13 Ugandan banks risk collapsing if three of their largest borrowers defaulted, according to the 2016 Annual Supervision Report published by Bank of Uganda (BoU) last week.
If the three borrowers defaulted, the banks would become significantly undercapitalized; a thing that might see BoU take them over just like it did to Crane Bank in October last year.
This shock would result into “an aggregate capital shortfall of Shs513.86 billion.”
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The report sanctioned by Prof. Emmanuel Tumusiime-Mutebile adds that seven (7) banks could collapse if their single largest borrower defaulted.
The report also indicates that nine banks would become undercapitalized if their Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) increased by 200%. Seven banks would also go under if their NPLs increased by 100%.
“If NPLs were to increase by 200 percent, assuming the increase is in the loss category which requires full provisioning, 9 banks would become undercapitalised with an aggregate capital shortfall of Ushs247.39 billion,” the report says.
The report says that BoU conducted stress tests on a quarterly basis to quantify the magnitude of losses which banks would incur in the event that they encounter specific shocks, and the impact of these losses on the banks’ capital.
The shocks included in the stress tests were: decline in net interest margin, decrease in interest income on government securities, depreciation of the Uganda Shilling against the United States dollar, increase in non-performing loans and 100% loan loss of each bank’s top 3 borrowers.
“The shocks chosen were those considered plausible and realistic while others are pegged to previous adverse experiences such as the bank closures of 1999 to 2001 and the economic downturn of 2011/2012,” the report says, adding: “The results of the tests conducted on the banks’ financial positions at the end of December 2016.”
The report states that year 2016 was a very difficult one for the banking system, with loan quality deteriorating terribly.
NPLs to total gross loans rose from 5.3% to10.5% between December 2015 and December 2016.
This led to a slowdown of private sector credit growth and a drop in bank profitability.
In October 2016, Crane Bank, one of the largest banks in the market, was taken over by the BoU and placed under statutory management because its huge burden of NPLs placed depositors’ funds at risk, the report says.
It adds that Crane Bank was resolved in January 2017 with the transfer of the bulk of its assets and liabilities to DFCU Bank.
“The resolution of Crane Bank, despite its size, was achieved without any contagion to the rest of the banking market and without its depositors incurring any losses,” the report says.
Besides Crane Bank Limited, the report adds that there was another bank that had fallen below the required minimum capital of Shs25bn, but it injected in fresh capital on directions of BoU.
The 2016 Annual Supervision Report provides information on the supervisory activities conducted by the Bank of Uganda.
It also provides an assessment of the performance of the financial system and potential risks to financial stability, as well as the reforms to the regulatory framework undertaken during the year.
The challengewith Ugandas banks,is governance,internal control and corporate governance coupled with government interfearance in operations and recruitment.this ought to be double checked by management of central bank