NPL&REO News

Reports note strength of Greek banks’ results

More positive reports on Greek banks have come out from Canadian ratings agency DBRS and US financial services company Jefferies Group. 

DBRS notes that improvements in operational results and a better risk profile support a further strengthening of the banks’ capitalization. But it also expects a slowdown in net income from interest rates. 

Jefferies notes that rising rates and strong economic activity have boosted the sector. 

It also estimates that investors will henceforth focus on each bank’s ability to further clean up non-performing assets and to keep rising central bank interest rates from affecting its own rates structure.

Original Story: Kathimerini | Newsroom 
Photo: Photo by Jonte Remos in FreeImages
Edition: Prime Yield

Credit card revolving interest rates rise to 445% per year, says BC

A hot topic at the moment, the average total interest rate charged by banks on revolving credit card payments rose 8.7% from June to July.

The Central Bank (BC) also reported that the rate went from 437.0% to 445.7% per year.

The emergency credit modality is at the centre of the country’s economic and political discussions at the moment due to the more expensive rates on the market.

The issue is the subject of a working group formed by the Ministry of Finance, the Central Bank and the banks.

Proposals

Recently, Roberto Campos Neto, the president of the Central Bank, said that the solution was “moving towards” the end of the revolving credit card, with the card debt being automatically transferred to the instalment plan with interest.

Since 2017, banks have been obliged to transfer revolving credit card debt to instalments after one month, at a lower interest rate.

Campos Neto also indicated that there could be a disincentive fee for “long” interest-free instalments, which is in the interest of the banks, while Finance Minister Fernando Haddad is against ending interest-free instalments.

In addition, last August 24th, deputy Alencar Santana (PT-SP) proposed limiting the rate on revolving and interest-free instalments to the principal amount of the debt, in his opinion on the Desenrola project.

The measure would apply if the banks do not propose self-regulation within 90 days of the law coming into force.

In the case of instalments, the interest went from 196.1% to 198.4% per year between June and July.

Considering the total credit card interest rate, which takes into account revolving and instalment operations, the rate went from 104.2% to 102.7%.

Original Story: CNN Brasil | Thais Barcellos and Eduardo Rodrigues
Photo: Banco Central do Brasil
Edition and translation: Prime Yield

Banks add €11 billion in provisions anticipating a rising in NPLs

The ECB’s interest rate hikes have boosted banks’ profits after years of low profitability, but the change of scenario has had its downside. Customers are now suffering a growing increase in the cost of their debts and this has forced banks to sharply increase provisions in anticipation of a rise in non-performing loans (NPL).

In the first part of the year, the six large Spanish banks listed on the Ibex added €10.868 in provisions to face a possible default  , an increase of 27% compared to €8.537 billion the previous year, according to a report by the consulting firm Accuracy.

This is considerably higher than the combined profits in Spain of the six banks, Santander, BBVA, CaixaBank, Sabadell, Bankinter and Unicaja, of €5.373 billion in the first half of the year, 49% higher than a year ago. This is despite the fact that the banks are still flush with liquidity, the Achilles heel that precipitated the falls of Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse. Including international activity, the profit for the half year was around €12.4 billion.

The ECB recently warned that the near-term outlook for the economy has deteriorated due to a contraction in demand. The central bank says tighter financing conditions are behind the trend, which may prove key in determining whether it will raise interest rates beyond 4.25%.

Among Spanish banks, the only ones that have not raised provisions have been Unicaja and Sabadell, the latter due to positive impacts on its real estate portfolio and litigation. Santander, on the other hand, raised loan-loss provisions sharply in anticipation of a worse performance by customers, especially in the United States. They rose from €5.770 billion a year ago to €7.426 billion in the first half of the year. This is a rise of 28%.

BBVA has increased provisions by 36%, to €2.087 million, compared with 19% for CaixaBank, to €556 million, and 26% for Bankinter, to €193 million. In the case of CaixaBank, these provisions actually fell in the second quarter compared to the first due to the improved macroeconomic outlook in Spain, but the picture for the half-year as a whole continues to show increases.

For the time being, these movements are part of the preventive manoeuvres before the foreseeable arrival of storm clouds that have yet to appear on the balance sheets of Spanish banks. Santander’s NPL ratio has remained at 3.1%, while those of BBVA and CaixaBank have fallen, in the first case from 3.7% to 3.4% and in the second from 3.1% to 2.6%. On the other hand, Sabadell’s rose to 3.5% and Unicaja’s to 3.6%.

There is another warning light that is also still off. When a loan passes to special surveillance risk it is computed as stage 2 and when the risk is doubtful, it passes to stage 3. These are the two steps prior to default, which have their own accounting drawers and allow banks to anticipate the danger. At the end of the first half of the year, stage 1 and stage 2 of the banks’ accounts amounted to €226.13 billion, just €367 million more than a year ago.

Original Story: La Vanguardia | Iñaki de las Heras 
Photo: CaixaBank website
Edition and translation: Prime Yield

White & Case advised Intrum on Piraeus’ €300 million Project Senna securitization

Law firm White & Case LLP has advised Intrum Holding AB (Intrum) on a securitisation involving Piraeus Bank’s Project Senna non-performing loan portfolio.

“Intrum and Piraeus Bank have already closed seven other securitisations as part of their successful strategic partnership, now totaling more than €17 billion gross book value,” said White & Case partner Dennis Heuer, who co-led the Firm’s deal team.

The Project Senna portfolio consists of loans with a total gross book value of €300 million at March 31, 2023. It is held by Senna NPL Finance DAC and consists of approximately 60% small-sized mortgages, and 40% consumer and small business loans. 

Piraeus and Intrum have agreed that Intrum Hellas will act as servicer of the Project Senna portfolio, and Intrum has agreed to acquire the entirety of the notes of the securitisation from Piraeus.

Original Story: White & Case | Press Release 
Photo: Piraeus Bank
Edition: Prime Yield

Bad debt fell in July and lending slowed down

According to the latest data published by the Central Bank, the household default rate with free resources fell from 6.30% to 6.21% between June and July. Boa Vista’s Default Records indicator anticipated this movement, as it had fallen by 0.5% in the monthly comparison and in the long-term analysis the growth slowed even further.

“This was the second drop in the household default rate this year, the first was between February and March, but this time it seems to have been more consistent. The long-term trend of the Boa Vista indicator already indicated that, even disregarding the effect of ‘Desenrola’, the number of registrations and, consequently, the default rate had reached a turning point. Of course, the effect of the programme can’t be ruled out and it’s expected to be even greater in the coming months, but the fact that delinquency didn’t necessarily fall in the more expensive credit lines, such as revolving credit cards, instalments and overdrafts, also drew some attention, although it did fall in non-consigned personal loans. It’s still too early to make a diagnosis of the programme, which only started in the second half of July. It will have the effect of reducing defaults, but the efficiency of the renegotiations that are being made could be put to the test if the most expensive accounts remain open,” says Flávio Calife, an economist at Boa Vista.

The average interest rate charged to families when granting free resources fell in July from 47.44% to 47.07% due to a reduction in the cost of funding and the banking spread, as had happened in June. The granting of these loans rose 8.1% year-on-year, but remained on a path of decelerated growth in the 12-month accumulated variation.

“The start of the cycle of cuts in the Selic rate and the Copom’s signalling that the pace can be maintained in the next few meetings are arguments that favour the fall in the cost of funding, as happened in June and July, but it’s important to note that this has been going on since April, when inflation data was already starting to look better, indicating that the downward cycle was approaching. As defaults went sideways in June and fell in July, the spread has also fallen, but it’s important to emphasise that interest rates are still high and that’s why lending continues to slow down. Boa Vista’s Demand for Credit indicator is anticipating this trend very closely. It had risen by 9.7% compared to July last year, and over 12 months it shows growth of 12.4%, while lending is up 12.5% on the same basis of comparison,” concludes Calife.

Original Story: Monitor Mercantil | News room
Photo: BBVA website
Edition and translation: Prime Yield

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