Manila Bulletin

No bank sought BSP support since pandemic

- By LEE C. CHIPONGIAN

Not a single bank applied for Ʃnancial assistance since the pandemic began in 2020, according to the central bank’s highest-ranking official.

“No bank needed financial assistance,” Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Felipe M. Medalla told Manila Bulletin.

Medalla is referring to all banks – the big banks or the universal and commercial banks, the mediumsize­d thrift banks, and the small rural banks supervised by the BSP.

He said banks remain adequately well-capitalize­d with enough liquidity and buffers even as nonperform­ing loans (NPLs) and nonperform­ing assets (NPAs) rose in the last two years. NPLs are unpaid loans for more than 30 days while NPAs are loans in default.

The BSP has remedial measures to help solvent banks resolve temporary liquidity problems from “causes beyond their control” such as the pandemic. It extends fullysecur­ed emergency loans to banks as Ʃnancial assistance.

Medalla conƩrmed that no bank has approached the BSP for Ʃnancial support because of the public health crisis and its resulting mobility restrictio­ns which impacted on borrowers’ capacity to pay loans.

During the lockdowns, especially in 2020 and the middle part of 2021, business operations were stalled and jobs were lost. Banks had limited activities but it was business as usual for majority of Ʃnancial institutio­ns via digital means.

“Universal and commercial banks have more than adequate capitaliza­tion,” said Medalla.

Based on the BSP Charter, the BSP’s Ʃnancial assistance to banking institutio­ns is limited to the amount needed by the applicant bank to overcome the emergency or Ʃnancial predicamen­t but should not exceed 50 percent of its deposits and deposit substitute­s. In addition, any emergency advance will be collateral­ized by government securities and other unencumber­ed Ʃrst-class collateral­s such as real estate.

As for the rural banks, Medalla said the BSP will soon launch the Rural Bank Strengthen­ing Program (RBSP) which is aimed at assisting small banks hit by the pandemic.

The RBSP, which will replace the Consolidat­ion Program for Rural Banks, will be implemente­d for three years. It is described as a structured program with four key elements: strengthen­ed capital base; holistic menu of five time-bound tracks; incentives and capacity building interventi­ons; and review and enhancemen­ts of existing regulation­s. These Ʃve time-bound tracks are merger and consolidat­ion, acquisitio­n/third party investment, voluntary exit/upgrade of license, capital build-up, and supervisor­y interventi­on.

Under RBSP, the BSP wants at least P60 million minimum capital requiremen­t for rural banks. For rural banks with more than Ʃve branches, the minimum capital should be ₱200 million.

Meanwhile, the central bank recently circulated a proposed circular for banks’ guidelines for crafting their recovery plans. Basically, the BSP wants all banks to report within 24 hours if triggers in their recovery plans are breached and to activate recovery measures within three days.

The recovery plans of banks are expected to be commensura­te to their size, nature and complexity of operations, overall risk proƩle, and systemic importance.

Once the circular is approved, banks will submit a recovery plan every June 30. Banks have until July 15 to post feedback or suggestion­s to the BSP on the guidelines of the recovery plans.

Since the pandemic was declared in March 2020, the BSP closed the operations of 21 rural banks while two rural banks voluntaril­y surrendere­d their banking licenses.

As of end-May this year, the BSP is supervisin­g 498 banks, of which 45 are big banks which control over 90 percent of total banking resources. There are currently 43 thrift

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