Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Moody's does not see floor for Irish house prices yet >>>Nor do I, unfortunately!

Irish banks’ asset quality will likely weaken further as mortgage arrears rise and a bottoming out in house prices hasn’t yet occurred, according to credit ratings agency Moody’s.

“We have been highlighting for a couple of years now that we expect mortgage arrears to rise substantially. That now has started to come through,” said Ross Abercromby, a London-based

analyst with Moody’s. “From a capital position, we think the banks have the capital but without doubt asset quality is likely to continue to deteriorate for a while. There doesn’t seem to be any floor yet in house prices.”

While Irish banks have enough capital under Moody’s “current stress scenario,” things could change given “everything going on in the euro area,” Abercromby said.

The banks, which remain highly reliant on central bank funding, are unlikely to regain access to the public debt markets before the sovereign, said Abercromby.

“We can’t really see that happening until the deleveraging process has very much worked its way through,” said Abercromby in a phone interview today. “We think it’d be difficult before

the government’s back in the debt market again.”

In the meantime, banks may continue to be able to issue small amounts of secured debt in private placements. With bank deleveraging plans set to run through 2013 and the government

aiming to be in the market by then “if everything went according to plan, then probably around that time” banks may be able to re-enter the public debt markets, he said.

Moody’s said in a report issued today that the outlook for Ireland’s banking system remains negative citing the banks’ weak funding and liquidity profiles, a very challenging operating environment and the rating agency’s view that profitability will remain weak.

“The substantial weakening in the funding and liquidity profiles of the banking sector is a key driver of the negative banking system outlook,” Moody’s said. “The banks continue to rely on short-term central bank funding from the European Central Bank and in some cases from the Central Bank of Ireland.”

Moody’s said that through its support for the troubled banking sector in recent years, the

government has significantly weakened its own credit profile.

“The banks now have to deal with the implications of this as the government aims to reduce its debt burden and restore its financial flexibility,” it said in a statement.

“In our opinion, the substantial reduction in the government's net spending between 2011-2015 is likely to place considerable pressure on the country's recovery prospects. This will have a significant impact on banks' profitability and is leading to a weakening of already poor asset quality,” it said.

The banks' credit exposures to Irish sovereign debt and to government-guaranteed debt issued by the National Asset Management Agency also contributes to the negative outlook on asset quality, it said.

“However, Moody's views the raising of substantial capital in 2011, mainly from the Irish government, as credit positive. The four domestic banks that are supported by the government now have the capital resources to cope with loan losses anticipated by Moody's stress-case scenario,” it said.

Posted via email from quirkeproperty's posterous

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