Fitch: Financial Pressures Build on Russia and its Banks
18.09.08 11:30
/Fitch Ratings, London, September 17, 08/ - Fitch Ratings says today that
a series of adverse shocks and mounting pressures in the banking sector have
tilted risks more to the downside although, as signalled by their Stable
Outlooks, Fitch does not currently expect to change Russia's Long-term
foreign and local currency Issuer Default ratings of 'BBB+'. Widespread
downgrades of Russian banks are also not anticipated at present, but
individual negative rating actions are possible, with smaller and mid-sized
banks generally more at risk in light of their typically weaker funding
franchises and lesser access to government liquidity facilities. Fitch will
continue to closely monitor events.
"An unpalatable cocktail of heightened global financial turbulence, falling
oil prices, the war in Georgia and corporate governance concerns has dented
investor sentiment towards Russia and increased pressure on the banking
sector," says Ed Parker, Head of Emerging Europe in Fitch's Sovereigns
team. "Nevertheless, the Russian sovereign's strong balance sheet
underpins its 'BBB+' rating and gives it the capacity to provide support
to the banking sector."
The Russian banking sector is a long-standing rating weakness for the
sovereign, after a period of rapid credit expansion on relatively weak
foundations. Fitch's Macro-Prudential Indicator (MPI) for Russia is '3',
signalling a "high vulnerability" to systemic banking stress from above-trend
credit growth coupled with asset price bubbles or significant real exchange
rate appreciation. The banking system has become used to operating with
markedly negative real interest rates, but now faces a squeeze on liquidity
and difficult period of adjustment. Net private sector capital inflows have
receded, the value of equity collateral has fallen and confidence in
counterparties has weakened - exacerbated by payment problems at the
small investment house, KIT Finance - causing inter-bank interest rates to
jump to 12% today from only around 4% in July. Aggressive borrowing in
recent years has seen the Russian private sector's external debt rise to
USD436bn at end-March, from USD109bn at end-2004, increasing its
exposure to global capital markets and international investor sentiment.
Yesterday in an effort to alleviate the liquidity squeeze, the Central Bank
of Russia injected RUB360bn (USD14bn) of liquidity through one-day repo
auctions into the market, with the level rising slightly to RUB365bn today.
The Ministry of Finance also increased its limits for placements of fiscal
deposits in the three largest banks, Sberbank, VTB and Gazprombank, to
RUB1,127bn (USD44bn), and increased the deposits offered to banks at
today's auction to RUB350bn, following yesterday's placement of RUB150bn.
Banks only took up RUB118bn of the amount offered at today's auction, but
Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin has indicated that in future the three largest
banks may on-lend fiscal deposits to smaller institutions. In addition, bank
reserve requirements have been cut today by 4% to support overall sector
liquidity. Reduced levels and the higher cost of bank funding are likely
to lead to a marked slowdown in credit growth, with some knock-on effects for
investment and GDP growth. Government support to banks underscores that
the sector is a contingent liability to the sovereign. Fitch would not
necessarily view the use of the sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) to help
stabilise the banking sector as warranting negative rating action if moderate
in size and limited in scope. However, it would look unfavourably on attempts
to prop up the equity market or an open-ended or substantive commitment of
public resources to the banking sector that significantly weakens the
sovereign balance sheet.
Relatively weak and concentrated funding franchises have been a major
rating constraint at many Russian banks, in particular at smaller and
medium-sized institutions which tend to be more dependent on shorter-term
customer and bank deposits. "The fact that liquidity facilities offered by
the Central Bank and Ministry of Finance can generally be accessed primarily
by larger, more highly-rated institutions, coupled with the ongoing cutting
of limits on the inter-bank market and the drying up of the commercial repo
market, could result in severe liquidity constraints at some smaller
institutions," comments James Watson, a Senior Director in Fitch's Financial
Institutions Group in Moscow. "Provision of liquidity by state-owned banks
could, however, help to relieve these constraints - although the volumes and
conditions of this funding remain to be seen - while the reduction of reserve
requirements should provide at least short-term liquidity support for the
sector as a whole." While banks have generally not been major investors in
the stock market in recent years, some have significant direct exposures and
others have built up considerable volumes of equities-backed credit
exposures on the loan and repo markets, which could also become sources
of losses. In addition, a sustained period of low credit growth and suspension
of lending operations by some banks could also exacerbate liquidity
pressures in parts of the corporate sector, in turn feeding back into asset
quality problems for banks.
Notwithstanding current financial market and banking sector weaknesses,
Russia's sovereign ratings are underpinned by its strong public finances.
General government debt was just 8.6% of GDP at end-2007, compared with
the 'BBB' range median of 28%, and Russia has accumulated around
USD175bn in its SWF. Fitch expects Russia to run a general government
budget surplus and current account surplus of around 6% of GDP in 2008,
buoyed by high average annual oil prices. Its foreign exchange reserves of
USD574bn (including the SWF) provide a substantial liquidity buffer.
Contact:
Edward Parker, London, Tel: +44 (0)20 7417 6340;
James Watson, Moscow +7 495 956 6657
Media contact:
Alla Izmailova, Moscow, Tel.: + 7 495 956 9901/03,
alla.izmailova@fitchratings.com
[2008-09-18]