S&P Global Ratings: The Overall Effect Of IFRS 9 On Rated Gulf Cooperation Council Banks' Financial Profiles Will Be Manageable, Says Report


(MENAFNEditorial)

In the run-up to the adoption of IFRS 9 in January 2018, S & P Global Ratings has assessed the potential impact on the GCC banks that it rates. We expect that GCC banks will show resilience to the change in reporting standard, with the impact on their financial profiles manageable on average. This is thanks to GCC banks' relatively good earning capacity and conservative approach to provisioning. We focused on the quality of banks' lending portfolios, and excluded other assets in scope of IFRS 9 when estimating lifetime expected losses due to a lack of public disclosure. We included these assets in our normalized losses calculation.

DUBAI (S & P Global Ratings) May 29, 2017--The impact of International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) 9 'Financial Instruments' on the financial profiles
of the rated banks in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) will be manageable, according to a report published today by S & P Global Ratings.

IFRS 9 is due to be implemented on Jan. 1, 2018, and will require banks to take a more forward-looking approach to provisioning. At the moment, banks are required to set aside specific provisions only when they incur losses, or when the counterparty or financial asset defaults on its obligations. Under IFRS 9,
banks will have to set aside provisions in advance, based on their loss expectations.

'Our view that the impact of IFRS 9 will be manageable is due in part to the relatively conservative approach that GCC banks already take to calculating and setting aside loan-loss provisions,' said S & P Global Ratings credit analyst Mohamed Damak. 'Some banks, for example those in Kuwait, take a
conservative approach as part of local regulatory requirements to set aside general provisions for all their lending portfolios.'

Under our base-case scenario, rated GCC banks will have to set aside additional provisions equivalent to 17% of their net operating income on average following the adoption of IFRS 9. Excluding banks with no provision shortfall, the same measure rises to 27% under the base-case scenario.

However, these results mask significant differences between banks.

The least affected rated banks would be in Kuwait. This is because the regulator already requires banks in Kuwait to set aside a general provision on their performing facilities equivalent to 1% of cash facilities and 0.5% of non-cash facilities.

The most affected rated banks would be in Qatar, primarily due to the specific cases of a couple of Qatari banks that have either seen a significant deterioration in their asset quality indicators, or an increase in past due but not impaired loans, over the past couple of years.

We calibrated our assumptions based on rated GCC banks' balance sheet structures. The same methodology and assumptions might not be applicable to
other banks or other jurisdictions.

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