Friday, November 30, 2012

Slovenia – Publicly-owned bank NLB announces plan to boost its share capital by € 375 mln but government denies it has the necessary funds; government to send to parliament proposed amendments to increase the authority of the central bank; Probanka registers net loss of € 30 mln for 9M 2012 due to provisions for NPLs; IMF issues notice and country report on Slovenia


On 28 November the management of Slovenia’s largest bank, the state-owned bank NLB (Nova Ljubljanska banka d.d.), announced that the bank’s supervisory board, in a meeting held on the previous day, had voted to call a general meeting of shareholders for 29 December in order to consider a proposal to increase the bank’s share capital by € 375 mln.

As of 30 September 2012 the bank’s capital consisted of 12,548,930 shares, and as of 30 June 2012 the book value of shares was € 90.3 per share.  As of 30 September the bank's largest shareholders were the Slovenian government (40.21%), the Belgian bank KBC Bank (22.04%), the national pension fund Kapitalska družba (9.99%), and the national remuneration fund Slovenska odškodninska družba (9.00%).  At 30 September 2012 NLB's market share in Slovenia in terms of total assets (tržni delež po bilančni vsoti) was 25.2%.

Sources:
NLB official announcement: Sporočila za javnost - 40. redna seja Nadzornega sveta NLB (2012-11-28)
NLB financial statements for 3Q 2012: Medletno poročilo - september 2012


Later that same day (28 November), the Minister of Finance, Janez Šušteršič, stated publicly that the Slovenian government does not have € 375 mln to spare to recapitalize NLB, and that in fact it might be in the state’s interest to sell its share in the bank.  Nevertheless, analysts note that recent results of NLB’s second-largest shareholder, the Belgian bank KBC, have not been positive enough that KBC would be able to invest any large part of the € 375 mln being sought.  Because Slovenia’s second-largest bank (NKBM) and third-largest bank will also need recapitalization, analysts and economists consider it most likely that the recapitalization of all three banks will come from Slovenian government funds.



Also on 28 November, the government of Slovenia adopted proposed amendments to the law on banking, which will now be sent to the National Assembly.  The amendments would clarify the role and powers of the central bank – Banka Slovenije – giving the bank, for example, the authority to force banks to recapitalize even if they do not wish to.



In another sign of Slovenian banking woes, on 30 November the commercial bank Probanka (Probanka, d.d., Maribor) published a brief summary of its financial results for 9M 2012, in which it indicated a net loss for the period (čisti dobiček/čista izguba poslovnega obdobja) of € 30.23 mln, in marked contrast to the modest net profit of € 1.70 mln earned in the year-earlier period.  While both interest income and income from fees/commissions were down from the year-earlier period, the major part of the loss came from provisions for impaired assets, which totaled € 36.66 mln during 9M 2012, four times the provisions in the year-earlier period (€ 9.16 mln).

On 30 September 2012 the bank’s total assets were € 1,077 mln – 2.3% of the total assets of the Slovenian banking system – down from € 1,155 in the year-earlier period.

Sources:


In other news, on 29 November the International Monetary fund published a short informational notice and a lengthy (56 pp.) country report on Slovenia.  The following is the entire text of the informational notice, approximately half of which deals with the banking system (emphasis as per original):

On November 21, 2012, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation with Slovenia.
Background
With a loss of more than 8 percent of GDP, Slovenia experienced one of the largest economic contractions since 2008 among euro area countries. The timid externally-driven recovery observed in 2010 faded as export growth slowed, deleveraging picked up pace, and fiscal consolidation started. The recession intensified in 2012, as euro area growth decelerated, external financial conditions worsened, and private consumption growth turned negative. Unemployment reached 8.4 percent in August 2012. Inflation has been kept in check by weak demand and averaged below the euro area aggregate, more so in core indicators. The current account reached broad balance in 2011 and a moderate surplus is expected for this year, largely as a result of import compression. With stringent financial and economic conditions continuing in the euro area, deleveraging, and fiscal consolidation, staff expects the economy to contract by 2¼ percent in 2012 with growth resuming in the second half of 2013 led by the projected euro area recovery.
The performance of Slovenian banks deteriorated markedly in recent years as a result of the unfavorable operating environment. Bank asset quality worsened substantially since 2007, especially in publicly-owned banks. Of particular concern are loans to the over-indebted corporate sector. The increase in non-performing loans (NPLs) resulted in substantial impairment charges, leading to system-wide bank losses in the last two years and repeated downgrades of bank ratings. Although capital adequacy improved in 2011, many banks will need further capital increases. The loan-to-deposit ratio remains high, and banks have replaced lost external commercial funding with government deposits and ECB financing. Alongside an external assessment of the size of bank losses, the government is creating an asset management company to deal with NPLs and is elaborating a strategy to reform governance of publicly-owned banks.
The headline deficit is set to drop to around 3½ percent of GDP in 2012 from 4.3 percent of GDP in 2011 (excluding capital injections to publicly-owned banks and corporations), and the 2013 headline deficit target is 2.8 percent of GDP in spite of weaker-than-expected economic activity. The authorities target a structurally-balanced budget by 2015, with adjustment frontloaded in 2012 and 2013. Under the staff’s baseline scenario, which conservatively assumes a debt increase of about 11 percent of GDP in connection with bank restructuring, the debt-to-GDP ratio would peak around 70 percent of GDP around 2016 and gradually fall thereafter. However, Slovenia has one of the most adverse pension expenditure dynamics in the euro area, and further action will be required after the realization of current pension reform plans. After more than a year of absence from the long-term markets, the government cash position was alleviated thanks to a successful 10-year bond issuance in US dollars on October 19. This is Slovenia's first dollar-denominated bond since 1996.
Executive Board Assessment
Executive Directors noted that Slovenia’s economy is suffering from the negative feedback loops of recession, bank deleveraging, and corporate distress against a background of structural weaknesses, financial sector vulnerabilities, and weak domestic and external demand. They underlined the need for strong and prompt action to address these problems. In this regard, Directors considered appropriate the authorities’ emphasis on fiscal consolidation and their plans for ambitious and comprehensive structural reforms to restore macroeconomic and financial stability and economic growth. They looked forward to swift implementation of the reform agenda.
Directors welcomed the proposed establishment of a Bank Asset Management Company to address the build-up of nonperforming loans, stressing that timely implementation will be of the essence. Directors noted that publicly-owned banks may need more capital, while the corporate sector is highly leveraged. They encouraged the authorities to move decisively to restructure, recapitalize and ultimately privatize banks and corporations, which will also help strengthen governance. Directors welcomed the authorities’ efforts to implement the FSAP recommendations. In particular, they emphasized the importance of strengthening the regulatory and supervisory framework and improving macroprudential oversight and crisis contingency arrangements.
Directors commended the progress with fiscal consolidation and the efforts to strengthen the fiscal framework. They supported the front-loaded, expenditure-based consolidation as necessary to bolster market confidence. They encouraged focusing on structural rather than on nominal targets, and endorsed the goal of a structural balanced budget by 2015 net of bank restructuring costs. Directors called for a strengthening of the quality of adjustment and fiscal governance, including through a constitutional structural balance rule with a debt brake and enhanced medium-term fiscal planning.
Directors emphasized the importance of structural reforms to ensure fiscal sustainability, enhance competitiveness, and spur growth. They considered the current pension reform proposals to be a step in the right direction, but observed that more decisive measures will be needed to ensure medium-term fiscal and debt sustainability. Directors welcomed the engagement with social partners on labor market reform, which is essential to reduce market segmentation and improve competitiveness. They also called for improvements to the business climate to attract foreign investment.



Below are excerpts from the country report, which enters into considerably greater detail than the informa­tional notice (emphasis as per original):


C. Financial Sector: Dealing with NPLs and Improving Bank Governance
11. The performance of Slovenian banks deteriorated markedly in recent years as a result of the unfavorable operating environment and weak governance. Bank asset quality worsened substantially since 2007, with a heavy concentration in the large publicly-owned banks. Of particular concern are loans to the over-indebted corporate sector, which is facing sluggish domestic and external demand. The largest firms, especially in the construction sector (mostly infrastructure), have been the worst hit. The increase in NPLs resulted in substantial impairment charges, leading to system-wide bank losses in the last two years and repeated downgrades of bank ratings with the largest publicly-owned banks losing investment grade.
12. Although capital adequacy improved in 2011, many banks will need further capital increases. The aggregate total capital adequacy ratio stood at 12 percent as of December 2011, up from 11.3 percent in 2010, mainly due to capital injections in six banks for €458 million and deleveraging. However, banks’ continuing losses are eroding their capital. To meet EBA requirements, the largest publicly-owned bank Nova Ljubljanska Banka (NLB), was recapitalized again by €383 million in June 2012, and further recapitalization of this and some other banks may be needed after the planned restructuring. While the recent capital injection included €320 million through a contingent convertible bond, the ECB has noted that it generally prefers issuances of shares against cash contributions for financial stability reasons. The authorities have taken note of this preference and plan to act accordingly.
13. Despite some deleveraging, banks are still heavily dependent on wholesale funding from abroad, and increasingly on the ECB. Although banks have lost access to external commercial funding since 2009, the loan-to-deposit ratio remains high at 137 percent at end-March 2012. Banks have replaced external funding with government deposits and ECB financing, which increased by €3.4 billion mostly as result of LTROs. Target2 liabilities have increased to over €5.0 billion. The ratio of domestic deposits to GDP has been broadly stable so far, and the government’s deposits are mostly long term. Thanks to the large use of the LTRO facility and the ample availability of ECB-eligible collateral, the bank liquidity position is still comfortable. However, further downgrades of the sovereign could reduce the pool of eligible assets and domestic deposits may decline in relation to GDP.
14. The authorities are moving to strengthen the financial sector broadly in line with FSAP recommendations. The FSAP noted that the risks to systemic financial stability stemmed mainly from the negative macroeconomic outlook and the high dependence of banks on external funding. With real estate being a major form of collateral, the real estate price risk is of particular concern.
15. The authorities announced a comprehensive plan to address financial sector vulnerabilities. The authorities have moved to obtain an external assessment of the size and distribution of bank losses, to create an asset management company, and to define a strategy for capitalizing and restructuring troubled banks and non-financial corporates.
·  Diagnostic process. According to the standard definition used by the Bank of Slovenia (i.e. assets with more than 90 days arrears) total NPLs were € 6.3 billion as of June 2012 (13.2 percent of classified claims). Based also on due diligence exercises (already completed for NLB and to be completed by the end of the year for Nova Kreditna Banka Maribor and Abanka), the government intends to transfer up to €3 billion of assets from the banks to the new asset management company (see below), comprising both non-performing and highrisk ones.
·   Bank Asset Management Company (BAMC). In October, the parliament voted the law on financial stability creating the BAMC as a public agency, which is subject to oversight by the supreme audit institution and the parliament. The new agency should be operational by the end-2012 or early-2013. The BAMC can issue a maximum €4 billion of governmentguaranteed bonds (about 11 percent of GDP). The acquisition price for impaired assets will be the “real long-term value,” following the EC State Aide guidelines. The BAMC will have the instruments and the power to seek a quick resolution of the impaired assets, be it by restructuring the corporate or by liquidating it and selling its collateral and assets. Bankruptcy procedures where the BAMC is involved are to be concluded within six months. The BAMC is to be wound down after five years, at which point the remaining assets will be establishing BAMC is to privatize the banks once they have been cleaned up and recapitalized. While public debt will increase when the BAMC’s bonds are issued, this debt should be partially repaid with the proceeds from the liquidation of assets, including the privatization of the banks and other corporations that end up in the BAMC’s portfolio.
·   Bank capitalization and restructuring. Banks needing recapitalization after selling their impaired assets to the BAMC will have to prepare a restructuring plan, which will be submitted to the EC within six months of receiving recapitalization. The government estimates that banks may need to be recapitalized for up to € 1 billion (2¾ percent of GDP) to cover the losses due to the difference between the book value of the transferred assets net of provisions and the actual price paid by the BAMC as well as future losses deriving from the possible worsening of the bank assets in the future.
·   The SSH. Also in October, the parliament passed a law to create the SSH to unify the management of all publicly owned corporations, clean up their finances, and define a strategy that includes the target stakes in different types of corporations and sectors, including full and partial privatizations. Addressing the financial weakness of the corporate sector is a necessary complement to the restructuring of the banks.
16. Yet the implementation of the plan as well as some of the FSAP recommendations will need the authorities’ strong effort. The steps taken thus far are substantial, but are just the initial ones.
·  Bank recapitalization and restructuring. The authorities and staff agreed that the BAMC should be independent and free of political pressures, appropriately funded, able to hire the best talent, fully accountable for its actions, transparent, and subject to external professional auditing. Staff noted that bringing banks back to a healthy state requires addressing the corporate sector debt overhang, possibly through debt to equity swaps. They should move at once to transfer the impaired assets out of the troubled banks and to subsequently recapitalize those banks. To determine capitalization needs in addition to those arising from the below-book value asset transfers to the BAMC, staff recommended thorough stress tests on the banks’ remaining assets. Staff welcomed the clear and short deadlines set in the law for the acquisition of the assets and their subsequent sale, as well at the provisions to reinforce the transparency of its governance. Staff also encouraged the authorities to engage at least one international expert in the board of the BAMC to ensure its effectiveness and the adoption of solid international practices.
·   Bank privatization and governance. Staff also encouraged the authorities to move quickly to privatize banks to bring about the needed change in their governance and commercial cultures. The changes in the management of the two largest banks may not be enough to end the public sector’s interference with the commercial orientation of banks. The authorities agreed that privatization is important but noted that reducing public ownership to below the blocking minority share of 25 percent requires broader political support.
·   Crisis preparedness. Staff recommended a prompt discussion and adoption of the draft Banking and Recovery and Resolution Acts, which enhance the powers and resources of the Bank of Slovenia to deal effectively with financial sector crises. These drafts provide adequate legal protection of bank supervisors in civil and criminal court proceedings, and empower the Bank of Slovenia to define the requirements for major acquisitions by banks, subjecting them to its approval. In addition, staff recommended periodic stress tests to monitor the quality of bank assets as well as capital adequacy as economic conditions continue to be challenging.



Mark Pleas
Eastern Europe Banking & Deposits Consultant