S&P affirms ratings of Kazkommertsbank, Nurbank and AsiaCredit Bank; outlook changed to Stable
25.01.11 11:27
/Standard & Poor's, Paris, January 24, 11, KASE headline/ - Standard & Poor's
Ratings Services said today it revised its outlooks on Kazakhstan-based
Kazkommertsbank (JSC) (KKB), JSC Nurbank, and JSC AsiaCredit Bank to stable from
negative. At the same time, the long- and short-term counterparty credit ratings
on the banks were affirmed. We also assigned our 'kzBB+' Kazakhstan national
scale rating to Nurbank.
The rating affirmations affect:
- The 'B/C' long- and short-term counterparty credit ratings on KKB and Nurbank;
- The 'B/B' long- and short-term counterparty credit ratings on AsiaCredit Bank.
The outlook revisions reflect our view of the robust economic recovery in the
Republic of Kazakhstan (foreign currency BBB/Stable/A-3; local currency
BBB+/Stable/A-2; Kazakhstan national scale rating 'kzAAA'). We expect GDP growth
to average 7% between 2011 and 2013, underpinned by structural net inflows from
foreign direct investment and the prospect of a doubling of oil output by 2020
(see "Republic of Kazakhstan FC And LC Long-Term Ratings Raised By One Notch To
'BBB' And 'BBB+'; Outlook Remains Stable," published on Dec. 23, 2010).
The rating actions also reflect our opinion that the banking operating
environment in Kazakhstan has stabilized following the restructuring in 2010 of
three of the four defaulted banks. The pressure on Kazakh banks' asset quality,
liquidity, and profitability has, in our view, eased, following a period of
heightened risks over the past three years.
In the short to medium term, we expect ongoing improvements in asset quality
because we believe that the deterioration bottomed out in 2010. We also expect
to see the three banks maintain adequate liquidity to meet wholesale debt
repayments and customer deposit withdrawals, especially from government-related
entities, and adequate capitalization to mitigate the high-risk economic and
banking environment in Kazakhstan. In January 2011, we assigned a preliminary
Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment (BICRA) score of 9 to Kazakhstan's
banking industry (see "Preliminary Banking Industry Country Risk Assessments In
23 Countries," published on Jan. 6, 2011). A BICRA signals our view of the
relative riskiness of a country's banking industry on a scale of 1 to 10,
ranging from the lowest-risk banking industries (group 1) to the highest-risk
banking industries (group 10).
The ratings on the three banks are based on our assessment of their stand-alone
credit profiles and we do not currently apply any uplift for extraordinary
parental or government support to these banks.
JSC Kazkommertsbank
The rating actions on KKB reflect our belief that KKB will continue to benefit
from state support, given its high systemic importance according to our
classification. They also reflect our view of KKB's cautious and fairly
efficient business and operational adjustments and its efforts to reduce
leverage, which have helped it adapt to the challenging operating environment.
The ratings on KKB reflect KKB's weak asset quality, high dependence on foreign
debt, limited capitalization, and high single-name concentrations in corporate
loans and deposits. On the other hand, KKB has a good market position,
particularly among large Kazakh corporate clients, and adequate core revenue
generation, supported by aggressive cost management.
KKB is one of the largest banks in Kazakhstan, with total assets of Kazakhstani
tenge (KZT) 2.7 trillion (about $17.5 billion) on Sept. 30, 2010. As of this
date, KKB also accounted for 21% of the system's assets, 25% of loans, 19% of
retail deposits, and 22% of corporate deposits.
In May 2009, the Kazakh government acquired a 21% stake in KKB through a capital
injection of KZT36 billion, but we understand it intends to exit KKB when market
conditions improve. Direct state funding accounts for slightly less than 10% of
KKB's liabilities, but we estimate that about 40% of KKB's deposits relate
to state companies.
We expect the proportion of loans under stress, including restructured loans, to
reduce only moderately in 2011 from almost 48% on Sept. 30, 2010. This will
continue to hurt KKB's capitalization and financial performance. Wholesale debt
repayments of about $700 million due in 2011 and significant deposit
concentrations will continue to challenge the bank's liquidity management, in
our view.
JSC Nurbank
The rating actions on Nurbank reflect our view that the bank has addressed its
credit reserving needs through increased credit provisions at midyear 2010, in
conjunction with a capital injection at year-end 2010.
The ratings reflect our view of Nurbank's weak asset quality, high
concentrations in lending and funding, and sizable exposure to the troubled
construction and real estate sectors. These negative factors are partly offset
by the bank's increased capitalization and credit reserves, strengthened
management team since the beginning of 2010, and adequate liquidity management.
The level of reported nonperforming loans (NPLs; 90 days overdue) decreased in
2010 (8.9% at midyear 2010). However, we believe the proportion of loans under
stress, including restructured loans, is closer to 40%. Loan loss provisions of
23.4% of total loans at midyear 2010 are adequate, in our view, following a
significant increase. We expect earnings to slowly recover from 2011 onward,
after a material loss in the first half at 2010, as revenues pick up and credit
costs normalize.
A capital increase of KZT95.5 billion (about $650 million) in December 2010 by
the new shareholder to cover provision-related losses should have markedly
strengthened Nurbank's adjusted total equity-to-adjusted assets ratio to more
than 30% at year-end 2010. However, the ratio could have been undermined by
potential additional provisioning needs and high concentrations.
Nurbank's balance-sheet liquidity and funding profile are comfortable, in our
view. Due to recent substantial foreign debt repayments and deposit growth, the
share of foreign debt in the bank's total liabilities declined to about 9.4% at
midyear 2010, which is below the sector average. However, large deposit and loan
concentrations remain, increasing roll-over risk.
JSC AsiaCredit Bank
The rating actions on AsiaCredit Bank reflect its decision to increase capital
by $100 million in 2010-2011 and our view of a positive trend in asset quality.
The ratings on AsiaCredit Bank reflect the bank's small domestic franchise, weak
asset quality and profitability, and aggressive growth plans. The ratings
benefit from our view of AsiaCredit Bank's strong capitalization, enhanced by a
proposed large capital increase and good short-term liquidity.
AsiaCredit Bank is a small Kazakh commercial bank with a market share of about
0.1% by total assets. In our view, AsiaCredit Bank's small capital base in
absolute terms--KZT6.1 billion (about $40 million) on Sept. 30, 2010--leaves it
vulnerable to external shocks and the changing fortunes of its largest
customers.
The bank's controlling shareholders - Kazakh businessmen Nurbol Sultan and
Chingiz Dosmuhambetov - plan to contribute $100 million (about KZT15 billion) in
capital in 2010-2011 to increase capitalization to the minimum regulatory
requirement and support the bank's medium-term growth strategy. The bank
received KZT7.4 billion from Mr. Sultan in September 2010, which is currently
registered as a deposit. This should result in a markedly stronger risk-adjusted
capital (RAC) ratio than the 18.9% after adjustments we had calculated as of
year-end 2009, which was the highest among rated banks in Kazakhstan.
In our view, AsiaCredit Bank's asset quality is improving. Reported NPLs (90
days overdue, including restructured and written-off loans) fell to 10.8% on
Sept. 30, 2010, from 13% at year-end 2009. We believe this is largely due to the
bank's more-conservative growth rates than peers' during the mid-2000s. Exposure
to the construction and real estate sectors (41% of total loans, including
residential mortgages on Sept. 30, 2010) heightens credit risk.
We regard AsiaCredit Bank's funding and liquidity position as adequate,
reflected in an acceptable loan-to-deposit ratio of 117% as of Sept. 30, 2010,
and no outstanding foreign debt repayments.
Ratings list
To From
JSC Kazkommertsbank
JSC Nurbank
Counterparty Credit Rating
B/Stable/C B/Negative/C
JSC AsiaCredit Bank
Counterparty Credit Rating
B/Stable/B B/Negative/B
New rating of JSC Nurbank
Kazakhstan National Scale Rating
kzBB+
Analysts:
Ekaterina Trofimova, Paris, 33 (1) 44 20 67 86
ekaterina_trofimova@standardandpoors.com
Magar Kouyoumdjian, London, (44) 207 176 72 17
magar_kouyoumdjian@standardandpoors.com
Annette Ess, Frankfurt, 49 (69) 33 999 157
annette_ess@standardandpoors.com
GroupE-MailAddress@standardandpoors.com
[2011-01-25]