Quotes: US MENA   Enter Symbol: NewsLetter: Search: advanced

Syria's banks come under pressure from declining deposits and rising bad loans  Join our daily free Newsletter

MENAFN - Jordan Times - 23/02/2012

No. of Ratings : 0
Digg This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093486192 Share This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093486192 Add to Delicious Seed this article Buzz this article Add to Reddit Add to furl Add to stumbleupon Add to Mixx!


 


(MENAFN - Jordan Times) Unrest in Syria is causing chaos at the country's banks which will struggle this year in the face of rapidly declining deposits and rising bad loans.

The banks posted bumper profits last year as a plunge in Syria's currency boosted foreign exchange gains.

The country's 14 privately owned banks, mostly subsidiaries of Arab banks, have weathered the 11-month uprising against President Bashar Al Assad's rule, and the civil unrest and international sanctions that have accompanied it, thanks largely to a windfall from their foreign currency holdings in the wake of a 39 per cent depreciation in the Syrian pound.

The central bank has encouraged banks to maintain high foreign currency holdings as the country's foreign exchange reserves have diminished since the political turmoil began.

Net profit at Chambank, one of three private Islamic banks in Syria and 32 per cent owned by Commercial Bank of Kuwait , soared 553 per cent last year, standing out among a string of strong earnings reports from the banking sector.

"A lot of the Syrian private banks held a lot of dollars and because of that this gave them a huge windfall. They took advantage and made exceptional profits," said Talal Samhouri, a Jordan-based financial expert and asset manager.

Surging profits, however, masked lower operating income and a fall in the value of banks' assets, which will become much more evident this year. Chambank had to set aside nearly the same amount as its net profit to cover doubtful loans last year.

Until the uprising a year ago, banks had enjoyed a decade-long credit boom after the state relinquished its monopoly on the sector, making banks the showcase of economic liberalisation as they took advantage of an under-banked market in the country of 20 million.

Now analysts question how many banks will survive as the uprising and Western sanctions have crippled Syria's economy and triggered capital flight, causing total bank deposits to drop by almost a third since the unrest began.

Customers are still switching to dollars and hoarding savings or smuggling them to the relative safety of neighbouring markets such as Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey, bankers say.

"Banks are facing dire pressures that could threaten the very survival of some of the smaller banks if operational revenues continue to plunge dramatically. We could even see mergers or bankruptcies down the road if Syria slides into civil war ," said one banker at a prominent Lebanese bank.

Before the uprising, the total assets of Syrian banks, public and private, stood at two trillion Syrian pounds (43 billion), a small amount compared with neighbouring countries.

Syria's four state-owned banks still have a dominant share of the local market, although most non-governmental business goes to the 14 private banks.

Offshoots of Lebanese banks, the first to enter the Syrian market and whose Syrian operations had driven their profits in recent years, appear more resilient than later arrivals including the units of Gulf and Jordanian banks, bankers say.

Syria's old mercantile class, which traditionally did business through Lebanon's banking system and still has large shareholdings in some Lebanese banks' Syrian branches, provides a solid customer base for Lebanese banks.

Aggressive lending by late entrants to the Syrian market in the last few years means their loan portfolios could expose them more to bad debts, bankers said.

Syria International Islamic Bank, 30 per cent owned by Qatar International Islamic Bank, posted a 12 per cent rise in pretax profit last year after expanding aggressively in recent years, but is one of the banks that has now put aside hefty provisions against possible loan losses, bankers added.

"The Lebanese banks have already passed stages that we are still going through. In our case it's still the launching stage, with costs...for branches that need to be set up. The damage will be bigger," indicated a manager of a bank in Damascus with a large Jordanian shareholding, who asked not to be identified.

Lebanon's Audi Bank, for example, saw its Syrian deposit base roughly halve last year but still turned a profit in Syria despite an 83 per cent drop in net income as it cushioned its balance sheet with hefty provisions in anticipation of more bad debts.

Liquidity problems

As the unrest has now spread to large swathes of Damascus and to the country's economic capital Aleppo, bankers fear a plunge in the value of real estate collateral could further expose troubled loan portfolios.

Non-performing loans have already shot up to at least 10 per cent of private banks' total loans, which bankers estimate at around 254 billion Syrian pounds, with more corporate clients asking for lengthy five-year debt rescheduling deals as widening unrest pushes more and more customers to default, bankers say.

On top of this, Syria's central bank raised interest rates from the start of this year to between 9 and 11 per cent on deposits, from 6-7 per cent, to stem the run on the banks, adding to banks' costs.

Tightening sanctions by Belgium-based SWIFT, which provides banks with a system for moving funds around the world, have made it harder for banks in Syria to transfer foreign currency. More customers now head to Lebanon and Jordan to open letters of credit in dollars and even to do normal commercial transfers with parties overseas, which Syrian banks can no longer undertake.

Bankers say few banks are willing to sell scarce foreign currency to customers - even after the central bank last month lifted restrictions on the sale of dollars at market prices, a move aimed at relieving pressure on state banks' financing of imports.

The central bank requires banks to have cash to cover at least 30 per cent of their foreign currency holdings and deposits; banks still comfortably exceed that minimum. But bankers are privately worried that the worsening security situation could accelerate the hemorrhage in deposits, which had shown some signs of abating in recent months.

"The biggest coming challenge that relates to risk in the Syrian banking sector is the growing liquidity problem," said a senior banker at a leading privately-owned bank in Syria, who requested anonymity.

He indicated that some banks were already putting together contingency plans that could involve asking for central bank support, such as a currency swap which would allow banks to obtain Syrian pounds if there were a bigger run on deposits. Another rescue step might be a cut in the minimum reserves which Syrian banks are required to hold.

But other bankers say Syrian authorities have traditionally eyed the country's mainly foreign-owned private banks with suspicion, so they doubt the authorities would come to the banks' defence in the event of a major crisis.

"The central bank doesn't...view private banks as instrumental to spurring the economy," a Syrian banker familiar with central bank thinking said, noting that monetary authorities had failed to give banks dollars despite pledges to do so in recent weeks.

"I doubt they will intervene. They will just add pressure on us to increase provisions, and won't give us much flexibility," he added.

 






  MENA News Headlines
May 23 2013Brazil to open huge oil field to auction ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Brazil on Thursday said it will auction concessions to drill and explore an offshore oil field believed to hold up to 12 billion barrels of crude, the country's largest find. The ...

May 23 2013IMF chief grilled in Paris court over 2007 payout scandal ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) IMF chief Christine Lagarde faces another day of questioning after being grilled for hours Thursday by French prosecutors who are deciding if she should be charged over a state ...

May 23 2013Oil recovers after dive on Chinese data ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Global oil prices closed little changed Thursday, recovering from sharper losses earlier in the day after weak Chinese manufacturing data. New York's main contract, West Texas ...

May 23 2013Researcher admits mistakes in stem cell study ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) A blockbuster study in which US researchers reported that they had turned human skin cells into embryonic stem cells contained errors, its lead author has acknowledged. Shoukhrat ...

May 23 20135,000 cave paintings discovered in Mexico ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Archeologists have found nearly 5,000 cave paintings made by hunter-gatherers in a northeastern Mexico mountain range where pre-Hispanic groups were not known to have existed. The ...

May 23 2013Germany 'most popular country' in the world: poll ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Germany is the most popular country in the world despite well-publicised protests against its insistence on austerity measures within the European Union, an annual poll for the BBC ...

May 23 2013NYSE says to spin off, not sell Euronext ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) NYSE Euronext with spin off European stock exchange group Euronext via an initial public offer rather than sell it following its merger with InterContinentalExchange (ICE), a senior ...

May 23 2013Softbank yields to US security concerns on Sprint ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Amid a heated takeover battle for US wireless carrier Sprint, Japan's Softbank has taken unusual steps to allay national security concerns about the deal, but a rival bid claims this ...

May 23 2013China clears Boeing 787s for nation's airlines: Boeing ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Chinese regulators have approved the Boeing 787 to fly in the country, Boeing said Thursday, a move that opens up a large potential market to the US aerospace giant. "I can confirm ...

May 23 2013H7N9 bird flu can spread in mammals: study ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) The H7N9 strain of bird flu can spread among ferrets and could do the same among humans under certain conditions, according to lab animal studies on the virus published Thursday. So ...

more...


 
Click to Apply






Google

 
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network

MENAFN News Market Data Countries Tools Section  
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network
Arabic MENAFN

Main News
News By Industry
News By Country
Marketwatch News
UPI News
Comtex News

IPO News
Islamic Finance News
Private Equity News

How-To Guides
Technology Section

Travel Section

Search News

Market Indices
Quotes & Charts

Global Indices
Arab Indices

US Markets Details

Commodoties

Oil & Energy

Currencies Cross Rates
Currencies Updates
Currency Converter

USA Stocks
Arab Stocks
 

Algeria 
Bahrain 
Egypt 
Iraq
Jordan 
Kuwait 
Lebanon
Morocco 
Oman 
Palestine
Qatar 
Saudi Arabia 
Syria
Tunisia 
UAE 
Yemen

Weather
Investment Game
Economic Calendar
Financial Glossary

My MENAFN
Portfolio Tracker

Voting

Financial Calculators

RSS Feeds [XML]

Corporate Monitor

Events

Real Estate
Submit Your Property

Arab Research
Buy a Research

Press Releases
Submit your PR

Join Newsletters


 
© 2000 menafn.com All Rights Reserved.  Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | About MENAFN | Career Opportunities | Feedback | Help