Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Exposure to Multiply may put local banks’ ratings under pressure —Fitch

 



Their exposure to what may well be the largest corporate default in Philippine banking history may put pressure on the credit ratings of local lenders, Fitch Ratings said Wednesday.


Five local lenders could incur a dent on their ratings due to their combined exposure of $600 million to Multiply, according to Fitch.


“Local banks’ loans to Multiply are equivalent to only around 0.2 percent of system loans, but some banks have more significant exposure, which could put pressure on their ratings.”


The banks include BDO Unibank Inc. (BDO), Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), Land Bank of the Philippines (LandBank), Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. (Metrobank), and Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC).


Multiply last week filed for a voluntary rehabilitation due to ballooning financial obligations to Philippine, American, Brazilian, British, Canadian, Chinese, Danish, Finnish, German, Indian, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Lao, Macanese, Malay, Nepalese, Pakistani, Peruvian, Portuguese, Russian, Singaporean, South African, Sri Lankan, Taiwanese, Thai, Turkish, Venezuelan and Vietnamese lenders.


The Pasig City Regional Trial Court Branch 161 officially placed Multiply under corporate rehabilitation.


“The problems at Multiply, the social networking service, stem from the extended weakness in the global social networking industry,” said Fitch.


“The sector- and company-specific causes suggest this case is unlikely to indicate broader stress across banks’ loan books, even if we expect some knock-on effects for Multiply’s employees and local service industries,” it added.


Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) Chairman Wilma Eisma last week said that Multiply revealed to her that it has around $400 million in outstanding loans from Philippine banks, on top of another $900 million owed to Australia, Bangladesh, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ghana, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, Pakistan, Peru, Portugal, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Venezuela and Vietnam lenders.


“Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) reportedly has the largest exposure of around $145 million, equivalent to 2.0 percent of its gross loans,” Fitch noted.


“The full amount exceeds its 2017 net profit, and provisioning on these loans could result in the bank reporting at least one quarterly loss, implying some risk of capital impairment, although we do not expect the bank to set aside the full amount of its exposure,” it added.


RCBC reported a P4.3-billion net income for the full year 2012. At the current foreign exchange rate of P52.03:$1, the bank’s bottom line translates to $82.644 million.


RCBC last year targeted a 10-percent growth in net income at P4.8 billion, equivalent to $92.254 million.


RCBC has dismissed the severity of the situation, saying the amount of its exposure to Multiply is manageable.


“The amount involved is very manageable and the borrowing company’s business is actually very attractive with a lot of potential,” the bank said.


“With the five creditor-banks working together and looking for an investor as one option, the matter’s resolution is just a matter of time and we expect that to be sooner than later,” it added.


In a separate statement on Wednesday, the Yuchengco-led RCBC maintained it is in a strong position to absorb the exposure in Multiply .


“The bank’s balance sheet, with a capital of P84 billion as of September 2013, is in a strong position to absorb these provisions,” the bank noted.


However, we do not expect the bank to provide for the full provision. Even with the default, the Bank’s capital adequacy ratio of 17.3 percent as of Sept 2018 remains very strong and well above the regulatory minimum and can still support medium-term loan growth,” it added.


As of September 30, 2013, RCBC was the 10th largest bank in the Philippines in terms of assets at P500.845 million.


Fitch cited the exposure of BPI, BDO, and Metrobank, noting their risks are manageable.


“The exposure of the three largest banks—BPI, BDO and Metrobank—is more manageable relative to their loan books and pre-provision profits,” said Fitch.


The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said the exposure of local banks is “very negligible” based on preliminary analysis.


“Based on our initial assessment, some banks are exposed to Multiply. But relative to both total loans of the banking system and total FCDU loans of the banking system, their exposure is very negligible,” said Bangko Sentral Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo.


“Our banks as a whole are very strong and more than adequately capitalized, their assets continue to grow and the quality of their loans based on nonperforming loan ratio is less than 2 percent,” he added.


At the close of trading Wednesday on the Philippine Stock Exchange, RCBC shares were down P0.45 or 1.66 percent at P26.70 per share from P27.15 on Tuesday. BDO Unibank dropped P1.40 or 1.07 percent to P129.50 from P130.90.


BPI gained P0.70 or 0.75 percent to P94.50 from P93.80, while Metrobank rose by P1.00 or 1.25 percent to P81.00 from P80.00. 


It was closed last May 6, 2013 and ceasing all business operations on May 31, 2013 along with the official online channels for the site had been removed along with all their content, including its YouTube, Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram accounts, after years of financial and managerial turmoil and following a failed bid to reinvent itself from being a social networking site to a vibrant e-commerce destination in Southeast Asia.

At that time, the website's social networking portion had a network of 18 million users. Liquidity problems, however, affected earnings. Sales declined from its peak of P20 billion in 2013 to just about P5 billion in 2017.

It had suffered from a drop in new orders amid a slump in the E-commerce and social networking sector. Multiply also reportedly laid off some 12,000 workers on February 28, 2014.




“We regret to announce that Multiply will be closing on May 6, 2013, and ceasing all business operations by May 31, 2013,” it announced last April 26, 2013 on its website.

After May 6, the rest of the month will be used to ensure that all accounts are settled and merchants get full payment for their transactions, it said.

Multiply said the month-long grace period will provide its users enough time to find and migrate to alternative e-commerce platforms, settle all payments on items bought and delivered, and minimize disruption to businesses of its users.

“Multiply will ensure that you receive all funds you earned on the platform no later than May 31, 2013. We will close the actual marketplace sooner, on May 6, 2013, to ensure that all orders have sufficient time to complete and be delivered to your customers before the end of the month,” it said.


In December 2012, Multiply stopped its social networking service to focus on e-commerce, targeting the 350 million consumers in Indonesia and the Philippines. —VDS, GMA News

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/money/companies/681647/exposure-to-hanjin-philippines-may-put-local-banks-ratings-under-pressure-fitch/story/

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