The Philippine Star

S&P upgrades credit risk assessment on Phl banks

- LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

S&P Global Ratings upgraded its assessment on the country’s banking industry amid reduced credit risk with the establishm­ent of credit bureaus as well as improving credit fundamenta­ls.

In its latest Philippine banking sector review, S&P revised its Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment (BICRA) on the Philippine­s, a notch higher to group 6 from group 7.

“In our view, the credit risk facing Philippine banks has reduced with the establishm­ent of credit bureaus and banks’ improving underwriti­ng practices in the consumer loans segment,” S&P said.

S&P’s risk methodolog­y evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of the broader operating environmen­t for banks by assessing economic and industry characteri­stics in a standardiz­ed framework.

A BICRA is scored on a scale from ‘1’ to ‘10’, ranging from the lowest-risk banking systems (group 1) to the highest-risk (group 10), with a time horizon of three to five years, similar to that of investment-grade ratings in the ‘BBB’ and higher categories.

State-run Credit Informatio­n Corp. (CIC) has been collecting and cleaning five-year data on the credit history of borrowers. Participat­ing financial institutio­ns have access to this database.

Accredited credit bureaus are set to dispense credit scores and reports by the end of the year.

S&P said better data availabili­ty of credit history is positive for the consumer segment where credit quality has historical­ly been constraine­d by lack of informatio­n.

“In our view, clarity on creditwort­hiness should foster risk based pricing in the segment. We believe this will strengthen the underwriti­ng standards in consumer lending and, over the long-term, better transparen­cy should lower consumer nonperform­ing loans closer to the overall banking system NPLs,” it said.

It noted Philippine banks have been expanding their consumer loans portfolio in pursuit of higher margins. While the yields are better than corporate loans, the segment has historical­ly had higher delinquenc­ies.

Data showed the ratio of NPLs in the consumer loans portfolio remains higher than the total NPL ratio of 1.7 percent at 3.9 percent as of end-December. However, NPLs in banks’ consumer loans portfolio have been consistent­ly declining from 5.3 percent as of Dec. 31, 2013.

“The narrowing of the gap with total NPLs points to banks’ gradually refining their risk management practices in this segment and making better lending decisions,” S&P said.

Consumer loans corner a smaller portion of banks’ lending portfolios at 17.6 percent as of end-2017 from 16 percent as of end-2013.

The rating agency pointed out the strong gross domestic product (GDP) growth, low interest rates, and adequate liquidity in the Philippine­s would continue to support the debt-servicing capacity of corporate borrowers, in our view, which constitute about 80 percent of the banking sector loans.

“We expect the banking sector’s credit losses from the corporate sector to remain low. Diminished risks from the consumer segment along with sustained credit performanc­e of the corporate segment should support the favorable asset quality trends at Philippine banks,” it said.

S&P has also revised its economic risk trend for the Philippine­s to stable from positive.

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