Sri Lankan banks’ operating environment (OE) assessment and overall credit profiles will be supported by any improvement in the sovereign’s credit profile (Long-Term Foreign-Currency IDR: RD, Long-Term Local-Currency IDR: CCC-) following a completed debt restructuring, Fitch Ratings said.
“This is due to the strong link between sovereign financial health and banks’ operating conditions. We believe this would be positive for the National Ratings of Fitch-rated large Sri Lankan banks – albeit based on their creditworthiness relative to other Sri Lankan issuers,” the rating agency said.
Sri Lankan banks’ current OE score of ‘ccc-’/stable is linked closely to the sovereign’s local-currency credit profile, given their predominant exposure to the domestic economy and government securities (local-currency treasury instruments: 33.4% of assets and foreign currency instruments: 3.4% at end-1H24) and lending to the broader public sector.
The sovereign exposure tends to be higher among the large banks, and state-owned enterprise (SOE) exposure is primarily at the two state-owned D-SIBs. “We expect an improvement in Sri Lanka’s credit profile to alleviate sovereign-related pressures on the banks, which is likely to be credit positive in terms of our financial and non-financial assessments.”
As per Fitch’s National Scale Rating Criteria, the starting point to derive a national rating is an assessment of the issuer’s credit quality on the international rating scale, which may be reassessed following a sovereign rating change. In such instances, Fitch will update the national ratings of affected local issuers to reflect changes in relative rankings following the sovereign rating change.
Fitch last recalibrated the agency’s Sri Lankan national rating scale on January 12,2023 to reflect changes in the relative creditworthiness among Sri Lankan issuers following the downgrade of the sovereign’s Long-Term Local-Currency IDR to ‘CC’ from ‘CCC’.
“The ratings of locally incorporated banks, excluding Cargills Bank PLC (A(lka)/Negative) which is driven by our expectation of extraordinary shareholder support, are based on their standalone credit profiles. We do not factor support into the ratings on the two state-owned D-SIBs, despite their strong state linkages, given the sovereign’s constrained ability to provide extraordinary support.”
However, a sustained improvement in the sovereign’s financial flexibility may lead to a reconsideration of state support, the statement said. Sri Lanka is close to completing its foreign-currency debt restructuring. A successful outcome, in line with the proposed framework for local bondholders, would be likely to significantly reduce the challenges faced by banks, improving their financial profiles, Fitch Ratings said.
Pressures on foreign-and local-currency funding and liquidity have eased considerably due to better external sector flows and the banks’ efforts to preserve liquidity. “We expect banks to regain access to foreign-currency wholesale funding, following the restoration of the sovereign’s creditworthiness.”
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