Moody's: Turkish banking system outlook remains stable
Global Credit Research - 24 Jan 2013
Frankfurt am Main, January 24, 2013 -- The outlook on the
Turkish banking system remains stable, says Moody's Investors Service in a new
Banking System Outlook published today. The key drivers of the outlook are (1)
the rating agency's view that moderate economic growth and improving sovereign
financial strength will create supportive operating conditions for banks,
despite downside risks from the euro area crisis, volatile markets and investor
risk aversion; and (2) banks' sufficient resources to absorb an expected
gradual increase in non-performing loans (NPLs). These factors are partially
offset by Moody's expectations that (1) banks' net profit margins will likely
decline further amid low interest rates and rising competition; and
(2) bank funding profiles, while still sound, are
becoming less robust with loan growth outpacing deposit growth.
The new report, entitled "Banking System Outlook:
Turkey", is now available on www.moodys.com.
Moody's subscribers can access this report via the link provided at the end of
this press release.
Moody's expects sustained growth in Turkey's GDP of 3.8%
in 2013, up from an estimated 3.0% in full-year 2012, but below the recent boom
prior to the 2009 recession. This relatively moderate growth will create
supportive conditions for banks, which also benefit from the improving
financial strength of the Turkish government (Ba1 positive).
Following years of a surge in lending, Moody's expects
credit expansion to moderate to around 12-15% in 2013 underpinned by increasing
banking penetration, particularly in under-banked regions in Turkey. Downside
risks include a renewed acceleration of the euro area crisis and a sudden
increase in global investor risk aversion.
Asset quality will likely normalise gradually, with NPLs
increasing moderately from very low current levels. After lending rose by a
rapid 101% in the three years to 30 September 2012, delinquencies will increase
as loan books season. Unsecured consumer loans and loans to small and mid-sized
enterprises are most at risk and NPLs will rise only gradually, because
economic growth still supports borrowers' payment ability. Importantly, banks have sufficient
resources to cope with even worse-than-expected losses, given a system-average
14.5% Tier 1 ratio (Basel II) and Moody's-adjusted Tier 1 ratio (which reflects
sovereign exposures in local-currency) at 12.0% as of 30 September 2012.
Capital ratios have, however, decreased as asset growth outpaced capital growth.
Moody's expects net profit margins to weaken over the
next 12-18 months, as banks confront an environment of moderating growth,
heightened competition, and rising provisioning costs. Pre-provision margins
are likely to stay flat, at best, as moderate economic growth limits revenue
opportunities and competition for deposits dampen any positive impact from
lower central bank rates on funding costs. A critical longer-term challenge for
the system will be to preserve risk discipline despite intensifying competition
and profitability pressures.
With loans having grown faster than deposits for many
years, banks increasingly turn to wholesale markets or shift from liquid
securities into loans. As a result, they are becoming more vulnerable to
funding market volatility, although most banks still benefit from robust retail
deposit franchises.
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