Wednesday, 2 December 2015

Sri Lanka LB Finance gets 'A-(lka)' Fitch rating

ECONOMYNEXT - Fitch Ratings said it has assigned LB Finance PLC a National Long-Term Rating at 'A-(lka)' with a Stable Outlook.

The rating reflects LB Finance’s established franchise among licensed finance companies, whose higher yielding exposures have supported sound profitability, a statement said.

It also captures the finance company’s relatively higher risk appetite as indicated by its exposure to gold-backed loans, the rating agency said.

The full rating report follows:

Fitch Ratings-Colombo-02 December 2015: Fitch Ratings has assigned LB Finance PLC (LB) a National Long-Term Rating at 'A-(lka)' with a Stable Outlook.

KEY RATING DRIVERS - NATIONAL RATINGS

LB's National Long-Term Rating reflects its established franchise among licensed finance companies (LFC), whose higher yielding exposures have supported sound profitability. The rating also captures its relatively higher risk appetite as indicated by its exposure to gold-backed loans. Fitch views LB's capital as satisfactory taking into account the entity's good revenue generation.

LB's leading 11% deposit market share among LFCs, as well as its extensive branch network have supported the company's funding position. At the same time, it also exposes LB to higher liquidity risk compared with peers in particular as gross loans reached 90% of assets at end 1HFY16 which is higher than the industry. Meanwhile, its share of liquid assets (as a % of total assets) declined to 9%. Mitigating factors include its moderately concentrated deposit base and un-utilised backup facilities.

Fitch sees LB's product exposure to gold-backed loans (17% of gross loans at end 1HFY16) as being a potential risk to its asset quality due to the volatility of gold prices even though the focus is on short tenure facilities (almost all under six months). This concentration is unique in the LFC peer group. LB's business focus remains on vehicle financing (75% of the loan book at end 1HFY16) with motor cars and three wheelers accounting for 26% and 24% of the total at end 1HFY16. About 60% of its motor car and three wheeler loans comprise unregistered vehicles, which is a positive as they are newly imported and are of a better credit quality.

Fitch expects LB's net incremental non-performing loans (NPLs) to increase in the medium term in line with the entity's projected loan growth. Its 90 days overdue loans are higher than peers'. Reported NPLs at a five month level improved to 4.6% at 1HFY16 from 5.2% in FY15, the latter being, however, mostly a function of solid loan growth (1HFY16: 12.6%, FY15: 15.1%). Revision of its impairment policy in FY15 resulted in a significant improvement in its provision coverage.

LB's pre-impairment profit to average total assets stood at 8.5% at end 1HFY16 (FY15: 8.8%, FY14: 6.8%), similar to higher rated peers. Its cost to income ratio remained the lowest among peers at 36% at end 1HFY16 on the back of greater scale. Higher net interest margins (NIMs) reflect relatively higher risk products such as gold-backed lending and three wheeler leasing, along with an increase in lower cost wholesale borrowings. However, Fitch believes that a potential increase in operating costs due to branch expansion and an increase in credit costs could hamper operating profitability and internal capital generation, in the medium term.

The rating reflects Fitch's expectation that LB's profitability remains sufficient to allow for growth, while maintaining capital ratios at the current level. The regulatory Tier-1 ratio stood at 16.0% at end-FY15.

No comments:

Post a Comment