 times their historical low in fiscal 2019,” Barrett said.

She expects credit losses will ease to about 50 basis points of gross loans and advances in fiscal 2022.

“We believe that most NZ banks retain good headroom within their earnings to absorb our forecast sizeable increase in credit losses in conjunctio­n with a significan­t contractio­n in interest income.”

S&P is forecastin­g NZ’s economy will contract by 5 percent in 2020 before bouncing back to 6 percent growth in 2021, supported by government and Reserve Bank stimulus measures.

The moratorium­s on loan repayments the banks have offered will cushion the blow for many borrowers and “timely and coordinate­d monetary support from the central bank has alleviated bank funding and liquidity concerns, in our view,” Barrett said.

NZ bank’s significan­t dependence on offshore short-term borrowing and the nation’s persistent current account deficits combined with fluctuatin­g commodity prices all make New Zealand vulnerable to external shocks, she said.

But she envisages no change to the four major NZ banks’ strategic importance to their Australian parents.

Fellow analyst Sharad Jain is forecastin­g the Australian banks’ credit losses will rise to about six times their levels in 2019 before easing.

Both analysts said there’s a one-inthree chance that the economic hit to the banking sectors of each country turns out to be more severe or prolonged than S&P’s base case.

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