The Philippine Star

Stress test shows Phl banks remain stable, resilient

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

An analysis of the financial soundness indicators of the Philippine banking industry showed that it is stable and resilient despite the global uncertaint­ies related to the extent and path of the pandemic, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

Based on the report on the Philippine financial system for the second semester of 2020, the BSP said banks remained well capitalize­d as the capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of universal and commercial banks on solo and consolidat­ed bases is well above the minimum thresholds set by the BSP at 10 percent and the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s (BIS) at eight percent.

As of end-2020, the CAR of big banks improved to 16.6 percent and 17.1 percent on solo and consolidat­ed bases, respective­ly, from the previous year’s 15.4 percent and 16 percent.

The BSP said the industry’s risk-taking activities were supported by adequate capital mainly composed of common equity and retained earnings.

Based on the BSP’s stress test exercise, big banks are also resilient to credit and market risk shocks,

The results showed that post-shock CAR of combined universal, commercial, thrift, and other banking groups remained comfortabl­y above the 10 percent threshold under an assumed separate 20 percent write-off of loans to top 20 conglomera­te groups and micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSME) loans, additional five percent allowance for credit losses (ACL) on total loans, as well as simultaneo­us impact of increase in non-performing loans (NPLs) and ACL with correspond­ing disposal of a portion of soured loans.

According to the BSP, the COVID-19 pandemic tested the resilience of the banking system and the robustness of the financial ecosystem.

As the crisis significan­tly affected the banking operations, the BSP deployed targeted and time-bound regulatory relief packages that facilitate­d the uninterrup­ted flow of financial services in the country, especially during this challengin­g time of the pandemic.

“The relief packages strived to address the critical requiremen­ts of the economy while at the same time ensuring that financial stability is not compromise­d,” BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said.

The total resources of the country’s banking system rose by 6.1 percent to P19.45 trillion, accounting for 80.7 percent of the nominal gross domestic product (GDP) sourced from deposits, bond issuances and capital infusion.

Loans held the largest share of the banking system’s total assets at 54 percent or P10.5 trillion, followed by financial assets other than loans with 23.6 percent or P4.59 trillion, as well as cash and due from banks with 18.4 percent or P3.58 trillion.

The industry’s loan disburseme­nts slipped by 0.9 percent to P10.86 trillion due to limited corporate demand and weak economic activity during the lockdowns.

The BSP said the quality of the banking system’s loan portfolio remained satisfacto­ry despite the rise in the NPL ratio to 3.6 percent in end-2020 from two percent in end-2019.

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