RAM Ratings reaffirms SMIB's ratings
RAM Ratings Lanka has reaffirmed the long and short-term financial
institutions ratings of A and P1 for State Mortgage and Investment Bank
(SMIB).
The long term rating has a stable outlook.
The ratings are based on the Bank's strong capitalisation and the
financial flexibility it derives from its sole shareholder, the
Government of Sri Lanka (GOSL).
However, the ratings are moderated by SMIB's higher than industry
level of non performing loans (NPLs) and the substantial negative gap in
its short-term asset liability maturity mismatch (ALMM).
SMIB is a licensed specialised bank (LSB), created by the GOSL under
the SMIB Act No. 13 of 1975. SMIB comes under the purview of the
Ministry of Finance and Planning (MOF).
While the Bank is permitted, as per the Act, to provide loans for
housing and agricultural purposes, its main role is as an institution
that fulfils the GOSL's social obligations vis a vis facilitating home
ownership for the masses.
Despite its conservative lending in the recent past, the Bank's NPLs
have increased and remain significantly higher than its peers'.
SMIB recorded a gross NPL ratio of 37.02 percent as at end December
2009 (end December 2008: 27.58 percent); this remained unchanged as at
end September 2010.
The high NPL levels mainly stem from its EPF backed lending
portfolio, which accounted for about 48.75 percent of its total loans as
at end September 2010.
However, SMIB bears no default risk for these loans as they are
backed by the borrowers' EPF funds. Nevertheless, the Bank's NPL ratio
on conventional mortgages remained weak at 14.81 percent as at end
September 2010 (industry: 10.14 percent).
Its social obligation of lending to the low and middle income
segments exerts downward pressure on the Bank's credit quality, due to
its customers' weaker repayment ability.
Notably, SMIB's focus on long tenured mortgage loans funded by its
short-term deposit base has rendered its ALMM position weak. While the
negative gap in the Bank's ALMM had narrowed as at FY Dec 2009. We
expect the gap to widen again as it expands its loan book. Nonetheless,
SMIB's liquidity issues are moderated by its strong deposit franchise
(anchored by state support).
Public deposits took up 79.89 percent of SMIB's total funding as at
end FY Dec 2009 (end FY Dec 2008: 75.92 percent).
Owing to its state ownership and its social agenda, SMIB derives
financial flexibility from the GOSL.
That said, RAM Ratings Lanka has accorded limited benefit to this
financial flexibility given the Bank's restricted scope, i.e. its focus
on housing loans and the fact that its role can be easily replicated by
bigger and more systemically important state-backed financial
institutions.
SMIB's performance had strengthened during the period under review.
The Bank recorded a net interest margin (NIM) of 4.44 percent for FY Dec
2009 (FY Dec 2008: 3.47 percent).
This ameliorated further to 8.21 percent as at end September 2010, as
delinquent loans had not been re-priced downwards while deposit rates
were reduced in line with market rates. Costs, however, had not
increased in line with its NIM as the Bank had continued its operations
with its existing 12 branches.
Therefore, its Return on Assets (ROA) and return on equity (ROE)
climbed to 0.76 percent and 4.97 percent as at end-FY Dec 2009 (end-FY
Dec 2008: 0.40 percent and 2.18 percent).
The ratios strengthened further to 3.89 percent and 24.94 percent as
at end September 2010.
In tandem with its healthier profit showing, the Bank's internal rate
of capital generation (IRCG) improved to 3.05 percent in FY Dec 2009 (FY
Dec 2008: 1.74 percent), before advancing further to 13.50 percent as of
end September 2010.
Meanwhile, SMIB's capital adequacy is deemed healthy as its
risk-weighted capital-adequacy ratios (RWCARs) are well above the
regulatory minimums. The Bank's tier-1 and overall RWCARs clocked in at
25.82 percent and 26.51 percent, respectively, as at end September 2010.
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