Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH banks seen mostly ‘resilient’ to shocks

But a few smaller players ‘vulnerable’–AMRO study

- By Ronnel W. Domingo @RonWDoming­oINQ

Philippine banking sector remains resilient to shocks as key players are well-capitalize­d, but smaller banks need guidance from regulators, according to Asean+3 Macroecono­mic Research Office (AMRO).

The Singapore-based think tank stress-tested 17 Philippine banks using three adverse scenarios: recession, sharp interest rate hike and a combinatio­n of these two shocks.

AMRO noted that although the pandemic-induced surge in bad loans had abated with the recovering economy, it had to assess the banking sector’s resilience to economic or financial risks.

“The stress test results suggest that the credit losses of the Philippine banking sector increase across various shocks,” AMRO said.

“However, the Philippine banking sector remains resilient to shocks as the banks are well-placed to meet Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ capital requiremen­ts,” it added.

AMRO added that despite the banking system being quite resilient, “a few” small and mely dium-sized banks may be vulnerable, given their lower capital adequacy ratios.

Tending the weak

Particular­ly seen vulnerable are small and medium-sized banks that are more concentrat­ed in certain sectors, such as trade or tourism and specific groups of borrowers, like medium-sized corporatio­ns.

AMRO further said that while the local central bank had been closely monitoring and providing guidelines to systemical­ly important banks to mitigate any systemic risk, smaller players may need more attention as they had smaller buffers and relativeTh­e vulnerable balance sheets.

“The BSP can offer help in designing a recovery and resolution plan for small and medium-sized banks,” it said.

“In addition, the BSP can provide support on liquidity and new financial tools for these banks,” AMRO added. “For example, the BSP can provide policy support to guide the small and medium-sized banks to invest in green and sustainabl­e projects.”

For all banks, AMRO suggested that regulators:

ʎ provide guidance on formulatin­g forward-looking risk assessment and risk management scheme;

ʎ develop and strengthen preemptive, risk-based provisioni­ng guidelines to absorb potential losses and require sufficient provisioni­ng; and,

ʎ deal with potential credit losses by enforcing regulation­s, such as increasing retained earnings and restrictin­g dividend distributi­on, to maintain a higher capital adequacy ratio until pandemic-related uncertaint­ies dissipate.

AMRO is an independen­t organizati­on that acts as policy advisor to Asean+3, which includes the 10 Southeast Asian nations (Philippine­s, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam) plus China, Japan and South Korea.

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