The Philippine Star

&rising S P: Phl banks likely to lend more despite bad loans

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

Loan disburseme­nts by Philippine banks are seen recovering this year despite slumping for three straight months since December due to uncertaint­ies brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to S&P Global Ratings.

In a report, S&P said bank lending in the Philippine­s would likely grow by 6.5 percent this year, still slower than the average 9.29 percent annual expansion prior to the global health crisis.

Latest data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed loans disbursed by universal and commercial banks contracted for the third straight month in February at 2.7 percent amid tepid demand from borrowers while industry players remained risk averse due to uncertaint­ies brought abut by the pandemic.

This was the biggest slump for bank lending in more than 14 years or since the 2.9 percent contractio­n in August 2006.

Loans released by big banks amounted to P8.94 trillion in February or P251 billion lower than the P9.19 trillion recorded a year earlier.

“Banks in the region are flush with liquidity due to a slowdown in loans growth and the buildup in deposits from 2020. Our banking analysts anticipate a pickup in credit growth across the region in 2021. They also expect credit growth will revert to pre-COVID levels in 2022,” S&P said.

It said bank lending would

stay selective this year as credit costs are likely to stay high until 2022.

“Banks are already favoring the larger and higher-quality borrowers or clients with establishe­d relationsh­ips and a long record of bank support through a credit cycle,” the debt watcher said.

According to S&P, working capital requiremen­ts are bound to grow for the corporate sector as revenue growth recovers and companies in the region rebuild their inventorie­s.

It added more widespread working capital is an essential factor for a broaderbas­ed recovery. Its return would stabilize corporate credit conditions in South and Southeast Asia.

“We view the sometimes strained working-capital conditions as indicative of broader liquidity challenges, as much of this region continues to battle a deep health crisis,” S&P said.

Aside from slashing the benchmark interest rate by 200 basis points to an all-time low of two percent as part of COVID-19 measures last year, the BSP’s Monetary Board has decided to maintain an accommodat­ive monetary policy stance to help the economy recover from the recession.

The central bank’s response measures to cushion the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy unleashed P2 trillion into the financial system.

S&P said unpredicta­ble access to capital and refinancin­g for weaker issuers in South and Southeast Asia is likely to create a spike in default rates if volatile funding conditions persist beyond the third quarter.

With corporate ratings at ‘B-’ or below for over 10 percent of rated companies in South and Southeast Asia, default rates on the rated universe in the region could reach five percent over the next 12 months, nearly twice the level of 2020.

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