Philippine Daily Inquirer

BSP CHIEF URGES THRIFT LENDERS TO EMBRACE DIGITAL BANKING

- —DAXIM L. LUCAS

The country’s chief banking regulator wants smaller financial institutio­ns like thrift banks to embrace digital technologi­es to be able to more effectivel­y deliver services to underbanke­d sectors of society in areas that are not reached by their larger rivals.

To this end, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin Diokno urged the Chamber of Thrift Banks—the umbrella organizati­on of lenders specializi­ng in mobilizing retail savings—to adopt solutions that would extend their reach beyond their traditiona­l physical branch networks.

“For thrift banks, this should mean two things,” he said during his online keynote address to the group’s annual convention. “First, shifting to the cloud must be seen as an opportunit­y, as even rural banks have maximized the benefits of scalabilit­y of financial services, from mobile and electronic banking to near field communicat­ion payments.

“Second, thrift banks must embrace the change of mind-set from a ‘brick and mortar’ thinking to embracing the promise of digital transforma­tion in providing crucial banking services to its clients,” Diokno said.

The central bank chief explained that smaller thrift banks can take advantage of these available digital technology to lower operationa­l costs and be able to better compete with large financial institutio­ns.

“The opportunit­ies are limitless, but risks, business synergies and contributi­on to growth have to be carefully considered,” he said. “The COVID-19 pandemic has also accelerate­d the digitaliza­tion of financial services to support resilience.”

To date, regulators have extended a slew of relief measures to the thrift banking sector including relaxed requiremen­ts for accessing the central bank’s liquidity facilities.

Thrift banks can also stagger the booking of allowance for credit losses for loans extended to affected borrowers for a maximum period of five years, subject to approval of the BSP.

Loan accounts affected by the pandemic may also be excluded from the past due and nonperform­ing loan classifica­tions until December 2021.

More importantl­y, the central bank has also incentiviz­ed lending by reducing the credit risk weights of loans granted to micro, small and medium enterprise­s that are current in status to 50 percent from 75 percent for low risk borrowers and 100 percent for higher risk ones.

Moreover, new peso-denominate­d loans to small businesses, and certain large enterprise­s that were critically impacted by the pandemic shall be recognized as forms of alternativ­e compliance with thrift banks’ reserve requiremen­ts against deposit liabilitie­s and deposit substitute­s.

As of end-july 2020, thrift banks were able to provide a total of P80 billion loans to small firms. These were used as alternativ­e compliance of thrift banks with the reserve requiremen­ts as of end-september 2020.

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