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Finance 10/05/2017 Fitch: Most Uzbek Banks Resilient to Depreciation of soum
Fitch: Most Uzbek Banks Resilient to Depreciation of soum
Tashkent, Uzbekistan (UzDaily.com) -- Fitch Ratings says that most of the Uzbek banks it rates are resilient to depreciation of the Uzbek som, which is possible over the medium term as the authorities plan to liberalise the foreign-exchange market and relax regulation of conversion operations. However, a few banks are vulnerable to large falls to the som.

Fitch has assessed Uzbek banks’ resilience to depreciation of the som under different scenarios.

“We estimate that Uzbek Industrial and Construction Bank Joint-Stock Commercial Bank (UPSB), Microcreditbank, PJSB Trustbank and Universal Bank could withstand depreciation of 50% without breaching regulatory capital limits, while Asaka and IpakYuli could withstand a fall of 20% but may need extra capital or forbearance in the event of larger falls. OJSC Agrobank already breaches minimum ratios,” the agency said.

“We believe that direct foreign-currency (FC) risks are low, as all Fitch-rated Uzbek banks have long or fully closed FC positions. However, free conversion of local currency could lead to increased deposit dollarisation, leaving banks exposed to short FC positions. Banks might then have to issue more FC loans to close their FC positions, as financial hedging instruments are not widely available in Uzbekistan. However, this could increase asset-quality risks, as borrowers may not have currency hedges,” Fitch Ratings underlined.

“Depreciation of the som would hit banks’ capitalisation through inflation of FC-denominated assets, but we believe the impact would be moderate. Devaluation could also undermine the quality of FC loans, which are high at UPSB (82% of loans at end-1Q17) and Asaka (54%), and significant at IpakYuli (25%). Most of UPSB and Asaka’s FC exposures are to borrowers with FC revenues and/or are guaranteed by the state, which limit the risks to asset quality from currency falls, but FC exposures at IpakYuli are more vulnerable,” Fitch Ratings stated.

The agency said that reported FC borrowing other than customer accounts is high at UPSB (73% of total liabilities), moderate at Asaka and IpakYuli (31% and 19%, respectively), and low in all other banks. The banks’ short-term foreign debt repayments are small (below 5% of total liabilities in 2017) and linked to loan repayments. FC liquidity is moderate at UPSB (17% of total FC borrowings) and Asaka (33%), and strong at IpakYuli (68%).

“In our view, the state’s ability to provide support in FC is solid as reflected by large sovereign FC reserves of about USD25 billion at end-2016, equal to about 2x the banking sector’s total FC liabilities, or 11x its external debt. State guarantees already cover a significant part of external FC funding at UPSB and Asaka,” Fitch Ratings said.

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