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Banking & Finance News South Africa

Weak economy weighs on faith in retail banks

SA's retail banking confidence weakened in the second quarter, according to a survey by professional services firm Ernst & Young (now called EY).

The report, released this week, said this was partly a result of a subdued macroeconomic environment in SA.

The decline in confidence raised questions as to whether the country's major banks would still grow earnings in their retail divisions at upper double-digit rates. SA's major banks, apart from Absa, showed strong growth in earnings for their respective retail divisions in the last financial reporting season.

They are now in a closed period ahead of their reporting for the period ended June.

"Profits are under pressure, but this does not mean banks are not making profits," said Emelio Pera, EY financial services sector leader for Africa.

Overall, banking confidence fell to 62 index points from 82 in the first quarter, the EY survey showed. Retail bank confidence fell from 80 index points in the first quarter of the year to 46, the lowest in close to two years.

Pera said the confidence in retail banking had weakened in the second quarter in line with tough economic conditions, weak employment growth and a challenging labour environment. But the lower confidence was not driven by lower earnings, but anxiety about the financial status of the South African consumer.

The National Credit Regulator said last month that consumer indebtedness had risen about 2%, or by 189,000 individuals, to 9.53-million among a little more than 20-million credit-active consumers in SA. Bad debts were rising faster than new accounts.

The Standard & Poor's banking industry risk assessment for SA, released yesterday, said there was an expectation of modest loan growth of about 8%-10% this year. But this could be lower if the growth in unsecured loans continued to slow.

It also expected the availability of unsecured credit to fall this year.

"We also think the real estate market will remain subdued, which alongside low interest rates will give domestic banks more time to clean up their nonperforming and restructured mortgage loan books," Standard & Poor's said. "Still, we expect weakening asset quality in unsecured lending to negate any real estate market improvement and credit losses to start increasing slowly over the next 18-24 months."

Pera said lending growth remained in single digits. There were no signs that corporate and retail banking segments would significantly grow loans.

Source: Business Day, via I-Net Bridge

Source: I-Net Bridge

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