Bangkok Post

BoT preps new asset warehouse programme

- SOMRUEDI BANCHONGDU­ANG

The Bank of Thailand is preparing an additional measure to help the struggling hospitalit­y and property sectors through an asset warehousin­g programme.

The new Covid-19 outbreak has caused the economic recovery to be more uneven and depressed fragile business segments, especially small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs) and the property sector, which has seen an oversupply of condos and a focus on foreign buyers, said Chayawadee Chai-Anant, senior director of the economic and policy department.

The hospitalit­y sector has endured a prolonged slowdown for almost a year, said Ms Chayawadee.

These industries have a lot of property assets and many businesses have used them as loan collateral. Meanwhile, SMEs face difficult access to bank loans, especially during the pandemic crisis as banks have implemente­d a stronger risk management strategy to cushion against deteriorat­ing loan and asset quality.

These business segments need more financial aid, including additional credit lines and loan guarantees, leading to the roll-out of a targeted measure aimed at assisting each segment directly, she said.

The government, financial authoritie­s and the private sector have been deliberati­ng on an asset warehousin­g programme to aid SMEs, hotels and the property sector.

Under the concept, asset warehousin­g would allow business operators to suspend debt repayment and transfer property assets, as loan collateral, to

their creditors temporaril­y within a specific time frame.

Business operators would then be allowed to either lease these frozen assets from the creditors to continue their business operations or let the creditors manage the frozen assets.

A buy-back agreement within a specific time frame would also be embedded as a condition in the asset warehousin­g programme.

This condition would be based on fair prices and a voluntary agreement of the borrowers and creditors, said Ms Chayawadee.

“The asset warehousin­g programme would help contain non-performing loans in the banking industry and prevent asset auctions and asset devaluatio­n, along with cushioning the impact on employment,” she said.

A banking industry source recently told the Bangkok Post the central bank approved in principle commercial banks setting up a bank-owned asset warehouse to freeze non-performing assets in the hospitalit­y sector. The frozen-asset period would be around 3-5 years.

The government has also considered amending the Bank of Thailand’s 500-billion-baht soft loan decree and using 100 billion to fund the asset warehousin­g programme, said

the source.

The prolonged pandemic crisis has caused the revenue of SMEs, hotels and the property sector to dwindle sharply, subsequent­ly making it hard for businesses to generate sufficient liquidity to operate and service debt liabilitie­s.

Despite receiving a debt holiday from financial institutio­ns, interest liability is still a burden.

Ms Chayawadee said the central bank forecasts the number of foreign tourist arrivals to gradually improve in the second half, in line with vaccinatio­ns.

Under this scenario, the existing debt burdens of businesses could exceed the loan collateral value, she said.

The first wave of the outbreak in Thailand resulted in a nationwide lockdown, with stringent containmen­t measures that caused business activities at hotels to plunge by 97%. The second wave saw a 58% contractio­n for hotels, according to Bank of Thailand data.

Passenger transport activities fell by 65% last year before improving to a 20% decline recently, while the property sector saw its activities decline by 28% before recovering to a 10% decrease.

 ??  ?? Ms Chayawadee says the hospitalit­y sector has endured a slowdown for almost a year.
Ms Chayawadee says the hospitalit­y sector has endured a slowdown for almost a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand